1890 — PAMLICO 225 



and Miss Pauley were each awarded third premiums, 

 and Robert M. Taylor behind the money, as usual. 

 The next stop was at Philadelphia, where, during the 

 July meetings at the Philadelphia Driving Park and 

 Belmont, Goldsmith won the Bellevue House Stake 

 with Pamlico from Suisun and Andante, reducing his 

 record to 2:17^2, an eight-heat race with Simmocolon, 

 cutting his mark to 2:20^4, a first and a second with 

 Mambrino Maid, a mark of 2:1834 being placed after 

 her name in one of the events, a second and a fourth 

 with Plush, a second with Gretna, the Mambrino Dud- 

 ley mare making her mark of 2 127% in the race, a 

 third with Stephanie, while Miss Pauley and Robert 

 M. Taylor were outside. 



After cutting out the weaker members of his 

 stable, Goldsmith dropped into the Grand Circuit at 

 Pittsburg, where he won with Mambrino Maid, Sim- 

 mocolon and Mamie Wood, while Pamlico finished 

 second to Rosaline Wilkes in the free-for-all. Daw- 

 son was saved for Cleveland, where he was beaten by 

 McDoel. At Buffalo he won again by the narrowest 

 kind of a margin, or, as a local reporter remarked, "by 

 an eyebrow." He trotted his last race at Rochester 

 in the 2:21 class, which was won by McDoel, with 

 Miss Alice second, Tariff third, and the Mansfield 

 gelding fourth. 



On the trip down the line Mambrino Maid, 

 Pamlico, Simmocolon and Mamie Wood proved 

 the props of the Goldsmith stable. The Mambrino 

 Startle mare won at Cleveland, where she trotted in 

 2:17^4, Buffalo, Rochester and Springfield, and was 

 second to Mocking Bird at Poughkeepsie, Hartford 

 and Philadelphia. Pamlico won at Rochester, where 

 he made a record of 2:16^, and Springfield, was 



