^^^ : \,-.^" y^;. **.,** .•:*i*. \,/ .-afe'-. *w^ ■ •■> .*^ .0 o . ...» A < -o..' ^°-^<^. X -V^ %#> •»> "°, ■■■ A°' ^^ [v %,^^ .'^^^<^^ \./ :^^'-^ %/ /^\^^'» %/ :>^'v %,'i^ y V ■^^^ -^^^ Nf .^" f" '^'^'V ,4''^-r. ^^-i^ • ^'b''V '^bi ''^<>, > .-1 = A* o > ' " ° • O JENNti*^ VON A. KLNfP.0 DOK BECMDOLT The Cartoon A reference book of Seattle's Successful Men With Decorations by the Seattle Cartoonists' Club TODAHL BKOTZE nAMIN Frank Calvert, Editor etO HAGtR. DlTT-f COPYRIGHTED 1911 BY FRANK CALVERT CALVEfM -e \ l2%6'-0 ©CLAaonGSS Preface HIS volume includes a short history of the best known men in Seattle. We hope that it will meet with approval, and that no one will take offense at anything contained herein. We feel that an apology is due our patrons for the tardy ap- pearance of this work. The delay was due principally to the difficulty in securing photographs of many of those whose pictures appear herein. For this reason several of Seattle's representative men are omitted from the book, but they will be found in the revised edition, which will be pub- lished later. ^ If the above explanation should not prove satisfactory to some, we beg to state that a long and varied experience in publishing cartoon books fits us to make any kind of an apology. So please make your choice of apology, and consider the same made and delivered. fl In the pages that follow the kind reader will find no inkling of the trials and aggra- vating set-backs we have encountered in our attempt to round up photo- graphs and biographies; of the sleepless nights which are still our portion; of the harsh words that have reached our sensitive ears over the telephone; of the threatened law suits that have come to us by mail, and the reports that we were to be imprisoned which have reached us indirectly ; of the carload of letters we have been compelled to write to anxious subscribers in which we gave the exact date (within a year or two) of the book's appearance, etc., etc., etc. tj We have purposely left all these things out of the book. If any one blames us for this omission, he will have to wait until we return from a dense and im- pregnable stretch of timber, where we are now beyond the reach of rail- way, steamship, telegraph, telephone, or airship, and where we will be occupied for months in dividing the immense profits reaped from the pub- lication of this book. Incidentally, we will add that as a body we are really to be feared. Kindly observe us in our working clothes on l)C>^ the title page. •] With assurances that we have tried d^^^ faithfully to fill this book with humor of the non-irritat- llsuf^, ing brand, and hoping that our efforts will meet your /ay^^J hearty approval, we are. Gratefully yours, SEATTLE CARTOONISTS' CLUB. Dr. H. E. Allen M^R. H. EUGENE ALLEN is division surgeon of the Chicago, Mil- ^f 1 waukee & Puget Sound Railroad, chief medical inspector of the ^b' city schools, and was formerly assistant surgeon in the United States Army in the Philippines, from 1900 to 1901. fl Dr. Allen has lived in Seattle since 1902. In 1904 he was married to Miss Ethel Bagley of Seattle. They have one son, Richard Bagley Allen, three years old. ^ Dr. Allen was born in Wisconsin in 1876. He is the son of F. G. Allen and Gertrude Dodge. His father was a native of New York and his mother was born in Wisconsin. Dr. Allen received his edu- cation in Wisconsin, graduating from the University of Wisconsin in 1895. He completed the course at the University of Chicago medical school in 1898, and came to Seattle after the Spanish American war. ^ Dr. Allen is a thirty-second degree Scottish Rite Mason and a member of the Mystic Shrine. Edgar Ames IWOUUD LIKE TV> PAY YOU $575,000 To TlLL fAY TIDEl_^No BUT ICRn'T ^0f AVING come from the "Show Me" state, Edgar Ames, as one 11^ of the younger business element of Seattle, is noted as a university 11^ and club man. ^ He was born February 26, 1868, in St. Louis; was educated abroad at Berlin and Paris, and at home in Andover and Yale. He has the degree B. A., and he is a member of the University Club, where he resides, and of the Rainier Club, Country Club, Athletic Club, Golf Club and College Club. CJ The faith of the Ames family in Seattle was shown several years ago, when they became interested in the Seattle & Lake Washington Waterway Company, as the principal back- ers of that enterprise for the filling of the tide flats and the dredging of the East and West Waterways to the Duwamish. ^ At the outset of that project for the reclamation of valuable lands in what is now developing as a manufacturing center. Former Governor Eugene Semple was the leading spirit, and associated with him were Henry Semple Ames, Andrew Hemrich, George M. Paschall, Julius F. Hale and D. E. Durie. ^ Edgar Ames came to this city as general manager of the company, and under his direction the operations have progressed to their present state. Mr. Ames is single. E. W. Andrews ' N the fraternity of money- changers they say that E. W. Andrews, President of the Seattle National Bank, is one of the best bankers in the West — and most men hold the praise of their own profession as higher than any encomiums that might be offered by the un-elect. ^ Certain it is that Mr. Andrews understands to a rare degree the in- tricacies of finance, but as well he is equipped with a personality and a manner that give him lots of friends, and prove to the contrary the pop- ular belief that bankers are cold, unapproachable and distant. €| Before the consolidation of the Seattle National Bank with the Puget Sound National, making one of the largest banking institutions upon the Pacific Coast, Mr. Andrews occupied the same po- sition as now, while President Jacob Furth, of the Puget Sound Bank, became chairman of the board of directors of the merger. £ SUCH A JOLLY GOOD CALLOW we've 0GC106-D TO DWERT ""«. BUSINESS YOO- WARDS Mes^.ENGeiS.. 8RING FORm THE LUCRji CAKING a prominent part in civic affairs, and in the efforts of tlie Chamber of Commerce to advance the interests of Seattle, WiHiam M. Calhoun, president of the insurance and real estate establishment of Calhoun, Denny 6c Ewing, has become one of the foremost citizens of the city. ^ Mr. Calhoun's hfe, and that of his parents, is intimately identified with the early history of Washington. He was born at St. Martius, New Brunswick, in 1864. t| 1 he following year his father. Dr. George V. Calhoun, was sent West to take charge of the United States Marine Hospi- tal at Port Angeles, and the family lived at Port Townsend for the decade following 1866. Dr. Calhoun in 1876 came to Seattle, but in 1880 moved to La Conner, and lived there until 1896. Though far advanced in years he is a familiar and venerable figure on the Seattle streets today. Another of his sons is Dr. Grant Calhoun, and a third. Corporation Counsel Scott Calhoun. Mr. William Calhoun remained in Seattle when the fam- ily moved to La Conner. A/iTH MM-ICa I AFOR-ETMOUGHT ; 'T'S one thing to announce yourself as a lawyer and an- other to get people to believe it. In a city full of attorneys- at-law, Hermon S. Frye, of Gill, Hoyt & Frye, has built up a big law practice because he has proved to be a good lawyer. ^ He started in early, did Mr. Frye. At twenty he had completed one university course and was ready for another. He didn't waste any time about the second, either, and four years later he turned his attention to the world at large, ready to go forth and conquer. Seattle was very much in the public eye at that time, since the Klondike had just been discovered, and Mr. Frye vnsely concluded that where everybody was getting rich in a hurry there ought to be a little law business. Q Hermon S. Frye was born February 19, 1875, the son of W. H. and Amy S. Frye. Both his father and mother were natives of Montreal, Canada, but Mr. Frye was born an American at Clear Lake, Iowa. ^ In the public schools and stale university of Iowa, he received his general education, and was graduated from the university in 1895. He took the law course at the University of Wisconsin and finished in I 899. Mr. Frye came to Seattle October 1 . I 899. In 1 902 he was married to Miss Anna B. Barrington. Jacob Furth ^MVN any volume of success- II ful Seattle men the H name of Jacob Furlh would always be among the first. He is one of the commanding figures of the Northwest. It is likely that Mr. Furth, who came to Se- attle from California when Seattle was a village, foresaw ^, , the tremendous development of J«fe George Matzen ^EORGE MATZEN. in the Matzen Manufacturing Com- pany, has built up one of the largest garment making estab- lishments in the West. Starting from the smallest of beginnings, the energy and resource of Mr. Matzen overcame obstacles that to many men would have been insurmountable mountains. He gained recognition for his makes all up and down the Coast, even before they came to be known in Seattle. ^ Now his factory, located at Third Avenue and Washing- ton Street, employs close to 1 00 men and women, and is so heavily loaded with business that Mr. Matzen has difficulty meeting the demands that are placed upon him. This success has come in a remarkably short space of time, as he has been a resident of Seattle less than a decade. q June 4, 1 902, he and Miss Helen Irene Pinney were married in the East, and two weeks later they were in Seattle to make their home. They have one son, Quentin, who is just two years old. Mr. Matzen takes a keen interest in civic affairs, and is first vice president of the Seattle Commercial Club. He has just com- pleted a magnificent new home. Mr. Matzen was born in Plymouth, Mich- igan. His father, Matthias Matzen, and mother, Maria Matzen, were both bom in Denmark. He is a Republican. J. W. Maxwell ^■flC OST people think it must be a great thing to be a banker. Bank- ^11^ ers, according to popular opinion, have nothing to do but receive 1^ II V other people's money, come down to vs^ork at 10 o'clock in the morning, and quit at 3 in the afternoon. The rest of the time they are supposed to smoke expensive cigars, play golf and drive their motor cars. ^ J. W. Maxwell was cashier of the Seattle National Bank, and later vice president. When the Title Trust Company was reorganized and named the National City Bank, Mr. Maxwell became president. He is president of the Seattle Commercial Club, chairman of its Chinese Relief Committee, which sent $60,000 in cash and food to the starving thousands in China, and generally a pretty useful citizen. C|I Mr. Maxwell was born in Iowa, Septem- ber 8, 1 864. He came to Washington more than a quarter of a century ago and for a long time made his home in South Bend. He was a repre- sentative of Pacific County at the state legislature in 1 899. He was twice mayor of South Bend and for several years served as national bank examiner. ^ Mr. Maxwell mar- ried Miss Belle Oakley. He lives at I 1 08 Harvard Avenue North. J. G. McFee aLTHOUGH the public seldom heard his name in connection with the building of the Chicago, Milwaukee & Puget Sound railway westward, much of the success attending the construction of that magnificent line is attributable to J. G. McFee. ^ For years Mr. McFee has carried forward the great projects of H. C. Henry, Seattle's most widely known railway contractor, who has also made his name notable in lines of philanthropy and public spirit. On Mr. McFee Mr. Henry placed his greatest reliance, for he knew that whatever was undertaken Mr. McFee would carry forward not only to a successful but to a speedy conclusion. The Milwaukee's line through to Seattle was completed before the time set in the contract. ^ Mr. McFee is a native of Russelltown, province of Que- bec, Canada. He fitted himself with a thorough business education, and his activities in business now are along many lines. ^ He is treasurer of the real estate firm of G. W. Upper & Co. Mr. McFee is well known in Seattle clubdom. Oliver C. McGilvra ▲■■ N a state that has grown so rapidly as Washington the native sons II of pioneer days are not numerous, and therefore Oliver Chase Mc- Bl Gilvra, bom in Seattle in I 867, has with particular propriety taken an active part in the organization of the Native Sons in Seattle. Mr. McGilvra comes of one of the most distinguished pioneer families, his father. Judge John J. McGilvra, being a prominent jurist of the early years. ^ Judge McGilvra, in the days when Seattle was a village, took up a homestead on Lake Wash- ington covering the district that is now known as Madison Park. Mrs. Thomas Burke, his daughter, was long the possessor of the unique summer home Illihee, adjoining the Firloch Club grounds. ^ It is fitting, too, that Oliver C. McGilvra. who has seen Washington's magnificent resources attacked so ruthlessly by the great primal industries, should be president of the Washington Con- servation Association, and a leading figure in the movement to prevent the dissipation of the state's natural wealth. ^ Mr. McGilvra is a lawyer by profession. Miss Maud Walthew became his wife in I 902. The family is of Scotch descent. Lee McKenzie aAV F there is pre-eminently an insurance authority on the Pacific Coast II that man is Lee McKenzie, Washington's insurance surveyor, with II offices in the Colman Building. He knows more about insurance — policies, risks, losses, adjustments and all that — than the average man could learn in a hundred years, working Sundays. j to distinguish the career of Dr. Ed- mund Marburg Rininger was his choice as medical director of the Alaska-\'ukon-Pacific Exposition of 1909. He held that important place throughout Seattle's great fair, and met the responsibilities attaching to it in a way to arouse the highest commendation. As a practitioner he is known in Washington and Alaska. ^ By birth and parentage Dr. Rininger is essentially of the land of Wil- liam Penn. His father and mother were both Pennsylvanians, and he himself was born at Schellsburg, in that state, March 7, 1870. He is the son of E. L. Rininger and Margaret Hoover Rininger. His father was a native of Schellsburg and his mother was born at Wolfesburg. ^ Dr. Rininger is a graduate of Marion Sims Medical College, class of 1893. He came to Seattle in 1905. fl Dr. Rininger was married to Miss Nellie M. Powers, July 11, 1893. They have one daughter, Helen Dorothy Rininger, aged ten years. ^ Dr. Rininger is a member of the Masonic fraternity and a Mystic Shriner. He is a member of the Rainier, Seattle Athletic, Golf and Country, and Arctic clubs. Chester E. Roberts W%^ CHESTER E. ROBERTS, secretary and manager of the Imperial Candy Company, is a Westerner, born and bred, and the story of his life in Seattle is essentially the story of Western initiative and pluck. CJ He was graduated from the High School of his home town in Kansas in 1 899 and came to Seattle in May, 1 900. Before he had been in town two days he got a job in the Armour packmg house. It was not a clean and easy job in the office, but a greasy job among the hams and bacon. Promotion came in a few months, and Mr. Roberts went upon the road as a traveling salesman, covering Northwest Washington, and af- terward to the Alaska territory. ' 10HN ROSENE is one of the empire builders who first saw the great possibilities of Alaska, and exploited them with capital. A man with no schooling, as he himself states, he has played a big part in the making of Alaskan history and won a fortune from the golden north by sheer ability. ^ Among the numerous big enterprises in which he took a hand, Mr. Rosene was instrumental in the development of Alaskan fish- eries. He was responsible for J. P. Morgan's interest in the Northwestern Fisheries, afterwards exploited by the Morgan-Guggenheim syndicate and recently sold to the Booth syndicate. This was one of his many interests in Alaskan development. As president of the Northern Exploitation and Development Co., Mr. Rosene is playing a big hand in the game. ^ John Rosene was born in Nor- way, September 21, I 860. He is married and has made his home in Seat- tle for many years. He is a member of the Lawyers' Club of New York, and the Rainier and Arctic Clubs of Seattle. He is a Knight Templar, a thirty-second degree Scottish Rite Mason and a member of the Nile Temple of the Shrine. Phillip Rowe THIS tS MV Busy •M^HILLIP ROWE is the president of the Halhdie Machinery Co. 11^ He is also president of the California Wire Works. These two MM' jobs have kept him too busy to hold public office, fl Mr. Rowe is a Welshman by birth. His father, Phillip Rowe, and his mother, Elizabeth, were born in England. Mr. Rowe was born in Wales in February, 1871. ^ Mr. Rowe never went to school. He made his way unaided and he made it well. ^ Ten years ago Mr. Rowe was married to Miss Florence Doyen. At the same time he decided that Seattle was a good town to live in. As head of two big manufacturing and sellmg corporations he has done much toward the commercial advancement of this city and the making of his own business success. Geo. H. Rummens m HEN George H. Rummens isn't practicing law, it's a safe guess that he's at the Elks' headquarters in the Alaska Building; and if by some mischance he is not at the Elks' it is a 1 to 1 shot that he is at the Press Club in the Eilers Building. This is only another way of stating that he has the qualities of a "mixer, " somewhat highly developed. ^ If his hours are not fixed by a stop-watch, that does not alter the fact that his system of procedure is pretty close to perfection. The first part of the day is devoted to the law; the second part to the lodge, and the third part to current literature; but perhaps it were an unjust thing to record the visitations among the newspaper fraternity, where he is rated as an "asso- ciate member," for in that circle there is literally no night, and sometimes the fourth part of the day is overlooked on account of its evanescence. ^ But for all that, Rummens, in com- mon with other members, has the opportunity once in awhile to get home and renew family acquaintances. ^ Rummens belongs to a genus sufficiently rare in the State of Washington, for he is actually rated as a "native son." He was born in Goldendale, March 16, 1878. His father was born in Wisconsin, and his mother in Illinois. He belongs to the Republican party, by which he was elected prosecuting attorney of Asotin county in 1903. He served in that position until 1907, when he moved to Seattle. ^ He was married October 5, 1904, to Miss Mae Steen, and has a family of two, a boy and a girl. George F. Russell 6 EORGE FREDERICK RUS- SELL, our handsome and efficient postmaster, is a real, dyed in the wool, guaranteed and warranted na- tive son. He was born in Seattle, way back September 30, 1873. Not only is Mr. Russell a real native son, but his parents were real pioneers. Q Nowadays, when the "real" pioneers have incorporated themselves and raise particular Cain with anybody who innocently refers to one of the un- incorporated, that came to Seattle on a train, as one of the elect, writers should use the greatest care in referring to a real pioneer. Inasmuch as George Russell's father, Thomas S. Russell, came to Seattle in 1852, and his mother, Sarah Jane Gallagher, came here in 1865, by Heck, we defy Clarence Bagley and all the incorporated to find fault with that statement. ♦J Mr. Russell, being born as recently as 1873, we shall not refer to him as a pioneer, but he certainly has lived in Seattle just as long as he could. His father was a native of Ralston, Ohio, and his mother, who is a daugh- ter of the famous Ben Butler's law partner, came west from Lowell, Mass. ^ George F. Russell was educated in Seattle public schools. When it came time for him to get out and hustle for himself he proved ready to try anything. He was in turn a stevedore, grocer, real estate dealer and mining man. He was also a consistent Republican and served as city treasurer, from which position he was appointed, four years ago, to serve as postmaster. ^ On May 15, 1904, Mr. Russell married Minerva R. Judd. They have one daughter, Dorothy S., aged five years. Fred E. Sander SAY fredI INVEST THIS FOR ME-. J 11 N Seattle there is one thing rarer than a day in June — and that is the day when Fred E. Sander does not pro- ject and build a new railroad some- where. He states that his business is a "broker," but everybody the least familiar with the city's history knows that he has laid out enough street car transportation to give an aviator a fair start toward the moon, provided the tracks were all joined and pointed in the right direction. ^ If Sander did not build the first street railway in Seattle, he was on the ground before the echoes of the gong had died away, and he has been steadily at it ever since. He blossomed into prominence when electricity came to the front as motive power, and he has kept pace with the development of that form of energy — ■ which is only another way of observing that Sander is decidedly a live wire. No difference which way a new street car line trends, north or south, Sander is pretty apt to be found as the projector. ^ It's as easy as pie for him to start an enterprise like the Everett Interurban, and then turn it over to the Stone- Webster corporations; and just as likely as not he will have a line to Bothell one of these fine mornings, before the rest of the town is entirely awake. When Sander was asked if he had held public office, he answered in the negative, and added, "I do not want any." Of course not. He doesn't need it. He is that rare combination, a Democrat without office- seeking proclivities. ^ He was born in Corinth, Miss. His father was a native of Hanover, Germany, and his mother of England. Sander came to Seattle in 1879. He has worked every day and night since that date, and has developed street car projection into a recognized, legitimate industry. R. Sartori a NATIVE of Switzerland, R. Sartori came to the United States when a lad of 1 6 — and he never has been known to regret com- ing, even though the land of William Tell is one of beauty. For a number of years in his young manhood, Mr. Sartori lived in California, and came to Seattle to engage in business in i 888, the year before the great fire. C] His business success enabled him to make large investments, and his natural sagacity directed him into the right course, so today he is regarded as a man of independent means. ^ For the last seven years he has been engaged in the real estate and investment line, w\th offices in the Collins building. Also he is secretary and treasurer of the Seattle Grain Drying Company, which operates a plant at George- town. ^ The Sartori residence is a handsome place on the First hill, bounded by Minor avenue, Jefferson street and Broadway. Mr. Sartori is a member of the Chamber of Commerce, of the Commercial Club, of the Arctic Club, and of the Seattle Athletic Club. Joseph Schlumpf ^tfV T was in the day of Sixteen-to-One that Joseph Schlumpf first began II to feel the enlivening influence of politics; but it required no less II than fourteen years for him to land in a position giving him a modest chance to save his country. From I 896 to 1 9 1 is a pretty far cry when one is willing to hold office, but Mr. Schlumpf was patient — and the last named year found him comfortably estabhshed as one of Seattle's coun- cilmen. He had just secured the passage of his weights and measures or- dinance, a piece of legislation that has since resulted in putting dishonesc scales out of business in Seattle, when along came an amendment to the city charter providing for the election of all councilmen at large. *! Mr. Schlumpf tried tor it, but the result was as if he had been weighed in the balances himself. His case was very like that of a noted ruler, for "The King of France went up the hill, with 20,000 men; The King of France came down the hill, and ne'er went up again." ^ Mr. Schlumpf is no longer in the council — but who knows what may happen in these days of direct primary and equal suffrage — for he is not only a handsome man, but an able campaigner, with a gift of telling a good story inimitably. Carl Schmitz ,— g%VERYBODY knows Carl Schmitz — but especially do those who |B# are interested in good things to eat. Put it this way: when you ^^f think of good things to eat in a down-town cafe your mind nat- urally pictures a brightly illuminated and most attractive resort presided over by his Germanic Majesty Carl Schmitz. It's a picture that causes the mouth to water, and the olfactory nerves to convey impressions of keen delight. ^ For years Carl Schmitz was the Rathskeller and the Rathskeller was Carl Schmitz, but now with the removal of that famous gastronomic palace to an elevated location on Second avenue the familiar face has returned again to the former location, and the Carl Schmitz of old is to be found in the basement of the majestic new Hoge building, on the site where the old Rathskeller had its abode. ^, Carl Schmitz, who is a nephew of the Seattle capitalist, Ferdinand Schmitz, member of the Seattle Park Board, and donor of Schmitz Park to the city, makes his home in the Washington Apartments. rdinailjd Schmitz 1 [AM an optimist," writes Ferdinand Schmitz, in supplying data for this sketch. Those who have known Mr. Schmitz since he came to Seattle in 1887, will vouch for the truth of the statement. He is an optimist and his particular optimism is over the future of Seattle and her park system. , jyoH-" CAYING of asphalt pavement and more particularly finding more places where people are willing to pay to have the pavement laid is the business of R. G. Stevenson. Mr. Stevenson is district manager of the Barber Asphalt Paving Company. ^ Mr. Stevenson was born in Scotland on February 18, 1871. He re- ceived a high school and business education and turned his attention to as- phalt paving with great success. ' •> ^^0^ r^^'' ^f^ c^ ^>^^' ,0*^% "--r^^-- ^^' '-0- ^^^--^T,.' / c-^-^ -IaVa!', U ^-^ '^^ . ' ' • -1 o^ ■^^ \* .. -*• *"'"°' ^' ^^p/ ^^'^^'^ '•'>^%'^'-V' -i."^ ""^ •<& A' DSC ?: - r. «>" '"^-i o •'■'*■• o -^ .^^ •*b ,0 -