fflif €rntte BELLEFONTE, PA. The Largoit, Cbnnpmt and Best Paper I'UHLMHKU IN CBNTKB COUNTY. TilK t'KNTKK DEMOCRAT is pub lil*1 *v*rjr Thurl*y iiiortihig, at ttrllvfoiit*, tVtitrr county, I'll TKRMO— OMH In %*U t OM opt at option of pithliqhora. Paper* going out of tin* couuty must IH* paid for in mtmncp. Any poraon prucurltic ns ttirah salttrrlbsni will In* wnt a copy froo of < liarg*. Onr sttsnaiv* circulation inako* thi* paper an un> iiauiilly roliahla and protltaldr medium for auvartlalng We hara the most anipl* facllitiea for JOll WORK and are prepared to print all kind* of Hooks, Tntct*, Programmes, I'oatrra,(Jommen ial printing, Ac., in tli finest alylo and at the loweat |MH|II|C rates. RATE* OF Al>\ KRTISINQ. Tim*-, ill n. ;•I n. 31 n. 4 In. l A In. I'Hn i'ln. 1 Week, fl 00 tl •<> •*> 4 Oft ?. Oil fa no |l2 lai 2 Week*, { I 60 * ft", * • ft"! ft t*;il ia>; Ift Oft U Weeks, 2 itUj si 60 iai ft OIK 7 > l oo la t* 1 M .ath. J 601 4 in. ft un j7 00 HOO !.* ftOl 20 2 Month*. 4 00j ft mi n on lo on 12 •" 2ft '! 2* IN) 3 Mouths, •' '"> l H lai'li no |3 00 I". fto £' ouj :i6 INI ft Mouths, • ini 12 in h Oft 20 no 22 on X, no| tin oft I Y.-ar, 12 00116 00124 00,26 Oft 62 00 01 00 IOQ UP Adrertiarme'its are i-sk'nUN hjf tin- Inch in length of column, and any lews space is rated as a full Inch. Foreign advertisement* must he paid for In-fore in aertlou. e\rept ,n yearly conlrarts, when half-yearly payments in advance will he required. POLITIC at NOTICM, R < euta per line each insertiun Nothing Inserted hr less titan sft cents. Hi ovum Vorii'M in the editorial columns, 16 cent* pei line, each Insertion. |of At Noth is, in I*H al columns, 10 cents |Hr line. ANVOI'MCBUCHTS or Monie< IVP DiAtmliiorlwl free; hut all obituary notices will t charged Scents p-r line. SPECIAL None its 26 per cent, alsive regular rates. Tho Great Ejoctment Suit. The important ejectineut trial —im- portant because of tlie vn.-t interests involved in ita determination —of K. J. J'runer ami Jacob Hurley ngain.-t the heirs of tho late Dr. Daniel limit/., occupied the attention of our court I during all of la.-t week. Tlii-< suit was brought for the owner-hip ami lMKacttuou of two valuable tract- of coal and timber laud, including the ground upon which the present thriv ing town of Houtzdale stands, in Clearfield county, ami by a change of venue the cue was brought to this i county for trial. The trial began on ; Monday afternoon of la.-t week, nml | la-ted until after ten o'clock ofSatur- ; day night, when the jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendants, j The Hon. George A. Jenks, of Jeffer son county and Gen. J a-. A. Beaver np|xared for the plaintiff-, ami Hon. William A. Wallace, of Clearfield county, and Hon. C. T. Alexander for Ihe defendant-. Judge Orvis wa- up on the bench, assisted by Associate Judge- Diven and Franck. The case was ably aud closely tried by the the attorneys ou Ivoth sides, and dur iug the argument to the jury attracted a great many listeners to the court house. We have heard the charge of .Judge Orvis to the jury spoken of by lawyers, and others fully competent to express an opinion,as oue of the ablest and clearest expositions of the land Jaw of Pennsylvania ever delivered ' to a jury, and a- a matter of general interest to our readers we arc glad to give space to this able production. Jl read- a- follows : Kuh ANII J. PRI-NKR and jin n>. c.,.,rt ~r .Isma Hrsi.rr, I >•,.- ( 1 ~f Ontra m. i N" 206, A upHt ! HANNAH K. HRIMMN, et al. i TRM,T<- CIIAR-.B or TUB CO, RT. Gentlemen of' the Jury : This is an ac tion of ejectment brought by Edward J. Fruner and Jacob Hurley against Han nah K. Hrisbin and Geo. M. i'rishin, her husband, Eliza 11. Good and I). 11. Good, her husband, Clara McAtoer and 11. J. McAleer, her husband, all being heirs Ht law of Ir. Daniel IfouU, and a large number of other defendants named t,|on the record, to recover possession or six hundred and forty-four acres and sixteen perches and allowance of land, situate now, partly in Woodward town ship ami partly in the borough of llout* dale, Clearfield county. This action was brought originally in Clearfield county, aud by proper proceedings, upon the application of the plaintiffs, was removed to this county for trial. Fjectmcnt is the proper and only form of action, in Pennsylvania, by which one party can recover land belonging to him. which is in the actual possession of another, when that other claims title to the land. It is a general rule of law. applicable to ejectments, that the plaintiff must recover, if at all, on the strength of his own title, and not upon the weakness of the title of his adversary. If neither party shows a good title to the land in controversy the law will leave the de fendant in possession, where it found him. Whoever is in the peaceable pos sess ion of land, whether he has a good title to it or not, has tho right to remain undisturbed until the rightful owner cornea ami asks that he shall turn out. The plaintiffs claim this land under two warrants granted by the common wealth October 8, 1859, to Jacob Hurley and E. J. Pruner. respectively. The warrant to Jacob Hurley wa* for four hundred acre* of land, and a survey in pursuance of that warrant was made ' 'ctober 15, 1859, for three hundred and aixty-three acres and ninety six perches. The warrant to K. J. Pruner was for three hundred acres, upon which a sur vey was made October 19, 1859, for two hundred and eighty acres and eighty perches. These warrants were not lo cated nor the surveys made by the Coun ty surveyor of Clearfield county, but wcro made by Henry P. Trcziyulny, a surveyor living in this oounty. John li. Cuttle, who was then County survoy >r of Clonrfield county, Approved the survey* thus made by Trcziyulny, but endorsed upon the return that in hi* opinion the land win not vacant and tlice survey* interfered with survey* made in 179!. upon warrant* granted to ileorge Itickliain, Jacob It. Howell, Wil liam Shell', and others. These surveys were accepted by the Surveyor (leneral, and on the 29th of October, 1859, patent* were issued by the Commonwealth, to Jacob Hurley and K. .1. l'runer for their respective trnrts. <>n December .'lO, 1804. l'runer and Hurley conveyed these two tract* ot land to Samuel Smith, a citizen of New Jersey. The plaintiffs have given in evidence a deed dated March 29, 187-1, from Charles 11. Smith and Sadie V., hi* wife, Samuel 1.. Hurrough and Mary Ann, Ids wife, Jacob 11. Lippineott and Martha A., hi* wife, John 1.. Dough ty and Kttima 1,., hi* wife, Samuel C. Smith'and Agne* 11. Smith, hy their guardian, Ann W. Smith, children and heir* at law of Samuel Smith, late of llnddonHehl, New Jersey, deceased ; Ann W. Smith, hi* widow, and Ann W. Smith, Charles 11. Smith and Joseph 77, from E. J. Pruner to Jacob Hurley for the undivided one third part of thi* land. To what ever extent the plaintiff* have thus shown the title to these two warrants to have been conveyed to K. J. Pruner by the deed of March 29th, 1873, to that extent they are entitled to recover in thi* action, if the land upon which their warrant* were located, was vacant and unappropriated land in 1859 when these warrants were located upon it. If, however; thi* land had been previously appropriated by war rant and survey, it would not be vacant land upon which a new warrant eouM be legally located, and the plaintiff* would tuke no title whatever, under their warrants, surveys and patents. The defendants have given in evi dence warrants, dated May With, 1793, to George Hickliam. Jacob It. Howell, William Johnson and Philip Loa*t, re sjeclively, for 400 acre* each, and ur veys made in pursuance of said war rants on the 11th and 12th days of July, 179-1, and patents for each of the tract* to Richard Peters in 1796 and 1797. They have also given in evidence con veyances of thi* title l*nlii|ajfflflnj| and void, a* if the same thing by an individual. The original title to all lull* ,1 tylvania i, since the revo|A n ,lL, by law, HI the State or Conp, Rl Regulations have been e*tj.'i,j7JWl by statute, from time to tune, for the *a!e and hy the n the ground. So far we have lieen speaking of sin gle warrants and separate and Individ tial survey*. I'nder tlm law a* it stood in 179-3, no one individual could obtain a warrant for more than four hundred and forty acre#. If be desired to obtain a larger tiody of lnnd than thi*. he had to have different person* apply for and obtain different warrants, and subse quently transfer their right in them to him, he usually paying the purchase money to the t omrnonwealtii. Thi* practice wo* very common from 1784 to 1800. Where a number of warrants were applied for at the *ome time, and the purchase money for them paid by the same individual or company, and survey* made in pursuance of such war rant* u|Mn the same or *ucce**ive days, and these survey* located to as to ad join and calling for each other in sue oea*ion, and the survey* when made all returned at one time, they conatitute what i* called a > 'block of turreyt." The survey* constituting a block are not to he treated a* separate and individual survey* and each tract located inde pendent of the reat, by it* own individ ual linea or calls, or course* and dia tance* \ but such survey* are to he lo cated together aa a blnck, or one large tract. Survey* made nnd returned a* a block, mut be located upon the ground in a block ; and that, whether their line* can be found upon the ground or they were chamber survey*. If line* and corner* tnada for such a block of surveys can he found upon the ground, thi* fixe* the location of the block even to the disregard of the call for adjoin er* or natural monuments. The lines and corner* found upon any part of a block of survey*, belong* to each ami every tract of the block, a* much a* they do to the particular tract which they adjoin. If n younger block of survey* calls for an older block, and no line* or corner* can he found, made for the younger block, tin- proper mode of determining the location of nuch younger block i to locate the older, and then locate the younger adjoining it, Recording to it* calls. II more than one older tract or block is called for, and the younger : cannot bo located no a* to answer all of | itn cull*, that location muni he nelected i for the younger which will answer most ' of it* rails, and at the name lime best preserve the general configuration of the block. If, however, the linen and corners of the younger Idock can he found upon the ground,these must control the loca tion of the block, even if by no doing you have to entirely dinregard itn call* for older track* or block*. Whenever there i* a discrepancy between the linen run and marked upon the ground and the calls for older survey* or natural monuments, the latter must always give way and the line* and corners them selves must govern the location. Thi* rule i* equally applicable to individual -urvi-yn, and to block* of *urveyn, and ' it i* the duty of every jury in deter mining the location of surveys to re member, and apply it. The call* in a survey for waters, such a* spring*, pond* and stream*, must be considered by the jury in determining tin- location of the survey. The value ot thi* evidence, however, depend* ujion circumstance*. If the surveyor wan not upon the ground, but plotted the nur vey in hi* office, he could have little accurate knowledge of the location of waters, and hi* call for lliem would he hut slight evidence ot their existence. If, however, the line* of the survey were run upon the ground, and crossed stream* of considerable si/a-, we would expect nuch streams to be noted upon the return of survey with reasonable ac curacy. The course of stream* through the interior of tract*, are seldom found accurately laid down, for the reason that the surveyor did not meander them, and could not, therefore, accurately give their different course*. Where some of the lines of a survey were run ujion the ground, and other* not, waters purporting to cross the lines not run are seldom found to be a* accurate a* those crossing tbo line* which were run. Where line* were not run upon the ground, the surveyors sometime* placed imaginary streams without any knowledge, whether similar ones actual'- ly existed or not. F.ven where line* were actually run ujion the ground, crossing streams, and we find those stream* aeeur*t-lv designated upon the tract* on one *ide of the line, we fre quently find no streams at all upon the opposite side of the line ; although the stream which run* out of the one tract across the line, must necessarily run into the other. What are the fact* of thi* case, to which these principle* and rule* are ap plicahle? The defendant* have shown title to four tract* of land in the war nntee name* of tieorge Bickham, Jacob ft. Howell. William Johnston and I'bilip l/on other part* of the block. All the line* and corners mark ed ti|son the ground and returned.niut lie considered in ascertaining the prop er location of the block. If sufficient line* and corners can be found they de termine the location of the entire block without regard to iU calls for adjoincr* or for waters, if such call* conflict with the lines actually run and returned. The question is not what the deputy surveyor who located these warrants ought to have done, but what did he actually dot Of course he ought to have so located these warrant* a* not to interfere with older surveys already made; but did he do it? Wherever be run and returned the line* of these survey*, whether entirely u|>on vacant land, or partly upon vacant land -and I nrtly upon older surveys, there they must remain for ever. If they interfer ed with older surreys when they were located and returned, they must re main there, although the result would be that the owner of these warrant* would get no title to that |iortion of the land covered by the older surveys. All of the lines of this block of sur veys as returned into the Land < tffioe, are due north and south, and east and west, except one—the south eastern line of the Casper Haines, which runs N. 44 K., and M, 44" W. Twelve of the thirteen tracts are rectangular, Iwing .'!2O rod* long from east to west, and 2.30 wide from north to south. The other tract, the t'as|>er Haines, has five lines, having'the south eastern corner of a rectangle cut off by this diagonal line running N. 44° K. These thirteen tracts are arranged upon the official connec tion* as follows : Commencing upon the east the first tier contin* four tracta, in eluding the Casper Maine*; the second tier, which corners with firnt tier on the north, extends southward and contain* five tracts; the third tier, cornering wiih the second upon the south, con tains hut three tracts; the fourth or western tier contains but one, purport ing to lie directly west of the middle tract of the tier—making the blmsk from the southern line or the tieorge Bickham to the northern lina of the Henry Hhaffer or Jacob Cox 11IV0 rod* long from north to south; and from the western line to the Benjamin John ston to the eastern line of the ('-asper Haines or Joseph Matlock four miles or 1280 rods from east to west. On no part of the exterior lines of this block of surveys are older surveva nailed for, except along the diagonaf line of the Casper Haines, where the John Ander son anil other survey* of 17KI urn call ed for. If BO liii'-i anou the ground, and the surveyor* ii|ori both aidett admit that their loca tion in not a matter of diapute. Begin ning with the northern corner of the John Anderaon, which in a white oak, and a well known and indisputable corner of 17*1, and which in called for in the return of the <'anper Ilainea, the latter tract would fie well located along : the old line ol 'B4, running H. 44 W. from the Anderson white oak. The <,'aaper Maine* being thus located along the survey* of >l, the Joseph Matlock | would go directly north of the f 'aaper I Maine*, the Hohert Milt/heimer north of the Matlock, and the Jacob Cox north of the MilUheimer. Thi* would ! complete the eastern tier of tract* ae -1 cording to the offy-ial connection. The Henry Shaffer should then be located directly h*l c r the Cox, the Thilip I/O ant south of the Shaffer and went of the Milt/heimer, the William Johnaton -outh of the boast and went of the Mat lock, the Jacob It. Howell eonth of the Wrn. Johnnton and went of the Haines and the fieorge I'-irkhain nouth of the Howell. Thin would complete the sec ond tier of five trai l*. Then the Tbo*. I*. Wharton nhould he located directly went of the fieorge Kick ham, the Wil liam Shelf north of the Wharton and went of the Howell; the Jnrael Whelin north of the Sheff and wont of the \V illiam Johnnton. Thi* would com plete the third tier of three tract*. The remaining or thirteenth tract, the Kenjafrun Johnnton, nhould then be lo jated directly went of the William Sheff. | Thi* would locate the entire block, giving to each tract it* proper position and >|uantity of land, and preserving | the general configuration or nbape of the block. By thin location the call for the '* I nurveyn on the noutheant of the Cos per Maine* would be fully answer ed, and no part of the block would in terfere with older rurvey. By thi* lo cation the *outhern linn of the block would be north of the land in dispute, leaving it vacant and liable to b<- ap propriated by the two warrant* of the plaintiff*. We have naid that thin would be the proper, and in fact the only location which could be made of tin* block, if no line* for it were found run ami marked upon the ground; but if line* were run and marked tijion the ground ami returned for thin block of survey*, these line* must control the location of the block and not the call* of (bet;** per Maine* for the survey* of 17x4. The firt question ol fact concerning the location of thi* block which you must determine, i, were the line*' of thoe surrey* run and marked by the deputy surveyor hi 179.3. If they were, then they muit determine the location of the block. About this first question there teem* to bo no room for dispute. All of the surveyor* who have been call ed agree that they find upon the ground marked line* counting back to 1793 running in the right direction* and at the right distance* apart to tuit this block of survey*. We do not mean to *ay that all of the lines of every tract have been found ; but that a sufficient number of line# have been found and , identified, to fix the general location of the block. If you find thi* to be a fact, you must reorl to these line* and the corner* found upon theru to determine where thi* block was located in 179.3. The defendant* contend that thi* block i* located upon the ground *o far southward, a* to interfere with the Philips nmyi/rf Ma) end June, n 11 By tin* location the tieorge Kirkham and Jacob K. Howell tract* which they own cover the land in dispute. In the other hand, the plaintiff* contend that the block i* located two tract*, or 4AO rod*, further north, and that by their location the block doe* not interfere with the senior survey* of 179.3, and that the land in dispute i south of the southern line of this block. Thi* i* the main oueMion in thi* case, and is a que* tmn of fact for you to determine under all of the evidence bearing upon it. The first surveyor who was upon thi* block of survey* after it was located and whose testimony is given in this •Ms® i* Henry t\ Trriiyulny. He testi fie* that he w* upon thi* block of aur veya, a* early a* 1822. What line* he then run and what corner* he found be doe* not give in detail. The next aur veyor. whose testimony i* given in this ease is Mavid Ferguson. He testifies that he run the line* of this block of survey* atiout thirty five year* before hi* dejKwition w* taken in 1864 : that would take it hack to 1829. He testi fies that he spent shout a week in try ing to locate these thirteen tract*, from the call of the Casper Haines for the Anderaon white oak. but that he could find no lines or corners corresponding to this location : that he did find the block well located by line* and corner* on the ground two tracts further south and interfering very considerably with the Philip's surreys He names the living corners which he found corre sjsonding with the return* of surveys, and which were a large majority of all the corner* upon the block. If the testimony of this witness i* believed, then fifty year* ago, most of the line* and corners returned for this block of surveys, were found by him upon the ground, where the defendant* claim the block to be located. It is conten der! by the plaintiff* that the testimony of this witness is not to be credited, Ire cause at the time hi* de|m*ition was taken, he was very old and infirm, so much so, that he had to attest the dep osition with a mark instead of writing his name, and that no counsel was pre* ent representing the plaintiff to cross exsmine. And further that this witness testifies to finding original lines, where surveyor* now can find none and that he failed to find a line where their aur veyoti testify a line of 179.4 now i*. The credibility of Havid Furguson, as of all other witnesses is for the jury to determine. If the plaintiff* have satis fied you that he is unworthy of belief then yoti should disregard his testi mony. Bui the fact that he testifies to having found lines and corners, which surveyors cannot find fifty year* after wards is hardly a circumstance militat ing against the credit of hi* testimony, for corner* and even whole line* mig&t disappear In a half a century. Thla la ahown by the fact that while many corner* of this block of survey* are hown to have been standing and liv>nx within the ln*t thirty year*, but thr<-<> or four of them, even if that many, are living now, I he next surveyor in order, wlio w..a upon this block of surveys, wo* Johii K. ' uttle who wax there tir*l in IH|: and again in IH.VJ when he run out I nearly the entire block. In the nam* i year .fohn T. Hoover run thin block of j *urvey* for Morgan, Itawle and Peter* who owned them. The deprnition of ■ 'this witne** taken u|ori a former trial I wa* read in evidence to you. Acoorap*- | living thi* deposition i* a draft made by Mr. Hoover, abowing hi* location of thi* block of aurvey*. You will notice by the deposition, a* well a* by the draft attached, that Hoover did not run the eastern line of the second tier of tract* a* far south a* surveyor* since have done. He ran only a* far south a* the angle in the line of the Thoina* Kdmondson, one of the Phil ips He there found a maple corner of 1793 and apparently took it lor the southeastern corner of the fieorge I'ickham where a maple i* call ! en the ground. Recently several other surveyors have been there and run sotne of the lines of this block of surveys. They have each testified to you what they found. Al though, as was to l>e expected, the sur veyor* who have la-en there more re cently found less of the original work, than they did who were there in an earlier day. It is contended by the defendants that the testimony of all these wit nesses, taken together, show* conclus ively that the line* and corner* run and established in 1793 and returned to the Land < iffice, for thi* block of surveys, are the same as those found upon the ground, and that they fix the location of this block of surveys where the defendants claim it to he. The plaintiffs have read to you the notes of the testimony given by 11. I'. Trcsiyulny ujion the trial of this cause at Pittsburg. They have also called as witnesses Thoma* W. Moote, who sur veyed these land* in lKi4, and Samuel K. MeCloskey, who surveyed there in IM>3 and again in I*7*. Also James < aldwell, who examined these surveys in_ company wuth Mr. MoCloskey in I v 7K. All these surveyors called by the plaintiff*, while tuey admit that there are lines of 1793uj>on the ground which suit the defendants' location, oontend that these southern line* were aban doned by the surveyor who located these warrants, and that he located thi* block of survey* two tier* of tracts or 4Gi roils north of where the defend ants claim it to be. They testify to having found marks of 1793 north of defendant* location—that they find one tree counting to 1793 some distance north of the Anderson white oak, which would lie about th# middle nf the Jos. Matlock tract. a the plaintiff* locate it. but would be along the eastern line of the Jacob tox according to the defend ants location. Thi, you will ol>servc. is not north of the defendants' location, and even should you believe it wa made for a line for this block of surveys, it would answer for cither lo cation. They also testify to finding marks north of what is known as the hemlock sapling, within some fifty or sixty roils from it, two tree*, living, which counted to 1793, and a third one, dead, which could not be counted. They alao testi fy to having found the western line* of the Israel Whelm and William Sheff, and the division line between these two tract* according to the plaintiffs' loca tion, which would t>e north of any tract* of the block according to the defend ants' location. The defendants' survey or# contend that these lines are not lines of 1793, but of 1794, and were run there for tiie Thoma* Msston and other tracts located there in 1794. The truth of these allegation* you must deter mine. If these lines are line* of 1793 they should be considered by you in determining the proper location of Una block of surveys. If. however, they are linos of 1794 they are not evidence bear ing upon the location of these surveys in 1793, and should not be considered by you at all. None of the plaintiffs surveyors, al though the first was there as early as IVJ2, have testified to the finding of any original corners for this block of surveys north of defendants' location. While they claim to have found lines and part of lines, no one of them claims ever to have found a corner or a pointer, or witness to a corner, counting lark to the date of these surveys. This is an important fact which you should con sider in determining whether this block of surreys is located as far north as they claim it to be. Much has been said concerning the waters called for, u|on this block of surveys. f you take the separate offi cial draft of the Jacob K. Howell, jrnu will find a stream represented as flowing eastward from it into the Casper Ifaine*. if you take Ibe separate official of the Joseph Msllock you will find a stream represented as crossing it* southern