Show HORSEMEN SEE HERE HOASEI1 I The horsemen of this region should j j r wake up after this fair closes There are at the fair some magnificent horses of heavy breeds The Percheron the Clydefl the Cleveland bay and the Suffolk Suf-folk of Mr line are as line as the world can produce so Is the greatPercheron of Mr Smith and there are many I others but they are all draft horses i must useful animals surely and most beautiful but save the little beauty I of Mr Pcnnlnclon the other of Smith and the little chestnut three years old I the display 1 of standardbred animals I is most dismal while so far as we could I see there Is not one blood horse in all I tho round Now while this situation I remains the Slate tall will not pay j that is not much In the article which we referred to from Scribner yesterday I Is one sentence which we beg to lay before Tribune readers It Is 1 this I There were GOOOO people there the j 1 I afternoon Star Pointer and Joe Patchen I paced The entrance feo was GO cents so that the fair could well afford to pay the owners of these horses 1000 for a single race That tells the whole story Salt Lake ought to have a track equal to any in I oUJht tho world then a Schedule should bC1 J I fixed for some dead honest races and it 1 1 should be advertised al home and In adjoining I ad-Joining States I any famous horses can be secured they should be How I many halfdollars would the men and women of Utah give to see The Abbott j go against Crcsceus Enough to buy t I the land build the track the grandstand grand-stand and the necessary stables would I they nol To make 0 State fair pay It must be made attractive We are I aware that there are people who object to racing because men make wagers on horse races Well there were men here I day before yesterday and yesterday I who were laying wagers on a boat race I 2500 miles away As to that there arc just two considerations The men do < ertons < I not learn to make wagers because of the races they acquired that accomplishment I accom-plishment long ago I was born in a1 J I great many of them Again no State I will ever be famed for tjie excellence I of Its horses where races arc forbidden forbid-den and the race that produces and I I uses the best horses is always a dominant domi-nant race of the earth While the present pres-ent rules are clung to the fairs will I probably just about pay expenses year I I after year but there will not be much enthusiasm about them for they contain i con-tain nothing to create any particular enthusiasm I |