Page:The Green Bag (1889–1914), Volume 12.pdf/104

 Lincoln (Maine) Bar. Not with Longfellow hanging his crane. Illustrative of life's domestic train : Nor yet with fronds of the old tree top, But the hanging of an acorn drop. Or if preferred, you soon shall see Memorial hidings in a junior tree:

pure spring water of the old town; also, of its rural environments. The labors of the day sug gested recreation and exercise, by rambling in the woods, and extensive walks. Lured by the long bridge to quaff refreshing sea airs across the Sheepscot tides, and to revel in the scenic beau-

JOHN A. I'ETKRS.

And that none shall ever doubt or croak It's a scion true of the "Penobscot Oak"! The story we will give in a summary of this judicial finding. In his service on the bench of Lincoln bar, at Wiscasset, his honor became enamored of the

ties of landscape and forest attractions of " Folly Island," the site of the ancient military defenses of Wiscasset Harbor and the heart of Maine as well, the island still pitted with earthworks frowning over the narrows, and through the port holes of the gun deck of a wooden castle, known as