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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: June 24, 1864., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 10 total hits in 4 results.
Bavaria (Bavaria, Germany) (search for this): article 6
Orleans, Ma. (Massachusetts, United States) (search for this): article 6
France (France) (search for this): article 6
A Picture of Paris.
--A Paris scene is thus described in a recent letter from the metropolis of France:
The day is magnificent, the road well tended, hundreds of gen d'armes keep order amongst the disorderly procession of unrepentant thieves and magdalens which the Bourse and the Rue de Breda let loose upon the gaping population which lines the sidewalks of the Champ Slysees.
The Empress has just passed by. She is attired in a species of gallant half mourning, indicative of the share she takes in the sorrow occasioned by the loss of King Maximilian of Bavaria.
Her dress is of violet colored molie, with a paletot of the same cut, with tails en gigot exactly like the coats worn by the dandies of 18.6 when the Duke of Orleans ruled the fashions by which ladies' hearts were to be ensnared.
Two large buttons at the waist behind, and a row of the same in front, add to the illusion which leads us to believe we have before us a specimen of the handiwork of the great tailor of tha
Paris (search for this): article 6
A Picture of Paris.
--A Paris scene is thus described in a recent letter from the metropolis of France:
The day is magnificent, the road well tended, hundreds of gen d'armes keep order amongst the disorderly procession of unrepentant thieves and magdalens which the Bourse and the Rue de Breda let loose upon the gaping population which lines the sidewalks of the Champ Slysees.
The Empress has just passed by. She is attired in a species of gallant half mourning, indicative of the share she takes in the sorrow occasioned by the loss of King Maximilian of Bavaria.
Her dress is of violet colored molie, with a paletot of the same cut, with tails en gigot exactly like the coats worn by the dandies of 18.6 when the Duke of Orleans ruled the fashions by which ladies' hearts were to be ensnared.
Two large buttons at the waist behind, and a row of the same in front, add to the illusion which leads us to believe we have before us a specimen of the handiwork of the great tailor of th