Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 August 2014
1 Georgia Laws, 1924, No. 517.
2 Acts of the General Assembly of South Carolina, 1924, No. 540.
3 An absent-voting law was enacted in Kentucky in 1918, but was held unconstitutional by the state supreme court in 1921.
4 Arizona, New Hampshire, South Dakota, and Vermont. Laws of Arizona, 1925, Ch. 75; New Hampshire Laws, 1925, Ch. 20; Session Laws of South Dakota, 1925, Ch. 159; Laws of Vermont, 1925, No. 5.
5 Arizona, Delaware, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Wisconsin, and Vermont.
6 New York Laws, 1924, Ch. 446.
7 New York Laws, 1925, Ch. 509.
8 Minnesota Session Laws, 1925, Ch. 289.
9 Minnesota Session Laws, 1925, Ch. 388.
10 Ibid., Ch. 278.
11 Session Laws of Hawaii, 1925, Act 273. Unimportant amendments to absent-voting statutes were adopted in Nevada and Virginia. Laws of Nevada, 1925, Ch. 36; Virginia Acts of Assembly, 1924, Ch. 420.
12 Clark v. Nash, Lyon v. Nash, 192 Ky. 594 (1921).
13 Lancaster City's Fifth Ward Election, 281 Pa. St. Rep., 131–138 (1925).
14 Statutes of California, 1925: Concurrent and Joint Resolutions and Constitutional Amendments, Ch. 56, p. 138.
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