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HO,Poreos LINCOLN'S -BRUTUS. () S1H.t l liS!l:':tli11."1S TRAtl"g'Dr 01' ""JULI US C.S.4It." John T. Ford on tho Crtmo of John Wi ;:, Booth--Hbstory of the I4ottve -- I Lu1st I) clat'ation Burnod --The Iurd.or Unpremecitated. Shkspeatru's,rgd of "Julius C' raru" is abou)it to bo produced inl .alltin,>re. 'lho st.riking similarity betw\oeen two of the groattest tradge die:s that1 history recordsr prompted a rep)re:;entativu of thu Ba.ltimoro ( tt'f!e to revive the historv of the Presidtlial assussinatio, and eu (leavOr to ascertain the real motive of Booth in taking Mr. Lincoln's I life, and the following is the result: The i:ulressionl has generally pre vai ld that- Mr. John T. Ford, who w n ltaager of Ford's Theatre at the thnlo the trtge:ly occurrod, was fanili:r with facts in conlec ti.)1n with the mat.tcr that had never I aIp):red in print, and he was asked if sueh was the case. Mr. Ford rt:marked that he had fre (quentl'.y bt'n requested to give cxpression to 1i, viut\ws on the sub ject, but had (telined. A general conversation on the subject, how ever", enlsuel, tlie sub itanco of which, with Mr. Ford's conversation, , we print. It throws some new light on the great tragedy, and will doubt 1'ss he found of general intorest. Mr. Ford said: ADMIRATIoN or nRuTUs. John \Wilh(s Booth was trained Irool ealieslt infalley to CO)Sidler i1h :J11 (,,t dl'.e .d :,:sns:jn1 11rulllls just is Shakespeare immorlzed himl). Ills. lf:ler was namlted "Junius Su Ius ;" his brother is now the )altarer of that surnnamlo. The t, ooth frequently appeared ill ti 1i.ly of "Julius (cisav," and. no(t lter than .1864 three of his s acted the throe leadig cha'ac ter" of the plaV to an audience that appl 'l the sentimlents of Brutus t..> the echo. Now trace the assa.s1 sin:t.in I of Lincohi. On the 1m)o1ing of April 1.1, 1865, Booth, vwho it (.msiredl for six months previouis to abduct .President Lin ("Oin and convey him a 1)risoncr to :eSolth, was the last guest at I' i'tklfast at the National Hotel in Wa:singtoAi~n. T1he( srlLrenldor at Aipomlltox haid euded all chance for hita to carry out his original con uracy.I He left the hotel after eleven o'clock that morning and walked ul) Sixth street to If, alld tittopp1ed at the Snrrattt House, wh:e he met the widow who kept it, returning from the religious serv.ces of Good Friday, and1 then in the act of going to her former count.ry place (the vehicle to convey her alreatdy at, the door) to collect somne money duio her) so as to pay what was du by hr to the Cal vert her intended visit, requested her to get. bomIo articles belonging to himi that he had left at the country tavern,'a and thein, bidding her adieu, he walked up H street to Tenth, and down Tenth to thu theat.re. 'When lie reached there it was about or pr1obaly a little later than twelve o'clock mfiddaiy. There he heard for the first timeO that both l'residen(1)t Lincolni and General Grant w.oroO to visit. the theatro that night. Thle pr1ivato box was in the pro~css of dlecoration. The White Hos me5 [ ssen ger had b)oon thor.o an) hour before to senure its use. I Lolieve.-and all reliable written or 0oral testimnony con firms that belief --that thlen and1( there the terrible thought of assassinaLtion first sug g4ested itself. lit came liko this: "If I failed to servo the South in my consp~ir;icy to abduct, I can now be ber Brutus." nooTn1 SJDEcLAiRATION B)URNED. Trhis thoughlt fastened on his brain-led him to go from the theatre toward the Kirkw~ood House to have a1 conforence.with some of his 01ld conspirator's. John Surrat was away, O'Lioughlin was in B3alti.. more, and Arnold was in a sutler store aIt Fortress Monroe. They knew the abduction conspiracy had been abandoned, but Payne, Atzerodt and Harold were in Washington. Theso latter he got togetheor and conspired with them to kill the President, the victorious General and some of the Cabinet. He must have written between the tiw4e ' when he parted with bIBeQc con urt.ors arnd theonru be aa appeared at the theatre a lengthy statement for publication. excusing his intended crime by Roman pret codont, When dying ho referred to it for his justigcation. He gave, on the evening of the 14th, a package to an actor, directing its delivery the next day to the National Itetlli gth ecer. The actor confesses that he. frightoned at the risk he ran, broke the seal, read the inolosed matter arid at midnight burned it. If that package had been preserved it would have revealed the declara tion that until noon that day its writer had net premeditatod mur, der, but feeling deoply the humnilia, tioni of the South, to the people of which he bore all the love that Bru tWs ever felt for Rome, he would strike down that night the leading mon of the victorioua hosts who were thon shouting their preans of truth. When dying, with his face lit up with the blaze of the burning barn upon the Garrett farm, just at the break of day, on the morning of April 24, ho muttered some words, a soldier bcnt over him and caught them from his fast obbing breath, First, a mossago for his mother, "Tell her I did it, ats I thought, for the best," and thon he said, "Tell others that the communication I wrote, addressod to the NArtional Intelligencer, will explain why I did what I did." During the conspira ey trial at the arsenal the Hon, Joseph Holt, the Judgo..Advocato, called on John F. Coyle, then the publisher of the National .Intelli, gencer, and asked if that communi cation had ever been received. Hie reply was, "No." "It was," con, tinned Mr. Ford, "burnt in the grate of a chamber of a boarding house, and a Catholic Priest, now living in Vashingtou, had the fact confussed to him soon afterward. I had the occurrence revealed Lu no--with the added information of the confession--by the party who was the custodian of the package, I'his fully sustaits my theory that John Wilkes ]looth had not contem, plated the assaEsination of Presi" dent Lincoln when he met Mrs, Surratt, at miday, and he never tnet her again, WIjFE8 1OoTII DESORInED. In order to demonstrate that his brain was turned by the poetic an I iramatic glamour which transmitted the story;of the I1omaii assaasination, said Mr. Ford, it is but just to de-, scribo him at thin time. In person bE was remarkably handsome, witl} i face of singular manly beauty, in perfect health, less than twenty-si, yors of age, and aln)oot idolized by is friends, As an actor he coul4 Darn at least $10,000 per annum. ITo was so popular in Boston that :1uring an engagement at the Muse um, hundreds of ladies lLve waited to see him nAavo the stage to go to his hotel. These facte anld opinions will, I think, show the great danger >f glorifying anassination under any 2ircimstarnces, Julius Cmsar was to Rome sthe union of the scholar, Iho soldier and the gentleman." *Mighty Cresar 1 411 Bonie did ove him once not without causse." Yet Cassius did say-~ -How inay eges honoQ shall this our lefty scenc be aoted over, [u Statesi unborn, 4ad apooots yet ng. kr*own ? Was this, added Mr. Ford, in sloBing the interview, the incarna Lion of dramatic prophecy, suggest-. ng the crime that occurred 1,909 years after, "in States unborn and iccenats yet unknown" when Casay lied?i Mrs. Don Gameron is still praised )y the newspaper correspondents, md she certaiply deservou t.o be, 2nly the other night she put her trmis about the Senator's neels and saidl pleadingly: "Please, Don, don't kill off the newspapers for a couple f months .yok I know you hatq thom but spare them yet a libtle bwhile for my sake." And this is the r'eason that so many newspapers still live --#let,eland erald. TIrE CASE OF JEFF DAVIDs.-Govd ernor Hfampton has returned from Abbeville, whither he had gone from Nmety-Six, to investigate in person the case of Jeff Davids, now uinder sentonce for the murder of the Franklins, and about whiek grave do4$ts are expressed -as to his guilt. The Governor has not yen dicated his probable action '. the premises. The prisoner's reprieve extends to July 12, The Cleveland Hgrial, repoets that the President did sipog uatn nit ,vqe'