I think you are overcomplicating things here by having a Dockerfile (I could be wrong if your needs are actually more complex than what you have shown, if so please provide further information and I will edit this answer). When you run ADD in the Dockerfile you are copying your code into the built image but you never copy the built object out again (and in fact there is no way I know to do that using a Dockerfile). There is no 'nice' way to get the resulting binary out of the image.
I think something simpler like this command will suit your needs better (run it after changing to the directory containing your code):
docker run -it -v "$(pwd):/source" jimmycuadra/rust cargo build --release --target=x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
This mounts the current directory as /source in the container (which is the default WORKDIR for the image you are using) and then builds your code, meaning the resulting executable will end up in the current folder:
ls target/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/release/
There is a slight problem with this - everything in the container runs as root and therefore the build artifacts get created with the owner set to the root user. This may cause issues for you trying to modify/remove them on your host later. To get around that you may be able to use something like this:
docker run -it -v "$(pwd):/source" jimmycuadra/rust sh -c "cargo build --release --target=x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu && chown -R $(id -u):$(id -g) ."
I say 'may' because I'm not sure if that will work on a Mac. I'm sure there is a way to achieve the same thing though.