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Show race horse of the highest class. In the stud he bred many winners, including PRETTY AllClllCTEOTS Oneida Fusilleer, and Midg-lePotentate, st-He nearly seventeen hands THE GOVERNMENT lVIGHT NOW high and ighs almost 1,400 pounds. NEW YORK HAS TWO PROMIxt the immense shoulders, A A HAND. TAKE glance NENT PLANNERS. short, powerful back, and tremendous quarters will convince any horseand Quality Can man or student of the horse, that he is The Misses Haad' and Gannon Are Very fpeed, Snbstance, Size Never be BlendedT By the Present big enough to be put to any use for Successful at Their Profession and Method! of Breeding: Austria Alone which the horse is intended. In addi- cure their future. It will also prove that women have succeeded in still another BEEEDING OF HOUSES- - y. ds LAMENT-abl- e T IS A that fact horses American have lost their , in- dividual! t y and that many breed-- e r a n pursuing 1 fads have departed from the paths of reason to such an extent average that the product of American studs below is that of could be almost any other country that named. It was a desire to excel in the breeding of the horse for general purposes which lias caused the Austrian government to send commissioners to this country to secure specimens of the trotting family. Austria already has the finest horse in the world for carriage purposes, and the standard is so high that visiters can scarcely distinguish between those kept for hire and those owned by private individuals, the of the" carriage alone being gor-geousn- ess the guide. For many years the Austrian government has been judiciously blending the most desirable strains of blood that can be found, and as a result they have a type that is fixed and desirable. The fifty mares and half dozen stallions purchased in this country within the last two months will be mated with the pick of the products of the Austrian etud, and those that do n6t come up to expectations will be discarded. American faddists have pursued their hobbies until theyj have horses tW. are horses only in name. The Western product Is heavy and coarse, leaden of foot, and so dull of comprehension that main strength is the chief Th requisite in handling them. southerner, save where the paeer is propagated, seems to take more kindly to the mule, and his horses are generally poor specimens indeed of a noble family. Kentucky, the home of many thoroughbreds and trotters, furnishes some splendid specimens of a breed of which everybody Is fond, but there are many monstrosities, and it is sad to say that in the main everything is sacrificed to speed, and where size, beauty and soundness are found as well as the very necessary it is oftadjunct of en the result of accident, as little care has been taken in the mating or the blending of families that would be dej -- blue-blood- ed ess sirable. The thoroughbred race horse In his perfection Is big enough to log with, to plough with, or to haul the grist to mill. He should be 16 hands or more in height, and given a blooded horse of that stature, with the hard, fine, dense bone of that .breed, be will put a dozen i i HAYDEN EDWARDS. dunghills into their graves. No Clydesdale will live half a By carefully mating selected thoroughbred sires with the common mare. It would not take many generations to make the breed uniform, It was said some time ago that one of the objects of the Jockey club would be the farming of thoroughbred stallions of the proper kind, thus giving the general public 'aft opportunity to? establish a breed of horses that would have size enough and quality enotigh for any farmer purpose. It took the Canadian some time to learn on ' which side his bread was. buttered, although he had as early as 1860 a type to follow. The English soldiers brought ma4y thoroughbreds to Canada, and the benefit of the blood imported then is apparent in some localities to this day, 'although for some years there was danger of the type beihg entirely: destroyed; through Injudicious importation of the Clydesdale and Percherom Thej day of the heavy horse has passed, however, and the horse that brings the money nowadays is the cross of the thoroughbred I The Bire . and the common mare. Perchetfbn or mares can be Clydesdale utilized .to advajitage, asj experience has demonstrated that some of the best high jumpers, hunters ;aiyl harness horses that have been placed on the New York market in the last few years have been the result of method of breeding. Thousands of horses are shipped monthly from Ontario to England and to America andj the supply will, in" the immediate future fail to i come up to the demand. In the opinion of some experts there should be something done jby the American Government to establish a breed that would come somewhere near the Austrian standard. The trotter does not .always have size!, and many trotters need artificial appliances to bring, out speed. What is wanted Is the horse that will bend his knee naturally, possess pual-lt- y, size and substance, andj, best of all, bave enouFh sneed to make him. when necessary.a train catcher. If the Jockey Club would cooperate with (the farmers of adjacent States and send them some or. the broken-dow- n stallions that have the necessary qualifications, in time and in a short time at benefits would be seen in thethatthe streets. A great many persons have an idea that the thoroughbred is fragile, and that he has not sufficient size and fcone for the heavier tasks that have to be performed by his coarser relative. Two illustrations ai- given to disprove this theory. Hay den. Edwards, a son of imported Prince Charlie land Nannie Boy, by Glenelg, i3 one of the largest thoroughbreds in the wprld. He is owned by John E. McDonald of New York, and while he never raced, it was known before he met with aa accident nsjiway pouiwon mat hj was a j ! . . ; ;. , tht ; i ; . : - -- . their laurels if they want to keep pa, with Canada. There are half a dozen thoroughbred stallions In the stud in Canada to one in this country. C. F. RIPLEY. THE TURF. Arion will not be raced this year. He iu to make a full stud season. Directly is surely the champion of the month of January. Improved records better than 2:08 are scarce these times. In case the legislature of Connecticut g passes a law which will permit of on race tracks, as is now expected, a new mile trotting track, to cost over $100,000, is to be built in New Haven, Conn. The owners of the mile track at Red Oak, Iowa, have secured the House Review Standard stakes of $10,000 and $5,000 each, for the June, 1895, meeting. The Iowa association was the highest bider among several. Entries to close for the stakes March 1. Nearly all the western track owners appear to be following the lead of C. W. Williams in opening stake races ofor the trotting season of 1895 on the plan. Under this system owners of horses are not required to pay their entries, but are given credit until the day preceding the race, when, if accounts are not settled, all delinpuent debtors can be suspended from every prominent trotting track in America. The plan is well known on the running turf, but it has never found favor among trotting clubs until this year. The Duke of Portland has bought the great Australian race horse, Carbine for $65,000 in gold. He is by Musket, out of Mersey, and has shown himself to be the greatest racer ever bred In Australia. His best performance on the track was made in a two mile race for the Melbourne Cup of 1890, In which, with 1451b. up.he defeated a field of thirty-eighorses, and won the event in 3:284, the fastest race record. As a two year old Carbine was purchased by Daniel O'Brien, the Antipodean turfman, who paid $4,000 in gold for pool-selln- forfeit-entrance-f- 5 - - J I Tux BUldb will continue in numbci to publish brands under yearly contract at nominal price. The advantage to 111. the ttockralsei! . of- arail. .. . 1.1 I . 1 BLACKSMITH Have Accomplished Great Things In House and Tenement Designs. A. A. ; j ! i New York Correspondence. . , , ; i, RCHITE CTURE is a paying profession usurped by men, in which the world thinks the gentler sex! would not succeed. However, members of the feminine gender seem to think otherwise, for they are loath to adopt its chances. Who could plan a commodious dwelling house better than a woman? Who should know the conveniences of pantry, stairways, closets, etc., more thoroughly than the one whose knowledge has to keep the establishment in running order? Who more efficiently than a housewife should plan the essentials of good housewifery? That in the present time a man does more completely comprehend these things is due to training more than inheritance or Intuition. The difficulty has been that until the last two years little inducement in the way of practical training has been offered for girls. The advantages for architectural perfection have all been given to the men. Even the opening of such a department in the School of Applied Design was a supply to create a demand and the small class of five women who Joined were persuaded into it. Men who had so long dominated the profession laughed at the feminine sport, as they termed it. Their experience went to show that women designed beautiful buildings that were not in the least practicable. Therefore, when the class opened, the architects who were elected as tutors said that the girls would be given the benefit of practical work. Now the men are looking with some degree of admiration upon the work already accomplished by these very women. Miss Hands and Miss Gannon, who have an office in New York, are trying to bring themselves more quickly into prominence by solving the tenement house problem. Mr. Richard Watson Gilder of the Century has taken both young women with him on investigating tours through the slum districts. Miss Hands and Miss Gannon have talked to tenement house keepers and secured their views on necessary improvements. They have also taken, counsel with the College Settlement women, who, after long battling, are fa- - THE! I i DESERET HOUSE. i il- ' al i under slit In left j .. ear.-lil"- i i City and county Newspapers from all parti or Ore specimens from Detroit and else where. Erery thing RESPECTABLE. PUEEST WATER ON EARTH. ANTEED CUBE for all Diseases of the Kidneys and Bladder ... Testimonials on Application. . MRS. J. P. GIBBS, Prop. jji'js-bjKjirr- , Thurman Dei snnp: Jno Ai:""-V- " ft Raoe .'Cricket Mountains and Lower Sevier. Address, Under slit In right, under slit in, left ear. Range: Crlektt : rrrrr i JC3, y n "rri - .n. jR.-TTfi - Address, : i Mountains a4 Lower Serler. W, Water Right Cases a Specialty. Deseret,. UUh in First National Bank Building, tion at the Beaux Arts in Paris. u tan. j?royo uny, The cost of a course of study in arch itecture is small. Two seasons at $50 each complete the work, with six months in elementary drawing. Then it is wiser to go into an architect's office for a year of work, to gain actual ' Miners and Sheep Men. experience. JOCELYN DAVIES. DON'T FORGET that T Hava a mm. Address, pletie line of MERCHANDISE and SHE PRACTICES LAW. smtaDie for your need?. An Iowa Women Boldly Enters Upon a SHEEP DIP a SDedaltv. PORTRAV. ELERS I have COMFORTABLE Legal Career. MEALS AT POPULAR Horned Stock, QUARTERS. Dubuque (Iowa) Correspondence. on same brand PRICES. Grain and Hay, Stabling. Mrs. John B. Utt of Dyersvllle, Duright thigh. PELTS BOUGHT. buque county, recently admitted to RANGE: practice in Iowa courts, was born in Lower Seyier. this oity. She is the daughter of one of Dubuque's first settlers and most es- - Drum Address, Springs, Detroit Mining District. KU-fjfLiiu- lllW II" DesereL Utah. m MISS HANDS. i 1' Jos Dewsnnj mrntwm r Rooms J -- "I ' UTAH. S of their haughty brethren by each having been invited to Join the Sketch club of New York and to enter the competi- :. IF?; right, under slit in left ear. i ATTORNEYS-AT-LA- ; tipper slit in Wormwood & i : ? Deseret, ' Utah. Address, A Flowing Well of This Water Is a GUAB uncut tvang:e: iWta Mountains and low utan. On the Premises. "'4. I . JotiniY Smltb Horse Grower i and Dealer, ATTENTION! House Mountains and Lower Serler. Caste, Utah. s . A. M. LAIRD. -- - - - Deseret, Utah, LJ ,. ee prerson Brcs FRANK WHITEHEAD, Breeders sb4 klealers in Short hern Dnrhams. iBorses same brand an left tthlgh. Cattle slope im j Upper each ear. Range river arid monntalaiL I j Manufacturer of Harness, Boots & Shoes Will also do repairing of the abere articles on short notice. PRODUCE TAKEN' IN between Mills' 'elation on the DJ Pt Ky and Learnt ington. Address, Leamington, Millard Oo., Utah. EXCHANGE Parley AllrEfl same Horses SHOP, Opp. HINCKLBT CO-O- K brand on left thiffh. Cattl-eclose crop in left and slit in right ear. GENERAL MERCHANDISE Range, Serler. Lower Des Address, ret. utan. him. Frank L. Noble, the well known horseman and former owner of the noted stallion Alcryon, 20.5, died at his "I I f Bast Main Street, - j r fl i yi HI .mii efc us- Snake Valler and east t. of 8nake Mts. also south i - ; - II II iUntU reoenthr I ""'"i Creek "Mountains.' side of Deep ii'm' TlUe, Millard county, L tan. Address, ftxaltsf i! L on left thigh; same- brand on DESERET. 1, .lactHDlUiM and Wapn Bepairag. i. At bottom Prices for Pay Doirn.f - ii branded leftribs. i it to left (I . JIIO. DEWSHUP, MGR. - t I V Ji if If DESERET CASH STORE Goods at bottom prices for spot cash. T tiI v4 i AT THE residence in Grand Rapids, Mich., recently. Directly, in a time trial at the track at Fresno, Cal., Feb. 1, reduced his world's record for two year old trottera to 2:07, although the track was wet and slow It is announced that the half interest recently purchased by Riley Grannon in the racing stable of "W M. Wallace has been resold to the latter, at an. advance of $100, Grannon deciding that he did not care to be an owner, The Richmond (Va.) Riding and reDriving Association held a meeting meetrace cently, arid decided to hold a previously to ing this spring, the week Four races the one at Baltimore,-Md- . . will take place each day. T ir "i f il Joslati Snltfe AIM PRODUCE left hip of cattle. Range-WilloSprings. Address, f ' w J. Kearney, P. Fisk: Springs, Juab County, be Plea6ed to 6ee all old and new cus U T on left thigh v double swallow fork in left ear. Hange, Lower Sevier. Address i Rubber Stamps, Branding Irons. Death of Mattie Roe. (Ms. Thompson Oasis, Millard Co. battle Roe (Mamie Cooper), an opera S. J. B. JOHN UTT. GRIFFIN, MRS, !:'.'!! Utah. N. 27. died Jan. at Binghamton, Twenty-fift- h singer, St., Ogden, Utao Y. aged 29 years. The deceased had Manufacturer of Rubber ana Metal Stamps, also ox notarial ana otner seals, iiaages, stencus, been a member of "The Little' Tycoon" miliar with the grossest defects of the teemed citizens, IMark, slit ! D. John Brandinff Irons, etc. Also has for sale Check and two slits right company and the Corinne opera com present tenement house Bush. Her maiden name was Annie Punches, Numbering Machines, etc., and Is agent in .'t ear. Sane system. PP Through each garnered experience this M. Bush; she was married to Mr, Utt in tor JoimDia isicycies. brand on left t shoulder on horses Oo. Safes aad feminine firm of architects hope to erect 1886, Her husband was a practicing atAgent for P. N. Petersen, f Box s, IT. a tenement 25x100 feet, where families torney at Dyersvllle, and being much Taut Work. Steel Oasis Address, can be healthfully housed. of his time absent Mrs. Utt began to Utah, Range, Low er Sevier When. I saw them they were elated law to enable her to attend to her over their work. Their newly completed study. Behusband's business when absent. S- I Same left plans gave light, air and separation for coming interested she. extended her thigh' On Horses. every family, making the house fire studies to every, branch of the legal proUpper slope and - SALT LAKE. under slit ini til one fession, and having a liking for It, left ear. and to decided came She easy. knowledge slits in right ear. RANGE :Oak study for admission to the bar, and having prepared herself appeared before General Comm issi onLIorcDtin 1 the feomittee of the Supreme court at Sims Walker Des Moines Jan. 14 and 15 last in a 'Dealer la Address. Oafc City, Utah. class, of thirty-fou- r applicants. The ex4 amination was very strict, lasting two FRUITS, VEGETABLES, BUTTER, ten were Of class the rejected, days. some of whom were graduates of law Eggs, Poultry, Game, Veal Pork aaA ' Beef, Smoked aad Fresh Plskf schools. When her name appeared and Grain. Notary and Conveyancer Hay Flour, among the sucoessful applicants there was1; general applause. Mrs. Utt is a ' It will pay you to ship your goods to me. I brunette, of fine appearance and atten- eharora 10 nr Mnt far ha.a11fn an A Deeds and Mortgages made out and soon as goods are sold. Can glra She will devote her of tion to equity cases, preparation wuni reierenoes u aesirea. signatures acknowledged: affidariti and depositions taken: mining deeds papers, and pleadings before the Judges, and will undoubtedly make her and business a specialty. mark among the lady lawyers of the ATTENTIOK. PROMPT i country. '..... . ex-May- or Herring-Hall-Marvi- I: n Fire-proo- O MARTIN, lj - two-unde- r ) J ;; I F Q-IBB- S: pleas-mannne- rs. ftxst-eia- ss . PERSONAL. PARAGRAPHS. MISS MATTIE ROE. were sent to tht pany. The remains in mother Jersey City, N. home of her j for interment. i , W. Q. M STEWARD, ... The string of fifteen trotters handled the head of which by Walter Maben.at a record of with is La Belle, Mrs. Severa woman, owned by 216 is Cal., and a soance, of Los Angeles, slope. She ciety laeder of the Pacific and conformis an expert on pedigreesown horaesi ation, and buys all her : .!) ,. - S Office with MILLARD GO. BLADE. D. B. Davis of Columbus, Ohio, threw away a fortune when he invented the lrc, EnlSer Sttos, Branlijij locomotive cowcatcher and forgot to CO V. 2nd, South, SALT LAKE OITY '. ,' patent it. MISS GANNON. P. O. BOX -L. of Benedict Charles the Judge Twenty fifth St, OjrdenJ UUh," , proof and inexpensive. "Could any man United States District court for the dedo: better than that?" they queried. eastern district of New York, has Iliad Conplei C1.C0 f NntArisl and ether Sttli'iiKiH... cTTlr If these two young girls for they are cided to resign, as he had always con- Irca Array 1.C0 ''"S"" rrnii, T etc., .".-- ret . only 18 and 20 years of age have their templated doing when he reached the Copper Colnmbla tat Bicycles. 1X0 Atzzj 71 mean will an it for 70. He wil be order age of in March. He Areat design accepted Herring &w Tamil a?' safas work. Btrc bo for a $5,000,000 investment of money in was appointed by President Lincoln in Usitl laiplef ::"' vf: 'i : VS tenements, which, of course, will se- - UC5. . A Woman Owns Them. Tii, ; -- Uall-Marvia ; ::;. . ' - fire-pro- . i ; ht soft-porous-bo- season by his side, and it is to the thoroughbred horse that this country must ultimately look for its type. -- HANOVER. Column v" i j tion he has a world of quality, not as much, perhaps, as Hanover, one of the at greatest of race horses, now owned; McGrathiana Stud, but enough to warrant his selection as a type of the horse that we should try to produce. Horses with the finish possessed by Hanover are seldom "seen, and it is doubtful whether his head and neck are not the finest to be found throughout the length and breadth of the land. carWhat would a pair of sixteen-han- d riage horses as beautifully topped as Hanover, capable of trotting a mile in three minutes, be worth? Just as much as any man would care to pay for such horses, and half breeds have been sold In New York for as much as $5,000. Of course, $5,000 is an extravagant figure, and only men of means, with money to gratify every taste, can afford to pay such a sum. The United States must look well to Oar Stockralsers the first approved work of these clever girls. The Florence sanitarium In San Francisco is of The Pioneer their planning. Two dwelling houses in Mrixiu me yuimo wiiu ma Drancj and mart Mount Vernon, two more on Staten Isare to well known to need attention. It la U the Ktookman as valuable as an adtertlsemcat land, one at Jamaica, L. I. and the i o mo meronanb. Rockaway Hunt club have been finCalia while and churches three ished, fornia millionaire's home await their Of Deseret, for construction. This record 1 l. ' . plans , CM5. F. ell). seems sufficiently bright to encourage other women? in studying architecture Haa removed to his new shop just north as a profession, RANGE! Miss .Mercer of is anthe river bridge, where he Liower tsevier ana l other promisiing young architect. The Sink of Beavers I f will do all kinds of V splendid woman's building at the com"Address: ing interstate exposition at Atlanta, Utah. Oasis, Ga., will bear testimony to her talent. Miss Belden and Miss Hay den are reckoned among the few others whose successes seem to prophesy a golden Ray. future. As a measure of equality these; 't r, JTT gentle aspirants have gained the notice 'Bquarg crop aa MINIM UEE slit la richt, diaeo-nEeadparters for , I ftolTed the Problem. S. W. WESTERN, art and industry. This will not be ; ta |