40 MEMOIR. 



believed it. Now we keep asking ourselves in a dazed 

 sort of way if what we saw with our eyes can really be 

 true. Smuggler first saw the light within the limits of the 

 Buckeye State. He journeyed West obscure and looked 

 upon as a menial. Today his fame is as wide as the 

 world, and he wears the laurel which once wreathed the 

 neck of Goldsmith Maid. Wonder not that the people of 

 Ohio should swell with pride when they point to him and 

 his history. His triumph was in the face of obstacles 

 which were truly formidable. 



' 'How did you enjoy yourself?' queried the President 

 from the Judges' stand after the tumult had subsided. 

 The lady, one of Cleveland's fairest daughters, well ex- 

 pressed the general feeling in her answer from the grand 

 stand : T am so glad and yet so sorry.' Glad that she 

 had hailed the new king and sorry that she had seen the 

 old queen lay down her crown." 



Cleveland, O., July 27, 1876. 



Purse $4,000, free-for-all-trotting. 



H. S. Russell's b. s., Smuggler by 

 Blanco (Marvin) 2 5 1 1 1 



Budd Doble's b. m., Goldsmith Maid 

 by Alexander's Abdallah (Doble)... 1 1 2 2 2 



C. S. Green's b. m., Lucille Golddust 



by Golddust (Green) 42333 



W. M. Humphrey's ch. g., Judge Ful- 



lerton by Edward Everett (Mace).. 53444 



H. C. Goodrich's b. g., Bodine by 



Volunteer (Johnson) 3 4 5 5 5 



TIME. 



Quarter. Half. Three-Quarters. Mile. 



34% 1:07^ 1:41^ 2:15^ 



34*A 1:08 1:42 2:17% 



ZA l /z 1:08 1:42 2:i6>j: 



34 l A i:og l / 2 i:44^ 2:19^ 



33 1:08 >£ 1:43^ 2:17^ 



