ATL2CDG,
I read the passage in the book of Mormon. It clearly referenced horses. Supposedly, and I say so because no one can verify what is on the plates that Joseph Smith "found," the book of Mormon reveals that some people came over from Israel two thousand years ago with horses and acted just like they did with whole kingdoms and wars and such like the Israelites had in the Promised Land. All this and not one trace of their civilizations or any evidence for their existence unlike that of ancient Israel.
If you want to believe Joseph Smith could translate some plates with what are called hieroglyphics on it, through a stone go right ahead. I don't know of any reliable source other than Joseph Smith that can make sense of it. If it truly is a style of writing, then it ought to be able to be interpreted by a reliable linguist. So far as I know, the plates cannot be read by anyone. I don’t even think they are accessible. I’ve been to the Temple grounds in Salt Lake City. If the plates were available to be viewed, it wasn’t posted anywhere on the property.
Furthermore, what I have read before on Mormonism suggests some fatal flaws in their doctrine that emanates from the book of Mormon when compared with Christianity and the Bible. Therefore, I do not think Joseph Smith was a proper prophet. He got it wrong. In addition, that means the book of Mormon, the stone and the plates did not come from God. It means the angel Moroni or how ever you spell it is a cruel hoax and eleven million adherents are being duped.
On a related fact, Salt Lake City is the capital of America's home brewing industry.