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TRAINER MILAMS. HORSES IN CHARGE By T. B. Cromwell. Lexington, Ky., September 5. J. C. Milam will not have a horse to nice in his own colors this fall unless he should buy something luring the Lexington, Louisville or Latouia meetings. Captain Roes, Captain Hodge. Exterminator, Ironmaster, 15. B. Johnson and Kate Adams are all on the shelf from one or another of several minor causes sfnA have been turned out at the Milam farm near Lexington to remain until about the first of next year, when they again are to be put into training. While he was at Saratoga. Milam disposed of Jim Dinney, Tanlae, II. C. Basch and Jerome. II. C. Basch is a brother to Morristown and was sold to Max Hirsch for Congressman George W. Loft. The horses Milam has in his stable at the Kentucky Association track and to race at the Kentucky meetings are Atalunta, Honeydew, Everest, Solly and Plevna, the property of Hon. Johnson N. Camden; Embroidery, property of Arthur B. Hancock; Right Angle, owned by Catesby Woodford, all three of the owners being among Kentuckys most prominent breeders of thoroughbred horses. Plevna arrived here from Saratoga witii a slight ailment from the effects of shipping and it may be that she will not be started until late in the local meeting. At the close of the Lexington meeting Milam will take up four yearlings now at his farm, they being tho bay filly by Star Shoot Lady Schorr, by Esher, for which he paid ,000 at the Hal Price Headley sale; the bay filly by Uncle Winifred A., by Sir Dixon, which he got out of the same sale for 1917.sh00; the bay gelding by Magneto Beth Miller, by Miller, and the bay filly by Stalwart Jersey, by Onnicant. Another yearling Milam will take up is the colt by Plaudit, which Col. E. II. Taylor bought in May from th6 Messrs. Holloa at Forks of Elkliorn. He also may have several others in his string of juveniles, though he is inclined to operate on a smaller scale than for some time past.