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D-ELECTION CASE OF HORGAN v. TINKHAM
HEARINGS
BEFORE THE
COMMinEE ON ELECTIOiNS No. 2
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
SIXTY-FOURTH CONGRESS
First Session
ON
THE CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE OF FRANCIS J. HORGAN
V. GEORGE HOLDEN TINKHAM, FROM THE ELEVENTH
CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
MAY 3 AND 4, 1916
WASHINGTON
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFIOE
1916
D.
•ju bO IS J
CONTESTED-ELECTION^ CASE OF HORGAN v. TLNKHAM.
Committee ox Elections Xo. 2.
House of Representatives,
Wednesday^ May -5, 1916.
The committee met at 10 oVlock a. m.. Hon. James A. Hamill
(chairman) presiding.
The CiiAimiAN. Are counsel ready to proceed in this case?
Mr. Innes. AVe are both ready. Mr. Chairman.
The Chairman. The meeting has been called this morning for the
purpose of hearing argument in the case of Francis J. Horgan. con-
testant, against George Holden Tinkham, contestee. The contest is
from the eleventh congressional district of Massachusetts. Who ap-
pears for the contestant?
Mr. Prout. William C. Prout.
The Chairman. Mr. William C. Prout appears for the contestant.
Who appears for the contestee?
Mr. Innes. Charles H. Tnnes.
The Chairman, (lentlemen, liave you any idea as to how much
time you desire to argue this case?
Mr. Prout. What is the custom? Is it customary to allow the
contestant any time for rebuttal?
The Chairman. Yes; the contestant will have the right to open
and to reply.
Mr. Prout. I would not want to limit myself to anything less than
one hour on the first argument.
The Chairman. On your opening argument?
Mr. Prout. Yes.
The CiiAiRarAN. How much time will you want, Mr. Tnnes?
Mr. Innes. I do not know. It Avill depend someAvhat upon what
i3rother Prout has to say. I did not intend to cover anything he
covers.
The Ciiair:man. If in the course of the argument anyone wants
further time, it is always given by the committee. We are very
liberal about that. The only i:)oint is, we want to get some kind of a
tentative idea as to about how long you think you will he. You
think you will be about one hour in your opening statement, and you
think you will want about one hour. Mr. Innes ?
Mr. Innes. About one hour, Mr. Chairman: yes.
The Chairman. And how long will you want in reply?
Mr. Prout. I do not imagine over 15 or 20 minutes.
The Chairman. Half an hour?
Mr. Prout. Half an hour at the outside. I should say.
The Chairman. That can be changed later, if the committee so
desires.
3
4 CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HORGAN VS. TINKHAM.
Mr. Rogers. May I ask if it is your intention, Mr. Chairman, to
push this matter to a conclusion to-day?
The Chairmax. If possible ; if it is not possible, we will meet to-
morrow. The House meets to-day at 12 o'clock, and therefore we
will have two hours. Mr. Prout, you may begin.
STATEMENT OF MR. WILLIAM C. PROUT, ATTORNEY FOR MR.
FRANCIS J. HORGAN, CONTESTANT,
Mr. Prout. Mr. Chairman and gentlemen of the committee, this is
a contested-election case from the eleventh Massachusetts district.
Briefly, for the information of the committee, the district is com-
posed wholly of wards AYithin the city of Boston, including ward 10,
the whole of ward 11 with the exception of two precincts, and wards
12, 18, 19, 21, 22, and 23.
The Chairman. Will you please repeat the numbers of those
wards ?
Mr. Prout. Ward 10; the whole of ward 11 with the exception of
two precincts, there being nine precincts in the ward; wards 12, 18,
19, 21, 22, and 23.
Mr. Russell. ^'\^io represented this district in the last Congress?
Mr. Prout. Andrew J. Peters, and the district has been represented
by Democrats since its formation 10 or 12 years ago. The make-up
of the district and the political complexion of the district I will touch
on a little later.
In order to get down as rapidly as possible to the meat of the case,
I would like to say that the contest is based on several grounds, in-
cluding bribery, the use of liquor, deception of voters by postal cards
sent out from one end of the district to the other linking the name of
the Democratic candidate for governor and the Republican candidate,
the contestee, for Congress, and a conspiracy between the Democratic
leader in the district and the contestee, the Democratic leader being
a member of the Senate and chairman of the Democratic city com-
mittee of Boston ; and also an allegation that the contestee's returns,
as filed with the secretary of state in Massachusetts, were not in
accordance with the Massachusetts corrupt-practices act.
On the question of bribery, the bribery consists in the payment of
certain small sums of money to individual voters in the district,
including the payment of money to one Dolan, as testified to on page
307 of the record; one Purcell, as testified to on pages 112 and 235
of the record ; that amount of money being
The Chairman (interposing). Mr. Prout, is that set out in your
brief, just for my information?
Mr. Prout. Yes; the references are made in the brief and the
different subheads are set out and you can find in the index of the
brief an outline of the brief.
In the case of Purcell the bribery alleged consists of allowing Purcell,
who was a Democratic voter, to retain for his own use the unexpended
balance which was given to him by the contestee for the purpose of
sending out these postal cards referred to as the " Walsh-Tinkham
postal card," Walsh being the Democratic governor and a candidate
for relection and ]Mr. Tinkham being the Republican nominee for
Congress; also money paid to one Sheppard, referred to on page 493
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOEGAN VS. TINKHAM. 5
of the record, Mr. Sheppard being a negro voter who was paid $27.85
under the heading of posters.
Mr. R-VMSEYER. ITnder the heading of what?
Mr. Proltt. Posters; also the payment of $58.75 to one Mason,
another negro voter, who Avas paid that monev for the purpose of
having a rally, but there was no itemized account as to his expendi-
tures and no evidence as to how the money was expended.
Mr. Tillman. What is the reference to Mason ?
Mr. Pkoitt. Page 492. There is also considerable evidence of
bribery AThich is not of specific sums and not on the admission of the
individuals to whom it was paid, but rather in the nature of general
testimony, which is valuable more because of the cumulative effect of
it than be.:;ause of the value of any isolated instance. This testimony
includes, among other things, the testimony of one Devlin, on page
127, who saw Senator Timilty paying out money to voters, and Sena-
tor Timilty, we claim, in so doing was acting as the agent of the
contestee. Also the evidence of one Lally, on pages 290-296 and
305. containing various instances of the payment of money to the
voters and the use of liquors. Also the testimony of one White, on
page 809, who testified as to the payment of $10 to one Killilea. Also
the testimony of one Brosnahan. on page 285, Avho testified to the
payment of $50 to the secretary of an organization known as the
Kearsarge Club. Also the testimony of one Keyes. on page 339,
who testifi'^d as to the payment of $1.25 to him and the giving to him
of 10 or 12 small vials of whisky for distribution among the voters.
That also comes under the heading of the use of liquor as well as the
distribution of money.
There was also the testimony of one Frederick J. McLaughlin, on
page 250 of the record, a man Avho is the circulation manager of the
largest women's publication, probably, in the United States, and a
man of standing in the community, whose testimony was disposed of
with a wave of the hand by the contestee, but who testified that one
Duffin, a law partner of the contestee and a man very closely associated
with him. who testified that he was in a position to know the facts in
connection with the contestee's political campaign, and ^McLaughlin
testified that Duffin stated to him. as appears in the record, that the con-
testee had barrels of money and they, meaning the contestee and his
agents and servants, spent it on the election like drunken sailors; and
furthermore that they had put the thing across, to use his oAvn words,
but they felt that the contestant could not prove it. That evidence
being the admission of one so closely connected with the contestee in
his law practice and in the political campaign is certainly entitled to
great w^eight and certainly is demonstrative of the excessive use of
money and the bribery and corruption of the voters. In addition to
these instances, there are several instances of the distribution of
money under the guise of purchasing tickets for dances and balls of
organizations, some of which probably existed and some of which
probably had no existence whatsoever. That is referred to in the
testimony of one of the contestee's witnesses — I beg your pardon, one
of the contestant's witnesses — who was a supporter of the contestee,
on page 301, 302, and 303. of the record, and in the testimony of con-
testant on pages 358. 359. 360, and 363. Xow. with regard to the
question of the use of liquor, which is also of some importance, that
6 CONTESTED-ELECTIOlSr CASE HOEGAlSr VS. TINKHAM.
is referred to in the testimony of one Crimmins on page 202, Avho
testified that liquor was dispensed freeh^ in private houses in ward 18,
that being the ward dominated by Senator Timilty, and in the testi-
mony of Keyes on page 338, ah^eady referred to, in the distribution of
vials of whisky, and the testimony of William J. Kelley, pages 209,
210, 211, and 212, who testified as to the distribution of liquor in
"various barrooms, the owners of which were friendly to contestee,
and supporters of his. The testimony of one Lally, on pages 290 and
296, who testified as to the purchase of liquor b}^ Craven, another of
contestee's supporters, in a hotel on election day.
Now, the matter of the use of liquor by contestee is disposed of by
him in his brief in rebuttal by the statement that in Massachusetts
on election day the. barrooms have to close ; consequently there could
not be any distribution of liquor on election day. Our reply to that
is that, although the common, ordinary barrooms have to close, the
extraordinar}'' kitchen barrooms, of course, are always open on Sun-
days, holidays, and any other time, and also any liquor place which
happens to have a hotel license — and there is a great many of them
in the district — are allowed to remain open and do business just as
on any ordinary day of the week; and on the testimony of the wit-
nesses referred to we claim that there was a widespread, illegal dis-
tribution of liquor by the contestee and his agents and supporters.
Now, the next matter which I desire to refer to is the deception of
voters of one ward — ward 22 — by the printing and distribution of
the post card referred to as the Walsh-Tinkham post card.
The Chairmax. Pardon me a minute, Mr. Prout. Is this a copy
of that post card?
Mr. Innes. Yes.
Mr. Prout. Yes ; that is one of the post cards Avhich was sent out.
The Chairman. It is agreed that this post card [Exhibit No. 1]
is the card know^n as the Walsh-Tinkham post card.
Mr. Russell. Dees the record show, or is there any way to know,
how many of these postal cards were mailed out ?
Mr. Peout. Yes; the record will show that in the testimony of
Pur cell.
Mr. lN>fES. The printer's bill, I think, shows how much he paid
for them.
Mr. Russell. If the record shows that
Mr. Prout (interposing). The record, on page 112, in the testi-
mony of Purcell, will show there were approximately 2,000 of these
cards sent out in one ward, that being ward 22. Now, the contestee
and the men who signed the post card admit that both signers of the
post card are registered, enrolled Democrats ; that both are employed
by the New York. New Haven & Hartford Railroad, and they got
up a card containing the names of the Democratic candidates for the
house — that is, the Massachusetts house — and contestee's name, and
presented that card to the contestee, and after the conference with
him it was changed so as to include the name of the Democratic can-
didate for governor and his own name; that he paid these men $40
to cover the cost of getting this out; that they had it printed and
distributed it in ward 22.
Mr. Russell. Did I understand you to say that the contestee admits
that he paid for printing the card ?
Mr. Prout. Yes.
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOKGAN VS. TINKHAM. "
Mr. Russell. And it -was done with his knowledge and consent?
Mr. Prout. He paid for it and a change was made in the form of
it after conference with him.
Mr. Magee. I notice the card is signed by two gentlemen. Is it
your contention that the signatures were put on the card Avithout
authority?
Mr. Prout. No, sir ; they both testified and the contestee testified
that they put their signatures on themselves.
Mr. Tillman. You say they are known Democrats?
Mr. Prout. They are enrolled Democrats, or were at that time. In
jSIassachusetts we have a system of party enrollment and the voters
who desire to take part in a party caucus are obliged to enroll them-
selves as members of one party or the other.
The Chairman. Now, Mr. Prout, what point do you make about
this postal card?
Mr. Prout. AVhat point ?
The Chairman. Yes; what is your point; that it was illegal to
send this out ?
Mr. Prot T. We do not make any claim of illegality as far as con-
formity with the ordinances of the city of Boston or the State of
Massachusetts is concerned, but we do say that it is an unfair attem})t
to mislead the voters of the district and that, as a matter of fact, it did
deceive and mislead a certain number of them, and that it comes un-
der the ruling laid down in the case of Bradley i\ Slemons.
Mr. Russell. May I ask whether the contestee and his organization
were supporting Walsh ?
Mr. Prout. Pardon me just one moment — that reference is 2 Hinds,
938. The contestee and his organization were not supporting Walsh,
but the idea of sending this card out was to confuse the voters and
give them the idea that Gov. Walsh, a popular Democratic governor,
Avho was then governor and candidate for reelection, Avas running on
the same ticket or in some way was identified with the Republican
candidate for Congress. They were not supporting each other and
had no connection. The contestee does not claim that he supported
Walsh or that AValsh supported him.
Mr. Ramseyer. How long before the election were these cards
mailed out?
Mr. Prout. The election was on Tuesday, and I believe the cards
were mailed on the Saturday before.
Mr. TiLLJNiAN. Are these Democrats well known and popular
people or are they obscure men, and w^ould their names on a card
of this kind attract the attention of Democrats all over the city
and cause them to get the impressfon that they were speaking for
those two names on the ticket, or are they obscure Democrats and
not well known to the electorate?
Mr. Prout. Both of them are fairly well known, and one is a
son-in-law of a former chairman of the Democratic ward committee.
The Chairman. INIr. Prout, is there anything to show that Pur-
cell or Reynolds objected to the use of their names, or did they allow
the use of their names?
Mr. Prout. They allowed the use of their names. They both
testified on the stand that they were not acquainted with Mr. Tink-
ham until shortly before the primaries; that he had never done any-
thing for them, and they did not know Mr. Horgan and knew
8 CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOEGAlsr VS. TINKHAM.
neither good nor evil about eitlier one of the candidates, and there-
fore they had absohitely no motive for sending out these cards, and
we question their motive in sending them out.
Mr. Rogers. It was testified, was it not, that Mr. Tinkham paid
for these cards?
Mr. Prout. Yes.
Mr. Rogers. Do you recall whether the item was entered in Mr.
Tinkham's campaign return?
Mr. Prout. That I can not say, but I presume it was; yes.
Mr. Innes. It was. Incidentally, I might say here, if you are
going into this question, Mr. Prout, I know you want to have it
correct, Mr. Purcell did testify that the barber who shaved Mr.
Tinkham at the athletic club was a friend of his and that was the
reason he gave for interesting himself.
Mr. Prout. Yes; that is correct. The only reason that Mr.
Purcell could give for taking an interest in this matter, although
an enrolled Democrat, in behalf of a Republican nominee, was
that the barber who had shaved Mr. Tinkham or habitually shaved
Mr. Tinkham at the atheletic club, asked him to interest himself
in Mr. Tinkham's behalf ; and he did and persuaded Reynolds to do
the same, although Reynolds was the son of a former chairman of
the Democratic ward committee, and I believe Purcell was a son-in-
law of another former chairman of the Democratic ward committee.
The law which I refer to as tending to show that this was an un-
fair, if not a positively illegal way to conduct a campaign, is set
out in the case of Bradley v. Slemons
Mr. Magee (interposing). Is it your contention that there is any
statute in the State of Massachusetts under which the sending out
of this card might be held to be an illegal act?
Mr. Prout. No; I say, as far as the statute of Massachusetts in
connection with sending out political literature is concerned, there
was no violation of that statute. The statute simply requires that
the card be signed by one person and have his address on the card;
but in the case of Bradley v. Slemons, which was decided by the
Committee on Elections of the House, in which case a similar act
was committed, the committee not only thought that it was a thing
which should not have been done, but in their report said:
We now come to the consideration of tlie most important point made by
tlie contestant in liis brief and arguments — the circuhition of false and fraudu-
lent posters in Chicot County a few days before the election.
That was a case in which posters were placarded throughout the
district several days at least before the election, so that the other
candidate had an opportunity to see them and correct any damage
they did, while in this case it was a matter of sending out postal
cards on Saturday evening, they being received by the voters on
Monday morning, the very day before the election, which allowed
the other candidate absolutely no opportunity to make any explana-
tion or to refer to them in any way.
The committee in that case went on to say :
The object was evidently to deceive the Republican Party in that county
and thus induce that vote to be cast for Slemons and a vote which was sup-
posed otherwise would have been cast for contestant. It was a shallow device,
dishonorable to those engaged in the transaction, and deserves the emphatic
condemnation of every friend of free and fair elections, and if the testimony
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOEGAN VS. TINKHAM. \)
was .suHicient to estabiisli tlie coinplicity of conlestee v.ith an act so dis-
lioiiorahle, and when satisfied that its effect upon tlie voters niMihiced a result
different from that wlucli otherwise would have occurred, we would not
hesitate to reconiuieud that the election he set aside an43 votes. There Avere two precincts
missing, however, Avhen he ran for Congress, which would change
that from 1,643 votes to something in the vicinity of 1,800 votes or
1,850 votes. This statement shows, however, that in spite of the fact
that he had represented those wards in the senate, instead of growing
stronger he grew progressively v/eaker.
Mr. Magee. What is the city council? To what body does that
correspond ?
Mr. Prout. It has been been abolished now for about 8 or 10
years. It was formerly made up of three councilmen from each of
the 25 wards of the city of Boston.
I have just referred to the case of Mitchell v. Walsh (2 Hinds'
Precedents, par. 263), showing the well settled law as to the amount
of proof and the character of proof required in a case Avhere con-
spiracy^ or fraud is alleged. In that case the committee said :
Fraud can rarely, if ever, be proven by direct evidence, and the rule is tliat
whenever a sufficient number of independent circumstances, wliicli ix)int to its
existence, are clearly established, a prima facie case of its existence is made,
and if this case is not met with explanation or contradiction it becomes con-
clusive.
That rule is also followed in the case of Noyes v. Rockwell, in the
Fifty-second Congress, Rowell's Digest, page 716, and also in the
case of Donnelly v. Washburn (2 Hinds' Precedents, par. 945),
wherein it was held :
It must not be forgotten that bribery is a secret crime ; both the parties to
it are equally interested in keeping it secret ; and where detected both are
ready to give ingenious explanations of it.
That rule is also upheld in the case of Abbott v. Frost (2 Hinds'
Precedents, par. 917), which was a Massachusetts case. In that case
it was said:
In a great majority of cases it is impossible to prove a charge of bribery by
•direct and positive testimony. From the very nature of the case the only source
from which such testimony can c.84.
Mr. Ramskvkr. Is that for the election or for the piimarv and
elec^tion (
Mr. Proit. That is the election exclusively.
Mr. Tillman. P'our thou.^ond and what ^
Mr. Prout. $4.-.il.5.;U.
Mr. Tillman. That is. at the primary^
Mr. Prout. No: at the election.
The Chairman. You are leaving the i)iima:\v out of this alto-
gether ?
Mr. Prout. Yes.
Mr. Innes. There was no contest in the primary.
Mr. Ramsever. Under your State law you are re<|uired to file an
itemized statement with what officer^
Mr. Prout. With the secretary of state.
Mr. Ramsever. .Vnd does his itemized statement show $4,215.34?
•Ml'. Proit. X<»: 1 will explain that. That $4,-215.84 is simply and
solely what Ml-. Tinkliani admits him.^elf to have spent. Now. Mr.
Tinkham explains that amount by a (i\u)tation of a statement of his
interpretation of the Mas.sa(husetts act which is in conflict with the
Federal act.
22 CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOKGAN VS. TINKHAM.
The Chairman. That is what we want to know. How does Tink-
ham justify the expenditure of $4,215.34 when the Law says he can
spend only $3,000?
Mr. Prout. He says that under the Federal act personal expenses
are not included in that amount, and he includes as personal expenses
printing and mailing and postage, and he claims that since the
Massachusetts act is in violation — or. as he claims, is in Adolation or
conflict with the Federal law— in spite of the fact that the Massa-
chusetts act sets forth $3,000 as an absolute limit, under the Federal
act, he is entitled to spend in excess of that amount for printing,
mailing, and postage, which he claims are personal expenses.
Mr. EussELL. But the Federal act provides that where there is a
State act the limit shall be that fixed by the State, if under the
amount fixed by the Federal act.
Mr. Prout. Yes, sir. Therefore we claim that the limit was $3,000
and that in exceeding that limit it was an unlawful amount.
The Chairman. Does the State act, Mr. Prout, exempt a candidate
from these personal expenses, or does it require him to bring personal
and all other expenses within the $3,000 limit?
Mr. Prout. That Massachusetts corrupt-practices act was passed in
1914 as amended
The Chairman (interposing). What time in 1914?
Mr. Prout. It went into effect on the 1st of August.
The Chairman. The 1st of of August, 1914?
Mr. Prout. 1914.
The Chairman. Before the election?
Mr. Innes. August 1 before the election, and many men did their
printing for this election before the 1st of August. This act took
effect practically just on the eve of this election, August 1, 1914.
Mr. Eamseyer. Have you a reference to that act?
Mr. Prout. The act is printed almost in full in the contestee's brief.
It is chapter 835 of the acts of 1912 as amended by chapter 783 of
the acts of 1914.
Mr. Magee. What section of 1912 ?
Mr. Prout. Chapter 835 of the acts of 1912 and chapter 783 of the
acts of 1914.
Now, Mr. Tinkham filed his report with the secretary of state and
made some suggestion, I believe that there were other expenses
which he
Mr. Innes (interposing). Why not read what he said, Mr. Prout?
Mr. Prout. I will if I can find it here. Have you got it ?
Mr. Magee, What was the maximum allowed under the prior act ?
Mr. Eogers. That is at page 84 of the contestee's brief, Mr. Prout.
Mr. Prout. On that point Mr. Herbert H. Boynton, who was the
assistant secretary of state and the man in charge of that particular
work in the secretary of state's office, testified, and Mr. Tinkham in
filing his report said :
I make no return of printing, postage, stationery, typewriting, etc., because
section 343, chapter 835, acts of 1912, as amended by section 2, chapter 783, acts
of 1914, says that " candidates for nomination or election to the Senate or
House of Representatives of the United States shall be subject to the laws of the
United States in so far as this act may conflict with such laws."
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOEGAN VS. TINKHAM. 23
That is, he claims he comes under the Federal act and is not bound
by the Massachusetts act, although the Federal act states where there
is a conflict
Mr. EoGERs (interposing). Each law says that Avherever there is
a conflict the other one shall prevail, does it not ?
Mr. Prout. I believe so.
Mr. Eamseyer. Does the Massachusetts law say that ?
Mr. Rogers. Yes.
Mr. Prout. And Mr. Boynton, who was in the secretary of state's
office, testified :
I called the attention of Mr. Tinkluun to the possibility of donbt as to whether
his constrnotion of the Massachusetts law was correct, stating that lUKloiibtedly
we would he obliged to submit it to the attorney general for his decision, on the
ground that the State law was complete, and it required everything to be stated,
and that part of the United States law in effect stated that it shall be subject
to t]K> laws of tlie United States so far as they were applicable and in conflict.
My understanding of the law was that he should be subject to any other require-
ments in addition to the State law; that the State law was complete.
Mr. Innes. Mr. Boynton's contention was that there should be a
return made to the State. He did not say the State law should gov-
ern, but that there should be a return made.
The Chairman'. That these personal expenses should be returned?
Mr. IxNES. His contention was that there should be a return made,
but they did not come within the limits fixed by the State law, and
that was the only contention raised by Mr. Boynton.
Mr. Prout. Mr. Boynton stated in his testimony that the matter
was referred to the Attorney General as irregular. The campaign
publicity act. House Rules. 2958, paragraph 940a. at page 407. says:
This !ict shall not l)e coustruwl to annul or vitiate the laws of any State not
directly in conflict herewith, relating to the nomination or election of candi-
dates for the ortices herein named, or to exempt any such candidate from com-
plying with such State hiW'^.
Mr. Maoee. As I understand it, if I got the correct impression in
reading the Massachusetts corrupt practices act, that yielded to the
Federal law in express terms, did it not? Just what was that State
act?
Mr. Prout. The State act says:
Candidates for nomination or election to the Senate or House of Represent-
atives of tlie United States shall be subject to the laws of the United States in
so far as this act may conflict with such laws.
Now, this act did not conflict with those laws, because the Federal
law stated expressly that the State law should govern, and that that
act was not intended to vitiate or annul the State act. The State act
made an absolute limit of $3,000 and Mr. Tinkham expended $1,200,
on his own admission, in excess of that amount.
Mr. Magee. If it was not the intention of the Massachusetts Legis-
lature to yield to the Federal act, why did they incorporate such
language in enacting that law?
Mr. Prout. The idea of the State act as expressed by Mr. Boynton,
who was in the office of the secretary of state and in charge of election
affairs, was that the State law was complete —
and it required everything to be stated, and that part of the Uniie. That is not denied.
Mr. Innes. We have added to the figures in our brief
Mr. Magee (interposing). AVas the $()00 deducted?
Mr. Innes. We say
The Chairman (interposing). Do you contend that more than
that was paid ?
Mr. Innes. Yes, sir; based on his own figures. I am giving him
credit for the money paid to the committee.
Mr. Russell. You claim that the contestee expended more than
the amount that he admits?
Mr. Prout. In the statement that the contestee has made on page
96 of his brief, he bulks the primary expenses in with the election
expenses, and he shows an expenditure of $4.5-1:4.03 instead of $4,500.
as is allowed by law for primary and election expenses.
Mr. EussELL, Do you admit that that is the amount that was ex-
pended, or do you claim that there was even more than that sum?
Mr. Prout. This is their statement of the contestant's expenses.
Mr. Russell. How much is that?
Mr. Pkoi^t. That is $4,544.03. The contestee claims that there was
an excessive amount expended of $9.75.
The Chairman. Are you going to show that Mi-. Tinkliam spent
more than that $4,200? Are you going to show that he did really
spend more than that, and that he spent more than $3,000 for the
things that he was not allowed to spend over $3,000 for?
Mr. Prout. The amounts in excess of that are a number of small
minor amounts.
The Chairman. For things not included in personal expenses?
Mr. Proit. The only one in addition to those expenditures is the
amount expended for what we allege is bribery, which does not
amount to a great deal, possibly not more than $150.
Mr. Magee. What puzzles me is the question of the amounts that
they may lawfully expend under the Massachusetts statutes. Now,
I understand you to contend that the maximum is $3,000 for election
purposes?
Mr. Prout. Yes. sir.
Mr. Magee. And the maximum allowed under the law for ])rimary
purposes is $1,500?
Mr. Prout. Yes, sir.
Mr. Magee. They are separate and divided?
Mr. Prout. Yes, .sir; separate and divided. Noav, the figures of
the contestant including everything, printing, postage, mailing, and
all personal expenses of every kind and nature, show $2,943. I do
not quite understand the excess of $44 claimed by the contestee, and
I do not quite understand the bulking together of the primary ex-
26 CONTESTED-ELECT! 01^ CASE HOEGAN VS. TINKHAM.
penses and the election expenses of the contestant. The figures given
in the contestant's brief are figures which were made under oath and
which were not questioned.
Mr. Magee. Your contention is that Mr. Tinkham, in both the
primary and election contests, expended some $44 in excess of the
maximum amount allowed by law?
Mr. Prout. No. sir ; we are talking simply of the election ex-
penses, and we claim that he expended $1,200 more for the election
than the law allows — that is, that he expended $4,200 instead of
$3,000.
Mr. Magee. What is your contention as to the amount expended
by him for primary expenses?
Mr. Prout. I do not know that they expended anything on ac-
count of the primary. He had no contest in the primary.
Mr. Magee. The disbursements of the contestee that are material
here relate entirely to election expenses?
Mr. Prout. The figures of the contestee relate altogether to elec-
tion expenses. The amount is $4,200.
Mr. Ramseyer. When was the primary held?
Mr. Prout. On the 23d of September. I hope the members of the
committee are not confusing the contestant and contestee in these elec-
tion returns. The contestant claims that the contestee spent $1,200
more on his election than the law allows, and the contestee tries to
explain that on the ground of a difference in the law
The Chairman (interposing) . That he is exempted by the Massa-
chusetts statute?
Mr. Prout. Yes, sir. There is no distinct argument raised by the
contestee on the contestant's expenses.
The Chairman. Is the contestee going to argue that the contestant
spent more than $3,000?
Mr. Innes. It is a very small sum. We are simply using it to
indicate how possible it is for anybody, no matter in what good faith
he may be acting, to go beyond the limit in such matters as printing,
for instance.
Mr. Rogers. You say he may go over the limit, even when acting
in good faith ? Does the statute expressly provide for that ?
Mr. Innes. Yes, sir.
Mr. Prout. The contestee, in his figures on the primary and elec-
tion returns of the contestant, deducts the $1,200 which was dupli-
cated, but he does not deduct the $75, which was also duplicated, as
explained by the contestant on page 39 of the brief, wherein he says:
October 20, 1914, return to Congress by contestant $130, from which should be
deducted items 17 and 10, amounting to $55, which were duplicated.
In other words, taking the figures of the contestee, after making
that deduction of $55 on account of duplication, the amount would
be brought under $3,000, because he claims an excess of only $44.
Now, in order to get through, I will return briefly to the matter
of the conspiracy with Timilty, as shown by the facts and figures
that have been presented, by the testimony of the several witnesses I
have referred to, and by general rumor throughout the district that
it was a matter of common knowledge. It is also a suspicious cir-
cumstance that the contestee visited Timilty at his clubroom shortly
after the election. He claims in his testimony that, although he went
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOEGAN VS. T[NKHAM. 27
through the district every night and was well acquainted with it. he
did not know where he was going when he went to this place, but
that he thought he was going to the " Nuff-ced " Club. However,
Mr. Tiniilty was there and introduced him and he talked. That
visit shortly after the election Avas commented upon by the news-
papers, and was a highly suspicious circumstance. One other thing
which ties them up and which is given a great deal of attention in
the evidence and in the briefs is the one-way circular.
The Chair^iax. It is now 12 o'clock, and we have no authority to
sit during sessions of the House. We Avill therefore adjourn until
10 o'clock to-morrow morning.
(Thereupon, at 12 o'clock noon, the committee adjourned until
Thursdav. Mav 4, 1916, at 10 o'clock a. m.)
com^iittee on elections xo. 2,
House of Representatives,
Thursday, May 4, 1010.
The committee met at 10 a. m.. Hon. James A. Hamill (chairman)
presiding.
The Chair:man. We will continue hearing the arguments in the
case of Horgnn r. Tinkliam. Mr-. Prout, you may ])roceed.
STATEMENT OF WILLIAM C. PKOUT, ESQ., COUNSEL FOR CON-
TESTANT— Continued.
Mr. Prout. Mr. Chairman, I think when I concluded yesterday I
was just touching on the conspiracy between Mr. Timilty and the
contestee, and had covered certain phases or certain circumstances
tendiug to show that there was a conspiracy. I would like to again
call the attention of the committee to the fact that from the very
nature of a conspiracy it is impossible to show or to produce any
direct evidence proving the fact of a conspiracy, or any evidence
showing inevitably the existence of a conspiracy. But from what we
know of human nature, and from what we know from experience and
from observation, of course, we know that the greatest desire on the
part of anyone engaged in a conspiracy is to keep those matters
secret, and owing to the very nature of the conditions surroiuiding
a conspiracy it is impossible to get direct evidence to prove it.
In this case we have shown from the evidence, from Mr. Timilty 's
own words, that he did support Mr. Tinkliam. We have shown from
the evidence of three witnesses that he did support Mr. Tinkham, and
we have shown by reference to the common reports throughout the
district that he did support Mr. Tinkham, and we have shown from
]Mr. Tinkham's own testimony that Timilty did support him.
Mr. Magee. Suppose Mr. Timilty did support Mr. Tinkham; is
that wrong, in itself?
Mr. Prout. That, I think, I touched on yesterday. I said yester-
day there is nothing illegal in such support, in itself, or there is
nothing wrong, even if Mr. Timilty was acting in a representative
capacity as an agent or representative of Mr. Tinkham, however
reprehensible it may have been in itself, it is not illegal, but taken in
28 CONTESTED-ELECTION" CASE HOEGAN VS. TINKHAM.
conjunction with Mr. Timilty's denial of it, under oath, and the con-
testee's denial of it, and all the surrounding facts and circum-
stances, tending to show, and showing, that Mr. Timilty's henchmen
did everything in their jDower to conceal the situation and to explain
it away — I think those things should be taken into consideration by
the committee.
The Chairman. Here is your argument, as I understand it. I
want to get the correct understanding of your argument, so that the
members of the committee may have it clearly before them when
they came to consider it.
You say that Mr. Timilty, while pretending to be with Mr. Hor-
gan, at the last moment turned over himself and swung his friends
over to the support of Mr. Tinkham — and I say that, politically, was
an unfair act — but I do not see where it was illegal, and I believe
you agree with me in that.
^ But your contention is that that conspiracy, as you call it, coupled
with the fact that he denied it on the stand, irresistibly forces us to
conclude that there was an illegal conspiracy. Is that your argu-
ment ?
Mr. Pkout. That, together with the e\ddence that Timilty's
brother-in-law, one Craven
The Chairman (interposing) . That all goes to the point of shoAV-
ing that Timilty did actually support Mr. Tinkham ?
Mr. Prout. And it also shows that they made a great many en-
deavors to conceal that support and to coerce their witnesses into
denying that support, and to deny the various connections which we
showed existed between Timilty and Tinkham, and it all tends to
show that there was something there they desired to hide and to keep
under cover.
The Chairman. So that your argument is that the support of
Timilty by Tinkham, in itself, is not unlawful, but the fact that he
denied it under oath proves that there was something unlawful in
this conspiracy which, you claim, prevented Mr. Horgan from getting
the election.
Mr. Prout. That denial, under oath, is one element which tends
to show that, and that taken in conjunction with all the other things,
the fact of Mr. Caven's denial
The Chairman (interposing). That all goes to the point of prov-
ing that when Timilty said he did not support Tinkham he was
stating what was not true. As a mater of fact, he did.
Mr. Prout. It shows the lengths to which he would go to conceal
the conspiracy, and therefore I say if he would do those things to
conceal that support there was something illegal and unlawful under-
neath it all which he went to these lengths to conceal.
The Chairman. Suppose the committee comes to this point. Sup-
pose we come to the conclusion that although. Mr. Timilty all along
lured this man on and led him to believe that he was supporting him,
which, in a party sense, betrayed him, to say the least — I am strictly
inclined to take that view of it — is there anything illegal in that ?
Mr. Prout. No, sir.
The Chairman. Now, I really want to get your argument, to
find out, for the benefit of the members of the committee, just what
your argument is.
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOEGAN VS. TINKHAM. 29
Your contention is that the fact that when put on the stand he
did not admit that, but. on the contrary, took pains to deny it, and to
conceal it, is sufficient proof to justify this committee in conchiding
that he had done something illegal, which prevented Mr. Horgan
from being elected. Is that your argument and your ccmtention?
Mr. Prout. That is, as far as you go.
The Chairman. I am not passing any opinion on the matter. I
merely want to know just what your argument is.
Mr. Prout. Yes ; and added to that fact Avhich you mentioned, his
perjury in connection with that point, and these various other points,
some of which I have touched on and some of which I have not
touched on, among which is a meeting between Mr. Timilty and Mr.
Innes, who was interested in Mr. Tinkham's campaign, which meet-
ing was held at a certain hotel in Boston.
Mr. Ramseyer. That is denied, is it not?
Mr. Magee. You have a secret ballot in Massachusetts, have you
not ?
Mr. Prout. Yes.
Mr. Magee. How could anyone be made to divulge mi anv court..
or anywhere else, how he may have voted?
Mr. Prout. He can not be made to divulge that.
Mr. Magee. How can anyone say but that in this case somebody
may have voted for Mr. Horgan?
Mr. Prout. In the first place, I wanted to satisfy the committee
briefly as to just what Mr. Timilty's strength was in this district,
how far he did dominate it, and then I intended to call your attention
to the law governing this question in regard to the exact manner in
which funds should be dispensed.
Mr. Eamseyer. As I understand you, although you nuiy not have
asserted it in so many words — as I understand it, your contention is
that the senator did not testify truly.
Mr. Prout. Yes, sir.
Mr. Ramseyer. And that you draw that conclusion from the pre-
sumption arising from the facts and circumstances surrounding the
case. What I mean to say is, how can one say, unless he has pretty
good proof, that that is evidence as to how the senator voted ? Have
you not got to take his statement, unless you can rebut it, so that
there will be something more than a presumpti( ^n existing as to how
he did actually vote ?
Mr. Prout. Of course, while it is impossible to ever force a man to
divulge how he voted, it is his privilege to admit how he voted. In
this case, Mr. Timilty refused to state how he voted.
Mr. Ramseyer. Of course, it is true in a large number of cases that
very often a large nmnber of Democrats vote for some Republican
on a ticket, and, vice versa, it is also true that a large number of
Republicans vote for some Democrat on a ticket.
Mr. Prout. Yes.
Mr. Russell. Is there anything in the evidence which tends ta
show what his incentive was for betraying his party nominee? Was
there any personal bad feeling between them ?
Mr. Prout. No; Mr. Timilty said he was as friendly to the con-
testant as he always had been. He said that he was friendly to him
on election dav. and there is no evidence of any reason for the ex-
30 CONTESTED-ELECTION" CASE HORGAN VS. TINKHAM.
istence of any enmity between them. On the other hand, the con-
testee testified that he did not know Mr. Timilty, except to speak to
him, and he testified that he never had had any extended conversa-
tion with him on any subject.
Mr. Tillman. What is your idea of the motive that prompted
Mr. Timilty to betray the contestant, if he did betray him? If you
find a motive, you take a long step in the direction of finding what
was actually done. If Mr. Timilty did that, he must have had a
motive. What was the motive?
Mr. Prout. The motive we allege, supported by no direct evidence,
but supported by secondary evidence, is that there was a money con-
sideration.
Mr. Tillman. I suspected that that was your idea. I would like to
hear you on these points: I would like to hear you on the point you
just mentioned, and also if money or whisky was illegally used by the
contestee or his friends. I would like to hear you on that. I can
understand why, if there was a free ballot, there avouIcI be some
justification in seating the contestant. I would like to hear you per-
sonally on those three points.
Mr. Ramseyer. Suppose Mr. Timilty had gotten on the stand and
admitted and said that he voted for Mr. Tinkham, and that he told
his friends to vote for Mr. Tinkham. How would that affect your
case ?
Mr. Tillman. That would not in itself be any justification for
seating the contestant.
Mr. Ramseyer. Would that strengthen or weaken your case, if he
had admitted that on the stand ?
Mr. Prout. If he had admitted on the stand that he had supported
the contestee and there were no rumors of alleged corruption, that
would, of course, have weakened the contestant's case.
Mr. Tillman. I wish you would answer the question I asked you,
and also address j^ourself to the other point of unfair methods with
cards and posters, and otherwise. I think that is the crux of the case.
Mr. Prout. There are one or two other things I would like to refer
to first, if there is no objection.
Mr. Tillman. Certainly. I simply wanted to be sure that you
would develop the points I referred to before you get through.
Mr. Prout. I would like to refer to this matter of the alleged con-
spiracy, and also to refer to this circular and save your time, because,
while it may be said that that is not very important, I would like to
point out where it is important.
Mr. Ramseyer. Have you that exhibit here ?
Mr. Prout. Yes; that is in the record in several places, and the
original exhibits have also been filed with the Clerk of the House.
You will find a copy of that on page 431 of the record. That is
what is referred to as the " One way " circular. The " One way "
circular was a circular, of which you have a copy, which was sent
out through the district on the Friday and Saturday before election
day, which was on the following Tuesday. The originals of that
circular have been filed with the Clerk of the House, and I presume
that they are now in the possession of the Clerk of the House of Repre-
sentatives. That circular was signed by seven Democratic voters in
that district.
COISTTESTED-ELECTIOX CASE TIOEGAN VS. TTNKHAM. 31
The CiiAiRjNrAx. What page of the record is that on?
Mr. Prout. It is on pages 431 and 132 of the record,
The Chairman. What is the number of the exhibit?
Mr. Prout. It is contestant's Exhibit Xo. 11 to the testimony of
James TI. Barry.
That circidar was signed by seven Democratic voters in that dis-
trict. And it appears in evidence that at least five of them were
enrolled Democrats and members of Timilty's club. Under the laws
of Massachusetts it required one signature in order to make that a
legal circular.
The Chairman. Why was it called the " One way" circular?
Mr. Prout. It was called the " One way " circular because it was
headed " The one-way game exposed," and we have referred to it
as the " One way " circular for the sake of brevity.
There wei-e several reasons why that circular was introduced in
evidence by the contestant. In the first place, when the cii-cu.lar was
originally referred to, several of the witnesses summoned by the
contestant, who were friendly to the contestee, denied ever having
signed that circular or having known there Avas such a circular; and
after that it was shown by several witnesses that a large number of
copies of this circular were thrown from the l)uilding in which the
contestee had his office and from a height which would indicate
that they came from the window of the contestee's office on to
a Democratic rally which was being held on the street below, at
Avhich the Democratic governor of the State was speaking, and in
several other ways the connection between the contestee and that
circular was established. The circular became a very important
exhibit for the reason that we find that the signers were members
of the Timilty Club, and our c(mtention is that the signatures were
obtained by Mr. Timilty, again establishing the connection between
him and Mr. Tinkham as well as the fact that Mr. Timilty denied
any knowledge of the circulars and denied cooperating in any way
in getting it out. and also denied that any consideration of anv
kind Avas paid, while the evidence shows — the evidence of contestee's
witnesses as well as contestant's witnesses — that Mr. Timilty did
know about the circulars, and that shortly after it was sent out broad-
cast Mr. Nicholls, a friend of contestee, finally admitted responsi-
bility for these circulars and testified that when he learned there
was some commotion in the district in regard to the signatures tele-
phoned to Mr. Timilty. and Mr. Timilty brought the signers to
Mr. Nicholls's office, and there they executed affidavits, copies of
which are in evidence, to the effect that they did sign that circular.
It also appears in evidence that seven of the signatures weve ol)-
tained in Mr. Timilty's clubroom by Mr. Timilty's brother-in-laAv.
Mr. Craven, and Craven, in testifying as to who made him obtain
the signatures, or how he happened to get them, denied that he did
it at the behest of Mr. Tinkham or any of his agents, and said he
did it for an old-time friend of his, and that he was so friendly t(^
him that he would do things for him in favor of Tinkham rather
than do what Timilty wanted him to do, although he Avas ahvays
known as a heeler of Timilty's. This man, AAdiose name Avas Broad-
Avin or Broadbent — it is given both ways in the evidence — died sev-
eral davs before Craven testified, and I desire to call the com-
32 CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOEGAN VS. TINKHAM.
mittee's attention especially to the fact that this man Craven, in
spite of his protestations of his long acquaintance with Broadwin or
Broaclbent, in view of the fact that the members of that man's family
could not see any good reasons why he should do this for him, that
this man Broadbent or Broadwin was selected because it Avas known
to Craven that Broadwin was dead, and therefore he put this on
Broadwin, who died on January 26, 1915. They fastened this cir-
cular, this " One-way " circular, on to Broadwin because he, being
dead, could not be summoned, and he would present an unpassable
wall beyond which they could not go and could not make any in-
quiries in regard to the circular which he sent ovit and in regard to
the consideration which was paid for it.
The production of this dead man, Broadwin, we think, in addi-
tion to that fact, is a suspicious circumstance, because when people
who are confronted with allegations of this kind go to the extreme
length of talking about a dead man and holding him responsible
for such things, we say that that in itself is an extremely suspicious
circumstance. -
In addition to that is the evidence that Timilty represented that
he knew nothing about it, when, as a matter of fact, he took the
men to Mr. NichoU's office to get them to make affidavits, showing
that he was deliberately lying there, and that is substantiated by
the testimony of Mr. Nicholls as well as the men who made the
affidavit that they were taken to Nicholls's office by Timilty.
There is also the evidence that Mr. Nicholls did not know Mr.
Broadbent or Broadwin and that none of the men interested in
Tinkham's campaign knew him, thereby showing that Broadbent
was not interested in Tinkham's campaign, but was introduced into
the case for the purpose of stopping any inquiry along that line.
' The Chairman. Did you ever find out whether the men who
signed the circular got any money ?
Mr. Prout. There is evidence to the effect that this man Craven
was paid $50 for obtaining the signatures. There is evidence of
rumor that Mr. Craven got $50 for getting the signatures. There
are also other things in connection with the " One-way " circular.
There is the testimony of Robert F. Fanning, on page 1827 ^"^'ho
made affidavit that his signature was put on without his knowledge
or consent, but who later made affidavit that he did sign it for Mr.
Nicholls. That was a second affidavit, and when he went on the
stand he endeavored to disown his first affidavit, and to deny that
he ever made it.
There was also the testimony of one Gormley that he did not sign
it, and that Craven had told him he signed his name to it, and that
Gormley had heard stories through the district that there was a
frame up going to be executed, and that witnesses were going to be
produced who would testify, who were going to testify that he did
sign the circular, and that they saw him' sign it.
Mr. Ramseyer. Were any of those matters ever taken to the
grand jury?
Mr. Prout. No.
Mr. Ramseyer. If Craven got $50 he ought to be in jail, ought
he not?
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HORGAN VS. TINKHAM. 33
Mr. Pkout. Craven has a criminal record which is in evidence,
showing. I think, about iJO convictions, but he, being- a brother-in-hxw
of Senator Tiniilty. and Senator Timilty being a strong man in
Suffolk County, he had very little difficulty in regard to that.
The Chairman. So that you did not put him in jail because it
A\' to get
38 CONTESTED-ELECTIOJSr CASE HORGAISr VS. TINKHAM.
tickets printed and easy to sell tickets, Avhether there is any organ-
ization or not, and get money that way, it is only a very superficial
way to gloss over the payment of money; and that being the case,
we maintain that it should be counted.
Mr. Rogers. You claim that the evidence is fairly indicative of the
fact that it was a subterfuge in this case ?
Mr. Peout. Yes, sir.
The Chairman. Did Mr. Tinkham attend this dinner you have
referred to?
Mr. Prout. You mean the colored Masons' dinner?
The Chairman. Yes.
Mr. Prout. Yes.
Mr. Innes. Is there any evidence of that fact?
Mr. Prout. Yes.
Mr. Innes. The organization was not a political organization; it
was a fraternal organization.
Mr. Magee. Is there any statute in Massachusetts providing that
persons may not approach a candidate for public office for the pur-
pose of selling tickets of this character ?
Mr. Prout. No, sir.
Mr. Magee. I think we have such a statute in our State.
Mr. Tillman. Along the line of Mr. Magee's suggestion, suppose
a candidate should give a dinner costing $500, would you consider
that he should report that fact, the expenditure of that money among
his expenses ?
The Chairman. Do you think he would have attended the dinner
of the colored Masons if he had not been a candidate ?
Mr. Prout. Undoubtedly not.
Mr. Tillman. Suppose he gave a feast that cost him $500. Should
he report that money among the items of his expenses ?
Mr. Prout. If it was given in the midst of a political campaign.
Mr. Tillman. That is what I mean.
Mr. Prout. There is no question in mj^ mind but what he should
make a report of such an expenditure.
Mr. Tillman. Then he should report the expenditure of the $5 in
you have referred to in the same way, should he not ?
Mr. Prout. Certainly; the mere amount does not make any dif-
ference.
Mr. Eamsayer. Do you think it is probable that a candidate would
attend a dinner or any other gathering and pay his way in if he was
not a candidate? In other words, do you think he would not have
attended that dinner if he had not been a candidate ?
Mr. Prout. If a man goes to an affair and pays 50 cents for a
ticket, if he pays 50 cents for a ticket to a dance and does not dance,
it is a legitimate political expense, and it should be returned as such.
Where a man buys 5 or 10 tickets and does not buy them for himself.
I say that that is not a legitimate expenditure, and also that it should
be returned in the list of his expenses.
Mr. Magee. Is there any statute in Massachusetts which prohibits
a candidate from furnishing food or drink to any person when he is
a candidate?
Mr. Prout. Yes, sir.
Mr. Innes. Drink; not food.
I
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOKGAN VS. TiNKHAM. 30
Mr. Pkout. The statute prohibits the furnishing of anything of
value to anybody without making a return for it. That is the corrupt
practices act which also prohibits the giving of drink for political
],rurposes, whether it is returned or not.
Mr. Magee. Whether it is buying a drink or buying a dinner, I
think our statute specifies in regard to that.
Mr. Prout. The Massachusetts statute does not specify; it is not
specific.
Mr. Innes. The Massachusetts statute explicitly exempts any form
of entertainment called " private hospitality." Whatever that covers
is a question of interpretation.
Mr. Prout. The only thing remaining which I want to touch upon,
I believe, is the matter of the votes cast, as to the contestee's allega-
tion that the c(mtestant was not a strong candidate. I have already
explained to the committee that the district is a Democratic district,
and has been a Democraic district for 10 or 12 years, and has always
sent Democrats to Congress, and is Democratic for other offices, for
President, for governor, and so on down the line, and a compilation
of votes in the various wards for ward offices, not only on this par-
ticular day, but on every election day, has always shown it to be
Democratic for every office, with the exception of this particular one.
Mr. Innes. Do you ^ant to make that statement, Mr. Pront?
Mr. Prout. In a broad way.
Mr. Innes, In the face of our figures here? It seems to be a waste
of time, because the figures show that that is not so.
Mr. Prout. As far as the votes in the wards in 1914 are concerned
somebody requested yesterday that we get that and I have the vote
in the varioTis Avards here, and I will read that into the record. These
figures cover tlie vote for governor, for lieutenant governor, for Con-
gressmen, for the senate — that is, the State senate — and for the
governor's council.
In ward 18 the Democratic vote for governor was 1,256 and the
Republican vote 655; the Democratic vote for lieutenant governor
was 1,149 ond the Republican vote for lieutenant governor was 666;
the Democratic vote for Congressman was 920 and the Republican
vote for Congressman was 934. The Democratic vote for the State
senate, that is, the independent Democratic vote, was 1,338 and
the Republican vote for the State senator was 546. The Democratic
vote for the governor's council was 1,141 ; the Republican vote for
governor's council was 707.
In ward 19 the Democratic vote for governor was 3,031, while the
Republican vote for governor was 486. The Democratic vote for
lieutenant governor was 2,852, while the Republican vote for lieu-
tenant governor was 565. The Democratic vote for Congressman was
2,641, while the Republican vote for Congressman was 928. The
Democratic vote for State senator was 3,225, while the Republican
vote was 380. The Democratic vote for governor's council was 2.947,
while the Republican vote was 604.
In ward 22 the Democratic vote for governor Avas 2,562, Avhile the
Republican vote Avas 1,412. The Democratic vote for lieutenant
governor Avas 2,333, while the Republican vote was 1,559. The Demo-
cratic vote for Congressman Avas 1,951, Avhile the Republican vote
Avas 1,972. The Democratic vote for State senator Avas 2,595, while
40 CONTESTED-ELECTIOIST CASE HOEGAIST VS. TINKHAM.
the Eepublican vote was 1,371. The Democratic vote for governor's
council was 2.342, while the Eepublican vote was 1,625.
The total Democratic vote in wards 18, 19, and 22 for governor
Avas 6,849, while the total Republican vote for governor was 2,553.
The total Democratic vote in wards 18, 19, and 22 for lieutenant
governor was 6,334. while the total Eepublican vote was 2,790, The
total Democratic vote for Congressman in w^arcls 18, 19, and 22 was
5,512, while the total Eepublican vote for Congressman was 3,834,
The total Democratic vote for State senator in wards 18, 19, and 22
was 7,158, while the total Eepublican vote for State senator was
2,297, The total Democratic vote in wards 18, 19, and 22 for gover-
nor's council was 6,430, while the total Eepublican vote for gover-
nor's council was 2,936.
As far as a comparison of votes, either on that clay or on previous
days is concerned, and the method of ai'riving at that, I would call
the attention of the members of the committee to the case of Cook v.
Hinds, where, in quoting McCrary on Elections, the committee said :
When the A'oter can not, by reas()nnl)le diligence be found, ov being found,
refuses to state for whom lie voted, it may be shown l>y circumstances. And
here great latitude must be allowed.
And in the same case reference was had to extraneous circum-
stances.
Mr. Oglesby. Was that the case in Avhich the witnesses were
charged with having received something of value for their votes?
Mr, Pkout. Yes, sii
It is shown generally that the men who employed these miners were favorable
to Mr. Cutts ; that they wei'e l)rought to the indls l)y Republicans; that their
votes wei'e challenged l>y Democrats and greeubackers (contestant's friends)
and their votes ui'ged and directed by Republicans.
And the fact that they Avere brought to the polls by Eepublicans
and their Azotes challenged by the people of the opposite party Avas
held to be indicatiA^e of their vote. And again in the Broad Seal
case (1 Hinds, par. 799) it Avas held that —
Although in numerous instances the voter, being examined as a witness,
A-oluntarily disclosed the character of his vote, yet in many cases he either
did not appear, or, a]>pearing, chose to avail himself of his legal right to refuse
to answer on that point. In such cases the proof of general reputation as to
the political character of the voter, and as to the party to which he belonged at
tlie time of the election, has been considered sufficiently demonstrative of the
complexion of his vote.
Then, again, in the case of Bromberg v. Haralson (2 Hinds, par.
907) is Avas held :
It would perhaps be fair to assume that the -whole vote cast at this in-ecinct
in excess of the vote of two years before, when no such influence existed, was
cast by voters who came there under the influence of the corrupt practices and
promises disclosed in the evidence.
And this when the only evidence disclosed Avas a rumor circulated
among the voters that in order to obtain certain material benefits it
Avas necessarA^ for them to vote the Eepublican ticket, which rumors
were not traced to contestee, the committee holding that it Avas his
duty to disabuse the Ax-ters of the Avrong impression.
NoAv, Mr. Chairman, as to the Azotes as cast and the contention of
the contestant as to hoAv they should be counted — but before I get to
that pai'ticular matter I see I have made a note here in reference to a
CONTESTED-ELECTrOlSr CASE HOEGAX VS. TINKHAM. 41
matter that I want t(t speak about bi'iefly. That is in regard to a
contention in the brief of the contestant that the contestee admitted
that he paid the sum of $1 on one occasion and another $1 on another
occasion to a voter by the name of Boland. I want to retract that
statement. It Avas an error, and contestee did not accept that dollar,
but he denied that he did make that payment, and I do not want to
have it stand that I charged him with that when it was an error.
Mr. Magee. Do you contend that you raise any more than a pre-
sumption of wrongdoing?
Mr. Pkout. No, sir; aa'c claim there is direct evidence— in many
€ases specific evidence and in some cases uncontradicted evidence of
wrongdoing. For instance, in the matter of the election returns,
that is admitted
Mr. Magee (interposing). I mean in reference to the votes and
the question raised by Mr. Timilty.
^Ir. Proit. There is very direct evidence of the i)ayment of the
mone}^ to the voters and of the use of liquor. Then there is a lot of
other direct evidence which I think I have referred to on those points.
Mr. Magee. What is it upon which you rested on a presumption?
Was that in reference to the conspiracy item ?
Mr. Prout. I can not recall just in what connection T made that
statement.
Mr. Magee. I had an impression yesterday that you raised the
question of presumption.
The Chair-Max. I think that was where he said the fact that SeHa-
tor Timilty had denied on the stand that he had entered into a con-
spiracy raised the presumption that there was something illegal in
his action.
Mr. Magee. That Avas Avhat I was trying to get at, Avhether in your
contention in regard to the matter of conspiracy you rely on pre-
sumption.
Mr. KoGERs. Can you give us, in a few words, the precise things
which you allege as having been committed by Mr. Tinkham, per-
sonally, in violation of either statute law or connnon law to prove
conclusively an illegal use of money, bribery, or any other similar
unlawful act.
Mr. Prot't. Of course, it is not necessary under the laAv that those
things shall be j^roven to have been done personally by Mr. Tink-
ham. It is sufficient if they were done in his behalf, with or without
his knowledge, by his agents, if he as a candidate got benefit from
them. In that case it is the same as if he did them himself.
There are several things in the evidence which involve Mr. Tink-
ham personally; that is. the payment of various sums of money for
tickets and various expenditures which Avere not included in his
returns.
Mr. TiEL:\rAx. I Avish you Avould develop the first question Mr.
Rogers asked you. He asked you to show Avhat Avas actually "done in
the interest of Mr. Tinkham which Avas illegal. Avhether he Avas the
beneficiary of it, or Avhether he did it directly.
jNIr. Prout. As far as things he did directly are concerned, I haAe
ansAvered that. As far as the things Avere done in his behalf were
concerned, and Avhich did affect the issue, that includes practically
everything. And I think, as I developed it yesterday and as I have
42 COISTTESTED-ELECTIOIsr CASE HOEGAN VS. TINKHAM.
shown it to-day, in the payment of money, the use of liquors, the in-
timidation of voters by Timilty, some of which was done in his be-
half, and the facts as we look at them from this end all show that
that was of some material benefit to him.
Mr. Rogers. Do you allege that the onlj^ thing which Mr. Tinkham
did personally and which can be complained of was the purchase of
these tickets, for which he failed to make a return ?
Mr. Peout. In addition to that, the engineering of the Walsh-
Tinkham card, paying for it and paying for these tickets. That is
all I have referred to as personal which was unaccounted for.
Mr. Magee. Suppose Senator Timilty or some of his helpers did
something of which Mr. Tinkham had no knowledge. Is it your con-
tention that if they did anything themselves which was in direct vio-
lation of law, which was illegal, that that would affect the status of
Mr. Tinkham under your Massachusetts law ?
Mr. Peout. Yes, sir; anything done by anybody in behalf of Mr.
Tinkham, provided they were agents of Mr. Tinkham.
Mr. Magee. That is exactly what I am getting at, whether you do
not have to establish the relation. If you do not have to establish
that, what would prevent any two, three, or four persons vitiating
the election of any candidate?
Mr. Peout. Of course, some of that is so.
Mr. Magee. As I understand it, under your law" j^ou must estab-
lish some relation existing between the candidate and the parties
cherged with the wrongdoing.
Mr. Prout. Under the general law the agency can be presumed
by the doing of acts with the knowledge of the principal. I do not
mean to contend that any Tom, Dick, or Harry opposed to a candi-
date could go out and do things which were illegal and then fasten
them onto the candidate simply because he did them on behalf of
the candidate.
Mr. Magee. What I mean is this: I am asking for informa-
tion
Mr. EussELL (interposing). If he is a bona fide agent, then he
acts directly for the beneficiary, and then the candidate would be
responsible for his action?
Mr. Prout. Yes.
Mr. Rogers. How manj^ items are there disclosed in the evidence
imcontradicted, of cases where Mr. Tinkham made expenditures
which you say are attributable to his campaign and which are not
returned in the statement to the secretary of the State of Massa-
chusetts ?
Mr. Prout. There was the purchase of tickets
Mr. Rogers (interposing). Can jon be a little specific in the
answer to that inquiry?
Mr. Prout. I think I have already touched on most of those.
Mr. Rogers. If you could combine them at this point it would be
useful.
Mr. Prout. You mean everything?
Mr. Rogers. I would like to have a reference at this point to every
case where unreturned campaign expenses are charged by the con-
testant.
Mr. Prout. There is the evidence of Edmund Dolan at page SOT
of the record. Then there is the testimony of the contestee at page
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HORGAN VS. TINKHAM. 43
492 of the record in reference to a payment of $58.75 to Mason, and
also the testimony of the contestee on page 493 of the record in
reference to the payment of $27.85 to Sheppard.
Mr. Innes. They were returned, of course?
Mr. Ramseyer. Those references are on your brief?
Mr. Prout. Yes. The last two amounts to which I referred were
returned. The references are contained in the brief under that head
and I imagine it would save time to refer to that page in the brief.
Mr. Russell. It seems to me if you could make a summary of
those things and put it in the record at this point, it would serve the
purpose desired.
Mr. Prout. They are all in the brief, in the brown-covered brief.
Mr. Rogers. I have not read the brief for several days, and I do
not recall that there is a specific place where the unreturned elec-
tion expenses, as charged, are included.
The CnAiR]MAN. On page 25, under the heading "Lavish use of
money in bribery of Democratic voters" there seems to be a refer-
ence to all of these instances.
Mr. Innes. Perhaps I can assist Mr. Prout. He makes an allega-
tion in regard to a dollar to Dolan
Mr. Prout (interposing). I would refer the committee, in order
to save time, to page 25 and page 2(> of the brief in regard to that
|>articular point. There is no division made as to the money that
is alleged to have been paid for which no return was made, but in
the contestee's brief there is a copy of his return.
Mr. Ramseyer. Then, on page 35 of your brief you give a list of
his expenditures — the amount of his expeditures — showing what was
accounted for.
Mr. Prout. Those are expenditures.
Mr. Ramseyer. The second item, which is said to be not accounted
for in vour statement, is "Amount paid to Anchor Linotype Co.',
$2,139."'
Mr. Prout. That was not accounted for in his return because of his
belief or interpretation of the law that printing was a personal ex-
pense, and therefore he Avas exempt from accounting for it.
Mr. Ramseyer. Your contention is that he should have accounted
for it?
Mr. Prout. Yes; as well as all the other things which follow that
statement.
Mr. Ramseyer. Suppose the committee finds with you on that
proposition and finds that Mr. Tinkham did expend more than he
was entitled to expend under the Massachusetts law. what do you
contend would be the result? Should this committee contend Mr.
Tinkham was not elected and put Mr. Horgan in Mr. Tinkham's
seat, or just declare the seat vacated? That is, assuming
Mr. Prout (interposing). That is for the committee to say. It
depends, I imagine, upon the nature and the extent of the proof and
as to how the committee views the evidence. If the committee find,
or if in the minds of the committee there was a violation of the law,
of course, that point is difterent from the other points.
Mr. Ramseyer. In order to make it clear, assume that the commit-
tee finds against you in relation to everything except the matter of
returns.
44
CONTESTED-ELECTIOJS' CASE HORGAN VS. TINKHAM.
Mr. Prout. In that case the committee would not be justified in
seating the contestant.
Mr. Eamseyer. But Avould be justified
Mr. Prout (interposing). In unseating the contestee. On the
other points
Mr. Eamseyer (interposing). I understand your position on the
other points.
Mr. Prout. I would like to include in my statement this other
tabulation in regard to the votes for the various other offices in the
district on that election day.
The table referred to is as follows:
Ward.
Gov-
ernor,
Walsh.
Lieu-
tenant
gov-
ernor,
Barry.
Con-
gress,
Ilorgan.
Senate,
Demo-
crats.
House,
average.
Demo-
crats.
Gov-
ernor,
McGall.
Lieu-
tenant
gov-
ernor.
Gushing.
Con-
gress,
Tink-
ham.
Senate,
Repub-
licans.
House,
average.
Repub-
licans.
10
922
466
1,304
1,2.56
3,031
2,292
2, 562
2,817
795
359
1,177
1,149
2,852
2,007
2,333
2, 552
724
368
1,066
920
2,641
1,792
1,951
2,401
731
393
1,157
11,338
13,225
2,024
12,595
2,586
631
338
1, 175
1,062
2, 644
1,829
2,073
2,590
1,417
1,628
907
655
480
2,028
1,412
2,435
1,545
1,714
1,011
666
565
2,201
1,559
2,631
1,601
1,643
1,148
934
928
2,411
1,972
2,873
1,445
1,607
1,092
546
380
2,146
1,371
2,844
1 400
11
1 549
12
18
'814
621
19
472
21
2 080
22
23
1^923
2,264
Total....
14, 650
13,224
11, 863
14,049
12,342
10, 968
11, 892
13, 510
11,431
11,123
1 Democratic Senate; includes regular Democrat and independent Democrat.
Mr. Prout. Mr. Tillman inquired yesterday as to the size of the
colored vote in ward 18. It is in evidence that the total vote in the
ward is 3,084, and the contestee, Mr. Tinkham, testified there were
between TOO and 800 colored voters in the ward. He testified to that
on page 493 of the record, and the contestant testified on page 554 of
the record that in his opinion there are about 250 colored voters in the
district. It is not in evidence, but that figure of 250 was too low. As
a matter of fact, there are in the vicinity of 400 colored voters in the
district.
The only other point to be touched upon I will touch on very
brieflj^ That is, the allegation of the contestee that the contestant
was a very weak candidate, and for various other reasons he was
defeated.
In the first place, the circular of the contestant sums up his quali-
fications for the office of Congressman. He had had many years of
legislative experience, had just completed a term of three years in the
Massachusetts Senate, having been elected as a Democrat from a strong
Eepublican district, had practicall}^ the united support of all the
labor unions in the district, as is shown by reference to the records
from pages 534 to 550.
He had the indorsement of the State branch of the American
Federation of Labor, and the indorsement of various other local
unions. In addition to that he had the support of the Democratic
governor and the Democratic State treasurer and the Democratic
State auditor, and the Congressmen in that district, including Con-
gressman Gallivan and Congressman Tague.
Mr. Innes. There is no evidence of that.
Mr. Prout. Yes, there is, and various other supporters are referred
to on page 376 of the record. There is also a letter from Mayor
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOEGAN VS. TINKHAM. 45
Curley of Boston, on puoe ;>S1 of the record. There are also indorse-
ments of hibor unions found on pages 374 and 375 of the record, and
also on page 37(5 and in the exhibit comprising largely letters from
legislative agents of the union on pages 414 to 4()2 of the record.
The point also Avas made by the contestee that the two men who
opposed the contestant in the primaries confessed the fact that they
did not injure him in the campaign. There is no evidence that that
was any more than usually follows such a case. As a matter of fact,
there is evidence that botli of these men were with the contestant
and supported him on the stump up to and including a Aveek or 10
days before the election.
Mr. RoGEiJS. Is Mr. Horgan's senatorial district included wholly
within the congressional districts
Mr. Prout. One M^ard is in the district and one is not.
Mr. Rogers. Can you give us the wards included in the former
senatorial district?
Mr. Prout. The former senatorial district consisted of wards 23
and 24. Ward 23 is in the congressional district, and 24 is in Mr.
Gallivants district.
Mr. Rajisever. Does Mr. Horgan live in ward 23?
Mr. Proi't. Yes. The only other point I would ask the members
of committee to consider is in determining whether Mr. Horgan is a
weak candidate in addition to his legislative experience and record
and the support of the various leaders of the Democratic Party in
the State as well as in his district, with the exception of the few
men referred to — he is here; you can look him over. He looks like
a pretty able, intelligent man. and certainly the votei's in the district
would not be prejudiced against him on account of his personal
appearance or his handling of the Queen's English.
Mr. TiLL.ArAN. AVas Walsh a popular Democrat anis election Timilty entered into a conspiracy against him,
and had his friends vote against him.
Mr. Innes. Unless many of his friends did not believe it.
The Chairman. Am I clear in the point I am stating?
Mr. Innes. I think that is a fair conclusion.
Mr. Oglesby- Do I understand the chairman to imply
The Chairman. Do you see what I mean there, Mr. Tillman?
Mr. Tillman. Yes; I see your point.
Mr. Oglesby. Do I understand the chairman to imply that the
senator's failure to support a Democratic nominee in any way tended
to establish a conspiracy that was not shown by other evidence of
value ?
The Chairman. Oh, no; it is just as to the question of whether
Timilty did cut Horgan.
Mr. Innes. I think that argument is perfectly fair.
The Chairman. You see my point?
Mr. Innes. I think it is a perfectly fair conclusion to draw. But
I was only offering it at this time, Mr. Chairman, for the purpose of
emphasizing and bringing out the unreliability of the character of
the brief. I do not think you ought to accept the sweeping state-
ments unless you find them verified by the record.
The Chairman. You are pointing this out as a prominent in-
stance ?
Mr. Innes. That is all I offer it for at the present time.
The Chairman. I see.
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOEGAN VS. TINKHAM. 53
Mr. Rogers. I notice on that green Morgan circular in the record
the name of Senator Timilty appears as one of the advocates of Mr.
Horgan. Is there any evidence in the record to show that the inchi-
sion of his signature was authorized by him?
Mr. Innes. I do not think there is any evidence anybody ever
signed that circvdar. I do not mean to say they did not; they may
have ail authorized it. I simply tried to find out Avho collected the
names, and I asked the manager if he did. and he said " Xo."
Mr. EoGERS. Timilty being one of those in the limelight. I was
asking if his authorization had been made a matter of proof.
Mr. Innes. I do not think they asked him, and I had not any idea
of it when he was on the stand. I think he was one of the fiirst Avit-
nesses, and I had never seen this circular at that time.
Mr. Magee. Did not Timilty deny his signature was genuine ?
Mr. Innes. I never asked him.
Mr. Tillman. Was that circular sent out?
Mr. Innes. Fifteen thousand were sent out and 7.000 were sup-
pressed, they say. And may I say about that suppression the man
who he says suppressed this circular Avas then the secretary of the
city committee, not Timilty's secretai-y, and Avhy he did not send this
out, if he did not send it out, Ave have no idea and do not knoAv. I
ncA^er talked to him. Perhaps he did not get paid enough money : I
do not knoAV. I do not knoAA- that he did not send it out.
Mr. Oglesby. It is entirely consistent Avith the theory of con-
spiracy if it existed?
Mr. Innes. It is consistent, the same as almost anything is con-
sistent with conspiracy, if there is any evidence to connect us AAith it,
by Senator Horgan or anybody else.
Mr. Magee. You say Senator Horgan announced his candidacy
in July ? What was the position of Congressman Peters at that time
as to running again?
Mr. Innes. Congressman Peters had made no announcement. He
had been talked to by several people and said he AA^as undecided
what he Avas going to do, and he so remained until August, three
weeks later. Avhen he published his statement he AAould retire. But
everybody kncAA- he Avould not enter a contest in the primaries.
Now, the third pcint — and I am going to speak of this as the last
point. He speaks about Timilty having been eliminated by unani-
mous vote as president of the Democratic city committee and that
committee has done AA'hat it could to punish one Avrongdoer. There
is not a particle of evidence furnished either that JNIr. Timilty AA'as
eliminated or by a unanimous A^ote. Noav, I hold no brief for Sen-
ator Timilty in this matter. He is not represented at all in this con-
test any more than any other Democrat of prominence, but I simply
state tiiat he belongs to the opposite faction from Brother Horgan.
And Avhat the evidence does disclose is that Mr. Timilty Avas re-
elected to the senate; after all these neAA'spapers charges he AA-as put
at the head of the Democratic city committee — after all these ucaa's-
paper charges and after this election. If you AA-ant to kriOAv the real
facts, last year they had a new head, as they have every year, and
Timilty said he did not care to go back.
Mr. Prout. That is absolutely Avrong.
54 COIsrTESTED-ELECTIOjSr CASE HOEGA:Nr VS. TINKHAM.
Mr. In^^es. Let it rest. There is no evidence of it ; and, if I make
a statement of it, I want to say it is mereh'- my statement and not in
the record.
Mr. Oglesby. Would not his action in deserting his own party and
supporting a man of the opposite party be just as deserving, from a
party standpoint, of punishment by removing him from a position
of trust in the party — to have done it as a matter of friendship — as
if it were done as the result of a corrupt bargain? In either event
he was unworthj^ and ought to be replaced b^^ somebody whom the
party could depend on.
Mr. Innes. I would prefer not to answer that question, simpl}?- be-
cause Mr. Timilty is not of my party, and I do not want it to get in
the papers that I suggested I thought he had been with Tinkham or
that he ought to be removed if he was.
Mr. Oglesby. I mean from a party standpoint. All of us try to
get votes from the opposite party, and nobodj'' for a minute would
consider that such a conspiracy was the result of anything wrong.
On the contrary, we would be inclined to contend that it showed good
citizenship if a man were to leave his own party to vote for a man in
the opposite party because he thought he would get somebody elected
who would better represent the people. But I say, from the party's
standpoint, desertion for any cause is considered party perfidy, is it
not?
Mr. Ix>'ES. I should prefer not to give you mj^ opinion, which does
not seem to me is quite a part of the case. I w^ould be perfectly
willing to give it to you personally.
Mr. Ramseyer. Mr. Oglesby is simply getting at the abstract
proposition.
Mr. Oglesby. I want to find out Avhether or not this desertion
might not be entirely consistent with what is legally permitted and
still would warrant and require punishment by the party.
Mr. Innes. Oh, absolutely.
Mr. Oglesby. Because he occupied a position of trust in the party.
Mr. In?vEs. I misunderstood your question. I thought you wanted
to know whether he ought to be removed.
The Chairman. What would be the legal effect?
Mr. Innes. Of Timilty deserting ?
The Chairman. Of Timilty turning over to the Republicans?
Mr. Innes. I do not think it has any legal effect.
The Chairma. I want to hear you on that. You heard what Mr.
Prout said.
Mr. Innes. I think Mr. Prout stated there is no punishment can
be invoked, criminally or otherwise, except the party may see fit to
exercise its discipline. I know of no other punishment.
Mr. Oglesby. Except it is clone as a result of a corrupt bargain ?
Mr. Innes. It would not be the result of a corrupt bargain unless
it was clone as the result of an unlaAvful conspiracy. If that con-
spiracy had as its end something lawful
Mr. RiTSSELL. Do you concede that Mr. Peters deserted the Demo-
cratic Congressman ?
Mr. Innes. No.
Mr. Russell. You do not concede he supported Mr. Tinkham?
Mr. Innes. I do not. It is manifest that many of his followers
did. Going into the realm of speculative politics, I have found that
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HORGAN VS. TINKHAM. 55
very often a man can stick to a part}' and let his friends go. I do not
knoAV whether Tiniilty did that or not, but it very often happens,
possibly Timilty did that.
The Chair:man. I can understand Timilty doing that, and we all
knoAv it has been done, that he would get his friends to defeat a party
candidate, but would keep his own skirts clean, as far as he could,
and vote the straight ticket himself, so that in the future he could
always have the record of having been a perfectly regular party man,
and could nev er be accused of having cut the ticket.
Mr. Oglesby. I do not want to be put in the category of those
who could understand that. Of course, politics in New Jersey are a
little different from politics I have been used to; but I could not un-
derstand that.
Mr. RooERS. Do you consider it consistent Avith the Aveight of the
evidence that Mr. Timilty simply kept his hands off?
Mr. In>es. My own personal view is that Mr. Timilty did not do
anything that he might have done to straighten out things for Mr.
Horgan. And I think lots of other men in the Democratic Party did
exactly that same thing. I think many of them thought they Avere
Avithin their political rights in doing so. I am not clear they Avere
not. I have seen enough elections
Mr. Oglesby. You differentiate betAveen a man avIio is simply a
party man, and the man who occupies a position of trust, as presi-
dent, or secretary, or some other official position of the organization ?
Mr. Innes. Oh, I think so. I think the other man has a right to go
out on the street corners against any candidate he Avants to ; I think
he has a perfect right to do that.
Mr. Oglesby. But if the other man is honest, and can not support
the ticket, he should resign any official position, should he not?
Mr. Innes. Personally, I did once, Avhen I had a partner running
for goA'ernor on the Democratic ticket ; I thought it the proper thing
to do; not that I did not Avant to A^ote for him, but I did not Avant to
be in a position of supporting the other man. I think that is the posi-
tion to take.
Mr. Ramseyer. It has been suggested at times Senator Horgan
and Senator Timilty belong to different factions. Were there tAvo
factions, and those tAvo men belonged to separate factions?
Mr. In>;es. There is a line of demarcation in Boston politics Avhich
you can almost ahvays tell. This croAvd is here, and that crowd is
there. Once in a Avhile the}^ shift around.
Mr. Ramseyer. You mean in the same party?
Mr. Innes. In the same party. They used to have a line-up for
local offices at one time.
The Chairman. The tAvo factions?
Mr. In:nes. The tAvo factions.
The Chairman. And fight bitterly in the primaries?
Mr. Innes. And fight bitterly in the primaries.
The Chairman. The Timilty Democrats and the Horgan Demo-
crats ?
Mr. Innes. Yes.
Mr. Rogers. Is there any evidence as to Avho Timilty supported
in 1914?
Mr. Innes. I do not knoAv, except Avhat the record sIioavs. The
record shoAvs Horgan got about 4,400 votes, and Fay, who Avas in
56 CONTESTED-ELECTIOl^T CASE HORGAN VS. TINKHAM.
Mr. Timilty's ward, received 3,600, and AVatson, who is also from
the same ward, received over 3,100.
Mr. KoGERS. Are both Fay and Watson affiliated with Senator
Timilty's organization ?
Mr. Innes. They used to oppose it, but for the last two or three
years have supported Timilty's organization. We are getting now
into the realm of Democratic politics. I think Mr. Fay was an
opponent of Timilty's for some years, and ran against him in the
Senate, and also at one time was supported by him for the House.
Then they had some trouble, and whether they came back together
I do not know. But, at any rate, those three candidates ran at the
time Mr. Horgan ran.
I am only mentioning those three things to emphasize what I think
you might consider unfair on our part. Then I believe our brief
does not contain anything untrue and unjustified, as I know their
brief does, and I think that has been reiterated in this brief here,
which is filed in rebuttal.
I want to come directly to two things said here, and that is the
questions asked by Congressman Tillman; that is, about the liquor,
the dispensation of liquor, and the corrupt use of money. Now,
there is not any evidence that Tinkham even bought a single drink
for any man during that campaign.
The Chairman. Did any of his agents?
Mr. Innes. There is not any evidence that any of his agents
bought any liquor for any man during that campaign.
Mr. Oglesbt. How did Horgan get licked?
Mr. Innes. Eead his campaign textbook, Mr. Oglesby.
The Chairman. It was stated that liquor was used?
Mr. Innes. Mr. Chairman, that is absolutely denied. And Mr.
Tinkham was asked that specific question, and I would like to tell
you what he said.
The Chairman. You need not quote it.
Mr. Innes. He said, " I have no objection to going into a hotel
barroom, but from the time I Avas nominated I never entered a place
where liquor was sold, except a club."
The Chairman. That is all right
Mr. Innes. From the time I was nominated for that office.
The Chairman. That is all right, so far as Mr. Tinkham was con-
cerned ; but is it a notorious fact that liquor was used quite generally
on that day, more so than on the other days ?
Mr. Innes. Mr. Chairman, there is not a particle of evidence that
liquor was used at any time during the entire campaign, except John
Craven, Mr. Timilty's brother-in-law, they say took some kind of a
drink at one of these hotels. But Mr. Timilty was a candidate for
the senate himself at that time. They say he took three or four men
there in an automobile; Mr. Timilty was running for the senate.
He had a hard fight on with one of the Democrats, one of the prin-
cipal witnesses in this case, to show the character of Mr. Timilty,
who was running against him for the senate. He had his" own fight
^n his hands.
The Chairman. What is there to support the statement these
small flasks of whisky being handed out?
Mr. Innes. There was the statement made here, and it is in the
brief of Brother Front, that small flasks of whiskv were given out.
CONTESTED-ELECTIOISI" CASE HOEGAN VS. TINKHAM. 57
I want to read the testimony in that case, and this man who testifies
is the type of derelict of which many were summoned to testify. I
want yon to listen to his testimony; and when I say he is a typical
derelict and hanger-on, I am going to prove it by his own statement.
The Chairiman. Is he the only man who testifies to these vials of
liquor ?
Mr. Iknes. He is the only man who testifies to anything
The CHAiRisrAN. In the way of liquor?
Mr. Innes. In the way of liquor.
The Chairmax. Is there only the one witness, this man whose
testimony you. are going to read? Is he the only witness who says
anything throughout the whole record about the use of liquor?
Mr. Innes. Absolutely the only man.
The Chair^nian. And you are going to tell us what he did say?
Mr. Innes. My Brother Horgan says that is not so. and I am
going to say this to you, that there is lots of evidence here to this
effect: ''Did you hear rumors that liquor was being disjiensed? ''
" I did." '' Where did you hear that? '" ''Around the street corners."
The Chairman. I see.
Mr. Tnnes. There is lots of that sort of evidence, but nothing
which would be considered in any court, nothing that is fastened to
any particular person.
The Chairman. Nobody except this man says they saw a man
diinking liquor or a man handing out those flasks of liquor?
Mr. Innes. There is not any evidence except it is testified a man
named Lane bought a drink for two or three men. Senator Lane had
been in the senate for two or three years and ran for Congress.
The Chairman. How many men did he treat?
Mr. Innes. He had three or four men. He w^as asked about this
himself, and he said he stopped off there and met some men in the
hotel bar, and he was asked how much it was, and he said '25 or 30
cents, maybe 40 cents. That is all there was.
The Chairman. There was not any taking in of a whole. crowd of
voters
Mr. Innes. Mr. Chairman, there is not a line of evidence
The Chairman (continuing). And treating them at the bar?
Mr. Innes. Nothing of that sort at all. Now, in the Keyes testi-
monv — Keves is the man produced to show Tinkham's briberv —
record 338^
The Chairjian. And you are on this li(|uor business?
Mr, Innes. I am on the liquor question.
Mr. Ramseyer. You are reading from your brief?
Mr. Innes. From my brief, page 73; record, page 338. He was
asked :
Q. Well, with whom did you first .lijet into oomnuinioation in the campniii'n? —
A. Well, somebody sent me down to Mr. Tinkhnnfs otHce, tellin.u' me that there
was going to he u l)arrel of n\oney distriijuted, and I thought I would get a
little bit of it, and I went down there, and I saw INIr. Tinkham. and he told
me that he thought it wasn't hardly fair in a way; that he could not put out
money directly nf»w, but to go down to Mr. Savage, over in the Globe Building,
and he woidd give me the money. I went to Mr. Savage, and IMr. Savage told
me they were all out of funds, and to go up — that he had siient all he had to
spend.
Mr. Savage was chairman of the twelfth ward committee. Later,
after going to Mr. Savage, and being informed he had no money to
58 CONTESTED-ELECTIOX CASE HOEGAN VS. TINKHAM.
spend, he went then to a member of the legislature or a candidate for
the legislature, named McGregor, and he said McGregor gave him
some flasks of whisk}^ and told him, I think, he would give him three
or four dollars, I think, for working election day at the polls. He
then goes on to saj^ he intended to take McGregor's money and not to
vote for him. I asked him that question, and he said, " Sure, the
same as they take it from us all." He said that he received a card for
use at the polls with a lot of names on it, which apparently was the
whole Republican ticket. Record, page 340. Then he goes on :
Q. Do you mean the whole ticket or the whole ballot of the Republican
candidates? — A. The whole ballot, I presume.
Q. You looked at the card?— A. I did.
Q. Was the name of Gov. Walsh on the card or the name of Mr. McCall? —
A. I can't say.
Q. Was the name of Mr. Barry or Mr. Gushing on the Card? — A. I don't
know, because I didn't take any more stock in it than I do in this whole shoot-
ing match, because I didn't want to be brought into it.
Q. Did you ask anybody to vote for anybody on that day? — A. I certainly did.
Q. Who did you ask to vote? — A. I think Dr. Walsh was a candidate,
wasn't he? ■
Q. Did you ask them to vote for Dr. Walsh? — A. Yes; and I would go again,
and wear my toe nails off for him.
Dr. Walsh was not a candidate that day, having been defeated in
the primary election by Senator Leonard. Then Keyes finally says
that Mr. McGregor and not the contestee employed him.
A. I could not work other than I was employed by Mr. McGregor. That is
the only one that employed me.
This McGregor was a candidate for the legislature. Certainly
that statement can not be laid up to us in any way, shape, or manner.
Mr. Tinkham testified he did not even know Keyes, did not remem-
ber his having come to the office, and never has met Mr. McGregor
in his life. The following remarks are rather interesting and illu-
minating, indicating the whole character of the man :
Mr. Peotjt. Did Mr. Innes give you any money that day?
The Witness. No, sir ; because he did not wait long enough for me to touch
him.
Mr. Ramseyer. The Mr. Innes referred to there. Is that the
gentleman speaking now ?
Mr. Innes. I was the gentleman referred to. On election day I
went around in some of the precincts, and the testimony of this
Keyes is that he saw me. and then Mr. Prout said, " Did Mr. Innes
give you any money that day ? " And he said, " No, sir ; because he
did not wait long enough for me to touch him."
I merelj^ put that in to show the character of the witness. Now,
we certainly can not be blamed for Keyes. Then, let us take the
other case they mention, and that is the only case of liquor in this
campaign, ancl yet it is characterized as the lavish use of liquor.
The Chairman. He says there were half a dozen vials of whisky.
Mr. Innes. That is the one given to him, he says, by McGregor.
The Chairman. That is the one given to him by whom?
Mr. Innes. By McGregor. He worked for McGregor, he said, to
borrow tAvo dollars or two and a half.
The Chairman. He said there were about two good drinks in
them: they were of a brown nature — I suppose becaijse he did not
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOKGAN VS. TINKHAM. 59
knov.- tlie specific nature of the drink — and there were half a dozen
of those used. Xow, were tliere any more vials of whisky handed out,
so far as this record is concerned," than those six vials"? That is 12
drinks of whisky; there were six vials, and two drinks in each vial.
Mr. Inkes. Yes, Mr. Chairman; there is no evidence that anybody
in the entire district, that any candidate, State officer, or governor-^
they were all running that day — that liquor Avas handed out to any-
body except this.
Mr. Rogers. I notice the witness has his own standard of ethics,
because he says on page 342 of the record, "I suppose I would tell
you a lie, but not on the stand."
Mr. Innes. I did not quote him, because he was simply the type
of man I do not think anybddy ought to put on the witness stand to
take awa}^ anj'body's reputation.
Coming to the other specific charges, about briljery — that is a
pretty strong Avord to use. Brother Prout mentioned three instances.
The Keyes case was one. The second case was Purcell. Purcell sent
out that postal card with Reynolds and signed it. Purcell testified
that he received certain money \^hich Avent to the printer, and the
printer was called and testified what he received to pay for those
cards. Purcell directed a thousand of those cards himself, and
Reynolds directed the other thousand, and there was left over, after
the campaign, $-1: for directing that thousand cards, for the Avork
he had done, and he kept it.
The CHAiR:\rAx. How nuich did he keep for directing the cards?
Mr. Innes. $4 for the Avhole work he had done. I think that is
l)etty muckraking, to charge bribery against a man Avhose testi-
numy is uncontradicted, Avitli a statement of that character.
Then they speak about Mason, the negro, and Sheperd. Mason
held rallies in Avard 18.
The Chairman. Hoav much money did Mason get?
Mr. Innes. One got $58 and the other $40. Mason got $58.
The Chairman. What did Mason do for that; hoAv many rallies?
Mr. Innes. The testimony shoAvs that. I am talking only from
the record. The testimony shows that Mason held night rallies.
The Chairman. Hoav many, about?
Mr. Innes. He had an automobile, and presumably he Avent
around and had various meetings in Avard 18 on tAvo nights. That
is the only negro A^ote there is in the district. And that Avas re-
ceipted for, and put on Mr. Tinkham's book, Avhich was produced
here, in Avhich he had kept every dollar he spent — not alone that
Avhich he returned but every dollar which his return said came under
the United States law% and Avhich he appreciated this committee had
a right to have, if it Avanted.
The Chairman. Tell us Avhat he did for the $58, He had an
automobile?
Mr. Innes. He had rallies in the nighttmie.
The Chairman. And he Avould go in the automobile from one
place to the other?
Mr. Innes, There may have been two; I do not know whether
there Avas one automobile or tAvo.
The Chairman, Hired automobiles?
Mr. Innes. Hired automobiles, because he did not have one him-
self; he was a negro. And they had rallies at street corners, and
60 COISTTESTED-ELECTION" CASE HOEGAN VS. TIISTKHAM.
had two or three speakers, and the}^ would get up and talk, and then
go to some other place. I think they did that on two nights.
The Chairman. That was done for two nights ?
Mr. Innes. For two nights.
The Chairman. And that $58 covered both automobiles?
Mr. Innes. It covered everything that was spent. Now, the other
charge, Sheperd, $18 for circulars; that circular is here in the
evidence.
Mr. Prout. Twenty-seven.
Mr. Innes. Exhibit 27?
Mr. Prout. Oh, no; $27.
Mr. Innes. It was $27 for circulars sent out to those negro voters.
It was a perfectly legitimate circular, nothing anybody could object
to, did not mention Horgan's name; simply asked his Kepublican
voters to come out and vote. That was sent out by him, and paid
for, and kept track of.
And the last charge, and the only definite statement throughout
that Tinkham gave anybody a dollar, is that given a man named
Dolan, the amount of $1. And I want you to read Dolan's testimony
in the record. Dolan, gentlemen, is another one of those political
hangers-on. Dolan had no business. Dolan was in Senator Hor-
gan's office time and time again during the entire campaign, so he
says in the record.
The Chairman. Tell us about Sheperd, then we will come to the
dollar to Dolan.
Mr. Innes. To dollar — Dolan.
The Chairman. You have explained the money to Mason and you
have explained the money to those who sent out these cards — Pur-
cell. How much monev was given to Sheperd — $27?
Mr. Innes. $27.
The Chairman. What did he do?
Mr. Innes. Sheperd sent out circulars to Avard 18 to the colored
voters.
The Chairman. That is the " One way " circular ?
Mr. Innes. No ; that is not the " One way " circular.
The Chairman. How many were there, about?
Mr. Innes. That is in doubt. They always claim they have more
voters than they have. Mr. Tinkham said 750 to 800. I think that
is a fair statement.
The Chairman. And he paid for the 2-cent stamps?
Mr. Innes. It may have been a 1-cent stamp ; he paid the amount
for the stamps. ■
The Chairman. And that covered everything — the labor of ad-
dressing and all?
Mr. Innes. It covered the labor of addressing and everything else.
The Chairman. How about the Dolan dollar?
Mr. Innes. Now, the Dolan dollar man, as I say, was a political
hanger-on. I do not think lie was a social friend of Mr. Horgan's
in his office. He came to Mr. Tinkham because he had been told
there was a barrel of money down there. This was his testimon3^
He says Mr. Tinkham gave him a dollar and asked him to vote for
him ; he took the dollar and promised to vote for him. Then next
week he went back again because he wanted another dollar. In
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOEGAN VS. TINKHAM. 6X
the iiieantiine he had been to Brother Horgan's office, but he never
asked him for money. lie says so, and Mr. Horgan says so, too>
So he came down again and got another doHar. I asked him, '' What
had you done to get that doUar^ '' and he said, "I thought I could
get somebody else to vote for him."" I said, " Did you vote for him? "
and he said, " No ; he did not vote for him."' Then I asked him if
he intended to, and he said, " No ; he did not intend to." And I said,
"And you did not intend to go and vote for him when you got the
dollar." He said, " No; but he went about to get the other friend to
vote for him."
Now, that is the testimony of Dolan with this court convictions.
Mr. Oglesby. Mr. Tinkham used bad judgment in buying his vote,
didn't he?
Mr. Innes. I want to say to you that Mr. Tinkham denied abso-
lutely he gave him a dollar.
Mr. Magee. Denied it?
Mr. Innes. He denied absolutely he gave him a dollar. But I
am going to read his testimony to you in just a minute — what Mr.
Dolan said:
Q. Are .v<»u now under probation from the city court? — A. Idle and dis-
orderly. I think that was the charge.
Q. AVhen was that?— A. December r,. 1913.
Q. Have you any other record than drunks? — A. One.
Q. What is the one? — A. Assault.
Q. When was that?— A. That happened in 1907.
Then I asked him what other record he had besides drtmks and
assault, and then follows his other records.
Now, the question of cons[)iracy is preposterous and is not to be
believed, and ought not to be oifered before any tribunal, and I should
hesitate to ask anybody to believe that statement against the state-
ment of Mr. Tinkham which I am noAV going to read you.
Mr. Magee. He testified above there that he did not vote for any-
body for Congress, didn't he?
Mr. Innes. That is right. That is one of the statements where they
say we admitted we gave him a dollar.
Mv. Prout. Which I later corrected.
Mr. I^NES. You corrected that to-day for the first time. Then
comes Mr. Tinkham's testimony. He says :
He [meaning- Dolan i may have come to my ofiice. There were lunulreds, and
I miiiht say tliousands, who came to my ofiice during the campaign. In rela-
tion to these charges that T gave any money to anyone improperly, I want, how-
ever, to make this sttement, that for years I have been inclined, if a man came
to my otttce and the case was a worthy one, ond he wanted me to give him
something — from 10 cents to .$5, which, of course, was the maximum — if the
case seemed a worthy one I gave him the money. I also have given money to
people on the street. I determined when I started in on this campaign that it
was unsafe to do such a thing as that, and I even cut out private charity ; and
although I had many men come to me and ask me for money I explained to
them, although they' did not seem to accept the information very pleasantly,
that it was absolutely impossible for me to give them any money, whether they
lived in the district or not, because it might be misunderstood or used against
me. And I must say that there were a number of cases where I would have
given the man some money had it not been for the campaign.
The CHAiRaiAN. Is that all of the evidence of money used?
Mr. Innes. That is all of the evidence in any way.
The Chairman. We have the liquor and all of the money?
62 CONTESTED-ELECTIOX CASE HORGAN VS. TINKHAM.
Mr. InjsEs. That is all of the direct charge of any money coming
from any source except they have charged that Mr. Timility gave
somebod}^ some money.
Mr. Tillman. I see that Dolan, on page 307, says that Magoon told
him he got $2 from Tinkham.
Mr. Innes. Magoon was called by him.
^Ir. Magee. What did he testify?
Mr. Innes. He denied ever receiving any money. In fact, he said
he did not see Mr. Tinkham until after the election, as I recall the
testimony, and then went in to get a job — to ask a favor. He was
one of the Eoxbury Crossing crowd around there looking for posi-
tions, but he had not happened to see Mr. Tinkham.
The Chairman. I do not want to direct the course of argument;
but how about the law regarding campaign expenditures in Massa-
chusetts ?
, Mr. Innes I was coming to that last, because that is one
The Chairman. That is one of the points relied upon — the con-
spiracy with Timilty is relied upon; the use of liquor and money — ■
and we want to get your answer on all of these points.
Mr. Innes. I think I have said all I want to say about that particu-
lar matter. I do want to call your attention to his brief, in which he
cites, on pages 14 and 29, a lot of witnesses whom he says will bear
out his contention either that money was used or that liquor was dis-
pensed. And I want to say to you, gentlemen, that the testimony
in the record does not disclose that these witnesses ever testified.
Mr. Oglesby. You can depend upon it we will look up those ref-
erences.
Mr. Innes. I want to show you a sample of the men spoken of
here to-day as testifying to these most serious charges. William J.
Kelley was spoken of as verifying the expenditure of money, the ex-
penditure of money in barrooms. And this is a sample of what we
have had to meet in this whole hearing, Mr. Chairman :
Q. Did you hear anything about Mr. Logue spending any of Mr. Tinldiam's
money in tlie form of cash or liquid ref reshmenst ? — A. I heard liquids were
passed out freely at Cullivan's barroom. I heard it before and after the
primaries, and it was pretty well known in the district that you could go
down there, and if you were friendly with their political ideas, you could get
fixed up in the way of liquor.
Q; Are you acquainted with a young man named .Joe Aigen? — A. I know Mr.
Aigen,
Q. Is he employed in Cullivan's barroom? — A. As far as I know, he is
tending bar there.
Q. Did you hear that he was active in Tinkham's campaign? — A. I heard so.
Q. And he was dispensing Tinkham's money? — A. I heard so.
Q. And that he was giving out free liquor to people who were supposed to be
With Tinkham? — A. That was the general impression.
Q. Now, are you acquainted with a William J. Miller? — A. Why, yes; I
know Mr. Miller.
Q. And where was he employed at about the timei of election? — A. At
Madden's barroom at Roxbury Crossing.
Q. And that goes under the name of Yaeger's? — A. It has gone under the
name of Yaeger's.
Q. What capacity was he employed in there? — A. Waiter.
Q. Did you hear that Mr. Miller was interested in Mr. Tinkham's campaign? —
A. I heard that.
Q. Tell us what you heard about that.— A. I heard that Mr. Miller was in-
terested in Mr. Tinkham being elected, and that he would set up the drinks in
case you spoke well of Mr. Tinkham.
Q. That is. he was working generally in Mr. Tinkham's behalf? — A, Yes; as
I understood it.
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOKGAX VS. TINKHAM. 63
Then, on cross-exaniinntion, I asked :
Q. Did you see ]\Ir. Tinkhani give anybody money? — -A. Wliy, no.
Q. Did you see Mr. Tiniilty give anyltody any money? — A. No; I did not.
Q. Did you see Mr. Kelley receive any money ? — A. No ; I did not.
Q. Did you see Mr. Miller receive any money? — A. No; I did not.
Q. Did you see anybody that you have testified about here receive any money
from Mr. Tinkham, or from anybody else connected with the election? — A.
No ; I did not. *
That is Kelle}', the same Kelley, who circuhited these rumors
which have been put out in our newspapers as evidence in this case,
Mr. Chairman. We have had some head lines opening- up the politics
of the day there. Then I go on :
Q. Did Mr. Miller tell you he received any money from Mr. Tinkham? — A. I
did not speak to Mr. Miller about it.
Q. Did he tell you that he received any money from ^Mr. Tinkhani? — A. No;
he did not.
Then, further along in his testimony:
Q. Is there anybody else that you can mention from the time you started
of this campaign that told that they received money from INIr. Tinkham
for being with him? — A. I just said before tliat you wouldn't get anybody
to admit it, but the general rumor.
Then comes the barroom story:
Did you ever tell this barroom story?
That is my question.
The Chairman. That is the story of the Tremont House?
Mr. Innes. No: this is the barroom dispensing liquor for Tink-
ham :
Q. Did you ever tell him about this barroom story? — A. I don't recall
esi)ecially about the bai-room story.
Q. Well, was that rumor sinu)ly something that somebody told you, or was
it around the district generally?— A. All around the district. You couldn't
help hearing it.
Q. You heard it, and others? — A. Probably hundreds heard it.
Q. I should think you would have gone down with the crowd.
That is the barroom where this Avas being dispensed, and every-
body knew about it. He said:
A. I don't mix with the crowd.
Q. But you heard the story a week before election that free liquor was
being dispensed in Tiarrity's barroom, and that all you had to do was to go
down there and get a drink if you were with Tinkham? — A. That was all.
Q. I should think you would have gone down to see the crowd. — A. I tell
you I don't drink. I don't go into barrooms.
That is one of the witnesses who verifies the story of liquor, who
was active in Mr. Horgan's campaign, one of the managers — not a
manager, but a man who did some printing for him. His name
is in his return. And then he quotes his own statements, he spent
<:1ays— a day. I think, and a half— on the witness stand. And this
is the kind of testimony :
Have you got any knowledge that former Senator Lane spent money in
the district?
Only what I have heard ; I have no knowledge.
What did you hear —
And Brother Prout told the witnesses in this hearing, these
rumors were competent evidence — that is in the record, too — and they
took advantage of that situation and gave these rumors as testimony
64 CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOKGAN VS. TINKHAM.
to take away the reputation of men who were not there and who
could not even testify, if they wanted to.
Q. What did you hear? — A. That he was spending money profusely through-
out the district. I saw him at Roxbury Crossing one morning at half past 8
and I thought it was an unseemly hour for him to be at the crossing, and
together with that I heard — I assumed that he was spending money.
Mr. Lane denied that he been at the crossing at that time.
Q. And did you hear that he was spending money from more than one
source? — A. I don't know what you mean by that.
Q. Was it one individual who told you that Senator Lane was spending
money? — A. Oh, no; that was generally said.
Q. Everybody knew that in ward 19? — A. It was generally said around.
Q. And in what way did he spend the money? — A. He was in different bar-
rooms buying drinks.
Q. And did you hear of any particular barroom that he was in? — ^A. I
heard that he was in the Highland Tap, and several others. I don't know.
Q. Now, did you hear anything about Senator Tinkham spending any money
in the district in different barrooms? — A. Well, no.
Q. Or hotels, or other places? — A. Not before election.
Q. Did you hear anything about Senator Tinkham being in Germania Hall
on Sunday afternoon, November 1; that is, the Sunday before election? — ^A. I
heard he was up there ; yes.
Q. Did you hear whether or not he spent any money there? — A. Well, I
heard he was up there, and that there was a lot of money spent. Whether
he, Tinkham, spent it or not, I don't know. I understand he couldn't spend
any money.
Q. Did you hear that he was in the Forest Hills Hotel on Sunday afternoon
and spending money"? — A. Yes.
In all cases we took those rumors, and whenever we found it
emanated from any man, we asked if he knew as a fact it was true,
or if he had heard the rumor or made the statement. Mr. Tink-
ham said he had not been in the Forest Hills Hotel during the entire
campaign. You have heard that argued, that story about Timilty
meeting him at Doyle's barroom or hotel.
The Chairman. That is the Thursday before election?
Mr. Innes. Some day before election.
The Chairman. Thursday, wasn't it?
Mr. Innes. It was, I believe.
The Chairman. You were supposed to meet a man in there and
he said you came in on Thursday, before election, and bought a
drink.
Mr. Innes. No ; he did not say I bought a drink. I went in the
toilet, I think it was.
The Chairman. And told him the bartender would tell him who
to vote for. Is that the one ?
Mr. Innes. No ; that is not the one. It is the one he manufactures
to try to bring out some sort of conspiracy, but there is no evi-
dence here that Tinkham and Timilty ever even talked together,
or anybody talked to Timilty about Tinkham's campaign, or Tim-
ilty ever talked to anybody about supporting Tinkham. There is
not a particle of evidence on that subject.
Mr. Magee. Was not Senator Timilty running for the senate at
this time?
Mr. Innes. That same day.
Mr. Magee. Was he elected ?
Mr. Innes. He was elected that year and the year after.
Mr. Magee. Is he a senator now?
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOBGAN VS. TINKHAM. 65
Mr. IxNES. He is a senator now, I think serving his sixth term.
I Avoiild not mention this, but Brother Front's argument is some-
Avhat personal to me. Brother Front said there is evidence here
of my meeting Senator Timilty in Senator Doyle's barroom or
hotel, and that I said— I met him in the hall, l' think, and went
upstairs with him.
The CiiAiR^rAx. That is. they met n man who was a waiter?
Mr. Inxes. p]xactly.
The CiiAiHMAN. They had some (h-inks. and he tohl them the
story (
Mr. Innes. Exactly, Mr. Chairman; you remember it.
Now, what is the evidence they have on that point? Why, from
a man named Lally. Who is he? Lally worked in the contest-
ant's office before election.
Mr. Tillman. What page?
Mr. Innes. Page 48 of my brief, if I may so refer you. This man
Lally Avorked for Hoi-gan during the campaign. He was one of the
most active partisans during the campaign. He was the author of
and sent out a circular; he did detective work during the campaign
and after. He was produced as the official stenographer to take these
notes here, which Avere to be transmitted to Washington, but we
could not agree on his ability to transcribe these notes, or his fair-
ness. He served legal papers for the contestant in this case. He
Avas the man Avho Avas ahvays present, and AvheneA'er you read this
testimony of any of those general rumors, most of these stories Avhich
Avei'e contradicted by the men themselves Avere told by Lally. He
Avas omnipresent and ubiquitous and always ready to fill up any
chinks. He Avas the man selected — I do not Avant to say " selected,"
l)ut he did go to this hotel. He said he met a man and " put a few
drinks into him "" to make him talkative, and the felloAv said he had
seen Mr. Innes in there, Charlie Innes or Mr. Innes, AvhateA'er he
called me, and Senator Timilty there.
Mr. Ramseveij. He did not say that himself?
Mr. Innes. He did not say he did at all; he said he had gone there
and got this evidence of this man, in this place, who told him those
facts.
The Chairman. And that the bartender would tell him for Avhom
to vote ; is that the story ?
Mr. Innes. That is the story,- Mr. Chairman.
The Chairman. And the bartender told him to vote for Tinkham?
I think that is the story, as I recall it.
Mr. Innes. That is the story. Noav, he did not get the name of
that man that he says gave him this evidence, and if he did, he did
not get his address. He was neA-er produced at the trial. The man
Avho talked to Lally, Avho talked about the gentleman here, he said
he Avas a spare Avaiter. His address is 333 Tremont Street. He had
not tried to locate him, hoAvever, from the time in December when
he found this most important evidence, so he thought, of the meet-
ing between ]Mr. Timilty and myself. I have been known from boy-
hood days as a friend of Mr. Tinkham's. He is not, as Brother Hor-
gan suggests he is, my rich tool. I have knoAvn George Tinkham for
a good many years, and Avas ahvays glad to support him.
Mr. Tillman. Is he a Avealthy man?
40880—1(5 ~^
66 COlSTTESTED-ELECTIOlsr CASE HOEGAN VS. TIl^KHAM.
Mr. Innes. His mother and father and aunts are rich. I do not
think he is rich, himself. I have met his mother and two aunts, his
maiden aunts; they are rich, but he is not a man of large means,
himself.
I do not suppose Brother Horgan can understand another man's
keen interest in somebody else's campaign. I have taken an interest
in Senator Tinkham's campaign for a great many years. I take the
same interest now, and have for a good many years. I was not on
the committee ; my name does not appear in this entire rigid investi-
gation which was conducted. But I did everything I could for him,
however. Now, Mr. Tinkham denies having a meeting there with
Timilty. Mr. Timilty denies it in a most positive way, before any-
body ever knew the charge was to be made. He was called to the
stand as one of the first witnesses. He was asked this:
Q. * * * Tell us why on Thursday, October 29, at some time around noon,
you were closeted in the toilet room of the New Tremont House with Senator
Innes? — A. Where?
Q. Why was it on October 29, Thursday, about noon, at the New Tremont
Hotel, .Jim Doyle's barroom (that is Senator Doyle), that you met Senator
Innes by appointment there, and went to a private room there? — A. Do you
really mean that question?
Q. Positively. — A. I never met Mr. Innes any place in my life, in any hotel
or any place, and wherever you get that information
Q. That is all. You deny, then, that you did meet him? — A. Most emphati-
cally.
Q. You never met Senator Innes at the NeAV Tremont House prior to elec-
tion? — A. Never met him at Jim Doyle's hotel in my life.
Q. Did you meet anybody at Jim Doyle's hotel just prior to election? — ^A.
None, whatsoever.
Q. Were you in Jim Doyle's hotel just before election? — A. Not for a year
and a half.
Q. You did not meet Peter Murray in Jim Doyle's hotel prior to November
1? — A. Never met Peter Murray in any hotel.
And so on, about the tricks and the other things, about which we
had no idea as to what it was all about, and we sat there in amaze-
ment when these questions were asked.^
Now, what do you think of any evidence that anybody met Mr.
Timilty in Mr. Doyle's hotel. Is that statement a fact ? I won't go
further to suggest to you the character of Lally, except what this
record shows.
The Chairman. Mr. Innes, what other evidence is there besides
Lally's statement that a man told him, to establish this fact? Is
there any?
Mr. Innes. None whatever.
The Chairman. Is it corroborated by any circumstances?
Mr. Innes. No circumstances whatever. And Lally went a little
further. This is where he went a little too far, and I am talking
from the record. The record discloses he said he met a detective
named Erickson, and received instructions to go to Jim Doyle's place
out in Eoxbury, and told him to see a certain witness and tell him not
to talk about this case. This man named Erickson was a detective,
and he had been told to find him. And I said to him. How did you
happen to know Erickson, and he said they had worked together at
one time. Then I asked him if he had tried to find Erickson, and he
said, " Yes, I have looked all over town, and can not find him." This
testimony was offered to prove that word had been sent to these peo-
ple to keep away from the hearing. I looked up the records in Bos-
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HORGAN VS. TINKHAM. 67
ton. and foiiiul a man named Erickson who lived where Lally said he
lived, in South Boston, and we brought Erickson down to the court,
and Erickson said he had worked on a case with Lally some time
before, on some detective business for some corporation, but Mr.
Erickson said he had not seen Lally for a year and a half. Then
Mr. Lally said he guessed that was not the Erickson he meant.
The Chairman. I see that in the brief. What is the point you
make of that?
Mr. Innes. It is the worst case of manufactured testimony.
The Chairman. How manufactured?
Mr. Innes. I am not blaming either Mr. Horgan or Mr. Prout for
this, because they were surrounded in this case by men who were
overzealons. or crooked: I do not know what; and they believed the
silly rumors that are brought to your office every time a man rims
for office, but you pass them up. I do not blame them. But I say
Lally, in that statement, proved absolutely unreliable, and I believe
it proves absolute perjury and framing up of testimony in this case.
Mr. Oglesby. They repeat in there a very serious charge against
you, which they say was printed in one of the newspapers in Boston.
Mr. Innes. I did not think the charge was very serious.
Mr. Oglesby. Page 16.
Mr. Innes. Page 16 of the record, or their brief?
Mr. Oglesby. Of their brief.
Mr. Innes. Yes. Of course, this statement was written in a Pro-
gressive paper of our town, by a very clever newspaper man, who
likes to take a fall out of most any party, either party who hap-
pens to come his way, and this was written in an interesting and read-
able w^ay, for the ordinary public. Of course, the information there,
Mr. Chairman, was furnished by some close friend of Mr. Horgan's.
It gives the amount of money spent for affidavits, and alleges votes
were bought at five per. We did not give the information, did we?
Who did give it ? What is it based upon ? The reporter was never
called, whoever he was. I asked Mr. Horgan why they never called
the reporter to testify to it. It was put out after the election. That
is the sort of newspaper stuff we have had in his campaign. Twenty-
six affidavits that votes were paid for at $5 per vote. And then
Brother Horgan suggests in his brief that somebody ought to sue
those people for libel. I have tried to bring suits for libel, myself,
sometimes. You have got to prove it was spoken about some definite
person.
The Chairman. So did Barnes.
Mr. Innes. Nobody wants to walk up to a court and say, " I am
the fellow ; this charge is about me; it is not true." There is a charge
made about nobody here; simply a newspaper story and incidental
to that
The Chairman. Did you ever find out who gave the information
for this story?
Mr. Innes. I assume it must have been some of Mr. Horgan's
intimate friends.
The Chairman. Or a clever newspaper man.
Mr. Innes. I assume it must have been some of Mr. Horgan's
intimate friends.
Mr. Oglesby. You do not have to give the newspaper boys any
information for a story.
68 CONTESTED-ELECTIOlSr CASE HORGAN VS. TINKHAM.
Mr. Innes. And then I have published the editorial in a paper,
the same paper, and I have stated there that it is not part of this
record, because it came out after this case was closed. But I put it
m, although it is not a part of the record (but I have told you about
that) in which this same paper ridiculed all the evidence here as
Jacking in positiveness and character.
Now, I do want to say a word or two to you about Mr. Horgan's con-
clusions that he has drawn, that there was a conspiracy or anything
crooked back of it. He reasons as perhaps he ought to reason there
were Democrats who did not vote for him, and he seems to think that
is evidence of crookedness. What are we going to say about William
Monroe Trotter, the colored gentleman who ATas put out of Presi-
dent Wilson's office a few months ago? Horgan says Trotter first
informed him of what Timilty was doing ; and he claims he received
either $10 or $20 from Horgan for advertising, or something of that
sort. And Mr. William Monroe Trotter is a colored man. Of
course, the money did not influence him any. Of course, he has been
a leading exponent of his race — at least, the papers state that he
represented them here, and the President objected to his presence
in his office, and asked him to retire. That is all the record shows,
hoAvever. It is quoted in the record. Of course, he voted for Mr.
Horgan from purely reasons of personal friendship. I do not say
he had any other reasons, but T wish Brother Horgan would give us
the benefit of that same viewpoint.
I want to say one word about the postal cards, because it has been
mentioned these postal cards were sent out, and it is all in the record,
b}^ these two men. It was their own idea, the signing of them, and
the sending of them to men in the district. They thought of the
idea. The}^ were good Democrats and wanted to have Mr. Tinkham
elected to Congress. Brother Prout says they had no reason. This
lecord shows one of them was the barber who shaved Tinkham at the
Athletic Club. Brother Horgan sneered at it. I do not know what
your experience has been, but I have sometimes found a barber most
helpful, and I would rather have a barber for me than the average
banker, because he will do more for you, maybe because he has more
time, and so Travers asked him, and he said he would be glad to do it.
He had not any interest in politics particularly.
Mr. Russell. I believe your statement of yesterday was that the
contestee indorsed the postal card, and agreed on the form?
Mr. Innes. He did. Purcell brought it to him, he said, and Mr.
Tinkham indorsed it, and paid for it. Now, that postal card — there
is nothing on it that you can object to, unless you object to the pre-
diction. The prediction was " Vote for Walsh, Democrat, and Tink-
ham, as hundreds of other Democrats are going to do."
The Chairman. That was more than a prediction; it was a sug-
gestion, a solicitation.
Mr. Innes. It also says, " as hundreds of other Democrats will do."
We think they did. We think a good many Democrats voted the
same way, for Gov. Walsh and Tinkham.
Now, I want to speak, Mr. Tillman, because it occurred in your
district, on the Slemon's case. In this case it was claimed, and it was
a fact, that the candidacy of a well-known Republican was an-
nounced who was not a candidate at all. Whether you had the
Australian ballot system at that time I do not know. But you did
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HORGAN VS. TINKHAM. 69
not have a list of names to vote for and you were handed a ballot, and
you would find posted up all over the walls a prominent Republican
who was said to be running- who was not a candidate at all. Of
course, it was an eminently unfair thing to do. I do not know
whether it changed the election, but it was unfair as between two
honorable men contesting for election; an unfair thing to do; to
divert votes from one i)artv by claiming somebody was running who
was not running at all. Nothing of that sort Wiis done here.
And you have a case in your records, which came from our own
State, where we had a forged telegram as coming from the Demo-
cratic chairman of the national committee urging the candidacy of
one of two prominent Democrats to Congress, and the chairnu\n of
your national Democratic committee, who was said to have sent the
telegram which was published throughout the district, said, as a
matter of fact, it was a forgery, and the committee found it was a
forgery. It was said to be a trick, but they coidd not say that any
votes had been influenced necessarily by it. although they paid some
tribute to the ability and standing of the gentleman who had signed
the telegram. But you said there was no evidence that any votes
had been changed by it. We say that this postal card is a legitimate
thing to do; we submit that it is a perfectly fair thing to do. We
submit that our methods are legal — of course, we would say that —
and we were A^ithin our moral rights, and Mr. Tinkham, I think, has
a right to say. " I stand for that," and I think it is a perfectly legiti-
mate method of conducting a campaign.
There has been a lot of talk, and Brother Prout has particularly
criticized us for the little time we have taken in our brief about the
circular called the "One way game expose." There is no doubt about
the fact that it was a correct statement of Mr. Hogan^s record.
There is no claim there is any deceit in the cii'cular offered. I have
doubt that even a trained legal mind would know exactly why that
"One way" circular came into the brief. It w\as brought into the
brief because he says they want to show Timilty's connection with
the circular and, therefore, with Tinkham. I w^on't discuss all the
other phases of it — whether all the signatures are genuine or not —
but I want simply to say this, that even if everything he claims
about it is true, even if the signatures did come from some of
Timilty's clubs, it merely shows some men in Timilty's club were
friendly to Tinkham's candidacy. There is not the remotest con-
nection of Timilty with it. except the fact that some members of his
club signed it, knowing Mr. Tinkham. And it has been said here in
this connection that he has changed his testimony, or we have
changed our case, and Brother Prout, in his last brief, has said that
we framed up this whole case and changed our policy afterwards. I
do not know, but I can not see on what any such suggestion or
slanderous remark as that is based. There is nothing changed
about the testimony. The facts are clear enough. Senator Xichols
drew up that circular; drew it up without asking Tinkham about it.
Mr. Tinkham went around in an automobile — around speaking-
nights and at noon — speaking to the factories at noontime and to the
factories at 5 o'clock, and speaking at night in rallies, mostly out on
the streets, because he was conducting his own personal campaign —
because he was looking for Democratic votes.
70 CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOKGAN VS. TINKHAM.
Mr. Nichols got that circuhir up. It was charged to Tinkham at
a printing establishment that did all of his work, and he paid for it
without any attempt to conceal it. Mr. Xichols wanted some names
on that circidar, and he wanted, naturally, very properly, if it could
be done, Democratic names. He got two himself, all he'had to have.
He only had to have one by law, but he got two himself. And in the
hurry of the time the circular was sent out on Thursday or Friday, 1
believe, befoi-e ejection. He wanted to send it out in time in order
to be refuted if any statements in it were incorrect. In getting
those signatures different people started to go to get them, and he
says the signatures came in. He only verified two, because he only
had to have one. And he added the names of those other people,
half a dozen or more, and sent it out. And the evidence all disclosed
that he sent it down to the printer and the printer sent it out, acting
absolutely in good faith about it, with no attempt made to do any-
thing that Avas improper. And Mr. Tinkham, Avhen he heard of it,
said, " That is all right ; that is satisfactory to me, if you know that
record is correct." That is the testimony of the record. And he
approved it, and said, " I will stand back of everything you said if
you know it is correct."
Now, I am going to close
Mr. Eamseyer. Who is this man Nichols?
Mr. IjStnes. Nichols is a State senator.
Mr. Eamseyer. A Republican?
Mr. Inxes. a Republican; yes.
Mr. Ramseyee. Manager of Mr. Tinkham's campaign?
Mr. Innes. He was not on Mr. Tinkham's campaign committee,
but he was a close friend of his, the political editor of the Boston
Post — not the editor — but he had been the editor at one time. He is
not now. He had done more or less work along these circular-pre-
paring lines.
Mr. Ro<}ERS. This may not be any too pertinent to either side, but
it has been discussed somewhat, and I have been rather interested in
the suggestion that there were no rules of evidence observed in the
proceedings which formed the basis of this record.
Mr. In]sjes. Absolutely none, Mr. Congressman.
Mr. Rogers. And that a ver}^ large proportion of the evidence
there is admissible on no possible theory of law, I take it ?
Mr. Innes. I think it is unquestionably true. I want to say I do
not believe — and I leave the question to the members of the com-
mittee who are lawyers — I do not believe one-quarter of that testi-
mony would be allowed in any court whatever. And the character
of what I have given jon was the character of testimony that has
been offered.
Mr. Ramseyer. Did 3'ou aim to take exceptions to such testimony
as you thought illegal?
Mr. Innes. I entered objections, but the magistrate took this view
of his jurisdiction, that he was there simply to get wdiat was said and
to certify it to you here at Washington, without any attempt to ex-
clude any evidence whatever.
Mr. Rogers. Do you know in any past contests whether the mag-
istrate has taken that same view or has attempted to limit the
evidence ?
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOEOAX VS. TTNKHAM. 71
Mr. Innes. I have only had one other contest, and the magistrate at
that time took the same viewpoint, and I think his viewpoint is
correct. Personally. I think the entire procedure onght to l)e i-e-
vised. I think it is an unfortunate situation.
Mr. EoGEiJS. That is my experience from a service of three or four
years on this connnittee and I have come to that same conclusion.
Mr. Innes, I do not want to suggest what this committee should
do, hnt I do believe it would be a good thing if yon would pass a
definite statute putting the matter in the hands of the court to take the
evidence for this body.
Mr. Tillman. Yon concede there are no rules governing the ad-
missibility of evidence?
Mr. Innes. Exactl.y. And the record is full of political linen
which was washed out there, which it was thought advisable to wash
out.
Now, I want to say a Avord about the expenditures, whether we
have expended more money than the law allowed us. I am coming
now directly to what he calls the expenses of an illegal nature.
The Chairman. That is what I Avant to* ask you, to tell us about
the Massachusetts law with relation to congressional requirements.
Mr. Innes. The Massachusetts law has been correctly (pioted by
Brother Front, to the elfect that it allows $;^,000 expenditures in elec-
tions and $1,500 in the primaries, and then it says:
Provided, howwcr. Tluit caiulidates for iiomiuatiou or election to the Senate
or House of Ileiu'eseutatives of the United States shaU be subject to the laws
of the United States in so far as this act may conflict with such laws.
The United States statute provides that no candidate for Con-
gress shall pay an amount in excess of that allowed under the laws
of the State, provided —
That money expended by any such candidate to meet and discharge any
assessment fees or charge made or levied upon candidates by the laws of the
State in which he resides, or for his necessary personal expenses incurred for
himself alone, for travel and subsistence, stationary and postage, writing or
printing (other than in newspapers) and distributing letters, circulars, and
posters, and for telegraph and telephone service shall not be regarded as an
expenditure within the meaning of this section, and shall not be considered any
part of the sum herein fixed as the limit of expense, and need not be shown in
the statements required to be filed.
Now, there was a definite provision in the State law which gov-
erned, and which I have called to your attention, that the personal
expenses should not be considered in determining this question under
the State laws. We also have our own State law. saying here that if
this act was in conflict with any United States statute that the na-
tional law should govern. And that, I think. Mr. Chairman, is a
doubtful proposition of law. It was so doubtful that before entering
the campaign (this is all in the record, and I am not quoting to yon
except from the record) the contestee consulted personally various
men who would most likely know about what the law tried to do.
He consulted the man who "framed the act, Maj. John H. Sherburne,
of the Massachusetts Legislature, and his testimony is given in the
case. Maj. Sherburne aclvised him that personal expenditures could
be made in Massachusetts and need not be returnee!. He consulted
the attorney general. James M. Swift, one of his present attorneys,
72 CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOEGAN VS. TINKHAM.
and who has been for some time attorney general of the Common-
wealth, charged with the dut}^ of enforcing the corrupt-practices act,
and he was so advised by him. The deputy secretary of state, to
whom the return was made, never claimed that there had been an ex-
penditure bevond the amount allowed by law ; he merely claimed that
the State law should have been complied with, and that a return of
those expenditures should have been made. His one contention was,
" You should have complied by making a return."
The CHAimrAN. His contention was that your personal expendi-
tures were not included in the $3,000
Mr. Innes. Exactly.
The Chairmak. But you could not ignore them, and must tell
what thej were?
Mr. Innes. Exactly; that they shoidd have been returned.
The ChaikmajV. What do you think about that?
Mr. Innes. I think you are right about it. I think he has a right
to make the expenditures, but I think whether he had to return them,
now that the question is raised, was a very close one. It was not
raised, of course, mitil after this thing was done; but to cover any
possible question, it AYas all kept by Mr. Tinkham in his book and in ■
his check book, so that every dollar has been shown to this committee.
The Chairman. Can he make a supplemental report?
Mr. Innes. He can, under our law.
The Chairman. And did he do that?
Mr. Innes. He was asked to by Mr. Boynton, assistant secretary
of state, who is not a lawyer. He saj^s Mr. Tinkham did not do it.
And the State had a Mr. Boynton, a Democrat, attorney general at
that time, and he took the same viewpoint as Mr. Swift.
Mr. Prout. That is not so.
Mr. Innes. To be absolutely exact, Mr. Bo.ynton has never made
any further request or proceeded in any way. That is in the record- —
he has never made any further request. And that is equally true of
the last attorney general, Mr. Atwill.
The Chairman. Is it the duty of the attorney general to make re-
quest for this supplemental report, or must any candidate make it of
his own direction ? Do you see the point ?
Mr. Innes. I see. It is the custom there, or the law provides, that
the secretary of state, which means the deputy, shall call attention to
the incorrectness of any return, which may then be remedied.
The Chairman. Was that clone?
Mr. Innes. That was clone in a number of other cases. Then Mr.
Tinkham says, " I do not think I am supposed to make a return, be-
cause my statement sets out "
The Chairman. Pardon me, before we get to that. He called at-
tention to what was deficient in the return, in that he had not
specified
Mr. Innes. Specified the amounts.
The Chairman (continuing). Of those personal expenses?
Mr. Innes. Of his personal expenses.
The Chairman. What did Tinkham do after that?
Mr. Innes. Mr. Tinkham said, " In the statement I have given
vou, the return discloses the reasons for not filing them."
The Chairman. " So that I think I will stand on that? "
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOKGAN VS. TINKHAM, 73
Mr. I^■^•I•:s. '^\iid I think I will stand on that." That, then. Avas
referred to the attorney general for snch proceeding as he saw fit to
take.
The CHAiiiaiAN. Did he take anj^?
Mr. Innes. What was usually done, which was to send — because
many people slipped up on this — to send it back to have it corrected.
Nothing has been done from that time to this.
The CiiAii^MAN. Your contention is the fact that the attorney gen-
eral took no action, as he usually would if if there had been anything
wrong
Mr. Inm:s. Exactly.
The C'liAiijMAN (continuing). Is a presumption or a proof positive
that the thing must be all rights
Mr. Innes. That is all the record disclosed, what you say, and I am
iU'guing from the record.
Mr. EoGERs. Is this a penal statute?
Mr. Innes. It is a penal statute.
Mr. Rogers. And any violation of it then is punishable by fine and
imprisonment '(
Mr. Innes. Bv fine and imprisonment. But Ave have good
laith—
The Chairman. Tell us about the good faith.
Mr. Innes. Yes. The good faith is shown first by the care with
which Mr. Tinkham went at this, to see Avhat he could and could not
do; and, secondly, he kept the l)ooks, a most punctilious account in
liis books.
Mr. Ramseyer. Is that set out in the record ?
Mr. Innes. That is set out in the record.
Mr. Ramseyer. Every cent, personal, and everything?
Mr. Innes. Everything is set out in the record, and that he asked
the opinion of the attorney general and Mr. Boynton.
The Chair:\[an. I can see that, all right, but is it your construction
of the statute that even if a man has filed a defective return and does
not cure it, nevertheless the return is all right, provided he acted in
good faith?
Mr. Innes. Plxactly.
The Chairiman. Show us the statute or tell us about that.
Mr. Innes. The statute provides
The Chairman. Without expressing any opinion of the thing at
jJl, suppose the committee should come to the conclusion that this
return made by Mr. Tinkham Avas not correct, and that he should
haA'e filed a supplemental return, and, to that extent, it is deficient:
If Ave get that far, is it your contention that he is absolved from it by
the fact that he showed good faith?
Mr. Innes. Absolutely.
The Chairman. ShoAv us that.
Mr. Innes. I also say even if you find his return should have been
filed, irrespective of the suggestion or of the express statement about
good faith, that it Avould have been entirely Avithin the province of
tliis committee, if they thought there Avas good faith, to alloAv riim
to retain his seat.
The Chairman. Of course, I understand that, but you go stronger
than that, vour Massachusetts law.
74 CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOEGAN VS. TINKHAM.
Mr, Innes. Of course, our court has recentl}'- held the entire cor-
rupt-practices act is unconstitutional.
The Chairman, Yes ; I understand they have held it is not within
the province of a State legislature to bind national or congressional
candidates.
Mr. Innes. Exactly, •
Mr. Ramseter. Have you the decision?
Mr. Innes. I have been too busy
Mr. Russell. Is that the supreme court of your State ?
Mr. Innes. The supreme court of our State. They have prac-
tically said you can be the judge of your own returns and the legis-
lature can not pass any law binding any successor.
Mr. Prout. Is that the Swig case?
Mr. Innes. Yes.
Mr. Prout. That has nothing to do with the congressional elec-
tions.
Mr. Rogers. I do not think that Swig case has any bearing upon
the question before us.
Mr. Innes. I did not cite it, because I wanted to have this case
decided upon its merits, but that case did hold that the court had no
right to investigate into the matter, or make any report, which was
a legislative function, and went further to say it was the function
of each legislature to pass upon themselves. I was about to quote
the statute, which is chapter 783 of the act of 1914 of our laws.
The Chairman. What page?
Mr. Innes. It is chapter 783 of the act of 1914, section 10.
The Chairman. Have you got it in your brief ?
Mr. Innes. Yes; it is in my brief.
The Chairman. On what page?
Mr. Innes. On page 86 of the brief. It says that it shall be a de-
fense to any of these objections that such violation was not com-
mitted by the candidate, or any person of his knowledge and in his
behalf, and was committed contrary to his orders and without the
sanction or connivance of the candidate.
Mr. Ramseter. Is that statute law, or a court decision ?
Mr. Innes. That is statute law; that is this statute. The second
ground of defense is that the participation, if any, of the candidate
in such violation, arose from inadvertence, or from accidental mis-
calculation, or from some other reasonable cause of a like nature,
and in any case did not arise from any want of good faith. There
are other provisions, six or seven in number, which take the viola-
tion out of the punishing clause, either by way of removal or by way
of criminal prosecution.
Now, I think we have shown throughout this, very conclusively,
that we have complied with the law as we see it. I want also to sug-
gest to this committee that this has been a fairly searching examina-
tion for this contestee. He was summoned to the witness stand and
he was asked to produce every check book and every memorandum
book and every bank book having any relation to his bank accounts
or personal expenditures. He was submitted, as I say, to a full ex-
amination as to all of those matters. Nothing was disclosed of any
sort, nature, or description which would indicate there had been a
dollar spent that was not down on that book of his, which he kept.
I do not think that will be denied.
CONTESTED-ELECTTOl^ CASE HORGAX VS. TINKHAM. 7 i)
Somebody asked here what money was spent. There was not a
dollar spent except the $4,200 which is here mentioned and which is
before yoii gentlemen. The secretary of state, Mr. Boynton, whom
we have discussed here, said in the course of his examination that
the corrupt practices act had not been interpreted yet and, as he
said, it is very obscure in many of its details, last year being the
first year, and it is a difficult problem to carry it out. So we did the
best we could.
The Chairman. When was this law passed?
Mr. Innes. The very vear this election took place.
The Chaikman. In 1914?
Mr. Innes. In 1914; yes.
The Chairman. The legislature closed when?
Mr. Innes. It closed probably in July, and our Blue Book is not
printed, as a matter of fact, until September. Anybody who wanted
to look at it, had to go up to the statehouse. The legislature closed
that year, I think, in July some time. We sat for some time that
year. And that act took effect on August 1. Now, Mr. Chairman,
I do not care about pressing this particular thing I am going to
speak about, because I do not think it is of any great importance,
and I do not want to take your time: l)ut I am only mentioning it to
show how possible it is to violate, and intentionally, that statute.
We ne\'er thought to investigate Mr. Horgan's bills. We never
had any detectives, as he apparently had. following him around for
days before the election. We did not in(|uire except as to what
appeared in the record. But, in the course of this investigation, it
came out that his campaign manager had received contributions and
made no return whatever of them. The check Avas cashed, and there
was no dispute about it. and it came out that there had been ex-
penditures for liquor directly contrary to our statute. And his return
to the statehouse of that was under '' Political headquarters, $350."
When we asked about the bill we found that some of it was for din-
ners. They had political dinners, political ward committees, and
they had a bottle of beer and something else apiece. I do not want
to go into any muckraking; I am just mentioning those things.
Mr. Ramseyer. What point do you make of that?
Mr. Innes. That it Avas directly contrary to laAV.
Mr. Ramseyer. That would not hel]) Tinkham out any.
Mr. Innes. Not a bit, Mr. Congressman. I am onlv suggesting to
you the old maxim of equity which I used to teach, once, and that is,
"He who comes into equity should do so with clean hands"; and I
think a man who comes in criticizing a most ])unctilious and care-
ful num, as Tinkham has shoAvn himself to be in this contest, ought
not to come here with violations of laAv of that kind; that is all.
Mr. RA]\rsEYER. What I Avas trying to suggest Avas, if we should
find that Tinkham had violated the corrupt-practices act, and also
find that Mr. Horgan had violated that act, that Avould not help
Tinkham any.
Mr. IxNES. Not at all. But I am also offering, further, to shoAV
you it Avas unintentional.
Mr. Oglesby. You think that ought to stop us from seating Mr.
Horgan if Ave put Tinkham out?
Mr. Innes. I think so. But, also, I think it has bearing upon the
question of hoAv it is possible, unintentionally, to violate this laAv.
Let us assume his campaign manager did it. I do not say he did
76 COlSrTESTED-ELECTIO:^ CASE HOEGAN VS. TINKHAM.
Mr. Magee. Have you found any authorities on contested-election
cases bearing upon the question of returns?
Mr. Ikjs^es. I do not think I have found any authority, but what I
think you wouhl not know about. I have looked over all the author-
ities, and they are in the brief, and I have quoted from cases he
cites. I do not think most of them are directly in point. I think
they can be readily distinguished. 1 have not discussed them, be-
cause I think I have gone into them fully in the brief.
Mr. Ramseyer. The law governing returns is of very recent years,
anyway.
Mr. Innes. Oh, very recent years. But I want to say there is not
a suggestion in this case of any fraudulent votes, or fraudulent regis-
tration, of people coerced into voting. There is nothing of that sort
suggested here or any claim of marking the ballots illegally behind
the rail or tampering with the ballots.
I will close by saying only this, that I have ])ut in this list, at the
very beginning some figures in that district. They show the district
is a close one. It is a very independent district. We do not take our
politics with great seriousness there on matters of this character. In
the campaign for governor and lieutenant governor, for instance,
we gave Gov. Walsh a plurality of 2,000. and the Democratic candi-
date for lieutenant governor was in a minority of 1,200 votes.
Mr. Magee. In the same campaign?
Mr. Innes. The campaign last fall, the last one.
Mr. Magee. What do the Democrats claim the normal plurality for
either party is in this congressional district?
Mr. Innes. I think the district is a very close district. I think it
is a district any man can carry by a thousand votes, or two thousand,
and I think this return which I have here proves that.
I only want to say, in closing
The Chairman. I want you to take whatever time you think you
should ; I do not want to cut you off.
Mr. Innes. I know. You have been very patient, more patient
than our committees are. I only want to say this, that the whole
difficulty in this case has been that Brother Horgan can not under-
stand how he was defeated. What I say, I say without any personal
feeling. I am not going to discuss the personality of Brother Hor-
gan, but I simply want to say that since he entered public life, in
1896, he has run for a great many public offices. He has run as an
independent against his own party : he bolted his own party for the
Republican Party once and refused to vote for William A. Gaston.
And he has been continually in the turmoil of politics. He has at-
tacked some of the leaders of the party over and over again as he has
in this brief here, which is bristling with charges against many of
his own political party. He may be right about it.
Mr. Magee. When did he run as an independent Democratic candi-
date against the party?
Mr. HoRGAN. In 1898.
Mr. Innes. For the senate?
Mr. HoRGAN. No ; for the board of aldermen.
Mr. Innes. He started in 1896. That has been his career. I say
it not intending to criticize him; he may be doing perfectly right,
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HORGAN VS. TINKHAM. 77
and be doin"' a public ser\ice in -what he is doing-. But I say he has
accnnndated animosities throughout his career in politics.
^Ir. Maoee. You say he bolted the Democratic ticket'?
Mr. Innes. He bolted the Democratic ticket against AVilliam A.
(laston, who was the Democratic nominee for governor, and sup-
ported Bates.
Mr. Maoee. AVhat vear was that?
Mr. HoKGAN. In 1902.
The Ciiair:man. You are mentioning those without saying whether
he was right or Avrong. but merely to show that he has been a man in
the thick of the fight and would naturally have enemies'?
Mr. Ixnes. And has enemies. Perhaps we ought to respect him
for it. but we must appreciate the fact that such a man would ac-
cumulate antagonisms and can not go into a contest as well as some
other num. That is all I want to say about Brother Horgan, except
to call attention to this fact, that there was not a paper in Boston
that gave him any editorial support whatever. That is in the record.
There Avas not a paper. He talks about notices; he says. ''If I was
not supi)orted. why did they publish this report that Timiltv deserted
the candidate?" That was good newspaper stuff: the public likes
something sensational, whether it is true or untrue, and it was read-
able. Vnit when we talk about newspaper support we mean editorial
support, and there was not a single paper — and there are a number
of Democratic papers there — which supported Horgan in this cam-
])aign. while Tinkham. as the campaign I)ook here shoA\s. had on his
literature an editorial from the Boston American. Everybody knows
the Boston American, what ])e()ple it is supposed to influence, if any
influence it has. You know what it is, and it is not for me to discuss
here whether it has any influence or not; it has some influence, no
doubt. But that editorial was ])\it in a conspicuous place on Mr.
Tinkham's campaign book. Mr. Tinkham entered this contest under
the best possible auspices.
There were four candidates mentioned. Senator Lane, who has
l)een mentioned here, had run for two years and been defeated. Mr.
Cook had also run once and been defeated. And Mr. Nichols, who
was mentioned here, had been in the senate. Pretty prominent Re-
jiublicans, and there was a prett}^ good field to enter into this race,
which, Mr. Horgan says, was lost at the start. They had a meeting-
that is all in the record, too — and they left it to the (xeneral Curtis
Guild to determine Avho was the most popular man. (tcu. (ruild had
been governor three years, oui' former ambassachn- to Russia, j^icked
out Tinkham and said. " I think he is the man who will make the
best run." And they all adopted his suggesticm that Tinkham was
the man to run; without a contest he had their sui)i)ort. and at the
same time they were doing everything they could for him ; and yet
we have the audacious suggestion in this brief that those men were
jiaid to get out. It has not been pressed, except it was in the charges
filed originally.
Xow, Tinkliam had lived for 45 years right in that district. He
had gone to Harvard College, across the water. He had been a very
democratic num. he had been to the city council in Boston, he had
been a member of the board of aldermen in Boston, and he was known
78 CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOEGAN VS. TINKHAM.
as Boston's alderman intimately for years. He had been in the sen-
ate for three years as well. He planned out a campaign, which he
told you about in that record at the time. His campaigns were not
conducted with the Republican Party at all. He did not have Re-
publicans, such as Senator Lodge and Senator Weeks and any other
Republican orators, on the stump, because he said he knew the Re-
publicans would not vote for Senator Horgan against him, and that
is what the other witnesses say in the case, and it is true. Senator
Horgan could not get the Republican vote against George Tinkham
in that contest. -That is all testified to by their own witnesses.
liis campaign book was distinctly an appeal to labor, which largely
makes up the Democratic vote in that district. He did not say he
voted for everything they asked him to vote for, because he did not ;
But he had taken hold of some of the important things they were in-
terested in, which, in my experience, they more appreciate than a man
who votes for everything that comes along labeled labor. And his
book and his literature demonstrate the theory on which he went into
this campaign. His meetings were held with labor men who spoke
for him, men who were leaders in the labor organization, and they
went in automobiles to these factories at noon ; not with two or three
Republicans who were apt to irritate the Democratic converts because
they would speak of the old campaigns gone by, but with these labor
men who were conducting a campaign openly for him. They went
out and talked to those men. You have the evidence of a case where
he went at one time to a man named Harol, at half past 10 o'clock at
night, and he introduced himself — he rang the doorbell. Harol had
probably never met a real Congressman before, or a man who might
be a real Congressman, Rud he was glad to know him, and is there
anything strange in his taking hold of him? That was the most
effective kind of a campaign. That was the cainjjaign he conducted,
intelligently and carefully thought out. It resulted in his running
ahead in every precinct, in every ward in the city. And there is not
much difference in any of the precincts, whether Timilty represents it
or somebody else; I have no brief for Timilty here, but Mr. Timilty,
the ward boss (as pictured by contestant), disappeared j^ears ago
from politics, hasn't he? We see him in the novels occasionally, or
on the stage. He has gone from our State. Patronage has gone.
The civil-service laws protect the employees, or determine who shall
have the places, at least in Massachusetts, and why build up this man
of straw to knock him down again? Why attribute all of this to
Mr. Horgan's arrival last June in the eleventh congressional district ?
And, to Mr. Timilty, why attribute it all to him, because this vote
shows a falling off even in Horgan's own district, consistent in all
precincts, simply showing they did not want to vote for him.
Now, I want to say one thing in closing, and I think I ought to
emphasize this. Perhaps I feel more keenly about this case than I
should ; but I feel that men have been brought into this case, and their
names have been given to the public and to the press, without any jus-
tification or excuse, upon mere idle rumor. I think Mr. Tinkham has
had the proper results of an election honorably won taken from him,
in part at least, by this proceeding and by this character of evidence,
1 do not know whether you gentlemen who are here in Congi-ess
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOEGAN VS. TINKHAM. 79
lealize the iiuportance of the positions which you hold and what a
^reat honor it is to a man who has never been a Congressman to look
forward to having a seat in this Congress. I think as time goes by
yon accept it, perhaps, as a part of the duties of the day, and you do
not realize what an important thing it is to a young man who has,
perhaps, on leaving college gone into public life and who has con-
sidered questions in an academic way, but who looks forward for
a chance to decide the important questions he has merely thought
about. It is an impoitant thing and a great honor to be elected to
the Congress of the United States. You have to give u\) other tilings
of value to occupy the seat, and, after all, one of the things that you
get, and I sometimes think it is the best thing and the most gratify-
ing, is the hearty congratulations of 3'^our friends and the feeling that
yon have won a fight and won it fairly. Now, I say we have been
deprived of that perfectly just honor and proper honor, and we had
a right to it.
Mr. Oglesby. You are oversensitive. I have not seen a news-
paper in the last 10 years which had a kind word to say about a
Congressman.
Mr. Inxes. I think these charges are beyond that. When a man
has been as punctilious and as careful as George Tinkham has been
throughout his entire life it is very unpleasant, to say the least ; and
I say it is taking away from him just honors which he has a right to
have to have people discussing evidence of this character, that he is
passing out vials of whisky to people to get votes and bribing people
to vote for him, when there is not a particle of direct evidence to
substantiate it. That brings me to my conclusion, and that is, Mr.
Chairman, I think we have a right to suggest that we ought to have
in this case a fairly speedy decision. I think we have a right to
have something more than a decision in our favor; I think this
committee ought to characterize in no uncertain language the efforts
of this contestant and the character of the testimony that his been
offered here. There is no other place that contestee can go for
vindication, that I know of.
Mr. Oglesby. That would only be done in case he is seated. We
never speak harshly about a man who is defeated.
Mr. Innes. I do not want you to speak harshly about anybody;
but I do feel that your preclecessors at times have adopted very
strong language, and have condemned in a most positive way cases
they thought were brought with a desire to injure political opponents
or air political differences. I think you ought to speak strongly
about this case; and I feel if you do not you are going to make it
doubtful whether men with a desire to retain their reputations in the
community, men with sensibilities, will want to stand as candidates
for Congress hereafter.
(Thereupon, at 1.35 o'clock p. m., a recess was taken until 2.15
o'clock p. m.)
AFTERNOON SESSION.
The committee met, pursuant to the taking of the recesst, at 2.15
o'clock p. m.
The Chairman. You may proceed, Mr. Prout.
80 CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOEGAN VS. TINKHAM.
STATEMENT OF ME. WILLIAM C. PROUT, ATTORNEY FOR THE
CONTESTANT— Resumed.
Mr. Prout. Mr. Chairman and gentlemen, this has dragged on a
little longer than we thought it would, but I will wind it up now
as quickly as I can, inasmuch as Mr. Innes is anxious to get away
on the 3.04 train and I do not want to talk indefinitely.
There are several things which were mentioned by Mr. Innes to
which I should like to call the attention of the committee. One was
the alleged untruthful statement of the contestant's reply brief con-
cerning certain statements by a witness for contestant, one Mr.
Duffin. So far as that is concerned, on the face of it, it may look as
if it was not justified by the facts, but when that was written I
had this in mind: In the first place, at the time I originally ex-
amined Mr. Duffin I had no knowledge of this evidence of Mc-
Laughlin which was to follow, so tliat I did not have it in mind that
there was to be any contradiction of this kind, since I was only fur-
nished with the information of the evidence as it came up from day
to day.
The Chairman. You did not call Duffin for the purpose of con-
tradicting the other man?
Mr. Pkout* No, sir; I inquired of Duffin, and he said that he did
not know anything. At that time I did not know that there was
any other specific evidence. Later, it appeared that McLaughlin
testified as to a conversation he had with Duffin, and what I had in
mind when I wrote that statement in the reply brief was that at no
time Avhen McLaughlin made these specific charges did Duffin deny
them, as he might have done when the contestee had his time to call
witnesses. I mention that not because it is of any great importance
but because it might be thought that that misquotation here, or mis-
interpretation, was deliberate. And on that point I would call the
attention of the committee not to attack his fairness but from the
fact that the conte.stee in his brief did the same thing. For instance,
on page 8 he made a quotation of a table of votes in which he omitted
the vote of ward 18, and he also quoted the vote on page 9 of the
record — he made two tabulations of votes, omitting the poll of ward
18. Also, so far as his objection to the introduction of the letter
from ex-Congresman Peters is concerned, I say these votes on pages
8, 9, and 10 are votes which are not in the record but which took
place a year after the record closed. Also, as to the editorial in his
brief, it" was not contained in the record but was printed in some
paper long after. So there is no serious objection, gentlemen, to our
])utting that in. It was not done in any underhanded way.
The Chairman. Is it agreed by both parties that that letter was
really written by Mr. Peters — the one in October, 1915 — and that
that editorial appeared? Is it a fact?
Mr. Innes. If Mr. Prout says so. I would take his word for it;
surel}^
The Chairman. There is no doubt about it?
Mr. Prout. No, sir.
The Chairman. There is no doubt about the editorial?
Mr. Prout. I did not see it, but I take it for granted that it was in.
As to the importance of the Peters indorsements and letters which
passed back and forth, it is not very great, except so far as it would
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HORGAN VS. TINKHAM. 81
go to show good faith, or hick of good faith, on the part of tlie con-
testee or persons interested in liis campaign.
So far as the position of Mr. Peters is concerned, it is in evidence
that the contestant did talk Avith Mr. Peters here in Washington,
and that Mr. Peters did assure him of his support and told him he
Avould be glad to do anything to help him, once, in March, 1914, and
also in September, 1914, immediately after the primaries; and Mr.
Peters assured the contestant of his support and of his Avillinsness to
do anything he could to be of assistance to him.
So far as the indorsement is concerned, it is in evidence that the
contestant's campaign was managed by a gentleman named John F.
McDonald, who has managed the campaign of the first victorious
governor of Massachusetts that they had in Massachusetts for many
years, and has managed the victorious campaigns of sev'eral gov-
ernors, and the campaigns of the last tAvo
The Chairman. What did he manage this time?
Mr. Prout. For mayor of Boston; at this time he managed the
campaign of the contestant; and he also comes from the Avard of
Congressman Peters, and Avas the man Avho started Congressman
Peters in political life by placing him on the first ward committee,
and has been Avith him and been of great assistance to him in all of
his campaigns. He Avas very much interested in the campaign of
contestant, and, knoAA'ing Congressman Peters's position in the mat-
ter, having been in communication AA'ith him, he possibly felt justi-
fied in giving out some AA'ord he had from Congressman Peters; and
it is not in evidence, but he Avas probably responsible for the placing
of that indorsement on the circular. Noav, it is not at all reprehensi-
ble, and there is no evidence that Congressman Peters AA^as not Avith
the contestant at any time. He Avas Avith him and was willing to do
anything for him, and did actually speak for him tAvo or three nights
prior to the election.
So far as the absence of any letters is concerned, there Avas testi-
mony from three Avitnesses that letters and telegrams did pass to
and fro. The contents of some of the letters Avas given, and from
these letters of Congressman Peters it is clear that he Avas in com-
munication Avith contestant and did s])eak for him.
The Chairman. Of course, wdiile that Avas in a Avay unAvarranted,
the Aveight that I think it was meant to haA^e by Mr. Innes Avas that
the name of Mr. Peters was Avrongfully used to obtain votes for the
contestant. Is that the idea ?
Mr. Innes. That AA-as the idea I used in connection Avith that, and
also the reiteration of it in the supplementary brief, and the failure
to produce any letter on the subject AAdiatever.
The Chairman. I see.
Mr. Prout. On that point, I simply quote pages 361 and 389 of
the record, and also page 303, to the effect that Mr. Peters had sent
a letter stating that Mrs. Peters was sick and had the baby, and that
it Avas impossible for them to come to contestant. There Avere a great
many letters passed back and forth. Also on page 409 — but that is
of no great importance — and also on pages 539 and 540.
Mv remarks may appear disjointed as I go along, but I am simply
taking up the points made by Mr. Innes in his argument.
46339—16 G
82 CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOEGAN VS. TINKHAM.
So far as the statement that John J. Sullivan destroyed some 5,000
to 7,000 circulars of contestant, and the contention that that is not
indicative of Timilty's position in any way, because Sullivan was
elected clerk of the Democratic city committee, that is not significant
because he is not the clerk of the Democratic city committee, but he is the
clerk to the president of the Democratic city committee, appointed
by him, and is his personal choice ; and so far as Sullivan not being
called is concerned, there is evidence that contestant accused Sullivan
of not sending out those circulars, and that Sullivan said he did
send them out, and the contestee could, of course, have summoned
him and put him on the stand ; hut the contestant produced the man
who handled the folders, and he testified that the last 5,000 to 7,000
were never folded.
Mr. Ramseyer. Was Sullivan paid by anybody ?
Mr. Prout. He was paid as clerk of the president of the Demo-
cratic city committee.
Mr, Ramseyer. Did Timilty pay him out of his own pocket?
Mr. Prout. He was probably paid out of the funds of the Demo-
craitic city committee, and also paid to send out these joarticular cir-
culars.
I understand that, so far as the elimination of Timilty as the head
of the Democratic city committee is concerned, it is of no great im-
portance. It is simply true that he has been eliminated, and it was
to a large extent due to the fact that the Democrats in Boston realized
that with such a man at the head of the city committee they could
not hope for any success, and it was after one or tAvo failures with
him at the head of the city committee that the Democrats ousted
him. It is also true that he did want to be elected, and that he was
ousted summarily.
Mr. Ramseyer. Is that in the record ?
Mr. Prout, That is not in the record. So far as factions among
the Democrats are concerned, there is nothing in the record, and, as
a matter of fact, there is no division, as suggested by the attorney
for the contestee, which would line up Mr. Timilty with Mr. Fay
or Mr. Watson, the other candidates, on one side, and Mr. Horgan on
the other. As a matter of fact, there was no faction in this congres-
sional fight, and while there are factions in Boston, of course, there
is no well-defined faction in this congressional district, in the wards
that make it up.
The Chairman. Is there a Horgan faction or a Timilty faction?
Mr. Prout, There is no Timilt}^ faction outside of Timilty's own
ward and neighboring precincts, and the adjoining ward, the other
wards that go to make up the senatorial district.
On the point of liquor being used there is one piece of testimony
on that, and it was admitted by Daniel Lane, one of the candidates
for the Republican nomination, that he did spend money in bar rooms
during the campaign, and in the interest of the contestee. He testi-
fied that he never was reimbursed any money, but that does not affect
the fact.
There is also testimony that Tinkham was in German halls on the
Saturday afternoon prior to election, and that money was spent
there for liquor, as well as the testimony of the other witnesses that
I have already referred to and the testimony of Craven on his own
admission.
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HORGAN VS. TINKHAM. 83
There is also the interesting fact that one of the barrooms spoken
of as dispensing liquor was owned by Garrity. Garrity testified as
a witness and endeavored for a long time to conceal any connection
with the contestee or anybody else. He said that he was not inter-
ested in matters political and did not give them any thought, and
had not done anything in the preceding campaign, but later on he
admitted in his testimony that in response to a telephonic message
from the contestee he called at the con.testee's office and was in con-
ference with him. There is no definite connection shown there, so
far ns the " disbursement," or whatever you want to call it, of liquor
was concerned, growing out of that conference; but it is a fact that
there is testimony that Garrity did dispense liquor, that he was in
conference with contestee, and that he endeavored to conceal the
connection with the contestee clearly appears in the evidence.
Of course there are s( me of the witnesses who are not of the high-
est type; there is no question about that, and we would not for a
minute presume to argue otherwise. You do not find witnesses of
high type who are mixed up in these cases, either in taking money or
dispensing liquor or anything else, and you have to give their testi-
mony the Aveight that you think it is deserving of, both so far as their
testimony appears in the record and from the surrounding facts and
circumstances.
Now, I come to the point about Mason and the rallies for negroes.
There is no evidence that more than one rally was held.
(At this point there was a call of the house, and a recess was taken
for 15 minutes in order that the members of the committee might
go upon the floor and vote. At the conclusion of the recess the com-
mittee i-esumed its session. )
INIr. Pkout. I was referring to the testimony about iSlv. Mason and
certain rallies that were held for the negroes. As a matter of fact,
there is no testimony about rallies being held on two nights. There
is no testimony about a hiring of an automobile or automobiles or
any trumpeter of any kind. The only testimony is that of the con-
testee himself, Avho said he understood there was a rally held in some
hall near Lenox Street, and he thought he was at the rally ; but that
is all the testimony there was on that.
As far as the circulars for negroes were concerned, the amount was
$27.85, and the testimony as to the number of negroes varies from
400 to 700 voters. Mr. Innes did not know whether 1-cent or 2-cent
stamps were used, but there was no attempt to check up and find out
how much money was spent and how much money the man kept for
himself.
Before I forget it, I want to make a statement which Brother
Innes asked me to make, and that is with respect to the purchase
of tickets to balls and dances. His view of that is that the purchase
of tickets for dances and balls is perfectly legitimate unless the
purchase is made from a political'organization and for manifestly
political purposes. He neglected to touch on that in his argument,
and he wanted to have his statement on that put before the com-
mittee.
The Chairman. Will you state again what you say he believes.
Mr. Prout. He believes that the purchase of tickets for dances and
balls is perfectly legitimate unless the purchase is from a political
84 CONTESTED-ELECTIOlSr CASE HOEGAN VS. TINKHAM.
organization and for manifestly political purposes. On that point
I simply want to say that any purchase of tickets which is mani-
festly for political purposes, as these purchases were — that is, the
purchase of a large number of tickets which were not used by the
men who made the purchases, and who made the purchases indis-
criminately from any organization that came along, as testified to by
one Aspacher, does not come within Mr. Innes's rule ; and, of course,
so far as his rule is concerned our view is that any payment made,
whether indirectly or directly, if for political purposes
The Chairman. Suppose a number of the boys get together and
form the Humpty Dumpty Social Club, and sell a man running for
office $25 worth of tickets; is that a contribution for political pur-
poses or for the cultivation of sociability or society?
Mr. Prout. Certainly for political purposes; and particularly if
the Humpty Dumpty Club never runs any ball, which is quite com-
mon.
So far as the testimony of Lally is concerned, that was corrobo-
rated by Mr. Tobin, and the other charges against Lally that he
served legal papers for contestant. Tobin's evidence on page 311 of the
record consists of the fact that he delivered one paper for the attor-
ney of the contestant.
On the question of Erickson, Lally testified as to one Erickson,
that he was unable to locate him, and later the contestee produced
one Erickson that Lally testified was not the man he referred to.
So far as the giving on money for advertising to Monroe Trotter
is concerned, there is no evidence that money was given to Monroe
Trotter. An advertisement was put in the newspaper called the
Guardian, and the return for that advertisement was made, and there
is no evidence that Trotter was a voter or even lived in the district.
On the question as to the interpretation of the State law and Fed-
eral law on the excess of expenditures, and the returns for expendi-
tures, I believe the committee has that thoroughly in mind. I would
say, however, in passing, in regard to Mr. Innes's statement as to a
decision by the Supreme Court of Massachusetts, recently rendered,
in a case called the Swig case, that that has no application whatso-
ever to this particular case, and if Mr. Innes left the statement or
the impression that it had, I do not believe that he intended to
leave it that way; but I understood that he did. The Swig case
was only on the question of the right of one legislature to delegate
its power to some other body, whether judicial or otherwise, and
that does not interest us in any way.
Mr. Rogers. It appeared in the record this morning that there was
involved in that case a decision on the constitutionality of the cor-
rupt practices act. That was true only in so far as the portion
of the decision was concerned which involved that delegation of the
power to the three justices of the court?
Mr. Prout. Yes, sir. Now, on the testimony as to the use of
liquor on behalf of the contestant, the only evidence of that is that
at a meeting of the committee of the contestant at which a luncheon
was served one or more members of the committee had one bottle of
beer. There was no other liquor of any kind served, and nobody
had over one bottle; and it was not a public meeting; it was not a
rally, the voters at large were not admitted to it. It was only a
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HORGAN VS. TINKHAM. 85
meeting of the small committee of the contestant which had charge
of the contestant, and it therefore comes under the rule of social
entertainment and is not a violation of the act.
Mr. Magee. Who paid for that ?
Mr. Prout. The contestant, probably. But it was something
which Avas not ordered by him ; and if the men who attended the
luncheon ordered a bottle of beer to take with their luncheon it was
up to the contestant either to refuse to pay for it or to pay for it,
and in view of the fact that if he had thought of it he would have
decided that it was not a violation of the act, and consequently he
paid the bill for the luncheon.
Mr. Magee. There were how many present there?
Mr. Prout. Something in the vicinity of 12 ; not over 15.
As to the fact that contestant's independence of thought or action
affected him unfavorably, that is not so. because if it were so it would
have defeated him in the primary, would have defeated him for office
between the years 1902 and 1914, and. as a matter of fact, the move-
ment in 1902 was not in favor of a Kepublican as against a Democrat,
but was a popular movement directed against certain evils of the
convention system and was led by a man who immediately following
that was elected district attorney of Suffolk County against a man
who had both the Democratic and the Republican nominations; and
if it had any effect with the voters at large it certainly could not
have had any evil effect.
Mr. Rogers. There are eight wards in this congressional district,
are there not, in whole or in part?
Mr. Prout. Yes.
Mr. Rogers. Had the contestant ever been a candidate for office in
any of those eight wards other than his own ?
Mr. Prout. The contestant had never been a candidate for any
office in any ward, with the exception of his own w^ard; and he was
born and lived the greater part of his life in ward 11, at the other
end of the district, and was a candidate at large in 1899, covering
the city of Boston.
Mr. Rogers. For the office of alderman ?
Mr. Prout. Yes, sir; and as a matter of fact the contestant not
only got his full Democratic support, but in his campaign for the
senate he got strong suj^port from all parties.
So far as the support of contestee by labor men is concerned and
the fact that labor men were on the stump for him. the only labor
men who were on the stump for him were two, neither one of whom
lived or voted in the district, and they had no following, and their
action was simply a personal action and was not the result of any
action on the part of any labor union or labor unions; and, of course,
we have cited already the widespread indorsements by labor organ-
izations officially, as well as the personal letters from the legislative
agents of various unions contained in the record, and their appear-
ance on the stump.
In conclusion, I simply would like to say that apparently in the
mind of any reasonable man there should be no question but that
Mr. Timility did support the contestee; there should be no question
but that that support was unfair and reprehensible in a great many
ways, and in the minds of persons conversant with political matters
86 CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOEGAN VS. TINKHAM.
in general, conversant with all the testimony in this case, tlie conclu-
sion is almost irresistible, if not quite, that that support must have
been based upon some illegal inducement.
Mr. EoGERs. On page T of the record there appears a table showing
the difference in votes between Gov. Walsh and the contestant, ward
by ward, throughout this congressional district. That may be else-
where in the briefs, though I have not seen it. That shows that in
each and every ward of the eight, Mr. Horgan ran behind Gov. Walsh
anywdiere f rom 98 votes to 611 votes, with a total of 2,787. Is there
any disposition on the part of the contestant to question the accuracy
of those figures ?
Mr. Prout. No, sir ; we have already put in a table which contains
those figures, as well as for all the other offices.
Mr. Russell. And the contestee ran about the same amount ahead
of Gov. McCall on the Republican ticket.
Mr. Prout. A comparison of the vote of the contestee with Gov.
McCall will show that Gov. McCall received from 52 per cent of the
vote of the contestee up to 99.9 per cent, receiving the 99.9 per cent in
the home ward of the contestee and the 52 per cent in ward 18, which
is Mr. Timilty's ward, show^ing that the vote in ward 18 which Mr.
Tinkham got, as shown by that percentage, bears out the contention
of the contestant that there was some underlying reason for that vote.
Now, I should like to call the attention of the members of the com-
mittee to the law already cited, and to the fact that this committee
is the judge of the admissibility of the evidence and the weight of
evidence, and that it was the duty of the magistrate who sat here to
report everything to the committee; and in order to give the com-
mittee a picture of everything surrounding the case we thought that
everything should go in and consequently everything has gone in, and
it is for this committee to say just how much weight each piece of
testimony is entitled to, and we would respectfully ask this committee
to consider the testimony given by everybody, and all the facts and all
the evidence surrounding the case, and to apply to the case the knowl-
edge that you men have in common with men in general as to political
practices and customs, and the special knowledge that yon have as
persons who have gone through political campaigns yourselves, as to
the probabilities of the case.
Now, you are not bound by the rules of evidence. You can con-
sider any evidence that you care to consider and give it the weight
you think it is entitled to ; and in a case of this Idnd, in applying
the knowledge you have of politics in general and the knowledge of
law you have, and of the laws of evidence, you must agree that in
this particular kind of a case it is impossible to get direct evidence,
and you are not only justified in proceeding on circumstantial evi-
dence, but are really forced to it, and in considering that you can
consider what is the law in Massachusetts, and I presume it is the
law of other States. If a man is walking down the street wearing
an overcoat and carrying another a police officer has a right, in Mas-
sachusetts, to arrest that man, with no knowledge of where he got
the coat, or whose it was or anything about it. He can arrest him
and bring him into court and the man can be tried and can be found
guilty on no other evidence than his being in possession of a coat
stolen from some party unknown. If that be true elsewhere ordi-
narily as it is in Massachusetts, where a man can be found guilty for
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HORGAN VS. TINKHAM. 87
the unexplained possession of property wliich a police officer thinks
was stolen from some person unknown, why can we not apply that in
this case and saj^ that Mr. Timilit}^ did certain things — was found
in possession
Mr. Maoee. Suppose the man who had the coat denied he had
stolen the coat and testified it was his own ?
Mr. Prout, Under the statute the burden is upon him to explain
the possession of the coat.
Mr, Magee. Suppose he proved it was his own coat, would he then
be convicted?
Mr. Prout. If he claims that the coat is his own, the judge, from
his observation of that man and from what knowledge he may obtain
from the police officer of a previous record of that man, can draw
his own conclusions, and can, even in the face of an allegation on the
part of that man that it was his own coat, find him guilty.
The Chairman. Your point is that it shifts the burden upon him,
and that applying the analogy in this case, it is up to Mr, Tinkham
to show that he is lawfully in possession of this seat, after you have
cited circumstances which show, ih your judgment, that he is not
lawfully in possession of it?
Mr, Prout. Yes, sir. I make two points
Mr. Ma(jee. In my State you have to prove a man guilty beyond
any reasonable doubt.
Mr. Tillman, It is so everywhere in the world.
Mr. Magee. If a man swears that the property is his own
Mr. Russell. Some fellows swear they did not do a thing, and
there are so many other circumstances surrounding it showing that
they are lying about it that their testimony is worse than if they
had not said a word.
Mr. Tillman. The principle of the criminal law is that where one
is in possession of property recently stolen, there is no presumption
of law that he is guilty, and it is a weak one of fact. The Supreme
Court of Arkansas, in construing that very same thing, following
the language of the criminal law writers, Story and others, on tliat
proposition, has said that in the first place if a man goes down the
street with an overcoat, the presumption would be that it is his over-
coat and not somebody else's. If it is known to be a stolen overcoat,
then being in possession of property that is stolen, the law writers
say it is a weak presumption of fact that he did not come by it
honestly. As to the presumption of law, a man is presumed to be
innocent until he is proven guilty, and that is not only the presump-
tion of the common law. but under the code in every State.
Mr. Prout. Of course, the law in Massachusetts is not different
from all other laws. It is the same as it is elsewhere. A person
arrested for a crime is presumed to be innocent until the contra i-y is
proven. Also, he must be proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
Mr. Magee. It requires stronger proof in a criminal case than in
a civil action.
Mr. Prout. Yes; and in that case it would require a stronger pre-
sumption than in this case.
Mr, Ramseyer, In this case what rule do you claim applies, the
civil rule ? Is not the burden upon the contestant to prove that he is
entitled to this seat?
88 COISTTESTED-ELECTION" CASE HOEGAlSr VS. TINKHAM.
Mr. Prout. The burden is upon the contestant, of course, to make
out his case, and we submit that on the legal authorities cited here on
yesterday, with the production of all this testimony, a strong case
is established.
Mr. Magee. What part of this congressional district — eight wards,
I think you said it contained — was included in Senator Timilty's
district ?
Mr. Prout. Three wards— 18, 19, and 22.
Mr. Magee. Is it jour contention that the influence of Timilty ex-
tended through all these wards?
Mr. Prout. Through the whole district? No, sir. The voting in
the district varies from 52 per cent of Tinkham vote in wards 18, 19,
and 22 to over 99 per cent in ward 11, showing a wide disparity in
the vote.
Mr. Magee. Did either contestant or contestee reside in ward 11 ?
Mr. Prout. The contestee resided in w^ard 11.
Mr. Magee. That is where the biggest vote was?
Mr. Prout. That is where the lowest vote was for the contestee, in
comparison with the other votes.
On that question of the stolen overcoat which I cited I would say
that you might take some other stolen object. Within two or three
days before coming down here I saw in a paper a case where a man
was arrested for being in possession of a bag of coal weighing 100
pounds, and was convicted of stealing that bag of coal from some
person unknoAvn, and he w^as convicted w^ithout an}^ evidence that
it had been stolen and largely on the fact that he had it in his pos-
session, and it looked queer, and he had a criminal record ; and from
all the facts and circumstances, and also the fact that he could not
explain the possession of it, he was convicted. It was a criminal
case, and a higher degree of proof is required than in this case,
which is not a criminal case.
Mr. Magee. Has that statute been passed upon?
Mr. Prout. I do not know that that statute has ever been passed
upon by the supreme court, but it has been on the statute books there
for 10 or 11 3^ears, more or less,
Mr. Eussell. If the law is as it is in my State, where the de-
fendant was not bound to testify at all, I do not understand how
they could have convicted him simply because he had possession of
it. They would certainly have to have some testimony.
Mr. Kamseyee. They would have to prove the corpus delicti ; that
is, they would have to prove that it was stolen property. Then they
would have to prove that he had it ; and then, if he did not explain,
the presumption would be that he had stolen it.
Mr. Russell. Mr. Prout said that he w^as convicted merely upon
being found in possession.
Mr. Prout. The mere possession raises the presumption of theft.
The Chairman. If wdien a man was walking on the street carrying
an overcoat he was arrested and taken into court by a police officer,
and all the police officer could say was that when he took the man
off the street he had the coat on his arm, and the judge said, " What
have you to say ?," and he said, " I exercise my right to say nothing " ;
and the only evidence being that he was arrested on the street carry-
ing a coat, he could be convicted on that, God help us ! I think half
of us would be convicted. [Laughter.]
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HORGAN VS. TINKHAM. 89
Mr. Tillman. The laAv is uniformly the same on hirceny, which is
the taking and carrying away, stealing and converting of the prop-
erty of another; and if a man is knowingly in the receipt of stolen
property, he is gnilty. Still, it must be knowingly.
Mr. Prout. Well, we will let that go; and I will ask you, gentle-
men, to consider this principle alone apart from any law at all.
Your good wife goes down to the kitchen and finds the baby wiping
her hands on the roller towel, and on the towel and on her hands there
is jam. Then she goes to the pantry and she finds that somebody has
been in the jam pot.
The Chairman. There is the corpus delicti.
Mr. Prout. In that case, although she did not see the jam taken,
she finds that it was taken ; and from the fact that she finds somebody
stole it, and from the evidence of the jam on the baby's hands, she
is justified in the presumption that the child did take the jam; and
in this case I say we have found Senator Timilty and other witnesses
concealing evidence by testifying that it was not so, and I say you
are justified in the conclusion that Senator Timilty got the jam.
Mr. Russell. You think your testimony is absolutely conclusive,
and ought to be to this committee, that Senator Timilty did, in fact,
work for the election of the contestee?
Mr. Prout. I do not think there is any question about it. In fact,
when Brother Innes was asked the question this morning he said he
would prefer not to answer it.
Mr. Russell. They did not concede that he did.
Mr. Tillman. I believe he did. I think he actually threw the
fellow.
Mr. Russell. I am satisfied that he did, but I do not know that the
evidence makes it absolutely conclusive that he did.
Mr. Prout. The only question seems to be, to my mind, whether
or not the contestant has sufficiently shown that it was done for a
dishonest purpose.
Mr. Russell. Yes; if he did it honestly and in good faith — and he
had a right to do that.
Mr. Prout. And on that point I have cited a great deal of law ;
and without taking any further time of the committee, I should like
to be given permission, and also I will communicate the same to
Brother Innes if given permission so that he may do likewies, to
submit a short brief on the law.
The Chairman. That will be all right.
Mr. Russell. Yes.
The Chairman. Let us have your brief on the law, and you notify
Mr. Innes so that he may file one also.
Mr. Magee. Is there anything here to show, or is there any claim,
that there were any differences or that any troul)le ever existed be-
tween Senator Morgan and Senator Timilty prior to this election?
Mr. Prout. The'testimony of Timilty "was that they were both
friendly.
Mr. Tillman. I thought there was evidence of an attempt on the
part of Timilty to get Horgan out of the way, so that he. Timilty,
might run for Congress.
Mr. Prout. Yes,"that is one of the very interesting extracts from
a Boston journal. That is the only thing I have ever seen or heard of
it; because Senator Timilty probably realizes as well as anybody
90 CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOEGAN VS. TINKHAM.
else that he is not congressional timber; and while on that I should
like to say that there is absolutely no evidence that the contestant
was responsible for any of those articles in the paper or any of the
things contained in it; and, as a matter of fact, other articles were
contained in other papers which were very strongly opposed to him,
the Boston Record, for instance, which published the articles about
Senator Tinkham, the contestee being present at the Timilty Club,
and other things in other papers which could not possibly be at-
tributed to the contestant, and there is no evidence whatsoever that
he is responsible for any of those things in any of the papers.
Mr. Russell. Did Senator Timilty support the contestant for the
nomination at the primary ?
Mr. Prout. Senator Timilty kept his hands out of that altogether,
because there was a candidate from his own ward who was running
and another candidate running. There were three candidates — Mr.
Fay, who lived in ward 18; Mr. Watson, who had lived in ward 18
up to that time, but had recently moved to ward 21, the adjoining
ward; and the contestant. Mr. Timilty expressed no preference or
choice in the primary.
Mr. Russell. Was the contest decisive in that case or was it a
closely contested election ?
Mr. Prout. As proved by the evidence cited by the attorney for
the contestee this morning the vote was fairly well divided. The
contestant won by a plurality of about 800.
Mr. Russell. I believe you stated in your testimony on the matter
that the other candidates for Congress in the primary both supported
the contestant in the general election?
Mr. Prout. Yes, sir; went on the stump for him at three or four
rallies a night.
Mr. Russell. Was there any question about treachery on their
part ?
Mr. Prout. None.
Mr. Russell. You think they were entirely loyal ?
Mr. Prout. Yes, sir; absolutely.
Mr. Russell. And tried to get the support of their friends for the
nominee ?
Mr. Prout. Yes, sir.
Mr. Rogers. Were the names of Fay and Watson signed to that
circular which is in evidence — ^that big, green circular?
Mr. Prout. That I could not say. They probably were.
Mr. Rogers. Is there any evidence in the record as to whether
Senator Timilty authorized the use of his name ?
Mr. Prout. The only evidence on that point is that of one of the
witnesses who was asked that, and he testified that those names were
all procured by persons sent out here and there to get them, and that
he procured some himself ; but he did not say which particular ones.
Now, that is all I have to saj, and if I have the permission of the
committee I will notify Mr. Innes that he may submit a brief on the
law, and I will do likewise, and I will submit a copy of my brief to
him also at the same time I send it to the committee.
The Chairman. Mr. Horgan, you have been here all day, and if
you would like to make a statement I think the committee would be
willing to hear you.
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOKGAN VS. TINKHAM. 91
STATEMENT OF MR. FRANCIS J. HORGAN, THE CONTESTANT.
Mr. Hoi!G AN. Mr. Chairman and gentlemen, I do not kno^Y that it
is necessary, and perhaps it is not advisable, and I think perhaps it
is unfair in the absence of the attorney for the contestee for me to
make an^^ statement to the committee.
The Chairman. You have been sitting here all day. We are not
bound exactly by strict rules, and if you want to make any statement
I think the committee would be perfectly glad to hear you.
Mr. HoKGAx. What I would say, Mr. Chairman and gentlemen,
would be largely reiteration, and I simply would desire to emphasize
this point, if I may, waiving the evidence which appears in the
record, the value of which I presume you gentlemen are the final
arbiters of. The weight of the evidence you are the final arbiters of;
the rules of evidence yo uare the one to determine upon. Upon the
question of conspiracy I believe I would like to emphasize the fact
that where conspiracy is charged, especially in contested-election
cases — assuming for the moment that you are governing yourselves
by the action of your predecessors — it is a well established rule,
taking into consideration all the circumstances of the case, and recog-i
nizing, as men must that know human nature, that it is absolutely
impossible to implicate the parties directly in interest or to show
the consideration, that it must depend absolutely upon indirect evin
dence; and the value of that indirect evidence does not merely con-<
sist in the statement of John Jones or Thomas Smith or two or three
of them, it is the cumulative evidence of all of them combining, ta
that particular conspiracy. If those men have convinced the minds
of you as intelligent, practical men, that Timilty did an overt act
wdiich of itself is unexplainable, it is proper for you to go behind and
try to ascertain the reason: and to ascertain the reason you must
analyze the evidence of the various witnesses; and in determining
the value of their evidence you must appreciate, as I believe you do.
the fact that these witnesses must give largely circumstantial
evidence.
The Chairman. Let me say this to you. Here is my difficulty^
and it may be the difficulty of other gentlemen on the committee : I
will say — though this is merely an opinion which is subject to change
on reflection and discussion — that so far as I can see, Timilty did
go into an alliance with the Republicans against you, and I have no
hesitation in saying that it was a most base political act. But, as^
suming that to be true, did he not have a legal right to do that;
whatever we might think of a man of honer — or not of honer, if
you would so put it — is there anything in that that he did not have
the right to do ?
Mr. HoRGAN. Mr. Chairman, I would like to make this statement.
The Chairman. I would like to have you make any statement you
want to.
Mr. HoRGAN. First of all, I agree with the chairman, that if Mr<
Timilty as a citizen himself did a certain thing Avhich may have
been reprehensible in itself, so far as he was concerned and so far
as I was concerned, that act amounted to nothing so far as any
possibility of a conspiracy may have been concerned or anv possi^
bility of illegal consideration may have been concerned; but if iii
92 COISTTESTED-ELECTIOlSr CASE HOEGAN VS. TINKHAM.
addition to that he was chairman of the Democratic city committee
and had been a member of the ward committee for 20 years, and he
liad on the night before election on the public platform, in introduc-
ing me as the Democratic candidate for Congress, denied that there
was an}'' truth in the statement of his proposed knifing of me, and
had on the night before done all these friendly acts with a man
with whom he had been politically and personally friendly, not only
must a grave suspicion arise in your minds as intelligent men, but
you are justified in considering all this testimony of other witnesses,
that there was a consipracy.
The Chairman. In other words, this is what you mean, I think:
If we come to the conclusion that he, a man of power as he was,
gave his support to the Republican candidate, we can, from slight
circumstances, come to the conclusion that he did it not only not fairly
but unfairly ?
Mr. Russell. But dishonestly?
Mr. HoEGAN. Well, Mr. Chairman, if there were only slight cir-
cumstances I think that would be, from lack of explanation
The Chaieman (interposing). I am not going to criticize these
things.
Mr. HoEGAN. Yes; sure.
The Chairman. I had better say from the circumstances of the
Case, whether they be light or weighty, your contention is that from
those facts we can come reasonably to the conclusion that he did
it dishonestly.
Mr. HoEGAN. That is my contention, and I hope and believe
The Chaieman (interposing). I want your view, and if you can
give us citations on that, in your brief, or show us some authority,
it will be very helpful to us, 1 think. It will be to me, personally.
Mr. HoRGAN. I understand that authority on the matter of con-
spiracv, if proved, has been afforded by the citations on the matter
of conspiracy?
The Chairman. Yes.
Mr. HoEGAN. And I would like just to say this, that I hope and
believe, aside from the feeling that as a human being I naturally
tJntertain toward Mr. Timiltj^, we have been in this case animated by
and have endeavored to show only the feelings that naturally sur-
round matters of this character, and to present this case as fairly
and as impartially as a case of this kind can be. We have not in-
tentionally assailed Mr. Innes personajly, or his integrity. We have
not even said
The Chaieman. All Ave want is to get the evidence in this case.
Mr. HoEGAN. Surely, Mr. Chairman.
The Chaieman. Either you are entitled to that seat or Senator
Tinkham is.
Mr. HoRGAN. Sureh^
The Chairman. If he is not entitled to it, we will put you in. If
he is entitled to it, we will put him in.
Mr. Rogers. You ought not to say that, Mr. Chairman.
The Chairman. No ; I ought to say that if he is not entitled to it
We will vacate the seat, and if after vacating it we find that those
Votes should have been cast for you, we will put you in.
Mr. HoRGAN. I understand, Mr. Chairman, that you may either
Vacate the seat and declare the election void or place me in there.
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HORGAN VS. TINKHAM. 93
The Chairmax. I merely meant to say that the committee would
do justice as between you and Congress and as between you and the
contestee.
Mr. HoRGAX. I am perfectly satisfied of that. Mr. Chairman.
Mr. KoGERS. There is just one observation I would like to submit.
I think there should be some definite agreement as to the limit of
time for the presentation of these briefs on the law.
Mr. HoRGAX. Would you say two weeks?
Mr. Rogers. Suppose we say May 20?
Mr. HoRGAX. Is that within two weeks? That is ample so far as
we are concerned.
The Chairman. Then by May 20 you will have those briefs in?
Mr. HoRGAX. Yes. We w^ill notify Mr. Innes to-morrow^, so that
he can have the same opportunity that we may have.
Mr. RiTSSELL. So that the committee might be entirely fair, do
you not think it would be probably better now to ask the contestee
whether he wants to say anything to the committee ?
The Chairmax. Yes; and if Ave had had him here, I think we
would have asked him. I will ask the clerk to see if he can communi-
cate with Mr. Tinkham over the telephone.
Mr. Russell. He may not desire to appear, but I think he should
be given the opportunity.
Mr. Rogers. We had better conclude the heariiig to-day.
Mr. TiLLMAX. Yes; let us get through with the hearing to-day.
Mr. Russell. Is it your idea, Mr. Chairman, now^ to make a report
on this during the present session ?
The Chairmax. Oh, yes.
Mr. Russell. I think we ought to do it.
(Informal conversation between the members of the committee
followed for about 10 minutes, at the expiration of which time Mr.
Tinkham, the contestee, appeared before the committee.)
STATEMENT OF HON. GEOEGE HOLDEN TINKHAM, THE CON-
TESTEE, A REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS FROM THE STATE
OF MASSACHUSETTS.
The Chairman. Mr. Tinkham, we have extended to Senator Hor-
gan the privilege of making a few remarks, or making such ob-
servations as he thought he ought to make to this committee, and we
did not think it Avould be fair to let him have that privilege with-
out also extending it to you, and if you want to make any statement
to the committee we will be glad to hear you.
Mr. TixKHAM. As I understand it — I was not here — the con-
testant has made a statement and you wish me to make a statement,
if I desire.
The Chairmax. He has made a statement. After Mr. Prout had
finished we called upon him and asked him if he had anything to say.
Mr. TixKHAM. That is very fair, Mr. Chairman, I am sure.
The Chairmax. Are there any particular points in your case that
you would like to bring to the attention of the committee?
Mr. TixKHAM. The case of the contestee, I think, has been thor-
oughly explained and amplified by my counsel, who is a very compe-
tent man, or has been very fully and completely set out in my brief,
in the preparation of wdiich I took part. From what I have heard
94 CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HORGAN VS. TINKHAM.
Was argued before the committee yesterday — I was not present at
uny of the hearings — I should like to emphasize particularly two
facts. The first is, that the eleventh Massachusetts congressional dis-
trict is not Democratic as has been claimed. I believe the committee,
to be convinced of this fact, should examine carefully the votes of
that district for various offices for the last seven years. Those votes
are carefully set out in the brief and they are the votes which I
studied before becoming a candidate, and they are the votes also
which determined my mind. I should not have thought of running
for Congress without a verj^ careful examination of the situation,
particularly a very close inspection of the votes cast during the past
few years. I found, as I testified to in the hearing and as you will
Dbserve in the brief, that for various offices where the vote was con-
solidated for the district, the district had been carried time and
again for the Republican Party, although not for the head of the
ticket.
With my knowledge of the issues and the men in each successive
campaign, I realized that the head of the ticket on the Republican
side had lost the district because of his weakness and issues or po-
litical complications, but that basically the district, although I should
not want to say it was Republican, had a tendency to be more Re-
publican than 'Democratic. When I found that this was the fact,
I examined closely into the general political situation. I knew that
in a mid-election between two presidential elections there was usually
a reaction against the party in power. I knew there were certain
local political issues which would be extremely helpful in that par-
ticular district for a Republican. I think there appears in my testi-
Jnony various issues which I thought would be helpful for a Re-
publican. Then I also knew of various antagonisms against the con-
testant, who I expected would be nominated — wholly political, not
personal — and I came to the decision that I could defeat him on the
issues as they lay and in that district and at that particular time. I
did not announce my candidacy until he had positively announced
his. The point I want to make is that the committee shall neither
think nor have the impression that, although the eleventh congres-
sional district has been represented by a Democrat in Congress, and
always has been for 12 years, it is a Democratic district, because
it is not.
The other fact I desire to impress upon the committee is my good
faith in my intention to conform both to the United States and
Massachusetts corrupt-practices acts. The Massachusetts statute had
just been passed by the legislature in 1914 and was somewhat obscure.
The Massachusetts statute said that $3,000 was the limit of expendi-
tures for a congressional election. The United States law allowed
an unlimited amount for printing and postage, and by the phrase-
ology of the Massachusetts statute the expenditure for these two
purposes, it seemed plainly, was not included in the $3,000 limita-
tion. The facts and the law have been carefully set out in the brief
and in argiiment. With the understanding that I might be somewhat
influenced in my opinion because it was to my interest to have the
law interpreted as I interpreted it, I went to a lawyer who had been
attorne}^ general of Massachusetts, and who had had a great deal of
experience in interpreting statutes and enforcing the election laws.
I wanted no difficulties after my election; it was useless for me to
CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE HOEGAN VS. TINKHAM. 95
run for Congress, if after I was elected I was to be unseated. I
asked his opinion as to whether I could make expenditures for
printing and postage outside of the $3,000 limit of the Massachusetts
statute.
He gave me a written opinion and his personal assurance that 1
could do so. I also interviewed the man who drew the Massachusetts
act, Representative Sherburne, of Brookline, Mass., Avhom I knew
verj^ well, and I asked him what his interpretation of his own bill
was in relation to the point involved. He told me so far as the
printing and postage was concerned, that in a congressional election
the $3,000 limit did not apply, that that was the intention of the act
and was his intention when he drew the bill. He stated that the
exemption clause in the Massachusetts statute was put in for that
very purpose. This is the second fact I desire to emphasize. All
this appears in evidence and is confirmed by these two men. I think
it show^s my complete good faith in expenditures, particularly for
printing and postage. It was only yesterday, when I saw Senator
Owen al30ut a corrupt-practices act which he has introduced in the
Senate, that I drew his attention to the fact that, so far as postage
and printing were concerned, if there Avas a limitation of expendi-
tures put upon them, then he was putting a limitation upon free
speech by a representative to his constituents, because there is no
way in a large city with its various elements in which a candidate
or representative can communicate with his constituents except
through the mail. I do not believe it is the intention of any legis-
lature. I do not believe it is the desire of the people that repre-
sentatives of the people should be prevented from having free
speech with their constituents and from communicating with the
people, and I should say that on principle any law which interfered
with or restricted communication by a representative with his con-
stituents might be held unconstitutional as a restriction upon free
communication and free speech.
I think this is all I have to say, unless the committee wants to
ask me any question or for any information which will assist them
in a complete investigation. If there are any such questions I
should be much pleased to answer them.
The Chairman. No ; no question has been raised.
(At 4 o'clock p. m. the committee adjourned subject to the call of
the chairman.)
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