Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 19, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Flanders or search for Flanders in all documents.

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in the Yankee papers. The vote of the city in its better days was 18,000. The following is the vote polled on this occasion; First Congressional District--Hahn, 1,610; Durrell, 206; Greathouse, 343; Barker, 309. Second Congressional District--Flanders, 2,184; Bouligny, 136. The Yankee correspondent says: The election of Messrs. Hahn and Flanders has given great satisfaction to the friends of the Union. Both are uncompromising, unconditional Unionists, and were under a cloud during the Flanders has given great satisfaction to the friends of the Union. Both are uncompromising, unconditional Unionists, and were under a cloud during the reign of the Secessionists. Mr. Hahn, I believe, is a German. He must be immensely popular, seeing that he was nominated no further back than last Sunday morning by the Trust Delts. Up to that time Mr. Durell, the nominee of the Union Committee, was the popular favorite, and would have been elected had not Mr. Halm been placed in the field. The friends of Mr. Jacob Barker were of his election, but were disappointed. He is too old, however, and ought to give way to younger men at a crisis wh