 Hi-yo Silver! Fiery horse with a speed of light, a cloud of dust and a hearty hi-yo silver! The Lone Ranger! Before this exciting adventure, a word from our sponsor. General Mills, makers of Cheerios, the oat cereal that's ready to eat, Benny Crocker mixes, and Wheaties, the breakfast of champions, present by special recording, the Lone Ranger! Did you ever talk to your grandmother or your mother about what it used to be like to bake an angel food cake? Before there was a Betty Crocker angel food cake mix, that is. Well, they used to have to take 13 eggs and separate the whites from the yolks. Can you imagine all that bother over a dozen eggs? Angel food cakes took hours then, and I guess that's why they only bake them for very, very special occasions. But now, you can have big, delicious angel food cakes all the time! It's so easy when mom uses Betty Crocker angel food cake mix. That's the mix with the whites of 13 farm fresh eggs right in the package. Mom just adds water and your favorite flavoring for a perfect cake. Angel perfect every time. Cake after cake after cake. A high light every day is party day kind of cake. And it's guaranteed perfect by Betty Crocker of General Mills Minneapolis. I hope mom bakes lots of Betty Crocker angel food cakes at your house. They're so meld in your mouth good! With his faithful Indian companion title, the daring and resourceful mask writer of the plains led the fight for law and order in the early western United States. Nowhere in the pages of history can one find a greater champion of justice. Return with us now to those thrilling days of yesteryear. From out of the past come the thundering hoofbeats of the great horse Silver. The lone ranger rides again! Come on, Silver! Let's go, people! I am Silver! Fuller! He was crowded, and a lone murmur ran through it as Jonathan Steele rose to his feet and faced the judge. Jonathan, I represent Rex Bradford, the deceased's only brother. Now it's our contention that the terms of this will prove that the late Robert Bradford was of unsound mind when he made it. We ask that the court declare the will invalid and that the estate be awarded to my client as Robert Bradford's only legal heir. The court intends to investigate the validity of the will. Are the witnesses present? Yes, sir. Arthur Judson. Here you are, Your Honor. You swear to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so helping God? I do. You knew the late Robert Bradford? Yes, sir. We were friends and neighbors for nearly ten years. I owned the spread just below his on Crystal Creek. Do you remember witnessing his will? I do. When I got to his ranch that day, he was sitting at the window looking out at the creek. He had the will folded up in his left hand. He told me to sit down. Worried about what Rex will do if he gets his hands on this ranch. I guess there's no doubt about what he'll do. He's talked about it enough. He'll damn Crystal Creek and make us pay so much for water rights that we'll have to sell out to him. Yes. Even if he is my brother, I must admit that he's greedy and unscrupulous. I'd like to be sure that he doesn't get the ranch. Which you've got nobody else to leave it to, have you? Yes, I have. And I've made a will. Judd, I'm leaving my ranch to the Lone Ranger. Judd, you're not at Robert Bradford ever seen the Lone Ranger? Well, I know. Not that I know of. Have you ever seen the Lone Ranger? No. No. No, of course you haven't. Neither you nor anyone else. And why? Because there is no such person. Does counsel intend to prove that the Lone Ranger doesn't exist? No one has ever seen him. Senor! Senor! Order! Order in the car! Senor, your honor, did not prove what the senor has said. Pancho has seen the Lone Ranger? Are you Pancho? Yes. Pancho Gonzales. Will you listen to your testimony? You swear to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help your God? Yes. Take the chair. Now, where was it that you saw the Lone Ranger? It was long away from here. I worked for a senior coal fax there near San Antonio. How did it happen? I tell you, one night I walked from the town. I feel so bad I sit down beside the trail and put my head in my hands. All of a sudden I hear horses. I look up and see a big white horse and a paint. Caromet is a mask man who rides a white horse. Who's over here? The mask man. Don't be afraid. I'm not an outlaw. I have no money. Are you hungry? No, senor. There must be something wrong. Oh, see, see, all the world is against Pancho. Oh, why don't you tell me about it? I might be able to help. Mio bambino, my little boy. Mi guelito is sick. Maria and Pancho are afraid that he will die. Well, suppose we give you a ride home, Pancho, and let Tano have a look at your boy. Ah, that's a good idea. Come on, I'll give you a hand up. Oh, see, senor. There you are. Come on, sir. Come on, let's count. And then our cabin, the Indian look at the boy. Oh, him pretty sick, he must have been. And my wife, Maria, she cried a little. Pancho, if only we can take him home. Where is your home, Pancho? In the mountains, in Las Cabras. It is across the river in Mexico. It's good for boy to go to mountain Kimasari. Well, why don't you take him there, Pancho? It is impossible. He and one little prayer at the shrine of the Madonna. And I know me where we'll be back. Just pack up your things and be ready to leave in the morning. I thought of it, I'll be here early. Thanks, Maria. Gracias. A prayer has been answered, Pancho. A prayer has been answered. Put it in the car. Put it. And this mask man kept his promise to you. See, senor, he and the Indian bring the wagon and they travel all the way to Las Cabras with us, into the mountains. I remember the day we'll reach the shrine. Maria kneel and pray. And the mask man bow his head. Oh, senor, I have seen the long ranger. What do you think of that testimony, Steele? Does Your Honor consider the testimony of an obviously superstitious peeing competent any more questions, Steele? Yes. Yes, I have. Pancho, you've testified that a mask man helped you get home to the mountains where your boy regained his hair. Now, what makes you think that mask man was the lone ranger? He wore a mask. His horse was called Silver. His friend's name was Tandoor. Did he ever tell you he was the lone ranger? No. That's all. If Pancho does not say his name, is Pancho still Pancho? You've answered the question, that's enough. That is all, Pancho. See, senor. Your Honor. Order in the court. If there are any further disturbances, I'll have the court cleared. Your Honor, I have no intention of creating a disturbance. But I feel that my testimony should be heard in this case. Did you know the deceased? No, Your Honor. My testimony concerns the lone ranger. And I'll let you decide for yourself whether I'm either simple, uneducated, or crazy. I don't see why we shouldn't hear what you have to say here. Sit down, please. Thank you, Your Honor. You're swear to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth? I do. What is your name? Benjamin Gregg. Your occupation? The past five years have been a rancher. And before then? United States Army. I served with both McClellan and Grant. After the war, I was in command of all the troops in the New Mexico and Arizona territories. You must be General Gregg. I am, Your Honor. I see. And what is it that you wanted to tell us, General? Simply that I knew the lone ranger. Proceed, General. Very well. My son was killed by the Apache two years ago. He was a captain in the cavalry station Fort Webster in Arizona. When the news reached me, I went out there at once. I borrowed a horse at the fort and rode out to Red Rock Canyon where my son was buried. I reached the canyon just as it was getting dark on the second day. I shouldn't have, but I lit a fire and I was sitting beside it, thinking, dreaming, perhaps. But I suddenly realized there were men near me. I looked up, shadows all around, and then Crazy Wolf himself stepped into the circle of light around the campfire. His carbine was leveled at my heart. This good. Crazy Wolf know you, you general, you prisoner now. We'll continue our lone ranger adventure in just a moment. Diving Doris is 13 and she is a diving queen. She can do a flip because she knows she's got go power from Cheerios. Yes, she's got go power. There she goes. She's feeling her Cheerios. Cheerios. That's a mighty good idea for you. Just make sure you eat a big bowl of Cheerios and milk every breakfast and you'll get go power too. Because a Cheerios breakfast is loaded with proteins, vitamins and minerals. The very things that help build healthy bodies, strong bones, good red blood and muscles. Why they'd be the sort of breakfast you'd go for even if they didn't taste so good. And they do taste delicious. Cheerios are a real oat cereal already cooked with that delicious toasted oat flavor. So that's for you. I'm tasting Cheerios and milk for go power. Eat them every morning and you'll hear... She's feeling her Cheerios. Now to continue. A courtroom was silent, tense and expectant as General Greg described his capture by the renegade Apache Crazy Wolf. I expected to be killed on the spot but Crazy Wolf had other plans for me. I was taken to his camp high in the hills. I was bound hand and foot and thrown into a teepee. I lay there all during the next day. That night there was a war dance. Finally most of the Indians rode out of camp. There was a guard sitting in front of the teepee. He was drunk and it wasn't long before he fell asleep. The camp was quiet. Then I heard a sound at the rear of the tent. There was a knife slitting the deer skin. Two men crawled in through the opening. They crawled past me and under my guard and then... All right, come on, gag him inside. That's far enough. Find him and gag him. How to do that? I'll have you free in a minute, General. Who are you? A friend. Are you wearing a mask? Yes. All set, come on. Lead the way. I'll follow with a general. We crawled through the opening in the rear of the teepee and then ran to the cover of the woods. The camp was high in the hills. Instead of starting down, we began to climb. And finally I should judge a thousand feet above the Indians camp. We came to a small clearing. There were three horses there. A white stallion, a paint and my own horse. The one Colonel Lacey had given me at the fort. Why, that's just not mine. Yes, General. Colonel brought him up here while the war dance was going on. I'm not sure that I could find my way back to the fort, but with a few directions... We'll show you the way when the right time comes. But not tonight, General. There's too much chance of running into Crazy Wolf in his raiding party. Now we'll wait here until tomorrow night. We waited all that day. But as soon as it was dark, we started down the wooded mountainside. I'm also. We passed the Indian encampments safely and finally we reached the valley. It stretched a hundred miles to the north and south. All right, let's go. It was twenty miles across the valley to the eastern hills and only an occasional sandstone butte broke the level surface of the basin. The fort was beyond the hills. There was a full moon. We saw no Indians. Not until we had nearly reached the far side of the valley. Then we saw them heading straight for us out of a wooded draw. I heard shots. Something hit me. That's all I remember. I opened my eyes. I was lying close to what seemed to be a wall of rock. The mask man was only a few feet away firing at something or someone below him. That takes care of them for a while. Where are we? On top of one of the buttes. The one we just passed from the Indian source. But how could we climb to the top? Look, the west slopes come all the way. I carried you up here while Tano held them off. As good as a fort. What about Tano? I opened fire as soon as I got up here. He got away with the horses. He'll bring his help from the fort. That's a long way. Yes. Are we surrounded? Now we are. But all we have to do is keep them from climbing up here. What's that? More Indians. A lot of them. I think they've got a lazy wolf. I must have been uncartured for a long time. Early morning. How about I mean it? Enough for this charge? Are they still coming? Yes. How many bullets? Six left. They have to come up single file. I'll wait for them. Six bullets. Then... The first one? The second. Did I really hear that? A bugle. Yes, you did. Can you see anything? No, I... Yes, General. The cavalry. There's Tano running at the head of the column. Looks like a whole troop. Heaven be praised. That was the end of Crazy Wolf's uprising, Your Honor. That was how I happened to meet the Lone Ranger. I sincerely hope that applause was not meant for me. General, did the scout who rescued you from Crazy Wolf tell you he was the Lone Ranger? Well, no, he didn't. That's all I wanted to know. That's all that's relevant to this case. The court will decide the relevance of the General's testimony, Countess. Yes, Your Honor. But I must plead that no evidence has been introduced, which establishes in any way that there actually is such a person as the Lone Ranger. My contention is that there is not. I asked you to declare Robert Bradford's will invalid. You will have my decision tomorrow. Court is adjourned. The judge had his supper at the hotel that night and then walked through the quiet back streets of the town to the little white cottage where he lived alone. When he reached it, he settled himself behind his desk and studied Robert Bradford's will. He studied it for a long time. Then his head nodded. He leaned back in his chair and in another moment he was asleep. As he slept, he dreamed. He was with Poncho crossing the Rio Grande and driving on toward the mountains of Las Cabras. He was with the general in Crazy Wolf's camp and on the high butte in the valley. And then clearly he heard a voice. Slowly he returned to consciousness. He opened his eyes. Was the door of the cottage open? Was there a shadowy figure standing in the doorway? Was the door closing now? A horse outside and then... Am I still dreaming? And then the judge saw something shining on his desk. Something made of silver. He leaned forward and picked it up. In the name of justice. On the following morning, the judge wrapped for order in the courtroom. Court has reached a decision in the case of Robert Bradford's will. Counsel for Rex Bradford has argued that because there is no such person as the lone ranger, the deceased has given evidence of being of unsound mind at the time the will was executed. In the opinion of this court, the contention has not been proved is the court ruling that the lone ranger does exist? The court is ruling that the lone ranger may exist, that the deceased was of a sound mind and that the will is valid. In that case, will the court set a time limit during which the lone ranger must claim his inheritance? If there is such a person, do you honestly expect him to walk into a court of law and identify himself? I haven't finished counsel. The phrase allergy of the will is not exact. So it is also the duty of this court to interpret it. The intention of the deceased becomes important. From a careful study of the document, the court has decided that the will merely sets up a trustee ship. That the lone ranger has been appointed to administer the estate for the public good. If the lone ranger is not available, then it is also in the power of this court to appoint another executor, General Greg. Will you accept the appointment? Yes, Your Honor. File the will. General, I'd like to see you in my chambers, please. Thank you, Your Honor. After you, General. Thank you. Your Honor, I'm a little disappointed. Why? Well, you've managed to save the small rancher's water supply, but it was by some legal interpretation that I don't understand exactly. It was perfectly sound. But don't you believe that I was telling the truth? Of course I do. Look at this. A silver bullet. That's right. Where did you get it? Who can tell, General? Perhaps I, too, have had the honor of beating the lone ranger. The lone ranger, a copyrighted feature of the lone ranger incorporated, is produced by Trandall Campbell Muir Incorporated. A part of the lone ranger is played by Brace Beamer, your announcer, Fred Foy. 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