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In the standard LR program closing, the masked man yells "Hi-Yo Silver" and Tonto follows with "Get 'em up Scout". And Tonto expresses pleasure about that name - "Good Scout. However, in the Septemepisode #874 titled Border Dope Smuggling (sometimes titled Sheriff Sanders and the Smugglers), the paint horse helped uncover the leader of a smuggling ring, and there is some conversation about the paint horse being a "sure enough good scout". In several subsequent shows, Tonto simply referred to his new horse as "paint horse". "White Feller" remained with the Chief to recover.
The lone ranger rides again movie#
Scout (not yet given that name) was presented to Tonto by Chief Thundercloud (not the movie Victor Daniels/Chief Thunder Cloud, but simply a character of that name in the radio show). Tonto received the horse (to be known as Scout) in an Augradio program titled Four-Day Ride (episode #862), and the hoss was a gift to replace his earlier horse "White Feller" (White Fellah). The earliest show that I can recall where "White Feller" (White Fellah) is mentioned as the name of Tonto's horse is the Maprogram titled The Apache Kid (episode #795). Tidbits on the Tonto character and his steeds, "White Feller" (White Fellah) and "Scout": Tonto was a member of the Potawatomi tribe, as stated in a number of radio shows and comic books. Livingston used the mask quite often in his films - he did this when starring in the Three Mesquiteers series at Republic as well as at Producers Releasing Corporation (PRC) in the 1940s when he replaced George Houston as the Lone Rider. Bob Livingston's real name was Robert Edgar Randall, and he had a brother named Jack Randall (real name: Addison Owen Randall) who also was a cowboy star in some oaters for Monogram Pictures in the late 1930s and early 1940s.