Go West
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:10:01
I have made
some other financial arrangements.

:10:04
It's been nice knowing you, gentlemen.
:10:06
I'm glad to have made your acquaintance,
and a good day to you both.

:10:10
- Good day.
- Goodbye.

:10:12
Come on, Rusty.
:10:18
Gentlemen, this is Mr. Terry Turner
who has just arrived from the West.

:10:22
- Hello.
- How do you do?

:10:24
Young man, I want you to tell these
gentlemen what you told me this morning.

:10:28
I understand you are thinking
of building a railroad...

:10:30
from Cripple Creek
north around the mountain.

:10:33
And I'd like to ask you
to go in another direction.

:10:38
I'd say the straightest way to go...
:10:40
would be from Cripple Creek here
straight through to the Pacific.

:10:45
You expect our trains
to fly over the mountains?

:10:47
No, sir.
:10:48
I expect your trains to go through here,
Dead Man's Gulch.

:10:51
May I ask why you're so interested
in seeing that this land is sold?

:10:55
Yes, sir. So that I can get married.
:10:58
I think I understand.
:11:00
- You own the land.
- No, sir, but my grandfather did.

:11:03
He being quite a crook, he unloaded it
on my girl's grandfather, Dan Wilson.

:11:08
Old Dan's been sore about it ever since.
:11:10
It started a feud
between us Turners and the Wilsons.

:11:13
And now he won't let me
marry his granddaughter.

:11:15
If I could just prove to him
that I'm not a crook...

:11:18
then maybe he could see the light.
After all, he's not a bad old coot.

:11:22
I think Beecher should leave
as soon as he can to contact...

:11:25
Dan Wilson, sir.
:11:26
And arrange for the purchase
of the Dead Man's Gulch.

:11:44
I don't know what's the matter.
I dig and dig, and the hole gets no bigger.

:11:49
- I'm moving on.
- Yeah, but how about the gold?

:11:52
There ain't no gold here.
:11:54
I've been working Dead Man's Gulch
off and on for 40 years.

:11:57
I'm convinced.
:11:59
Mr. Wilson, why don't you quit?

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