Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 3, 1860., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Paris or search for Paris in all documents.

Your search returned 2 results in 2 document sections:

Fanny Ellsler. --A letter to the New York Times, from Paris, contains the following: Fanny Ellsler is now at Berlin, at the bedside of a sick sister, wife of the son of Prince Adelbert, of Prussia. The marriage of the young Baron de Barnum, eldest son of the Prince Adelbert, to Mile Therese Ellsler, sister of the famous danseuse, and something of a danseuse herself, created a great sensation at the time; but the union has been a happy one and the relatives long ago became reconciled to the plebeian intruder. From this union was born one child, a son, whose bad health induced his parents to send him, some months ago, to Egypt, to try the effect of the climate on his lungs. But, like Rachel, he received no benefit, and has just died in Nubia. The news threw the mother on her bed, and her sister Fanny hastened to her side to console her in the cruel loss.
the rate for the best short paper is still quoted at 9@ per cent. Money on call is, if anything, rather more abundant, a circumstance which seems to arise, however, more from the absence of demand than any increased liberality or restoration of condense on the part of lenders. Most of the discounting done is by the banks, but even here there is less doing, and a disposition to hold off. The advices from Europe by the Arabia are of a character to admonish us of a "crisis" in London and Paris, as soon as the news of our troubled here reach them. Even as the heavy and constant drain of bullion from the Banks of England and France, was beginning to seriously upon the monetary and mercantile interests of both countries. One feature of it was the advance of the rate of discount, at Bank, to 6 per cent., by this time there can scarcely be a doubt, that a still further advance has been announced. The Philadelphia Bulletin, of Saturday, says: "The money market is quiet, a