Boies was an unsuccessful candidate for election as judge of the district court in 1890. He served as member of the school board of the independent school district of Sheldon from 1900 to 1912. He was appointed judge of the district court of the fourth judicial district of Iowa on January 1, 1913.
On a division of this district, he became judge of the twenty-first judicial district, and in 1914 was elected for a term of four years.
On March 31, 1918, Boies resigned as judge to become a candidate for the Republican nomination to represent Iowa's 11th congressional district in the U.S. House. The incumbent, George Cromwell Scott, had chosen not to seek re-election. Boies won the Republican nomination (defeating two opponents), and then the seat (defeating former Congressman Thomas J. Steele),[1] becoming a member of the Sixty-sixth Congress.
He was not a candidate for renomination in 1928. In all, he served from March 4, 1919 to March 3, 1929.
He died in Sheldon, Iowa on May 31, 1932. He was interred in Eastlawn Cemetery.
References
^"Iowa Politicians Playing the Game," Sumner Gazette, 1919-12-18, at p. 15.