Word: grosvenors
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...from whom the anonymous Harvard well-wisher confidently expects a first-class pitching staff to be developed include several good prospects. K. N. Hill '24 and Grosvenor Bemis '24, "H" men, have been unable to report regularly yet, but their proven ability makes them outstanding candidates. Philip Spalding '25 has made a vast improvement over his last year's form. R. F. Cordingley '25 was also showing up to very good advantage until he broke his wrist recently. His physician expects him to be in shape to play before May 1, and does not anticipate any permanent result from...
...other committeemen are as follows: L. J. Abbot, Grosvenor Bemis, F. E. Bowman, Peirce Clark, W. E. Collins, W. G. Cole, R deS. Childs, W. E. Crosby, G. G. Dolphin, J. F. D'Wolf, N. K. Fairbank, J. W. Gordon, S. P. Edgerton, W. A. Gordon, J. U. Harris, F. S. Hill, K. N. Hill, J. R. Hoover, C. J. Hubbard, R. S. Hubbard, Percy Jenkins, Grinnel Knowles, H. A. LaFarge, F. W. Mason, Malcolm Morse, A. C. Paletti, Eugene Reynal, Thorvald Sanchez, F. A. O. Schwarz, W. R. Sherwood, J. B. Squier, A. H. Tully, G. G. Walker...
...Hill '24, whose excellent relief pitching in the final Yale game last June puts him among the leading aspirants for a regular berth, has been at the field for practice. He is still favoring a football injury, however, and so has not yet put on a uniform. Grosvenor Bemis '24 and Philip Spalding '25, both of whom saw service last year, are not expected to report at present. R. G. Morris '24, substitute first-baseman a year ago, is numbered among the pitching candidates...
...Grosvenor Bemis...
...spelt his name Trumbull at this time) delivered the Valedictory Oration in 1762 when he came back for his Master's degree, and the library has the two letters which President Holyoke wrote him inviting and urging him to deliver the oration. These were received in 1905 from Mr. Grosvenor S. Hubbard of New York, great-grandson of Governor Trumbull. Mr. Hubbard also gave the library a few years later a manuscript containing Judah Monts' "Hewbrew Grammar" and William Brattle's "Enchtridion Logicae," text-books then used in Harvard College, with other notes and lectures on natural philosophy written...