The limits of said town shall be as follows:
Beginning for the same at a point on the westerly line of the state
road leading from Salisbury through the town of Hebron at the center
of a ditch, which is the northerly line of the land of Isaac T. Wimbrow;
thence running in a westerly direction and with the center of said
ditch in a straight line a distance of 140 yards; thence running in
a southerly direction through the said Wimbrow land on a line parallel
with and 140 yards distant from the westerly side of the said state
road to a point 150 feet north of the northerly side of Lillian Street;
thence running in a westerly direction on a line parallel with said
Lillian Street a distance of 186 yards to a point in the aforesaid
Wimbrow land; thence running in a southerly direction between the
mill properties and the canning house property of Bounds and Phillips
to the northerly side of the county road known as the "Old Railroad"
at a stone; thence running by and with the northerly line of said
county road in an easterly direction and across the aforesaid state
road to the center of a private road which leads through the Denila
Wright land at a stone; thence in a northeasterly direction in a straight
line to the northwest corner of the colored church property on the
southerly side of Chestnut Street; thence running across said Chestnut
Street on a perpendicular line to the northerly side thereof; thence
running with said Chestnut Street in an easterly direction a distance
of 175 yards; thence running in a northerly direction in a straight
line to the point of intersection of the southerly side of Lillian
Street with the center of the private land of Ira Ellis; thence running
across said Lillian Street and continuing in the same direction for
a distance of 160 yards to a point in the land of Ambrose Phippin;
thence running through said Phippin land in a westerly direction to
the southeast corner of the property of S.T. Culver, which fronts
on the aforesaid state road; thence running by and with the easterly
line of said Culver's property, the property of G.W. Holliday and
others in a straight line to the center of the aforesaid ditch; thence
running by and with the center of said ditch and across the aforesaid
state road to the point of beginning.