224 THE GOLDSMITHS. 



the regular meeting, Pamlico, Dawson, Simmocolon 

 and Mambrino Maid were marked as winners, Miss 

 Pauley saved her entrance, while Plush and Robert 

 M. Taylor were unplaced. Dawson picked up an- 

 other race at Albany the next week, while Plush also 

 won the 2 :20 class, after a seven-heat contest with 

 Yorktown Belle, Maud Muller and Golden Rod, in 

 which all of them won heats, and Simmocolon trotted 

 third to Suisun in the Clay Stake, Alicante being be- 

 tween him and the winner. 



James H. Goldsmith won live of the nine races 

 programmed for the June meeting at Mystic Park, Bos- 

 ton, in 1890, with Pamlico, Simmocolon, Miss Pauley 

 and Dawson, the last named having two events placed 

 to his credit, while he was also second to Fearnaught 

 with Mambrino Maid, and unplaced with Richmond, 

 Jr., and Robert M. Taylor, both of them being dis- 

 tanced. In her race with Fearnaught, Mambrino 

 Maid reduced her record to 2 122 and showed her 

 ability to beat 2 :20, much to the surprise of those who 

 branded her a self-willed hussy that was marked for 

 life when she was sent away from Lexington with a 

 mark of 2:23^. When Goldsmith sampled her he 

 found that she was one of the kind that must be let go 

 when they want to, but as she stepped off good gaited 

 and had plenty of speed, it did not take him long to 

 mould her into a first-class piece of racing material. 



After stopping at Hartford, where Simmocolon 

 and Dawson won, Plush trotted second to Fear- 

 naught, Mambrino Maid fourth to Jean Valjean, and 

 Richmond, Jr., a horse which his brother brought on 

 from California, fourth to Molly J., the Goldsmith 

 stable was shipped to Poughkeepsie, where Pamlico 

 and Mambrino Maid won their engagements, Plush 



