. Spalding's official cricket guide; with which is incorporated the American cricket annual . States and Canada 189 Great Aggregate Scores 195 Great Individual Scores 195 Hat Tricks. 1913 198 Individual Sc<,res of 200 in America 194 Longest I»artiiership Made for Kach Wicket in the United States and (\-uiada 194 Long Partnershiiis in England 195Long Partnershi])s in the United States 195 Seven Hundreds in a Season in the United States 195 Six Hundreds in a Season In the Tnited States 195 Six Wickets with Consecutive Ralls in the United States and Canada 195 Three Individual Hundreds in an I


. Spalding's official cricket guide; with which is incorporated the American cricket annual . States and Canada 189 Great Aggregate Scores 195 Great Individual Scores 195 Hat Tricks. 1913 198 Individual Sc<,res of 200 in America 194 Longest I»artiiership Made for Kach Wicket in the United States and (\-uiada 194 Long Partnershiiis in England 195Long Partnershi])s in the United States 195 Seven Hundreds in a Season in the United States 195 Six Hundreds in a Season In the Tnited States 195 Six Wickets with Consecutive Ralls in the United States and Canada 195 Three Individual Hundreds in an Innings in the Tnited States 195 Tie Games. 1913 198 Deaths in 1913 202 Diagram of Cricket Field 208 England First Class Cricket. 1913 205 Laws of Cricket 2(i9 Instructions to Umpires 2i:j Notable Incidents of 1913 204 Tour of the Australmis 109 Statistics of the T(,ur 177 Tour of the Tncogniti 181 Statistics of the Tour 187 United States vs. Canada—Hundreds Hit In Games be-tween TnitiMl States and Canada 200 Innings of Over .50 201 Records, 1844 to 1913 200 Washington (D. C.) C. C 145. IIAUKY MANLEY, DeYoungs Ihnti President New York and New Jersey Cricket Association. olFKIAL <, KKKET GUIDE. 5 All-North America Elevens By F. F. Kelly. It would bi impossihle to lay dnwii any cast-iron reason for tlio factthat ^nrral interest in cricket has increased by leai)s and bounds inthe last tliirty years. The fact is incontrovei tible, whatever the causemay be, but to most of those who have watched \ho course of criclietevents, the progress of competition cricket will present itself as theprimary cause of the progress of the game, as a whole. At the sametime, there is a fair field left for those who choose to maintain that theimpetus giv( n to competiti\e cricket is really due to the rapid spread oftlie j^ame itself and the attendant enthusiasm of its admirers; whilethere is, as usual, a third course left to us, which is to maintain thatthe two things, general cricket an


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookpublishernewyork, bookyear18