1921-22 DEPARTMENT OF LANDS AND FORESTS 91 



seven links, but as the boundary line is not a property line at this place, we felt 

 the change was of no consequence. Again at the south branch of the La Grassie 

 River, the deflection monument, No. 34, being in Concession VI West Hawkes- 

 bury Township, at about chainage 221 on the third or Rigaud section, had been 

 on the north bank of the river where a considerable slide had recently taken 

 place, was found lying on the southerly bank of the river, we carried it up on 

 the north bank and set it on the forward line about L75 chains from the top of 

 the bank, and made it a deflection point, then we went back to monument No. 

 33, at chainage 206 + 78 and made that a deflection point also, with a very small 

 angle, this made no appreciable difference to the line except that there is one more 

 angle in it than Fletcher had. 



Two monuments Nos. 42 and 44 could not be found. We were not able 

 to find any person who had seen them that could find them again, nor could 

 we find them from chainage, but built new ones at places so located. 



Monument No. 2 

 Ontario-Quebec Boundary. 



At Pointe Fortune we found buildings on the line as shown on the enlarge- 

 ment on the plan. 



On the return we check chained with a 200 foot chain, by different men, 

 my assistant and I doing it, straightened up, moved and mounded up the stone 

 monuments and built new concrete monuments at points shown. The check 

 chainage showed a difference of 2.4 feet in 53,447 feet in the north or Rigaud 

 section and a slightly greater difference in the other two sections. Four stone 

 monuments, which had the tops broken off and were in cultivated fields, were not 

 touched, as they would be in the way for cultivation. 



At certain places as shown on the plan and field notes, new concrete monu- 

 ments were built, these being a two feet square shaft about four feet long and 

 being pyramided to eight inches at top in a height of two feet, as shown on de- 

 tail attached. Generally a two-foot hole was dug in the ground as deep as re- 



