170 THE GOLDSMITHS. 



The next starts were at Dover, Del., where Driver 

 won a class race and Judgment finished second in two 

 events to Sherman Morgan. Bateman was also 

 started the same week at Lewistown, Pa., in the free- 

 for-all and won it. These meetings were followed by 

 two weeks' racing at Belmont and Point Breeze 

 Parks, Philadelphia, at which James H. Goldsmith 

 started five horses in ten races, his returns for the 

 fortnight being one first with Driver, three seconds 

 with Bateman, a second and a third with Powers, a 

 fourth with Bateman, while Alley was distanced by 

 Trampoline and Bateman unplaced in the race that 

 Hambletonian Mambrino won at Belmont. 



The next starts were at Prospect Park, Brooklyn, 

 where Driver won the 2 124 class and Powers saved 

 his entrance in a race won by Lysander Boy. Driver 

 also won a race at Providence the following week, 

 while Powers trotted second to Kansas Chief and 

 Judgment was defeated by Richmond and Noontide, 

 the daughter of Harold, whose dam, Midnight, was 

 again represented at Narragansett Park in 1884, when 

 Jay Eye See, her foal by Dictator, cut the world's 

 record for trotters to 2:10. During the balance of the 

 season Driver trotted second to Darby at Fleetwood 

 Park, New York, and Bateman, after finishing second 

 to Hambletonian Rattler at Richmond, Va., won at 

 Norfolk, Va., on November 14, just six months from 

 the date that he began his campaign at Suffolk Park, 

 Philadelphia. Huntress was also taken up again in 

 September and started by John Alden Goldsmith at 

 Ogdensburg and Malone, N. Y., where she was 

 second to Clifton Boy, and in two races at Montreal, 

 where she was again beaten by Clifton Boy and Ben 



