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πŸ“… 1891newspaperπŸ“œ public-domainid: s_silver-city-enterprise-1891-08-01-005-on_0cdahrrπŸ“„ TEI
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chunk 882 Β· paragraph 1049
recious stones whose value cannot be stated as they have not yet been ap- praised. It is something enormous, however* The excavation about the castle is not yet fin- ished and a discovery of new treasure is not improbable. An Old Timer’s Biography From the National Republican. Col. Albert J. Fountain, department com- mander, is one of the most prominent characters on the southwestern frontier. He is a born leader of men, and as a gallant soldier, a suc- cessful lawyer, a brilliant lawyer, a keen, for- cible writer, and a public-spirited citizen, he has no superior. Col. Fountain was born in New York in 1838. He migrated to California in 1854, and at an early age successfully engaged in literary work on leading daily papers on the Pacific coast. When the war broke out he en- listed as a private in Co. E 1st Cal. He was soon promoted to be first sergeant, and marched with his company, as a part of Carleton's column, from California across the deserts of Arizona and New Mexico to the Rio Grande. For gallant conduct in a fight with Apaches Fountain wascommissioned second lieutenant. He served in New Mexico during the war. Upon his regiment being mustered out in August, 1864 he was commissioned as captain of cavalry, and assign- ed to the command of a company of scouts and guides against hostile Navajoes.