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    Chapter XLVI - Page 2

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    toward noon, the
    figures were all in the purser's hands in sealed envelopes. Smith was
    serene and happy, for he had been bribing the engineer. But another
    party won the prize! Smith said:

    "Here, that won't do! He guessed two miles wider of the mark than I did."

    The purser said, "Mr. Smith, you missed it further than any man on board.
    We traveled two hundred and eight miles yesterday."

    "Well, sir," said Smith, "that's just where I've got you, for I guessed
    two hundred and nine. If you'll look at my figgers again you'll find a 2
    and two 0's, which stands for 200, don't it?--and after 'em you'll find a
    9 (2009), which stands for two hundred and nine. I reckon I'll take that
    money, if you please."

    The Gould & Curry claim comprised twelve hundred feet, and it all
    belonged originally to the two men whose names it bears. Mr. Curry owned
    two thirds of it--and he said that he sold it out for twenty-five hundred
    dollars in cash, and an old plug horse that ate up his market value in
    hay and barley in seventeen days by the watch. And he said that Gould
    sold out for a pair of second-hand government blankets and a bottle of
    whisky that killed nine men in three hours, and that an unoffending
    stranger that smelt the cork was disabled for life. Four years afterward
    the mine thus disposed of was worth in the San Francisco market seven
    millions six hundred thousand dollars in gold coin.

    In the early days a poverty-stricken Mexican who lived in a canyon
    directly back of Virginia City, had a stream of water as large as a man's
    wrist trickling from the hill-side on his premises. The Ophir Company
    segregated a hundred feet of their mine and traded it to him for the
    stream of water. The hundred feet proved to be the richest part of the
    entire mine; four years after the swap, its market value (including its
    mill) was $1,500,000.

    An individual who owned twenty feet in the Ophir mine before its great
    riches were revealed to men, traded it for a horse, and a very sorry
    looking brute he was, too. A year or so afterward, when Ophir stock went
    up to $3,000 a foot, this man, who had not a cent, used to say he was the
    most startling example of magnificence and misery the world had ever
    seen--because he was able to ride a sixty-thousand-dollar horse--yet

    could not scrape up cash enough to buy a saddle, and was obliged to
    borrow one or ride bareback. He said if fortune were to give him another
    sixty-thousand-dollar horse it would ruin him.

    A youth of nineteen, who was a telegraph operator in Virginia on a salary
    of a hundred dollars a month, and who, when he could not make out German
    names in the list of San Francisco steamer arrivals, used to ingeniously
    select and supply substitutes for them out of an old Berlin city
    directory, made
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