This stereoview card from the Keystone View Company depicts a scene inside an old gristmill, featuring a miller seated among sacks of grain and milling equipment. The miller, wearing a hat and light-colored suit, is positioned near a hopper filled with grain kernels ready to be ground. Surrounding him are various sacks and baskets containing corn, wheat, oats, and buckwheat, reflecting the agricultural processing typical of a country gristmill. The back of the card provides a detailed explanation of the milling process. It describes how farmers bring their grain to the miller, who grinds it into meal using the hopper and millstones (not visible in the image). The miller adjusts the hopper to control the coarseness of the meal, which is collected in bags hung beneath the bins. This card serves as an educational and illustrative piece, capturing the essential activities and tools involved in grain milling during the early 20th century. The stereoview itself is an original, black and white photographic print mounted on cardboard, representing a single unit from the early 1900s. It offers a glimpse into rural industrial life and the relationship between farmers and millers in the United States during this period.