Wild and Woolly is a 1932 American Western short animated film by Walter Lantz Productions.
Momentarily a gun-slinging rottweiler also comes to the bank, and causes a frenzy, even shoving an umbrella down an old woman's throat.
The chase continues until they reach a cabin which Oswald enters, but the house is occupied by a thin dog who is an accomplice of the rottweiler.
The punch sends Oswald bouncing off the walls until he knocks off a goat's skull that falls on and covers his head.
In Michael Fitzgerald's book Universal Pictures, it is mentioned as Wild and Wooley.