' -it-ittii a nv air P.A f W — ftnnfMi»i f . ' 



noT)T,K— At Belmont, suddenly. March T. Fred- 

 eric DodKe. In his SlUh year. Funeral lW*T" 

 lees at the Belmont Unitarian Church, Thurs- 

 day. March 10. at 2.30 P. M. Relatives and 

 Me»fl« Invited. Please do not send flowers. 

 Burial private. 



y RETIRED JUSTICE DEAD 



Judge Frederic Dodge of Belmont, Har- 

 vard '67, Was Appointed to U. S. Cir- 



A cult Court by President Taft 



Judge Frederic Dodge of 81 Clark road, 

 Belmont, retired justice of the United 



* StateB Circuit Court, died Monday of 

 apoplexy at the age of seventy-nine 

 years. Bom in Cambridge in 184", Judge 

 Dodge was graduated from Harvard in 



j 1867, and two years laher was admitted 

 to the Massachusetts bar, practicing for 

 thirty-five years as a lawyer in Boston. 

 In 1905 he was appointed by President 



j Koosevelt to the United States District 

 Court, and in 1912 President Taft ap- 

 pointed him to the United States Circuit 

 Court. Judge Dodge leaves a daughter, 



/ Mrs. Robert X. Miller of Washington, 



Though he retired in 1918, Judge Dodge 

 the following year served in his most 

 noted case, when he sat as master in the 

 U'tiga-tlnn between the trustees of the 

 Christian Science Publishing and the di- 

 rectors of the Christian Science Mother 

 Chuvch 



The- funeral will be held Thursday at 

 2.S0 P. M. from the Belmont Congrega- 

 tional Church (Unitarian) and burial will 

 be at Mt. Auburn Cemetery. 



