Issue 98 March 2012 - Vol. 24 No. 1
We recommend printing this newsletter and saving
The Silver Bullet
The Official International Chronicle for Lone Ranger Fans
Peter Ford – actor, author and son of Glenn Ford
On a very hot and humid day on July 22, 2011 in Princeton, Indiana I had the pleasure of meeting Peter Ford.
The heat index was around 102 and one would never know he is a celebrity. He is a very gracious, pleasant and
interesting person to talk with. I was with him for about three hours and every moment was an intriguing
experience. He has written a book about the life of his father, Glenn Ford. Once you start reading it you will
find it difficult to put it down. The book is titled Glenn Ford: A Life.
I have his personal endorsement of my appearances looking like The Lone Ranger in promoting non-violence,
no drugs, no smoking, no drinking, no profanity and taking responsibility for ones actions to the kids of today.
Reported by:
LR Tribute Performer
The first of 2,956 episodes of The Lone Ranger aired on the radio for the first time on January 30, 1933 on the
Mutual Broadcasting Radio Network. The last radio episode of the Lone Ranger was aired on September 3, 1954.
221 Episodes for TV – Sept. 15, 1949 to June 6, 1957 (Randomly listed)
The Masked Rider - Never Say Die - Legion of Old Timers - Cannonball McKay - Outlaw Town -
Greed for Gold - Jim Tyler's Past - The Lone Ranger Fights On - The Lone Ranger's Triumph -
War Horse - The Renegades - Finders Keepers - The Man Who Came Back - Man of the House -
Two Against Two - The Law and Miss Aggie - Dan Reid's Sacrifice - The Tarnished Star -
The Midnight Rider - Stage to Estacado - Diamond in the Rough - Ex-Marshal -
Message to Fort Apache - Rendezvous at Whipsaw - Homer with a High Hat - Sheep Thieves -
The Woman from Omaha - The Perfect Crime - Pete and Pedro - The Tenderfeet - High Heels -
Six-Gun Legacy - Return of the Convict - Old Joe's Sister - The Red Mark - The Fugitive -
The Frightened Woman - Six-Gun Sanctuary - Outlaw's Trail - Colorado Gold - The Globe -
The Angel and the Outlaw - The New Neighbor - The Durango Kid - El Toro - The Condemned Man -
The Empty Strongbox - Trader Boggs - Bandits in Uniform - The Sheriff's Son - Tumblerock Law -
Trouble In Town - Triple Cross - The Wake of War - Best Laid Plans - Indian Charlie - Godless Men -
The Devil's Bog - Right to Vote - Sinner by Proxy - A Stage for Mademoiselle - Son by Adoption -
Black Gold - The Deserter - Embezzler's Harvest - The Brown Pony - Death in the Forest -
Sunstroke Mesa - The Too-Perfect Signature - The Woman in the White Mask - The Swami -
Trial by Fire - The Pledge - Treason at Dry Creek - Delayed Action - The Letter of the Law -
Two Gold Lockets - Friend in Need - Jeb's Gold Mine - Frame for Two - One Jump Ahead - Lady Killer -
The Outcast - The Hooded Men - Outlaw's Son - Outlaw Underground - Desperado at Large -
Through The Wall - Trouble at Black Rock - Special Edition - Behind The Law - Paid in Full -
Turning Point - The Decision of Chris McKeever - False Accusations - The Old Cowboy -
Gunpowder Joe - The Man with Two Faces - Buried Treasure - Adventure at Arbuckle -
The Return Trapped - The Sheriff's Wife - The Sheriff of Smoke Tree - Counterfeit Mask -
The Ghost of Coyote Canyon - Old Bailey - A Broken Match - Two for Juan Ringo - Texas Draw -
Dan Reid's Fight for Life - Tenderfoot - Slim's Boy - The Prince of Buffalo Gap – Canuck -
Mission for Tonto - Journey to San Carlos - The Map - The Silent Voice – Backtrail -
The Gentleman from Julesberg - Heritage of Treason - Bounty Hunter - Heart of a Cheater -
Sheriff's Sale - The School Story - The Quiet Highwayman - The Lost Chalice - The Law Lady -
Uncle Ed - Jornada Del Muerto - Breaking Point - Prisoner in Jeopardy - The Quarter-Horse War -
Wanted - The Blind Witness - The Whimsical Bandit - The Star Witness - Outlaw's Revenge -
Double Jeopardy - Dead Man's Chest - The Squire - Banker's Choice - Mission Bells - Thieves' Money -
Masked Deputy - Danger Ahead – Quicksand - The Letter Bride - The Twisted Track - Christmas Story -
Trouble at Tylerville - Outlaw Masquerade - The Avenger - A Message from Abe - Six Gun Artist -
Framed for Murder - One Nation Indivisible - The Cross of Santo Domingo - Enfield Rifle -
Code of the Pioneers - White Hawk's Decision - Showdown at Sand Creek -
Million Dollar Wallpaper - Drink of Water - White Man's Magic - Trouble for Tonto -
The Wrong Man - Ghost Town Fury - Ghost Canyon - The Courage of Tonto - Code of Honor -
Dead Eye - Gold Fever - Death Trap - Devil's Pass - Damsels in Distress - Outlaw of the Plains -
Pay Dirt - Billie the Great - Matter of Courage - Rifles and Renegades - Man Without a Gun -
Clover in the Dust - A Harp for Hannah - *Outlaws in Greasepaint - Word of Honor - Mr. Trouble -
The Telltale Bullet - Hot Spell in Panamint - Mrs. Banker - Ranger in Danger -
The Return of Don Pedro O'Sullivan - Stage to Tishomingo - The Sheriff of Gunstock - Bait Gold -
Barnaby Boggs, Esq. - Lone Ranger - Desert Adventure - Hidden Fortune - The Rustlers' Hideout -
Gold Town - The Return - The Banker's Son - Pardon for Curly - Eye for an Eye - The Beeler Gang -
Bullets for Ballots - The Black Hat - Spanish Gold - Troubled Waters - Gold Train -
Sawtelle Saga's End - The Black Widow - Crime in Time - Bad Medicine - Death Goes to Press -
The Return of Dice Dawson - Counterfeit Redskins - The Wooden Rifle - No Handicap -
Trigger Finger - Gold Freight
* The last episode that aired June 6th
, 1957
(All messages printed as submitted)
Senior Citizens - IT REALLY is us....
Senior citizens are constantly being criticized for every conceivable
deficiency of the modern world, real or imaginary.. We know we take
responsibility for all we have done and do not blame others.
HOWEVER, upon reflection, we would like to point out that it was NOT
the senior citizens who took:
The melody out of music, The pride out of appearance,
The courtesy out of driving, The romance out of love,
The commitment out of marriage, The responsibility out of parenthood,
The togetherness out of the family, The learning out of education,
The service out of patriotism, The Golden Rule from rulers,
The nativity scene out of cities, The civility out of behavior,
The refinement out of language, The dedication out of employment,
The prudence! out of spending, The ambition out of achievement or
God out of government and school.
And we certainly are NOT the ones who eliminated patience and
tolerance from personal relationships and interactions with
others!!
And, we do understand the meaning of patriotism,
and remember those who have fought and died for our country.
Just look at the Seniors with tears in their eyes and pride in their
Hearts as they stand at attention with their hand over their hearts!
YES, I'M A SENIOR CITIZEN!
I'm the life of the party..... even if it lasts until 8 p.m.
I'm very good at opening childproof caps.... with a hammer.
I'm awake many hours before my body allows me to get up.
I'm smiling all the time because I can't hear a thing you're saying.
I'm sure everything I can't find is in a safe secure place, somewhere.
I'm wrinkled, saggy, lumpy, and that's just my left leg.
I'm beginning to realize that aging is not for wimps.
Yes, I'm a SENIOR CITIZEN and I think I am having the time of my life!
Now if I could only remember who sent this to me, I wouldn't send it
back to them, but I would send it to many more too!
Spread the laughter, Share the cheer
Let's be happy while we're here.
Go Green - Recycle CONGRESS!!
Dusty
Loveland, CO
TLFC #006 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I for one am not looking forward to this at all. In 1979 I protested the
Wrather mess-up by starting a petition to get Clayton’s mask back. In 2012
I’ll just stay home and keep my mouth shut. I will cherish my memories
of “The Champion of Justice” and Clay and Jay. I don’t want to see another
mess like the WB put on several years back.
When I read they were originally going to film around Deming, NM I thought
about going there to see what I could see and possibly get on the set. We have
friends in Deming and were going to take our trailer and check it out. I no longer
have that desire to see or have any part of a “Takeoff on The Lone Ranger”
Jim
Apple Valley, CA
Hi-Yo Silver Away
The Legend Lives On!
TLFC #338
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Johnny Depp has great talent No Denying But here in the land of the Six nations can
we not we cannot find a Seneca or Mohawk or Onondaga etc to step into that Great
Canadian's shoes, Jay Silverheels? Also a great Lacrosse player. Perhaps a Micmac or
Pequot and Mohegan?
Bill
Warwick, NY
TLRFC #202
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I think all Johnny Depp wants to do is make a mess out of the Lone Ranger , i hope
it never gets finished & i don’t think i will ever go see it , i think it is a waste,
the only people i think would be interested in it will be People who doesn’t really
know the Lone Ranger &don’t Respect TLR
Barbara
Greensboro, NC
TLRFC #519
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I shouldn't judge something before it's reality, but listening to Depp talk about
his portrayal of Tonto upsets me, since it sounds like a satirical account of the
Lone Ranger, and is going to belittle the overall message that Moore intended.....a
comedy does not sit well with me, and I probably won't see it if it's going to poke
fun at the characters I believe are true to life being serious and having a light
side with a laugh and smile as part of the persona of the two main characters......
Joe
Bainbridge Island, WA
TLRFC #174
Saw the interview on Larry King....
As a long time Lone Ranger Fan and collector, this movie appears to be a joke. From
what I have read about it, and now heard on Larry King, this very well could be worse
than The Legend Of The Lone Ranger released several years ago. I would only hope that
those that are in charge of the movie will watch episodes of The Lone Ranger with Clayton
Moore and Jay Silverheels to get a feeling of the characters before proceeding further.
Another bad movie about a great character will send the series and any future movies
into oblivion.
Jay
Lansing, Michigan
TLRFC #252
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Yes Sir, I would like love to continue to be a part of the Lone Ranger Fan
Club. Nine $$ is a very small amount, I don't know how you cover
everything for only $9.
I know that you have kept the Lone Ranger alive for thousands; more than
likely more so than anyone else. We are fortunate to have a dedicated fan
like yourself to take over the reigns of Joe Southern's LRFC.
Do you already have a newsletter or are you going to continue the one Joe
had kept going from his predecessor? Certainly not critical; but it would
be nice to have that connection once in a while, like how the new movie is
going. I heard it had been sidelined for budget reasons; but is now back
in production mode, due out in the Spring of 2013. Yes Sir, I know, You
probably know all about that.
Anyway, thanks so much for keeping the Lone Ranger going, I am extremely
happy to be a part of something dedicated to the code of the Lone Ranger
and to the basic whole idea of the good guy.
Thanks,
Steve
Savannah, GA
TLRFC #346
Dear LRFC
Thank you so much for the Membership Certificate it now hangs in pride of place on my
bedroom wall.
Being born and brought up in England, it can be hard to live the life of a real cowboy,
but as a boy living in the north west of England (Liverpool) this to me was the
wild-west, watching and reading anything and everything to do with cowboys and Indians.
T.V episodes of the lone ranger kept me on the right track in life always fighting for
good. Not being able to afford a horse I turned to the next best thing my trusty dog who
i called scout we had many adventures together in our land of make believe re-enacting
the episodes with friends. Now at the age of 53 i know the moral code has rubbed off on
my children who have grown up to be great women, having never done drugs, drink, or any
other immoral things they now have children and i hope will be new members in the coming
months.
So keep up the good work and on behalf of us all at the Bowen household.
David - TLRFC #697
Newark, United Kingdom
I enjoy your newsletters and also I really do like my Lone Ranger ornament I ordered
recently. I've also had a lot of good natured comments on my "Lone Ranger for President"
bumper sticker. Thanks for the fun!!
MP Magers TLRFC #518
Louisville, KY
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Lone Ranger Vendetta is a new novel for Moonstone Books
The Masked Rider of the Plains rides
again in a gritty tale of the vengeance
from out of his past.
The Masked Man in a brand-new adventure! From out of
the past comes a mysterious killer systematically
murdering anyone with a connection to the Masked Rider
of the Pains former identity. When all signs point to Butch
Cavendish, a man long dead, The Lone Ranger finds
himself trapped in a deadly game of cat and mouse with the life of his faithful Indian
companion hanging in the balance!
For more information and about ordering click on the picture of the book.
Above information sent to us by:
John Martin, #367
Centralia, WA
Here is a quick tip – You can view many different pictures of the history of The
Lone Ranger at a website, topictures.com
You can spend hours browsing over 10 pages of
information by clicking on the pictures. “Enjoy” ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
John Hart and Clayton Moore Western Clippings is a great website
that features western treasures from
the Golden Age. For more browsing
fun click Here.
A trivia comment made by Clayton
Moore:
“’Lone Ranger’ fans may not be
aware there were actually two Silvers.
The first one was the horse we called
Liver Lip because of his protruding
lower lip. He had a dark spot on his
hindquarters that had to be dyed white before filming.
The second came along while John Hart was starring. Though it was rarely visible on
the show, the horse had a black spot on her left ear. Otherwise they were nearly
identical.”
**LRFC note – did you pick up on the second horse the word her? The new movie will
feature a white mare for Silver also.
Few people realize that there were actually two horses that have portrayed Silver on
film and on television. Silver #1 was a 12 year old, Morab Tennessee Walking Horse
cross stallion over 17 hands tall who was chosen personally by Clayton Moore (The
Lone Ranger) himself in 1949 for use on the television series just prior to its launch.
His real name was “White Cloud” or from some sources, “Traveler”. He did not know
many tricks, but was very gentle and had an impressively high rear which became the
hallmark of this dynamic duo. Silver #1 came from the Hugh Hooker Ranch in the San
Fernando Valley of California.
In 1949, the owner of the Lone Ranger Television show, George W. Trendle purchased
a four year old Morab Saddlebred cross by the name of “Tarzen’s White Banner” from
a farm in Peoria, Illinois. He immediately renamed and registered the horse, “Hi-Yo
Silver”. In 1952 “Hi-Yo Silver” was shipped from Illinois to California and became
Silver #2 taking the place of Silver #1 in the television series while John Hart briefly
stepped into the role of The Lone Ranger. Silver #2 was trained by the famous trainer
and handler, Glenn Randall who also trained Roy Roger’s Trigger. Silver #2 had an
opposite temperament from the first Silver being a high strung stallion who was quite
skittish of camera sounds.
FLINT, Michigan -- Retired high
school science teacher Everette
Humphrey of Flint has given an Illinois
museum a piece of its own Lone
Ranger history.
Humphrey, who taught in the Westwood Heights School District, has donated the only
known existing
saddle belonging to Brace Beemer to the Wabash County Museum, according to the
story in the Daily
Republican Register in Mt. Carmel, Ill.
Everette Humphrey, former teacher in the Westwood Heights School District, is shown in this Flint Journal file photo.
Beemer was born in Mt. Carmel in 1902 and was the longest-running and best-known radio voice of the Lone Ranger.
The story says the Beemer saddle came up for auction in 1989, and Humphrey purchased it as part of his own collection
of memorabilia. Humphrey describes himself in the story as one of Beemer's biggest fans with hundreds of objects
relating to the radio and television programs and to Brace Beemer's life.
By Joe Southern
Reporter for the Silver Bullet
Ready or not, like it or not, filming has finally started on Walt Disney’s new Lone Ranger motion picture.
The 10-year journey to bring the Lone Ranger and Tonto back to the movies for the first time in 31 years is finally at its end as filming
begins in New Mexico. What began in 2002 with Columbia Pictures announcing its intention to make a Lone Ranger movie has
reached its fruition in 2012 with Disney under the direction of Gore Verbinski and produced by Jerry Bruckheimer.
The movie stars Johnny Depp as Tonto and Armie Hammer as The Lone Ranger. An all-star cast has been filling in behind them,
including Helena Bonham Carter, James Badge Dale, Dwight Yoakum, Tom Wilkinson, and Barry Pepper. The Internet site
www.imdb.com also lists James Frain, Damon Herriman, Mason Cook, Timothy V. Murphy, Saginaw Grant, James P. Bennett and
Bryant Prince.
Yoakum is to play the villain Butch Cavendish, but the primary bad guy will be Wilkinson’s Latham Cole character. Wilson is the
female lead and plays Rebecca Reid (not Linda?), the wife of Dale’s Dan Reid. Prince has the part of Danny Reid. Carter is slated to
play a brassy, brothel-owning madam.
Getting to this point has been a long and harrowing ride for the masked
man and his faithful Indian companion.
About 10 years ago it was announced that a major motion picture was
going to be made by Sony for Columbia Pictures. The WB had also
green-lighted a pilot for a new Lone Ranger television show. In 2003
the pilot, then turned into a made for TV movie, aired and established
itself as the “Ishtar” of TV Westerns. The series was thankfully never
made.
The movie, however, kept plodding along through development at
Sony, finally succumbing in 2007. A few months later in 2008, super
producer Jerry Bruckheimer announced he wanted a shot at it. A major
announcement was made by Disney Studios that Bruckheimer would
again pair up with his “Pirates of the Caribbean” star Johnny Depp in a remake of the masked man. Only this time Depp would star as
Tonto and the movie would focus on that character.
For the next two years the project lingered on. A script was written by the powerhouse duo of Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio, who gave
us such wonderful stories as the first three Pirates of the Caribbean movies, “Shrek”, the two recent Zorro movies, the National
Treasure films, “Aladdin”, “The Road to El Dorado” and many more. That script was rejected by Disney and handed over to Justin
Haythe for a rewrite.
While Haythe sank his teeth into it, rumors went wild as to who would star as the Lone Ranger and who would sit in the director’s
chair. Depp stayed busy doing Alice in Wonderland, Public Enemy and another Pirates movie with Bruckheimer. The producer
extraordinaire, however, plowed into his popular television shows and gave us lukewarm films such as “Prince of Persia: The Sands of
Time” and “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice.”
Finally, a couple months ago the movie moved into production. Former Pirates director Gore Verbinski hired on to direct.
Armie Hammer won the right to wear the mask and an all-star cast began to populate the growing list of characters. Set construction
began in southwest New Mexico and casting for extras was announced. It was given a Dec. 21, 2012, release date.
Just as soon as the light of day finally shone on this project, Disney
CEO Robert Iger thrust it back into darkness over budgetary concerns.
With a reported $250 million budget and a lackluster performance
record of modern-day Westerns and Bruckheimer’s own silver screen
letdowns, Disney was not ready to play high-stakes poker with an
uncertain economy and fickle moviegoers.
Following a week-long dollar détente and the willingness of Depp and
Bruckheimer to cut their own fees, the director and producer were
unwilling to trim their vision for the film. The game of brinkmanship
ended with the purse strings pulled and the project thrust back into the
pits of development dilemma
.
A short time later, Bruckheimer, Depp and Verbinski emerged from their budget-chopping pow-wow and struck a deal with Disney to
make it for a reported $215 million. Given a second green light, production began in areas of New Mexico and the original cast came
back on board.
Casting calls have been going on in Albuquerque, N.M., and more recently in Moab, Utah, and Creede, Colo., Shooting started in
February and is slated to run through August. The movie is scheduled for release on May 31, 2013.
***************************************
Note – Movie Follow Up –
The lone Ranger Fan Club has just been informed, from a reliable source, about a video of the new movie set that will be used in the
movie. It is located just west of Rio Rancho, NM.
To go to the webpage for the video click HERE. Also we at the Fan Club have a member that will be in the movie – Read more
about his acting scene in the June Silver Bullet.
Silver #1
Original Name: White Cloud
Birth: 1937
Death: 1959 Age:22
Equine Actor. He starred as Silver in "The Lone Ranger" Television Series from 1949 to 1954,
and was thought to be one of the most popular horses of all the western heroes. The first horse
to portray Silver, his true name was White Cloud. An impressive 17+ hands tall, he was known
to be very gentle and well trained. He was retired after a brief stand-in appearance in the 1956
movie, "The Lone Ranger", and was only used for close ups and head shots thereafter.
In 1957, Silver won the Award for Excellence (Patsy). He lived out his days at the Ace
Hudkin's stables in southern California
Silver #2
Original Name: Tarzens White Banner Silver
Birth: 1945
Danville, Des Moines County, Iowa, USA
Death: 1974 Age: 29
Equine Actor. He starred as Silver in the television series "The Lone Ranger" from 1952 to
1954, when he took over the role of the original Silver. He was also used for all the Lone
Ranger public appearance tours and promotions (he was the only "Silver" that Clayton Moore toured with), and starred in the 1956
movie of "The Lone Ranger." Not as large as the original Silver, he was also known to be the opposite in temperment.
In 1957, Silver won the Award for Excellence (Patsy). After his retirement in 1962, he lived out his life on the Wayne Burson Ranch
in southern California.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Remember the Flamingo?
It's 1946. Gangster Bugsy Siegel is set to unveil the first "glam" hotel on Vegas' strip. A post-
Christmas storm keeps the rich and famous away from the grand opening, and within months the
Flamingo flounders---and Bugsy is gunned down by the mob.
By Joe Southern
Reporter for the Silver Bullet
The Lone Ranger is riding again in the comic books for Dynamite Entertainment under the reigns of a
new creative team.
Beginning several months after the first 25-issue run of the book, the new series takes the Lone Ranger
beyond the origin story and moves him into a more familiar role, roaming the plains with Tonto and
righting wrongs.
The story is written by Ande Parks with art by Esteve Polls, colors by Marcelo Pinto and lettering by
Simon Bowland. The covers are done primarily by Francesco Francavilla, with half of the first issue
covered by Alex Ross.
The first issue takes place in the Oklahoma territory when bandits robbing a man end up killing his
wife by accident. The man laments her loss as he and his two children bury her and try to go on with
their lives. The man is filled with grief and doubt. Meanwhile, the Lone Ranger and Tonto break camp
a day’s ride away in Kansas and head south.
Back in Oklahoma, the man, Nathan Jurgens, puts his kids to bed and lies down to sleep when he is startled by the sound of horses
approaching. He wakes the children and the three of them sneak out the back door and hide in the boulders behind their cabin. Out
front, the masked bandits return, torching the house and calling Jurgens out. Within moments, the lead bandit’s gun is shot out of his
hand and more than one battle is joined.
Parks said he wrote the story from the point of view of Jurgens in order to give readers a different view of the Lone Ranger. “I did that
on purpose,” he said. “I did not want it all to be seen from the Ranger’s point of view. … Part of the issue is to see how the people
perceive the Ranger himself.”
In the end, the rescue is twofold. “I felt like he (Lone Ranger) wanted to send a strong message to
the father,” Parks said. Parks and his creative team are the ones who did the Lone Ranger: Death of
Zorro mini-series for Dynamite. “When they asked me to do the Death of Zorro, I was excited about
Zorro. I didn’t know much about the Lone Ranger,” he said.
When he was told to have Zorro die in the first issue of the five-part series, he knew he would be
doing a Lone Ranger story instead of a Zorro story. That didn’t bother Parks. “The more I got to
know the Lone Ranger, I liked the upright nature of the man,” he said. One thing readers will notice
is a more authentic feel of the West in Parks’ work.
“What I’m good at is research and having a historical component to the work,” he said. Parks, who
is from Kansas, has a six-issue storyline already complete called Hard Country. Unlike the previous
series where the Ranger and Tonto were grounded to a home base, Parks has the two on the move
across the plains in the manner which fans expect of him. As they make their way across the rugged
frontier, the heroes will eventually find themselves up against a crooked lawman.
Parks said he began writing comic books only about two or three years ago. “Before that I had a long career as an inker,” he said.
When Dynamite Entertainment began publishing a bundle of Green Hornet books, Parks got the call to do one about Kato. “Kato
number one is the first monthly comic I had written,” he said. When it comes to the Lone Ranger, Parks said he wants fans to know
“that I have a great respect for the character. … I love his values, his set of morals and I want to convey that.”
In a short time, Parks has come to appreciate what the Lone Ranger means to millions of fans. “He is a good man and will do the right
thing and he shows that you can inspire hope in others,” he said.
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“The pessimist may be right in the long run,
but the optimist has a better time during the trip.”
We encourage member participation – got some historical information or something
you feel might be of interest to other members?
Contact us – we might be able to use it in future issues of the Silver Bullet – We like to
feature pictures and articles about today’s younger
generation of kids that are taking an interest in The Lone Ranger. It is they that will
carry on the spirit of our treasured hero.
Should you want to contact us please go to the website LoneRangerFanClub.com and
click on the Silver Bullet located on the left side of the page which reads "Contact Us".
((Please include your membership number in all correspondence.))
Adios from, The Lone Ranger Fan Club.com LoneRangerFanClub.com ClaytonMooreFanClub.com TheLoneRanger.tv TontoFanClub.com JaySilverheelsFanClub.com
Hi-Yo Silver Awaaay!!
The Silver Bullet is published four times a year (March, June September, December) for the Fan Club Website since 2011 by Circle C Enterprise, a non-profit
organization based in Salisbury, Maryland and is owned by Garry Cherricks.
TLRFC was established and published by Terry and Kay Klepey from 1988 to 2002. In 2002 it was published by Joe and Sandy Southern until 2011. During this time
from 1988 to 2010 it was postal mailed to the membership.
The Lone Ranger and Tonto and all related characters and materials are Trade Mark and Copyright of Classic Media, Inc., in New York, NY. This Fan club is in no way
connected with Classic Media.
The Silver Bullet is a fan publication of the official International Lone Ranger Fan Club website expressly for Lone Ranger enthusiasts and collectors.
Deadline for submissions of letters, articles for printing and advertising is one month prior to the month of publication on the website.
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