Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 19, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Flanders or search for Flanders in all documents.

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em, and was enough to determine every one who had any timidity about him in voting for "the Government." It is true that Flanders cut this up a little; but he represented a part of the Government, and promised to protect those who went for him. --Money was lavishly used. One young creole was offered five hundred dollars to use his influence for Flanders, and it was not much. If it was as liberally disbursed elsewhere, the votes which Flanders got must have cost a very large sum. Let us loFlanders got must have cost a very large sum. Let us look at the men elected to fill the chief offices of the great State of Louisiana. Of Mr. Hahn little used be said; he is a man certainly not inferior in intellectual, acquirements and capacity to the average of Governors, but the fact that he has beeo voted for him, sotto voce, declare this; and the chief reason given why Mr. Durant and his friends insisted on running Flanders was that they did not believe that Hahn's abolitionism was more than skin deep. --Hahn, the people say, talks thus: "As