According to [arXiv:math/0503542][1] by Suter (Fact 5.1) the sizes of the conjugacy classes of $G$ other than the trivial one are 1, 30, 20, 20, 12, 12, 12, 12.  These numbers (plus 1 for the trivial) sum to 120, which is the size of $G$, providing a sanity check.    

In general (also from the same source), if the branch lengths of the finite Dynkin diagram are $p_1$, $p_2$, $p_3$, there are $p_i-1$ conjugacy classes of size $|G|/2p_i$, generated by powers of some element $\gamma_i$ satisfying $\gamma_i^{p_i}$ all equalling the central non-identity element, plus a conjugacy class for it.  

One would therefore expect the $\gamma_i^j$ conjugacy classes to correspond to vertices along the branches, and the central element to correspond to the branch vertex.  Suter actually labels an $E_8$ diagram like this (with powers increasing towards the branch point, which makes sense since that way the branch point is $\gamma_i^{p_i}$ for all $i$) but I don't see any explanation in the paper of what that labelling means for him.  

And, of course, this doesn't begin to answer the question the OP asked...


  [1]: http://arxiv.org/pdf/math/0503542.pdf "arXiv:math/0503542"