Show GL EM bikis EXMES ROBERT bors bons birthday birthday birth day verat wab commemorated ih most moat of the principal gitles throughout the union ri by feasting toasting anda the ori girill copy 0 00 ap 1 id lang 8 syne ne 1 in in durna burna own hand rn ting was prese arese presented I 1 ed to the new york barns bar is Asab association Mation matlon which ia is something of a cu rosity the copy of possession ha hab has a been veen mislaid millaid mi 01 0 burns barns sag bag as a man and as a poet henry ward IV beechen beecher echer made the following remarks at one of the great burns celebrations in yan k e eian ull nid uil ui l I 1 asa inan man osul torm form lorin any etl eti mate either cither et of the rood arkad aliat that was wai la to hirn him who did nt nil tuly ruly birns heart elwe wige luus were dep drep a ai oan evans gl ain aln ami aim bom dom imn tim timis almis s aa as tm trul f alwa tsira isira J lehl lehi iehl 1 e h abo ato a her ber gitary of 0 and ami n ft t P nt bifi a dark alid nd asked mth with t ala tia othen other trail trait hl chraca ier xer according to ibe the th iatter latter there wa 4 in the barnin baste ni a portion et the she Ke keneff ma mas nias s whose whom it was wai to pr 1 odice l gendral sen without re garl ear gar 1 to the special of or the burns wai eminently a amin in in that had sen sivility litY jils ills an nature carried enouch enough for twenty coin corn nn mien men pt more ore f force ace or of fa elipa ile llo II 11 never trickled d drop pop rop nen ren by drop m hr hp ruhel ne rie never ran a thread or of filver silver water he ranle canie down booming add burning I 1 ke one of his hii hi i owa which when a fann fA huhes down the mountain all parts of hia hla nature were to this ihla s m guellen guillen ow he ile theu then glit lilt as dracon brazon he tie felt love as a prairies f ral rai I wild antl anti troah erraa breaston turning the dreg dref and ami leaving not nol bolling Ling but da an biby aay waste behind them how unfortunate it ti is that in ih this world of ours oars we are seldom ar or never able to discern the merit of our co temporaries and thatus diat IR is reserved for future gw gyrations rations to whom perhaps the genias genius the statesman th the emi I 1 mighty oty w champion fo rights and lastly perhaps not least the poet was unknown exception except in history to do the honor to their names which their good deserve some of the worlds great joics however have traduced traducer trad themselves by their own vices ices and follies and rep rendered dered themselves unworthy of aught but present oblivion and eternal infamy byron thoy thol hib his presence was courted by lords and rulers in europe because ae be had bad wealth and title to sustain him in the pursuit of his hia extravagant and libertine career yet as is well attested by private te writings bis his inordinate lewdness and his pro frigate life rendered him while living the object of deti detestation station among amon 0 the good and virtuous wherever he was known ile he was a farst fir first strite rate nate fellow fellows in the worlds acceptation of the term full fall of hypocrisy and corruption but now the generations of or a succeeding century almost idolize his bis memory while his writings are numbered with the classics we trust that burns has greater claim to canonization than a life of extreme licentiousness else we would prefer wit wil bolding our adoration of his big memory ip all acres ages even the best beat of men have failed to receive while living that deference due cia to them and bolenare ote ole nare and maii mali maligned n but when death me has stin sundered dered the boods bonds I 1 of their association and intimacy with mortality their deeds and names are em blazoned upon tife the pinnacle of worldly fame I 1 such is the world now and such it was wag eighteen hundred years ago when a great and good man said 99 29 wo unto you scribes and pharisee be be cause canse re ye bulis the tombs of the prophets and karnish the at 0 the righteous 30 and say gay if we had bad been in the dayson our rathers fathers wa we would dot nol llave ben n partaker partaken par taken with them la in the blood et t the prophets 31 1 etore re ye bo b witnesses unto yourselves that ya ye alre atre re the children of them killed we prop prophets liets 3 fill ye up then the Wa littre of your fathers 33 ya yas ye generation of vipers hi hoe hov can an ye to escape app of h hh TV 1 31 iT Wherefore I 1 send prop prophets bels bets and raen awl cribe and ame ut thu thront dethill aillaud abd dod some gome of them thee hall shall jo ye scourge tn in your syna byna and persecuted them rr lu ciry city to city 35 gebat gibat thal that upon fsr isy come all ail the oui ovi blood shed thed th be earth from the blood of ab ats 1 unto IM a mod of zacharia zao Zac harim ann awn or of Barac lilai mew between the tempa add and lle altar enatt halt c As it was waa then so it ia is now the prophets of the present generation have been heen bunted hunted by their enemies persecuted and 1 dor for have they ahey been duly appreciated and bo honored nored while living hying even by those who professed friendship for them antl anti and obedience to their doctrines but succeeding generations will praise their memory and say if ve we had been in the days of our fathers we conid not have leen partakers par takers with them in the blood of the prophets J whether there is or can be any good resulting frisi tb the e post mortem glorification propensities 1 of mankind we do not now assume the I 1 province of g but it that which is highly esteemed among men is abomination in the of god 12 among other oiher radical im improvements prove ments would it not be more mere con hicie to the general good of the saints to eta ett eavor more folly to appreciate ibe ike t virt virtues ites and to emalete abe the illustrious example of the great and altti living in ili their aiu ain ek the dea dead diao aido burr bury their dead dea aills r I 1 BUT nilo r sti i is isina xira in every very on ones el s mo v th tali thai a man may mag maybe magbe be ro rough ugh and hone honest swe wa do not doubt the fallacy however lies ties in the implication that rough sa and honesty are naturally twinned the boston statesman says good manners and good morals are oftener found in company than rudeness ami awl goodni gooda hug bug i is i genuine kindness of heart rarely falls to produce gentle centle words and a benignant c coar coarse e manners are eliher either the of a coata nature 0 rale rate a assumed on the strength of the boneh but honesty honest proverb to get credit credits with shallow observers tor for a sincerity that does not exir 12 shakespeare was a shrewd critic on men and things ile he thus delineates one of this class of humburgs humbugs hum bum bugs this Is some fellow who having baying been arged for doth affect A maucy mancy kanc roughness ness nesa and constrains the quite from his natu t he be cannot flutter flitter he hf ai an hont honet mind and plain he must t peak nak dak truth these theae kind of adavto knaves I 1 know filfli in lit tb th a plainness pIilua ees eEl harbor more cratt craft avid and more corrupted ends endi than twenty silly clucking cluck ciuck lne ine ob servants that stretch their duties lil ill nicely cely J nor are aji ajl the specious pretenses pretences to lentil ity and affected effected modesty worthy of a more favorable construction the genuine blunt and honest fellow is tolerable the involuntary serf of e iq iette lette is is excusable but the man who would basely ape them is is the most disagreeable awre agre pable of impostors and should be lite branded in hib hia real character as rough e and dascall rascally y 11 THE SPIRITS have harp rapped out that shak speare st andied idled law with david conger in berkshire england prof mccoy of the albany law lav school to whom the spirit of william shak speare vouchsafed the above revelation sta stated ted tea that adso al so told him that thai in the unseen land bere where A he now is he is occupying himself in writing a new play and further farther that as soon as it was finished he would send it to the professor and the professor promised the students of the law school that before it was published to the world he would read it to them two GRAND BALLS in in aid of the mount blount vernon association have have bave been held in in the bos ton theatre the first appropriation of this vast temple of the dram i boball room purposes the tha profits of the lat last are estimated at ORLANDO F PARSONS committed suicide in Bal bai baltimore timbre march I 1 morphine and strychnine nine failed three or four times to produce death as he stated in in a note found in his lis pantaloons pocket through ti some superhuman agency so he be shot his own brains out ile he bad been a clerk in the new york post office which situation be resigned to fili fill a more profitable one promised him in in one of the he departments in washington but as be he further states arrom irom th the fact that the departments were all full and a general cry having been raised for retrenchment it mas impossible to get me through having subsequently applied for eni employment in various quarters and obtaining none he be became discouraged and finally desperate and as be says feeling confident that I 1 ican lean can do mp goad here to myself or anybody else elbe el jal sel be destroyed himself ile he was nas about 23 years of ae a age e the first victim of retrenchment I 1 CHARLES sahir SABir SAMPSON son sox of the he well known co bosbonis Bo boston is dead THE BIRTHDAY BIRTH DAY DALY of thomas jefferson april avas to be celebrated in boston april 1 HARDSHELL inasi must be getting rather advanced in years hence his bis sermons are shot and more moye to the point an ad quai quality ity for sermons sermons in general en eral here ia is a bit of one e iry lly ily bret herinx and fineral tt el a mats mima mius mim a full nil of or reil rell religion gion you jon cant hurt himl himi there wals the three arabian children they put paterm yem in a gery nery furnace betted aven a sven n ven times hotter than it could conid be het bet and it swings a bar on their head hearl I and their was john the evan Evau evangler evang gler gier ler let they put lim him ermil owl where do you t hink bT etherine and ani bt stern they pw him why they euthim into a miln 59 11 5 9 and ind ailed him hint all nights and it raze faze his bis fabell and their was danel they put him in fn a viloula lion ilon den denand and aud what whet bat my fellow lers and nd respected auditor r d yeti twi he h wg was put into a llona den fur for why for amin omin phree three a day D nt be al annl and sir six tern I 1 dont dout think any of t you wilt wili wll wil ever get into a gilwit den I 1 THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY has attained a circulation of 40 the first complete buc BUG cess ceas in the publication of a hiob high toned literary i periodical many bad fondly hoped that in it tub ins ius ruts monthly a refutation would be found to the charge of english writers terr tere that the american people can appreciate nothing better than lovesick love sick stories and sentimental poetry but they were doomed to disappointment monthly gave up tip the ghost after a i chort bort and q alile alte unsuccessful career thoyl tho some borne of its contributors were among the oest gest b est I 1 american writers W trist the ll atlle will tally ralty Mu illustrate strate its excelsior aspirations antl anti ini uni never stoop sloop to vile party or be of any rny or creed whose lehs lebs and privileges are constitutionally added upon this broad platform the great char ter of human right s a high bibb ill iii minded ihde d effort to t 0 enciu encourage r ae a e and nd c cultivate u high toned literature literak r e and provide for the reading public of the united states without distinction of party flarty or clied cited creed a national periodical of chaste elevating sentiments cannot fail fall to be sustained EUROPEAN affairs are in a critical condition italy is the fhe point around which vast political events are revolving to make england a nonentity in europe is said to be precisely louis napoleons policy in 1763 france was inferior interior as a power of lu fluence influence even to austria and England was triumphant having ruined her commerce and destroyed hen her navy but now france seems to be ascending the throne of influence and is fast growing L to be the dicta dictator tor toz of Euro european nean politics the emperor meanwhile continues to deal out smooth words of a peaceful import but does not cease his hia active preparations for war he is determined to destroy the aus rian power in italy A BALL by the hp ame paris was arranged for feb 22 tickets 30 francs H HER E R AT A jr STY 9 s T theater h e ilter itter in london londo n is lo 10 be converted into a hotel THE KING of naples is yet q quite guite uit nit ill of water around the heart ALL THE RUSSIAN soldiers on furlough have been recalled and orders given to purchase purchase cavalry horses DULLNESS and distrust seems seema to increase says the eng C guardian of feb 19 gland and the stock market has been heavy darak dav day THE PARIS of oi feb 15 the organ of prince napoleon has a very bold article arti abbl lle cle on the prest present ant ent issue between france and austria italy if at y and sardinia Sardi fila tila assuming 11 that the duty f of france is most imperative in relation to forcing arcing t Austria out of italy it demands ewh who a has hag riveted th the pop to his odious system that 1 py the destruction detraction dest deit ruction of the aman R man austria wha initiates instigates sti gAtes the kinc kinf kin of naples to ta his fool tool foolish lh resistance lo 10 the most moat legill mite wishes and to ta tion actoria aa Ac itria torta who crushes under iron bond bondage age louf lout and valc au ati tria who B modena modem and tuscany austria yes tea austria everywhere atit Alit rity riss thi therefore the he position of is changed and order is 18 established the presse asserts that italy desirous of breaking loose from austrian tyra riby does not rely upon her own strength in the struggle that she does not now in the frenzy of her patriotism exclaim itala fara da sely sei sey ehe she invokes the cooperation operation co of generous nations that the 0 opportunity of putting a termination to I 1 the e anxiety which torments eil Eti europe should about I 1 be welcomed with gratitude but austria has rendered herself obnoxious to france because she has ha raised her head not only in italy but also elsewhere hear the presse aa again lil iii Is it not austria that has hag ha nullified fied fled the results of the treaty of pm pris lit I 1 it not austria that inspires tu turkey r key with her trea trva treason n an annl I 1 treachery Is I 1 it not austria hat bat trout led lol be the alliance that united us with england would not a war which would deliver u ui from the nightmare be blessed above all other wars suan is i the thet war we believe pr pir paring in I 1 italy and rind why we regard it with confidence and seLu security rity 11 the prospects are fair af at present that the proud looks and of austria will be humbled bumbled AUSTRIA is by no means inclined to war the austrian journals have received instructions eions s to moderate their tone towards fiance france great despondency iswald is baid said to prevail in venice owing to the prevalent conviction that louis napoleon ia is determined at all hazards to I 1 quarrel with austria to provide for her security it io the event of the theater of war being removed demoi ed from italy austria has concluded treat treaties leq with the second rate german powers PRUSSIA has now the reputation of holding bolding in her hand band the key to future europe and if upon b her er fi flit it rests the question of |