Page:Traveler from Altruria, Howells, 1894.djvu/186

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180
A TRAVELER FROM ALTRURIA.

mortgage it close up, you have all your capital free, and you can keep turning it over. That's what you ought to do, Mrs. Camp. But what was the slavery that Captain Camp said was not abolished yet?"

The invalid looked at her a moment without replying, and just then the door of the kitchen opened, and young Camp came in, and began to gather some food from the table on a plate.

"Why don't you bring him to the table, Reub?" his sister called to him.

"Oh, he says he'd rather not come in, as long as we have company, He says he isn't dressed for dinner; left his spike-tail in the city."

The young man laughed and his sister with him.