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LYNE TRIES FOUR DIFFERENT TRAINERS. Lexington. Ky.. March 11. — San ford Lyne has four • horses in training at the Kentucky Association i track and they are in the hands of four different trainers. The two rear-old chestnut flllv Norma S.. , by Nastnrtiuni S:oleu Kisses, is in the staid • of t "Bub" May. Dan T. Morris has the t wo-v ear old I bay filly Pyredinc. by St. Dory — Belle Callum. Ad lax. the tin. • ■ -year-old chestnut gilding by Match less- Add. is in Jimmy Ross string and Paul Kuin-ait. - ■ bay gelding, three years old. bv l.aldur Pay S.. is lteing tr..ined by John Kodegap! Asked why he "scattered his play" instead of f giving the horses all to one man. the master of I.archiuont Stud and father of Jockey I.u.icn Lvne. said: "Well, in the first place. I wont have to « pay them all at the same time if money should I happen to be a little tight. If I had them all in i one stable Id have to settle all at oaee. This wav I can pay one fellow one w c k and stand the others ; off mid so on. I t.«ok a pe. p into Wall street once • and I got wise to the system there. Thats the wav the high financiers do. they tell me. So 1 thought 1il I try it on in the horse proposition. Then theres another advantage With four men looking after he • string. you get four different notions about the ■ best way to train a horse and BMtjhe one of those • teiiows will develop a eiackerjacfc with his idea, whereas if I had all the horses with on ■• man I* I* might pick the wrong liinn. Ive tried every other • va. even tried to train some mys If. If this • system of spreading cm over the layout doesnt t work. I expert Ill have to go further than Wall I str.et next year for an idea or just simply quit t trying to make em win and stick to the farm. Thatij pretty good if the Agnew Hart hill doesnt t jtaia."