154 THE GOLDSMITHS. 



Nellie Walton. At Kingston, Lottie was unplaced to 

 Mountaineer, while she won in 2 403/2 at Chatham. 

 Both Lottie and Huntress were started at the Sep- 

 tember and October meetings at Prospect Park, 

 Brooklyn, the former being behind the money in a 

 race Dan Mace won with Arthur, and distanced by 

 Lady White, and the latter distanced by Fleety Gold- 

 dust, second to Bruno and third to Sensation. Hunt- 

 ress also won a free-for-all at Walcottville, Conn., 

 where she defeated Barney Kelly, Spotted Colt and 

 Kittie D., and was third to Hopeful in the 2 :2i class 

 at the Goshen October meeting. At this meeting Res- 

 cue was also awarded third premium in the race, A. J. 

 Feek won with George F. Smith, a bay gelding by 

 Niagara Chief and Lottie, after trotting a dead heat 

 with Lady Annie in 2:33*4* finished third to Feek's 

 horse, Bonner. He also defeated her the following 

 week at Poughkeepsie. 



1875. 



He trained her and raced her to lower the mark. 



All of the racing material in the Walnut Grove 

 Farm stable was in charge of James H. Goldsmith 

 when the bell rang in 1875, and from that date until 

 the stock passed under the hammer of Peter C. Kel- 

 logg & Co., at the American Horse Exchange, New 

 York, March 1 and 2, 1887, he drove all of his father's 

 horses with the exception of a few races in the fall of 

 1879 an d the horses that started in 1880, of which men- 

 tion will be made at the proper time. The returns for 



