If I remember my tales from H.O. Yardley correctly, if somebody else bet the
farm you were given a day to raise enough money to meet it.
I didn't see anything like that in Yardley. In fact, my memory of Yardley is that there is no evidence that the games are not played table stakes. All the stories in the book that involve winning something other than the money on the table involve side bets voluntarily agreed to by both parties.
Ciaffone wrote at some point that he has researched this question extensively, and that he has never found a reliable account of a no-limit game not played for some form of table stakes. The "24 hours to raise the money" rule comes from the movie Big Hand for a Little Lady", and the whole idea of forcing someone to fold by betting more than their net worth comes from the movies, not from actual poker games.
Andy Latto andy.latto(deleted the rest)