The Coming of Cassidy by Clarence E. Mulford Buck Peters put everything he owned into the Bar-20 and thought he could make a go of it. It looked pretty good too, until he fell in with that gang of renegade buffalo hunters. There were after his spread, his cattle, his life. And they swore to let nothing stand in their way. And then they met a cowhand named Cassidy... Bar-20 by Clarence E. Mulford Cassidy could fan a gun like a Billy the Kid. Six rounds in three seconds was his slowest time. No one in the state of Texas could beat him. That was, until he met Slim Travennes, head of the Sandy Creek Vigilante Committee. Slim was snake-fast. "Death with a little skin wrapped around it," was the way the tinhorn in Waco described him. No man could go up against him and live. Hoppy could stand or die. He had no other choice. At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.
This loosely themed collection of tales about classic cowpoke Hopalong Cassidy and the rough-and-tumble crew of the Bar-20 Ranch is a must-read for fans of golden-age Westerns.
These are Clarence Mulford’s first three Cassidy novels, stories that helped to establish the genre conventions of the Western in the first decade of the twentieth century, and which introduced the famous character, Hopalong Cassidy.
The Original Books Behind the Famous Movies Hero (Including Bar-20, The Coming of Cassidy and Others, ... He was interrupted, however, forgot to finish a verse as he had intended, and jumped to one side as a stone bounced off his leg.
"Hey, you cow-wrastlers!" said a not unpleasant voice, and they turned suspiciously as it continued: "You've shore got to hang up them guns with the hotel clerk while you cavorts around on this range. This is fence country.
Includes three great western novels by Clarence Mulford. Books 1, 2, and 3 in the Hopalong Cassidy series. Hopalong Cassidy Western Collection Volume 1 Books 1,2,3Bar 20, The Orphan, The Coming of Cassidy
It'd have to bea cow to show Texas,” grinned Dad Johnson,who,it appeared, also had an imagination and wanted people to knowit. “Youcuttin' in on this teetateet?” demanded Jimmy, dodging the compliments of the sleepy individual.
Mr. Travennes hastily laidmusicaside andtook up elocution ashedodged another stone andwished that the mesquiteloving crank had put on a roof. In evading the projectile he let hissombrero appear on a level with the desert, and the hum of ...
Hopalong Cassidy In the ranchlands of Texas, it's best to get along with your neighbors.
It 'd have to be a cow to show Texas," grinned Dad Johnson, who, it appeared, also had an imagination and wanted people to know it. "You cuttin' in on this teet-a-teet?" demanded Jimmy, dodging the compliments of the sleepy individual.
Buck Peters put everything he owned into the Bar-20 and thought he could make a go of it.