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' Text Appearing After Image: 1000 RUNS AND 100 WICKETS 261 beyond three days was unanimously adopted.The board decided to delegate the selection ofteams for test matches to a small sub-committee,and also agreed that the remuneration given toprofessionals and reserve men for taking partin a test match should in the future be;^2o each. As under the new financial arrange-ments each first-class county participates pro-portionately in the profits derived from thetest matches, any possibility of difficulty insecuring the service of professional cricketerson the ground that they are engaged elsewhereis removed. During 1898 three batsmen achieved the dis-tinction of scoring over a thousand runs andcapturing over a hundred wickets in a season offirst-class cricket—F. S. Jackson for Yorkshire,Charles Townsend for Gloucestershire, and W.Cuttell for Lancashire. This had up to this yearbeen done eighteen times since 1874—seven timesby myself, twice each by C. T. Studd and G. W.Hirst, and once each by Flowers, Davidson, Pe
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