Let 'er buck, a story of the passing of the old West . —dives head first—seizes thesteer by its horns, though it is running like a deer. He is now,if he maintains his hold, carried or dragged, as in the case ofFrank McCarroll in Catch as Catch Can. Sometimes a manfalls short of the horns and gets a nasty fall. Sometimes heover-reaches, accidentally or on purpose and thus hoolihans thesteer by causing a complete somersault. This, however, is notpermitted at Pendleton and disqualifies a contestant. All ques-tions of cleanness of throw and fall lie entirely with the judgeswhose decision is final.


Let 'er buck, a story of the passing of the old West . —dives head first—seizes thesteer by its horns, though it is running like a deer. He is now,if he maintains his hold, carried or dragged, as in the case ofFrank McCarroll in Catch as Catch Can. Sometimes a manfalls short of the horns and gets a nasty fall. Sometimes heover-reaches, accidentally or on purpose and thus hoolihans thesteer by causing a complete somersault. This, however, is notpermitted at Pendleton and disqualifies a contestant. All ques-tions of cleanness of throw and fall lie entirely with the judgeswhose decision is final. The hazer as he is shown, Bidding the Steer Goodbye,assists in keeping the steer on the track and stands by with lassoto keep the bulldogger from being gored in case of also assists the bulldogger, who in this case is Art Acord,in getting up and away from the steer after he has bulldoggedit. The hazer is holding the struggling brute down by the mostapproved method, the tail and horns, then on releasing him,both run for their Photo by Charles Wellington Furlong •Catch as Catch Can


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectfrontie, bookyear1921