Transcribe Page

Indian Lives and Anecdotes ca. 1886 - 1941 part 8 (ms158_b3f003_008.07.pdf)

[Top half of the page not struck through:]

two years ago Sebattis was sick at Kineo but was brought home and in the fall went off guiding. He lost his winter's work and a good part of the spring but began to feel better and mingled some with his old companions. One day he was met half drunk supported on either side by a comrade in the same state of joviality. Joe said he had a great coat with a big bottle in the breast pocket and kept putting his hands now in one pocket now in the other jingling the money in them. He was going into the woods and in spite of all entreaties he went. About two weeks after he was brought back and he never went out of the house again.

[Bottom half of the page struck through with one penciled diagonal:]

Joe Mitchell has had a varied life but has always remained a jolly rascal. In his youth he used to go to sea a great deal. At one time he was accused of firing a school house on Isle au Haut, and with two white men was locked up in Ellsworth Jail - when the keeper came to feed him Mitchell threw him into

Description: Pages from Fannie Hardy Eckstorm's notebook 10 (X)

Link to document in Digital Maine

Language: English

Date: ca. 1886 - 1941

Image 7 of 11