KILKY, TUB PKUSOXATOR AND HCMORlHT.The entertainment of J. \V. Kiley.tbe poet, bum *ri«t and reader, th;s evening at the Opera House is one which ought nlt; t to be missed, and will well repay all who attend. He is one of the rising literary stars of the West. His qualities as a humorist are unsurpassed, and us a persunator he surpasses in many respeets Sol Smith llueseli. The Indianapolis llerald spoke of bis performance in that city as follows: “lie Is an inimitable imitator, and can mimic tones, languages, gesture, as no other man can that we ever saw, and be tu»n do better; he can put himself into the character and be It, *h well as imitate it. Nothing so exquisitely funny w as ever seen on the stage of the 1'ark.*’