The Liberal Kansas area is in trouble. The town is without a Marshal and the nearby farmers are unable to grow crops due to the summer drought and trail riders that run cattle over their land. Bat Masterson arrives to bring law and order and his Deputy accidently finds a variety of wheat that will withstand the drought. But the farmers are giving up and leaving and Bat must convince tham to stay. He wants them to continue farming and also help round up the local gang of outlaws. —IMDb
Journeyman director Ray Enright started out in the editing department at Mack Sennett’s Keystone Studios; before working his way up to chief editor, he also contributed gags to Sennett’s 2-reel comedies. Following World War I service, Enright joined Thomas Ince’s editing staff, then moved to up-and-coming Warner Bros. There he was given his first opportunity to direct with the Rin Tin Tin vehicle Tracked by the Police (1927). He remained on the Warners/First National directorial pool until 1941, adding his professional (if somewhat anonymous) touch to the films of Joe E. Brown, Joan Blondell, Pat O’Brien, Jimmy Cagney and Dick Powell. Enright’s credits of the 1940s include Universal’s The Spoilers (1942), Columbia’s Good Luck Mr. Yates (1943) and RKO’s The Iron Major (1943). Ray Enright returned to the Warners fold in the late 1940s, where he became one of the principal directors of the studio’s medium-budget westerns. —allmovie