PRICE LIST. 



SLOW HORSES MADE FAST, 



And Fast Horses Made Faster. 



Including al 1 successful secrets of professional horsemen, ex- 

 posures of tallacious theories and faulty appliances, tricks of 

 jockeys and frauds of the turf. A guide to breeding, raising and 

 training trotters, as well as developing and improving speed of all 

 hor-es. The System laid down in t iis book is the one to which 

 DEXTER owes his supremacy. ROBERT BONNER (editorial in N. 

 Y. Ledger) says : " A series of very interesting and instructive 

 articles." 



" A very readable and profitable work for breeders and trainers 

 of the trotting horse. The work treats of the origin of the Ameri- 

 can trotter, the high values of fast horses, large profits from raising 

 them, ache'vements of celebrated trotters, improvement in the 

 stock, how to produce the best trotters, tra ning, shows how good 

 horses are spoiled by fallacious theories and faulty appliances, tells 

 how to make pacers trot, and how to take care of colts, and other 

 matters." New York Herald. 



" The interest which is taken, and which is daily increasing, in 

 the improvement of horse-flesh will render this volume an exceed- 

 ingly acceptable one to m.-my people. * * * Cannot fail, through 

 its reliability to become a standard authority among professional 

 horsemen and amateurs.'' N. Y. Express. 



" A well written treatise on t ; ie history of the American trotter 

 and on the best method of developing speed, with the exposure of 

 fallacies and tricks of the turf." N. Y. Evening Mail. 



"By no means fulfills the promise in the title of a catchpenny 

 publication, but is a reaUy instructivetreat.se on the most approved 

 legitimate methods of developing the speed of horse-flesh. * * * 

 Every man who is about to buy a horse had better consult this little 

 work before deciding on his purchase." Ne>o York Tribune. 



"A very valuable and well written treatise, giv ng sketches of 

 several noted horses, with pictures from photographs, and present- 

 ing a system for improving the speed of horses which appears to us 

 to be based upon a clear common sense view of the matter, and 

 which has been fairly treated, with unexampled results in the case 

 of DEXTER." Pomeroy's Democrat. 



*' The articles embraced in its pages will be found well worth the 

 cost, and no one interested in any way in horses, should be without 

 a copy." Wilkes' Spirit of the Times. 



" Handsomely illustrated, and contains matters which will interest 

 every horsem in especially those interested in trotting stock." 

 If /ore's Rural New Yorker. 



' Will have a peculiar interest for horse fanciers." N. Y. Home 

 Journal. 



" Occupies on account of its merit a high place in the upper ranks 

 of equine literature."^. Y. World. 



IPriee, Clotli Blna.inaf> fcl- 



