208 •wkl through 54 innings and took 319wickets, part bowled in 16 innings d tjok 13wickets, his summary showing 302 wickets during the season. B owling F E n ro n mances . Runs per Overs. Mdiia. Runs. 5YLts Wekt. 7 O 1 4 12 G 20 10 24 S 8 3 9 ( 15.3 i 12 5 ♦) 1.2 9 *> '»»■***. rVN'tmc, Bowled for. Acruinst. • \ IVatt......... Victoria WanderorNFiiisbury . . . . U. C tniperVictoria Wanderer*5lionisoy Fisc V. ( l e .......... Victoria AVamicrorsMyddeiton .. S t e e ......... Victoria Wanderers Kchmiul Alb. VsY propose to give each year a table after the above pattern, and shall be 1 to receive any particular feats for insertion in future editions. The con­ ations to I k *that not less than five wickets are taken, and a t a cost of three runs and under per wicket. Tin M atches .— The match between the United South of England Eleven v. 22 of Swansea, on May 25th and 26th, ended in a tie, the Eleven coring 125 and 75, the Twenty-two 160 and 40. The return match between Middlesex and Surrey was also a tie, Surrey scoring 215 and 245, Middlesex, 138 and 322. C arrying B at through an I nnings .— Mr. W. G. Grace went in first for Gloucestershire against Yorkshire, on Aug. 17th, at Cheltenham, and was not out with 318 out of 528, having been at the wicket eight hours and five j ninutes. For Surrey v. Kent, at Oval, on Aug. 24th, Jupp went in first and carried out liis bat in the first innings for 73 runs, after an innings of five hours and twenty minutes, and in the second innings with It. Humphrey, cored 57 without the fall of a wicket. For Surrey v. Yorkshire, at Sheffield, Jupp went in first in the first innings, and was not out with 37 it of 74 runs. For Lancashire v. Yorkshire, at Manchester, oil June 22nd, Mr. A. N. Hornby went in first in the first innings of Lancashire, and was not out with 23 out of 56 runs. For Lancashire v. Notts, at Nottingham, - n May 15th, Barlow went in first in the first innings, and was not out with 4 out of 187 runs. For Middlesex v. Notts, at Nottingham, on Aug. 17th, Mr. A. J. Webbe went in first in the first innings, and was not out with 34 out of 144 runs. T all S coring . —Oxford University scored 613 runs against Middlesex, at iTince’s, and in all 1,218 runs were made for 24 wickets. Gloucestershire •ored 528 against Yorkshire, the highest innings in a County match. In a match between the Royal Artillery and Rifle Brigade, on May 19th and 20th, at Woolwich, the Artillery scored 531 runs, the first wicket falling 1 r 158 runs. On May 30th, Jesus College made 553 runs against Magda- ue College, at Cambridge ; on June 2nd, 3rd, Mr. H. H. Bell’s Eleven 519 t Burton-on-Trent, against the Burton Club ; on July 1st, Beddington irk, 586 for nine wickets against Marlborough Nomads, at Boddington I’ark. In a match between Richmond Albion and Carlton United, the >rmer scored 229 runs for one wicket, J. Bartram 19, H. Tate 108, not out, ?. Swann 88 not out. At Dublin, on May 13th, the Viceregal Club made _25 runs for the first wicket against the Cavalry Brigade of Dublin Gam- mi, Mr. Renny-Tailyour 134, Mr. Coltburst 84. The Leinster Club n a match against tho Civil Service at Dublin, scored 351 for four wickets, V. J. Fleming not out 152, O. L. Stokes not out 109. For the South . ainst the North, at Hull, in first innings, Mr. W. G. Graco scored 126 out of 159 runs, five being extras. In tho first innings of Notts against VMueestcrshire, at Clifton, Daft and Oscroft made 151 runs for the first ' .icket. For the Surrey Club against South Wales, Messrs. H. K. Avory and F. W. Bush in the second innings scored 123 runs for the first wicket. At Rochdale, in September, the South, in their second innings, scored 237

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