Issue | #16 |
Published | October 1949 |
Frequency | monthly |
Cover Price | 0.10 USD |
Pages | 52 |
Editing | ? |
Characters | Lone Ranger; Silver (horse) |
Synopsis | The Lone Ranger surprises a pair of rustlers who are changing brands on a steer. |
Genre | western |
Pencils | Mo Gollub? |
Inks | Mo Gollub? |
Notes | Cover has the "This is a King Feature" emblem. |
Characters | Lone Ranger; Tonto |
Pencils | Mo Gollub? |
Inks | Mo Gollub? |
Letters | typeset |
Notes | Inside front cover; black and white. Illustrated promo for subscriptions to Dell’s Lone Ranger comic. Different from promo in The Lone Ranger #15 with same name. Includes partial reprint of cover of The Lone Ranger #14. |
Reprinted | from Lone Ranger, The (Dell, 1948 series) #14 (see notes) |
Characters | Lone Ranger; Tonto; Silver (horse); Scout (horse); Geronimo |
Synopsis | Geronimo goes on the warpath and the Lone Ranger and Tonto have to save the telegraph office at Pine Hill from being burned. |
Genre | western |
Script | Fran Striker? |
Pencils | Charles Flanders |
Inks | Charles Flanders |
Notes | Four tiers of panels per page. |
Reprinted | from The Lone Ranger (King Features Syndicate) 1946 newspaper strips. |
Characters | Lone Ranger; Tonto; Dan Reid; Silver (horse); Scout (horse); Victor (horse) |
Synopsis | Cowboys from the Double-A ranch capture Dan Reid and Handy Andy, the tinsmith, and force them to repair a tank used to water stolen horses. |
Genre | western |
Script | Fran Striker? |
Pencils | Charles Flanders |
Inks | Charles Flanders |
Notes | Four tiers of panels per page. |
Reprinted | from The Lone Ranger (King Features Syndicate) 1945 and 1946 newspaper strips. |
Characters | Captain G. W. Arrington |
Synopsis | True story of Texas Rangers tracking Comanche raiders across the desert of the Texas Panhandle and New Mexico border in 1880. |
Genre | western; fact |
Script | Carl Smith (credited) |
Letters | typeset |
Notes | Text story with three illustrations. |
Characters | Young Hawk; Little Buck; White Fawn |
Synopsis | After their tribe breaks camp to return to their homeland, Young Hawk and Little Buck are captured by the Sioux braves they battled before. They are rescued by a girl called White Fawn. |
Genre | western |
Script | Gaylord DuBois |
Pencils | Tom Hickey |
Inks | Tom Hickey |
Notes | Part of a continuing storyline. Script credit from Robin Snyder, taken from Gaylord DuBois' personal records. |
Synopsis | Facts about the Natchez Indians and their structures. |
Genre | western; fact |
Notes | Inside back cover; black and white; text and illustrations. |
Synopsis | Portrait of an unnamed Pawnee Chief. |
Genre | western |
Inks | Mo Gollub? |
Colors | Mo Gollub? |
Letters | typeset |
Notes | Back cover; 9th in a series of portraits of Indian warriors. |