Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 39 Part 2.djvu/619

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1786 PROCLAMATIONS, 1916. th{Q1;§i°**P“°¤·°°¤· and one rod distant from said Otter Creek Road, to the southern ' line of said Kane Memorial Path; thence at right angles easterly to the center of said Otter Creek Road; thence nort erly, by said Otter Creek Road, to an iron bolt at the junction of line of land of Morrell and the eastern line of said Road; thence south thirt degrees thirty minutes east, but everywhere following said land of Morrell two hundred and iifti feet, more or less, to an iron pipe driven in the ground· thence sou eiglht degrees ten minutes east, but every- where following the sout erlry line of said land of Morrell and land of Dorr two thousand Eve hundred and thirty-four and four-tenths feet, passing through an iron pipe driven in the ground marking the southwest corner o land of George B. Dorr, to a stake driven in the ound; thence north eiglgty-one degrees twenty minutes east, folgwing said land of said rr, one hundred and fifty-six and seventy- five one-hundredths feet to a stake driven in the (ground; thence north seventy-three degrees east, still following said land of Dorr, two hundred and eighty-seven and twenty-six one-hundredths feet to a stake driven in the ground; thence north nine degrees fift —five minutes east, still following said land of Dorr, seven hundredv and fort -four and ninety-seven one-hundredths feet to a stake driven in the ground; thence north fifteen degrees thirty minutes east, still followingrsaid land of Dorr, three hundred and twenty-five and five one-hun edths feet to Ja stake driven in the ground; thence `north fift —five minutes east, still following said land of Dorr, two hundred and, fourteen and ninety-nine one- undredths feet to the southern line of the Quarry Road, so-called; thence south sixty-five degrees twenty-three minutes east one hundred and ninetg-nine and ninety- eight one-hundredths feet to a stake driven in the ground; thence south twenty-one degrees twenty minutes west, followin land of said Dorr, four hundred and ninety-five feet to a stake dgriven in the ground; thence south eighty-seven degrees east, followin said land of Dorr, three hundred and sixty and eighty-five one-hundredths feet to a stone set in the ground marking the northwest corner of land of Bowler; thence south nineteen degrees fifteen minutes west, eight hundred and sixty-nine and eighty-eight one—hundredths feet to a stone set in the ground in the line between land of Bingham Estate and said Bowler; thence continuing same course, to wit, south nineteen degrees fifteen minutes west one hundred and eighty-one and seventeen one-hundredths feet to a pine tree marked or a corner; thence south seven degrees east, but everywhere following the western line of said Bingham land three hundred and eighty-seven and forty-two one·hund.redths feet, more or less, to the most northerly corner of that certain lot described as conveyed in the deed from Daniel W. Brewer to the Trustees of the Bm ham Estate, dated October 23 1882, and recorded in the Hancock Count Maine Registry of Deeds in Book 185, Pa e 169; thence in a generaifsouthwesterly direction, but everywhere following the northwesterly line of said lot so described as conve ed in said deed from Brewer to Trustees of the Bingham Estate, to the northerly line of land formerly of Charles T. How, later of Brunnow; thence south eighty-three degrees east to a stake and stones marking the northwest corner of land of Brunnow, said stake and stones being six hundred and seventy-four feet north eighty-three degrees west from the Schooner Head Road; thence south thirty-three degrees thirty minutes west one hundred and two feet to a poplar tree; thence south sixty-eight degrees west one hundred and nineteen feet to a stake and stones; thence south seven degrees east three hundred and twenty-five feet to a stake and stones marking the southwest corner of said land of Brunnow; thence north eighty degrees forty-five minutes east, following the southern line of said land of Brunnow, eight hundred and sixty feet, more or less,