Cricket 1891

i 12 2 CRICKET: A WEEKLY RECORD OF THE GAME. MAY 21, 1891 FELTHAM’S MANUFACTURERS OF CRICKET, TENNIS, CROQUET, &c. AND ALL IN & OUT-DOOR GAMES. FE LTH AH ’S Excellent Cricket Bat. IMPROVED HANDLE, BEST SELECTED blade, r'f/,;w F E L T H A M ’ S Reliable and Special Cricket Bats. ALL MADE FROM WELL- SEASONED WOOD STEAM COMPRESSED. F E L T H A M ’S MATCH CRICKET BALLS. F E L T H A M ’ S LEG GUARDS, GAUNTLETS, CRICKET NETS, BATTING GLOVES, STUMPS. All requisites for the g am e o f Cricket Sold by all Dealers, aod wholesale of the Manufacturers. CITY STEAM WOBKS— BARBICAN, LONDON, E.G. P rice L ists os A pplications . LUNN & Co. Cr icket, Golf, L aw n Tennis, &c. SPECIAL TEEMS TO CLUBS. " Fully Illustrated Catalogue, 72 pages, Post Free. LUNN & Co., 257, Regent St., London, W. pR ICKET, FOOTBALL, & TENNIS GROUNDS (all thoroughly drained, October, 1888), TO LET at Hyde Farm, Balham, for Season, Day, or Saturdays, close to Railway Station. Special reduced return railway fares from Victoria, 5d. London Bridge 7d.—Apply H. B enham (Proprietor), 104, Bossiter Road, Balham. (Cycling and Running Tracks now ready ) riRICKET, FOOTBALL & TENNIS GROUNDS. v J South London Clubs desiring Grounds can be accommodated in the Neighbourhood of Catford Bridge, close to the Mid-Kent Railway Station, and accessible in half an hour from the City.— Apply to M e s srs . F r e r e F o r s t e r & Co., 29, Lin­ coln’s Inn Fields, W.C. WINCHESTER COLLEGE PUBLIC SCHOOL CRICKET MATCHES. Contains scores of all the Cricket Matches played by WINCHESTER against ETON and HARROW. Also the names of Captains of “ Lord’s ” and of those Wykihamists who have obtained Cricket Blues at Oxford or Cambridge.— Price 2s.— W e l l s , College Street, Winchester; W r ig h t & Co., 41, St. Andrew’s Hill, E.C. C r i c k e t G a u n t l e t s , B a t t i n g G l o v e s , F i v e s G l o v e s , & c . CHEAPEST ID THE TRADE. ONLY BEST QUALITY GOODS T. P. LEE& Go, L imited , DEER, BUFF, CHAMO IS , & W H I T E L E A T H E R DRESSERS & SELLERS, 24 a , DUKE ST., BLOOMSBURY, LONDON, W.C. MANUFACTURERS OF B EAL BU CKSK IN WALK ING AND DB IV IN G GLOVES. CRICKET GAUNTLETS, BATTINGGLOVES, FIVESGLOVES. &C. P R I C E L I S T F R E E . OUTFITS FOR CRICKET, ROWING, TENNIS, CYCLING AND ALL SPORTS. W . J . 171 TO BE OBTAINED OP P i l e , The City Athletic Outfitter FEN CH U B CH ST R E E T , E .C . AND 73, Park Street, Regent’s Park, N.W. Flannel Shirts, 5/6, 6/6, 7/6, 9/6; Flannel Trousers 8/6, 9/6,10/6,12/6.14/6; Flannel Caps (large assort­ ment), 1/-, 1/6; “ Perfecta” Straw Hat (weighs only 2oz.),‘2/6; Shoes for Running, Boating, and Tennis, from 2/6; Running Drawers, 2/11, 3/6, 4/6; Toe Caps, 9d. per pair; Corks, 6d. per pair; Elastic and Silk Belts, 1/-; Hat Ribbon?, 1/-; Boxing Glovep, from 4/6; Indian Clubs, from 1/6 per pair. Badges embroidered in the best style. Designs worked out on the shortest notice.—W. J. PILE, Outfitter by appointment to the C.T.C.. London Athletic Club (L.A.C.), London Rowing Club (L.R.C.), Blackheath Barriers, and other leading Clubs. Send for Price List to 171, Fenchurch St. or 71 and 73, Park S t, Regent’s Park, N.W. Cricket: A W E E K L Y BECOBD OF THE GAME. *1, ST. ANDREW’S HILL, LONDON, E.O. THURSDAY, MAY 21 s t , 1891. B m abstract and brief chronicle of the time.— Hamlet. T h e announcement that Her Majesty has been graciously pleased to confer the vacant Commissionership of Railways on Viscount Cobham seems to have been, curiously enough, overlooked by the sporting papers. The omission is the more singular from tho fact lhat the brotherhood of which Lord Cobham is the head has enjoyed a reputation inferior, if at all, to only one other family in the history of cricket. In the annals of the game, as a matter of fact, there are no more wonderful instances of conspic­ uous ability concentrated, or at least developed, to the same remarkable extent in the same family as in the Lyttelton or the Walker brotherhood. U n d er his later title of Viscount Cobham, to which he succeeded under special remainder on the death of the Duke of Buckingham, it is possible that even many of the better-informed of C ric k e t readers may fail to recogniso the fine all-round player who did such splendid service for the Gentlemen early in the sixties. T h e Lytteltons have been to Eton what the Walkers were, and still are, to Harrow. Their father, the late Lord Lyttelton, an Old Etonian, played for Cambridge against Oxford in 1838, and while no less than seven of the brothers appeared in the Eton eleven v. Harrow, at Lord’s, at different times, three of them subsequently represented Cambridge with brilliant success. In 1867, the Lyttelton family, consisting of the late Lord Lyttelton, his two brothers, and eight sons, played Bromggrove School, and beat them easily Tyithi ten wickets to

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