What a Horse Show Really Is tures of Omaha Horses Made by a Staff Artist 1 11 ', ILH'k p " u Ji ' hum , 1 ' ' ?J " W-, J i m.ui Hill '. Vats?-- jr-ik l V-i Ln., " 'H x ' Jr-- ' A Mil. W. II. M'UUIID S FINE TANDEM TEAM. MK. F. A. NASH'S SINGLE ROADSTER. '5 Y IT Hi f i ASSESS? W1 1 ARTHUR C. SMITH'S SINdlE ROAI33TEIV. MRS. F. A. NASH AND HER TURNOUT. MR. GOULD DIETZ AND HIS SADDLE HOUSE GA1TED. MR. F. S. COWGILL AND HIS PAIR TGI(, " A ImnfMl nun H rn roil nf Tp-W I genus equs, iued for drawing. do for Nouh Webster in his ofTlclal ciipai-lty tis rtyninloKit, but to tho juivato Individual who Ii;iihus to own a 3-year-olil, tho liortte la u "hows," n thing of contlmiou Joy, u rroaturc that will rub lla noso asaliiHt your coat wlieu you cntT Ms nta.ll uiul will titatul by you wIrii men, women and itynudoHists ui3 willlnu to kick you Into tho gutur. Loiifr ns'3 iiko tho linio may have bevn of the ponut iMjus and no more. l!ut Bluee tlirn Man has n.alu'icd him in and by constant hiimlllu; dcvi'Ioied him from the dwarfi'd, uiiKaiiily craliiio of tho Asiatic ett'jipt'S to his jiiisint condition. This wtek at tho Audit. uiuni Omaha icople will liuve a I'hancc' of si'i'lns the best tyjios of tho ppoch's. Tho horse was one of the main factors in tho bi'ltorhiK of tho man of t ho west, nml now the man of the west Is bettering the horse and past experience lias shown that a horse show is one of the best means for tho development of tlm animal. The primary principle of a horso how Is to Increase a taste for horscllcsti and to tench the public that kind treatment and attention will Improve his condition. Jncldentully, the dollars and the social aspect of the affair nr very acceptable. Horse jtUows, aa far oa they can be traced, have ever been associated with the rich and exclusive cliques forming- what is known as Society. The llrst event of this character waa held at Versailles, France, during- the reign and under the auspices of Louis XIV. The grand SelKneur attended personally, and as a natural consequence it was patronized by the gentlemen of France and conducted with all the mag lilllcence und slitter which characterised the court of La I'ompadour. So successful was it that tho king and the women re peated the shows annually, each successive show Furpasslng its predecessor In tho way of brilliancy. The successors to the throne followed the example of their ancestors until the unfortunate disagreement between Louis XVI and tho people resulting in tho weak minded monarch und the brilliant Marie Antoinette mounting the horse of the day La Guillotine. The revolution, which placed In power a band of blsoted cut tliroals, swept court, society and Its attending umusements from the borders of France. The nobles liked horse shows, therefore horse shows were an Infringement on tho rights of the people and must be done away with. That was the principle Robespierre and his associates worked on. During the Napoleonic era the feature wan revived, the "Little Corporal'1 himself holding annual fairs at St. Cloud. The siilrlt of the times made it almost neces sary that the function should be of a quasi-military character. Tho seats of honor were occupied by tho heroes of Austerlitz and Jena, cavalry chargers were more appreciated than ladies' driving mares ami the contestants were marshaled to their places by tho stirring calls of a Cuirasseur regiment. In Knglnnd the gay and misguided Charles I repeatedly held horse shows at his court at Croydon, near Ixindon, and it is said that tho immorally frolicsome Nell of Old Drury herself gave nway the ribbons to tho winners. Tho llrst horso show to be held In this country was at Long Itranch, twenty-one years ago, and since then has spread rapidly from town to town, till at tho present day one of the signs of prog ress of a city Is a Jlrst-chuss horse show. Tho horse show being, then, a society affair, thoso that enter or attend are re quired to conform with a certain amount of cllqtiettu in the way of language und manners. Two horses may lie called n team In tho workaday world, but In a horse show, never. They nre a "pair," lintess a tandem. A pair is never "hitched up" in the arena, it Is "put to," unci a horn Is never "blon," It Is "sounded." H is a common error to call nny kind of a coach, be It drag or break, a tally-lio. Tho word tally-ho Is Imply tho cry of tho huntsman to the hounds nnd Is used in a perverted senso when applied to coaching. It originated with the Introduction of coaching by th fact of the first owner of a coach christen ing tho vehicle "Tally-ho." A drag is th name applied to a coach when used solely for private purposes; no sooner is a four-in-hand put Into service and fare charged than it ceases to be a drug and becomes a coach. As to manners, a horse show has its own rigid line of etiquette which for a con testant to depart from renders him hope lessly not blessed in the eyes of the ones that know. A slight movement of the whip is sultlclent in saluting the judge, it is not necessary to tip one's hat. The box must be mounted from the off or whip-hand sid ami it is considered bad form to use a whip unless wishing to convey to the horso a distinct command. To hit a horso In tha same place twice is also tabooed. To object publicly or criticise the judge's decision is tho worst thing a competitor could da if ho has any idea of gaining favor with tho audience. To hiss or give vent to that long drawn "O-O-Oh" or "Rot-ten" la con sidered the height of vulgarity. Thoo who are attending a horse show for tho first time will come across a num ber of terms not ordinarily used in every day horse talk. For example, "cock horse. (Continue J on IV to Fiva