A&$P! . SPECTATORS AT THE Li? F Selections from the Story Tellers' Pack ON,.: night last week a vaudeville actress, wliu was playing In ono of the Chicago theaters, walked out on the stage to do her "turn." She euuii' out smiling and begun to slug a rugllmu song. Whuii she finished the song she waited for t ho applause, but as it was not forthcoming alio turned to tliu audience and said: "I know 1 can't slug, but what am I to do? I can't cook." This remark nimle tliu audience hiiiIIu. iiut Just then i-omeUilng happened which put tlio bouse In an uproar, for just as soon as the actress had said "1 know I can't sing, but what uui 1 to do? 1 can't cook," a nuwsboy, who was sitting in the top row of the gallery, yelled down to her: "(Jo aud peddlo papers." The actress turned red and immediately begun Hinging a "coon" song to drown the laughter. It happened at Cump Lincoln, when the Fifth Illinois was in camp at Sprlngllold, re lates the Chicago Tribune. After tlio sunset gun hus been llred the camp takes on all the appearance of grim vlsaged war. I'lckets aro posted and no one Is allowed to pass without llrwt being chal lenged ami explaining to the satisfaction of the sentry his Identity ami business. Ono evening soon after sunset one of the oMcerri of the regiment, who had been In town with Ills pretty daughter, approached one of the sentries on guard at the camp and was promptly challenged. "Who goes there?" rang out the sharp challenge as the muket came to present. "Ollicer of the Day," wiih the answer. "Advance, Ollicer of the Day, and bo recognized," said the business-like picket. The ollicer ami Ills pretty daughter promptly walked forwnrd and passed through Into the camp. A little later the same evening the young woman had occnidon to pass through the lino for a moment. When she stnrted to return she was challenged by the same son try who hod stopped her when she was ac companied by her father. This time sliu put on a bold front nnd detormlned to do Just ns ho had done beforo. "Who comes there?" cried the sentry fiercely In the gathering twilight. "Officer of the Day," answered the glil, as she had heard her father answer. For half a mlnuto the sentry wns puzzled. Then he recovered his wits. "Advance, Ollicer of the Day," he called, "and kiss tlio guard." Whether the young woman's military tialnlng had been miftiolently advanced to mako her realize that n soldier's first duty Is obedience to orders Is not recorded. "The lBnguor of the soft spring days car ries mo back In memory to the beginning of my professional career," said ex-Senator Chandler of New Hampshire the othor day to a friend. "Thoro used to stand In the streets of Portland, not far from my nlllce, Fomo dry goods boxes, which were much sought by citizens when the weather was flno nnd time hung somewhat heavy upon their hands. When the 'spring feeling' was strongest on mo I used to think, from my perch on one of those boxes, that life would bo a doleful grind If I must go back to my desk and work. Since then I huvo learned that there Is such a thing us a habit of duty. "When a man mis once acquired it ho can no longer sit quiet on u dry goods box uml sun himself. He must always bo doing .something or he Is uncomfortable and en forced leisure Js more irksome to him thau the hardest of labor. 1 inquired the duty habit forty years ago, and a balmy spring day, though It never falls to call up memurles of my youthful love for a loaf In the sunshine, inspires me with no temptation to repeat that experience." One day recently "President Hlmer 11. Capen of Tufts college was addressing the Miishuchusetls Dental society and ex plained his lack of technical dental nomen clature, expressing the hope that If, on this account, ho made a poor speech, It would not be assumed that he always made poor speeches. In making this point he told a nautical story, "The male of a certain schooner," ho said, "was In (he habit of drinking more than wa good for him. On ono occasion, after he had recovered from an unusually severe attack of Intoxication, he was looking over the log aud found that the captain hail In scribed therein on a certain date: " '.Mate drunk.' "The mate promptly went to the captain and asked why such a statement had beon written down, "'It Is true, Isn't it?' asked the captain. " 'Yes,' said the mate. "Then let It stand," said the captain. "A few days later the captain In locking over the log found this Inscription: Cap tain sober.' lie summoned the mate and asked him what he meant by taking such u liberty. " 'It's true, Isn't It?' asked the mate " 'Yos,' said the captain, 'but ' " 'Then let It tdnnd,' said the mate." One of the great tiirnlng points In tho early life of Admiral Farrngut Is told In the August Issue of Success, which pub lishes a scries of new stories of the great American. David was acting as cabin boy to his father, brave (Jeorge Furragut, who had taken part In the revolutionary and tho In illan wain, and who, on this occasion, as Hulllng-muster of tho fleet, was on his wny to New Orleans with the Infant navy of tho I'nlted Stntes. Tho boy thought ho hail tho (luulltles that mako a man. "I could Bwear like an old salt," he says, "could drink as stllf a glass of grog as If I hail doubled Cape Horn and could smoke llko a locomo tive. I wos great at cards and was fond of gambling In every shape. At tho close of dinner ono day," ho continued, as tho story Is related by William M. Thayer, "my father turned everybody out of the cabin, locked the door and said to mo: 'David, what do you mean to bo?' " 'I man to follow the Ben,' I said. "'Follow tho sea!' exclaimed father, 'yea, bo a poor, miserable, drunken sal.lor before tho mast, kicked and cuffed about tho world and die In a fever hospltnl In somo foreign cllmol' "'No, father.' I replied, 'I will tread the quarter-deck and command, as you dn." "'No, Dald, no boy over trod tho quar-ter-deik with such principles as you havo, and i mil habits ns you exhibit. You will havo to changa your whole course of llfo If you ever becomo a man," M father lift me anil went on deck. 1 was stunned by the rebuko and overwhelmed wiih iiioi miration. 'A poor, miserable, drunken sailor before the mast, kicked and culled iiboul the world ami die In some fever hospital!' 'That's my fate, Is It? I'll change my llfo nnd I will change It nt once. I will never utter another oath, never drink another drop of Intoxicating liquor, never gamble, ' anil, as Cod Is my witness," said the admiral, solemnly, 'I have kept those three vows to this hour." "To II I dm t people the lute (iellelul (leorgo Crook, the Indian tighter, was a solemn mall, but he loved a practical joke," said Colonel "Jou" Her to a Chicago Tribune man. "Hack in the '70s, soon after he was made a brigadier general and stationed at Omaha, Coneral Crook organized a wildcat hunting party among a lot of us ami one moonlight night we started across tho prairie from Omaha for the fort. Tho plan was to Bleep at the foil and at daylight start for tho wildcats. After we were all fast asleep Oonernl Crook came down stairs without any shoes on and took from our lilies the bull cartridges, replacing them with blanks. On the way to the woods the general In dicated the order in which ho wished us to lire on the Hist wildcat In case we should treo thu beiiHt. We had hardly reached the woods before (lonerul Crook rose 111 his saddle and said: " 'lly thunder, boys, there's a cat tight In tho crotch of that fir! Drop off your wagon and bag hltu!' "We were on the ground In a twinkling and in less time thau It takes to tell it we were bl'i.ing away at a monstrous big wildcat .vhieh was hugging I In- limb of the tree. The cat never stirred us the siir eessivo shots were llred anil the hunters looked at one another In open-mouthed astonishment. Wo looked around for llon ernl Crook ami found him behind a stump, laughing away to beat the baud. At onco It Hashed on us that wo timl been hoaxed. The general had just straightened up and was beginning to explain the Joke when the driver, a hired man at tho fort, pulled from under a blanket in the wagon a double barreled shotgun loaded with buckshot. The general didn't see htm Hie, but he turned around Just In time to see tufis of I'M- and hair lly from the wildcat us It dropped from the tree. "Off went the general Into another lit of laughter. Hut this time tho laugh wiih on himself, for tho hired man had poured both charges of buckshot Into a beautifully Muffed wildcat, completely ruining It, and tho general subsequi nt ly paid the saloon keeper from whom he hud borrowed It about All thin ("rook said was: "'Hoys, It was worth lion apiece to see five good marksmen miss n wildcat In broad daylight nt thirty paces.' " Tho sudden death' of Historian John Flsko brings out stories of hl.i wonderful precocity ns a child. At 7 ho was reading Caesar, at 8 ho had read tho whole of Shakespeare and a good deal of Milton, liunynn nnd Popo. Ho began firoek at 0. IU II h hud read Clbbon, liobertson anil l'nsioii and must of Krolssart and at tho s.iiiii. age wrote ftom memory a chiono lognul tuM' from II C mini to A D 1C0. tilling a quail., blank book of sixty p igi s Ai 1.' he had r. u i must ,f the 'Collectanea Orucca Majorn bv the aid of a (Ireek Latin dictionary, ami tile next year hud read tho whole uf Virgil, Honor, Taellu, Sullust and Suetonius and much uf I. Ivy, Cicero, Ovid, Catullus and Juvenal. At the same time ho had gone Ihtniigli Kuclnl, plane ami spherical tiigonotui It i . survey lug ami navigation, and uiiulyin geometry and was well on Into tho dllTn. nilal ial culiis. At l.ri ho could read l'lato and Hero dotus at sight and was beginning (ieiuian Within the next year he was keeping, his diary In Spanish aud was leading Prone h Italian and Pot liigueio. He began llchiow at 17 and ti.ok up Sauskiii the next eai Meanwhile he was delving alo In scb lice getting his knowledge from books and not from the laboratory or the Held. He aveiaged twelve hours study dally twelve mouths in the year, befoio lie was ID ami afterward nearly Hfteeii hours dully, working with persistent energy, yet ho maintained the moat robust health and entered with enthusiasm Into out-of-duor life. Kduiuud Vance Cooke, a platform poet aud contributor to magazines, during a ir cent tour through Texas, was accosted b a drummer in the usual fashion of "What do you sell?" "Hot air," answered Mr. Cooke In n ver matter-of-fact way. "Hot air?" "Yes." "Ceo, I hope you don't sell any In this country. We want rain down hero." "Where do you reside?" "S:in Anton." "Well, I noli! a couple of lotH theie," "Who did you Hell?" the drummer In quired, In a characteristically ungrammat leal manner. "Franklin aud Shaw," mentioning the Hitmen of the president and secretary of tho Sun Antonio Lyceum. "Franklin and Shaw'' Don't know them You don't mean Lawyer Franklin, do you?" "Yes." "Well, purdnor, I can sell a ton of coal to a man that's looking for a load of Ice; I inn Hell men's shoes to a woman milliner, and once I sold a man a barrel of salt for confectioners' Htigur, but If you can sell hot air to a lawyer you can go to the head of tho class." t)ue of the most courteous and consid erate railroad men In the country Is M II Ingnlls, president of the lllg Knur. No matter what the circumstances he has never been known to give anyone n briisqtiu or Impolite answer. In this manner he Is a Chesterfield and In talking with his subordinates he issues orders as If his em ployes were doing him a favor in obeying hltt,. One time when he nas president of the Chesapeake & Ohio Mr. Ingnlls was going over the roud In his private ear, accompanied i,y H two sous, Albert and Ceorge. At a little station out In tho mountains of Virginia the train was side tracked nnd everything pointed to u long stop. Tho passengers were, as they al ways are, Impatient nt the delay and the telegraph operator was bombarded with questions. Now this operator, like the operatorH at most small stations, was the whole thing. He hail everything to do sell tickets, load baggage, dispatch trains in fact there was hardly a railroad departing that be did not have his hand In An I. of course be was not in the most amlatie frame of mind blame," said Mr you did not ap way. You ought mug man bus a has to be very little thing will I from the questions that had been asked him. Albert Ingnlls who, by tho way, Is now superintend! tit of the Indianapolis divi sion of the lllg Four became Impatient ami went to the tolcgwiph olllco to ascer tain the iiiiiHu of tho trouble ami learn how long the train was to wait. Some thing In his tone or dress did not pleas.' the operator and he huIiI things to tho sou i t the mud's president that scut hltu buck to his father's cur In a hurry. He ex plained that he could get no satisfaction from tho oiierutor. "Perhaps you were to Ingnlls, kindly. "Maybe proach him in the right to remember that the y. gleat deal to do and hi' particular and the least annoy him. Now I am suilslled that If had gone ho would have told me." "Suppose you try It, father," icmurkcd young lugallH, seating himself to await do vclnpmcnts. An hour or mom passed aud the picsi dent began to gel a little lestleHS himself ami concluded he would see If ho could gel any lufoi motion. So lie went up to tho (olograph oiiiie. The operator was "peck lug" away lor dear life. Ills faco wiih red and II was plain to lie soon that he wiih not In a very good humor Two or three train men were standing around nnd they hud been pcBlered with questions until they were iiboul ready to light. "Say. young man," said Mr. Ingnlls, n, Ills softest and IiiohI colli troilB Voice, "will you kindly te me how much longer w will be detained here''" Tho operator continued "peeking" awu and at last, after several minutes' wait turned mound and blurti d out. "How many more of you guys are com In In hero to devil mo with your il-- n questions? How tho h - do I know wloi, you are going lo Man ' Ho you suppos. I'm holding you here because I'm stud, mi you?" "Did you llml out how Bonn wo would Htnrt. fin hi i"" asked Albeit nB the presl dent ciime buck lo tho ear. "The young man was very busy, Albert." lespoiid.d his fniher, "ami 1 did not want to Inleirupt hltu. We Khali Imvu to wan until wo enn get nway." On one of the hottest duys reoently a prominent Wall street man walked Into Delmonleu'H with a friend, tolutes He Now Yotk iimo. Tho Inner wiih a mem her of tho HhiriwiilBt brigade. Taking bciiIh at n table, refreshments were iihinn to lieorderul when a waiter lemnrked - "Ceiillemen, I urn sorry lo lay I Cuunm hoivo you. Tho rule Is strictly onsen. .1 hero to servo nobody who Is without a coat." The gonllemen wero annoyed and ex pressed Iholr amazement tlml such a rule should be ciifnned unaliml two regular pat ions. ITnnlly the broker Kald to the wall oi" "You can serve me?" "Yew. sir," ho niiHwored, Well, bring me a Scotch high hull " After enjoying the boveruge, he coolly re moved his coal and handed II to his friend with the remark' "Put on inv coat and nnler what win nm at iin i pi'iisi. " Tb ' shirtwaist man did and g.d his drink