OCR Text |
Show . ... v k- aikiL Wk. a a w kj O" '-sr -jk r - ' ; , ' . . K ' 1 - , s ' 1 f ' 1 yi ' ' . - ' " l "" mi ni I iiiillWii(imnii..llil.iimlii,iY.j PETE SULLIVAN. ip-Pound Lad, Challenger of the World, Who Appears Here Soon . Against Harry Lewis. tin Conole, one of the niftiest lads in the ring, was knocked out bv Pete in the eleventh round. And they're a lot more. Pete works out every y day at the Sanitarium, and work's hard. After his bout here with Harry Lewis, he s going after Britt, and they're some in this nran's town that have a cast-iron hunch that Pete '11 make Jim-mne Jim-mne look like a lirty deuce. .1 ' ' the olden, golden days warriors vert Into battle ainglng hymns, clashing clash-ing cymbals and certain that, the right was on their side. Today, young Peter Sullivan, the man who has 'em all faded to a fare-ye-well, goes Into battle with prayers on his lips, socks on his feet and a belt around his middle. - And every nigllt of his life he goes to mass he's a Catholic and a good one. Sullivan, even if he does not win in fcismatch with Harry Lewis early this month, will still hold his many friends here. He's a modest chap. He has gone up against some, of the .hardest hitters in the business. He has-'fonght sixty-eight sixty-eight battles and was never knocked out. He has gone up agin three of the cleverest middle-weights in the East, and made all of their ankles smoke in the getaway. ' Wulio Fitzgerald, the man who made Joe Gans look palo 'round the gills, was stopped by Pete Sullivan in a twenty-round go last December. Mar- |