Page:Cricket (Hutchinson, 1903).djvu/587

Rh Bruce, W., 240, 245, 260

Buchanan, David, 210, 211, 212, 305

Buckland, E. H., 324

Mr. F. M., 315

Budd, Mr., 22, 27, 39

Bull, F. G., 389

Bullingdon Club, the, 299, 302

Bullock, W. H., 304

Buluwayo, 381, 397, 405

Burnup, C. J., 73, 176, 332, 334, 390, 410

Burton, 387

Bury, W., 308

Bush, J. A., 172

Butler, Mr. S. E., 312

Caffyn, W., 218, 362

Callaway, 412, 413

Cam, the, 296

Cambridge, 232, 296, 298, 302, 305, 307, 319, 325, 327, 333, 357, 359

Cambridgeshire, 150

Canada, cricket in, 381, 392

Canterbury Week, 355

Cape Colony, 402

Cape Town, 396, 395, 401, 402, 407

Carpenter, 160, 199

Case, Professor, 306, 359

Case, T. B., 357

Cazenove, Mr. Arthur, 304

Charlton, 244

Chatterton, 170

Clarke, P. H., 390, 391

Clarke, 22

Cliftonians, Old, 355

Climate, influence of, on cricket, 221, 222, 387

Cobb, M. R., 392

Cobbold, P. W., 334

Cobden, Mr. F. C., 310, 311

Cobham, Lord, 307

Coningham, 259

Cooper, W. H., 236

Coronation Match, 21

Cotterill, G. E., 307

Cowley Common, 299

Marsh, 302

Cranfield of Somerset, 69

Crawford, Frank, 81

Crawford, Mr., 203 note

Crawford, Mr. V. F. S., 391

Crawley, Mr. Eustace, 311, 324

Crawte, 15

Cricket, the beginning of, i; origin of name, i. 2; first form of play, 2, 3, 315 underhand bowling, 3; the first bat, 4, 5; choosing the wicket, 4; "length" bowling, 4, 5, 32; laws in 1774, 5; match between Kent County and All England in 1847, 5, 6; change of fashion in bat, 6; match between Hambledon Club and All England in 1775, 6; number of stumps increased, 7, 8; height of stumps and narrowing of wicket, 7, 8; distance between the wickets, 8, 9; regarding the width of the bat and size of ball, 10; invention of gauge, 10; laws first committed to writing, 1 1; influence of betting, 11, 135 a new moral epoch in 1833, 13; the Hambledon Club, 13, 14; a fire at the M.C.C. Pavilion, 14; Farnham the cradle of, 14, 15; county "boundaries," 15; famous battlefields, 16; early matches, 17; cricket in the north, 17; appearance of Essex and Herts, 18; the first Gents v. Players match in 1798, 19; more strict division of counties, 205 betting, 21-28; single-wicket matches, 27, 28

Cricket, country-house, 342; the prime of, 343; perceptible decrease in the amount of this class of cricket, 344; obstacles in the way of, 345; the task of collecting a team, 345, 346; an ideal week of, 346; the ladies' cricket match, 347; lunches, 347; Smokers v. Non-Smokers, 348; the I Zingari Club, 348, 3495 a batch of anecdotes, 349-354; "military weeks," 354; school tours, 355; clubs, 355-359; aims of, 360 county, 20; progress of, 139; organisation into a formal competition, 141; growth and systematisation, 142; gate money, 142, 143; increase of cricket, due to the growth of county cricket, 144; formation of a county Eleven, 144, 145; grounds, 146; professional players, 147; amateurs, 147; relations between professionals and amateurs, 149; question of residential qualification, 149-152; bona-fide residence.