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158
1
LAW 21
they
hadtoreturntoSanFrancisco.The
jewels
that
Tiffany
had
examined
they
leftwith
Harpending
for
safekeeping.
Severalweeks
later,
a
mannamedLouis
Janin,
the
best
miningexpert
in
the
country,
metthe
prospectors
inSanFrancisco.
_]ani.n
wasaborn
skeptic
whowasdeterminedtomakesurethattheminewasnotafraud.
Accompanyingjanin
were
Harpending,
and severalotherinterestedfi~
nanciers.Aswiththe
previousexpert,
the
prospectors
ledtheteam
through
a
complex
seriesof
canyons,completelyconfusing
themastotheirwhere
abouts.
Arriving
atthe
site,
thefinancierswatchedinamazementas
janin
dug
thearea
up,leveling
anthills,
turning
over
boulders,
and
finding
emer-
alds,rubies,
sapphires,
andmostofalldiamonds.The
dig
lasted
eightdays,
and
by
the
end,
wasconvinced:Hetoldtheinvestorsthat
they
now
possessed
therichestfieldin
mininghistory.
“Withahundredmenand
propermachinery,"
he
told
them,
“I
would
guarantee
to
send
outone
mil
liondollarsindiamonds
everythirtydays."
Returning
toSanFranciscoafew
days
later,
Ralston,
Harpending,
and
company
actedfasttoforma
$10
million
corporation
of
private
investors.
First,however,
they
hadto
get
ridofArnoldandSlack.Thatmeant
hiding
their
excitement—theycertainly
didnotwant
torevealthefield’s
real
value.So
theyplayed
possum.
Whoknowsif
_]anin
is
right,they
toldthe
prospectors,
themine
may
notbeasrichaswethink.This
just
madethe
prospectorsangry.Trying
adifferent
tactic,
thefinancierstoldthe
two
men
thatif
they
insistedon
having
sharesinthe
mine,
they
wouldend
upbeing
fleeced
by
the
unscrupuloustycoons
andinvestors
who
wouldrunthecor-
poration;
better,
they
said,
totakethe
$700,000
already
offerecl—anenor»
moussumatthetime—and
put
their
greed
aside.Thisthe
prospectors
seemedto
understand,
and
theyfinallyagreed
totakethe
money,
inreturn
signing
the
rights
tothesiteover
to
the
financiers,
and
leavingmaps
to
it.
News
of
themine
spread
like
wildfire.
Prospectors
fanned
out
across
Wyoming.
Meanwhile
Harpending
and
groupbegan
spending
themillions
they
hadcollectedfromtheir
investors,
buyingequipment,hiring
thebest
meninthe
business,
and
furnishing
luxuriousofficesinNewYorkandSan
0
Francisco.
Afewweeks
later,
ontheirfirst
trip
backtothe
site,
they
learnedthe
hardtruth:Nota
single
diamondor
ruby
wastobefound.Itwasallafake.
They
weremined.
Harpending
had
unwittingly
luredtherichestmenin
theworldintothe
biggest
scamofthe
century.
Interpretation
ArnoldandSlack
pulled
offtheir
stupendous
connot
byusing
a
fake
engi-
neeror
bribing
Tiffany:
Allofthe
experts
hadbeenreal.Allofthemhon-
estly
believedintheexistenceofthemineandinthevalueofthe
gems.
Whathadfooledthemallwas
nothing
elsethanArnoldandSlackthem-
selves.Thetwomenseemedtobesuch
rubes,
such
hayseeds,
so
naive,
that
no
oneforaninstanthadbelievedthem
capable
ofanaudaciousscam.
The
prospectors
had
simply
observedthelawof
appearing
more
stupid
thanthemark-—thedeceiver’sFirstCommandment.