Got an email from my hunting buddy that the pigs were back at my place and so we camped out in different stands. He was watching a feeder and I was watching one of the trails that leads to the feeder. After two hours, we were hearing pig noises, but unbeknownst to one another, hearing them from different directions. My field of view was pretty narrow, maybe only 20 yards at the widest point and 40 yards deep. I was hearing noises off to my right and inside the woods. So as I was waiting for something to pop out from the right side and close to the stand, I heard noise further out in front of me and there were five hogs out in the open and all but one were either moving around or partially obscured. I shot the one stationary hog and the rest disappeared nearly instantly given they only had to move a few feet to be gone from my field of view. However, not all the hogs disappeared from the area. I was still hearing noises to my right, grunts and such and still waiting for something to pop out from my right. After a half hour, I again heard noise out in front of me and spied another hog coming n from the left side, hackles raised, kind of doing a diagonal hopping toward the downed pig sort of like cats do when attacking their toys. Weird. I lined up my shot and CLINK! In my surprise, Ihad not taken off the safety. Recocked the hammer and as the new hog was inspecting the downed hog, dropped him in place as well At about 25-30 yards, the Hornady Leverevolution .45-70 325 gr. ammo performed well out of my Marlin 1895 being sighted through a Pulsar N550 digisight. Both hogs were hit just below the right ear with the rounds transiting diagonally through the brain case and exiting out of the next on the opposite side. The small hog turned out to be a young boar weighting 140 lbs and the large hog was also a young boar weighing 205 lbs. After this second shot, hog noises in the woods remained for a short while, but no other hogs presented themselves.