Six tickets altogether; there was the Constitutional Amendment voted
at that election.
Q. Did you observe which boxes the tickets of these persons were put
into?
A. I did.
Q. Which were they?
A. I think that the ballots that these ladies voted.
Q. I don't want what you think; I want what you know.
A. Well, they went into those boxes; Member of Congress, Member at
Large.
Q. Were there two boxes for Congressmen?
A. I think there was; I am not quite positive; I rather think I am
mistaken about that.
Q. Well, give us what you know about the boxes?
A. The most that I know about is, that the remark was made by the
inspector that they voted the four tickets.
Q. You heard the remark made that they voted four tickets; who made that
remark?
A. Mr. Jones or Mr. Hall; when they passed their ballots they would say,
"They vote all four tickets; no Constitutional Amendment voted."
Q. That was the practice of the inspector, no matter who voted?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Then you didn't see the tickets as they went into the boxes?
A. No, sir.
Q. You can't swear which boxes they went into?
A. I understood from the inspectors that they voted all the tickets with
the exception of the Constitutional Amendment.
Q.
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