Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 16, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Finn or search for Finn in all documents.

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ost Court we find the following item: "James Finland E. Bouligny had a row at J. Howkins's Bouligny shot three times at Finn, with whom he had been fighting, and who had knocked him down. None of the shots took effect. Both parties were arrested Finn was fined $25, and Bouligny was fined $100, and sent thirty days to the Parish prison." This is the same Bouligny who, at the time of the secession of Louisiana, was a representative in the Federal Congress from that State and who, born in the South, went over to her enemies. At the recent bogus election in New Orleans he was defeated for Congress by a man with whom he would have scorned to associate before he became a traitor. Finn was regarded in New Orleans as a quiet, inoffensive man, but quite formidable as a "buffer" when aroused. He was a private in the Confederate service from the commencement of the war until within a few months past when he received his discharge on a Surgeon's certificate, and, being probably still loy