1376 LAWS OF MARYLAND. [CH. 680
ABERDEEN.
Section 1. The citizens of Aberdeen and its vicinity, in
Harford County, be and they are hereby constituted a body
corporate, by the name of "The Commissioners of Aberdeen, "
and by that name may have perpetuate succession, sue and be
sued, and have and use a common seal.
2. The limits of said town shall be as follows: Beginning
at a set stone, Market 1, in the line of the Philadelphia, Wil-
mington and Baltimore Railroad on the easterly side thereof,
and opposite the northeast corner of the late John James' farm,
and in a line of said land extended, and running and bounding
on said line to the end thereof, and continuing the same course
(magnetically) with an averaged bearing north -fifty-nine and
one-half degrees west, forty-two hundred feet to a stone (to be
set) in the line of the land purchased by the Aberdeen Land
Company, thence north forty-five degrees west, eleven hundred
and forty-seven and one-half feet to a stone, to be set, at the
southwest corner of a lot of land belonging to...............
thence parallel with a line drawn north forty-five and three-
quarters degrees west, from a set stone in Bel Air Avenue, near
C. W. Baker's dwelling and at the junction of the road to
Paradise to a point intersecting the line binding the westerly
side of Mrs. Dr. Hay's land, extended or otherwise, thence
binding on said Mrs. Hay's line (magnetically) north fifteen
and one-half degrees east, to intersect the end of the line drawn
north forty-five and three-quarters degrees west, two thousand
and sixty feet from the stone in Bel Air Avenue, thence still
north fifteen and one-half degrees, east four hundred and fifty
feet, thence parallel with the north, forty-five and three-quar-
ters degrees west, two thousand and sixty feet line south forty-
five and three-quarters degrees east, until it intersects the line
drawn north twenty-seven degrees east from the aforesaid set
stone in Bel Air Avenue, thence binding thereon north twenty--
seven degrees east, to a set stone on the east side of the public
road at the northwest corner of C. W. Baker's farm, thence
binding on the line of said C. W. Baker's land, north fifty-five
degrees east, two thousand four hundred and fifty feet to a
set stone, thence about south fifty-nine and one-half degrees
east, to a point in the line of the Philadelphia, Wilmington
and Baltimore Railroad on the easterly side thereof, thence
binding on the lines of said railroad in a southwesterly direc-
tion six hundred and seventy-six feet to a stone (to be set),
thence south forty-eight and three-quarters degrees east (re-
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