jonathandavis,
Is there a tag on the back of pedestal that says "Honey" ? This looks like a Honey Bear with solid doors. This would have a UL listed tag on back of pedestal with "Honey" at top. Just need to know if air comes up through base, and measurments of stove box. Most were sold with glass and brass doors, so yours looks strange without the fancy doors.
I would need a picture of the stove with the doors open. Does it have a tab that sticks up on the left side behind the air adjustment knob? This should be welded to a flapper door for air to come up through the pedestal. When the door is opened a crack, this allows the air intake flapper to open fully rushing air up the stack to avoid smoke coming in the door. Also is the right side knob a dummy for looks? If so, you have a Goldilocks that I also have a manual for. If so, it's a Mobile Home or Manufactured housing stove that draws air up through the floor. If installing one of these mfg. housing stoves in a conventional home or basement, you must raise the stove base off the floor one inch to allow combustion air into the pedestal and up into the firebox. Fisher sold one inch round balls to put under the corners where you drill 1/2 holes to keep them there. By 1982 they had cast doors with the fir trees, available brass plated or plain. Yours looks to be a fore runner of the finished listed product. It is not as old as the first generation Fishers with angle iron legs up the sides and large block letters at the top of the doors. (up to 1980) but older than the listed ones known in Dec. 82. Looks like it has rolled corners instead of welded 90* corners, so it's not that old.
If this has the regular draft caps with holes in the door, you better sell it to me pronto. They draw lightning..... They also made Honey and Goldie in a larger 8 inch flue model, and was available with a brass and glass door. There was also a coal burning kit for all these stoves, but the salesmen didn't push them admitting they didn't work well, and were a pain to shovel out without an ash pan. The "Coal Bear" is something else out there that pictures of the inside would rule out.
I should also ask if this stove has a series of plates on the back with about a half inch air space between them?