AH Te The Forsaken Farmhouse. Against the wooded hills it stands, Ghost of a dead home, staring through Its broken lights on wasted lands Where old-time harvests grew. Unploughed, unsown, by scythe unshorn, The poor forsaken farm-fields He, Ones rich and rife with goldon corn And pale green breadths of rye, Of healthful herb and flower bereft, The garden plot no housewife keeps; Through weeds and tangle only left The snake, its tenant, creeps. A lilac spray, once blossom elad, Sways bare before the empty rooms; Beside the roofless porch a sad, Pathetic red rose bloows. His track, in mould of dust and drouth, On floor and hearth the squirrel leaves, And in the fireless chimney’s mouth His web the spider weaves, The leaning barn about to fall Resounds no more on husking eves; No cattle low in yard or stall, No thresher beats his sheaves. 30 sad, so dear! It seems almost Some haunting Presence makes its sign; That down yon shadowy lane soma ghost Might drive his spectral Kine! THE BOTTLE. “She blamed me, but I knew it was the evil spirit 10 me that she meant. ¢ +You've lost your piace, Jack," says sho. ‘Everything has changed. You don’t care for the children, It's all that bottle,’ “But Jack was too tipsy to care what she said, He staggered over to the table, took me be the neck and car. ried me to a liquor store, There they put another evil into me, That one drove the furniture out of the house; bit by bit it was pawned, “‘Then they left the house itself and were living in a cellar somewhere, She took in washing; some of the money she earned went for more evil spirits tc fill me, “Didn't I loathe myself? One night 1 sat on the table and saw the old grand- father lying dead and Jack drunk on the floor at the foot of the bed. Didn't I loathe mysel? I tried to topple off, but 1 couldn't manage it. If ever a bottle did desire to smash itself, Idid. Batit was no use, Happy bottles, beautiful cat glass cologne bottles, innocent water bottles have been broken when they most desired to last, no doubt; but I, who had become a dwelling place for | devils, I lasted. “They carried the old grandiather away, and his poor daughter got a black dress somehow, One night Jack went thing comfortable,” said Tom Barnaby, Tom Barouby was pot a member of Not that he was a drinking man, dear, no! Never was drunk io lus life; | never even slightly overcome by liquor. Bat still—well, still, a nice glass of | something comfortable struck Tom in a | pleasant light, and he generally took It | when it did. To-might it was cold and chilly and | gloomy, aud the wiud rattied the shut- | ters and crooned down tne chimuey,and | wade a banshee of itwelf along the | street; and Tom, who was not very fond of reading, could pot lose himself in | book or magazine, and there was no one io talk to, and the resolntion above re sorded seemed to be the most natural thing in the world. *“'A glass of some. thing comfortable,” said Tom, *‘and a biscuit, aod then I'll turn in.” Then Tom went to the closet to look | lor a vessal in which to bring the neces- | sary liquor for the comfortable some- | thing from the ccrner store, and spied { an an upper shelf a green bottle, with a lat body and a long neck, which had | nothing in it, and smelled of nothing, | and he set it upon the table, while he stirred the fire aud put the kettle on, that everything might be ready on his | return, i Mrs. ‘I'om was absent from home, and | Tom was keeping house ‘or himself, He | was on his knees before the stove, rak- | ing it, when he heard a groan; but it bad such a ghostly sound that he | started, “What's that?” he cried; and some- | thine answered: { “Oaly me,” And jumping to his feet, Tom Bam. aby stood star ng aboat; for there was | aothing in the room that ought to have | i and a voice but himself—not even a kit- | ‘en or canary rd, “Who is me?” cried Tom. “Tom ought to know,” voice, And this time Tom saw it came from she green bottie, ‘Hanged if it isn’t the bottle!” Tom. *‘Is it emirits, or what?” And the bottle suswered: “Yes, worse Inck. Itis spirits, Bad spirits, too, Gn, rum and brandy-- whiskey and alcohol’ “Oh, that kind!” said Tom. “Yes,” said the bottle. *'F ve devils, I've been possessed by them all, Years and years they led me such a life that 1 wished I was smashed; years and years antil your wife got me and put blessed vinegar in me Nice, sharp, respectable vinegar, that never did worse than give some poor cabbage eater the colic, And I thought I should end my days as a decent vinegar bottle, and here I am— going to have one of the devils back, I know, Oh, what did that dear woman ge away for? Why did she go?” Tom, who had grown used to the phe- pomenon of a talking bottle, and did not mind it at all by this time, nodded his head sagely. “Right there,” he said, *'It's ex- reedingly nncomfortable to have wile away, but you are very foolish to talk as you do, What harm 1s there in a moderate drink?’ All you'd hold wouldn't hurt a fly. You've been listen- ing to teetotallers.” “I haven't been listening to any- body,” said the bottle. “I've formed wy own conclusions, There wasa time whez I thought as you do. 1t was when I was a brand new bottle, with a gilt label, ‘Best Holland Gin,” on me, snd wy owner, the liquor dealer, took me otit of my case and handed me to Jack Barker, who had just finished painting the store, ““ ‘Here, Jack,’ says he, ‘this will help you keep Onristmaa.’ *““Thank ye," said Jack; and off | went under his arm. “And there, 1n a bright little room, with a preity wile and nice old grand. father, and two cunning little babies looking on, he opened we, “ ‘What a nice smell!’ said she—the pretty wife, “And then he made some stufl with Jemon and sugar, snd they ali draok some, and the babies looked at the lignt shining through my green sides and the gilt label on me. Aud the o'd grand father said the drink bad gone to his bead, and he should have to be owrried ap-stairs, and they laughed at that, be cause it was such a joke, “I hiked myself then and what was in me, “Before 1 was empty the first time 1 felt pleased to be such a favorite as I was. “Ah, dear, 1 was filled up again and again, and ; and after awhile I be- gan to seo change in and about mo. The wile’s face was not so bright; the old grandiather never laughed; the baby's toes were out und one day Jack staggered in, took mé up, drank the last drop from me, ana tumbled tuto a chair, 0 wife begun to ery, “Oh, Jack!’ says she, ‘Oh, Jack! how I hate that dreadful bottle, We were 850 Lappy vefore it came Into the said the said i | sneaking ont of the house with a bundle | und ar one arm and me under the other, Tne bundle was his wife's mourning dress for her father, He took it to a pawn-shop and pawned it for enough to fill me twice. ‘I'he poor woman never “She was in rags. . She was hungry. I've seen Jack cintch her hand and wrench themoney she'd earned for her cluidren’s bread from it and then go off | with me, Think of 18! I had to mad and did not know how I hated the devils | that lived in me, but that were hard to | But he fell down stairs with me m his pocket, and broke his head, and | He hit me against things, to their imjury, not mine, I| must have a guardian devil, I lasted so, | “One day—it was such a bitter day, ice and snow and sleet everywhere— | just five years from the Christmas I'd been made a present to Jack, he stood, ragged and dirty, at a bar.room stove, with me in his pooket—my neck stick- ing ont. In came the proprietor, * ‘Now, Jack Barker, says he, don’t you go hone?’ “He was ashamed to have him there, i ‘why He used to be called Handsome Jack to filling me, Think of that, “Now he looked up with a miserable, abject whine, ** ‘(Go home with an empty bottle on a Christmas eve? says he. ‘You didn't with fall pockets, Mr. Jones, “ “Well, no, I did't,’ said the man; ker.’ Oa, the wretched cellar; the | 1 remember | wife lywng sick npos it, ‘She was very sick, and there was a | little baby beside her, Jast think of | another baby there, “Happy Christmas!’ said he, as he | ‘Happy Cbristmas, old | giril’ : “ ‘Happy! #aid she, *Oh, this dread- | ful day! That bottle came to us first | on Christmas.” It takes so little to put a drunken man in a rage, He answered with an oath, “* ‘Anybody would think | was drunk | to hear you talk,” said he. And the POOT Woman answere.!: “*Oh, good heaven! sober? On, Jack! Jack! * And then he flew at her, He took | me by the neck and beat her over the | bead with me, The cork fell out aud | the liguor poured over her breast and over the face of the little baby ying apon it. It mingled with her blood, “At first she screamed. Tuoen she lay still, Her face grew white, 1 knew I was a murderer, ‘Oh, let me break! I cried, ‘Let me be broken into frag mental!’ Bat ber fair flosh was mashed to pulp, ber delio te bones hrokea, snd 1 was sound as ever, when Jack, led by Heaven knows what mad fancy, left his victim and stagrered into the street again, The%now was falling. The amir was white with it, He staggered along muttering to himself. At last he eame to a wharf, and stumbled across it, 1 believe a boat 1ay there on whieh he had been ounce before and on which they had given him drink, *‘ ‘Sea Bird, ahoy! eried he. ‘Hullo! hallo! Sea Bird, aboy!" “Nobody answered him, “I'm coming abroad,’ he muttered ‘I'm coming abroad, I shan't stay st home to be preached to, I'm my own master,’ “Then Le fook ome step more, Splash-—erash! He was through the thin ico under the water, * “Thavk Heaven,’ said |, my miser- able career is ended, “Then I turued cond as ico myself, and there was a roaring iu my neck “Next thing | kuew 18 was broad day- light, and I was floating on the water, “ “There's a bottle,’ said some one, It was a bare legged boy. He stooped over the side of a boat and canght me, “ ‘There was 3 man drowned here last sight," said ing to another boy st his 0. “Did yon ses him ?° said this one, “ Yes,’ said the first, ‘He was drunk and killed his wife, They've got an ia. guest on her, down in the cellar over say, I'm gomg to sell this are you ever! hous?’ ] . £ i vinegar-—and I've been a good reformed bottle ever since, And now you —yol— her husband, are going to put the dav. lish spirits into me again, For Heaven's sake, break me first! 1 don’t want to destroy another household.” “You shan't,” smd Tom Barvaby. “Here you go back on your shelf, I leave you to innocence and vinegar; and I think I'tl make a cup of strong coffee,” “Right,” said the bottle. And so the bottle stands still beside the crnet on Mrs, Barnaby's dresser; and Tom Barnaby is still a sober man, Opium Auctions, A certain number of chests ot opium, as fixed by notification from the Govern- ment of India, are sold by public auction every month in one of the rooms of the Board of Rsvenue in Calcutta, The Secretary to the Board presides at the auction, The auctioneer is one of the assistants of the Board, The action-room is filled with the intending purchasers; several of them million- aires or their representatives, who have their recognized seats to which they are admitted by tickets, The auction is usually conducted in that calm and quiet manner which is suitable to trans- actions in whieh hundreds of thousands of pounds are involved, Each lot con- sists of five chests, and a native clerk holds up a blackboard, on which he ex- hibits in chalk the amount of the last bid, The excitement about the bidding may have led to au alternation in the valae of opium subsequently to the last The rival millonaires ecoutend by a quiet nod to the auctioneer HOW MILLIONAIRES BATHE, The Bath Rooms of the Vunderbilis, Mr. Marqvand, Mr. Garrett and Others. ——————— The milllonaire’s bath room marks the age. N othing so gives the sign of the material prosperity of the country, the growth of luxury, the indulgence of the sensas, In the past few years there have been placed in private resi- dences a half dozen bath rooms that are veritably latial, In fact, the pre- vailing style of the bath room of the money king has been suggested from those of royal palaces, and particularly from the famous one placed by Francis I. in the chateau of Chenonceaux on the Cher. The chateau of Chenouceaux 18 now the home of M. Daniel Wilson, the son- in-law of President Grevy, and the bath room still remains one of the features of the interior, The walls are covered with small beveled mirrors, scarcely larger than a span. Datween these pa- nels runs a slender line of gold, and at the intersections hang metal drops like tears, and just long enough to be re- flected in the glass, The effect is most hmpid and britliant, and the panels are so small that the purposes of a mirror are skillfully frustrated. The bath is rs PAIRS SH SWS ine of solid silver with the water issuing from swan’s heads, which, with a mir- ror behind, produces the illusion of swans on the surface of the water, All the other appointments are in keeping with this magnificence, even to an ante room, where repose can be found with cigars after the bath, The famous bath room in the palace off Fontainbleau was modeled after the Chenonceaux bath by Louis XVI, for to what limit they may safely go. The purchaser of one lot of the chests is at liberty to claim the next tea lots at the The suction list is thus quickly run through. When the millicraires have satisfied their wants for the day, the smaller quirements, As each lot is knocked down a clerk goes about with a little book to each purchaser, in which he From an Failure to complete a bargain occurrence; but if default occurs the chests are put up for sale at the ensuing suction, at the risk who is is taken. resale takes place. In the course of an hour the anction- room is empty, and the noisy outside Pay - Bengal, aud on the production of » certificate of payment which he has purchased, and he at once tuem from the Government warehouse and coosigns them to his agents or correspondents in China and the Birsits by the swilt steamers which trade between Cideutta and Calas. i ——— JOAQUIN MILLER. The Eccentric Poet of the Sierras. The life of Joaquin Miiler has been an interesting one, Hus trae name is A: 13 years of age He served with Walker, in Nicarsgos, and afterwards sojourced with the Indians, the breaking out of the war he publish. ed a Democratic paper at Eugene City. in which his expressions of opinion were of 0 rank a character that the authorities saw fit to suppress it for dusloyaity, Hs had then achieved a reputation as the author of poetio pieces known as the “Poet of the Sierras.” In 1863, his attevtion was attracted by & scenes of gracefnl verses in the Western papers, which bore the signa tare of **Mionie Myrtie.” Ta: name of the writer was Miss Minnie Theresa Dyer. Mr, Miller called upon she lady, aud after a three days’ soguantance married her. Domestie trouble soon followed, and in 1870 the eouple were divorced Miller went to Eaglwad in 1871, and published a volume of poems called, “Songs of the Sierras,” a por- tion of whieh had already been pubiish ed noder the same name inthe Uuited States, Hm efforts met with better success in Eagiand than they bad done m America, and from that time forward his publications met with a ready sale, The poet is a most veoentrio man, sod for many years his long hair, red shirt, unpolished boots and tram p- like appear- ance were a source of muoh eomment After his divorce from his Pacifio coast wite he married into the Lisland family of hotel fame. It is claimed that the fortnne he had scoumaiated from hw enocessfal sale of his books was lost ou W il street, aud the fact that to-d«y he works nard as a Now York newspaper wan, for moderate pay, leads to a belie mn the report. His hair aod clothing are now of oonventional cat, and he save by those who koow him, Perhaps his most popular book is “Songs of Italy.” He 1s the author of that sucoessini drama, "The Danites,’’ basque underneath, rounded or cutaway, Nothing is easier than to transtorm an old waist to suit the ante room, and 18 just large enough for its purposes. The walls are paneled In large mirrors of beveled glass, and on these are painted Cupids with gar- lands of lace, above, around, about, and each as if about to leap from the air to earth, ' : The late Mr. W. H. Vanderbilt's bath room i8 paneled in mirrors, but over these is painted a delicate lace like de- sign that is exquisite in effect, and de- stroys the power of the glass for reflec- tion, Its magnificence, however, is exceeded by the bath room of his son, The walls are apple blossoms, panels ol The bath 1s a solid block of ler. mar | FASHION NOTES, —Califorma blankets are now made into wrappers. ~Jugt now straight feathers lead the ostrich plumes in popularity. ~The full skirt of last season Is again the favorite of young girls, - White woolen tulle is a novelty in ball dresses; it is draped over white or colored silk, ~ Parisian ball dresses are ornaments ed by flights of tiny stuffed birds or real butterflies, ~Sleeve-buttons with erystal tops, through which peer the faces of famous actresses, are novelties, -Delicately tinted gray feather fans in a variety of forms are favorites, har- monizing with almost any toilette, ~—QJuite new are the sleeyes slashed inside the arm almost to the shoulder showing lace or contrasting matenal —Silver and gold nets, studded with balls of silver and gold, are worn over pale-colored satins and brocaded silks, — A flat necktie that has just been seen has size to recommend it if noth- ing else, 1t 1s 6} inches in width by 10 inches in length, ~Lapes of Persian lamb’s wool, with sling sleeves, which only reach wo the walst line, are worn as opera man- ties by young girls, white, The wings at the side and os- prey at the top are all white, — Panels and scarfs with ends to cor. respond are to be found in faille Fran- caise with satin and plush stripes, They are all in the evening shades, ~A new bath wrap has a black back- ground both on the interior and ex. terior, the outside having large blue polka dots, and the inside the same dots in red. ~— Buttons are of great size and are used for trimming without any raison d'etre. Their excessive use will prob ably cause the fancy for them to be short lived, — Fancy smoking-caps are tufted, al- though some are capped with a single button and some in silk and lisle thread, Others are in bright-colored, even. colored stripes. ~The newest jerseys are made in tailor style, with as many seams as any - Boucle jersey cloth is a novelty. i i that of the chateau of Chenon- here is a Pompelian table of marble, Mr. Henry Marquand bath after the luxurious room in Bonaparte’s superb house in In this the bath 1s sunk, Pom Jerome i i ! Above these is a painted frieze, representing the ceiling springs from this This is given the semblance of arch of The marble bath is sunk several scent of several steps. It is sad that, exclusive of the artist's work, Marquand's bath room cost $4,000, Works of art are considerey nowhere more appropriate than in the bath room when their subjects are significant. In that of the late Mr. Charles J Osb srne, at Mamaroneck, there is a large frame overlooking the bath by Mr. George Maynard, The sabject Is Venus with Loves at a fountain, The figures are life size in Limoges tiles fired by the Volkmar process, The walls otherwise are lined and celled with white white enamel tiles, with a spotless porcelain lined bath, Toe last of the new and notab’e bath rooms is for Mr. Robert Garret’s new Baltimore house, This is distinguished not only by the veauly of its decoration but by its process. The ceiling is by Mr. George Maynard, and represents a lattice on which moming glories t sine, This design is painted on marble by means of an overlaying composition, and on being fired the medium melts away and the color sinking in, becomes aneorporated with the marbe. This endolithle process, as it is called, is new, and itr results in the soft radiance of the blended color and marble are said to be very fine. The design is in radia- ting sections, which make room for small octagonal panels, which are to be mirrors on which Cupids are painted. The bath room of Mrs. Seward Webb's honse is like a cave of while marble, Walls, ceiling and bath are all of marble, and the only variation of tint is in the siiver fixtures, Tue bath rooms in the billiard house are conceived io a different way. To each chamber 18 attached a large, lofty bath room with mosaic floors, walls biped with white enamel Liles, porcelnin lined Luth aud marble toilet, and in- stud of works of art the distinguishing feature is in the exposure of the piumb- ing. mma I INNS. SS A Shap-Canal for Rome There seems to be just now a rage for turning inland cities into seaports by means of ship-canals, The last propo- sal of this nature comes from an Italian engineer, Mr. Gabassi, who suggests that Rome should be connected with of twenty-aix feet, so ships of the largest kind vantage of it, : : It is made np all dark colors as well as in cream-white rose and delicate blue, ae | | HORSE NOTES , Jt. B. Conklm recently re'meed ap offer of $20 000 for King Wilkes. ~Jack Trout, of Beacon Park, Boston, will come to Philadelphia, it is saad, —A New York man paid *“K sack’ McCarthy $800 for br. wm. Lady Miller, ~The added money at Monmouth Park for the season of 1880 amounts tc $150,000, ~— Fred, Archer, the English jockey, is reported to be worth nearly a million dollars, —Paradeox, sou of Sterling, is ex pected to prove the best eap horse in England this year, ~The once famous Sadie Belle, 2.24 is frequently seen upon the New York drives. She is now 14 years old. ~E. B. Thayer, Chicago, Il., has bought the stallion Exception, sever years old, chestnut, by Btiilson; damn Abdallah Maid, by Erie Abdallah, —W. F. White, Jr., Lexington, has bought from Bidney Taylor, Millions, Ky., the horse Foxhound, =x years old, bay, by Foster, dam Carrie 1., by Don Juan, —Honesty, the pacer, record 2.22, and Noontid?, record 2 203. cael once sold for $100, —There are prospects of the ergani- sociation in New Jersey. —The 2,50 list of horses for Lhe sea son of 1886, so far as known, has beer made out. By the 2.30 list is meant the recorded horses whose records made last season will require them to enter the 2.50 class the coming season. Winnings of American-bred horses in England last year were: Blue Grass, $8 800.75; Jolly Sir John, $5,085.37; Bolero, $3,354.20; dea, $2 473.50; Eole, $1.091.25; Invalid, $275.73, Aristocrat, $217.03. Sachem, Passaic and Oliver did not win anything. —The Louisville Great Amencas Stallion Stake of 1888 is represented by the following stallions: Hindoo, Billet, Rebel, Miser, Blue Eyes, Wiisper, Enquirer, Great Tom, Luke Bilack- burn, Bramble, Ten Broeck, Long- fellow, Saracen, Kyrie Daly, Outcast, Springbok, Faustus, Hyder Ali, Grin. stead, King Ban, Felloweraft, Uuarter- — The Kempton Park husdle handi- by Vodotte, out of Sherweed. considered as at the present season In sorts of garments and siyles of goods for dress wear, and sore of the goods distinctively juvenile are exqui- -A collarette of wide lace falls over he shoulders, a narrow straight tam it af the Lhroat, where it is fastened by a lace pin, {i which depends a voluminous Jabot « the wide lace. t —The designs of a worn-out brocade may be cut out and sown on another ma- terial, finishing the edges with the fine i i i i i i i ! plastron for a low or open corsage —A skatigg costume of dark green serge has a box-plaited skirt, ornament- ed with gold braid in a broad design on each plait. The short drapery is trimmed in the same way, The jacket and tur- ban are trimmed with heavier far, ~ Effective dresses are made entirely of plain tulle in several shades of the same color, Blue arranged in this way is exceedingly beautiful, the outer skirt being of bive-white veiling, the deeper tints imparting a cloud-like effect to Shaded ostrich feathers are used for trimming these dresses, -A basket-cloth bhouse-jacket, with pockets and cuffs, and frogs for but. tons, is a very handsome garment, Others: in almost countless numbérs, have been described, and suffice it to say that new ones are being constantly received, and are open in best places for inspection, ~ Among the novelties in canes are some having handles that conceal each, oneof a variety of different articles. One springs out a candle and candle-stick, another a dice-box and dice and another a corkscrew. A barrelshaped handle can, by unscrewing, be transformed into a spyglass, In wristlets, new ribbed silks, in al- ternate and solid stripedjgoods, are fash- jonable. There are also new Roman combinations and tartans and black and white, which have a plain but tasteful appearance, Vertical Roman stripes in cashmeres and wools are pretty and not expensive, ~- Evening bonnets to correspond with the costume have the crowns of the figured material and the brims of the plain fabric of which the dress is composed, Tartan ribbons of velvet are used to trim fell bonnets, worn with tailor-made costumes, A bonnet of black tulle, embroidered with gold filigree, has the brim covered by plated lace corresponding to the gold embroid- ered tulle, The only trimming is a knot of creamwhite velvet ribbon. The strings are of black velvet, A bonnet of gray ottoman silk bas the brim ‘ned with plush of the same color. It is trimmed with bows of gray satin nib bon, relieved by delicate pink feathers, arranged among the loops. The strings are of gray satin, ~—A very tasteful novelty for trim- ming half-mourning dresses 18 white beaded with black jet, arranged into a slightly gathered tablier, or else in flounces superposed tion of either white or mauve silk: a Mau-of-war was favorite in the betting, seven to four being offered on while two to one was offered against Woodman, The canditions added, winning penalties, twe miles eight hurdles. ~ Taking the aggrezate number of additions to the 2 25 list for 1885 we find there are three less than the can Comparisons show that while for 1885, on the other hand there is an in the speed a were new 10 the 2 30 list, 58 old mem- or the 2.25 list got better marks, The 2.20 list now includes 154 members, an increase of 23 over 1884 In theentire ist 17 of the sires have records of 2.30 Desperandam, 2 24; Saitan, 2.94; Pan- coast, 2 21}; Black Pilot, 2.30; and and White Line, 230. These beat the figures of any previous year. Of the 154 performers in the lisk, 25 made their debuts last year. Taking these new comers by families, we find 10 are by Hambletonian sires, § of the Mam- brino Chief family, 3 Blue Lulis, 1 Clay, 1 Vermont Black Hawk, 1 Pilot, and 1 of pacing ancestry. Electioneer and Blue Bull are the leading pro- genitors, having 3 each. Ia the famale line we find six are out of Hamble- tonian dams, 3 out of Mambrino Chief mares, 3 out of Clays, 2 out of Yer- mont Black Hawk, and the balanc: out of mares of miscellaneous breeding. ~The Coney Island Jockey Club has opened a new three year old stake, with $10,000 added, to be run in 1888, and which will be known as the Realisation. The conditions of the great event are as follows: Realization Stakes, with $10,000 added, to be run at the June meeting in 1880, for then three-year olds. Foals of 1886 to be entered by July 15; yearlings of 1887, by July 15, 1887, as follows: Foals of 1888, at $25 each, $50 forfeit unless declared out by Jaly 15, 1887; $100 forfeit unless de- clared by July 15, 1883; yearlings en- tered by July 15, 1837, when the stake shall close, to pay $100 eaeh, $300 for- feil unless declared by July 15, 1888; $250 additional; the money and 50 per cent, of the start money; the third $1,000 of the money and 20 per cent. of the starting total amount at $250 each paid by starters, Uolts to carry 122 pounds; lilies and geldings 119 pounds; non-winners of $5 000 allowed four pounds; of §3, seven pounds; of $1.000, ten pounds, Handicaps and selling races not reckoned as races, The produce of mares or stallions which have not pro-