Owner of Alsab Breeds Thoroughbreds, Daily Racing Form, 1942-05-15

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t Owner of Alsab Breeds Thoroughbreds LEXINGTON, Ky., May 14.— Albert Sabath is best known as the owner of Alsab, but here in the center of the horse breeding industry he is also known as a thoroughbred breeder. The Chicago attorney owns two brood mares, I Say and Town Miss. Both are boarded at Robert M. Youngs Home-wood Farm. The first foal bred by Sabath was a stake winner. A bay colt by Judge Hay — I Say, named Say Judge, he carried the Sabath colors to victory in the Bay Meadows Kindergarten Stakes as a two-year-old in 1938. He was trained by C. E. "Boots" Durnell. This year I Say, winner of ten races, foaled a choice bay filly by Good Goods. Sabath sent the bay matron to that stallion last spring because a Good Goods colt in his stable, named Alsab, had begun to show a lot of promise. Town Miss was also sent to Good Goods, but did not conceive. Sabath is not sending I Say and Town Miss to the court of Good Goods this year. He has booked them to Count Gallahad, a young Sir Gallahad III. stallion standing at the Charles E. Asbury farm. The Chicago attorney selected Count Gallahad because he has now in his stable a two-year-old by him which he regards highly. The owner of Alsab for several years has been interested in breeding. In 1933 he retired to the stud the stallion Zacaweista, giving Col. Phil T. Chinn a half-interest in the son of High Time "to make him" as a sire. Later Sabath sold his remaining half-interest to Chinn.


Persistent Link: https://drf.uky.edu/catalog/1940s/drf1942051501/drf1942051501_38_3
Local Identifier: drf1942051501_38_3
Library of Congress Record: https://lccn.loc.gov/unk82075800