Salt of the Earth by W. C. Tuttle

Salt of the Earth by W. C. Tuttle is a humorous Western short story written in the early 20th century. Set in a near-deserted mining settlement, it follows prospectors, bartenders, and drifters scheming over gold claims, with salting scams, tall talk, and comeuppance at the heart of the tale. In Painted Post, Sad “Slim” Sanderson and his down-at-heel cronies—Whispering Smith, Forty-Dollar Fisher, and Lonesome Larson—spot two apparent tenderfeet, Magpie Simpkins and Ike Harper, and try to fleece them by “salting” worthless claims (the Golden Glow, the Yaller Chuck, and the Web of Gold) with shotgun-blasted gold supplied by Lonesome. Each demonstration pans out as a mere “trace,” and a bungled midnight robbery ends with the gang mauled in the dark by the tenderfoots’ burros. In a final, all-in attempt, they shoot every last ounce of Lonesome’s poke into Slim’s claim—still nothing. The “greenhorns” then calmly weigh a hefty poke of gold they’ve recovered by outsmarting the salters, and leave a note exposing the trick—placer gold, black powder grains, and felt wads don’t belong in a quartz ledge—before riding off. The crooks are left broke, bruised, and wiser, their own greed having salted their downfall. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

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About this eBook

Author Tuttle, W. C. (Wilbur C.), 1883-1969
Title Salt of the Earth
Original Publication New York, NY: The Ridgway Company, 1918.
Series Title Produced from Adventure Magazine, May 3, 1918.
Credits Prepared by volunteers at BookCove (bookcove.net)
Language English
LoC Class PS: Language and Literatures: American and Canadian literature
Subject Short stories
Subject Western stories
Subject Gold miners -- Fiction
Subject Simpkins, Magpie (Fictitious character) -- Fiction
Subject Harper, Ike (Fictitious character) -- Fiction
Category Text
eBook-No. 78900
Release Date
Copyright Public domain in the USA.
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