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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: December 3, 1860., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

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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.
Fanny Ellsler (search for this): article 2
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 reconcileFanny 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.
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.
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.
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.