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Table of Contents & Introduction

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10
INTRODUCTION
The " Blue Ridge sapphire," or " Georgia marvel," as it was called in the reports, was found in 1883 in a brook in the Blue Ridge Mountains in Georgia. It was estimated to be worth about $50,000 by the owner, he having been assured of its genuine­ness as a sapphire by two Southern jewelers, who had arrived at its valuation by computing its weight. Anything scratched by a file is sure to be pronounced glass, whether it is glass, topaz, or some other equally hard stone; while, on the other hand, the common fallacy prevails that anything that a file cannot scratch is a genuine stone, even though it may be only glass. In this in­stance the gem proved to be a piece of rolled blue bottle-glass, of which fact its owner could be convinced only when he saw a platinum wire coated with a melted fragment.
Another wonder was a stone weighing 9 ounces, plowed up near Gibsonville, Guilford County, N. C, which was pro­nounced a genuine emerald by some local expert, who tested it, and with the microscope showed that it contained various small diamonds. Its value was estimated up in the thousands, and $ 1,000 was reported to have been refused for it by its owner, who, as it was believed to be the largest known emerald, expected that it would bring him a fortune. Being, therefore, too valuable to be entrusted to an express company, he put himself to the ex­pense of a trip to New York, where his prize proved on examina­tion to be a greenish quartz crystal, filled with long hair-like crys­tals of green byssolite or actinolite, on which were series and strings of small liquid cavities that, glistening in the sun, had led to the included diamond theory. The best offer that he received for the stone was $5.
The "Wetumpka Ruby," from Elmore County, Ala., was supposed to be a ruby of six ounces weight, " after cutting away all the roughness." Owing to its assumed value, it was deposited in the Wetumpka bank vault, and on no consideration would be sent to any one on approbation. A small fragment sent to New York City proved the stone to be only a garnet and from its quality, of no gem value, even if a ruby.
Another is a crystal found near Danbury, N. C, which was examined and pronounced to be a genuine diamond by the local jewelers, and valued at $7,000.
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