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. | 1 FRONTIER HANDICAP TODAY WINDSORS MAIN FEATURE TO BE CONTESTED BY A FIELD OF NINE GOOD RACERS. Pan Zareta, Iron Mask and Back Bay to Clash in a Sprint — Many Arrivals from Kentucky and Colorado. Windsor, Out.. July 12,.— The first of Ihe Windsor Jockey Clubs 1915 meetings will begin tomorrow. The management l. 1- provided a bigh-clas program for the occasion and. with other conditions in keep lag, a brilliant opening aboaM result, the card is amde up of seven races, with the Frontier Handicap as the feature. The latter is a dash of a mile ami an eighth with 94.000 added. II has a well balanced held of nine prospective starters, with P. S. Thoaap Sims Slumber II. lop weight at 121 pounds. Boyal IP. winner of the Latonla Derby, and Amos Tarneya Waterbass an- among tin,-- thai have accepted the weights. A sprint race at three-qaarters, in which Par, Z.irel.-. Back I!a .ind Iron Mask will meet, is another f«"atnre. Large fields are entered for a majority of 11, e races and the condition .,r two ol them call for two year olds. The Helroit put. lie will have an opportanity of judging for themselves the relative merits of Ihe machines and the old-slyle system of speculation. If tin meetings at Bine Bonnets and Port Brie ate any eriterioa ihe Windsor meeting will he aa nn qualified success. An up lo date mutiiel plant has been installed by the elub. An addition has been built on the nar or the old betting eaehmare an I thirty mid machines installed. Several of them are of ihe h llaeiiineisier combination style. There are thirty-eight booths for the cashiers and ample room lo accommodate a large crowd. Everything 1 iu splendid condition and nothing has been left undone by ih.- mantgtmtnl to provide even mm fort for their patrons. A 11 Ihe ini|,io eineiits is a handsome BCW stewards and Judges stand, it is a double deck affair, with tie- lower part of plate glass. The seales will also be 01 lllis eneloMire. The Upper portion of the stand has been set apart I r the sbwards. lb,. JiMlgea will he l . Gerhard and Francis Nelson and the stewards Chaa P. Price and Joseph A. Murphy. A. P. Hade will do the starting and Joseph McLennan will a. 1 as clerk or the seales. There an many more horses her,- than iii prevleaN years and m ureal was the untax that the elub was forced to secure stabling for liftv oa the outside. The Kentucky delegation is especially alusai. among the more prominent stables that came from Latonla being those of .1. P.. Bespeess, W. B. Mizcll. C II. ko.no. T. P. Haves. C. W. .1. P.is-sell. P. .1. Mihs. W. P. Lewis. .1. . Calm. Bob McMillan. W. II. Finer and William Herat. Two carloads of horses came tr Beaver. In this were the slahh-s owned by .1. P. Gray. I nn Lackey, .1. P. Sii".-s. B. Kipiey, .1. P. Feeaey and c. K. Delines. I nele Jimmie Crays string is made up of five two-year-olds. Inchnling a brother lo Gotelas. Albert Si ns is looking after a hall do/en two- yi a -olds that were shipped hen- by James Rowe liin the Harry Payne Whitney farm in .N.vv Jersej Henry McDaniel, who is here with the Tbomclilfe Stable, , ill lake up lour horses that have be -u turned out since lasl fill when he reliirns t Hamilton. Calgary, a colt thai promised to de-Mii.p into a nigh-class racer, but proved a disappointment, i- ..i f tin- number. Plate Cla-,s is another. Iin- latter lias been ridden hv o I Mr. Davies daughters all spring as a hack. Btaiereaa is one of the others that will be put into training.