&.«■ ia $ BotleP t?oui]tij'o Court Hou^e. Butler's beautiful Court House, dis cernible from any part of the town, - is comparatively a new building. The old structure was totally destroyed by fire in 1883 and for two and a half years Wit hers poo n Institute was ; utilized as a Court House. The present edifice cost $150,000 and i is an ornament to the county, as well as a monument to the enterprise and thrift of the inhabitants. Work was begun on the present building in the spring of 1886, and completed Septem ber, 1886. The bnilding has a frontage ; of 80 feet, 90 feet wide at the back, 120 feet deep, and 165 feet high. It is built of Butler county stone, with Berea stone trimmings. The Register and Recorder, Sheriff, Clerk of Courts, Treasurer, Prothono tary and County Commissioners, alt 1 have their offices on the first floor, i each department comprising a public and private office and a fireproof vault, with a general vault in the hall for val uable papers. On the second floor are the jury and witness rooms, arbitration and ladies' room, and a commodious court room. The County Superintendent and the en gineer have offices on the floor above. The tower surmounting the building is the finest point of observation, to view the town. It contains a large clock and a bell which strikes the hour of day as time recedes and man knows it no more. Facing the Court House is a plot of ground called the Diamond, which is a part of the orignal five acres set aside by the county for this purpose. Owing to the large amount of business trans acted in oil leases, etc., the county officers are kept very busy and court week always bringe a large concourse of people to town. The enabling act, passed by the Leg islature March 12, 1800, authorized the erection of a county from a portion of Allegheny county, which then com prised all the territory lying north east of the Ohio and Allegheny rivers The act under which the county was organised for judicial purposes was not passed until April 2, 1803. It then became a part oi the Sixth Judi cial district, which included Beaver, Crawford, Mercer and Erie. The present site was selected as a county seat, a rude log court house was erected, which served the purpose until 1807, when a stone structure was erected, of which the people were very proud. In 1855 a larger house was built at a cost of $40,000. The first court In Butler county wrs held in a log cabin, void of windows, doors or fbrniture, on the Diamond, near where the office of Clarence Walker is now located. A few chairs and benches were supplied by the pop ulace, and a carpenter's bench served as a desk for the jndge and attorneys. This was quite a notable event, and was attended by all the great lights of the Pittsburg Bar. The Circuit' Court, which existed until 1833, was entirely separate from the Court of Common Pleas. The first case was entered in this court Septem ber 17, 1804, bnt was not tried until September, 1806. The first grand and traverse jurors were called at this term. The first business transacted in the Orphans' Court was on May 14, 1804. Jesse Moore, Esq., the first President Jadge, was appointed in 1804. His soooessors were : Samuel B. Roberts, in 1818; William Wilkison, in 1821; Charles Shaler, in 1824; John Bredin, 1831. In 1861 Daniel Agnew was ap pointed to a vacancy, and succeeded himself by election for two terms. In 1863 he was elected a Judge of the Supreme Court. Judge McGuffen was appointed to succeed him as President Judge, and was elected in 1864 In 1874 Charles McCandless was appointed Assistant Law Judge. In the fall of that year E. McJunkin and James Bredin were elected; the former as President Judge and the latter as asso ciate, of the Seventeenth Judicial Dis trict, composed of Butler and Law rence counties. In 1884, Aaron L. Hazen and John McMicbael, both of Lawrence county, were elected to the bench, and the lot of President Judge fell to Judge Hazen. EARLY 11HMBERS OF THE BAR Gen. Ayres, who came West with Washington's army in 1704, in the capacity of a tailor, read law with Judge Breckenrldge in Pittsburg and came to Butler in 1804 as Prothono tory. John Gilmore, born in Bradford county, educated at Washington, I'a., read law with the afterwards exiled David Bradford, came to Butler in 1803, to the Legislature and made Speaker of the House. He was after wards a member of Congress and State Treasurer. He died in 1846. John Purviance was one of the first attorneys in the county, and was ad mitted to the first court held in Butler. He served as a Golonel in the war of 1812. He was for a long time attorney for the Rapp Society at Harmony. John Bred in, for twenty years I'resi dent Judge, was among the ablest members of this Bar. He was born in Donegal county, Ireland, in 1794, and died in 1867. James Thompson, a native of Butler county, was at one time a printer's devil, and became a leader in his pro fession and in politics. He went to Erie, was sent to the Legislature, was made Speaker of the House, was elect ed to Congress, and finally became Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the State. S'lon after the expiration of his term on the Bench, while making an argument before the Court, he sank to the floor exhausted and never re covered. Samuel Purviance, George W. Smith, Charles C. Sullivan, SamuelA.Gilmore, practicing in the thirties, were all men of mark and ability. John Graham, who died Just before the war, was among the ablest, most reliable and best equipped members in his day, while John -Nelson Purviance and Edward Bracken, both of whom died a number of years ago, ranked high in their profession. It has been asserted that the Butler County Bar, was, and has been the strongest in- t\e State, in point of the numerous intellectual giants who nave, and are practicing here. Judges, senators, congressmen, legis lators, soldiers and politicians, who have gained national renown and fame, have graduated by the scores from Butler county's law offices, and have assisted in the mighty work of up building and strengthening this grand republic. Nor is there any diminution in the members who swell the ranks of the profession here. Tho growing west has been an exten sive field for Butler county boys, who battled with adversity, and now hold responsible positions and offices and enjoy lucrative practices, which the prowded condition of the bar of their native county would not permit. AARON L. HAZEN. I A History of the President Judge of L&w --1 rence and Butler Counties. His honor, Judge Aaron Lyle Hazen. jis a descendant of the sturdy ! pioneers who quitted merry England and made the American wilderness I a garden. It is believed that Edward Hazen, the progenitor of the family, I emigrated from New Castle on the !< Tyne, England, and settled at Rowley Mass., in tho seventeenth century. I The town records give evidence that in 1649 he was a selectman, judge and an extensive property owner and a respected citizen, which is proven by j the fact that he was permitted to have j seven gates in the public park, tho largest number permitted by law. Nathaniel Hazen, a descendant of tho above and great grandfather of the judge, was born March 17, 1745, at Lyme, Conn. He married Mary Bell, Nov. 27, 1768, and moved to the beau tiful Wyoming Valley in Penn sylvania. The horrible massacre, by the In dians and English, of the white settlers, in 1778, forced those remaining to flee with their families to New Jersey. Hazen, though a Continental soldier, happened to be at home and rescued his family from a cruel fate. When peace was restored and England recognized the rights of the Colonist, he with his family, moved to Fort Pitt, now Pittsburg. Finding the place anything but a paradise, he selected a home on Peters Creek in Washington county, now traversed by the B. & O. Railway. The whisky insurrection disturbed the peace of the Bottlers and many went further west to seek a home. Hazon purchased a tract of 400 acres of land from the government in 1792 on Connoquenessing creek, in Beaver county, long known aa"Hazen's Delight." Here he erected his log cabin and brought his family. His wife died Dec. 20, 1834 and the old sol dier and pioneer was laid to rest Nov. 3, 1836. Nathan, born May 1, 1786, in Wash ington county, was the tenth of thir teen children, and the grandfather of the subject of our sketch. He married Levina Kirkendal May 28, 1805, who j died Aug. 6, 1816. Her husband out | lived her 20 years. Henry, the ! eldest of 12 children, of this union, first Baw light, March 4,1806, in Beaver ' county. He learned the carpenter's trade and taught school in winter. He deserted his trade and settled on a farm in Shenango township after mar rying Sarah Warnock (daughter of James Warnock, Esq , a native of J County Down, Ireland, and Mary Gas ton,a native of Washington county, Pa March 21, 1833. Five boys were born to them, of whom only two are alive; Eli W. and Judge Ilazen. Ilenry Hazen died Dec. 28, 1841, his wife died April 25, 1885. Judge Hazen was born Feb. 19, 1537, being the second eldest of five children. Shenango 1 township, in which he was born, was > then in Beaver county, buk wai in ado a part of Lawrence county, March 12: 1549. Lawrence county was formed of about equal parts of Beaver and Mer-1 cer counties by act of assembly of j March 12, 1849. It was at the district schools and Beaver Academy that the Jndge learned the golden rule. He graduated from the latter place in 195S and entered Jefferson College, at Can-1 onsburg, Pa., from which place he graduated in 1 SGI. The last year at school was devoted to the study of law. During vacation of that year tort Sumpter was fired on and Judge Hazen was among the first to enlist, the 19th of April, IS6I, in the Twelfth Infantry Vol. When his enlistment expired he was refused admission to the ranks, on account of a serious deafness which had overtaken him He was entered as paymaster's clerk and served in the pay district of Cum berland; however, the last year of the war he was appointed receiving and paying teller in the U. S. department at Louisville, Ky. In September, 1865, he was admitted to the bar in Law rence county and gained practice and favor. In 1870 and 1573 he was elected two terms|as District Attorney, which j office he filled with so much credit ! that he was nominated on the Repub lican ticket of the .-eventeenth Judicial > District as candidate for Judge, to which office he was duly elected, al though his Republican consort of But ler county was defeated and Judge John McMichael, a Democrat of Law rence county, gained the goal. Judge Hazen moved to Butler j county, where he now occupies a beau tiful mansion on North Main street. Amelia J., daughter of Wm. Watson, of New Castle, and Judge Hazenwere mar ried in 1885. Three children were born to them, one daughter and two sons, but he who giveth and taketh, gather ed their offsprings unto him and left the kindly couple childless in advanc ing years. % -aS* I |S§j| ; , r SHERIFF WM. M. BROWN. A. Sturdy Yeoman Who Is a Terror to Evil. Doers la Butler County. The subject of our sketch is a sturdy j farmer, selected by the people of But- I ler county to act in the capacity of : Sheriff from 1890 till 1893. Mr. Brown is a descendant of the old j pioneer who settled at Brownsdale, after having served with distinction in the war of 1812. His son Joseph married Miss Mary Marshall, whose! family is one of tho most illustrious in the State, being a daughter of James and Jane Marshall, of this county. Wm. M. Brown, the Sheriff, was born June 12, 1832, in Forward town ship, and served hi:} apprenticeship on the farm at home, attending the dis trict schools daring the winters. Ar riving at maturity he took an active interest in his surroundings and served as Justice of the Peace four years, and 16 years as School Director in the township. 'Squire Brown was elected to the office of Sheriff on the Republican ticket, and has been a credit to the party since his acceptance of the trust. His home life is a peaceful one, where, surrounded by his wife and seven children, his house overlooks the most beautiful scenery in Butler county. He is a member of the U. P. Church, in which he takes an active intorest. ■A "*l% . - ,*) v M ; \ BUTLER COUNT?B PROTHONOTARY. A Highly Honored Gentleman, Who Serves His Second Term It ;office. John W. Brown, the ! Prothonotary, is the only officer in the Court House serving a second term. Though a . Democrat in politics, he is so popular with the masses that he was the only candidate on the Democratic ticket i electad. Harrisville, this county, is his native [ vil'age, where ho was born November 9, 1H43. Like a majority of the coun try boys he had to content himself with a common school education, which was not of the best at that time. He was a member of the Sixth Penn , sylvania Heavy Artillery during the [ war, and wai mustered out of service I in 1865. Having acquired the trade of , tanner and currier in Beaver Falls, > Pa., he followed this vocation until [ 1878. He acted as clerk in the Pro i thonotary's office three years, and was ( elected Justice of the Peace of Butler r borough in 18s5. In 1887 he was nom i inated ane the F ! scene on the shores of Lako Michigan in 7 ! Jackson park. Even tho graphic art 1 ' fails, and pictures aro but suggestion? I of the magnitude and magnificence then u . I found. It out Chicagos Chicago—out ' superlatives the superlative. I i lam not going to attempt to describe e it, but I will hint at it. Imagine a y square mile or more of ground whicl ' less than two years ago was for the most part a swamp. Chicago passes over il i the wand of her magic energy, and now ! you behold a dozen palaces rearing theii j roofs toward the sky. The swamp it s converted into a park. Lagoons atnl wooded islands embellish tho landscaiie. y Hundreds of miles "of sewers, watei mains, gas pities, electric conduits an ' ! nut in—it is like creating a city in a II IL. night. A police forco with a hundred patrol j men is organized, a fire department with ! a half dozen fully equipped engine hous s provided. Ten thousand met work on gT ,i Is and buildings. Onl\ in. «.f the- ■ k : ' - lt palao.- is nearly com pleted. and it is a character! .-tic of tssen tially inodt ru. alert, adaptable Cliicag. that t'..:- one is a silent tribute to this woman'- . M a era—the Woman's build ing. Other palaces are half done, one quarter done or just begun. The flooi of one is so vast that a dozen United Stat-s Capitols could be set down upon it—"larger," says Senator Peffer, "thac the farm 1 used to till ia Indiana."' In another is a steel arch larger than any other erection of a similar kind ir tho world. Crowning still another is tc be a dome greater and grander tnan the dome of the Capitol or St. Peter's. One Ls to have a doorway of solid IH-caral gold and r. c. i.ipaxiion door of solid silver. At »v. ry step new wonders un fold till the visitor, stopping to kick , some mud off his lxH>t> and assure him ' self he is not in fairyland, asks if these stupendous plans can be carried out, il I the giant buildings can ever be finished ' in time for the opening day. In the Woman's building a map of the ' grout;.Ls is hung upon the wall. A big, j strong man. muffled in a greatcoat, | stands before it, pointer in hand, ex ' plaining to the visitors the landscape ' and architectural designs. He is Chief Constructor Burnham, and in thLs forest of palaces, this cluster of superlatives upon which 10,000 men aro working, there does not appear to be a stone, s brick, a truss, a spike, a timber which ho has not before liitu in his mind's eye. Instinctively the audience conclude# and whispers one to another, "There ia 1 a Chicago man; see how he grasps everything; he is master of the situa | tion.'' And when, a moment later, Mr. Bnniliaiu modestly says all these build ! iugs will be ready for dedication next October an not the magnitude, noi the matchless speed with which work is driven, nor the gold door, uor the super lative steel arch and gilded dome—big things we exjiect of Chicago. The best is the art and the beauty of every detail, ' every effect. Not only is Chicago build ing on a va«t scale, but she is building with an artistic sense, in form and color, with dignity, with impressiveness, with every structure and every integral part thereof perfectly adaptable to the func tion required of it. Art is old and Chi cago is young; but Chicago was wise enough to trust not to herself, but to cull her architects from all parts of America and her artists from all the schools in the world. If Jack on park in midwinter, with buildings in embryo and mud, with the lagoons mere morasses, with no color yet applied and all decorative effects still lacking, with a hundred minor buildings not begun and an air of new ness and confusion about everything that i^—if tho World's fair of February, 1893, can capture the imaginations of skeptical visitors, what will the World's fair of l!r03 do, when tho palaces shine ; with color, with statues, with flags and ornamentation; when innumerable less i er structure picturesquely till out the i background, when a great pier and ca sino adorn the water's edge and steamers and pleasure boats fill the bay, when the ! banks of the lagoons present a mass of t green in vines and flowers and their : waters teem with gondolas, and when mankind gathers there to see what good, useful and beautiful things man hath , wrought in this world's workshop? My hope is that you and I and all of i us will be there to see. Walter Wki.i.«an. A Pell Sketch of Governor Jiorthen. W. J. Northen, present governor of Georgia, is ono of the most widely known and popular men in the south. He is a farmer by occupation, and takes great ! pride in rearing line cattle and raising fine crops. For some years he contested i with tho late Hon. Primus Jones the I honor of "getting the first bale of cotton !to market." Ho is in the prime of life, . hale, vigorous and full of ideas. His ' pet hobby i'l the future of the new j south, and lio believes in encouraging ; immigration. - ■——— ROMAN ARCHITECTURE. Domestic Betlgni Wlileh Preceded the Era of Public Grandeur. So great has been the destruction in Koine of many palaces and public monu ments, even within the first three centu ries of our era and of course much more so since, that it is very difficult even to trace the plans of some of the more im portant which were known to have ex isted, though it is impossible to make ex cavations anywhere in the sacred city without coming upon strata after strata of houses erected at various i>eriods. To . study her domestic architecture, there- I fore, we have to go to Pompeii, a second, i or even a third rate city, perhaps, but which, by a provision of nature, has been preserved in great part down to our own day. It is true that all the roofs and vaults are gone, and of the walls only from ten to twelve feet remain, but with these and the description of various authors it is possible torecoustru t in our imagination the gen eral appearance of the city before It was overwhelmed by the last fatal eruption of Vesuvius in the year A. 1). It, which buried the city in a shower of ashes, pumice and stone in a layer twelve to fourteen feet deep. Of the temple and other public building it is not worth speaking, as they are of far less importance than those in Rome and elsewhere, but of the private houses and villas of the upper and lower classes there exists an inexhaustible sup ply, from which the following general ar rangements can IK* summarized. The more important houses were divided into two parts, the public and the private portion. Of the former an entrance vesti bule led to the atrium, a large hall open in the center to the sky, the covered portion having a roof sometimes supported by columns surrounding the impluvium (a marble b.e.u under the compluvium, or open space in the roof.) Round the atrium, and lighted from it. were a series of cham • bers, sleeping rooms for the male guests, recesses lor conversation and the tablinum or sitting room. The private portion consisted of a peri style around an open court, in which there was a .small garden; the triclinium or din ing room; t he pinacotheca or picture room; the bibliotheca or library, and suites of small chambers used as bedrooms. Be side these there was generally a court sur : rounded by the offices, tho kitchen, bake > kouse and storerooms. All these rooms de , rived their light from the internal courts, the exterior of the block forming the house being invariably occupied by shops. In which sometimes the lord of the mansion kept retainer , who sold the produce of his farms and lands. 1 From the walls which still remain erect, we find thai they were all richly decorated , in color, painted in arabesque and occa * sionally with landscapes, figure subject* .' and wreath* of flowers; tho columns were i; of marble or painted in imitation, and the . 1 floors inlaid with mosaic or with small J pieces of marble set in cement. The roofs, being- all in wood have |>erinhed, but their ; coverings in tiles, with the various orna ments on the ridges of the roofs, are still ' found in the excavations. Such portions I of llerculaneuni—a town close by— as it has 1 been found pos- ible to excavate (the lava which overwhelmed it being of great hard ness) shows even liner work than at Pom peii, and those remains which occasionally are found in Rome show a far higher qual ity of work than that found in either of '! these cities.—Cassell's New Popular Edu ' j cator. • I When Woman'* Work Wan Valuable. In early Bible days richly embroidered raiment was enuii > rated with the gold, < | silver and other valuable property of a rich man. In that primitive age Dame Fashion j was not the fickle goddess she is at present. .' and the "raiment' so frequently mentioned i in the Holy Srriptures descended from fa 1 t ther to nun as a valuable part of tho inher -1 : itance. Raiment wits often sent, with gold 1 j and gems as a present to dignitaries. - It took, not months, but years to orna ii \ ment some of these garments, and the gold . i thread so lavishly used in embroidering , them was real gold. Moses describes the process of making the gold thread that was used in irnamenting the tabernacle. The habit of mak inn presents of rare needle work is still common among eastern na ' tions who changed their customs so slowly, fc —Woman's Work. I JOSEPH HARTMAN. Prk- J V. RITTS, Vici Pw C. A. BAILEY. CiMin. DIRECTORS. Hon. Jos. IlHrtman. J. V. Ritts. C. D. Greenlee, E. E. A drains, D. Osf>orne, Leslie H. Haxlett. Hon. \V. S. Waldron. O. M. Russell, M. Finegan, I. G. Smith. C. P. Collins, Henry McSweeney. When you desire to open either a business or interest account, or to transact any other hanking business, visit this hank and your intercut* will receive prompt and courteous attention, together with m great liberality as is consistent with safe hanking. THE BDTLER CODNTY NATIONAL BANK, OF BUTLER, PENN'A. BJIASSETB, Sole Owner and Manufacturer of the Gordon & Hasselh Oil mil Gas fell Packtn. ILL KINDS OF FISHING TOOLS FOB H TELEPHONE Na NO. 121 WEST WAYNE STREET. BUTLER. PENN'A. B. MABSETH. D * W * BLAOK. MiSSEIR 4 BLACK. Itpccnrnm ro ibkkhan * mashkth.) MANUFACTURERS OF Fishing Tools, Oil and Gas Well Packers, etc. Engines, Steam and Gas Pumps, and all Kinds of Machinery Repaired. Engines and Gas Pumps For Sale and To Let. Telephone No. 7. No. 121 West Wayne Street, BUTLER, PENN'A.