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Mining Matters

📅 1888newspaper📜 public-domainid: s_silver-city-enterprise-1888-01-27-003-matters_15fv1q6📄 TEI
🔗 View originalhttps://archive.org/details/silvercity1888
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Entities extracted from this source (2)

Chunks (2)

chunk 1489 · paragraph 6
ast pro- duced more copper than any properties in the southwest, and are considered today valuable mines. ( 2 ) Mining Matters Pinos Altos Surely Coming to the Front as One of the Liveliest Camps in the Territory. Reminiscences of the Camp.Capt. A. J. Hulburt remarked to N. Bell, both of whom are among the oldest timers there, “That was a pretty sharp trick, that ‘Arrastra’ Johnson worked on Judge Bennett years ago in Silver City.” “Yes, it was pretty smooth,” replied Mr. Bell. “Old Arrastra” was a cunning old chap and always laying for suckers. He gathered up all the old babbit metal to be found around Pinos Altos mills, got it in the best shape possible, brought it down to Silver where Judge Bennett was engaged in the mercantile business, and to assist the advance- ment of mining interests, announced that he would purchase and pay cash for gold and silver bullion, retort and amalgam. “Arrastra” conceived the idea that he might be able to work off his babbit metail as silver retort, and ap- proaching the judge, offered it to him. It did not look exactly right, and the judge, who was paying about $1 per ounce for good clean re- tort, informed “Arrastra” that he would have to clean it before it was purchased.
chunk 68 · paragraph 30
ast pro- duced more copper than any properties in the southwest, and are considered today valuable mines. ( 2 ) Mining Matters Pinos Altos Surely Coming to the Front as One of the Liveliest Camps in the Territory. Reminiscences of the Camp.Capt. A. J. Hulburt remarked to N. Bell, both of whom are among the oldest timers there, “That was a pretty sharp trick, that ‘Arrastra’ Johnson worked on Judge Bennett years ago in Silver City.” “Yes, it was pretty smooth,” replied Mr. Bell. “Old Arrastra” was a cunning old chap and always laying for suckers. He gathered up all the old babbit metal to be found around Pinos Altos mills, got it in the best shape possible, brought it down to Silver where Judge Bennett was engaged in the mercantile business, and to assist the advance- ment of mining interests, announced that he would purchase and pay cash for gold and silver bullion, retort and amalgam. “Arrastra” conceived the idea that he might be able to work off his babbit metail as silver retort, and ap- proaching the judge, offered it to him. It did not look exactly right, and the judge, who was paying about $1 per ounce for good clean re- tort, informed “Arrastra” that he would have to clean it before it was purchased.