. Bowdoin Orient. nd graduated from Col-lege in 1892, being the class prophet. He imme-diately entered the law office of United StatesDistrict Attorney Bradbury and in 1898 was ad-mitted to the bar. Mr. Gately opened a law officeand continued the practice of law until he wasappointed deputy clerk of courts by Clerk ofCourts Llewellyn Barton in 1906. Mr. Gately was a member of Portland Lodgeof Elks and the Cumberland Bar Association. Heis survived by his mother, Mrs. Maria I. Gately,his wife and one daughter, a brother, Walter J. ofColumbia, S. C, and three sisters. The funeralwas held Wednesda
. Bowdoin Orient. nd graduated from Col-lege in 1892, being the class prophet. He imme-diately entered the law office of United StatesDistrict Attorney Bradbury and in 1898 was ad-mitted to the bar. Mr. Gately opened a law officeand continued the practice of law until he wasappointed deputy clerk of courts by Clerk ofCourts Llewellyn Barton in 1906. Mr. Gately was a member of Portland Lodgeof Elks and the Cumberland Bar Association. Heis survived by his mother, Mrs. Maria I. Gately,his wife and one daughter, a brother, Walter J. ofColumbia, S. C, and three sisters. The funeralwas held Wednesday morning from the Cathed-ral of Immaculate Conception and was attendedby more than a hundred members of the Cumber-land County Bar in a body and many other citi-zens as well. Interment was at Calvary Ceme-terv. During the hour of the ceremony the mainentrance to the County Court House was closedand many of the offices in the building suspendedwork. BOWDOIN ORIENT VOL. XLIII BRUN5W ICK, MAINE, MARCH 3, 1914 NO. 30. GENERAL JOSHUA L. CHAMBERLAIN Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain was born inBrewer, Me., Sept. 8, 1828. He prepared for col-lege at a military school at Ellsworth, where hereceived a training undoubtedly useful in laterservice. At Bowdoin he was a member of theAlpha Delta Phi fraternity, and graduated withthe class of 1852. Three years later he graduatedfrom Bangor Theological Seminary and receiveda license to preach. But instead of assumingministerial office he became an instructor at Bow-doin. He was Instructor of Logic and NaturalTheology, 1855-1856; Professor of Rhetoric andOratory, 1856-1861; Professor of Modern Lan-guages, 1861-1865; President, 1871-1883, and dur-ing this time. Professor of Mental and MoralPhilosophy, 1874-1879, and Lecturer of Political Science and Public Law, 1879-1885. He had beena Trustee since 1867. In 1862, with leave of absence from the trusteesand overseers of the college, he enlisted, and withrank of lieutenant-colonel, went to the front with
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