211 



6. — When a play or pay bet is made on a horse 

 or horses, they must start, or the partj betting on 

 them loses. 



7. — Either of the bettors may in person demand 

 stakes to be made, and on a refusal declare the bet 

 to be void. 



8. — Outside bets cannot be declared off on the 

 course, unless that place was named for staking the 

 money, before the race should take place, and then 

 it must be done by filing such declaration in writing 

 with the judges, who shall read it from the stand 

 before the race commences, and demand if any per- 

 son will make stakes for the absent party, and if no 

 person consent to do so, the bet may be declared 

 void. 



9. — ^When a bet is made on one horse against the 

 field, he must start, or the bet is off, and the field is 

 what starts against him ; but there is no field unless 

 one start against him. 



10. — When a bet is made between two horses, 

 they both must start, or the bet is oK 



11. — A person betting odds has a right to choose 

 a horse on the field, and when he has chosen his 

 horse, the field is whatever starts against him, but 

 there is no field unless one or more start with him. 



12. — Parties wishing all the horses to start for a 

 bet must so name it at the time the bet is made. 



13. — If, in the final heat of a race, there be but 



