Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 September 2013
1 For summaries of absent-voting legislation enacted before 1917, see American Political Science Review, viii, 442, (1914), x, 114, (1916), xi, 116, 320, (1917); National Municipal Review, iii, 733, (1914); Case and Comment, xxiii, 358, (1916).
2 Colorado, Kansas, Missouri, New Mexico, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Oregon, Vermont, Washington, Wyoming.
3 Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, Wisconsin.
4 Laws of Illinois, 50th General Assembly, (1917), pp. 434 ff. Laws of the State of Indiana, 70th Regular Session, (1917), pp. 317 ff. General Election Laws of Minnesota, (1917), pp. 137 ff. Laws of Montana, 15th Regular Session, (1917), pp. 352 ff. Public Laws of North Carolina, (1917), pp. 78 ff. New Mexico Session Laws, of 1917, pp. 956 ff. Primary and General Election Laws of the State of Oklahoma, (1917), pp. 16 ff. Election Laws of the State of Ohio, (1917), pp. 132 ff. Laws of South Dakota, (1917), pp. 317 ff. General Laws of Texas, 85th Legislature, (1917), pp. 62 ff. Session of Laws of the State of Washington, 15th Session, (1917), pp. 712 ff. Wisconsin Session Laws, (1917), pp. 956 ff. Digest ofthe Election Laws of Tennessee, (1918), ch. 8.
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