Mm Bi KtMvB in %ttutn Olitg 1912 A Newspaper- Reference Work Printed for uJjUUui- mu.S^£^'V-:^2L^.-,:-:i CHARLES DAVID PARKER President of the United States Water and Steam Supply Company, Kansas City, Missouri. ■ HARLES DAVID PARKER, the subject of this sketch, was born July 12, 1853, in Garden Plain, Illinois. He obtained his early education in the public schools of Whiteside County, Illinois. As a means of livelihood he followed farming first, then raising fine stock, buying and selling live stock, grain, etc., until De cember, 1887, v^'hen he located in Kansas City. Missouri. Immediately upon his arrival he engaged in the real estate and loan business, locating his offices in the New Nelson building, remaining there about one year, when he removed to the American Bank building, being its first tenant. He moved from this location in ! 893 to the Massachusetts building, remaining there until the completion of the new building for the First National Bank in February, 1906, where he is now located. In 1893 he added fire insurance to his business. The firm is known as C. D. Parker & Com- pany, the members being C. D. Parker and Herbert Parker, a brother. There has never been a movement for the betterment of Kansas City that Mr. Parker has not been found in the front ranks. He has been president of the Real Estate Exchange, president of the Implement, Vehicle and Hardware Club, president of the Commercial Club, a member of the Kansas City Athletic Club, the Board of Directors of the Provident Association for upwards of twelve years, and continues his membership in these associations as well as the Oriental Commandery Ararat Shrine, Archaeological Society, and the Ma- sonic Fraternity in which he has reached the Thirty-second Degree, and Sons of the American Revolution. Mr. Parker is also president and a large stockholder of the United States Water and Steam Supply Company, the largest steam fitting and plumbing supply house in Kansas City. On January 6, 1876, Mr. Parker married Amanda Sutherland in Fulton. Illinois. He has one son, Carl Sutherland Parker, born in Garden Plain, Whiteside County, Illinois, February 12, 1877. C. S. Parker married Susan Amsden of Abilene. Kansas. They have one sou. Charles David Parker, sec- ond, born February 6, 1904. twenfx-Hve .1/ c o f A f f a I r s I II K a II s a s C i t V THOMAS J. ZOOK President and General Manager of Zook & Zook Live Stock Commisiion Company of Kansas City. HOMAS J. ZOOK, one of the most prominent and successful live stock commission men in the West, was born near Belle- ville, Mifflin County, Pennsylvania, March 2, 185 5, the son of Menno K. and Barbara Kauffman Zook. Mr. Zook is president and general manager of the Zook & Zook Live Stock Commission Company. He has been in Kan- sas City eight years and for thirty- five years has been in the cattle business, having been with great success in the commission business in Indiana prior to his coming to Kansas City. In November. 1885. he married Ida B. Ewing. They have two children. Mr. Zook is a Republican and a broad minded citizen who takes a lively interest in all the municipal and public improvement campaigns. tWi-iii\-M: M c n of / / (/ / r A- / ;/ A' (7 n s a s C i t y JAMES R. PAGE A Corporation Attorney of Kansas City, Missouri, Who Has Attained National Fame. lAMES R. PAGE, one of the foremost attorneys in Jackson County, was born in SuHivan County, Missouri, April 15, 1876, son of Philip A. and EHza J. Page. He was literally drafted for service in Kansas City, since his record as pro:iecuting attorney for Sulli- van County from 1901 to 1905 was such that his reputaion '^^ w^ent throughout the state and brought him to the attention of the legal department of the Metropolitan Street Railway Com- pany of Kansas City. After joining the legal department of the Metropolitan, Mr. Page proved to be one of the best trial attorneys in civil cases in Missouri, and in five years of service he made a remarkable record, w^inning more than seven ty- five per cent of the cases in which he appeared. When the second trial of Dr. Bennett Clark Hyde, charged w^ith the murder of Col. Thomas H. Sw^ope, came up, late in 1911, Mr. Page was made as- sistant prosecutor for Jackson County, that he might lend his abilities to the prosecution. After the case was w^ell advanced, the disappearance of a juror caused a mistrial, but Mr. Page had demonstrated again his ability to handle a complicated case in a masterful way. A Democrat of very progressive views, Mr. Page has been a power in the party throughout the entire state. He is a married man and has two sons, one eight and the other eleven years old. tzveuty-scvcii M c u f A f f a i r s i 11 K a 1 1 s a s C i t y JAMES FRANKLIN HOLDEN Vice-President of the Kansas City Southern Railway; also Director of the National Reserve Bank of Kansas City, Missouri. AMES FRANKLIN HOLDEN, son of James and Orilla Holden, was born in Whitby, Ontario, Canada. His father was a prominent banker and railroad builder, and many of the pioneer roads in the Dominion were his work. He died in 1882. James Franklin Holden, vice-president of the Kansas City Southern Railway, followed in the footsteps of his father and is now one of the best known railroad authorities in the United States. Aside from the vice-presidency of the Port Arthur Route, he served the C, O. & G. as vice-president from 1892 to 1901, the C, R. I. & P. as freight traffic manager at Chicago, from 1902 to 1906, and the Midland Val- ley as vice-president and general manager at Muskogee, Oklahoma, from 1906 to 1910. Mr. Holden was educated in Whitby (Ontario) Collegiate Institute, from which he was graduated in 1877. He married Charlotte Erene Ellsworth of Peterboro, Ontario, and they have five children. A Republican in politics, Mr. Holden is exceptionally well advised on all the issues of the day. His time and labor, however, are spent on the projects with which he has become affiliated and he is anything but a politician. Mr. Holden is a director in the National Reserve Bank of Kansas City, and director in the Southern Surety Company of St. Louis. He is a member of the Hyde Park Methodist Church of Kansas City. Iwcnly-eight M c n f A f f a i r s i ti K a it s a s C i f y m^Si^ -^--^an: EDWARD L. MARTIN Judge of the Jackson County Court, Western District; Former Mayor of Kansas City^ Missouri. DWARD L. MARTIN, judge of the Jackson County Court from the Western District, and one of the early mayors of Kansas City, was born in Marysville, Kentucky, March 12, 1842, the son of William and Margaret Sheridan Martin. Mr. Martin's father came to America from Belfast, Ireland, in I 820. Mr. Martin was educated in Richardson Academy, Marys- ville, Kentucky, and December 10. 1861, married Mary E. Rick- ett, of Marysville. They have two children, both residents of Kansas City, Mrs. Thos. E. Gaines and E. R. Martin. When Mr. Martin started out for himself he went into the merchandizing and manufacturing business and met with unusual success. He has now retired from active business. From the first he took a conspicuous place in the political life of Kansas City. A Democrat of progressive views, he was elected mayor for the term of 187 5-74 and served the public as a member and treasurer of the board of education for twenty -one years. Tw^o years ago he was elected by a good majority associate judge of the Jackson County Court. Organizer of the Kansas City, Pittsburg & Gulf Railroad, now the Kansas City Southern, Mr. Martin was its president until it was built into Port Arthur, Texas. He has been interested in numerous other enterprises of benefit to Kansas City and the state. twenty-nine Men f . I f f a i '' s i n K a ii s a s C i f \ V;-. 1 V. *■■:'■, ^ \ ^^ \ ' WILLIAM HUGHES Agency Director in Kansas City for the New York Life Insurance Company. 3ILLIAIVI HUGHES, well known as an insurance man and agcnLy director for the New^ York Life insurance Company, was born in How^ard County, Missouri, July 26, 1 b62, the son of J. Romeo and Prisciila Ann (Wiicoxson) Hughes. Mr. Hughes' ancestral stock is Welsh. His people seitled in Virginia in the Colonial days and later were pioneers in Kentucky. His grandparents settled in Howard County, Missouri, in 1816. Mr. Hughes was educated in Central College, Fayette, Missouri, and married Margaret Ricketts, December 21, 1895. They have one son, J. Rick- etts Hughes, born November 22, 1896. Beginning his business career in Texas as a cattleman in 1884, Mr. Hughes went over the trail with cattle from Jones County, Texas, to Custer County, Montana, in 1685 and remained in the cattle business there until 1 892, when he returned to Howard County, Missouri, and engaged in the newspaper business as editor and proprietor of the "Democrat-Banner." He conducted that paper as a daily and semi-weekly until 1697. He began his life insurance work with the Equitable in 1697 and continued with that com- pany until 1902, when he associated himrelf with the New York Life Insur- ance Company at St. Joseph, Missouri. In 1903 he was made agency director of the company's branch office at Quincy, Illinois, in 1905 agency director of the company's branch office at Wichita. Kansas, and in 1906 agency director of the company's branch office in Kansas City. The New York Life Insurance Company was the first and only great life insurance company to express in a substantia! way its confidence in the future greatness of Kansas City and its trade territory by erecting in 1 687 the New York Life building at Ninth Street and Baltimore Avenue. The interests of nearly twenty thousand policy holders who are insured for nearly forty million dollars are looked after through this branch office. thirty ]\I c n f A f f a i r s i ii K a n s a s ( ' / / v WILLIAM B. SCHNEIDER Wholesale Meat Dealer and General Broker in Packing House Products. ILLIAM B. SCHNEIDER, wholesale dealer in meats and broker in packing house products, was born in Chillicothe, Missouri, Octo- ber 27, 1875, the son of Andrew and Cassia Schneider. Mr. Schneider's father was a native of Germany and his mother was born in Pennsylvania. Coming to Kansas City in 1892, Mr. Schneider worked for various markets in the city until he was thoroughly posted on local conditions and he then went into business for himself, organizing the W. B. Schneider Meat Company, of which he is president, in 1900; later the company was incorporated. The general offices are in Suite 707, Sharp Building. Mr. Schneiders company deals in meats at wholesale, furnishing many of the largest hotels in the Central West with their entire supply. After the wholesale meat business had grown to unexpected dimensions, Mr. Schneider organized the Investment Brokerage Company, which has built up a gigantic trade in packing house products. August 7, 1901, Mr. Schneider married Mary M. Thurston. They have two daughters and a son. thirty-one M of Affair s 1 u K a 11 s C i t V m PAUL JOHN LEIDIGH President of the Leidigh and Havens Lumber Company. 1AUL JOHN LEIDIGH. president of the Leidigh & Havens Lum- ber Company, was born August 22, 1878, in Topeka, Kansas, the son of John H. and Sarah Shellabarger Leidigh, both of whom were natives of Pennsylvania. After completing the grade and high school courses, Mr. Leidigh entered Yale University and was graduated in 1901. He attended the Kansas City Law School during 1902 and then went into the retailing and manufacturing of lumber. From the first he made a success of the business and the Leidigh and Havens Company today is one of the largest lumber concerns in the state. January 29, 1907, Mr. Leidigh married .*\nne Warner. He is a mem- ber of the University Club, Kansas City Club, and Country Club, and holds a conspicuous place in the social and commercial life of the city. When questioned concerning his ancestors, Mr. Leidigh gave it as his opinion that he had the usual quota and assortment, but he was unable to say whether any of them w^ere ever hanged, though they had been mixed up in the troubles incident to the founding of the Swiss Republic. He was positive, however, that none of them carried William Tells bow or ate the apple he is reputed to have shot at. thirty-two M c I! f A f f a i r s i ii K a n s a s C I I v ALBERT MILLEN WILSON Prominent Physician and President of the Sphinx Publishing Company. LBERT MILLEN WILSON, well known physician and president of the Sphinx Publishing Company, was born in Aurora, Indiana, June 23, 1 854, the son of Thomas True and Sarah Speese Wilson. His ancestors came from England, Scotland and Germany, and w^ere pioneers in Kentucky directly following the Revolutionary War. His father and mother were both natives of Kentucky. After being graduated from DePauw^ University in 18 77, Dr. Wilson, in 1885, located in Kansas City, w^here he was graduated from the University Medical College in 1891. In 1876 he married Emma J, Dyke, and after her death he married Nelly Kreps July 15, 1884. He hai four sons and two daughters. Dr. Wilson has an extensive practice, but has found time to organize the Sphinx Publishing Company and edit the Sphinx Magazine, devoted to magic and sleight of hand. It is the only magazine of its kind published in the West and has a general circulation throughout the globe. Prior to coming to Kansas City Dr. Wilson was state secretary of the Y. M. C. A. in Ohio. For thirteen years he was professor in general medi- cine, materia medica, physiology and hygiene in the University Medical College of Kansas City. He is now, and has been for the past twenty-one years, professor of materia medica and therapeutics and general pathology in the Western Dental College. Dr. Wilson is a Scottish Rite Mason and a member of the Methodist Church. thivty-thrce .1/ .//■/" a i r i 11 K a II S 1 1 s L I I V m ^^IP f^ ;! 7/! ■V ■-r THOMAS S. RIDGE General Insurance Agent. Prominent in All Municipal Improvement Campaigns of Recent Years. llHOMAS S. RIDGE was born in Kansas City November 26. 1859. beginning his career simultaneously with the city's municipal existence. The family history is so interwoven with that of Kansas City that our work would be incomplete without men- tion of the sterling integrity of the early merchant-trader, Judge Thomas A. Smart, Mr. Ridge's grandfather on his mother's side, who was elected probate judge by the early settlers, and of the untiring pioneer, Dr. Isaac M. Ridge, who, in I b48, cast his lot with this people, and for twenty years, with distinguished success, alleviated suffering by the practice of his profession. Thomas S. Ridge has been a factor in shaping the commercial and civic career of this community. When fifteen years old he began to earn his ow^n way, and in 1878. when, because of generally depressed conditions, tax deeds were about to be made to the family property, from his savings he furnished the necessary amount to redeem and preserve the estate. In 1878 Mr. Ridge's mother died and in 1879, after graduating from Kansas City's high school, he attended the State University at Columbia. In the fall of 1879 Judge Smart died, and from his estate Mr. Ridge inherited the money with which he finished his four-year university course, and the property which furnished the nucleus of his present possessions. Mr. Ridge in I 884 married Miss Effie Searcy of Boone County, with whom he had been associated in the university. He then entered commercially into the activities of Kansas City, first in the hardware and sheet metal manufacturing business, then with his brother in real estate, afterwards as president of the Central Bank, and in 1892 in real estate and insurance, in which latter business he is still engaged. Mr. Ridge has a most estimable w^ife and three sons. Dr. Francis I. Ridge, the eldest son, is a graduate of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, and is now in Belieview Hospital, New York, serving his second and last year as interne. T. S. Ridge, Jr., the second son, is attending the Irving School for boys at Tarrytown, New York, and William Searcy, the youngest son, is attending the Country Day School, Kansas City, preparing for a course in Yale or Princeton. thirty-four 71/ o f A f f a i r s I n h \ an s a s C ! t V ...c-='-> REV. MICHAEL P. DOWLING Pastor of St. Aloysius Church and a Leading Member of the Kansas City Clergy. ^EV. MICHAEL P. DOWLIKG was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, June 14, Ib5l, and finished his college course in St. Xavier College in 1669, at which t me he entered the Society of Jesus. He made /M^Vfe^^JN the usual studies of literature at St. Stanislaus Seminary, St, Loui£, Missouri; philosophy, theology, mathematics and other branches at Woodstock, Maryland, and St. Louis, Missouri. He was ordained priest by Archbishop Elder in the Cincinnati Cathedral, December 21, 1 8t 1 . For some years before and after his ordination he taught rhetoric, poetry and literature in the Jesuit Colleges at Cincinnat\ St. Louis and Detroit. His first position of responsibility was as president of Creighton University, Omaha, Nebraska, from 1885 to 1889. In 1889 he was transferred to Detroit as president of Detroit College, w^here he opened a new home in 1891. During his administration a debt of $12,000 was cleared off the parish school and the church was renovated at a cost of $30,000. The next four years Father Dowling spent as pastor of the Holy Family Church, Chicago, probably one of the largest congregations in the land. For less than two years, beginning in 1897, he was pastor of the Gesu, Milwaukee, one of the largest parishes in Wisconsin, where, in conjunction with the Rev. Banks Rogers, he worked wonders. Later he was removed to Omaha, where Creighton University called for a stout heart and an energetic hand. Distressing financial embarrassments caused his ecclesiastical superiors to deliberate about giving up the university. Father Dowling se- cured the co-operation and continued financial assistance of Count John A. Creighton, who had unlimited confidence in his ability. After the death of Mr. Creighton in 190 7, and the settlement of an estate which left over a million dollars to the university, Father Dowling, at his own request, was relieved of a charge, which he had held continuously for more than nine years during his second administration and thirteen years altogether. At the time of this writing, March, 1912, Father Dowling is pastor of St. Aloysius Church, Kan:£as City, Missouri, and charged with the building of Rock hurst College, under the care of the Society of Jesus. thirtv-fize M en of A f f a i r s i ii K a n s a s C i t y f^ ARTHUR C. BROWN One of the Leading Patents, Trademarks and Copyrights Attorneys Central West. the RTHUR C. BROWN was born in Logan County, Ohio, September 18, 1878, the son of Thomas S. and Mary E. Brown. His father was a native of Ohio and his mother was born in Meford, Canada. IVlr. Brown, after obtaining a common and high school edu- cation, took up the study of law, following in the footsteps of his '^-^\i father, who for years 'was one of the leading patent attorneys in the Central West. He was giaduated from the Kantas City Law School in 1903, and June I of the following year married Grace C. Hawes. They have two daughters and a £on. In 1903 Mr. Brown succeeded to the business of his father, devoting his entire time to legal questions regarding patents, trademarks and copy- rights. He has been admitted to practice before the federal courts, and of the younger attorneys in Kansas City none is better known than Mr. Brown. While taking no active part in politics, Mr. Brown is a staunch Republican. Iliiily-six AI c II u f A f f a i r s I ii K a n s a s C i t y JOHN C. EGNER Noted Fire Fighter and Chief of the Kansas City Fire Department. :iOHN C. EGNER was born in Chicago. Illinois, November 29. 1660. His father, Charles Egner, was a native of Germany and his mother was born in Chicago. John C. came to Kansas City in 1871. As a young man in 1879 he joined the John Robinson circus and remained with it four years. Early in the '80s Mr. Egner joined the Kansas City fire department and he has been in almost continuous service ever since, serving in almost every capacity until his promotion to chief of the entire fire fighting force, on December 17, 1906. In 1693 he went to London, England, as captain of the crew which, under George Hale, won the highest honors over the entire world. In August, 1900, he was again captain of a picked crew which proved the sensation of the exposition in Paris, France. He is known the world over as an authority on fire apparatus and organiza- tion of crews. September 15, 1887, he married Alice L. Clark. He has a daughter and a son. Mr. Egner is a Republican of liberal views. He belongs to the following lodges and organizations: Masons and Scottish Rite, Kansas City Turnverein, Fraternal Order of Eagles, International Association of Fire Chiefs, Loyal Order of Moose and the Kansas City Royal League. thirty .1/ c n { A f f (I i r I II K a II s a C i t V GEORGE A. LOCK Manager of the Western Missouri Department of the Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia. Mr EORGE A. LOCK, one of the best-known insurance men in the State of Missouri, was born in Barbourville, Knox County, Ken- tucky, July 19, Ifc80. the son of William and Ellen A. (Pogue) Lock. The Lock family followed Daniel Boone into Kentucky. The ancestry on the molher's side came from Scotland, w^here they had played such a conspicuous part in the religious wars that they were exiled. Lock was educated in Union College, Kentucky, from which he was graduated in 1900. June 12, 1902, he married Jerree Pollard, of Cincinnati. Ohio. They have two daughters, Helen May, and Georgia. After leaving college Mr. Lock went into the banking business in Earbourville, Kentucky, being assistant cashier of the First National Bank, one of the strongest financial institutions in the s'ate. January, 1907, he resigned his position to become manager of the central district of the Fidelity lege, and for three years was on the lecture staff of the University Medical transferred October, 1909, to lake charge of the company's big office in Kansas City and since his arrival here has met with remarkable success and is considered one of the first insurance authorities of the state. thirly-cifiht .17 c II o f A f f a I r s in K a ii s a s C i t y LOUIS C. BOYLE One of the Leading Attorneys of Missouri; Former Attorney General of Kansas. OUiS C. BOYLE, former attorney general of Kansas, now one of the leading attorneys in the Slate of Missouri, was born in Port Colborn, Canada, February 26, 1866, of Irish descent. His child- hood was spent in Port Colborn and Watford, Canada, where he acquired but a meager education. At the age of fifteen he went to Colorado to work in the mines, and there, doing the labor of a man, he saved and studied until he had qualified himself for an academic course at Ann Arbor, Michigan. In 1889 Mr. Boyle was graduated from the Ann Arbor Law^ School and was admitted to the bar in Michigan. He then went to Fort Scott. Kansas. A strong, liberal Democrat, he was elected by that party prosecuting attorney of Bourbon County and served four years, after which he returned to a general practice in Fort Scott. In 1896 he was drafted by the Democratic party as a candidate for attorney general of the state and was elected, serving until 1899. At the expiration of his term he came to Kansas City. From the day he came first to Kansas City Mr. Boyle has enjoyed an extensive law practice and his work in several celebrated criminal cases has attracted the attention of the press and legal fraternity throughout the coun- try. He has earned the confidence of the public and is one of the strongest men in the Democratic party of Missouri. In 1890 Mr. Boyle married Miss Gertrude Burson, of Garnett, Kansas. They have one son, George, and tw^o daughters, Katherine and Clara Louise. Mr. Boyle is a Scottish Rite Mason and a Shriner, an Elk and a member of the K. of P. order, and he has always been a good friend of the newspaper fra- ternity. thirty-nine .1/ C II f A f f a i r 1 II K a II s a s C i t X W. EUGENE KING President of the House Wrecking, Salvage and Lumber Company, Kansas City, Missouri. EUGENE KING, president of the House Wrecking, Salvage and Lumber Company, was born in Grundy County, near 1 renton, Missouri. Opportunity did not seem to be rapping in his vicinity and at the age of eleven years he was doing a man's work with a pick and shovel. He obtained a common school education i.i^i.t>(^^'-^ and clerked in a drug store at the same time. For nine months he went to school to Governor Carroll of Iowa. In 1888 Mr. King was clerking in a drug store at Twenty-ninth street and Southwest Boulevard in Kansas City. He later bought out the owner. He added two stores to his interests and found time to study medicine and iurgery in the University Medical College. He was graduated in 1897. He then entered into a partnership with Dr. E. B. Lewis, the well-known surgeon. He became a lecturer on surgery for the Medico-Chirurgical College, and for three years was a lecturer at the University Medical College. In late years he has lectured to the nurses of St. Joseph's Hospital, being a member of the hospital surgical staff. In 1894-95 he was president of the Kansas City Pharmacy Association. When the Bank of Commerce Building burned in 1907, Dr. King con- ceived the idea of forming a wrecking and salvage company, and in face of the opposition of his friends he bought the damaged building and wrecked it. He tore down the nine-story building in thirty-four days, which was a record. He established a yard and in a year had to obtain another. Later he added a third, and in 1910 opened the Bargain Lumber and Salvage Com- pany in Kansas City, Kansas. Dr. King is also president of the Kansas City Motor Truck and Transfer Company. Dr. King takes a great interest in politics and was once a candidate for the upper house of the council on the Democratic ticket. He has a fine country home just out of Independence and his hobby is standard bred bird dogs. He helped organize, and is a director of, the Kennel Show. In 1887 Dr. King married Miss Lyda M. Sheets, of Gallatin, Missouri. They have three children living, S. R. King, Miss Ona Belle and Maud Lee. forty M c 11 o f A f f a i r I II K a n s a s C i t V WILLIAM THOMSON Prominent Attorney and Formerly President of the Kansas State Bar Association. ON. WILLIAM THOMSON was born in Linlithgow, Scotland, February 24, 1845, the son of Thomas and Marion (Somerville) Thomson. The family came to America and located in Chicago, Illinois, when William was five years old. Obtaining a common school education in Chicago, he entered Chicago University and was graduated in 1867 with the degree of B.A. His college work was interrupted by his enlistment in the One Hundred and Thirty-fourth Regiment of the Illinois Volunteers during the Civil War. After teaching school for a time Mr. Thomson returned to Chicago and entered the law office of Judge S. M. Moore and Barney Caulfield. He later completed his law study in the University of Chicago, was admitted to the bar in 1 869 and bes;an practicing with Robert W. Moore. In 1870 Mr. Thomson went to Burlingame, Kansas, and in that year was appointed probate judge of Osage County by Governor Humphrey. On completing this term he was elected prosecuting attorney. In 1878 he was made secretary of the Republican State Committee of Kansas, serving two years to the general satisfaction of the party. He was secretary of the Kansas delegation to the National Republican Convention of 1880. Governor Humphrey appointed him the first judge of Wabaunsee and Pottawatomie Counties in 1869 and in 1893 he was again elected to the place in the face of an overwhelming defeat of the Republican ticket. He retired from the bench in 1902. In 1898 he was admitted to practice before the United States Supreme Court and at that time had the endorsement of the Kansas bar for appointment as federal judge. He was elected president of the Kansas Bar Association, serving in 1897-98. Judge Thomson came to Kansas City in 1 904, establishing the firm of Thomson, Stanley & Price, Thomson handling cases involving corporation law, for which he is considered an authority throughout the country. He helped organize the Great Western Life Insurance Company and is now its general counsel. He is a member of the G. A. R., the Masons, Phi Delta Phi, and the Presbyterian Church. In 1874 Judge Thomson married Sarah E. Hudnall, of Astoria, Illinois. They have one daughter, Maud Somerville Holtz. fovfy-oijc Men of A f f a i r s i ii K a n s a s C i t y ^ 1|^ /•: ' Hi ]■■'. 1'. \ \' EDWIN RUTHVEN CRUTCHER Prominent in the Real Estate, Loan and Insurance Business of Kansas City, Missouri. DWIN RUTHVEN CRUTCHER. one of the organizers of the Kansas City Real Estate Exchange, was born August 29, !853, near Nashville, Tennessee. His ancestors came from Wales to Virginia in 1675 and were prominent in the Revolutionary War. Mr. Crutcher is a man who believes in taking a man for what he is worth rather than what his ancestors were and when asked for his ancestral tree remarked, "Well, all of them for three hundred years v^^ere highly respectable and quite honest." Mr. Crutcher spent his childhood in Louisville, Kentucky, and received a common school education there. Later he took a course in civil engineer- ing and at the age of seventeen was one of the official engineers of Louisville, in 1875 he married Laura Loving. They have three children, Edwin R. Jr., Loving T. and Wallace Mayo. After several years in the corn milling and grain buoiness, Mr. Crutcher moved to Kansas City in 1887. He had been here but a short time when he accepted the position of cashier of the Bank of Columbus, at Columbus, Kansas; later he became manager of the New York office of the Jarvis- Conklin Mortgage Trust Company, from which he went to the Chattanooga Savings Bank as cashier, returning to Kansas City in 1891 to engage in busi- ness for himself. With James B. Welsh, Mr. Crutcher organized the real estate firm of Crutcher & Welsh and from the first took a leading place in the commercial life of the city. Some years ago Mr. Crutcher reorganized his interests and the firm is now known as Crutcher & Sons with offices in the Commerce Building. A Democrat in politics, Mr. Crutcher has never been an aspirant for office, but has always responded and been a leader in campaigns for municipal improvements. forty-Hi'o M e n of Affair I 11 K a n s a s City ^l^'"' m ALEXANDER MAITLAND, JR. President of the Kansas City Bridge Company and a Prominent Civil Engineer. LEXANDER MAITLAND, JR., president of the Kansas City Bridge Company, was born on a farm near Richmond, Mis- souri, February 9, 1866, the son of Alexander and Mary Mait- land. His ancestors were of Scotch-Irish blood. His father was born in Toronto, Canada, while his mother was a native of Missouri. Mr. Maitland was graduated from the University of Missouri in 1 889, and in 1 896 married Miss D. Henderson. They have six children. Educated for the profession of civil engineering, Mr. Maitland held the chair of assistant professor of civil engineering in Missouri University during 1892-3. For five years immediately following he was assistant engineer in the bridge and building department of the Missouri Pacific Railroad Com- pany and from 1901 to 1905 he was contracting manager of the American Bridge Company. Mr. Maitland came to Kansas City in 1898. His reputation as one of the first civil engineers in the central west had preceded him and after leaving the American Bridge Company in 1905 he went into the Kansas City Bridge Company, of which he is now president. His offices are in the Orear-Leslie Building. A member of the Masonic Lodge, Mr. Maitland is also a member of the University Club, the recently organized Engineers' Club and the American Association of Civil Engineers. forty-three Men of Affairs in Kansas City JOHN PUNTON Alienist and Neurologist, Former President of the University Medical College of Kansas City. ^OHN PUNTON, one of Kansas City's foremost physicians, an alienist and neurologist of national reputation, was born in Dorking, Surrey, England, July 12, 1855, the son of William and Emily Gumbrall Punton. Both parents were natives of England. Coming to America in 1872, he obtained his early educa- tion in Jacksonville, Illinois. His first employment was in the druggist's department of the asylum at that place. He read medicine during his spare moments and \vas soon in a position to take a course in the Uni- versity of Michigan. In 1883 he was graduated from Miami Medical College, Cincinnati, Ohio. Returning to Jacksonville he practiced there a short time, then moved to Lawrence, Kansas, where he later served as city physician. His work there attracted the attention of the State Board of Charities and he was made assistant superintendent of the State Hospital for the Insane at Topeka, a place he resigned in 1887 to take a course in neurology at the Northwestern Medical College. In 1888 he came to Kansas City and has enjoyed a large practice from the first. Dr. Punton has served the University Medical College of Kansas City both in the capacity of director and president and as a lecturer as well. He was once president of the Academy of Medicine and a vice-president of the State Medical Association. He is also a member of the American Medical Association and the American Neurological Association. July 17, 1884. Dr. Punton married Miss Frances Evelyn Spruill of Jack- sonville, Illinois. They have four sons, Frank S., John, Jr., William Bruce, and Charles Wesley. Dr. Punton is a Thirty-second Degree Mason, Scottish Rite, and a member of the Linwood Boulevard Methodist Church. forty-four Men of Affairs in Kansas City - Hi MATT R. SMITH One of the Most Extensive Dealers in Lumber in the Central West. ]ATT R. SMITH was born in Decatur, Illinois. July 3, 1866. When Matt was six years old his father died, and quite naturally respon- Vfp?^! I sibilities came to the son when he was scarcely more than a boy. As a young man he started in the newspaper business and was at one time head of the circulation department of the Decatur Morning Herald, but he eventually found his field of activity in the lumber business where his success has been most remarkable. Today Mr. Smith is president of the Caddo River Lumber Company, capitalized at $450,000; president of the M. R. Smith Shingle Company, operating three mills in Washington state, with offices at Tacoma, and president of the M. R. Smith Lumber Company, which maintains a retail yard in Kansas City, Kansas, and is interested in seven retail lumber yards in Kansas and Missouri. Mr. Smith first started in the lumber business in Kansas, where he engaged in the retail trade in various cities. He came to Kansas City from Council Grove. Kansas, and knowing the business and the field, was not slow^ in arriving at a commanding place in the industry. In 1886 Mr. Smith married Lillian Odell. They have six children. Mr. Smith is a man of strong and pleasing personality and has been active in many of the campaigns for the improvement of commercial and industrial conditions in the city and state. Politically he is an Independent. forty-Jive AI c n of Affair s i ii K a n s as C i t y ^ . JOSEPH C. WIRTHMAN Druggist, and for Four Years a Member of the Upper House of the City Council. i^BS^rgtgg-' i OSEPH C. WIRTHMAN, who owns and operates four drug stores in Kansas City and who for four years has been a member of the upper house of the council, was born in Kansas City in 1865. Mr. Wirthman was graduated from the public schools of Kansas City and obtained a business education by attending night school at Spalding's Commercial College. Later he en- tered the Chicago College of Pharmacy, from which he was graduated in 1886. Immediately following his graduation he returned to Kansas City, and with his brother went into the drug business. In 1896 Mr. Wirthman began business on his own account and now operates four of the largest and most successful drug stores in Kansas City. He has been connected with the drug business for thirty years, having first been associated with it, when a boy, in 1881. Besides building up a large business, Mr. Wirthman has found time to devote to affairs affecting the interests of the city, and four years ago the Democrats placed him before the people as a candidate to the upper house of the city council. He was elected by a large majority and his work in the council has been such as to bring him universal commendation. He is a member of the Commercial Club, Knights of Columbus and of the Kansas City Lodge of Elks. Mr. Wirthman is also a member of the Retail Druggists' Association. We is married and lives at 3 1 02 Troost Avenue. Mr. Wirthman is a man who has great confidence in the city's future and the money he has made he has re-invested in city real estate. forty-six M c 11 of A f f a i r ^' I n K ansa City ORSON H. SWEARINGEN Attorney at Law and State Representative from the Second District. iRSON H. SWEARINGEN was born in Simpson County, Kentucky. July 29, 1871, the son of Benoni and Mary Hansford Whited Sw^earingen. In i 88 1 , with his parents, he came to Missouri, locating in Shelby County, where he received a common school education. He came to Kansas City June I 0, 1 892, determined to enter the legal profession. Having no funds to enable him to take up the study of law at once, he went to w^ork for the Schmelzer Arms Company. In September, 1895, he resigned this position and entered the University of Missouri, from which he was graduated in law June, 1897. He at once returned to Kansas City and began practicing. A Democrat of liberal views and known integrity, when James O. Beroth, representing the Fifth Ward in the city council, died, after serving scarcely a year of his term, Mr. Sw^earingen was elected in a special elec- tion and served the unexpired term with credit to himself and the city. He also served the county as assistant prosecuting attorney. Mr. Swearingen married Ruby Guy Patton October 2, 1899, at Clarks- ville, in Pike County, Missouri. They have one son, Clifford. As the representative in the state legislature from the Second District, Mr. Swearingen made a reputation that was a credit to himself and the Demo- cratic party, which elected him. As a member of the Commercial Club he has always taken a lively interest in industrial and commercial matters and repeatedly has gone to the front for conimercial organizations in the legislature, such as the Warehouse Men's Association, the Retail Grocers' Association and the City Club. Mr. Swearingen is associated with General Milton S. Moore, S. A. Handy and J. Harold Olson, attorneys, with offices in the Rialto Building. forty-seven Men of Affairs in Kansas City ALBERT G. LESLEY President of the Lesley Garment Company, a Merchant of Wide Experience. LBERT G. LESLEY, president of the Lesley Garment Company, was born in Kankakee, Illinois, December I L 1865, the son of J. P. and Barbara Lesley. Both parents were natives of Germany. With a common school education, Mr. Lesley began his business career as cash boy in a dry j^oods store in Lafayette. 2^^r^^ Indiana, and has worked his way through all departments of the mercantile business. His wide experience has well qualified him to be the head of a large concern and it was only natural that his general knowledge of merchandising should bring him success. At various times he has held responsible positions in the buying departments of large concerns in Nashville, Tennessee, Indianapolis. Indiana, St. Louis and Kansas City. He came to Kansas City in September, 1 909. October 22, 1889, Mr, Lesley married Mary M. Ruger. They have one son. Mr. Lesley is a member of the Elks and the Knights of Columbus. forty-eight Men of Affairs in Kansas City EDWIN L. WINN General Contractor, President of the E. L. Winn Construction Company. DWIN L. WINN, president of the E. L. Winn Construction Com- pany, 1211 Scarritt Building, was born July 8, I 865, in Bowling Green, Missouri, the son of William and Jane Winn. Mr. Winn's success has been that which the American people take pride in designating "self made." With a common school education, Mr. Winn learned the brick mason's trade. In ^ t 1886 he came to Kansas City from Bowling Green and started into business as a general contractor, and his success was exceptional. In more recent years he has constructed some of the best buildings in Kansas City, among them being the new addition to the Baltimore Hotel, the Met- ropolitan Power House, the Studebaker Building in the West Bottoms, the Smith Brothers Manufacturing Company's building in the East Bottoms, and the beautiful stone building on the Jackson County Farm. For six years Mr. Winn represented the Fourteenth Ward in the city council, having been elected on the Republican ticket. In 1891 he married Mamie Turner. They have one son and two daughters. Mr. Winn is one of the men who have shown their faith in Kansas City's future. He has been prominent in all the campaigns for municipal improve- ment and is heavily interested in real estate. At present he is handling the Honeysuckle Hill Addition south of the city proper, a beautiful residence tract of about thirty-three acres. forty-nine Men of A f f a i r I II K a u s a s C i f v CHARLES BOYNTON RIGGS General Manager Oldsmobile Company, in Charge of AH Southwest Territory. HARLES BOYNTON RIGGS, general manager of the Oldsmobile Company and one of the big men in the automobile industry of the Southwest, was born in Baldwin, Kansas, during the border warfare days of 1864. He is the son of James Henry and Louise Starr Riggs. His father was a successful farmer and a pioneer in Kansas, having come to the state in 1856, making the trip up the Missouri by boat to Westport Landing. The senior Riggs was a native of New York and his wife came from Ohio. Mr. Riggs says he was graduated from the big school of "hard experi- ence" and the lessons he was taught were lessons that are never forgotten. He left the farm when fifteen years old, and his first job in town was pushing a truck. When sixteen years old he had learned telegraphy and was agent and operator at a small station on the Santa Fe system. Two years later he was made traveling auditor, and when but twenty-two years old had been advanced to the responsibilities of chief train dispatcher. Resigning from the transportation department of the Santa Fe in 1898, Mr. Riggs accepted a position in the sales department of the John Deere Plow Company of Kansas City, and in 1909 was made manager of the Olds- Oakland Motor Company. One year later he was made manager of the Olds works, Lansing, Michigan, and in 1911 was made general manager of the Oldsmobile Company, in charge of all the Southwest territory. In 1 892 Mr. Riggs married Alice Isham of Coffey villa, Kansas. They have one son, John Isham Riggs. fifty Men of Affairs i n K a n s a s City m '81. V- ;iii I'. ROBERT L. WINTER Prominent in the Real Estate, Investments and General Loan Business of Kansas City, Missouri. ROBERT L. WINTER, one of the most prominent real estate dealers in Kansas City, was born in Middleton, Canada, July 3, 185 7, the son of Thomas B. and Martha (Smith) Winter. Mr. Winter's father was born in England but went to Canada at an early age. (^ r JIH^C^S^ ^^" W'ri*^'' received a common and high school education \j \yHV^<^y\ in Strathray, Ontario, and then started into commercial life for himself. He went into the mercantile business in Port Huron, Michigan, but being a shrew^d reader of municipal possibilities, he decided that Kansas City presented a remarkable field and in 1882 he moved to this city and w^ent into the real estate and loan business, the firm being known as the G. F. and R. L. Winter Company. In 1906 G. F. Winter retired and from that date the business has been carried on under the name of R. L. Winter and Company. January 20, 1887, Mr. Winter married Mary E. Cook. They have one son, Howard R. Mr. Winter's history cannot be separated from the remarkable history of Kansas City real estate, for he has been interested in every material exten- sion the city has made since 1882. He has handled many large estates for non-resident owners; the management of the New York Life Building has been in his hands for twenty -tw^o years. Mr. Winter's specialty has been subdivisions and he has platted and sold over 2,000 acres in Kansas City lots. Goodrich Addition, Coleman's First Addition, Sheidley Park, Gates' Addition, Fairmount Park, Winter Park and Lincoln Park are but a few of the real estate extensions \vhich he carried to complete success. Mr. Winter is a member of the Mid-Day Club, Kansas City Club, Com- mercial Club and the Kansas City Automobile Club. He is among the first men in the city to respond in every campaign for municipal improvement. Hfty-one Men of A f f a i r s in K a n s a s C i t y ..■~;-_'::i'. '-^ <--:::r.' ALBERT W. PEET Secretary and Treasurer and General Manager of Peet Brothers Manufacturing Company. LBERT W. PEET, of Peet Brothers Manufacturing Company, a firm known throughout the world, and one that has aided materi- ally in placing Kansas City on the commercial map, was born in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1871, the son of William and Nettie May Peet. His father was born in England, and his mother, who was of German descent, was a native of Maine. After completing the common schools, Mr. Peet attended St. James Military College and then began his education in business, starting in as an office boy with Peet Brothers. He worked his way, without aid or preference, until he was qualified to take a prominent place in the manage- ment. Today he is secretary and treasurer and general manager of the big concern which manufactures fine soaps, is president of the St. Joseph Ice and Manufacturing Company and treasurer of the Moss Grain Company. All of these concerns are among the most successful in their respective fields. Mr. Peet married Orelle Smith and they have two daughters and a son. Mr. Peet has been prominent in all the movements of recent years which have aimed to make Kansas City the commercial center of the Central West, and has repeatedly donated time and money for the city's good. He is a Republican of liberal views and a man who commands an extraordinary circle of friends. fifty-two Men of Affairs in Kansas City ym_a^- —-m-r .•■-: /i' K„ , ' ■ r=^'-iV<-?g . ' . ' ... ' . f JAMES R. SUTHERLIN President of Sutherlin and Company, Municipal Bond Dealers. ^AMES R. SUTHERLIN, president of Sutherlin and Company, doing a general business in municipal bonds, was born in Marshall, Missouri, May 8, 1885, the son of R. M. and Leila B. (Crutcher) Sutherlin. His father was a native of Cooper County, Missouri, and his mother was born in Bourbon County, Kentucky. Mr. Sutherlin received the grade school education and then finished the high school courses in Chicago, Illinois. August 28, 1907, he married Miss Sombart of Boonville, Missouri. They have one daughter. Of the younger men in Kansas City, no one has made a more gratifying success. With eleven years of experience in the municipal bond business, Mr. Sutherlin has gained an experience which has given him exceptional judgment and foresight in municipal financial affairs. As president of Sutherlin and Company, much of the responsibility of management fails to him, and that he is fully qualified and capable of shouldering responsibility has been fully demonstrated. Mr. Sutherlin is a member of the Illinois Athletic Club of Chicago, and of the Mid-Day Club of Kansas City. In politics he is a Democrat. ^fty-three M e n f Affai r 7 n K a u s a s C i f \ HARRY FRIEDBERG Attorney at Law and Former Assistant Prosecuting Attorney of Jackson County, Missouri. TARRY FRIEDBERG, one of the younger attorneys in Kansas City whose success is already assured, was born in Kansas City, Kan- sas, in 1875, the son of Benjamin and Anne Friedberg. His father, one of the first white men in Kansas City, Kansas, having settled there in 1 869, built and owned the Consolidated Electric Light and Power Company, which for years furnished light for Kansas City, Kansas, Rosedale and Argentine. Mr. Friedberg obtained his education in Harvard University, from which institution he was graduated in 1897. He received his law degree in 1901 at the Kansas City School of Law. Since then he has been one of the leading young men in the Democratic party of Jackson County. in 1906 Mr. Friedberg was the Democratic candidate for city attorney and served the county during 1908-9 as assistant prosecuting attorney. Dur- ing the flood of 1903 Mr. Friedberg rendered the city great service as chair- man of the committee of the Relief Association. He succeeded Herbert S. Hadley, present Governor of the State, as chairniian of the committee having charge of Convention Hall under A. R. Meyer, and for four weeks had direct supervision of the work conducted from (Convention Hall and personally supervised the distribution of household goods under W. H. Holmes. For two years he was assistant manager of the Kansas City Electric Light Company under Bernard Corrigan. Always ready to go to the front for Kansas City and the State, Mr. Friedberg has won a circle of friends and admirers unexcelled by those of any other young man of the city. He is not married and is a member of the Elks and Masonic Lodges. fifty-four M c It of Affair I n Kansas City ms2^ .m^ m^ JAMES WADDELL MALCOLMSON Well Known Throughout the Country as an Expert Mining Authority and Consulting Engineer. ^AMES WADDELL MALCOLMSON, one of the foremost mining engineers of the country, was born in Dover, Kent, England, October 12, 1866, the son of James and Cherrie Malcolmson. Both parents \\'ere natives of County Down, Ireland. He is the first of the family to be a pilgrim to America and his suc- cess has been remarkable. After receiving the common school education, Mr. Mal- colmson entered the Royal School of Mines in London, England, and w^as graduated from that institution in 1889. December 22, 1888, he married Katherine Haden Krause. They have six children, James Donovan, William John, Oliver Krause, David Krause, Robert Joseph, and Cherrie Katherine. From 1892 to 1902 Mr. Malcolmson was engineer and general manager of the Mining Department of the Consolidated Kansas City Smelting and Refining Company, of which August R. Meyer was president. He is now the consulting engineer for the Lucky Tiger Combination Gold Mining Com- pany, one of the richest mining companies in the world, with valuable mines in Old Mexico, the company being controlled by Kansas City capital. In politics Mr. Malcolmson should be classed as an Independent, always standing for progression whether it be Republican or Democratic, He is a member of the Institution of Mining and Metallurgy of London, American Institute Mining Engineers of New York, Mining and Metallurgical Society of America, Institute of Civil Engineers of London, and belongs to the Engi- neers' Club of New York and the University Club of Kansas City. He lives at 3 728 Main Street, and his office is at 1012 Baltimore Avenue. Hfty-Hve Men of A f f a i r s in Kansas C i t CHARLES FREDERICK HUTCHINGS Director Pioneer Trust Company and Vice-President and General Counsel for the Kansas City Western Railway Company. HARLES FREDERICK HUTCHINGS. a director in the Pioneer Trust Company and vice-president and general counsel for the Kansas City Western Railway Company, was born in North Bar- ton, Tioga County, New York, May 25, 1846, the son of Samuel Dean and Betsey Rounseville (Ashley) Hutchings. The ancestral stock was of the earliest colonists in New England and many of them were conspicuous in the Continental Army during the American Revolution. Mr. Hutchings was educated in Waverly Institute, from which he was graduated in 1863. January 14, 1869, he married Larooka Thornton Kinney. They have two sons and a daughter. When Mr. Hutchings first came west he settled in Kansas, where he w^as a representative in the Legislature in 1873 and a member of the law examiners of the Kansas Supreme Court from 1903 to 1908. Mr. Hutchings is a Democrat and has taken much interest in the indus- trial questions which have confronted the city in recent years. He is a man of recognized ability, and after becoming associated with the men who conceived and completed the first electric suburban railroad system out of Kansas City he w^as made vice-president and general counsel for the company. fifty-six Men of A f f a i r s in K a n s a s City ^-f-g ' !■' ■ "' '" I GEORGE C. HALE Member of the Fire and Water Board, Kansas City^ Missouri. 7^^^7^^^~1 EORGE C. HALE, known the world over as an authority on /rylfx ^'■^ fisJi*^'"g devices and member of the Board of Fire and Water lS\)'^Ci\L Commissioners of Kansas City, Missouri, was born in St. Law- l\V^\/!J (A ! V rence County, New York, October 28, 1849. Xj^^WyK In every sense of the word, Mr. Hale is a self-made man, ^**^^-^y^^ 1 having fought for his education and success from the very first. His father, Siras G. Hale, was a native of Connecticut, and his mother, Cornelia Hale, was born in New York. His grandfather was Colonel C. H. Hale, a descendant of Nathan Hale of Revolutionary War fame. The present efficiency of the Kansas City Fire Department is, in a large measure, due to Mr. Hale, who was the chief of the department from 1881 to 1902. During his time at the head of the department Mr. Hale's work brought him to the attention of the whole civilized world. He represented the United States at the International Fire Congress in London, England, in 1893, and in Paris, France, in 1900, taking from Kansas City a fully equtpped fire company, including trained horses, apparatus and life saving devices, and at each place his company won the highest honors. For several years after his retirement as chief he devoted his time to the manufacture of fire apparatus and supplies. With the beginning of the Brown administration he was called to the Board of Fire and Water Commissioners, where he has had practically full control of the fire depart- ment. By profession, Mr. Hale is a mechanical engineer, and he has invented many fire fighting devices now used throughout ihe country. He is married and has one daughter, Mrs. O. C. Weisner. Hfty-seven AI c II f A f f a i r s i ii K a n s a s C i t y '^^^---=^> ^:-^:^ ^ ...j:>->.) GODFREY SWENSON General Contractor and Builder of Office and Public Buildings. GODFREY SWENSON, one of the principal general contractors in Kansas City, was born in Wimmerby, Sweden, in which city he received his early training and education. His father. Sven Swenson, was a builder of railroads and heavy construction work and he saw to it that his son knew the business thoroughly before the younger man departed for America. Mr. Swenson came to Kansas City in November, 1896, and from the first his services were in demand. He later organized the Swenson Construction Company, of which he is president and treasurer. He has had direct supervision of the building and construction work of many of the largest buildings in the Southwest, among them being the Westport High School, Kansas City Live Stock Exchange, the Elms Hotel at Excelsior Springs, the Barnes Building of Muskogee, Oklahoma, a ten-story fireproof structure, one of the most beautiful and substantial buildings in Oklahoma. Mr. Swenson's company operates throughout the South and West. In 1899 Mr. Swenson married Hannah Johnson. They have a son, Clarence, and a daughter, Florence. Mr. Swenson is a Thirty-second Degree Mason and a Shriner, a member of the Commercial Club and a director of the General Contractors' Association. fi fly-eight M c n f A f f a i r s i u K a n s a s C i t y JOHN SULLIVAN Attorney and Chairman of the Legal Board of the Modem Woodmen of America. ]OHN SULLIVAN, attorney, for twenty -two years located in the New York Life Building, was born in Louisville, Kansas, Feb- ruary 10, 1864, the son of P. and Anna Sullivan. His father was a native of Ireland and his mother was born in Austria. Mr. Sullivan was graduated from Kansas University in 1687 and from the first year of his residence in Kansas City has been a popular and successful attorney. February 18, 1891, he mar- ried Marguerite St. Clair McClure at Lawrence, Kansas. They have three children, Elizabeth, Helen, and Vivian. Always taking a keen interest in fraternal organizations, Mr. Sullivan is now chairman of the legal board of the Modern Woodmen of America and is one of the organizations national lecturers. He represented the Treasury Department of the Federal Government during the construction of the Federal Building in Kansas City and is one of the most prominent Democrats in the state, where he has repeatedly campaigned in behalf of his party. For ten years Mr. Sullivan was associated with Thomas M. Spofford in the practice of law^. Since that time he has been alone and today has a select clientele, the equal of that of any other attorney in the city. He is a man of strong personality and is one of the real boosters for Kansas City. fifty-nine M c II of A f f a i r s I n K a n s a s -City I? R. EMMETT O'MALLEY Member Upper House City Council; Manager for William A. Stickney Cigar Company. EMMETT O'MALLEY, Democratic member of the upper house of the city council and manager for the William A. Stickney Cigar Company, was born in Leavenworth, Kansas, April, 1874, the son of Patrick Henry and Mary L. O'Malley. His father was born in Maine and was of Irish antecedents and his mother vas a native of Indiana, pier constructor. Mr. O'Malley's father was a bridge Coming to Kansas City in 1879, Mr. O'Malley completed the public clerk in a railroad ticket L. Lambert. They have school course and started his business career as a brokerage office. In 1901 he married Miss Jessie one son. Being a Democrat of sound principles, Mr. O'Malley was made the candidate of the party for the upper house and was elected by a good majority, going into office with the beginning of the Crittenden administra- tion. He has been prominent in the councils of his party for several years, and during the Brown administration brought himself before the people by his remarkable fight to prevent a switching combination in the district known as the "North Side." His work was of such a popular character that he was mentioned as a candidate for mayor on the Democratic ticket in 1912, but refused to allow his friends to bring him before the convention. Mr. O'Malley is a Past Exalted Ruler of Kansas City Lodge No. 26, B. P. O. E., a member of the Eagles, Knights of Columbus, the Kansas City Club, Kansas City Athletic Club, Mid-Day Club, Railroad Club and Elm Ridge Golf Club. Sixty Men of Affairs in Kansas City rtlr mi WILLARD MERRIAM Real Estate and Insurance, Firm of Merriam, Ellis & Benton, Kansas City, Kansas. ILLARD MERRIAM, one of the best known real estate and insur- ance operators in Kansas, was born in Berlin, Wisconsin, January 20, 1864, the son of Horace and Eliza Wright Merriam. His parents w^ere New^ Englanders, the father being a native of Ver- mont and his mother from New^ York state. Mr. Merriam's success has been "self made" in the sense that he had to go out and get everything, even to his educa- tion. That he was fully capable of taking care of himself in the face of adverse conditions is clearly shown by his enviable reputation today among real estate and insurance men in the Central West. Besides his interest in the firm of Merriam. Ellis & Benton, Mr. Merriani is active in the management of the Fidelity Building and Loan Association, of which he is president. He is now or has recently been interested in the Fidelity Mortgage Company, president of the Viking Refrigerator and Manu- facturing Company, president of the Merriam Land Company and president of the Real Estate Investn^ient Company, not to mention several minor inter- ests which have proved successful. The Merriam, Ellis & Benton firm is one of the largest real estate concerns in Greater Kansas City and their insurance department ranks with the largest between St. Louis and San Francisco. Mr. Merriam is a Republican. In ! 889* he married Bessie Burtner. After her death he married Anna Peacock in 1 899. He has four children. sixty-o)te I\I c II of A f f a i r s i n Kansas C i t FRANK G. BACKSTROM Merchant Tailor; President of the Custom Cutters Association of America. RANK G. BACKSTROM. one of Kansas City's first merchant tailors, was born in Sweden June 28, 1867. the son of Elias and Eva (From) Backstroni. For seven years he has been one of the best known tailors in Kansas City, the firm being known as Backstrom-Ferguson, located at I 1 04 Baltimore Avenue. He is also president of the International Custom Cutters' Association of America. Mr. Backstrom is a Republican, but has never been a candidate for office, although he takes a lively interest in city affairs. He was married in 1893 and has one daughter and two sons. sixty-two il/ c II of A f f a i r s in K a n s a s City =.« ':> mm JOHN W. SNODDY One of the Most Prominent Liverymen and Horse Dealers in Kansas City. OHN W. SNODDY, who for sixteen years has been one of the foremost liverymen in Kansas City, was born in Carrollton, Missouri, in 1864, the son of John T. and Sallie Wade Snoddy, his father being a native of Kentucky and his mother having been born in Virginia. Mr. Snoddy obtained the usual common school education, and from the first showed a liking for horses. He came to Kansas City in 1887 and went into the livery and horse trading and selling business, with the result that he has an extensive business, which has steadily increased, until today it is one of the largest in the city. In 1894 Mr. Snoddy married Iva Linton, of Kansas City. They have one son, John Harold. Mr. Snoddy is a Democrat and a man who has built up a big business by close application to his work. sixty- three Men of Affairs in Kansas City WALTER LITTLEFIELD Special Master in Chancery, United States Circuit Court, and Successful Attorney. ALTER LITTLEFIELD, attorney and special master in chancery by appointment of the United States Court of the Eighth Cir- cuit, was born on a farm in Lagrange County, Indiana. January 6, 1845, the son of A. M. and Hannah Emerson Littlefield. September 15, 1869, Mr. Littlefield married Ellen E. Aldrich. They have one daughter, Mrs. Frances L. Stoddard. Mr. Littlefield was well known throughout the Central West when he came to Kansas City in 1903. He commenced his law practice in Ottawa, Kansas, and met with signal success. He served Franklin County, Kansas, as prosecuting attorney and later was called to the legal department of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad, with which company he remained for fourteen years. Later he became attorney general for the St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad in St. Louis. On coming to Kansas City Mr. Littlefield became associated with Atwood and Hooper, lawyers, the firm taking the name of Atwood, Littlefield & Hooper and becoming one of the leading firms in the city. Republican in politics, Mr. Littlefield has always been considered one of the first attorneys of the Central West and his appointment as special master in chancery to the United States Circuit Court was a small measure of recognition of his ability. sixty-four Men of Affairs I n Kansas City J* ■::-s^- HOWARD VANDERSLICE President Vanderslice-Lynds Mercantile Company; Director Lucky Tiger Mining Company. lOWARD VANDERSLICE, president of the Vanderslice-Lynds Mercantile Company and prominently connected with several commercial concerns in the Central West, was born in George- town, Kentucky, April 8, 1853, the son of Thomas J. and Sarah J. (Birchfield) Vanderslice, both natives of Kentucky. His grandfather. Major Daniel Vanderslice, played an important part in the development of the Central West; in 1822 he joined an exploring expedition into Illinois. While encamped on Rock Island in the Mississippi River he met the famous chiefs, Black Hawk and Keokuk. Later Major Vanderslice purchased the Kentucky Sentinel at Georgetown and aided in the election of Van Buren and Johnson in 1836. The follow- ing year he was appointed special agent for the removal of the Chickasaw Indians to their new lands west of the Mississippi. When Major Vanderslice went west, Thomas J., the son, w^ent with him, and the family was established in Doniphan County, Kansas, in August, 1853, Howard being but an infant. The boy grew up in an atmosphere which bred self-reliance and courage. His elementary education was obtained in Highland University, Highland, Kansas. At the age of nineteen he accepted the place of operator and agent at Iowa Point, Kansas. In 1881, with Milton Emmerson, he began dealing in grain at White Cloud. In 1890 Howard Vanderslice came to Kansas City to engage in the feed and ice business, forming a partnership with John H. Lynds, the firm name being Vanderslice-Lynds Mercantile Company, now one of the largest commission companies in the West. June, 1907, they purchased control of the Central Ice Company. Mr. Vanderslice is also interested in mining and oil property, being a director in the Lucky Tiger Mining Company, the Chanute Oil Refinery, and the Exchange Oil Company. January, 1874, Mr. Vanderslice married Miss M. Elizabeth Flinn, daugh- ter of William F. Flinn, of Iowa Point, Kansas. He is a member of Smithton Lodge No. 1, the first Masonic Lodge organized in Kansas, is a Shriner, a member of the Commercial Club, Evanston Golf Club and an Independent in politics. sixtv-five Men f A f f a i r s i n K a n s a s City ''V , ■;v.;;v '^'^'y '•-'O- ^; # ■ '— — '"^V: ROBERT M. SNYDER, JR. President Snyder Estate Company and Director of the Kansas Natural Gas Company. ROBERT M. SNYDER. JR., son of Robert M. and Frances Hard Snyder, president of the Snyder Estate Company and a director of the Kansas Natural Gas Company, was born in Louisville, Kentucky, January 17, 1876. His father was a native of Colum- bus, Indiana, and was one of the pioneers in the development of the natural gas fields of the Southwest. R. M. Snyder, Sr., organized the Missouri Gas Company in 1895, reducing the price of gas in Kansas City from $1.60 to $1.00 per thousand; in 1904 he organ- ized the Kansas Natural Gas Company, building a pipe line a distance of two hundred miles, connecting Kansas City for the first time with the new gas fields of the Southwest and making possible the reduction in price of gas from $1.00 to 25 cents a thousand. Mr. Snyder, Jr., assisted his father in this organization, spending three years in the gas fields of southern Kansas. Mr. Snyder, after receiving a common school and high school education, spent three years in Missouri University. April 10, 1906, he married Miss Mary Bowen, at Independence, Kansas. They have three sons, Edward Le Roy, William Kenneth and Frederick Perry. Mr. Snyder, jointly with his brothers LeRoy J. and Kenneth W. Snyder, owns the Ha-Ha-Ton-Ka estate in the Ozarks. sixty -six M c of Affair s I n Kansas C i t PHILIP SETZLER Senior Partner of P. Setzler & Sons, Makers and Bottlers of Soda and Mineral Waters. HILIP SETZLER. who established the firm of P. Setzler & Sons, of which he is now^ the senior member, w^as born in Ungstein, Bavaria, Germany, November 28, 1836, the son of Philip Law- rence and Susanna Magdeline Setzler. In 1850 the family came to America, settling in Cleveland, Ohio. Later they moved to Bellevue. Ohio. Mr. Setzler obtained a liberal education in his native country, being graduated from high school in 1851. Afterward he devoted several years to the study of landscape gardening and fruit culture and in 1855, he followed his parents to America. For a year he engaged in a general mer- chandise business in Cleveland, and his brother soon afterward went into the drug business in Bellevue. In 1861 he located in Leavenworth. Kansas, and in March of the following year, came to Kansas City where he engaged in the liquor and cigar business with A. Wolf as his partner. Later, Mr. Setzler sold out his interest in the business and began the manufacture of cider and native wines which he continued until 1884, when he enlarged the business to include soda and mineral waters. Louis Philip, Charles Martin and William Herman, his three sons, are now^ associated with him in the firm of P. Setzler & Sons, proprietors of the Silver Rock Bottling Works. March 15, 1864, Mr. Setzler married Philomena Hauk. in Kansas City. To them w^ere born the following children: Wilhelmina, Louis P., Amelia Magdeline, Charles Martin, Mrs. Caroline La Rue, W^liam Herman, Eddie May and Edward Allen. At the begining of the Civil War, Mr. Setzler joined Company B., Seventy- seventh Enrolled Militia of Missouri, and continued with it throughout the war. He is a member of McPherson Post. G. A. R., and belongs to Humboldt Lodge, No. 4, Knights of Pythias. He has lived in Kansas City almost half a century. sixty-seven .1/ c It of Affair s i n K a it s a s C i t y EDWIN J. HESS President of the Largest Railroad, Mill and Packing House Supplies Company in Kansas City. DWIN J. HESS, president of the Equipment Company, doing an extensive business in railroad, mill and packing house supplies, was born in Dayton, Illinois, June 28, 1871, the son of Charles B. and Clara 1. (Green) Hess. His father's family was among the earliest in Virginia and his mother's one of the earliest in Illinois. Obtaining a common school education, Mr. Hess received technical training for a ceramics engineer, and from 1892 to 1909 he was engaged in exploiting clay properties and building and operating sewer pipe, fire brick, paving brick and roofing tile plants. For some time he was president of the Illinois State Clay Manufacturers' Association. Today Mr. Hess is one of the real authorities on clay products in the United States. April, 1909, Mr. Hess purchased an interest in, and became vice-president of, the Mercantile Lumber & Supply Company of Kansas City, and in April, 1911, with his associates he purchased the supply department of the com- pany and organized it separately under the name of The Equipment Company. Politically, Mr. Hess is a Democrat and one of the most progressive men in the city. He is a member of the Kansas City Club and the Knife and Fork Club. January II, I 905, he married Enid Ethel Powell. They have one son, Robert Powell Hess. sixty-eight M e n o f A f f a i r s i u K a u s a s C i f y SMM ELMORE SHELTON TRUITT Prominently Identified with the Real Estate Interests of Kansas City; Formerly a Successful Merchant. LMORE SHELTON TRUITT. for many years a successful merchant and now identified with the real estate interests of Kansas City, was born February 27, 1862, in Oakland, Pennsylvania, the son of James Alexander and Sarah Jane (Meredith) Truitt, both natives of Pennsylvania. The ancestors w^ere prominent in the colonial history of America. Mr. Truitt completed the common school course in Oakland and entered the classical and normal institute in the same city. In 1884, after having been engaged in the mercantile business with his father, he went to Colorado. He remained in Custer County about six months, then started on a trading trip through the Southwest. His party disbanded at Sherman, Texas, and in 1885 Mr. Truitt came to Kansas City. On his arrival here he went to work as a salesman with a dry goods firm. In 1886 he went into the real estate business, his assets being his ability and determination, a foundation upon which he has built one of the most extensive and successful real estate businesses in Kansas City or the state. August 16, 1892, Mr. Truitt married Miss Belle Morgan of Independence, Missouri. They have one daughter. In politics a Republican, Mr. Truitt is one of the few men who really think of Kansas City's best interests before he does politics. He is known as a real booster and has always encouraged campaigns for municipal improve- ment. sixfv-nine M f A f f a i r I II Kansas C i t y CYRUS BARDEEN SWEET Successful Lumberman; Vice-President Long-Bell Lumber Company and Subsidiary Concerns. YRUS BARDEEN SWEET, one of the foremost lumbermen of America, Vice-president of the Long-Bell Lumber Company, was born in Washburn, Woodford County, Illinois, January 20, 1861, the son of Enoch and Emma H. (Toy) Sweet. His paternal ancestors were English, and his mother's antecedents were of German stock. Both families were among the pioneers who drove the Indians from Illinois and opened the state to the white settlers. Mr. Sweet received a common school education in Washburn and Chenoa. During vacations he worked in his father's store or on neighboring farms, until, at the age of 18, he became connected with the agency department of a railroad. After leaving that employment he turned his attention to the lumber business. In 1884, Mr. Sweet took a place in a retail lumber yard in Cherryvale, Kansas; one year later he w^as, by purchase, one of the owners, the firm being C. B. Sweet & Brother, and from that day his career has been one of remarkable business extension. For twelve years this business v^ras extended until it included lumber yards in Kansas, Missouri and all the territory now in the state of Oklahoma. In 189 7, Mr. Sweet entered the manufacturing field, establishing the Hudson River Lumber Company, at Hudson, Arkansas, a subsidiary company of the Long-Bell concern. Mr. Sweet had personal charge of this milling venture and it was a big success. In 1900, he was called to Kansas City to manage the manufacturing department of the Long- Bell interests and he is now Vice-president of the Long-Bell Lumber Company and at least a dozen subsidiary companies. Mr. Sweet married Miss Flora N. Bell, in Chenoa, Illinois, in 1884. She died three years later. In 1891 he married Jennie L. Lockwood. One daughter, born of the first union, is Mrs. J. D. Tennant, of Lake Charles, Louisiana. The children of the second marriage are Sibyl, Athelia, Cyra and Robert. Mr. Sweet is a member of the Christian Church and in politics is a Republican. Liberal and progressive, he is today one of the most valued assets of commercial and industrial Kansas City. scven\\ Men of A f f a I r s Kansas City WILLIAM C. CULBERTSON Attorney and Member of the Upper House of the Common Council of Kansas City. JILLIAM C. CULBERTSON. attorney and member of the Upper House of the Common Council, was born in Rolla, Missouri, September I 2, 1 874, the family being of Scotch-Irish descent and numbering many distinguished and honored men. Mr. Culbertson took all that the public school and libraries of Rolla offered in the way of education and then went into the newspaper field, for a time editing two weekly papers. He entered William Jewell College and, while keeping up a high standard of scholarship, studied law. He was admitted to the bar by Judge E. J. Broaddus, then presiding judge of the Clay County Circuit Court. In I 898 Mr. Culbertson came to Kansas City. Although admitted to the bar and recognized as an able attorney, he entered the Kansas City School of Law while practicing with the firm of Wallace 6c Wallace. In 1899 he was graduated and was immediately taken into the firm, which then became known as Wallace, Wallace & Culbertson. In 1903 he withdrew from this association to practice alone. Having made a specialty of corporation law, he is now called in an advisory capacity by many of the largest firms and corporations in the state. In 1900, Mr. Culbertson married Miss Martha P. Wymore, of Liberty. Missouri. He is a Shriner, a member of the Odd Fellows and the Bar Asso- ciation, and has always been prominent in the organizations of city, county and state which have aimed at the general improVement and betterment of industrial and political conditions. Mr. Culbertson is especially popular in Kansas City for the fine way in which he has carried business methods into the Upper House of the Council. Elected a member of the Upper House on the Democratic ticket, he has re- fused to allow^ politics to blind him to the interests of the city. After serving four years in the Upper House, w^ith a record excelled by no member since Kansas City received its charter, it was only natural that the Democratic party should insist on his candidacy for re-election in 1912 and it was equally natural that he should have been re-elected by a substantial majority on April 2, 1912. scz'cuty-oue .1/ c II f .1 j f a i r s i u K a n s a s C i t y mm ROBERT HARRY JONES Wholesale Fruit and Produce Dealer, a Member of the Ginocchio-Jones Fruit Company. OBERT HARRY JONES, of the Ginocchio-Jones Fruit Company, one of the oldest and largest firms in the Southwest, was born in St. Louis, Missouri, February 18, 1863, the son of Robert Holmes and Mary Jane (Wardlow) Jones. His father was a native of Bourbon County, Kentucky, and his mother was born in Brook- lyn, New York. His father was a representative of the same an- cestry from which sprang Oliver Wendell Holmes, the poet. Mr. Jones received his education in the public schools of St. Louis and, when eighteen years old, began to learn the machinist's trade in the Fulton Iron Works of that city. A year and a half later he went with Shepherd & Ginocchio Company, one of the largest fruit and produce firms in St. Louis. Coming to Kansas City in 1885, he found employment with Kesting & Smith, fruit dealers. When the firm of Ginocchio Brothers & Company decided to establish a branch in Kansas City, they bought out Kesting & Smith and made Mr. Jones manager. His management was a success from the first, and in I 899 the firm of Ginocchio-Jones was incorporated. This firm has an unbroken commercial history running back to 1850. May 7, 1902, Mr. Jones married Mattie May Barnes in Kansas City. Mr. Jones is a member of the Commercial Club and has liberally supported all movements of recent years which have aimed to better and advertise com- mercial Kansas City. He is also a member of the Knife and Fork Club. scfcnty-tKO .1/ c II o f A f f a i r s i ii K a ii s a s C i f y "^illv -'•'> ■•:■>:> DUDLEY WARD EATON General Claims Attorney for the Kansas City» Mexico & Orient Railway Company. UDLEY WARD EATON, general claims attorney for the Kansas City, Mexico & Orient Railway Company, was born near Bucyrus, Ohio, July 15, 1874. the son of John A. and Bathsheba G. (Quaintance) Eaton, who were both natives of Ohio. Mr. Eaton was graduated from Kansas University Law School, in 1895, and October 25. 1899, married Madge Mc- Alister. They have one daughter. Admitted to the bar in Kansas in I 894, Mr. Eaton came to Kansas City in 1895, w^as admitted to the Missouri bar and w^as affiliated with the legal department of the Kansas City, Pittsburg 6c Gulf Railroad and was later made general claims attorney' for the Kansas City, Mexico 6c Orient, which position he now holds. He is one of the few attorneys who have held aloof from politics and devoted his entire time and energy to his pro- fession. Politically he is a Democrat of liberal views but has had no hanker- ing after office or political favors. Mr. Eaton is an enthusiast at golf and is a member of the Evanston and Elm Ridge Clubs. seventy-three Me f Affairs I n Kansas City ALBERT L. BERGER Attorney at Law» Bank Director and Railroad President. LBERT L. BERGER, one of the best known attorneys in Kansas and Missouri, a resident of Kansas City, Kansas, but intimately connected with the legal fraternity of Kansas City, Mo., was born in Lebanon, Illinois, February 2, 1665. His father was a student in Heidelberg University when the German Revolution of 1848 broke out. Forced to leave the country on the failure of the revolution, he came to America and settled in Lebanon, Illinois, where he practiced medicine and surgery. He married Cecilia Adams, a near relative of John Quincy Adams. Albert L. Berger, the son, attended McKendree College w^here he w^as a classmate of such men as L. Y. Sherman and Charles S. Deneen, now^ prom- inent in national politics. Mr. Berger completed his legal education in Wash- ington University, St. Louis, Missouri, and was admitted to the bar in 1886. In 1887 he married Miss Estella J. Hecker, granddaughter of Col. Fred Hecker, who had fled from Germany with the senior Berger. They have two children, Home Hecker and Cecilia Marie. Immediately upon being admitted to the bar, Mr. Berger settled in Kan- sas City, Kansas, where he at once took a leading place in the legal frater- nity. From 1890 to 1898 he served as auditor of Wyandotte County. He assisted in the organization of the Kansas City, Kanras, State Bank, in which he is a director; the Mercantile Bank, and the Missouri River & Gulf Rail- road, of which he is president. He is connected with the legal departments of the Union Pacific, St. Louis ftt San Francisco and the Missouri, Kansas & Texas railroads and was called in as a special counselor for the Metropolitan Street Railway receivers. scvetity-four M e n of A f f a i r s 1 II K ansa s C i f V I; FRANK P. SEBREE Former Police Commissioner and Member of the Board of Election Commissioners. RANK P. SEBREE, police commissioner under Governor Dockery and later chairman of the election board, was born in Fayette, Missouri, October 25, 1854. After attending Central College in Fayette and Pritchett College in Glasgow, Missouri, he entered the law department of the University of Missouri, from which he was graduated. Upon being admitted to the bar, he began practicing in Marshall, Missouri, where he remained until I 889, when he came to Kansas City. One year before coming to Kansas City, Mr. Sebree was elected to the state legislature from Saline County and served with conspicuous ability as chairman of the judiciary committee. Mr. Sebree's reputation as an able attorney and a Democrat of sterling quality and liberal views, preceded him to Kansas City, and w^hen he arrived to make the city his home, he at once took a prominent place in the councils of his party. In 1898 he was made chairman of the county committee and rendered efficient service. In 1902, Governor Dockery appointed him a mem- ber of the board of police commissioners for Kansas City but he later re- signed to accept the position of chairman of the board of election commission- ers. Mr. Sebree has served the county as counselor. Today he is one of the strongest men in the Democratic party and enjoys a large law practice. In I 883, Mr. Sebree married Miss Rusaie Boyd, daughter of Col. Sam Boyd, of Marshall, Missouri. They have one sort, Samuel Sebree. seventv-fi'i'c .1/ c n o f A f f a i r s i ii K a u s a s C i t * MATTHEW A. FLYNN General Insurance Agent, Former City Clerk and City Comptroller, Elected April 2, 1912. ]ATTHEW A. FLYNN, general agent for the Minnesota Mutual Life Insurance Connpany, former city clerk, and city comp- troller, elected April 2, 1912, was born in Cynthiana. Kentucky, July 4, 1866, the son of Thomas and Ellen Stapleton Flynn. His father was born in Ireland and his mother in Wellsville, Ohio. Mr. Flynn obtained the usual common school education and then began to shift for himself. He came to Kansas City, where he w^as from the first, very popular. Of Democratic politics, he has played no small part in recent campaigns and served as city clerk of Kansas City from 1909 to 191 L On giving up the office of city clerk, he returned to the insurance business in which he was very successful. The Democratic party, in seeking a candidate for city comptroller in 1912, selected Mr. Flynn, who was generally respected and highly esteemed by the business men of Kansas City, regardless of party. The wisdom of this selection was verified in the election when Mr. Flynn was voted into office by an almost unprecedented majority. October 25, 1888, Mr. Flynn married Mary Cronin. They have two sons and a daughter. seventy-six -1/ of A f f a i r s i ii K a It s a s C i f X ■<{L1^ .cji. « ^-■:v:r:;r>' < y.... ■%>■.■■'■■■-... . ■./^ ''^•^fg VAL B. MINTUN Kansas City Manager for the Missouri and Kansas Telephone Company, and an Authority on Telephone Operation. AL B. MINTUN, Kansas City manager for the Missouri and Kansas Telephone Company, was born in Kansas City, Missouri, August 29, 1874, son of Henry M. Mintun, one of the pioneers of this county ana one of the owners of the first newspaper ever pub- lished in Kansas City, The Bulletin. Mr. Mintun's father was a native of Ohio and his mother came from Middletown, Deleware. Mr. Mintun obtained a public school education and then went to work for the Missouri and Kansas Telephone Company, as a solicitor, in 1905. He served the company successively as adjuster, branch exchange worker, special agent, contract manager and assistant manager. In October, 1911, he was made manager, having come up through the ranks, and,' con- sequently, being equipped with a thorough technical knowledge of the tele- phone business. Mr. Mintun belongs to the Elks lodge, is a Thirty-second degree Mason, a Shriner, a member of the Commercial Club, Kansas City Club, Railroad Club, Mid-Day Club and Rotary Club. He is married and has one daughter. sereutY'Scveti M e n of Affair s i n K a n s a s C i f V DAVID WILSON RIDER General Superintendent Kansas City Terminal Railway; a Recognized Authority on Railroad Construction and Operation. AVID WILSON RIDER, general superintendent of the Kansas City Terminal Railway, and one of the recognized authorities on rail- road construction and operation, was born in Geneseo, Illinois, August 25, 1837, the son of David Wilson and Ella C. Rider. His parents were sterling Quakers, his father being a native of New York and his mother of Massachusetts. In 1871, Mr. Rider began his career as a messenger boy in a railroad office, having had but a public school education. He was shortly advanced to a freight checker and then began his work in the transportation department. Starting in as a switchman, he became successively brakeman, conductor, yard master and station apent and as a result had an understand- ing of operative methods possible only to the man who has been in personal contact with the problems arising. From October to December, 1881, he served as superintendent of the Peoria & Pekin Union Railway; from the latter date to January 10, 1887, he was division superintendent's chief clerk on the Wabash. Fuel agent for a short time, he became in May, 1887, chief clerk to the receiver of the Wabash system. In 1889 he became superintendent of the Jack.sonville South- ern and in 1891 took charge as general superintendent. In October, 1892, he was made superintendent of the Kansas City Belt Railway. Mr. Rider has been chairman of the Executive Committee of the Car Service Association, since its organization, served two terms as president of the Kansas City Division of the Central Association of Railroad Officials, has been a director of the Provident Association, Commercial Club, Conven- tion Hall and of the Merchants and Manufacturers' Association. He is an Elk, a Knight Templar and consistory Mason. In politics, he is a Republican. January 14, 1885, Mr. Rider married Mary Louise Mayo, of Chicago. They have two sons, David W., Jr., and George M., and a daughter, Elizabeth. seventy-eight Men f A f f a i r s i n Kansas C i t y gilll^^?:;^,,-.^ i=::-?;£i=^ iw # Vi^^fe JONATHAN A. BRUBAKER Hay Merchant and One of the Men Instrumental in Building Grand Avenue Temple. chool ONATHAN A. BRUBAKER, often referred to as the "Hay King." was born in Springfield, Ohio. April 2, 1859, the son of Benjamin and Susanah Denlinger Brubaker. His grandfather, Benjamin Brubaker, Sr., was a pioneer in Ohio, coming from Virginia. The Denlinger family came from Pennsylvania and settled near Dayton, Ohio. The fact that Mr. Brubaker received only the common benefits did not keep him from gaining a more complete education from books and observation and when he established his hay business in Kan- sas City in 1 88 1 , he was well prepared to make it the mammoth success it has proved. Today he is probably the best known hay merchant in Kansas City. Mr. Brubaker has been affiliated with the Grand Avenue Methodist Church for many years and he is one of the men who handled the business of building the elegant church and skyscraper office building at the corner of Grand Avenue and Ninth street. He was chairman of the building committee and also chairman of the board of trustees. For several years he served as superintendent of the church Sunday school. February 8, 1883, Mr. Brubaker married Elizabeth Martin. They have one daughter, Mrs. L. W. Cuyler. Mr. Brubaker holds an enviable position both socially and in the com- mercial world and he has always been among those who go to the front for the city. seventv-nuie .1/ o f A f f a I i II K a II s a C i f LAWRENCE W. HAGG President Hagg Investment Company, Doing a General Real Estate, Investment, Loan and Mortgage Business. AWRENCE W. HAGG. president of the Hagg Investment Com- pany, was born in Stanton, Iowa, in 1880, the son of John A. and Mary Matilda Hagg, and is of German and Scandinavian de- scent. His father was a native of Henry County, Illinois, and his mother was born in Iowa. After completing the common school, Mr. Hagg entered Western Normal College of Iowa and was graduated in I 899. He then went into the Southwest and for some time was in the banking busi- ness in Oklahoma. Later he went into colonization work in Amarillo, Texas, coming to Kansas City in 1908 with a large experience in the real estate and investment business and a thorough knowledge of values in the Southwest. It was only natural that, with this equipment, his business in Kansas City should have been a success from the first and that the company of which he is head should now be one of the largest of its kind in this territory. In 1903 Mr. Hagg married Beulah Smade. They have one daughter. Mr. Hagg is a Republican, a man of liberal views, and a Kansas City booster all the time. He is a member of the Linwood Presbyterian Church. eighty M c 11 I .If f a i r s i u K a ii s a s Lit THOMAS R. MORROW Solicitor for Missouri and Iowa of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company. Mr HOMAS R. MORROW, prominent attorney of Kansas City and solicitor of the Atchison, Topeka fit Santa Fe Railway Company, for the states of Missouri and Iowa, was born in Hartford, Con- necticut, January 24, 1 85 7. Mr. Morrow sums up his career thus: "Simply a hard working lawyer for about 30 years." But the high esteem in which he is held by the legal fraternity of the West, does not admit of dismissing the subject so modestly. Morrow obtained a general education in Yale Academy, from w^hich he was graduated in 1880. Subsequently, he entered Yale Law School and was graduated in 1 882. He immediately began the practice of law and has met w^ith uniform success throughout his career. Devoting all of his time and attention to the work in hand, Mr. Morrow has refrained from seeking political favors, although, being a Democrat of the old fashioned type, such favors might have been his for the asking. He made one exception to his rule during the administration of Governor Francis in Mis- souri, and accepted at his hand an appointment to the board of police com- missioners in Kansas City. He served in this capacity about three years. July 3, 1883, Mr. Morrow married Miss Flora E. Burt, at Hartford, Con- necticut. eighty-one M en of .^ f f a i r s i n K a n s as C i t y ^^Wg= JOHN P. MULLANE General Agent for The Columbian National Life Insurance Company. ^^^^^^^SIjOHN P. MULLANE, well known insurance man and general ^^yirG >^ agent for the Columbian National Life Insurance Company, with K^^ offices in suite 1304 Commerce Building, was born in County Limerick, Ireland, May 12, 1872, the son of Patrick and Catherine Mullane. Mr. Mullane obtained his education in the National schools of Ireland and then came to America. After trying several occu- pations he found his calling in the insurance field and today he is considered one of the best men in the business in the central west. In April, 1906, he married Miss Jennie Steele. They have one daughter. Coming to Kansas City in 1892, Mr. Mullane was inpressed by the air of activity and decided to locate here. For seven years he was with the firm of Drennon, Schafer & Company, who were doing a general insurance busi- ness, and in 1909 he became associated with the Columbian National Life Insurance Company, of which he is now general agent. eighty-two Men of Affairs in Kansas City c-:^-) ROBERT J. FLICK President of the Franklin Ice Cream Company, One of the Largest Ice Cream Makers in the West. OBERT J. FLICK, president of the Franklin Ice Cream Company, was born in Ohio, May 1 0, 1 874, the son of A. J. and Eliza Lipsey Flick. His father was a native of England and his mother was born in Ohio. Mr. Flick followed his connmon school education with a course in Nebraska University, from w^hich institution he was graduated in 1896. August 14, 1907, he married Grace Ashton. Going into the merchandise business, Mr. Flick eventually began the wholesale manufacture of ice cream. He came to Kansas City, in February, 1910, to assume the presidency and management of the Franklin Ice Cream Company, the largest concern of its kind in the city. For fifteen years prior to his coming here, he had been in the same business in Lincoln, Ne- braska, and still has a factory at that place. eighty-three .1/ o f A f f a i r s I II K a n s a s C i t V if WENTWORTH EDWIN GRIFFIN Chief of Police of Kansas City, Former Superintendent of Streets, Lawyer and Business Man. <]ENTWORTH EDWIN GRIFFIN, since 1908 chief of police of Kansas City, was born in Dayton, Ohio, December 24, 1872, the son of Edwin F. and Annie S. (Wentworth) Griffin, his father being a native of Vermont and his mother having been born in New Hampshire. Mr. Griffin came to Kansas City in 1886, having prepared for the legal profession, and for a time was associated with Judge William P. Hall. From 1692 to 1903 he was associated with the Western Sash and Door Company and later served the city as superintendent of streets, being in the office when civil service became effective. Mr. Griffin took the examination and qualified, later resigning from the place to accept his present position at the head of the police department. He is a Repub- lican of progressive and liberal views and has made his administration in the police department one of the best in the history of the city. August 14, 1901, Mr. Griffin married Dora C. Nagle. He is a Thirty- second degree Mason, a member of Gate City No. 522, A. F. & A. M., Scottish Rite and a Shriner and is also a member of the Modern Woodmen of America. eighty-fcur M f A f f a i r s i u K a u s a s C i t GEORGE A. DIXON Partner and Manager of the Cattle Department of the Charles Dixon Commission Company. EORGE A. DIXON, a member of the Charles Dixon Commission Company, 346-54 Live Stock Exchange Building, and manager of the extensive cattle department of the company, was born in I tAMV/ lrv 'ft Riley County, Kansas, February 21, 1875, the son of Thomas V^W^^ fy and Mary Hoff Dixon. His father was born in Ireland and his ^'^^^^^^^' 1 mother was born in Frankfort-on-the-Main, Germany. Mr. Dixon received his early education in Junction City, Kansas, where he was graduated from the high school. October 29, 1902, he married Ida Margaret McNamara. They have one son. In I 895, Mr. Dixon came to Kansas City and associated himself with the Charles Dixon Commission Company, one of the largest concerns of its kind in the Southwest. eighty-five M c 11 of A f f a i r s i u K a n s a s C i t y SHU; PETER W. GOEBEL Banker and Capitalist; President Commercial National Bank of Kansas City, Kansas. ■ AVE a little every month, indulge in no speculations, give every- body a square deal and don't forget God. By his own admission, this simple creed enabled Peter ^X^ Goebel to rise from an immi- grant boy, without funds, to one of the most influential bankers in Kansas and Greater Kansas City. Peter W. Goebel was born in Nassau, Germany, March 18, 1 859. At the age of 14 he had completed the public school course and he at once persuaded his father to allow him to come to America. Gaining the reluctant consent of his parents, young Goebel made the trip, steerage and alone, arriving in America with funds enough to carry him to Chicago. He went to work for an Illinois farmer until he had saved enough to pay his fare to Kansas. While learning the language. Mr. Goebel clerked in a drug store and cared for his employer's horses. When he was I 9 years old he had saved enough to have a drug store of his own. In 1882, Mr. Goebel became cashier of the banking firm of M. Reed & Company, at Loulsburg. In I 89 7, he organized the Commercial National Bank of Kansas City, Kansas, and became its president, a position he still holds. In 1905 he organized the Citizens' State Saving Bank, of Kansas City, Kansas, and in 1907, the Kansas Trust Company. Of both of these com- panies he is now the head. In 187 7, Mr. Goebel married Mary Shaw. They have five children. eighty-six Men of ^4 f f a i r s i n K a n s a s C i f y ■C.1 «L^ ^'0m WILLIAM R. THURMOND Attorney, Connected With the Legal Department of the Long-Bell Lumber Company. ILLIAM R. THURMOND, well known attorney, affiliated with the legal department of the Long-Bell Lumber Company, was born in Fulton, Missouri, August 21, 1870, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas D. Thurmond. Both his parents were natives of Mis- souri, his father having been born in Pike County and his mother in Callaway County. After obtaining the usual grade school education, Mr. Thur- mond entered Westminster College, from which he was graduated in 1890. October 12, 1893, he married Alma Harlan. They have two sons and a daughter. After leaving school, Mr. Thurmond began reading law in his father's office. He came to Kansas City from Fulton in 1891, was admitted to the bar in 1893 and began practicing the following year. He was associated with Judge Trumbull for ten years in the legal department of the Pittsburg & Gulf Railroad and while Judge Trumbull was general attorney for the Kansas City & Northern, now a part of the Q. O. & K. C. For the past seven years Mr. Thurmond has been practicing on his own account, the firm name at present being Thurmond & Farrar, 903 R. A. Long Building. Since May, 1910, the firm has been affiliated with the legal department of the Long-Bell Lumber Company. Mr. Thurmond is a man of recognized ability and talent, a member of the Jackson County Bar Association and the Knife and Fork Club. Polit- ically, he is a Democrat of liberal and progressive views. eighty-seven M c II of A f f a i r s i ii K a ii s a s C i t y ROBERT BURNS RUFF President of the Pioneer Life Insurance Company of America and an Attorney of Much Ability. .Ij^V^UijOBERT BURNS RUFF, president of the Pioneer Life Insurance l^nWlrjJ) Company of America, with headquarters in Kansas City, was r^ r^^ born in Winchester, Illinois, July 29, 1869, the son of John 1. (3r^^\J^^) and Lucy A. Ruff. Mr. Ruff is from a line of sturdy and famous ( \ AW^\\ Scotchmen, Robert Burns, the poet, being a great-uncle of Mr. !Jiyi^''^;i Ruff's father. Mr. Ruff was graduated from Illinois College in I 890, and July I I of the same year married Lizzie E. Holmes. They have three children, Mary Ellen, Robert B., Jr., and William Harrison. Mr. Ruff is a Democrat and once refused the nomination for congressman when nomination meant election. By profession he is an attorney. righly-cighl .1/ c of Affair s I II K a II s a s C i f CONRAD H. MANN Secretary-Treasurer and General Manager Kansas City Breweries Company; Chairman Board of Grand Trustees, Fraternal Order of Eagles. •^ONRAD H. MANN, chairman of the Board of Grand Trustees of the Fraternal Order of Eagles, and secretary -treasurer and general manager of the Kansas City Breweries Company, w^as born January 17, 1871, in Butler Township, Scott County, Iowa, the son of John and Barbara Mann. His father was a native of Germany and his mother was born in Richmond, Virginia. After finishing the common school, Mr. Mann took a busi- ness college course in Davenport, low^a, and became an expert bookkeeper and accountant. September II, 1902, he married Emma Werde, of Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Working on the theory that there is an opportunity for everyone who is looking for it, Mr. Mann followed his profession for several years and then became associated with the Kansas City Breweries Company, one of the largest concerns of its kind in Missouri, of which he is now^ the executive head. He has always been one of the hard workers in the Eagles lodge and as a recog- nition of his ability and effort he was made chairman of the Board of Grand Trustees of the order. Mr. Mann has always taken a keen interest in municipal affairs. Being a man of quick sympathies, the Mayor's Christmas Tree project appealed to him and during the Brown administration he was one of the men who twice made it a success. Mr. Mann has always been a warm friend of the newspaper fraternity. eighty-nine Men of Affairs in Kansas City ^'*"U' GEORGE GILCHRIST MOORE Assistant Cashier, New England National Bank, and an able Man in Financial Matters. PT^^IEORGE GILCHRIST MOORE, assistant cashier of the New England Vitv^T^ National Bank of Kansas City, was born in Holton, Kansas, July ■ ' ' 19, 1876, the son of James P. and Vinnie E. Moore. His father, who is president of the First National Bank in Holton, is a //7J[\| native of Ohio and his mother was born in Fairfield, Iowa. Mr. Moore, after obtaining his education, started to follow in the footsteps of his father, who is one of the prominent bankers in the Sunflower state, and became cashier of the Citizens State Bank, Ponca City, Oklahoma. While in Ponca City, Mr. Moore served the community as a member of the board of education from 1901 to 1903 and he materially assisted in establishing the excellent school system in that city. From Ponca City, Mr. Moore came to Kansas City to accept his present position as assist- ant cashier of the New England National Bank. September 28, 1898, Mr. Moore nuarried Clara B. Tucker. They have one son, James H., nine years old. Politically, Mr. Moore is a Republican. He is a man of ability and judg- ment and since coming to Kansas City has built up a large circle of friends. ninety Men of --'Iff o i '' s i n Kansas C i t y CHARLES CHRISTIAN HOEFER Member of the Woodstock-Hoefer Watch and Jewelry Company, one of the Largest in the Central West. 1HARLES CHRISTIAN HOEFER, of the Woodstock-Hoefer Watch and Jewelry Company, was born March 2, 1855, in Maryville, Dodge County, Wisconsin. Thomas W. Hoefer, his father, came from Germany in 1 845, landed in New Orleans, walked to St. Louis, made his way to Wisconsin and settled in Dodge County where he cleared the first forty acre farm in his vicinity. He married Philipina Knester. His father dying in 1858 and his mother ten years later, C. C. Hoefer was an orphan at the age of thirteen. His school education was abruptly ended and he went to work. For two years, Mr. Hoefer clerked in a drug store, two years in a dry goods store and then he went to Chicago where he worked for Marshall Field & Company and John V. Farwell & Company until 1882, when he went into the jewelry business as an employe of Otto Young & Company. Later he was with M. A. Meade & Company. In 1885 he came to Kansas City and with S. E. Woodstock, who had been a manager for a jewelry house in Des Moines, Iowa, he established what is now the Woodstock-Hoefer Watch and Jewelry Company, which from a modest beginning has come to be one of the largest jewelry establishments in the Central West. February II, 1885. Mr. Hoefer married Mary Virginia Schofield, of Schofield, Wisconsin. They have two daughters. Mr. Hoefer is a member of the Kansas City Club and the Elm Ridge Club. He is a Democrat of liberal views and a booster for Kansas City. ntnetv-one Men of A f f a i r s i n K a n s a s C i t y if^ M C. HARRY DARBY Manager of the Missouri Boiler Works Company and Interested in Banking, Real Estate and Groceries. HARRY DARBY, manager of the Missouri Boiler Works Com- pany, one of the largest concerns of its kind in the West, was born in Washington, D. C, June 17, 1865, the son of Henry C. and Mary Hannah Darby, his father having been born in Charles- ton, Virginia, and his mother being a native of Baltimore, Mary- land. The Darby family came to Kansas City when the subject of this sketch was a small boy and for forty-two years he has been connected with the city and its history. After finishing his school education Mr. Darby learned the boilermaker's trade and for a long time was with the Darby Boiler Works. Later he was associated with the Kansas City Boiler Works and in 1900 went into the field for himself and organized the Missouri Boiler Works. It has been ve:y successful from the first and at present Mr. Darby has a diversity of interests aside from it. He is interested in real estate in both Kansas Citys, has an investment in the grocery business and is in the organization of the Exchange State Bank, the Commerce National Bank and the Kansas Trust Company, all of Kansas City, Kansas. While not a politician by any means, Mr. Darby is a Republican of liberal views and served Wyandotte County, Kansas, as county commissioner for three years to the general satisfaction of all concerned. June 22, 1890, Mr. Darby married Florance Snith of Ellis, Kansas, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Snith of Rochester, New York. They have three children, Marie, Harry and Florance. While building up a successful business, Mr. Darby has not neglected the social side of life and he has an extraordinary circle of friends. He belongs to the Elks and is a Mason, a Knipht Templar and a Shriner. His position in commercial Kansas City is a monument to his hard work and honest business policy. The Missouri Boiler Works Company's plant is located at Third Street and Minnesota Avenue, Kansas City, Kansas. iiitiety-tzvo M en of A f f a i r s i n K ansa s City •:>:> .- SAMUEL Y. HIGH Chief Superintendent of the ICansas City, Missouri, Waterworks. ]AMUEL Y. HIGH, head of the municipal waterworks of Kansas City, Missouri, was born in Reading, Pennsylvania, August 30, 1856, the son of R. V. R. and Ester A. High. His ancestors were among the early pioneers of Pennsylvania and both parents were natives of that state. After obtaining a common school education, Mr. High attended the Philadelphia Polytechnic University in 1879-80. He married Louisa Patten April 29, 1881. They have two children, a son and a daughter. For sixteen years Mr. High was general superintendent of the ICansas City Bolt and Nut Company, one of the largest manufacturing concerns in the West. He later became connected with the waterworks department of the city and his appointment as chief superintendent of the big system was only a just recognition of his ability. Mr. High is a Republican. ninety-three Men of Affairs in Kansas City EDWARD F. SWINNEY Former President of the American Bankers* Association and Now President of the First National Bank. ;DWARD F. SWINNEY, a national figure in the financial world, at one t:me president of the American Bankers' Association and now president of the First National Bank of Kansas City, was born in Marysville, Campbell County, Virginia, August I, 185 7. After completing the common school course he entered Black- burg Military Academy at Blackburg, Virginia. Leaving the academy in 1875, Mr. Swinney decided to seek his field of opportunity in the West, and in February, 1876, he arrived in Fayette, Missouri, and went to work delivering groceries. His salary was $20.00 a month. In August, 1878, notwithstanding the fact that he had been given a raise in salary of $5.00 a month, Mr. Swinney decided that he wanted to learn the banking business and accepted a place in the Fayette Bank, where he remained until September, 1882. A change to Rich Hill. Missouri, brought him promotion, and later when Fayette capital opened a bank in Colorado City, Texas, Mr. Swinney was made cashier. He remained there until 1887, w^hen he became associated with the banking interests of Kansas City, coming to the First National as cashier. After serving in that capacity for thirteen years he was elected president of the institution, which is one of the strongest in the United States. At one time Mr. Swinney was a director of the Chicago & Alton Railroad, and a director in the Fidelity Trust Company and the Missouri Savings Bank. For several years he served as treasurer of the school board. Mr. Swinney's reputation as a conservative financier is national. In 1905 he was made president of the American Bankers' Association. He is a mem- ber of the Commercial Club and, as such, takes a vital interest in the indus- trial and commercial welfare of the city. He is also a member of the Country Club. He married Miss Ida Lee, of Howard County, Missouri, in 1882. ninety-four Men of A f f a i r s in Kansas City ^ GEORGE O. COFFIN, M. D. One of the Most Successful Physicians in the State and Formerly City Physician of Kansas City. EORGE O. COFFIN, M. D., well-known physician and formerly city physician of Kansas City, was born in Danielsvilie. Penn- sylvania, August 4, 1858. His early education was obtained in the common school of his native town and at Williamsburg Academy. Later he entered Penn Medical College in Philadel- phia and was graduated in 1879. He practiced in Frankfort, Kansas; El Paso, Texas, and Silver Cliff, Colorado, and came to Kansas City in 1887. In 1894 Dr. Coffin was appointed house surgeon of the General Hospital and in 1895 became city physician, in which capacity he served until 1901. He was elected to the chair of surgery in the Medico-Chirurgical College and was dean of the faculty. He is also professor of clinical surgery in the Women's Medical College of Kansas City and is on the staffs of a half dozen railroad and other hospitals. Dr. Coffin is a member of the Jackson County Medical Society and the Missouri State Medical Association. He is a thirty-second degree Mason, a noble of the Mystic Shrine, a Knight of Pythias and an Elk. ninety- five Me n of A f f a i r s i n K a n s a s C i f y .'.-.'■> <^ ;vv; ■ -/' -^^j .■<:■■■■■ # M^ JAMES ALLEN PREWITT Former Mayor of Independence, Missouri; Vice-President of the Home Deposit Trust Company, Independence, Missouri. AMES ALLEN PREWITT was born in Henry County, Kentucky. January 20, 1862, the son of James V. Prewitt, a farmer and merchant, and Catherine (Byrns) Prewitt, a woman in whom all the lovable qualities proverbial with the Southern woman were to be found. Both parents have been dead for several years. Mr. Prewitt received his education in a country school, augmented by a single year at Georgetown College, Georgetown, Kentucky. After teaching school three years, one year in Kentucky and two years in Missouri, he was admitted to the bar at Independence in 1887. He acquired the rudiments of his legal education while teaching school. He says he has never graduated; that he never intends to graduate; that he is opposed to dying young so long as there is something more to learn. Mr. Prewitt has not strenuously sought office, but in his early business career was elected justice of the peace, served acceptably and declined to be- come candidate for a second term on the ground that one term as justice of the peace was enough for any man and that in four years in such office one ought to progress beyond it, or give place to one who could. After his term of office as justice expired, Mr. Prewitt gave his entire attention to his profession, attaining a degree of success that has placed him in the ranks of the substantial members of the Jackson County bar. In 1906 Mr. Prewitt was nominated by the Democrats at a primary elec- tion for the office of mayor, and was elected on a progressive platform, pre- pared and enunciated by himself during the campaign. The other nominees on the Democratic ticket were named in convention controlled by the con- servative element of the party who refused to adopt the progressive platform presented by Mr. Prewitt. The election which followed, resulted in choosing Mr. Prewitt as mayor and the Democratic candidate for treasurer, both by safe majorities, but the rest of the Democratic nominees for general offices were defeated. No man ever assumed the office of mayor of Independence under more unfavorable circumstances, and no one ever succeeded more thoroughly in carrying out his campaign promises than did Mayor Prewitt. During the two nmety-stx Men of A f f a i r s i n Kansas City years of his administration a veritable revolution took place. The city was rejuvenated and has ever since continued to grow. Mr. Prewitt's character as an official and his style of accomplishing his purposes can best be shown by quoting froni his public utterances. In his first message to the city council he said: "This has been a significant election. Democrats and Republicans elected at the same time on issues and not on men. It means that we are now neither Democrats nor Republicans, but servants of Independence. The responsibility is not on the Democratic party or the Republican party, but on us." Again he said: "The improvements we are about to undertake will doubtless provoke opposition. 1 trust that through it all, the councilmen will keep sweet. Opposition is all we can afford to provoke. With our minds firmly fixed on the public good and our hearts full of respect and consideration for our fellows, we are bound to win." And again: "We cannot move forward so long as we get our inspirations from the past or copy our ideas from tombstones. Precedent is good enough to fol- low^ so long as we know nothing better. The world should be governed by man-alive, and a city should be conducted according to the highest ideals of intellectual development. No nation, state or city can make the best prog- ress that does not change its constitution or charter with every generation. An enlightened people will yet make this change not only possible but com- pulsory." Again, in a local option campaign, the mayor gave vent to this expres- sion: "It seems almost useless for a man to think unless he owns a news- paper or occupies a pulpit. This however should not deter us from using our best efforts to smother a movement which, for the sake of giving a few fanatics a chance to count, must result in much bitterness and in the suppres- sion of the work now being done toward the substantial improvement of our city." Mr. Prewitt's message to the council on the local option question and his Thanksgiving proclamation were so full cf unusual expressions and unique philosophy that they were widely quoted and came near giving him a national reputation. Out of his persistent advocacy of the improvement of the streets of Independence and the building of boulevards and paving the Old Santa Fe Trail, and the building of a City Home or Inn on a civic center in Independ- ence in commemoration of the Trail and the historic place which Independ- ence occupies in the civilization of the West, has grown much of the senti- ment that has started the movement for a National Highway from Washing- ton to Monterey. Mr. Prewitt is a Mason, Knight of Pythias and Modern Woodman. He is also a charter member and one of the organizers of the famous Twentieth Century Sunday School class, at independence, consisting of more than two hundred members, and including men of all ages and \valks of life. Mr. Prewitt is also one of the founders and organizers of the Home Deposit Trust Company and is its vice-president. This company was or- ganized in 1910, with a capital stock of $100,000. He is also president of the Independence Fair Association. July 12, 1896, Mr. Prewitt married Miss Mary Higgason, the daughter of the Rev. A. E. Higgason of Independence. They have one daughter, Anna. ninety-seven Men of A f f a i r s i K a n s a s C i t V Ji JOB HOLLINGER Building Contractor, President of the Hollinger Construction Company, Erector of Many Structures of Note. OB HOLLINGER, president of the Hollinger Construction Com- pany, a man who has built much of the new Kansas City, was born in Renfrew County, Canada, July 3 1, I860, the son of John and Sarah (Moore) Hollinger. Mr. Hollinger's mother died when he was five years old and he went to live with John Ryan, an uncle, near Ferguson's Falls, Ontario. He lived there until he was thirteen years old. Mr. Hollinger worked as a carpenter's apprentice in Eganville until Sep- tember, 1883, when he came to Kansas City, where he worked at his trade until 1888, when he began contracting and building on his own account. In 1893 he formed a partnership with Z. T. Mitchell. The latter's death in 1907 terminated the firm of Hollinger ^ Mitchell and the Hollinger Con- struction Company was organized. Among the buildings erected by this company are Miltona apartments, Switzer and Manual schools, residence of Mrs. S. B. Armour, Christian Church at Independence Avenue and Gladstone Boulevard, Jenkins building, addition to the Emery, Bird, Thayer building, St. Teresa Academy. The company has built many of the finest buildings in the Southwest, including the Congrega- tional Church at Springfield, Missouri, and the Presbyterian Church at Orange, Texas. Mr. Hollinger married a Kansas City woman. Miss Armita J. Curtis. In politics he is an Independent. He was the first president of the Master Builders' Exchange, and is a member of the Merchants and Manufacturers' Association and the Employers' Association. He belongs to St. John's Cath- olic Church and has been prominent in the work of the Provident Association. ninety-eight Men of A f f a i r s i n K a n s a s C i f y RICHARD JUSTIN McCARTY Vice-President of the Kansas City Southern Railway Company, Trainer of Competent Railroad Men. ICHARD JUSTIN McCARTY. vice-president of the Kansas City Southern Railway Company, one of the best known railroad men in the West, was born in Clarksburg, Virginia, March 12, 1851, the son of Joseph and Ann McCarty. Both parents were natives of Virginia and the ancestral stock came from England and Northern Ireland to America in 1670. Many members of the family served in the American army during the War of the Revolution. Mr. McCarty was graduated from the University of Virginia in 1875, having prepared himself to be a civil engineer. At one time he w^as general manager and chief engineer of the Metropolitan Street Railway Company of Kansas City. Becoming affiliated with the Kansas City Southern Railway he served that road in various executive capacities and is now its vice-president. Held in high esteem by the railroad fraternity of the Central West, espe- cially by the younger generation, Mr. McCarty has trained more competent rail- road men than any other official in Kansas City, and in his abrupt way has always been a warm friend of the newspaper fraternity. June 24, 1877, he married Mary Louise Allen. They have three sons, now grown to manhood. Mr. McCarty is a member of the American Society of Civil Engineers, American Society of Mechanical Engineers and of the Sons of the American Revolution. ninety-nine Men of A f f a i r s i n K ansa s C i t JOHN HARRISON ATWOOD Prominent Attorney, a Nationally Known Leader in the Democratic Party, Occupying a Large Place in Local Affairs. ^OHN HARRISON ATWOOD, of the law firm of Atwood & Hill, was born in Phillipston, Massachusetts, the son of Andrew and Mary E. (Holden) Atwood. He was graduated from the law de- partment of Harvard University and in 1884 was admitted to the bar in Middlesex, Massachusetts. He married Nellie F. Wyman, of Arlington, Massachusetts. They have three children. Mr. Atwood came to Kansas immediately after graduation and located in Leavenworth, where he practiced law froni I 884 to 1 908. He was a law partner of Lucien Baker, United States Senator from Kansas, later was associated with William C. Hook, now^ Federal Judge, and more recently in Kansas City, Missouri, with James A. Reed, United States Senator from Missouri, the partnership in each case being dissolved by the acces- sions to office. From 1886 to 1892, Mr. Atwood was County Attorney for Leavenworth County, Kansas, was Democratic candidate for Congress in 1892, delegate at large to the national conventions of 1896, 1900 and 1904, and served as Democratic national committeeman for Kansas from 1900 to 1909. Mr. Atwood is a member of the University Club. Mid-Day Club, Harvard Club, Commercial Club and the Kansas City Athletic Club. one hundred .1/ c II f A f f a i r s i it K a u s a s C i t y ■:.i n --•: .! LYMAN J. STUDEBAKER One of the Most Prominent Photographers in the Southwest, a Winner of Many Medals for Artistic Work. YMAN J. STUDEBAKER, photographer, was born in Freeport, Illinois, October 4, 1874, the son of George E. and Nancy E. Studebaker, who were natives of Pennsylvania. For twenty years Mr. Studebaker has been studying pho- tography and he is today considered one of the best in the Southwest. He began business for himself in Colorado Springs, Colorado, in 1903. In April, 1905, he came to Kansas City and opened a studio at 1024 Walnut street. In 1908 he w^as forced to move into larger quarters, where his studio is now located, 91 1 Grand avenue. Mr. Studebaker's ar(; work has a reputation throughout the country. Time and again he has won medals and trophies and for five consecutive years has w^on all the honors in the art class at the convention of Missouri Photog- raphers. Mr. Studebaker is a member of the Automobile Club, Kansas City Ath- letic Club, Elm Ridge Golf Club. Rotary Club. Ad Club. Y. M. C. A. and the Knights of Pythias lodge. one hundred and one Men of A f f a i r s i n Kansas C i-t y M t CLINTON D. FRENCH Treasurer Rowley Copper Mines, Maricopa, Arizona; One of the Founders Kansas City Board of Trade. -^LINTON D. FRENCH was born in Cooper County. Missouri. December 4, 1858, son of John R. French, deceased, and Martha French, still living and enjoying good heahh. Mr. French was one of the men who established the original Board of Trade at Union Avenue and Santa Fe Street when Kansas City's street cars were drawn by mules and passengers were often forced to alight and help push the cars up the hills. Under the firm name of French Brothers, C. D. and his brother, Andrew R., conducted for many years an extensive grain business, shipping often several train loads of corn in a single day. The brothers made a fortune in this business, but C. D., believing then, as now, in the great future of Kansas City, invested so heavily in real estate that when the slump came in 1 893 he lost more than half a million dollars. In the last few years Mr. French has devoted his entire time to the development and financing of what is believed to be one of the largest copper- gold properties in the country, the Rowley Copper Mines of Maricopa County. Arizona. Mr. French's widespread acquaintance in this locality and his strict integrity, coupled w^ith his unbounded energy, have enlisted many other lead- ing citizens of Kansas City in this enterprise, and materially assisted in estab- lishing the proposition. He \vas for some time secretary of the company, but his ability in the line of financing demanded his services more particu- larly in that line, and upon the request of his associates he now engages himself solely with the treasury department of the company, and the develop- ment of the property, which he very largely directs. one hundred and two M e n of Affairs in Kansas City JOHN F. DOWNING President of the New England National Bank, One of the Most Prominent Bankers of the Southwest. OHN F. DOWNING was born August 24, 1854, in Virginia. Illinois. His father, David D. Downing, was born in Kentucky, and his mother, Mary Gill Dow^ning, in England. He obtained his educa- tion in Illinois College, Jacksonville, Illinois, graduating in 1879, two years before William J. Bryan and Former Governor Richard Yates of Illinois received their degrees from the same college. On leaving college Mr. Dow^ning became a clerk in the Farm- ers National Bank of his native town and where he remained until the spring of 1882, when he came to Kansas City and became a bookkeeper for the Armour Banking Company. Through close application to business he stead- ily arose until he became paying teller, \vhich position he resigned in June, I 885, to go into the real estate business, in which he remained until January 1 , 1 889, when he accepted the office of vice-president of the New England Safe Deposit and Trust Company, a company which he helped to organize, and which had for its president A. W. Armour. The following year Mr. Downing succeeded to the office of president, w^hich he has held continuously since. On September 8, 1898, the trust com- pany was converted into the New England National Bank. Mr. Downing is, or has been, connected as official or director w^ith the Missouri and Kansas Telephone Company, Kansas City Railway and Light Company, Kansas City Viaduct and Terminal Company, Safety Savings and Loan Association and Elmwood Cemetery Society. He is a member of the Kansas City Club, Uni- versity Club, Commercial Club and the Railroad Club. In 1881 Mr. Downing married Miss Martha B. Collins of Jacksonville, Illinois, who died leaving two sons. In 1898 he married Miss Jessie Burnham, daughter of the late James K. Burnham of Kansas City, They have Iw^o daughters. one hundred and three Men of A f f a i r s i n Kansas C i t \' gnu •^? -»«g" ■■■•'■■■^Km) ■■■■H- s-^ m^ »■■';' ^: > ,--■-• ^7m^^i^ JERRY CULBERTSON Able Attorney and Politician and a Specialist in Industrial Development. ;jERRY CULBERTSON. descendant of a prominent family of the Old Dominion, was born in Bates County, Missouri, September 12, 1869, the son of Livingston and Mary E. (Douglas) Culbert- son. His father was born in Scott County, Virginia, and came to Missouri in 1866, a pioneer of Bates County, and founder of Rich Hill, which he named. The elder Culbertson was a son of David Culbertson, a native of Virginia and a member of the legislature of that state in 1838. The latter, a native of Virginia and a descendant of Scotch ancestry, was a member of the family from which the famous Culbertson family of Texas is descended. Mary E. Douglas was a daughter of Colonel Geo. Douglas, a descendant of the "Red Douglases." Jerry Culbertson received his education in the common schools of Bates County and St. Francis Institute (Catholic) at Osage Mission, Kansas. He took a course in Bryant College at Sprague, Bates County, Missouri. He entered the law department of the University of Missouri, and after two years* course was graduated June 3, 1896. Four days later he was admitted to the bar before Judge James H. Lay, at Butler, Missouri, and at once opened an office at Rich Hill, Missouri. In the Fortieth General Assembly he served as senatorial revision clerk from the Seventeenth Senatorial District. March 3 1, 1900, he received the nomination for prosecuting attorney of Cass County on the Democratic ticket, and was elected. in 1905 Mr. Culbertson came to Kansas City and has made it his home since then, devoting his time to the study of permanent investments. He is the founder and presi- dent of both the International Exploration Company and the Culbertson Realty-Stock-Bond Corporation. Fraternally, he is a Mason, an Elk and a Modern Woodman. As an orator he possesses rare ability. He is a young man of strict integrity, with a high sense of honor, and even those whose political views differ widely from those which he entertains, consider him incapable of a dishonest or unmanly act. February 20, 1901, Mr. Culbertson married Miss Josephine Parsons, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Parsons, of Harrisonville, Missouri, one of the pioneer families of that place. They have three daughters. oue hutidrcd and four M c n f A f f a i r s i n K a ii s as C i t y guug «m ■ii f-y ■ 1 i-i/^.y-OLj SAMUEL EPPSTEIN Prominent Attorney with a Large Practice and for Two Terms County Accountant of Jackson County. AMUEL EPPSTEIN, one of the leading attorneys in Jackson county, was born in New York City in 1 862, the son of Elias and Fanny Eppstein. After obtaining the usual elementary ed- ucation he finally decided on the law as a profession and was admitted to the bar in 1893. For four years he was associated with George A. Neal, former United States district attorney, in a law firm which was one of the strongest in the city. And since that time Mr. Eppstein has been identified with no law firm, but has at various times gathered about him some of the most prominent young men of the profession. A Republican in politics, Mr. Eppstein has not been an office-seeker, preferring to give his time and attention to his practice. He did, however, serve Jackson count}' two terms as county accountant, taking office in 1896. Mr. Eppstein has been in Kansas City thirty-two years. He married Isabel Goldsmith of Cincinnati, Ohio. He is a Mason, a member of the Elks' lodge and the Royal Arcanum. one hundred and fire Men of Affairs in Kansas City c-.^-.-) ^m ---■ 1- w IRA GRANT HEDRICK Consulting Engineer of National Reputation; President of the Kansas City Viaduct and Terminal Railway Company, 1907-1909. RA GRANT HEDRICK, of the firm of Hedrick & Cochrane, con- sulting engineers of national reputation, was born in West Salem, Illinois, April 6, 1868, the son of Henderson and Mary A. Hed- rick, who were both natives of Illinois. After completing the common school course, Mr. Hedrick entered the University of Arkansas from which he was graduated as civil engineer in 1892. He also has the degree of B. S., con- ferred by McGill University of Montreal, Canada, in 1898; M. S., in 1899 and D. Sc, in 1900. Coming to Kansas City from Arkansas University, Mr. Hedrick began work at his profession in the office of J. A. L. Waddell and was afterwards taken into partnership, the firm being known as Waddell & Hedrick until 1907. From that year until 1910, Mr. Hedrick was alone in business. Then he formed the firm of Hedrick & Cochrane, which has continued to the pres- ent time. Mr. Hedrick built the Inter-City Viaduct, which connects Kansas City, Kansas, and Kansas City, Missouri, and from 1907 to 1909 was president of the Kansas City Viaduct and Terminal Railway Company, to which the struct- ure belongs. He has been connected with some of the most important engi- neering works in America. He built the bridge across the Red River at Denison, Texas, the Oak Cliff Viaduct, largest concrete viaduct in the world, at Dallas, Texas, and is now building bridges at Shreveport, Louisiana, Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Peoria, Illinois, Calvin, Oklahoma, and other places. In 1889 Mr. Hedrick married Louisa Luther and after her death mar- ried, in 1909, Addie M. Luther. He has four children. Mr. Hedrick is a member of the University Club and is an Elk and a Shriner. He also belongs to the American Association of Civil Engineers, Canadian Association of Civil Engineers, Institution of Civil Engineers of England and is an honorary member of the Rensselaer Society of Civil Engineers. one hundred and six Men of A f f a i r s i n Kansas City c-.->-j /r^'i r- . ' ■ ■ ■ -^ -flr va lj:!^:^^>/^^ :> MATTHEW A. FYKE Prominent Attorney and Formerly a Member of the Board of Police Commissioners of Kansas City. ATTHEW A. FYKE was born in Marion county, Illinois, May 27. 1848. the son of Josiah A. and Margaret Fyke. His father was born in Tennessee and his mother in Illinois. Mr. Fyke came to Kansas City in 1 886. He took up the law as his profession and after his admission to the bar for a time practiced alone. His first firm association was with Bob Hamilton. Later he was a member of the firm of Fay, Yates & Fyke, which gave place to the present firm of Fyke 6c Snyder. In 1894 Mr. Fyke was appointed a member of the Board of Police Com- missioners and served until 1898. He is a Democrat and one of the leading men of the party in Jackson county. October 19, 1871, Mr. Fyke married Jennie Bennett, who died in I 873. January 28, 1 896, he married Marian C. Estes. Mr. Fyke is a member of several Masonic bodies, belongs to the Knights of Pythias and the Commercial Club, and while holding a high place in the legal fraternity is a man who is keenly interested in the civic and industrial welfare of the community. one hundred and seven M e II of A f f a i r s in K a n s a s C i t y m^m 'm^ • ■> ;■' ■ ^ ^ « ■< ; : 'X i ;■ V'', i. :.•■-> ; t h lp ■■-C5:'> fr"-'i;/:-r:;r>' ^■imm WILLIAM ROBERT LENCE Kansas City Agent for the Missouri Pacific Railway and an Employe of the Road Since 1890. ILLIAM ROBERT LENCE, agent for the Missouri Pacific Railway in Kansas City, was born in Williamson county, Illinois, Decem- ber 31, 1871, the son of Eli and Lydia Hare Lence. His an- cestors were Pennsylvania Dutch and emigrated to Jonesboro, III- nois, in 1 806. His father served in the Union army three years ^:i-i and a half during the Civil War, being present at the battles of Vicksburg and Mobile and other smaller engagements. With the common schools his sole source of education. Mr. Lence, at the age of fifteen, became an employe of a railroad and he has followed that calling ever since. He became associated with the Missouri Pacific Railway November 10, 1890, as a telegraph operator and has been steadily advanced until he was made the agent at Kansas City. November I, 1892, Mr. Lence married Miss Fannie Towl. Mr. Lence ii a Republican, a member of Ararat Temple, a Shriner, belongs to the West- ern Missouri Consistory, Kansas City Commandery No. 10, Odd Fellows and the Railroad Club. one hundred and eight Men n f A f f a i r s i u K a ii s a s C i t y 'J ■>-■■. t: ■::y-^y •■■■ ■' ::& ^^^^p CHARLES WHITTLE CLARKE S^^veyor of Customs, Port of Kansas City; Former Member of the Missouri State Senate. HARLES WHITTLE CLARKE was bom in Danville. Vermont, August 19, 1840. In the spring of 1849 his family removed to Ashtabula county, Ohio. Left an orphan when thirteen years old, at seventeen he was teaching school in northern Ohio and at nineteen he entered Hiram College, of which James A- Gar- field, afterwards President of the United States, was president. His first lessons in Latin were recited to Mrs. Garfield. Leaving college in 1861, Mr. Clarke entered the army as a private in the Forty-second Ohio Volunteer Infantry, commanded by Colonel Garfield, and served with that command until after the siege of Vicksburg. Follow^ing the fall of Vicksburg he was promoted to first lieutenant, and a year later was made a captain in the volunteer service. He took part in the battles of Big Sandy, Cumberland Gap, Chickasaw Bluff, Arkansas Post, Champion's Hill and the siege of Vicksburg. Mr. Clarke married M. Loveland February 14, 1866. at New Orleans, and engaged in the planting of cotton near Yazoo City. Mississippi. He was admitted to the bar in 1869, was a member of the constitutional con- vention of Mississippi, and as chairman of the committee on education wrote the article which gave that state its first public school. He served as pro- bate judge and judge of the court of common pleas at Greenville, Mississippi, w^as elected to the legislature from Washington county and was four times prosecuting attorney of what is known as the "Shoe String" district. A delegate to the national convention that nominated President Hayes, he also attended the one that nominated his old teacher, James A. Garfield. In 1904 he was a delegate at large from Missouri to the national convention at Chicago which nominated Theodore Roosevelt. He w^as elected to the Missouri legislature in 1896 and to the state senate in 1900. and re-elected in 1904. In 1906 he was appointed surveyor of customs at Kansas City and re-appointed in 1 9 1 0. His first w^ife having died, he married Miss Janie Croysdale of Kansas City, Missouri, in 1906. Senator Clarke is a member of the First Christian Church. Grand Army of the Republic, Loyal Legion, Royal Arch Masons and Odd Fellows. He came to Kansas City in 1883. one hundred and nine Men of Affairs i n Kansas City mi ^^^-:-c,^:-:r.:r^ JOHN LYLE HARRINGTON One of the Most Prominent Consulting Engineers in the West and Known Throughout the Country. :|OHN LYLE HARRINGTON, well known throughout the United States as a consulting engineer, was born in Lawrence, Kansas, December 7, 1868, the son of Robert Charles and Angeline Vir- ginia (Henry) Harrington. For four generations the ancestors were American born. Follow^ing his completion of the grade and high schools, Mr. Harrington entered Kansas University at Lawrence, from which he was graduated in 1895 with the degrees of A.B., B.S. and C.E. He obtained the degree of B.S. from McGill University, Montreal, Canada, in 1906. and M.S. in 1908. Mr. Harrington married Daisy June Orton of White Cloud, Kansas, June 2 7, 1899. They have one child. During 1895-96 Mr. Harrington was associated with J. A. L. Waddeli. Consulting Engineer, Kansas City; later, in 1896, with the Elmira Bridge Company; Pencoyd Iron Works, Philadelphia, 1896-7; Keystone Bridge Works. 1897-8, designing the Monongaheia railroad bridge and other heavy structures for the Pittsburgh, Bessemer ^ Lake Erie Railroad; assistant superintendent structural department Cambria Steel Company at Johnstown, Pennsylvania, in 1893; assistant chief engineer and assistant superintendent Bucyrus Com- pany, Milwaukee, from September. 1898, to March, 1899; assistant to chief engineer North\vestern Elevated Railway Company, Chicago, from March to December, 1899; designing engineer Berlin Iron Bridge Company of Connec- ticut, 1899 to 1900; assistant engineer buildings and bridges Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, 1900-1 ; with the C. W. Hunt Company, in charge of engineer- ing estimating and contracting, 1 90 1 -5; chief engineer The Locomotive &c Machine Company. Montreal. 1905-6. January, 1907, the firm of Waddeli ^ Harrington, Consulting Engineers, was formed and located in Kansas City. It is now^ one of the leading firms of its kind in the West. Mr. Harrington is a member of the American Society of Civil Engineers. Institution of Civil Engineers of Great Britain, American Society of Mechanical Engineers. Canadian Society of Civil Encineers, Society for Promotion of Engi- neering. He belongs to the Sigma Xi, Tau Beta Pi, and Sigma Nu fraternities, also to the Rensselaer Society of Engineers and the University Club. one hundred and ten Men of A f f a i r 1 n K a n s a s C i f V ■rj^:;-i> . y- CHARLES H. KUEHNE President of the Kuehne-Chastain Commission Compciny and a Pioneer in Celery Raising on a Large Scale. HARLES H. KUEHNE, president of the Kuehne-Chastain Commis- sion Company, was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in 1852, the son of Carl G. and Rosalie Kuehne. The ancestral stock was from Saxony. IVlr. Kuehne came to Kansas City from Milwaukee in 1 882 and entered the commission business. In 1886 he formed a partnership with D. E. Smeltzer, the firni name being The D. E. Smeltzer Company, doing a general produce commission business. This part- nership continued until Mr. Smeltzer's death in 1902 when Mr. Kuehne incor- porated under the name of The Charles H. Kuehne Commission Company and in 19 10 re-incorporated as the Kuehne-Chastain Commission Company, of which he is president. Mr. Kuehne is also interested in the celery business in California, w^here he has the largest and most modern celery farm in the United States, the business being handled under the firm name of The Golden West Celery and Produce Company. This farm w^as started with twenty acres and now occupies six hundred acres, tiled and irrigated from artesian wells. Mr. Kuehne has been twice married, his present w^ife being formerly Jennie Schuette. They were married in 1906. Mr. Kuehne has a son and daughter by his first marriage. A member of the Commercial Club, Mr. Kuehne also belongs to the National League of Commission Merchants and the Western Fruit Jobbers. His company, which is one of the largest in Kansas City, is located at 520-522 Walnut Street. one hundred and thirteen Men of Affairs in Kansas City JAMES T. BRADLEY Cashier of the National Bank of Commerce and a Financier Whose Reputation Extends Throughout the Country. ^AMES T. BRADLEY, cashier of the National Bank of Commerce and for seven years a national bank examiner, was born in Lon- don, Ontario, July M , I 856, the son of George and Martha Bradley. His father emigrated to Canada from Yorkshire, Eng- land, in 1838, and the family moved to Missouri in 187L In 1875 Mr. Bradley, the son, went to Kansas, settling in Sedan, where he lived for thirty-three years. He came to Kansas City in 1908. On coming to Kansas City he had a national reputation in financial circles, having been in the banking business for twenty-eight years. Mr. Bradley followed up his common school education with a course in the Kansas State Normal College and later served Chautauqua County, Kansas, as county superintendent of schools four years, was mayor of Sedan two terms, was a delegate from Kansas to the Republican National Conven- tion of 1900 which nominated McKinley and Roosevelt and was a member of the committee that notified Mr. Roosevelt of his nomination as vice-presi- dent of the United States. In 1879 Mr. Bradley married Miss Dora Gray. They have three children. Mrs. C. L. Kinney, James Ormond Bradley and Charles H. Bradley. On coming to Kansas City Mr. Bradley became associated with the National Bank of Commerce, one of the strongest banking institutions in the West and of which he is now cashier. He is a thirty-second degree Mason and a member of the Mid-Day Club. one hinxdred and fourteen Men of Affairs in K a n s a s C i t y GEORGE H. KELLY Prominent Attorney; Member of the Firm of Brewster, Kelly, Brewster & Buchholz. EORGE H. KELLY, one of Kansas City's prominent attorneys and a member of the law firm of Brewster, Kelly, Brewster & Buchholz. in the Scarritt building, was born December I, 1874, in Knobnoster, Missouri, the son of Samuel G. and Belle Kelly. His father, a native of Pennsylvania, was admitted to the bar in Missouri in the early '60s and three times represented Johnson County in the state legislature. His mother was a native of Ohio. After finishing the grade and high school courses, Mr. Kelly entered the University of Michigan, from which he was graduated in 1 696. He then came to Kansas City and began practicing. He has twice served the county in the capacity of assistant prosecuting attorney, having been an assistant under Herbert Hadley, now governor, when he was prosecuting attorney, and again under I. B. Kimbrell. As a Republican Mr. Kelly has rendered efficient service to his party in many of the recent campaigns. He is a man of exceptional talents and one of 'he best attorneys in the county. He is a member of the Elks, Masons, Phi Kappi Psi, and the Commercial Club. one hundred and fifteen Men of A f f a i r s i n K a n s a s C i f y JOHN ALEXANDER LOW WADDELL Consulting Engineer of Waddell & Harrington, and Known in Engineering Circles All Over the World. ^OHN ALEXANDER LOW WADDELL. of the firm of Waddell 6t Harrington, consulting engineers, Kansas City, Missouri, and Vancouver, British Columbia, was born in Port Hope, Ontario. January 15, 1854, son of Angeline Ester and Robert Needham Waddell. He was educated in Trinity College, Port Hope; Rens- selaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, New York (C. E. 1875), and McGill University (B. A. Sc. 1882; Ma. E., 1682; D. Sc. 1904)- He was given the degree of LL. D. by Missouri University, 1 904 ; D. E.. Nebraska University, 1911; decorated by Emperor of Japan, 1888, Knight Commander Order of the Rising Sun. and by Grand Duchess Olga of Russia. First Class Order Societe de Bienfaisance, for service as principal engineer of Trans-Siberian Railway. He began his career as draftsman. Marine Department. Ottawa, Ontario, 1875, engineering field work, Canadian Pacific Railway, 1876-1877; assist- ant professor rational and techinal mechanics, Rensselaer Polytechnic Insti- tute, 1878-1880, and technical mechanics, 1 878- 1 880; chief engineer, Ray- mond & Campbell, bridge builders. Council Bluffs, Iowa. I 88 I- I 882; pro- fessor civil engineering, Imperial University of Japan, 1882-1896, and in pri- vate practice in Kansas City, Missouri, since 1887, alone to 1899, Waddell 6c Hedrick, to 1906, and present partnership from 1906. Mr. Waddell's works are in all parts of the world and are too numerous to catalogue in so limited a space. He has done much of the most important constructive work in Mexico, United States and Canada. He built one of the bridges over the Missouri at Kansas City and the Inter-City Viaduct. He married Ada Everett of Council Bluffs, Iowa, in 1882. They have two sons and a daughter. He belongs to the Country Club, University Club, Engineers Club of Kansas City and is a member of most of the engineering and scientific societies of the world and Honorable Member of Tau Beta Pi and Phi Beta Kappa. one hundred and sixteen Men of A { f a i r s i n K a n s a s C i f y CHARLES SACHS General Agent for the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company and Active in Civic and Charitable Enterprises. ing House. " HARLES SACHS, one of the most prominent insurance men in the Southwest, is a native son of Kansas City, having been born here August 20, 1869, the son of Robert and Rosalie Sachs, local pioneers. He was educated in local schools, working as office boy in a law office during summer vacations. His first full time employment was with the old Citizens* National Bank, where he remained several years, becoming later manager of the Clear- Then Mr. Sachs decided on a life insurance career and in 1898 he moved to Chicago to become associated with the company for which he has been one of the largest producers ever since. In 1905 he w^as selected to take charge of a territory w^ith headquarters in his native city. In Chicago he married Miss Flora Weil, a cultured and charming young woman. With their two children they live in an attractive home at 3523 Charlotte street, are "first-nighters " at the theater, and patrons of art and music. Nor has personal interest alone commanded all of Mr, Sachs* w^orking hours. He has given much time to civic movements and tow^ard alleviating the conditions of the poor and delinquent. Since the organization of the Pure Milk Commission, he has been one of the officers, and is now^ chairman of its advisory board. He was especially prominent in the notable "river" campaign of the Commercial Club. He is also a member of the Mid-Day, City and Knife and Fork Clubs, and treasurer of the Progress Club, which recently bought the beautiful Rule farm as a home. He is a director of the United Jewish Charities, and has given energy and money to the support of the Institutional Church, Boys' Hotel, Girls' Hotel and many other simi- lar institutions. In 19 10 Mr. Sachs was a delegate representing Kansas City at the National Conservation Congress in St. Paul. A few years ago he was chosen by the Kansas City Ad Club to deliver an address at a banquet given in St. Louis for the National Association of Advertising Clubs. He has alw^ays been a warm friend of the newspaper fraternity. one hundred and sc7'C}tfrc]! ^1/ c II f .1 f f a i I- s ! II K a ii s a s C i t JAMES D. M. CROCKETT Certified Public Accountant, Head of one of the Best Known Accounting Firms in the Southw^est. AMES D. M. CRCCKETT. head of J. D. M. Crockett & Co,, certified public accountants, was born near Pictou, Nova Scotia, Canada. July 2, 1868, the son of Duncan Ross and Ellen Robert- son Crockett. His father was a Presbyterian minister and a mis- sronary among the Indians. Both parents w^ere of Scotch ances- try and both were natives of Nova Scotia. After obtaining a common school education. Mr. Crockett completed the courses of the academy and college at Brookfield, Missouri. November 2, 1895, Mr. Crockett married Miss Mel lie Wise. They have one daughter. Ida Winifred. Mr. Crockett came to Kansas City in 1890, took a couse in shorthand, and held various positions from stenographer to office manager, until he started his own business in 1906. Today J. D. M. Crockett & Co. is one ot the best known accounting firms in the Southv^i'est, having an office in the Grand Avenue Temple, Kansas City, and a branch office in Topeka, Kansas. In 1903 and again in 1908-9, Mr. Crockett served as a member of the school board in one of the suburban districts adjacent to Kansas City, Kansas. Since he was fourteen years old, he has been an active member of the Presby- terian church and is at present an officer of the Grand View Park Presby- terian Church. He is also a member of the Brotherhood of American Yeoman, the Kansas City Society of Certified Public Accountants, the Missouri Society of Certified Public Accountants and the American Association of Public Ac- countants. >nc Iniiitircd mtil eighteen .1/ o f A f f a i r I n K a II C i f GEORGE M. MYERS President Standard Fire Extinguisher Company and for Twenty-five Years Connected with Priests of Pallas. GEORGE M. MYERS, who brought the International Balloon laces to Kansas City in 1911, was born November 25, It55, m New York City. His father, Philip Myers, was connected with the freight department of the Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Rail- road for more than forty years. Like most of the successful men of the West Mr. Myers started life working on a farm in summer and attending school in the winter months. Having a predilec- tion for telegraphy he studied during his spare moments and secured a po- sition as night operator at Berea, Ohio. Through close application to business he gradually arose, first to be train dispatcher of two divisions, then manager of the Toledo office. In 1874 he resigned and came West, locating in Kansas City, where he w^as connected with the various telegraph companies doing business here at the time. Th;:i was before the Western Union Telegraph Company had absorbed these liner, and when this occurred, Mr. Myers went into business for himself. He has large property interests and is president of the Standard Fire Extinguisher Company, which he organized and which insialls automatic fire devices. He is a member of the Kansas City Athletic Club and the Evanston Golf Club. In 1882 he married Miss Laura V. Boyd. Both have traveled extensively in foreign countries. George M. Myers for over thirty years has been identified with Kansas City and has taken an active part in every movement for betterment. For twenty-five years he has been connected with the Priests of Pallas, for several years as treasurer of the organization. He organized and built the Pacific Mutual Telegraph Company, which extended from St. Louis to Denver, Omaha and Sioux City, and later sold out his interests to the Postal Telegraph Com- pany. He organized the Commerc'al Telegraph Company, now the American District Telegraph Company, in Cincinnati, St. Louis and Kansas City, and later sold to the Western Union Telegraph Company. one hinidrril tuui ii'owiccu Men of A f f a i r s i u K a n s a s C i t y ^ ■'4' ARNOLD DOUGLAS COTTINGHAM Largest Mule Dealer in the Country; Exalted Ruler of the Kansas City Lodge of Elks. RNOLD DOUGLAS COTTINGHAM gives Kansas City one of the distinctions credited to her in the live stock markets of the world he handles more mules than any other individual. In his twenty-five years of business in Kansas City he has built up a trade that provides an outlet for an annual average of 10,000 mules and many horses from the farms of Missouri and Kansas and surrounding states. His mule and horse business occupies a barn space of over three square blocks at the Kansas City stock yards and a 280-acre feeding plant near Hickman's Mills, Missouri. Mules are sold from his barns to practically every state in the Union and to foreign buyers. Although he is the owner and manager of the largest individual mule business in the world, Mr. Cottingham finds time to act as director of two of the leading financial institutions of the city — the National Bank of the Republic and the Fidelity Trust Company and as director of the American Royal Live Stock Show. He is also Exalted Ruler of the Kansas City Lodge of Elks and a member of many other organizations, including the Commercial Club, and is alw^ays active in charitable work. Mr. Cottingham's parents were Kentuckians of English and Irish descent. He was born in Carroll County, Missouri, January 9, 1862. In engaging in the mule business, Mr. Cottingham followed his father, who was also a stock- man. Mr. Cottingham started in the trade here with his brother, John R., under the firm name of Cottingham Brothers. The brother died in 1898. but Mr. Cottingham still conducts the business under the original title. On Sep- tember 19, 1891, Mr. Cottingham married Miss Gettie Ralls, a Kansas City girl. (ttic hundred and twenty Men of A f f a i r s I n K a u s a C i 1 V m SHERMAN W. NOGGLE President of the S. W. Noggle Wholesale and Manufacturing Company, With Business Covering the Entire West. HERMAN W. NOGGLE. president and treasurer of the S. W. Nog- gle Wholesale and Manufacturing Company, was born in Ada, Ohio, in 1870, son of John and Laura Noggle. His father was born in Pennsylvania and his mother in Ohio. Mr. Noggle came to Kansas City in 1893. He was at that time in the employ of J. H. Hampson, a pioneer railroad builder, who was heavily interested in the West and Old Mexico. Mr. Hampson established headquarters in Kansas City and Mr. Noggle, until the formation of his ow^n company, served as his private secretary. In 1897 Mr. Noggle founded The S. W. Noggle Wholesale and Manu- facturing Company to supply the bakers, confectioners and ice cream makers of the West and Southwest with machinery, tools and supplies. From its inception the company has had a remarkable success, until it now enjoys the distinction of being the largest house of its kind in the West, if not in the United States. It has tw^ice outgrown its quarters. The original location at 6 1 2 Broadway served for only seven years, when it was found necessary to move to 614-18 Delaware. After six years of steady growth there the build- ing which now occupies a quarter of a block at Sixteenth street and Baltimore avenue was erected and is now the home of the company. "The Bull Dog," devoted to the interests of the bakers, confectioners, ice cream makers and soda water dispensers, is published and distributed by the company and receives the hearty support and endorsement of all its patrons. Mr. Noggle in 1900 married Miss Jennie L. Pierce. They have one daughter. Deeply interested in the development of Kansas City, Mr. Noggle is identified with many of the public and commercial organizations, being an active member of the Rotary, Kansas City, Athletic and Commercial Clubs. The fact that Mr. Noggle has served three years on the board of directors of the Manufacturers' Association and two terms as treasurer, is evidence of his standing in the community. one Ir.uufrcd and tzvcntv-one M e of Affairs in K a n s a s C i f V.'|l,.;/ FRANK J. DEAN President Dean Hotel Company, Operating the Hotel Baltimore in Kansas City, Missouri. ]RANK JAMES DEAN was born June 25. 1686, in New York City. He is the son of the late Delevan James Dean, who died January 15, 1911, and Annie L. Dean, still living. The elder Mr. Dean conducted, during his active career, hotels in Sherman, New York, Wichita, Pittsburg, Fort Scott, Kansas, St. Joseph and Kansas City, Missouri. When death called him, he was president of the Dean Hotel Company, oper- ating the Hotel Baltimore in Kansas City. Frank J. Dean comes of English and German stock. His first schooling was received in the public schools of Missouri and Kansas. Then he was sent to a private preparatory school, winding up with a term in business college. This training fully prepared Mr. Dean and launched him on his hotel career, which he began as assistant in the auditor's office of the Hotel Baltimore. This was in August, 1904, and between 1904 and 1907 he was engaged in every department of the hotel business. In 1907 Mr. Dean had won the title of auditor, the result of his patient, painstaking application to his duties. June. 1 909, found the young man promoted to the associate managership; later the same year he became vice-president and general manager, and, upon the death of his father, he was elected president of the Dean Hotel Company. He was also first president of the Kansas City Hotel and Restaurant Men's Association. As Mr. Dean's ambition did not extend to political offices, he has held none. He is a Thirty-second degree, Scottish Rite, Mason, also a member of the Commandery and Shrine. June 16, 1909, he married Fay Harkless. They have a son, F. J., Jr, Mr. Dean is a member of the Commercial Club and of the Evanston Golf Club. one hundred and lii:ent\-two / c !i n f A I f a i r s i ii K a n s a s C i t y HUNTER MACKEAND MERIWETHER President of Federal Investment Company and an Attorney of High Stand- ing and Extensive Practice. lUNTER MACKEAND MERIWETHER, son of Dr. James Hunter Meriwether and Lucy E. (McClure) Meriwether, was born July 21, 1861, at Pecan Grove Plantation, Crittenden County, Arkan sas. The family of Meriwether is closely connected with the early history of Virginia and Kentucky. Mr. Meriwether received his education at Greene Springs Academy. Alabama, and at Van- derbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, graduating with the de- grees of B. S. and LL. B. He became assistant professor of mathematics at Vanderbilt University, and, having read law. he adopted that profession, at which he has practiced in Kansas City, Missouri, since 1885, giving special attention to real estate law^, corporation matters and questions w^hich involved taxation. Mr. Meriw^ether was sole counsel for Missouri, in the Western Union Telegraph franchise case, which he won in the Supreme Court; he was also special counsel for Missouri, in the United States Supreme Court in the impor- tant State Line case against Kansas. He is president of the Federal Invest- ment Company, West Missouri Land Company, and the Edgewater Terminal Railway Company, now affiliated with the Missouri Pacific Railway Company. He is a member of the Phi Delta Theta college fraternity, and is affiliated with the Masonic order, and of the Royal Arch, K. C. Chapter No. 28; also of the Society of Colonial Wars, and of the Kansas City Athletic Club and the Young Men's Christian Association. September 28, 1887, Mr. Meri- wether married Lucy Underwood Western of Bowling Green, Kentucky. They have two children, William Western and Juliet Elgin Meriwether. a}ie hundred and tz^'cnty-three :1/ C II of A I f a I r t It K a I! s a s C i t V hit WILLIAM CHRISTIAN WEAVER Street Commissioner of Kansas City Under the Administration of Mayor Darius A. Brown. ILLIAM CHRISTIAN WEAVER, street commissioner of Kansas City during 1910 and 1911, under the Brown administration, was born in Clinton, Pennsylvania, October 6, 1862, the son of Joseph and Isabella M. (Johnston) Weaver. His father was a native of Clinton, Pennsylvania. His mother was born in County Tyrone, Ireland, and was a direct descendant of Sir William Johnston of Scotland. Weaver, after obtaining the usual elementary training, entered Duffs in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and was graduated in 1880. From the first he showed ability for handling men, and. in time, came to be general manager of the Ogden Electric Railway Company, Ogden, Utah. Later he was receiver for the Bear River Irrigation Company and was with the Ogden Water Works Company for five years. On coming to Kansas City he was made general manager of the Northeast Electric Railway prior to its consoli- dation with the Metropolitan Street Railway System. When Mayor Brown went into office he appointed Mr. Weaver street commissioner, and that Kansas City has never had a more efficient man in that capacity was demonstrated during the unprecedented snows of 1 9 I 1 - I 9 I 2, when Mr. Weaver handled the situation to the entire satisfaction of every- body with an inadequate force and with limited funds. Mr. Weaver knows personally almost every newspaper writer in Kansas City and commands their friendship, regardless of their affiliations. He is a Republican of liberal and progressive views, a Kansas City booster, belongs to the Masons and is a Shriner. December 8, 1886. Mr. Weaver married Mary E. Ewart of Minneapolis, Kansas. They have two daughters. one hundred and tzvetity-fotir M en of Affair s 1 1! K ansa s C i f x EDWIN CLEMENT MESERVEY President of the Kansas City Board of Civil Service and Former City Counselor. DWIN CLEMENT MESERVEY. president of the Board of Civil Serv- ice of Kansas City, Missouri, and city counselor under the Beards- ley administration, an attorney called frequently to advise the city in franchise negotiations, was born in Hallov^'ell, Maine, March 4, 1861. His father, Thomas j. Meservey. and mother, Mary H. (Brooks) Meservey, were natives of Maine, the former having been born in Hallowel! and the latter in York. Mr. Meservey was graduated from the University of Kansas, with the degree of A. B., in 1882, and in 1885 received the degree of LL. B. from the St. Louis Law School. August 18, 1 89 1 , he married Bessie M. Harris. They have three children, Francis H., Edwin C, and Mary Bess. One of the strong men in the Republican party of Missouri, Mr. Meser- vey is a member of the Jackson County Bar Association and belongs to the Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Delta Phi and Phi Beta Kappa fraternities, as well as an active member of several club organizations which have civic improvement as their purpose. one hundred and fi<'cnf\'-iize M en of A f f a i r s in K a n s a s C i t y BENJAMIN FRANKLIN CARTER Prominent Attorney in Kansas City; Formerly County Atlorney for Wilson County, Kansas. Mr ENJAMIN FRANKLIN CARTER, prominent attorney in Kanras City and formerly county attorney for Wilson County, Kanras, was born in Fredonia, Kansas, January 15, 1871, the ton of James and Sarah Carter. Mr. Carter's parents were from Lin- ' nlnshire, England. They came to Illinois in I860 and to Kan- sas in 1871. A short time before the birth of the son the fa'.hcr was murdered and the mother robbed of her property. Carter received a common school education and then entered the Kanr:as State Normal school, from which he was graduated in 1895. For several years following his graduation, he was a teacher in, and later principal of, the Fredonia, Kansas, high school. During his spare time he studied law, for which he had always shown natural qualifications and in due time was admitted to the bar. Having, in the meantime, moved from Fredonia to Neodesha, Kanras. Mr. Carter was elected city attorney there by the Republican party, in which office he served four years; later he was elected county attorney for Wilson County on the Republican ticket and served two years to the satisfaction of all. He came to Kansas City. December 29, 1909, and is now associated in general practice with Judge William Thomson, well known throughout the state. August 8, 1897, Mr. Carter married Jennie Prunty. He is a member of Ivanhoe Masonic Lodge, is an Elk and a Knight of Pythias. one hundred and tzventy-six .1/ c n f ■'iff a i r s in K a n s a s C i t y WILLIAM S. COWHERD Attorney and Democratic Leader; Former Mayor of Kansas City and Former Congressman From the Fifth District. fa fell ILLIAM S. COWHERD, Democratic leader, former Mayor of Kansas City, and an attorney of national reputation, was born September I. 1€60, on his grandfather's farm between Lees Summit and Blue Springs, Jackson County, Missouri, the son of Charles J. and Emilie Strother Cowherd, the Cowherd family having been pioneers in the West, coming from Virginia. General Order Number Eleven, which made General Ewing heavily on the Cowherd family, but after the border warfare c'ays the farm again came into his grandfather's possession and today it is owned by the grandson, the subject of this sketch. William S. Cowherd got his early education "wherever he found it" rome of it from the teacher in the log school house, some of it from papers and books; much of it from observation and when seventeen years old was ad- mitted to Missouri University, was graduated in 1881, and a year later left Columbia with a "sheepskin" entitling him to practice law. He entered the law office of Tichenor, Warner & Dean, where he remained one year, then he began practice on his own account. Being a young man with all the qualifications of a successful leader. Mr. Cowherd naturally found opportunity in the service of the people. In 1884 he held his first public office, having been appointed first assistant prosecut- ing attorney. Returning to private practice, four years later he formed a rartnership with the late Judge William B. Teasdale and R. J. Ingraham. In 1690 he was made assistant city counselor and two years later the Democratic party elected him mayor of Kansas City, although he was but thirty-two years old. After completing his term as mayor, Mr. Cowherd entered the race for Congress from the Fifth District and was elected, serving four consecutive terms. In the primary of August, 1908, Mr. Cowherd was made the Demo- cratic candidate for governor and in the subsequent election lost by a very small majority to Herbert S. Hadley. Mr. Cowherd married Jessie Kitchen. September 25. 1889. OJie hundred and fcccutv-scren M en of Affairs in Kansas City ^^^^Mk ROBERT ALEXANDER LONG President of the Long-Bell Lumber Company and Subsidiary Concerns and a Noted Church Worker. ,mBERT ALEXANDER LONG, president of the Long-Bell Lumber ^1 Company, was born December 17, 1850, on a farm near Shelby- ville. Kentucky, the son of Samuel M. and Margaret K. Long. His mother was closely related to the noted Blackburn family. ( r jllfl^^^~^ ^^* '^^'^S was educated principally in the country schools, ijf y ^^%/l but spent fifteen months in a school for boys at Shelbyville. At the age of seventeen he found employment in a store. This proved not to his liking, so he returned to the farm in a short time, remain- ing there until twenty-two years of age, when he went West. Shortly after- ward he established a small lumber yard at Columbus, Kansas. Working early and late, and reinvesting his profits, Mr. Long rose stead- ily, until today he controls thirteen lumber companies, which ovk^n eleven modern sawmill plants and eighty-seven retail lumber yards. He is presi- dent and principal stockholder of the R. A. Long Real Estate and Investment Company, which owns the R. A. Long Building, the first steel skeleton office building of consequence in Kansas City. Two entire floors in this building are occupied by the offices of The Long-Bell Lumber Company. He is also a director in the Kansas Natural Gas Company, the National Bank of Com- merce and Commerce Trust Company of Kansas City, and the Yellow Pine Manufacturers' Association. Notwithstanding his numerous business interests, Mr. Long finds time to take a more than active part in the affairs of the Christian Church, of which he is a member. He is also national president of the Brotherhood of Disciples of Christ and president of the Christian Board of Publication which publishes the Christian Evangelist in St. Louis. During his long residence in Kansas City, Mr. Long has always been actively identified with important movements for the upbuilding and better- ment of the city. He is also noted for his numerous charities. Mr. Long was married at Columbus, Kansas, December 16, 1875, to Ella M. Wilson. They have two daughters, Mrs. Ellis, wife of Lieutenant Hayne Ellis, U. S. N., and Miss Loula Long, well known in Horse Show circles. our huittlrcd ami Iwnily-riiilil ,1/ c n o f A f f a i r s i n K a n s as C i f v mu i^v:"' ^~M!7, '■\^ ..^^|^^^.,-:fi^ ED T. OREAR Real Estate Dealer* Treasurer Consumers' Bread Company, and Former Treasurer of Missouri. D T. OREAR, prominent real estate dealer and treasurer of the Consumers' Bread Company, was born in Saline County, Missouri, August 20, 185 7, the son of Nelson C. and Anna E. Orear. Th^ senior Orear came to Missouri from Kentucky in 185 5 and located in St. Charles, where he started a newspaper. Mr. Orear is a Democrat and has been prominent for years in all movements w^hich had the improvement of the state in view^. He was for seven years State Treasurer when the office was appointive, and for four years served as superintendent of the insurance department of the state. Coming to Kansas City in 1906, Mr. Orear at once took a conspicuous place in commercial circles. In that year he organized the Gate City Bank and in 1909 aided in the organization of the Consumers' Bread Company, which has been a marked success. In 1909 he built the Orear-Leslie Building at 1012 Baltimore Avenue, eleven stories tall, and one of the most modern structures in the city. Mr. Orear w^as educated in Missouri University and in 1885 married Helen Owens of Sweet Springs, Missouri. They have two sons, John and Edward. Mr. Orear is a Knight Templar and a member of several clubs. one hundred and tn'cnty-uinc .1/ C II of A f f a i r s i ii K a II s a s i t \ m. >■;< * REV. EDWIN B. OLMSTEAD Pastor of the Grand Avenue Methodist Church and a Traveler and Lecturer of Note. EV. EDWIN B. OLMSTEAD, only surviving son of the late Rev. D. C. Olmstead, D.D., for many years prominent in the Methodist Church in New York and Pennsylvania, was born in the Methodist parsonage at Danby, near Ithaca, Tompkins County, New York. He graduated from Wyoming Seminary m 1876 with high honors and then entered Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut. After leaving college Dr. Olmstead studied law at Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. He entered the ministry of the Methodist Episcopal Church in 1882. His appointments have been as follows: Wyoming Conference April, 1882, to April, 1883, Oneonta Plains, New York; April, 1883, to April, 1885, Laurens, New York, and Oneonta Plains; April, 1885, to April, 1888, Great Bend, Pennsylvania; April, 1888, to April, 1890, Say re, Pennsylvania; April, 1890, to April, 1894, Broad Street Church, Norwich, New York; April. 1894, to April, 1899, Tabernacle Church, Binghamton, New York. Genesee Conference April 17, 1899, to October 10, 1904, Asbury Church, Rochester, New York. Holston Conference October 10, 1904, to April 21, 1909, First Church, Knoxville, Tennessee. St. Louis Conference — April 21, 1909, Grand Avenue Church, Kansas City, Missouri. He was trustee of Wesleyan University in 1896 and 1897. During his pastorate in New York, Pennsylvania and Tennessee, Dr. Olmstead was in frequent demand as a lecturer. In 1889, 1896, 1901 and 1908, he toured the Old World and his letters on foreign travel have been widely read. niic htiiulrcd and lliirtv M e n of Affair s i n K a n s a s C i t V ANDREW J. HAZELTON Manager of the Hydraulic-Press Brick Company, and a Recognized Expert in His Line. NDREW J. HAZELTON. manager of the Hydraulic-Press Brick Company of Kansas City, and one of the brick experts of the West, was born in Indiana, April 9, 1662, the son of James J. and Elizabeth Hazelton. Both parents were born in Ohio. After obtaining the usual common school education, Mr. Hazelton became associated with the brick industry and, after informing himself on the methods of manufacturing and the de- tails of the business, he was made manager of the Hydraulic-Press Brick Company in Chanute, Kansas, w^here he served for five years. He then went to Omaha, Nebraska, and for four years served in the same capacity, being made manager of the Kansas City Company, effective March 1 , 1912. In 1892, Mr. Hazelton married Josie L. Leitch. They have one child. Mr. Hazelton is a member of the Knights of Pythias and the Elks. one hundred and thirtv-one M e of Affairs i n K a n s a s C i t \ ■'■5 01 ^A CHARLES PERVINE SHIPLEY Executive Head of the Charles P. Shipley Saddlery and Mercantile Company, Established Twenty-seven Years Ago. HARLES PERVINE SHIPLEY, youngest son of Aaron and Eliza- beth Shipley, was born October 2 7, 1864, in Wooster, Ohio, where he received a common school education and learned the harness and saddlery trade. He came to Kansas City in 1 884 and in August, 1885, started to manufacture leather goods on a capita! of $300, borrowed from a friend. The business pros- pered and gradually expanded until today the name of Shipley is known in practically every corner of the earth where leather goods are used. In 1910 Mr. Shipley erected the Shipley Building at the Kansas City Stock Yards, one of the first ever constructed for this kind of business. It contains 24,000 square feet of floor space and every modern appliance for the making of leather goods. Mr. Shipley married Miss Cora May Hendrickson in 1886, and to them three children were born. The second son, Clyde Lee Shipley, is associated in the business with his father as vice-president and sales manager. The Shipley Company understands, through a quarter century of asso- ciation, the Stock Yards and Western cowboy trade, and for the convenience of its customers compiles a catalog, showing leather goods and uniforms representing Western life in all its phases. More than 100,000 of these cata- logs have been distributed. Mr. Shipley is also president of the Western Harness and Manufacturers' Association, and is active in all measures that tend to make Kansas City a better place to live in nnr hiiiiilrril mnl tlnrlr-hvn M c n f A f f a I r s i n K a It s a s C i t PHILIP KRAUS A Pioneer Merchant in Kansas City and Clay County; Now Retired from Active Business. HILIP KRAUS, who in 185 7 established an Indian trading business out of Kansas City, and who for twenty-one years was post- master at Harlem, in Clay County, was born in Germany, April 26, 1831, the son of Johann and Katherine Kraus, who came from near the Switzerland border in Germany. Mr. Kraus came to America in 1850, his capital being twenty-five dollars in money and the determination to make a success. For several years he sold oilcloth coverings for tables and in 1854 he went to Madison. Wisconsin, where he and his brother went into the hotel business. In 185 7 Mr. Kraus went to St. Louis by boat and then up the Missouri River to Kansas City, arriving in May, 185 7. He engaged in a general mercantile business. One of his stores, located in Shawnee, was destroyed by hre in 1863 and in that year Mr. Kraus went to Fort Scott and Fort Smith, returned to Kansas City in 1866 and established himself on the Clay County side of the river. In 1 87 I Mr. Kraus bought several pieces of property in Kansas City, which today are of great value. In 1872 Mr. Kraus married Katherine Klamm, who died in 1876. One daughter died in infancy and a son, John P.. is now a resident of Kansas City and assists his father in the management of his interests. oue humU'ed and thirty-three M e u of A f f a i r I n K a 11 s a C i f \ W. WALLACE GREENE State Senator from the Seventh District and a Prominent Attorney of Kansas City, Missouri. WALLACE GREENE, associated with the law firm of Cook & Goscett, and state senator from the Seventh District of Mis- souri, was born in Jackson County, Missouri, October 1 3, I 672, the son of Thaddeus W. and Eliza A. Greene. Both parents were natives of Kansas City, the Greene family having been pioneers in the county. After obtaining a good common school education, Mr. Greene decided to make law his profession and entered the Kansas City School of Law, from which he was graduated in I 900. July 23. 1 903, he married Miss Edna L. Coleman. They have one child. Being a man of sterling qualities, a native of the county, and known by almost every old family in it. Mr. Greene was made the candidate of the Democratic parly for state senator from the Seventh District in the campaign of 1908. He was elected by a fine majority and his record in the state senate has been such that the judgment of the voters ha3 been fully vindicated. one hundred and thirty-four .1/ c II o } . / /' / a i r s i n K a ii s a s C i f v 111 EDWIN OTIS MOFFATT President Moffatt Commission Company, one of the best known Grain Firms in the Southwest. DWIN OTIS MOFFATT, president of the Moffatt Commission Company, was born in LaSalle, Illinois, November 12, 1854, the son of Edwin R. and Mary O. (Williams) MofTatt. The Moffatt family in America began w^hen three brothers arrived from Scotland on the Mayflow^er. The subject of this sketch is a direct descendant of one of those brothers. His father and mother w^ere natives of New York. Mr. Moffatt completed the grade schools and lacked one year of finishing the high school course, most of his schooling being obtained in Freeport, Illi- nois. October 3, 1883, he married Mary C. Johnston in Freeport. They have three children, a son living at home, a daughter married and living in Japan, and a daughter now in Germany, studying music. From 1870 to 1879, Mr. Moffatt was employed in railroad offices in Chicago. In the latter year he v^^ent into the wholesale coffee and spice business in Kanras City. While in the coffee and spice business at Second and Main streets, under the firm name of Smith & Moffatt in 1886, the building was blown down. Mr. Smith was killed and Mr. Moffatt narrowly escaped death. T. G. Beaham took Mr. Smith's place in the firm after the tragedy. In 1 890, Mr. Moffatt went into the grain business and the Moffatt Commis- sion Company is now one of the best known firms in the southwest. Mr. Moffatt is a member of the Board of Trade in several cities and a member of the principal clubs in Kansas City. one h.miihcd and thirtx-Hi e Men of A f f a i r s i n K a n s a s C i t y gnu: Oi ^■'. im >.> .■■■■■■- /^-v^a ^j^ jA JUNIUS B. IRVING President of the Irving-Pitt Manufacturing Company and the Irving-Pitt Realty Company. !])UN1US B. IRVING, whose connections with the manufacturing inter- ests of the Southwest have made him one of the most prominent men in Kansas City, was born in Ithaca, New York, June 7, 1870. the son of John and Lydia Irving, of Scotch-English ancestry. Mr. Irving received his education in New York and engaged in a general book binding business prior to his coming to Kansas City. In 1901 he came West and decided that Kansas City offered him a promisiiig, u^i^. m i Vo4 the Irving-Pitt Manufacturing Company was organized and today it is one of the largest concerns of its kind in the South- west, occupying a beautiful building of its own. The company makes all kinds of loose leaf books and office devices. Besides being president and actively engaged in the management of this business, Mr. Irving is also president of the Irving-Pitt Realty Company. In June, 1893, Mr. Irving married Anna Murphy of Chicago, Illinois. He is a Mason and a Shriner, a member of the Elks lodge, belongs to the Kansas City Automobile Club, the Chicago Athletic Club, the Rotary Club and as a member of the Commercial Club has played a prominent part in many of the recent campaigns to boost Kansas City as a commercial center. one hundred and Ihtrlv-six Men of A f f a i r s i n K a n s a C i f V v-i t-; «B f ^s^^'i CHARLES J. SCHMELZER President and Treasurer of the Schmelzer Anns Company and One of Kansas City's Foremost Citizens. HARLES J. SCHMELZER was born in Hartford, Connecticut. July 23, 1656. His father, John F. Schmelzer, a native of Olden- burg, Germany, came to America in I b44 and settled in Hart- ford, Connecticut, where he was associated with the Colts Armory until he came west in 185 7. In that year he went to Leavenworth, Kansas, and began the business which is nov/ con- ducted by the Schmelzer Arms Company. The mother of Charles J., before her marriage, was Matilda Horst, a native of Osterbruck, Germany. Charles J. Schmelzer spent his boyhood days in Leavenworth, where he attended the public schools, becoming associated with his father's business at the age of sixteen years. When he was twenty-five years old his father admitted him to partnership, and upon his father s retirement from business in 1887, when the firm moved to Kansas City, the son became the executive head of the establishment. In I 896 the business was incorporated as the j. F. Schmelzer & Sons Arms Company, with a capital of $75,000. In 1907 this was increased to $300,000. In the half century of its existence the con- cern has grown from a small gun shop to one of the largest exclusive sport- ing goods houses in the w^orld. January I 2, 1 887. Mr. Schmelzer married Miss Alice ide, daughter of Judge H. W. Ide, of Leavenworth. They have a son, Harvey J., and a daughter, Alice. Mr. Schmelzer is a prominent member of the Commercial Club and has been one of the real boosters for Kansas City for more than a generation. He belongs to the Kansas City Athletic Club, Evanston Golf Club, Horton Gun Club, Minnesouri Angling Club, and there has been no movement in which the city has been interested in which Mr. Schmelzer has not I^een conspicuous. He is a truly representative example of the living, breathing "Kansas City Spirit." one hundred and fhirfY-scvcn Men of A f f a i r s i n K a ii s a s C i t T J. FRANK MARTIN Manager of the Buick Motor Company's Kansas City Branch and a Recognized Authority on Automobiles. FRANK MARTIN, well known automobile man and Kansas Ci y manager for the Buick Motor Company, was born in New York City, August I, 1870, the son of George C. and Josephine B. Martin. His father was a native of New York City and his mother was born in Newburgh, New York. After finishing the common schools, Mr. Martin spent three years in Columbia University in New York City studying engineer- ing. He then came west, where he has been associated with the automobile industry for several years. His ability as an executive officer and his knowl- edge of the motor car industry brought him quick recognition in the Southwest and he was recently placed at the head of the Buick Motor Company's Kansas City branch, one of the oldest automobile houses in this part of the country and one doing an enormous business. February 8, 1899, Mr. Martin married Pearl Sprague of Olathe, Kansas. iUic hiniilretl aud Ihirty-cighl Men of A f f a i r s 1 n K a n s a s C i f V FERNANDO P. NEAL President Southwest National Bank of Kansas City and Former Member of Park Board. ERNANDO P. NEAL. a banker known throughout the Southwest, president of the Southwest National Bank, one of the strongest financial institutions in the state, was born at Knoxville, Iowa, May 12. 1855. the son of J. E.. and Catherine Neai. His father was born in New York state and his mother in Ohio. Following his common school education, Mr. Neal attended William Jewell College. January 27, 1880, he married Ida D. Adkins. They have three children. Mr. Neal became directly associated with the financial history of Kansas City in 1888 on his arrival here. The following year he w^as made vice-presi- dent of the Union National Bank and continued with that institution until it ceased to exist in 1908. In that year the Southw^est National, now ha^'ing a capital and surplus of $1,200,000, was organized with Mr. Neal as the ex- ecutive head. From the very first it has been a great success. In politics Mr. Neal is independent. A conservative financier, he has always been interested in seeing Kansas City make a steady and solid, rather than a boom, progress and he has taken a keen interest in all the recent campaigns for municipal improvement. Mr. Neal is a member of the Kansas City Club, the Mid-Day Club and the Evanston Golf Club. one hundred and fhirtv-nine Men of Affairs i )i Kansas C i t y M: ^m SAM SPARROW Member Law Firm of Conkling, Rea & Sparrow, and a Prominent Democratic Leader in Jackson County. AM SPARROW, of the law firm of Conkling, Rea & Sparrow, a prominent Democratic leader in Kansas City, but never a candi- date for political favors, was born in Jamesport, Missouri, Octo- ber I, 1870, son of Thomas J. and Elizabeth J. Sparrow. His father was a native of Shelby County, Missouri, and his mother w^as born in Daviess County, Missouri. After obtaining a common school education, Mr. Sparrow entered the law department of Missouri University, from which he was gradu- ated in 1893. He came then to Kansas City and began practice, meeting with remarkable success from the first, and today the firm of which he is a member is one of the most substantial in the state. October 21, 1 896, Mr. Sparrow married Miss Russie E. Kissinger. A strong Democrat, Mr. Sparrow has rendered efficient service to his party and the public. He is a member of the Elks Lodge and also belongs to the Knights of Pythias. one liuiuircd and forty Men of Affairs in Kansas City FREDERICK A. WOLF Hat Manufacturer; Proprietor of One of the Most Prosperous Young Businesses in Kansas City. and his Mr Modern married REDERICK A. WOLF, hat manufacturer, was born in Germany March I I. 1869, son of Frederick W. and Maria W. Wolf. After obtaining a public school education he came to America and learned the hat making trade. March I, 1907. Mr. Wolf started in the hat manufacturing and repairing business at 721 Walnut street, doing all the work in his factory himself. He now employs a considerable force business is one ot^ the most successful in the city. Wolf is a member of the Moose, Independent Order of Foresters, Woodmen of America, and National Union. March 26, 1890, he Sophia M. Seitz of Cleveland, Ohio. They have one daughter. one hundred and forty-one M en of A f f a i r s i n Kansas C i t y GEORGE ALBERT BOND Prominent in the Automobile Industry of Kansas City. President of the Bond Motor Company. ^EORGE ALBERT BOND, president of the Bond Motor Company, one of the oldest and most successful automobile institutions in Kansas City, was born in Illinois, July 21, 1868. His father. James Bond, and his mother, Mary E. Bond, were both natives of Illinois. The success of the institution of which Mr. Bond is the head reflects his business ability. Politically he is a Republican and although he has never held office, he is none the less actively interested in civic progress. Mr. Bond married Miss Emma J. Antoni, July 7, I 898. Two children, a daughter and a son, have been born to them. Mr. Bond was reared and educated at Hannibal, Missouri, coming to Kansas City in 1886. He is a member of the Commercial Club, the Kansas City Club, the Elm Ridge Golf Club, the Automobile Club and is a Mason and an Elk. ouc hundred and foriy~iwo Met! f A f f a i r s i n K a n s a s C i t y W. B. ROBERTS General Manager Kansas City Branch of the W. W. Kimball Piano Company. B. ROBERTS, a pioneer in commercial Kansas City, was born July 23. 1848, on a farm in Kendall County, Illinois. At the age of fourteen he went to Chicago to shift for himself. Standing in front of Reed's Temple of Music on Dearborn street one day, he was watching workmen remove a large plate glass. The young spectator thought the big glass was about to fall and he jumped in to assist the men, his action attracting the attention of Mr. Reed, who gave him a job immediately, notwithstanding his youth. From that day he became a fixture with the Reed concern and remained so until its failure in 1879, when he accepted a position of responsibility with the W. W. Kimball house. In 1882 Mr. Roberts was sent to Kansas City to manage the Kimball Company's local branch. His first location was on Main street between Seventh and Eighth streets. After nine years of increased business it became necessary to hunt more commodious quarters and Mr. Roberts moved to Walnut street between Ninth and Tenth streets, where he remained until the disastrous fire of 1905. Prior to the fire he was contemplating moving again into larger quarters and when he found his old quarters in ashes with char- acteristic promptness he selected his present location at 1009-1 I Grand avenue. While building a great business Mr. Roberts has not neglected his duty to friends and city and today he is one of the most liberal-minded boosters Kansas City has. He is a member of the Kansas City Club and the Kansas City Athletic Club and is one of the oldest members of the local Elks* Lodge. In 1878 Mr. Roberts married Miss Cella 1. Taylor. They have two sons, W. B.. Jr., and Taylor. The Roberts home in Mellier Place is one of the handsomest in the city. one hundred and forty-three .1/ c II f A f f a i r s i ii K ansa s C i t v m k ALBERT DIX FLINTOM Branch Manager of the General Film Company and a Large Operator in Leases. LBERT DIX FLINTOM, manager of the Kansas City and St. Louis branches of the General Film Company, president of the Kansas City Leasehold & Improvement Company, president of the Twelfth Street Leasehold Ac Improvement Company, and a director of the Mercantile Bank, came to Kansas City from Lawrence, Kansas, in 1900. Mr. Flintom was born in Lawrence, Kansas, December 10, 1872. His father, W. J. Flintom, was a native of Vermont, and his mother, Jetta Graham Flintom, came to America from Ireland. Kansas City first called Mr. Flintom through the medium of a little "want ad" published by the National Bank of Commerce, which institution was in search of a bank clerk. He had been a teller in the Lawrence National Bank. Prior to that he had been employed on the Lawrence Daily Journal at wages ranging from $1.25 a week to $9.00 a week. At the end of seven years he resigned from the management of the bookkeeping department of the National Bank of Commerce, where he had two hundred and fifty men working under him and was receiving $2,500 a year. He invested his savings in the Yale Amusement Company which had long attracted him. In the meanwhile he had bought up options on Broadway property, through which he realized $4,500 in one month. Eventually he bought most of the stock of the amusement company in which he was inter- ested and managed the business at a salary of $4,500. He later organized a film exchange in Kansas City which was sold to the General Film Company of New York about a year ago at an enormous profit. He was appointed to the manaeement of the Kansas City and St. Louis branches. Mr. Flintom married Miss Ned Jaynes in November. 1906. They have one child, a son, Lathrop B. Flintom. Mr. Flintom is a Republican. one hundred and forty-four M en of A f f a i r s i ii K a ii s a s C i t v GRANVILLE M. SMITH President of the Commonwealth National Bank and Keenly Interested in All Municipal Improvement Matters. RANVILLE M. SMITH, one of the prominent bankers of the Southwest, president of the Commonwealth National Bank, was born in Adams County. Ohio, December 1 0, I 860, the son of Samuel M. and Amanda J. Smith, who were both natives of Ohio. After completing the common schools Mr. Smith attended Cornell College at Mount Vernon, Iowa. Going into the general banking business, Mr. Smith finally located in Kansas City in 1898. He was associated with the National Reserve Bank and the Central National Bank for a time, and in 1911 when the Com- monw^ealth National Bank was established he w^as made president of the organ- ization, which from the first has taken a place in the first rank of banking institutions of the Southwest. March 2, 1885, Mr. Smith married Annie B. Pinnell. They have one daughter. Marguerite, and three sons, Granville M., Jr., Niel, and George. Mr. Smith is a Republican, member of the Kansas City Club and the Knife and Fork Club and takes a keen interest in all municipal improvements. one hundred and forty-five Men of A f f a i r s in Kansas City STEPHEN HENRY VELIE One of the Most Prominent Implement Men in the United States; An Officer in the Deere Company. TEPHEN HENRY VELIE. known the world over as one of the master minds behind the gigantic John Deere Implement busi- ness, an executive officer in six great manufacturing concerns and a director of a very successful bank, was born in Prince- ton, Illinois, October 20, 1862, the son of Stephen Henry Velie and Emma Deere Velie. John Deere, father of Mr. Velie's mother, in a very literal sense revolutionized agricultural methods the world over, being the inventor of the steel plow and the founder of the Deere Company, which now n^anufactures farming implements, wagons, etc., which are sold everywhere. Mr. Velie, with only that education which he was able to obtain in com- mon schools and the university of experience, is today one of the most refined and sagacious business men in the United States. He has mastered every phase of the implement business. A Republican, politically^ he has never sought office but has always taken a loyal citizen's interest in municipal, state and national affairs. July 6, 1884, Mr. Velie married Emma Ainsworth. They have one son, Thomas A. Velie. Following are the executive offices held by Mr. Velie: Vice-president Velie Motor Vehicle Company, Moline, Illinois; president V .^lie Saddlery Company, Kansas City, Missouri; president Fort Smith Wagon Com- pany, Fort Smith, Arkansas; secretary and manager John Deere Plow Com- pany, Kansas City, Missouri; vice-president Velie Carriage Company, Moline, Illinois: vice-president Marseilles Manufacturing Company, East Moline, Illi- nois; director Southwest National Bank, Kansas City, Missouri. ouc hundred and forty-six M c 11 o I A f f a i r s l\ (,' ;/ \ (I s C ! :mi\ CHARLES H. BOOB Secretary Kansas City Sash and Door Company, one of the Largest in the Central West. HARLES H. BOOB, secretary of the Kansas City Sash and Door Company, was born December 5, 1856, in Miflflenburg, Union County, Pennsylvania, the son of Joseph and Mary Boob, who were also natives of Pennsylvania. After obtaining the usual common school education, upon his father's death, Mr. Boob went to Kansas and continued the general contracting business which his father had established. In 1880 he moved to Kansas City and became connected with Lovejoy Planing Mill. He remained eighteen years with that company and mastered the busi- ness down to the last detail. In 1902 he became interested in the Kansas City Sash and Door Company, of which he is now secretary. December 28, 1882, Mr. Boob married Addie F. Wilson. They have one daughter. Mr. Boob is a man who has made his own success, and his industry and sterling business integrity command the respect of his business associates and an extensive patronage. The Kansas City Sash and Door Company is one of the largest firms of its kind in the Central West, and is one of the prominent commercial interests of the city. Mr. Boob is a member of the Masons and the Modern Woodmen. one luuidfCii and forty-seven Men of A f f a i r s in Kansas C i t y : •^.~ -V> 'V^^^^.-^''~''*^ 1-. V-' fc-; '^^11 i:i I'. Vv \ f^ 1^/ l\ GEORGE H. EDWARDS Republican Member Upper House of City Council; President of the Edwards & Sloane Jewelry Company. EORGE H. EDWARDS, member of the upper house of the city council and president of the Edwards & Sloane Jewelry Company and the Mercantile Bank, was born in St. Louis, Missouri, May 25, I860, the son of Richard and Betsy J. Edwards. His father was well known throughout Illinois, having served as president of the State Normal University and later as state superintendent of public instruction. He was the author of the Illinois Compul- sory Education Law. After having spent several years traveling for Chicago and New York jewelry houses, Mr. Edwards came to Kansas City in 1 888 and went into business for himself, in which he has met with remarkable success. He early took an interest in politics and became a prominent member of the Republican party's counsel. He is now serving his second term as an upper house alderman. In 1889 Mr. Edwards married Miss Belle Dix of Lawrence, Kansas. They have two sons and four daughters. Besides taking care of his many personal interests, Mr. Edwards has always found time to take a prominent part in all municipal improvement campaigns and has stood for "business administration" and a "square deal" in the city government. nnr hundred niuf forly-cif^lit M e n of Affairs in Kansas C i f ■■■,-jr, «w f^ WALTER L. CRUSH iPresident W. L. Grush Produce & Commission Company, One of the Largest Commission Houses in Kansas City. ALTER L. GRUSH, president of the W. L. Grush Produce & Com- mission Company, was born in Springfield, Illinois, September 22, 1867, the son of Martin Luther and Elizabeth Grush, who were both natives of Maryland. Mr. Crush's extraordinary success has been of the kind which we are pleased to designate as "self-made." In 1887 he w^ent into the produce commission business in a small way. For one year he was located in Topeka, Kansas. Then he moved to Kansas City, where the enterprise has been enlarged and built up until today the W. L. Grush Produce & Commission Company is one of the largest concerns of its kind in the Southwest. Before going to Topeka, Mr. Crush lived in Howard County, Missouri. March 21, 1896, Mr. Grush married Miss Neva May. Mr. Grush is a director of the Mercantile Bank of Kansas City and a man who takes a keen interest in the commercial w^elfare of the city. In politics Mr. Grush is a Republican. one hundred and forty-nine Men of A f f a i r s in K a n s a s C i t JOHN P. PRESCOTT Civil Engineer; President of the Terminal Warehouse Company and Interested in Several Manufacturing Concerns. ^^^^OHN P. PRESCOTT. president of the Terminal Warehouse Com- ^^/i/v] ^ pany, was born February 4, 1859, in Spirit Lake. Iowa, the son of John S. and Mary Harris Prescott. His father was a native of New^ York and his mother was born in Delaware. His ancestors came from England in 1640 and settled in Massa- chusetts, near Boston. After finishing his school work, Mr. Prescott became en- gaged in the construction business, and from 1878 to 1898 he handled a large amount of railroad construction in the West, Mexico and Central America. In 1898 he came to Kansas City and became associated with the Terminal Warehouse Company, of w^hich he is president. He is also interested in several manufacturing concerns, one of them doing an extensive business in artificial limbs. December 20, 1892, Mr. Prescott married Martha Anderson. A Republi- can in politics, Mr. Prescott is a man alive to the interests of the city and has always shown a willingness to go to the front for any project which is for the betterment of financial or industrial conditions. one hundred and Hffy M en of A f f a i r s in K a n s a s C i t y .1 aik:?" ERNEST LOW BRUNDRETT President Kansas City, Missouri, Gas Company and Wyandotte County, Kansas, Gas Company. RNEST LOW BRUNDRETT. president of the Kansas City, Mis- souri. Gas Company and the Wyandotte County, Kansas, Gas Company, was born in Manchester, England. February 18, 1861. the son of Elisha and Margaret Ann (Malcolm) Brundrett. His father was a native of Manchester and his mother was born 'n Dundee. Scotland. Mr. Brundrett was graduated in 1877 from the Manchester Grammar school and prepared himself for the profession of an accountant. In 1886 he came to the United States and directly to Kansas City. Since 1888 he has been associated w^ith the interests w^hich have furnished the two Kansas Citys with gas. Being a man of executive ability, he at once took a prominent place in the management and w^as rapidly promoted. Mr. Brundrett married Mabel Constance Barningham. of Bowden, Cheshire County. England, February 17, 1909. They have one son. In politics, Mr. Brundrett is an Independent. He has always been a fine friend to the newspaper writers and, although one of the busiest men in Kansas City, is democratic and easily approached. He is one of the first associate members of the Kansas City Press Club. one hiDulrcd and fifty-one Men of Affairs i n Kansas C i t \< \'. CHARLES COE BREYFOGLE Successful Real Estate Dealer and Secretary of the Deatherage Lumber Company. \V I .A. HARLES COE BREYFOGLE, one of Kansas City's successful real estate dealers and secretary of the Deatherage Lumber Company, is another contribution of Kansas to Kansas City progress. He was born near Lenexa, Kansas, January 3, 1869. His father, Lewis W. Breyfogle, was a native Ohioan, having been born near Columbus, and his mother, Laura A. Breyfogle, was born at Valparaiso, Indiana. Mr. Breyfogle inherited his activity in Kansas City real estate from his father, who was interested in real estate in and around Kansas City from the time he moved to Olathe, Kansas, in I860, until his death. Also, the elder Breyfogle was president of the First National Bank of Olathe from the day it was founded throughout the remainder of his life. Charles C. Breyfogle was a student in Baker University at Baldwin, Kansas, but business life drew him away from the school before he had graduated. He married Marian Deatherage, February 18, 1902. They have one child, a daughter. Mr. Breyfogle is a Republican, but the activity of Kansas City real estate has left him no time to seek public office. He came to Kansas City from Olathe ten years ago when his interests in and around Kansas City demanded his presence here. He is a member of the Masonic Lodge. one hundred and fifty-ttvo Men of Affairs in Kansas City i'UII .■:fflS?nv^.-g?^ ^-::;s^:yy-";-^:rv^::---^> ;^"'-5';"';;;"-'t CHARLES C. CLEMONS President C. C. Clemons Produce Company; One of the Leading Produce Merchants of the Southwest. |HARLES C. CLEMONS. president of the C. C. Clemens Produce Company and one of the prominent produce merchants of the Southwest, was born in Covington, Kentucky, July 25, 1839, the son of Charles D. and Mary Clemons. For forty- four years Mr. Clemons has been a conspicuous figure in the commercial life of Kansas City. He came here from Alabama in April of 1 868 and started in the produce busi- ness. From the first his efforts met with success and today his company is doing one of the most extensive produce businesses in the Central West. He has been a member of the Produce Exchange since it was first organized and twice has served as its president. Established in 1 868, the C. C. Clemons Produce Company was incorporated in I 908. February 18, 1869, Mr. Clemons was married. He has two daughters. He is a member of the Commercial Club and has taken a prominent part in many of the campaigns for municipal improvement. Politically he is a Republican. hundred and fifty-three Men of A f f a i r s i n K a n s a s C i f y ^^ NUGENT J. FLYNN Member of the Firm of Richards & Flynn, Amusement Promoters and Theater Owners. UGENT J. FLYNN. a member of the firm of Richards & Flynn. owning and operating several high-class moving picture theaters in Kansas City, was born in Brookfield, Missouri, February I 5, 1882, the son of William and Martha Earl Flynn. His father was born in Lackagh, Ireland, and his mother in Indianapolis, Indiana. After obtaining a common school education, Mr. Flynn went to business college and prepared himself to be a stenographer and private secretary, in which positions he worked for several years. Realizing that Kansas City was a promising field for high-class amusement enterprises, Mr. Flynn, with Mr. Richards, built and is operating two of the best moving picture houses in the city and a third is under construction. Mr. Flynn is a Democrat, single, and a young man of industry and exceptional business ability. He is a member of the Moose Lodge. ouc hundred and fifty-four Men of A f f a i r s i n K a n s as C i t y JOSEPH M. GOLDSMITH President oi the Elgin Dairy Lunch Company and a Successful Self-made Business Man. OSEPH M. GOLDSMITH, president of the Elgin Dairy Lunch Company and interested in several other commercial ventures in Kansas City, was born in Rochester, Indiana, March 29, 1678, the son of David and Jennie Goldsmith, both natives of Germany. Mr. Goldsmith is one of the few successful men in Kansas City who had to fight for everything they obtained in the way of education. Starting early in life to shift for himself, he went to Chicago, where for several years he was a newsboy. Successful in various minor mercantile undertakings, he came to Kansas City in 1900 and was immediately employed by Jones Brothers, who w^ere then building up a great department store business. For seven years Mr. Goldsmith remained w^ith that firm until repeated promotions had placed him in one of the most impor- tant executive positions in the organization. In 1907, Mr. Goldsmith decided he would enter business for himself, and under protest from his employers he resigned his place in the store and organ- ized the Elgin Dairy Lunch Company, which now operates five lunch rooms in Kansas City. Mr. Goldsmith made the concern a big success from the first month. By no means the least important feature about Mr. Goldsmith is his friendship for the new^sboys. In 1911 he gave them a Thanksgiving Day dinner, repeating the performance on Christmas Day of the same year. He is intimately acquainted with almost every newsboy in the city. He is a Shriner and one of the most ardent boosters of Kansas City. one hundred and fifty-Hve Men of Affair s i it K a n s a s C i t y i,J.!L m--- BESTOR GASTON BROWN Manager of the Western Office of The M. C. Lilley & Company of Columbus, Ohio. ESTOR GASTON BROWN, manager of the Western office of The M. C. Lilley 6c Company of Columbus, Ohio, was born Novem- ber 22, 1861, at Bluflton, Wells County, Indiana, the son of George Summerfield and Martha Ellen (Karn) Brown. His paternal ancestors were Quakers of Scotch descent and were in fjfj Wm. Penn's colony in Pennsylvania. His maternal ancestors were Germans. His father was a native of Ohio and his mother was born in Indiana. Completing the public schools, Mr. Brown continued his education in the University of Michigan and later in Cornell University. For a time he followed the newspaper profession, being city editor of the Topeka Common- wealth, dramatic and sporting editor of the Topeka Capital, and a special correspondent for papers in other cities. December 7, 1884, he married Emma Jane Kellam of Topeka, Kansas. One daughter, Helen May Brown, was born to them, the happy union being broken three years after the mar- riage by the death of Mrs. Brown. Besides building a very successful business career, Mr. Brown has found time to make himself, as Thomas E. Dewey said in his biographical sketch, "the most accomplished as well as the most distinguished Mason" in Kansas, where he was for years the leader of all things Masonic. Mr. Brown has been through all the degrees of Ancient Craft Masonry, Capitular Masonry, Cryptic Masonry, Christian Knighthood, Red Cross of Constantine, and the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite, the most of his work having been received in Topeka. From the very beginning of his residence here Mr. Brown took a conspicuous place in commercial Kansas City. Once a newspaper man, always one, Mr. Brown is looked upon as a member of the profession by the newspaper men of Kansas and Missouri. one huiulrcd and fifty-si.v M en of A f f a i r s i n K a ii s as C i f y WILLIAM THOMAS BLAND President of the McPike Drug Company, and for Years Conspicuous in Kansas City's Commercial History. attorney in ILLIAM THOMAS BLAND, president of the McPike Drug Com- pany, was born in Weston, West Virginia, in 1661, the son of William John and Columbia Madison (Jackson) Bland. Both parents were native Virginians. Mr. Bland was graduated from the University of West Vir- ginia in 1883, and from the !aw^ department in 1884. He moved to Atchison, Kansas, in 1887 and was elected county 1890 on the Democratic ticket, mayor of Atchison in 1893, judge of the Second judicial district in 1895 and re-elected in 1899. He resigned in 1902 to become vice-president of the McPike Drug Company, which in 1904 was removed to Kansas City. He became president in February, 1911. In 1907 he was elected president of the Manufacturers and Merchants' Asso- ciation and when, in 1909, it, with the Commercial Club and the Business Men's League, amalgamated under the name of the Commercial Club, he was made president of the new^ organization. During his administration $1,250,000 was raised by public subscription to build boats to navigate the Missouri River, the controversy between the railroads and the two Kansas Citys relative to obstructions in the Kaw River, aggravating local flood situations, was settled and the work of the Kaw River Drainage Commission was permitted to proceed. At the April, 1912, election Judge Bland was chosen a member of the School Board. He is a director of the Commerce Trust Company and the Kansas City Missouri River Navigation Company and is a member of the Board of Governors of the Lakes- to- 1 he-Gulf Deep Waterw^ays Association. He has been repeatedly urged to make the race for mayor of Kansas City and also for Congress, but has declined. He is a member of the Sons of the Revolution. In 1891 Judge Bland married Bertha H. McPike. They have one son. William Thomas, Jr. hundred cud fifty-scvcu M c of A f f a i r in K a n s a s C i f v WILLIAM B. HILL President Ash Grove Lime and Portland Cement Company, One of the Largest in the Country. ILLIAM B. HILL, president of the Ash Grove Lime and Portland Cement Company, was born in Pleasant Hill, Miami Counly, Ohio, October 8, 1854, the son of Thomas and Mary A. hiill. As Mr. Hill expresses it, his education for the most part was received in "Clod-Hopper College. " The success to which Mr. Hill has attained is evidence that in whatever college he studied he got all that was to be learned. For a time he was in the grain and live stock business, making his headquarters in Carthage, Mis- souri. In 1886 he came to Kansas City and became associated with the Portland cement interests, now being president of the Ash Grove company, manufacturing lime and Portland cement, and one of the largest concerns of its kind in the United States. In 1885 Mr. Hill married Fannie Harding. In politics Mr. Hill is a Repubhcan. He ia a man who is proud of the city and state and has always been ready to do what he could to advance the interest of Kansas City. He is a member of the Masons, a director of the Mid-Day Club, belongs to the Evanston Golf Club, the Kansas City Athletic Club and the Railroad Club. one huitdrcd and fifty-eight M c II of Affair s i n K a ii s a s C i t y t CHARLES A. BERGFELDT One of the Leading Tailors in Kansas City, President of the Bergfeldt-Roueche Tailoring Company. HARLES A. BERGFELDT. president of the Bergfeldt-Roueche Tail- oring Company and one of the leading tailors in Kansas City, was born in Stockholm, Sweden. January 3 1, 1866. the son of Alfred and Emily S. Bergfeldt, both natives of Sweden. .^^\, .v> ^ Coming to America, Mr. Bergfeldt went into the tailoring ;-^^si:^^riJ business and finally located in Kansas City where he has built up one of the most extensive patronages enjoyed by any tailoring firm in the Southwest. Many of the best dressed men of Missouri. Kansas and Oklahoma keep standing orders with Mr. Bergfeldts house. June 29, 1892, Mr. Bergfeldt married Hannah G. Erickson. They have a daughter. Mildred, and a son, W. Harold. one hundred and fifty-nine Men of Affairs in Kansas C i t y Qi\L^ m -'■>:> ,■ EDWARD WINSTANLEY Chief Deputy County Clerk of Jackson County and Noted Throughout Missouri as a Democratic Party Worker. JDWARD WINSTANLEY, for years one of the best known workers in the Democratic party and now chief deputy county clerk for Jackson County, was born in London, England, in 1850, the son of Edward Newnam and Helen Glanville Winstanley. Mr. Winstanley was educated in Nutgrove College, Dublin, Ireland. He came to the United States when sixteen years old and to Kansas City thirty-five years ago. In I 879 he married Sallie E. Dunne of Independence, Missouri. They have four children. For many years Mr. Winstanley has rendered valuable service to both the county and city. He has served as superintendent of the county court house, purchasing agent for the city and deputy probate clerk for the county. He has always been a splendid friend to the newspaper writers of the state who have come in contact with him almost daily for the last decade. Mr. Winstanley is a member of the Elks and Moose Lodges. tiic liiiiiJinl mill .fi.i/y Men of A f f a i r s i n Kan s a s C i t y -/f h'-' ■• '■'■■■' ' lih HENRY LEE JARBOE, JR. Prominent in Financial Circles of the Southwest and President of the Drovers National Beuik. he d isposed ENRY LEE JARBOE, JR., president of the Drovers National Bank of Kansas City, was born in Burlington, Kansas, July 21, 1675, the son of Henry Lee and Addie Jarboe. His father was born in Missouri and his mother in Illinois. Born and reared on a farm in Coffey County, Kansas, Mr. Jarboe moved to Marlow, Indian Territory, in January, 1893. and organized the Bank of Marlow, acting as cashier until of his interest in 190L He then went to Chickasha, Indian Territory, as a junior member of the Gilkey-Jarboe Hardware Company, a wholesale and retail firm of which he was secretary and treasurer for several years. He organized the Chickasha Trust Company in 1901, which was absorbed by the Oklahoma State Bank of Chickasha, of which institution he was president until it was absorbed by the Oklahoma National Bank, of which also he was president. In 1910 Mr. Jarboe moved to St. Louis, where he became vice-president of the National Stock Yards National Bank, National Stock Yards, Illinois. He resigned that position in January, 1911, to accept the presidency of the Drovers' National Bank of Kansas City, Missouri. April 24, 1901, Mr. Jarboe married Pearle Haight, of Burlington, Kan- sas. They have three children, Thomas Wade, Lillian and Henry Lee, III. Politically Mr. Jarboe is a Republican. He belongs to the Masonic orders up to and including the Knights Templar; is a member of Ararat Temple, Ancient Order of the Mystic Shrine; is an Elk and a member of the Evanston Golf Club and the Kansas City Athletic Club. one hundred and sixtv-oiie Men of A f f a i r s i n K a n s a s City PRESTON K. DILLENBECK Founder and President of the Dillenbeck School of Oratory, Kansas City, Missouri. ■p=^v71 RESTON K. DILLENBECK. one of the prominent instructors of 1- -A J. ' oratory in the West, founder and president of the Dillenbeck School of Oratory of Kansas City, was born in Canajoharie, New York. March 20, 1859. the son of William H. and Tenette Dillenbeck. His ancestors were of Dutch extraction and were pioneers in the Mohawk Valley of New York. After attending the public schools, Professor Dillenbeck attended the Fort Plain Collegiate Institute where he made a specialty of oratory and public speaking. He came West and took a position with the Fulton and Trueblood School of Oratory from which place he was called to Kentucky University at Lexington, Kentucky, where for four years he occu- pied the chair of oratory and public speaking. He resigned from the faculty there, to come to Kansas City and establish the school of oratory which bears his name and which for nineteen years has been one of the leading schools of its kind in the Central West. In 1892, Professor Dillenbeck married Miss Liliie L. Lash of Linneus, Missouri. They have two children Catherine and Jocelyn. Professor Dillen- beck is a Mason and in politics is a Republican. His school in Kansas City has always maintained a high standard and among its graduates are numbered several who are now stars in the dramatic world. one hundred atid sixty-ttvo M en of A f f a i r s i n K a n s a s C i f y B. HOWARD SMITH President of the Consumers' Bread Company, Largest Bread and Baking Company in Kansas City. HOWARD SMITH, president of Kansas City's largest bread and baking concern, the Consumers' Bread Company, was born in Scott County, Indiana, the son of H. S. and Lucy Smith, who were natives of Ohio. Mr. Smith had the privilege of attending only the public schools. The knowledge and principles which have made him one of the prominent men in commercial Kansas City he obtained from the big university of experience. Having been in the bakery business for some time in various locations. Mr. Smith came to Kansas City in 1885 and engaged in the business which finally became known as the Consumers' Bread Company, of which he is the head and chief stockholder. In 1870 Mr. Smith married Mary E. Stillie of Ohio. They have four rons and a daughter. Mr. Smith is a member of the Elks Lodge and politically is a Democrat. nnc hundred and sixty-three Men of Affairs in Kan s a s C i t m M j^ Vv ^ VJ If WARREN NOBLE GROFF Prominent Attorney and a Member of the Forty-fourth General Assembly of Missouri. ^ARREN NOBLE GROFF, attorney and member of the Forty-fourth General Assembly of Missouri, was born in Tiffin, Ohio, April 23, 1874, son of Silas Wright and Mary Ellen (Noble) Groff. His grandfather, Warren P. Noble, was in Congress from Ohio during Lincoln's administration and was president of the first board of trustees of Ohio State University. Mr. Groff's father and mother were both born in Tiffin, Ohio. After completing the common school course, Mr. Groff entered Notre Dame University, where he studied from 1892 to 1894, then entered Ohio State University, from which he was graduated, B.A. in I 896, and LL.B. in 1899. Coming to Kansas City in 1901, Mr. Groff began practicing law and has built up an extensive and successful business. Being a Democ-a; of progressive views, when made the candidate of his party he was easily elected a member of the Forty-fourth General Assembly of Missouri and served with much credit to himself and satisfaction to his party. Mr. Groff is a member of the Chi Phi Fraternity, Kansas City Club, University Club, Railroad Club and the Knife and Fork Club. one Umidrcit ami sixly-fanr Men o f A f f a i r s i ii K a n s as C i t y JOHN HOWARD KITCHEN Member of the Firm of Lewis Sl Kitchen and One of Kansas City's Most Progressive Men. OHN HOWARD KITCHEN, one of the first men to subscribe to the million-dollar fund for the Missouri River Navigation Com- pany and a man who has taken a great interest in industrial work in Kansas City, was born in Easton, Pennsylvania, April 4, 1870, son of Francis Andrew and Anna Margaret Kitchen. Both parents w^ere born in Pennsylvania, of Quaker stock, and of ancestors who played an important part in the Revolutionary War. Mr. Kitchen's father was an officer in the One Hundred Seventy-fourth Pennsylvania regiment during the Civil War. The firm of Lewis & Kitchen, dealers in ventilating and heating fixtures, was organized in 1693 and subsequently branch offices were established in Chicago. Both members of the firm are engineers and contractors and are interested in a manufacturing plant of sheet metal novelties. Mr. Kitchen has found time, in building up an extensive and successful business, to give the city a great deal of valuable service. He is a member of the examining board of civil service ; he w^as one of the first to respond with financial aid when the project of reviving navigation on the Missouri was brought up; he is a director of the Juvenile Hotel Association and was a member of the building committee which erected the Boys* Hotel; he was for four years a trustee of the First Congregational Church and he is a man who in an extraordinary degree lives up to the principles of the brotherhood of man. Mr. Kitchen was educated in the manual training course of Toledo Uni- versity. In 1890 he married Mabel C. Lewis, in Ottawa, Illinois. They have two sons and a daughter. Mr. Kitchen is a member of the Commercial. Evanston. Elm Ridge Golf. Knife and Fork and Engineers* Clubs and the .Sons of the American Revolution. one hundred and si-vty-fiz'c ^1/ e II of Affair I II K a n s a s C i t HERMAN G. CHERRY President and General Manager of the Stock Yards Cotton & Linseed Meal Company. ERMAN G. CHERRY, president of the Stock Yards Cotton & Linseed Meal Company, was born May I 7, I 864, in Carthage, Illinois, the son of John W. and Purlina E. Cherry. His father was born in Overton County, Tennessee, and his mother in Hopkinsville. Kentucky. After finishing his school education Mr. Cherry became interested in hve stock, locating finally at Adrian. Missouri, where he built up an extensive business. From Adrian he came to Kansas City in 1897 and went into the grain and feed business. In May. 1908, the Stock Yards Cotton & Linseed Meal Company was organized, with Mr. Cherry as president and general manager. It is now one of the largest concerns of its kind in the United States. The firm is a member of the Interstate Cotton Seed Crushers* Association, National Expellers' Cotton Seed Crushers' Asso- ciation and the National Alfalfa Millers' Association. Mr. Cherry is married, is a member of the Democratic party and belongs to the Knights of Pythias and the Hoof and Horn Club. one hundred and sixty-six M e 11 of A [ f a i r s I 11 K a n s a C I t THOMAS MORLEDGE Engaged in the Wholesale and Retail Fish and Oyster Business in Kansas City Since 1879. HOMAS MORLEDGE. in the wholesale and retail fish and oyster business for thirty-three years and proprietor of the well known Morledge Restaurant, was born in London, England, the son of Joseph and Elizabeth Morledge. Coming to Kansas City in 1879, Mr. Morledge engaged in the fish and oyster business and has built up an extensive whole- sale and retail trade in that line. Eighteen years ago he opened an exclusive fish and oyster restaurant which is the finest thing of its kind in the city. Mr. Morledge is a Democrat, but takes no active part in politics, giving all his energy to his business. Wl i one hiiiulicil and sixty-seven Men of A f f a i r s i ii K a )i s a s C i t y ---5b -^ JACQUE G. L. HARVEY Counselor for Jackson County, Missouri, and a Prominent Attorney in Kansas City. ACQUE G. L. HARVEY, present county counselor for Jackson County and one of the prominent young attorneys in Kansas City, was born in Saline County, Missouri, January 26, 1875, the son of Jacque G. L. and Virginia Harriss Harvey, both natives of Saline County, Missouri. Mr. Harvey's four grand- parents were natives of Virginia and were among the pioneers who opened Missouri to settlement. His paternal grandfather was speaker of the Missouri house of representatives in 1840. Mr. Harvey's father was a Confederate soldier. Having obtained a common school education, reinforced by extensive reading, Mr. Harvey came to Kansas City in 1 890 intent on entering the legal profession. In 1900 he was admitted to the bar. Later he served Kan- sas City one year as assistant city counselor and in 1909 was appointed county counselor for Jackson County and reappointed a year ago. In his general practice he is associated with the well known firm of Reed, Yates, Mastin & Harvey. Mr. Harvey is one of the leading men in the Democratic party in Jackson County and has rendered valuable service in many of the recent campaigns. He is a member of the Elks lodge, Mid-Day Club and the Kansas City Club. one hundred and sixty-eighl M en of Affairs i n Kansas C i t y v'.'^*"--'— ^<'?' ^^^^^^^^^Sd Ts:i>.s3^ JOHN ERHARDT MUHLFELD Vice-President and General Manager of the Kansas City Southern Railway Company. OHN ERHARDT MUHLFELD, one of the foremost authorities on railroad operation in "the United States and vice-president and general manager of the Kansas City Southern Railway, was born September 18, 1872, in Peru, Indiana, the son of John and Kunigunda Erhardt Muhlfeld. His father was a native of Frank- fort-on-the-Main, Germany, and his mother was born in Water- bury. Connecticut. Mr. Mulhfeld's early education and training was obtained in his native town. In 1887 he worked for a time as a clerk in a drug store at $2.00 a week. Later he took a job in a coal and lumber yard. This brought him in touch with railroad men. After a course in mechanical engineering at Purdue University he began field work under Ed Rice, then building the Peru & Detroit Railway. He worked as an engine wiper and apprentice in the Wabash shops at Fort Wayne and was later made pit foreman. In 1 894 through the influence of Master Mechanic Frank W. Morse he got into road locomotive service. He passed rapidly from one place to the next higher, remaining with the Wabash until the spring of 1899. From 1899 to 1901 he was master mechanic western division Grand Trunk at Port Huron, Michigan: February to September, 1901, master mechanic at Montreal; September, 1901, to October, 1902, superintendent machinery and rolling stock Canadian Government Railroads; October, 1902, 'o February, 1903, acsis'.ant to general superintendent motive power, Balti- more & Ohio; Febr-jary to June, 1903, superintendent motive power same road at Newark, Ohio; June, 1903, to November, 1908, general superintend- ent same road at Baltimore, Maryland; November. 1908 to November, 1910, engaged in steam read expe't work; November, 1910, became vice-president and general manager of the Kansas City Southern. Mr. Muhlfeld married Marie Murphy in Tilton, Illinois, .Apr-1 14. 1902. They have three chiMren, Marie, Jane and John. Much of the work done by M'-. Muhlfeld has been of in'ernational impor- tance. Under President L. F. Loree of the Baltimore & Ohio, he developed and adapted the first Mallet type locomotive and the Walschaert valve gear to American steam roads. one hundred and si.vty-nl<-e M en of A f f a i r s i u K a n s a s C i t y Tur""^ WILLIAM JOHN KUPPER President of the Kupper-Benson Hotel Company of Kansas City. ILLIAM JOHN KUPPER. president of the Kupper-Benson Hotel Company, was born in Burlington, Iowa, September I 7, I 858, of good old German stock, his father, Jacob Kupper. having been born in Bieberheim, Germany, and his mother, Miria Mor- lock Kupper, being a native of Wurtemburg, Germany. Mr. Kupper is a Republican who would prefer that someone else hold the public offices while he looks after his business. He married Miss Anna Benson August 20, 1885. One daughter has been born to them. one hundred and seveni\ .1/ c II f A f f a i r s i n K a n s as C i t y GEORGE TEBEAU National Baseball Celebrity and Owner of the Kansas City Team of the American Association. EORGE TEBEAU, who is a national baseball celebrity and one of ihe foremost baseball magnates of the Central West, owner of the Kansas City "Blues'* of the American Association, was born { \^S^\/ ^ V '" ^^' L°"^^* Missouri, in 1861, the son of Louis and Louise A^^^^wA\ Bauvray Tebeau. He is married and has two children, a boy ^^"^^^-^ i^ I and a girl. Early in life Mr. Tebeau became a baseball "fan," later a player and finally an owner of professional clubs. Up until two years ago he owned the Kansas City and Louisville teams in the American Association and the Denver team in the Western League. Selling the Louisville franchise, he now devotes most of his time to his Kansas City interests. In 1900, when Ban Johnson, president of the American League, organ- ized that body to fight the old National, he called the team that then repre- sented Kansas City to Washington. This team was under the management of Jimmy Manning. That left the territory of Kansas City open to organized baseball and it was then that George Tebeau stepped into the breach. Mr. Tebeau at that time was interested in Denver. He placed a Western League team in this city that won the pennant in I 90 I. This team also won the pennant in 1902 under a different management. The following year the American Association was organized and Mr. Tebeau transferred his Western League team over to that organization. Since then he has maintained the Association team here. The same year another Western League team was placed in Kansas City, but the territory was de- clared the property of the American Association and the following year this Western organization ceased to exist here. Since then the American Asso- ciation team has had full sway. one Jiuudred and scvcntx-one M c n of A f f a i r I n K a n s a s C i t V *r- JAMES A. HOUCHIN Known the World Over as a Breeder of Fine Horses; A Candidate for Nomination for Governor, ^AMES A. HOUCHIN. who although not a resident of Kansas City, finds a place in this book because of his interests in the city and his world-wide reputation as the foremost horse breeder in Mis- souri, was born October 10, 1869, near Atlanta, Logan County, Illinois. The first seventeen years of his life w^ere spent upon the farm and his education was what he could obtain from four months out of the year at the country school house and three years in the schools at Lincoln, Illinois. The balance of the time his services were needed upon the farm. Having known what it is to labor, Mr. Houchin is a man who greatly respects those who live by toil. He is one of the most democratic men in the state, and is universally esteemed for the great success he has built from his humble beginning. January 2, I 89 I , Mr. Houchin entered Gem City Business College at Quincy, Illinois, and completed the commercial course there in five months. About the time he had finished the college received an inquiry for a young man who understood shorthand and bookkeeping. After exchanging letters. Mr. Houchin boarded a train, went to Jefferson City. Missouri, accepted the position offered at nine dollars a week and then wired the news to his parent?. He worked in the place for two years, then made a change that brought him better salary. From 1894 to the present time, Mr. Houchin has been asso- ciated with the Star Clothing Company, of which he took entire charge in 1897. Mr. Houchin is a resident of Jefferson City, Missouri, but is known throughout the West on account of the remarkable success of his business and his connection with the breeding of high grade stock. He is the proprietor of the famous Onward Wilkes Farm which has furnished a large number of fine horses for all parts of the country. Mr. Houchin's show string always takes the lion's share of the glory when it goes into competition in the various horse shows throughout the world. Besides his interests in thoroughbred and standard horses, Mr. Houchin deals in registered Hereford cattle. Of course, being vitally interested in the stock interests of the West, Mr. Houchin has been an enthusisastic champion of Missouri and has time and again aided in campaigns for stale improvements of roads and agricultural conditions. one hundred and seventy-two Men of Affairs i n Kansas C i t y Being a strong Democrat, a man of known ability and integrity, when the party began to look; about for a candidate for governor in the 1912 campaign, hundreds of Mr. Houchin's friends pressed him to make the race for the nomination. Prior to that he had refrained from seeking political favors, and at first he positively refused to consider the requests of his friends seriously. However, when it became apparent that his friends and business associates w^ere determined to force him into the race, he gave his consent, knowing that it meant a sacrifice of his personal interests. In announcing his candidacy for the gubernatorial nomination, Mr. Houchin issued a very business-like statement, characteristic of the man. He summed up his platform as follows : A practical administration of public affairs. Agricultural instruction in the high schools of the state, and have it ex- tended to the rural school as far as practical. Give the boy wtio cannot go farther than the little log schoolhouse an opportunity the equal of the city boy. State aid to the weak school districts of the state. A practical effort to better the condition of labor in every form. The slate should throw every safeguard around those who toil, and see that they have equal rights, protection and a square deal. We have talked good roads; let us now start building them. Let Mis- rouri be the first sta'e in this movement in the Central West. Give every citizen and every inte.est of the state equal, fair and jurt consideration. one hifiidred niul sevcuty-tbree M e n of Affair s i n K a u s as C i f y M: EDWARD JOSEPH WHITE Prominent Attorney and Author of Several Books on Legal Questions Relating to Personal Injuries. DWARD JOSEPH WHITE, prominent attorney and author of sev- eral books dealing with legal questions relating to personal in- jury cases, was born in St. Louis, Missouri, February 1 I, 1869, the son of Edward Charles and Euphemia Louise (Moffett) White. His father w^as a native of Ireland and his mother w^as born in Augusta, Iowa. After completing the common school course, Mr. White entered the law department of the Missouri State University, from which he was graduated in 1891. He at once began practicing and in 1896 he \*'as elected prosecuting attorney of Lawrence County, Missouri, which office he filled until I 898. He then became associated with the legal department of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company and later was general attorney for that line. Coming to Kansas City in April, 1911, Mr, White at once took a promi- nent place in the legal fraternity, his reputation as author of well known books on legal questions having preceded him. He is the author of the following books : "Mines and Mining Remedies," "Personal Injuries in Mines." "Per- sonal Injuries on Railroads" and "Law in Shakespeare." In May, 1896, Mr. White married Miss Bessie Youngblood. He is a member of the University Club, Mid-Day Club and belongs to the Elks and '.he I. O. O. F. Politically he is a Democrat. one hundred and seventy-four Men of A f f a i r s I ii K a ii s a s C i t y J. SCOTT SNIDER, M.D. Prominent Physician and Formerly an Assistant Police Surgeon of Kansas City. SCOTT SNIDER, a prominent physician and formerly an assist- ant police surgeon of Kansas City, was born in Centralia, Illinois, August 25. 1872. the son of A. J. and Mary E. Snider, both natives of Illinois. After attending college at Lebanon, Illinois, he came to Kansas City and entered the University Medical College from which he was graduated in 1900. From 1900 to 1903 he served as an assistant police curgeon. Since the latter year he has been practicing with exceptional success. Dr. Snider is a member of the Eagles and the Elks. Democrat. Politically he is a ouc fiuitdrctl and seven ty-fii'e Men of A f f a i r s in Kansas C i t \ -.-:=»■) -^^^^^^^ ^l^^^f^ .1 DAVID M. PROCTOR Prominent Attorney and a Member of the Firm of Borland, Pew & Proctor. ^AVID M. PROCTOR, of the law firm of Borland, Pew and Proctor. was born in Monroe County, Missouri, April 21, 1881, the son of James M. and Ellen McPike Proctor, both natives of Missouri. Graduating from William Jewell College in 1902, Mr. Proc- tor entered the Columbia Law School of New York and w^as grad- uated in 1905. October 17, 1906, he married Dayse Whitecott. They have one son. After graduating from law school, Mr. Proctor came to Kansas City and began the practice of law, first being associated with Pierce Pate. In January, 1909, the present firm of Borland, Pew and Proctor was organized. It is now one of the leading law firms in Kansas City. Mr. Borland, the senior partner, is United States Representative from this district. Mr. Proctor has been interested in opening up several fine residence districts in Kansas City, in 1910 having launched the West Moreland addition, one of the best in the city. Mr. Proctor is a member of the Kappa Alpha fraternity and the Univer- sity club. He is a Republican in politics and a member of the Calvary Baptist church. oi\c hundred attd seventy-six Men of A f f a i r s i ii K a n s a s City ;:fiiVi ■"""""'■"■■ " "' Wf}Ji m HENRY CARROLL TIMMONDS Attorney, Member Thirty-fourth Genera! Assembly of Missouri and Former Judge Twenty-sixth Judicial Circuit. ENRY CARROLL TIMMONDS. attorney, member of the Thirty- fourth General Assembly of Missouri and former Judge of the Twenty-sixth Judicial Circuit of Missouri from January \, 1899, to January I, 1905, says he is an Irish Kentuckian. His grand- father was born in Ireland and his father, Landon M. Timmonds, and his mother, Jane M. Tichenor, both were born in Ohio County, Kentucky. Mr. Timmonds himself was born in Knox- ville, Iowa, May 12. 1853. Mrs. Timmonds, the attorneys mother, was a lineal descendant of John Alden, who is reputed to have lost his first suit for his client. Miles Standish. and to have won for himself the hand of Priscilla. Being of Irish-Kentucky stock, it follows that Mr. Timmonds is a Demo- crat. He was the Democratic candidate for judge of the Kansas City Court of Appeals in 1 904, the year of the Republican landslide, and he w^ent down to defeat along with the Democratic state ticket. In 1910 his name was put on the Democratic ticket by the state committee to fill the vacancy on the state supreme bench occasioned by the dea'ih of Judge Fox. The contest instituted by the state committee as the result of the official count is still pending. Mr. Timmonds has lived in Kansas City since 1905. He is a member of Sigma Chi and a member of the S*ate Bar Association, the Kansas City Bar Association and the Commercial Club. oue humired and serentv-sez'cu M c n o f A f f a i r s I ii K a ii s a s C i t v ^-^-^^^mm^rm FERDINAND SULZBERGER President of the Sulzberger & Sons Company, the .Products of Which Are of World-Wide Note. tion was Mr. for ERDINAND SULZBERGER, president of the Sulzberger & Sons Company, was born in Karlsruhe, Germany, arriving in the United States at the age of nineteen. Soon after he formed a partnership with Samuel Schwarzschild in a small rendering establishment in New York City, the outgrowth of which is the present modern packing plant located at Forty -fifth Street and First Avenue. Sulzberger came to Kansas City in 1893, seeking a Western connec- a fast growing business. The Phoenix Packing Company's plant purchased, possession being taken in January, 1893. The growth of the Kansas City plant is evidence of Mr. Sulzberger's faith in the future possibilities of Kansas City. From a very small plant employing 250 men, it has grown to one now employing 2,000, and doing a business of $30,000,000 annually. The growth of the Kansas City plant is indicative of the growth of the entire company. Starting from a small rendering plant fifty years ago, it now has modern plants in New York City, Chicago, Kansas City, Oklahoma City, Los Angeles and Sioux Falls, South Dakota, with plans in preparation for new plants and extensions of the old ones. It has branch houses and selling agents in every corner of the civilized world and the products of the Kanfas City plant are found on the shelves of dealers from Nome to Cape Town, from New York to Yokohama. The total business of the company done in 1911 amounted to $100,000,000. The Schwarzschild Ac Sulzberger Company was succeeded in September, 1910. by the present Company, Mr. Sulzberger still retaining the preside icy. Mr. Sulzberger has kept in close touch with Kansas City for the past twenty years, and in the growth and future possibilities of the city he is a firm believer. one hundred and seventy-eight Men of A f f a i r s i n K a ii s a s C i t y DOUGLAS B. WORNALL Real Estate Dealer; One of the Successful Young Business Men in Kansas City. OUGLAS B. WORNALL, of the real estate f^rm of Wornall & Campbell, was born in Kansas City, July 4, 1888, the son of Samuel E. and Alice Buchanan Wornall. The family is one of the oldest in Jackson County, the Wornall line having been es- tablished in the vicinity of Kansas City as early as 1844. Both paternal and maternal ancestors date back to the French and Indian w^ars and the Revolutionary war. in which historic days they were very prominent. The great-grandfather of the subject of this sketch was a noted jurist and United States Senator from Kentucky, the state in which Douglas B. Wo mail's mother and father were born. After completing the grade and high school courses in Kansas City, Mr. Wornall entered the school of electrical engineering of Missouri University, where he spent three and a half years, returning to Kansas City to enter the real estate business, of which he has made a success, his firm now being one of the best known in the city. Mr. Wornall is a member of the Beta Theta Pi fraternity of the Universi- ty of Missouri. one hundred and sevcntx-nine M en of A f f a i r s in K a n s a s C i t y THOMAS RANKIN MARKS Prominent Attorney, Republican Leader and Former Member of the Board of Police Commissioners of Kansas City. ;\i)HOMAS RANKIN MARKS, one of the leaders of the Republican party in Jackson County and a former police commissioner of Kansas City under Governor Herbert S. Hadley, was born in Lafayette, Indiana, February 8, 1876, son of J. F. and Nancy C. (Rankin) Marks. Both his paternal and maternal ancestors came to America prior to the Revolutionary War and took a conspicuous part in those historic days. His father was a cap- tain in the Fortieth Indiana Infantry during the Civil War. After finishing the common schools Mr. Marks entered Purdue University, Indiana, and in 1 896 was graduated from the electrical engineering depart- ment. He took up the study of law in the University of Michigan and v^ras graduated in 1901. Coming to Kansas City in January, 1902, Mr. Marks began practicing law and from the first has held a conspicuous place in the legal fraternity. Mr. Marks is a member of the Mid-Day, University and Kansas City Athletic Clubs, is a Mason, and as captain of the One Hundred and Sixtieth Indiana Volunteer Infantry served a year in the Spanish-American War. In 1908 he was elected a Republican presidential elector at large from Missouri. In 1904 he was secretary of the Republican County and Congressional Com- mittee of Jackson County. In 1906 he was chairman of the Republican City Committee, the Republican County Central Committee and the Republican Congressional Committee. In each capacity he was largely instrumental in his party's success. ouc hundred end eighty M c of Affairs I n K a n s a s City c m :-.?i^^ -y:: ^1} m w EUGENE RUST General Manager Kansas City Stock Yards Company and Vice-President American Royal Live Stock Show. UGENE RUST, one of the men who placed Kansas City on the map as a live stock market, was born in Washington, Maine, in 185 7. His father, W. M. Rust, and mother, Martha Rust, were natives of Maine and his ancestors were among the English who settled about Boston in 1636. For four years Mr. Rust was collector of customs at Bel- fast, Maine. Since coming to Kansas City he has been in the live stock commission business. He is at present general manager of the Kansas City Stock Yards Company, a position he has held since 1902. Naturally the American Royal Live Stock Show project interested him and he gave it the most hearty support and is among the men who made the annual show^ one of the biggest events of its kind in the world. Mr. Rust is vice-president of the organization. Mr. Rust graduated from East Maine Wesleyan Seminary. He married Nellie A. Case of Bangor, Maine, October 6, 1874. They have three children, Fred W., Donald D.. and Dorothy C. Mr. Rust is a director of the National Bank of Commerce, is a Republican and one of the original Kansas City boosters. one hundred and eighty-one M e II of Affair s i u Kansas C i t y FORD F. HARVEY ,Pi*esident of the Fred Harvey System and One of the Receivers for the Metropolitan Street Railway Company. ]ORD F. HARVEY, president of the great Fred Harvey System and one of the receivers for the Metropolitan Street Railv^ay Company of Kansas City, was born in Leavenworth, Kansas, March 7, 1866, the son of Frederick H. and Barbara S. Harvey. His father was a native of London, England, and his mother came from Austria. With a common school training as his educational asset, Mr. Harvey became associated with his father in the extensive system of eating houses and hotels which the senior Harvey established along the railroads throughout the country. Upon the death of his father, Mr. Harvey became the executive head of the system which is the largest of its kind in the United States. When the Metropolitan Street Railw^ay went into the hands of receivers, Mr. Harvey was appointed by Judge Hook of the Federal Court, joint receiver with R. J. Dunham, and these two men are now handling the affairs of the great street car system for the court. In 1888 Mr. Harvey married Josephine Blair, daughter of General Charles W. Blair of Kansas. They have a son and a daughter. Having been associated with the Fred Harvey System since his youth, its history is very largely the life history of Ford F. Harvey. The chain of dining rooms, lunch rooms and hotels, extending from the Great Lakes to the Pacific Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico, reaching from end to end of the Santa Fe Railway System, and covering half a continent, had its beginning in 1876 with the establishment of an eating house at Topeka. Kansas. The founder was Fred Harvey, who came from England to America when he was about fourteen years old, and secured employment with a railroad. After a series of changes and promotions, and while w^ith the Santa Fe Railway, where his duties required him to travel through the West where inferior hotel facilities were characteristic, Mr. Harvey was impressed w^ith the opportunity for improvement, and it occurred to him it would be a good advertisement for the railroad to have neat and inviting eating houses. The plan he submitted to the management was accepted, and the first eating house, of which Mr. Harvey was in charge, proved so thoroughly popular that sim- ouc hiDnlred and cighty-Hvo Men of A f f a i r s i n Kansas City ilar places were opened all along the line wherever trains arrived at the hours for meals. This was the first time well cooked food had been served to railway travelers in the West, and naturally it was a great attraction. It is a remark- able organization now, with several thousand persons on the payroll. There are seventy establishments, besides fifty and more dining cars, each contrib- uting to the pleasure and satisfaction of its guests with substantial delicacies. Where hotels have been constructed, a style of architecture typical to the Southwest has been employed, generally following the lines of the old Franciscan missions of California, and bearins: the names of some characters prominent in early Southw^estern history. The Cardenas, at Trinidad ; the Castaneda, at Las Vegas; Fray Marcos, at Williams; the Escalante, at Ash Fork; El Garces, at Needles; the Alvarado, at Albuquerque, and El Tovar, at Grand Canyon, are named after members of the band led by Coronado, and Franciscan missionaries, who came into the Southw^est in 1540 and a little later. EI Ortiz, at Lamy, is constructed on the lines of an old Spanish hacienda and is very unique, while the style of the Bisronte, at Hutchinson, will be remembered as Elizabethan, or Old English, in character. Fred Harvey's greatest service to the public has been in raising the standard of living, and though he has passed away, his influence still dom- inates in the conduct of the service, and it is felt as w^ell in the homes of thousands of his patrons who learned in his dining rooms what was good to eat. one hundred and eighty-three Men of A f f a i r s in K a n s a s C i t y \ ,-- 'r •••.. 'e\ ■■S :; lA -^jw ■ :-■■ >;o--:--x; iT-T.rf JOSEPH E. MAXWELL President of the Maxwell Investment Company, General Dealers in Investments, Farm Mortgages and Municipal Bonds. JOSEPH E. MAXWELL, known throughout the Southwest as an extensive dealer in farm mortgages, municipal bonds and other forms of investment, president of the Maxwell Investment Com- pany, 1011 Baltimore Avenue, was born in Jonesboro, Tennessee, November 12, 1850, the son of William H. and Mary E. Max- well. His father was born in Jonesboro, Tennessee, and his mother in Green Meadow^s in the same state. After receiving the usual common school education he entered the Ohio Wesleyan University at Delaware, Ohio, in 1867, remaining there until 1869. While in college he joined the Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity. Mr. Maxwell lost little time in connecting himself with the business which was to be his life's work. In I 8 7 I , he went into the farm mortgage business in Ottawa, Kansas, in the name of William H. Maxwell ^ Company, his father being the senior member of the firm. This business continued successfully until 1876 when Mr. Maxwell went to Paola, Kansas, and became a member of the firm of F. M. Shaw & Com- pany, engaged in the farm loan business. Withdrawing from this concern in 1878, Mr. Maxwell continued in the farm loan business in Paola, his firm name being Jones Ac Maxwell. In January, 1905, H. C. Jones' interests were taken over by William L. Maxwell, son of the subject of this sketch, and the business was conducted under the firm name of Maxwell 6c Maxwell until July, 1909. Having built up an exceptionally extensive business throughout Kansas and Missouri and the < ntire Southwest, the Maxwell 6c Maxwell firm, in July. 1909, gave place to a reorganization under the firm name of the Maxwell Investment Company and the business was moved to Kansas City as the log- ical commercial center of the territory from which the firm drew its patron- age. Mr. Maxwell's operations were at first limited to Franklin County, Kan- sas. Territory was added from time to time until it covered most of the eastern part of the state. Later some counties in Missouri were included, then the best part of Oklahoma, Arkansas and Texas, so that the circum- ference of his investment business has extended from about twenty-five one hundred and ninety-two M en of A f f a i r s in Kansas City miles square until it includes the best farming sections of four states. Start- ing with one or two investors the Maxw^eli Investment Company now has satisfied customers from one ocean to the other. In the business since 1871, and all the time in the Southwest, Mr. Max- well today is considered one of the best authorities on investments in this part of the country, and the Maxwell Investment Company is one of the largest concerns of its kind in Kansas or Missouri. January 9, 1873, Mr. Maxw^ell married Carrie B. Loth r op. They have one son. Politically Mr. Maxwell is a Republican. He is a member of the follow- ing Masonic bodies: Paola Lodge, No. 3 7, A. F. and A. M., Paola, Kansas; Paola Chapter, No. 20, R. A. M. ; St. Elmo Commandery No. 22, Knights Templar, Paola, Kansas. He is a charter member of the Commandery and a Past Eminent Commander. He is also a Thirty-second Degree Mason, mem- ber of Wichita Consistory No. 2, Wichita, Kansas. He belongs also to the Kansas City Club, and finds time to be an enthusiast in all campaigns for the betterment of the city and state. Besides his interest in the Maxwell Investment Company, Mr. Maxwell is part owner in the Uinta County Irrigation Company of Wyoming, a company having 40,000 acres of water rights in Wyoming under the Carey Act. one hundred aud ninety-tJiree Men of Affairs in Kansas City GRANT I. ROSENZWEIG One of the Most Learned Members of the Bar of Kansas City, Missouri. RANT !. ROSENZWEIG, attorney, with offices in suite 131 M7 Commerce Building, was born in Erie, Pennsylvania, September 15, 1865, the son of Louis and Minnie Rosenzweig. His father was a native of Pennsylvania and his mother of Indiana. Mr. Rosenzweig was graduated from the Erie, Pennsyl- vania, high school in 1 883 and from Yale University, where he established an enviable record as a scholar, in 1887. Coming then to 'Kansas City, Mr. Rosenzweig began the practice of law. and from the first his services were much in demand. He has met with uni- form success throughout his career, and while political prestige has often awaited him, he has refused to enter politics, giving his legal practice his un- divided attention. He is a Democrat. October 1 9, 1 893, Mr. Rosenzweig married Mathilde Roseberg of Kan- sas City. In October, 1887. Mr. Rosenzweig came to Kansas City and began the career which eventually placed him in his present enviable position in the fore rank of the legal fraternity. With Herbert L. Doggett he formed a partnership which continued until Mr. Doggett's death in 1894. Since that date Mr. Rosenzweig has practiced alone, having a full office organiza- tion, including three practicing attorneys, under his personal direction. No attorney in Kansas City has a more exacting clientele and general practice. Mr. Rosenzweig makes a specialty of corporation and commercial cases, and while few of his cases are the kind that create general comment, they are all of vital importance, involving large amounts and delicate points of business law. Mr. Rosenzweig practices in all the state and federal courts, including the Supreme Court of the United States. In character, reputation and integrity, which he esteems of highest importance. Mr. Rosenzweig occu- pies the same high plane which he does as a lawyer. A man of great mentality, socially Mr. Rosenzweig has been popular from the first day he reached the city. He is a Mason. Knight of Pythias, a member of the United Workmen. Royal Arcanum. B'nal B'rith, Progress Club, Elks. Elm Ridge Club, and an associate member of the Kansas City Press Club. one hundred and ninety-four M e n of Affairs in Kansas City JOHN BARTON POLLARD President of the Gate City National Bank and a Well Known Financier of the Southw^est. OHN BARTON POLLARD, one of the prominent financiers of the Southwest, president of the Gate City National Bank, was born in Flinthill, Mo., January 19, 1875, the son of Thomas Jefferson and Demarius Lanier Pollard. His maternal grandfather came to Missouri from Virginia in 1845 and his paternal grandfather came to Missouri from Virginia in 1850. Both Mr. Pollard's parents w^ere natives of Missouri, his father having been born in Flint- hill and his mother in Troy. Mr. Pollard was reared on a farm, attended school in Troy and then went to Westminster College, Fulton, Missouri. In 1894 he began work for the Peoples Bank, of Troy. In 1904 he went to Hannibal, Missouri, and or- ganized the Hannibal Trust Company and \vas later interested in banking at Nowata, Oklahoma, coming to Kansas City in 1909 when he became inter- ested in the Gate City National Bank, one of the most substantial banking in- stitutions in the city. Mr. Pollard is known throughout the Southwest as a man of conservative methods and sound judgment in financial matters and he enjoys the confi- dence of a large and exacting patronage. He married Frances Kabler, Decern- ber 2. 1905. one luinilird mid iiiiiclv-fjir M en of Affair s in K a n s a s C i t y f/ V^ I __^-.-;i~- .•j.--;^.' ■ •■J.J ^■.■ ■- rrf.,■;^■^.:il■ u BENJAMIN BUTLER FOSTER President of the Foster Lumber Company, and One of the Prominent Lumbermen of the Southwest. ENJAMIN BUTLER FOSTER, president of the Foster Lumber Com- pany, was born in Leavenworth, Kansas, April 4, 1863. His father, John McCullough Foster, and his mother, Letitia Samp- son Foster, were natives of Pennsylvania. John McCullough Foster, the father, was the eldest son of Samuel D. Foster, second son of Alexander Foster, Sr., who was born June 3. 1773, in the County of Londonderry, Ireland, and emigrated to America when twenty years old, landing in Philadelphia, July 12, 1793. Benjamin B. Foster was one of nine children. His parents settled in Leavenworth, Kansas, in 185 7. The father invested heavily in real estate and suffered losses in the decline in values following the Civil War. To retrieve his fortune he became a lumberman in a small way, and that was the founda- tion of the Foster Lumber Company of today. He first placed a stock of lumber at Randolph, Kansas, in the spring of 1879, where he and his son Benjamin located. Success followed this venture and many new yards were added from time to time, the firm name being John Foster & Sons. In Feb- ruary, 1889, the company established headquarters in Kansas City, changing the name to the Foster Lumber Company, and opening a wholesale office. Mills were bought and in January, 1896, the business was incorporated by the father and sons and is still owned by the family. Subsequent to the death of John Foster in 1 899, Benjamin was made president of the company, which office he has since held. Mr. Foster is a Republican in politics, but has never sought any public office. He has never married, is a Mason and a member of the Evanston Club. He is one of the staunch business men of Kansas City. His company now owns some seventy retail yards and large lumber manufacturing interests in the South. one hundred and ninety-six Men of Affairs a n SOS City llil A m Vi 55 JOHN LAURENCE JOHNSTON Cashier National Reserve Bank of Kansas City; One of the Rising Young Bankers of the Southwest. ;OHN LAURENCE JOHNSTON, cashier of the National Reserve Bank, was born in Louisville, Kentucky, April 23, 1884, son of John T. M. and Florence Brooks Johnston, w^ho w^ere both natives of Missouri. Mr. Johnston completed his education in Washington Uni- versity, St. Louis, Missouri, and, September 9, 1908, married Ethel M. Brown, of Watertown, New York. Having taken up the banking business Mr. Johnston came to Kansas in 1909 and became affiliated with the National Reserve Bank, of which now cashier. Besides this position he is a director of several success- ful corporations located in the Southwest. Mr. Johnston is a Democrat and is a member of the Kansas City Country Club and the Kansas City Club. City he one hundred and nindv-scven M e n of Affairs in Kansas City JOHN J. FOSTER Founder and Owner of One of the Oldest Retail Harness Businesses in Missouri. ; OHN J. FOSTER, who established and owns the J. J. Foster har- ness and saddle business, 5 1 1 Main Street, which is said to be one ]^ of the oldest retail harness establishments in Missouri, was born near Camden, in Ray County, Missouri. He came to Kansas City in 1875. His father, George W. Foster, and mother, Kezziah Foster, came from Batavia, Clermont County, Ohio, and settled near Camden in 1836. Having had but twelve months of schooling, Mr. Foster's education and business success is of his own making in every sense of the word. He started out as an apprentice at the harness making trade and for three years worked for five dollars a month and his "keep," but he learned his trade so ihnroughly that now, the name "Foster" means good harness and saddles throughout the city apci iho rnt re West. In 1879 he established a retail business, (he firm name being DeBerry & Foster, the house being located at 306 Main street. Later Mr. Foster purchased Mr. DeBerry's interest and has since conducted the business alone. in 1^08 the Foster, Helmreich, Wagner Harness Company was organized and Mr. Foster is heavily interested in this company. He is also a member of the Foster-Pulver Clothing Company which w^as organized in 1910. In nnliiics Mr. Foster is an Independent. He is a member of Elm Ridge Golf and Country Club, the Knife & Fork Club, Rotary Club, Royal Arcanum, Elks, Moose, Commercial Club, Latour Hunting Club, Cooley Lake Hunting & ^i^hing C'lub. He is a real bai:cball fan and is president of the J. J. Foster City League ball team. one hundred atid ninety-eight Men of Affairs in Kansas City AUGUST B. UHL General Manager of the Walden W. Shaw Auto Livery Company, and an Automobile Pioneer. UGUST B. UHL, general manager of the Walden W. Shaw Auto Livery Company, has been associated with the automobile busi- ness in its various branches since the introduction of the motor car to private use in 1899. He was born in New Washington, Ohio, March 6, 1874. His father, Benedict Uhl, was a native of Germany, coming to America in 1836 from Landau, Gerniany, his birthplace, and settling in northwestern Ohio. His mother was born in Decatur, Indiana. Mr. Uhl is one of a family of ten boys, whose ages range from 26 to 52 years and none of whom is under six feet in height. Six of the brothers liv^ in Toledo, Ohio, where they operate a large metal manufacturing plant. He married Miss Mary Owen September 7, 1 898. He came to Kansas City Janu- ary 16, 1910. He is an Elk and a member of the Kansas City Club, the Rotary Club and the Railroad Club. No political affiliation is claimed by Mr. Uhl, who confines his interest in politics to the support of the men he believes best equipped to fill the office they seek. oiiv liuiulrcil and iiiiiclv-iiiih' Men of Affairs i n Kansas C i f y ANDREW FORSYTHE EVANS City Counselor of Kansas City Under Mayor Jost and Formeriy Circuit Judge of Jackson County. JNDREW FORSYTHE EVANS, city counselor under Mayor Jost and one of the most prominent attorneys in the state, was born in Mercer County, Kentucky, September 13, ) 862, the son of William R. and Mary J. Forsythe Evans. He was graduated from Centre College, Kentucky, in 1882, and in June, 1908, marricu Georgia Hal ley Latshaw^. Judge Evans, after educating himself, for a time followed the occupation of school teaching, reading law in the meantime. In 1884 he was admitted to the bar. Although he passed the bar examination with an exceptionally high standing he decided to spend one year at Harvard University and followed this with a year in Virginia University. After a years practice in Kentucky, Judge Evans came to Kansas City in 1887. From the very first Judge Evans commanded recognition. Finding him a shrewd and conservative student of events, the Democratic party soon drafted him into its councils and in November, 1902, he was elected circuit judge of Jackson county for a term of four years. He resigned this office in January, 1905. Much against his wishes he was drafted by the Demo- cratic party as candidate for mayor in 1910. He made a remarkable race against great odds, losing the election by a very small majority. Judge Evans is a member of the Jackson County Bar Associttiion, the Elks, the Knife and Fork Club, and several other lodges and organization:?, being always among the first to respond in any campaign for the better- ment of Kansas City and the state. two hifndrcd Men of Affairs in Kansas City v\.lli\V m.'y # ■V ^zi-'/i i^=ji^'1 K^Jf:.:-^tiA^ l^ •^;;r::''-'^0*'W^^^^^E;r^ii^' ""^"^r:^:-— v:v' ^^iS'k RICHARD W. HOCKER ^ w Lawyer, Banker, Real Estate Dealer and Railroad Builder; A Man Always Working for Kansas City, ICHARD W. HOCKER, active in the construction of the Kansas City, Lawrence & Topeka Railroad Company, one of the first suburban lines projected from Kansas City, was born in Lincoln County, Kentucky, October 14, 1853, son of R. W. and Margaret ( \ /i\\K^\^ ^' ^°*^^^'"- He was the youngest of eight children. His father y ly^^-^a'yl died when Richard was but two years old. Mr. Hocker is a self-made man in every sense of the word and as such, holds the respect of the commercial and financial Southwest. When 20 years of age he began practicing law in Kentucky. He went to St. Joseph, Missouri, in 1883, as cashier of the Saxton National Bank. Resign- ing in 1885, he was vice-president of the Citizens National Bank of Kansas City, Missouri, until 1888, when he organized the Metropolitan National Bank, of which he was president for five years, resigning on account of ill health. He then became interested in other commercial pursuits not so confining, among them the Kansas City, Lawrence 6c Topeka Electric Railroad, a road which, when completed, will be of great service and benefit to Kan?as City. Mr. Hocker is a man who inspires confidence. Modest and home lov- ing, he is at the same time a sagacious business man and an expert in real estate values. He was a member of Kansas City's first utilities commission and was delegated on behalf of the city to fix land values to be paid in con- nection with the Belt Line improvement and refused compensation for his w^ork. He resigned from the utilities commission in 1910 and was appointed city treasurer to fill out the unexpired term of William J. Baehr, deceased. He is a Democrat and one of the men who has always been for Kansas City's progress. June I 5, I 887, Mr. Hocker married Mary D. Ketcham of St. Joseph, Missouri, who died March 5, 1907. He has three daughters, Lucy K., Sara W. and Margaret Ann. He is a member of the Commercial Club, Elm Ridge Golf Club, Evanston Golf Club and Country Club. two hundred and five Men of Affairs in Kansas City RICHARD ROBERTSON President of the Norman & Robertson Abstract Company, one of the Largest in the Southwest. ICHARD ROBERTSON, president of the Norman & Robertson Abstract Company and one of the most successful young men in Kansas City, was born in Kansas City. Missouri, November 12, 1 882, son of Richard and Mary Calhoun Robertson. His father, a native of Kentucky, came to Kansas City in 1871. His mother, who was born in Louisiana, is a descendant of John Calhoun and her ancestors were prominent in national history from the Col- onial Wars to the Civil War. June 4, 1905, Mr. Robertson married Lucerne Miller. They have two children, a daughter and a son. After being graduated from the Central High School in 1900, Mr. Rob- ertson was with the firm of Norman & Robertson for two years, was a news- paper writer for four years and in 1909 was made president of the Norman & Robertson Company, doing a general business in abstracts of titles, one of the largest firms of its kind in the city. Mr. Robertson is a member of the Kansas City Athletic Club, Kansas City Club, Automobile Club, and by virtue of his work as a newspaper man, an associate member of the Kansas City Press Club. two hutidrcd and six Men of Affairs in K a n s a s C i t y THEODOR C. PELTZER President of the Peltzer Estate Company and Dealer in Real Estate, Loans and insurance. HEODOR C. PELTZER, dealer in real estate, real estate loans and fire and tornado insurance, president of the Peltzer Estate Company and director in numeious other corporations, was bo.n at Winlhrop, Missouri, November 2b, 16?!). His father, Theodor Peltzer, was born in Germany and his mother, Ger- trude Merwick Peltzer, came from Holland. The family moved to KantaG City when Theodor C. was eighteen months old. Mr. Peltzer, after finishing the common school course, entered St. Bene- dict's College at Atchison, Kansas, from which he was graduated in 1894. Immediately after leaving school he identified himself with the real estate and insurance business established by his father and which has increased to large proportions under the son s management. On June 28, 1904, Mr. Peltzer married Miss Mattie Couch. They have no children. Always identified with everything that tended to advance the business or social interest of Kansas City, he is a member of the Commercial Club, the Kansas City Club, the Young Men's Chrictian Association, the City Club, the Automobile Club, the Knights of Columbus, and holds a life member- ship in the German Hospital Association and the Kansas City Athletic Club. tzco hundred and seven M e n of A f f a i r s i n K a n s a s C i f \ m^^^ -"•?^ .■»^"-"--"i/?- :::•'• ■•'"•^ mw"^^^ '^ ill/: ;-;>.;^ E-i CHARLES C. PETERS Secretary of the Emery, Bird, Thayer Dry Goods Company and a Prominent Figure in the Mercantile World. "" HARLES C. PETERS, one of the most prominent men in the Kansas City mercantile world, secretary of the Emery, Bird, Thayer Dry Goods Company, was born in Danville, Illinois, Feb- ruary 22, 1866, son of C. T. and Amalia Peters, both natives of Germany. While Mr. Peters has taken an active part in Kansas City's progress for many years, he has always held himself in the background, being uncompromisingly hostile to the publicity searchlight when turned in his direction. Mr. Peters is a Democrat, but he holds the interests of the community and the integrity of men above party principles. Mr. Peters' wife, prior to her marriage, was Miss Josephine C. Hofmann. two hundred and eight Men of Affairs in K a n s a s C i t y f r--' '■■■■ :^^4 =i WILLIAM PEET :-r:^-SLJ^ President of Peet Brothers Manufacturing Company, the Largest Soap Concern in the West. ^ILLIAM PEET, president of Peet Brothers Manufacturing Com- pany, one of the big commercial interests of Kansas City and one of the largest soap concerns in the United States, was born in Chatteris, England, March 25, 1847, son of Robert and Sarah Jane Peet, both natives of England. Mr. Peet left home at the age of fifteen and went direct to Cleveland, Ohio, where he learned the soap making business. He remained there nine years and six months. In 1872 he came to Kansas City determined to start a manufacturing establishment in the West. He had saved money in Cleveland ^vith the intention of returning to England on a visit and it was this money which he invested in his first venture in Kansas City. For one year he was alone. Then General W. H. Powell became interested with him. Later General Powell sold his interest to Captain J. W. White and finally the firm of Peet Brothers & Company was organized, being later changed to the present name. In August, 1870. Mr. Peet married Miss Nettie Scoter. A Republican, Mr. Peet has taken no active part in politics, devotin;^; all of his time and energy to building up the great business which he founded and promoting the industrial and commercial interests of the city and state. two hundred and nine M e n of Affairs i K a n s a s C 1 / y EUGENE D. NIMS First Vice-President and Treasurer of the Southwestern Group of Bell Telephone Companies and a Bank Director. UGENE D. NIMS, first vice-president and treasurer of the South- western group of Bell Telephone companies and a member of the board of directors of the National Bank of Commerce, is a native of Wisconsin. His interests have, however, long been associated with the Southw^est, particularly with Texas, Okla- homa, Arkansas and Louisiana, in all of which he has large holdings. Oklahoma has, more, perhaps, than any other state, felt the force of Mr. Nims* ability. He has been prominent in the recent marvelous develop- ment of the new commonwealth, being financially back of some of the most extensive business enterprises in the young state and a director in several of its leading banking institutions. His oil properties and land holdings in Oklahoma and Texas have placed him far toward the front in these lines. Primarily a banker, Mr. Nims long since recognized the growing impor- tance of the telephone business in the industrial world and has for several years been actively engaged in its development. One of the pioneers in the Southwest in the movement for universal telephone service, he is living and working in the hope of seeing at no distant day the telephone regarded as much a necessity in every house as the sewing machine and the refrigerator are today. He believes, in view of the present rapid development of the industry, it is only a question of a decade or so before telephone conversa- tion over long distance lines will be as common as local service is now, and even cheaper. Taking charge of the Pioneer Telephone Company of Oklahoma in its infancy, Mr. Nims has brought it to the front so that it now stands full-fledged among the grown-up corporations of the state and is pointed to as an example of aggressive business enterprise worthy of emulation. His conduct of the affairs of the company has won him much praise from independent com- panies w^ith which he has come in contact throughout Oklahoma. Arkansas, Colorado and Texas. As a head of the Bell group, his success in this territory has caused him to be recognized as a leading figure in the national telephone field. The group of companies of which Mr. Nims is vice-president is com- posed of the Missouri and Kansas Telephone Company, the Bell Telephone tivo huudrcii ami ten Men of Affairs in Kansas City Company of Missouri, the Pioneer Telephone and Telegraph Company of Oklahoma and the Southwestern Telephone and Telegraph Company of Texas, Louisiana and Arkansas. Mr. Nims was one of the first heads of a public service corporation to offer to throw open the books of his company to the public and has always in his conduct of the business, especially where the question of rates arose, offered assistance to the public in arriving at a full knowledge of what the requirements of the connpany were. With his headquarters in Kansas City, Mr. Nims, though the majority of his interests lie outside the city, is a firm believer in its future and is ever ready to help push any project which has as its object the betterment of municipal and civic conditions, and despite his many business affiliations finds time to participate largely in the social affairs of the city. He is a member of the Kansas City Club, the Mid-Day Club and the Evanston Golf Club. He is a good friend to the newspaper men and always aids them liberally in every worthy enterprise. tzvo hundred and eleven Men of A f f a i r s i n K a n s a s C i t y JULIAN GIRVAN KIRSTEN Kansas City Manager of the Anderson Electric Car Company's Branch House and an Authority on Electric-Driven Vehicles. :jULIAN GIRVAN KIRSTEN, Kansas City manager of the branch house of the Anderson Electric Car Company, was born in Otsego Lake, Michigan, January 18, 1884, the son of Adelberl and Sarah Florence (Wilson) Kirsten. Mr. Kirsten's ancestors on his father s side came from Germany and located in Detroit in 1855. His mother's parents were pioneers in Michigan and the earliest white settlers on Lake Huron. Mr. Kirsten is one of the most prominent men in the automobile indus- try in the Southwest. He came to Kansas City in 1910 from Detroit, Mich- igan, where he had been associated with the home office of the Anderson Electric Car Company, and opened the first branch house to be established in Kansas City by a manufacturer of electric-driven automobiles. From the Kansas City branch office Mr. Kirsten takes care of Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas. He was clerk of the Michigan State Senate in 1901. On November 10, 1909, Mr. Kirsten married Winnogene Conner. They have two children. A member of the Mid-Day, Rotary and Kansas City Athletic Clubs, Mr. Kirsten also belongs to the Kansas City Motor Car Dealers' Association, is president of the Kansas City Electric Vehicle Dealers' Association and a member of the Electric Club. two hundred and twelve M e II of Affair I n K ansa s C i t •v-:^ m M' _.7. ■■. \- — '^ :}•:■■•■ -.f' BENJAMIN FINLEY HARGIS President of the Westport Avenue Bank and a Director in the National Reserve Bank. ENJAMIN FINLEY HARGIS. prominent banker, president of the Westport Avenue Bank and a director of the National Reserve Bank, both of Kansas City, was born in Howard County, Mis- souri, son of Josiah N. and Mary Finley Hargis. Mr. Hargis received the usual public school training and spent his youth on a farm near Lee's Summit, Missouri. Leaving there in 1872 he went to Belton, Missouri, and began his career in the banking business. Being a man of excellent business ability, conservative and holding the complete confidence of all with whom he associated, Mr. Hargis' success was assured. In 1896 he came to Kansas City and at once became interested in local finances. Today he holds a conspicuous place with two of the soundest financial institutions in the city. Mr. Hargis married Pet Lillard, in Boyle County, Kentucky, in 1880. Eleven years later she died. Mr. Hargis then married again, his bride being Henrietta Lillard, a sister of his first wife. He has two sons, Benjamin Lillard and Will H. Hargis, and one daughter, now Mrs. F. E. Georgia. Politically Mr. Hargis is a Democrat. He belongs to the Commercial Club and takes a keen interest in the city's welfare. izuo hundred and thirteen Men of Affairs in Kansas C i t THOMAS J. B. PAIN Secretary Campbell Glass and Paint Company, One of the Largest Concerns of Its Kind in the Southwest. HOMAS J. B. PAIN, secretary of the Campbell Glass and Paint Company, was born in London, England, October 28, 1849, son of Thomas J. B. and Sarah Knight Pain. He attended the public schools until he was thirteen years old, when he entered the office of Cassell, Petter & Galpin, publishers, where he remained until he came to America in 1 869. Landing in the United States, Mr. Pain came immediately to Kansas City, which has been his home ever since. He learned the car- penter's trade, serving his apprenticeship under the late Captain Joseph H. Fink, and continued in this work until 1874. In that year he entered the paint and glass business as an employe of John A. McDonald. Eight years later he left the McDonald house to connect with Campbell & Cutler, with which he is still connected under the reorganized firm name. Mr. Pain married Charlotte A. Saunders of New York City May 23, 1882. They have one child, Lilly Muriel. In politics Mr. Pain is a Democrat. He is a member of the Elks, the Commercial Club and the Kansas City Club, also vestryman and junior warden of St. Mary's Episcopal church. iti'o hundred and fourteen Men of Affairs in Kansas City CHARLES L. SIMPSON Prominent Real Estate Dealer and President of the Real Estate Board of Kansas City. ]HARLES L. SIMPSON, one of the most successful real estate men in Kansas City, was born in Lawrence, Kansas, in 1865, the son of Samuel N. and Kate L. Simpson, who w^ere of the New Eng- land stock which not only gave America her Independence, but furnished the hardy pioneers for the Central West. His great- grandfather fired the first shot at the battle of Bunker Hill. The gun and the commission of the Revolutionary soldier are now^ in Mr. Simpson's possession. Samuel N. Simpson, the father, w^as a pioneer in Kansas and lived in Lawrence during the border warfare days. After having completed the common school courses, Mr. Simpson con- tinued his education in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and upon finishing there he came to Kansas City, Kansas, where his father was then living, and took up the real estate and investment business. From the first his business has been a success until today he is considered one of the most authoritative judges of real estate investment in Kansas City. Being a man who has not allowed his personal interests to blind him to the possibilities of the city and keenly interested in municipal improvements, he w^as recently elected president of the Real Estate Board of Kansas City. Mr. Simpson married Mary M. Gamble. They have two daughters. In politics Mr. Simpson is a Republican. tzi'o Jmndrcd and fifteen M en of A f f a i r s I n Kansas City gU LiSS -V^r:^ .^:::3&^^^~^:-"-^y ^^^^ JOHN M. CLEARY Prominent Member of the Kansas City Bar and Formerly a Member of the State Legislature of Missouri. .OHN M. CLEARY, prominent attorney and former member of the Missouri state legislature, was born in Odell, Illinois, August 21, 1869, son of Michael and Ellen Cleary, both of whom were natives of Ireland. After completing the high school course in Odell, Mr. Cleary entered St. Viateur's College at Bourbonnais, a suburb of Kankakee, Illinois, from which he was graduated in 1892. He then entered the Bloomington Law^ School and was graduated in 1894. Since coming to Kansas City Mr. Cleary has held a conspicuous place in the ranks of successful attorneys and has been active in the Democratic party. He was elected to the state legislature in 1899 and served with dis- tinction. For several years he was reporter for the Kansas City Court of Appeals. June 30, 1892, he married Mollie O'Rourke. They have one son, John M. Cleary, Jr. tzvo hundred and sixteen M e of Affairs i Kansas City i;'-; '■■■} ;-.;o '.I ;#■ 'i-^ V CHARLES CLEMMENS ORTHWEIN Stock and Grain Broker, Member of Orthwein-Matchette, One of the Best Known Firms in the Southwest. ■IHARLES CLEMMENS ORTHWEIN, member of the general brokerage firm of Orthwein-Matchette, was born in St. Louis, Missouri, February 13, 1869. His father, Charles F. Orthwein, a pioneer of St. Louis and the first grain exporter of that city, was born in Germany. His mother, Caroline Nulsen Orthw^ein, was born in St. Louis. Mr. Orthw^ein, after finishing the common school course, entered Washington University in St. Louis, from which he was graduated in 1892. Upon leaving school he \vent into business w^ith his father and in 1893 w^as admitted to partnership, the firm name being C. F. Orthwein & Sons. A branch of the company's business w^as established in Kansas City and in 1897 C. C. Orthwein came here as manager. Mr. Orthwein married Miss Edith Hall of St. Louis in 1897. He is a member of the Kansas City Club, the Driving Club, and the Masonic Lodge, and is actively identified with all organizations and movements tending to enhance the growth and progress of the city. fwo hnudrcd and seventeen Men of Affairs in Kansas City # ARTHUR CHAPMAN Owner of Chapman's Cafe, the Finest in Kansas City; Former Member Missouri State Legislature. RTHUR CHAPMAN, owner of Chapman's Cafe, the finest eating place west of the Mississippi River, was born in Clay County, Missouri, December 30, 1864, son of Dr. Andrew L. and Mildred F. Mosby Chapman. The father was born in Washington County, Pennsylvania, and the mother in Clay County, Missouri. Mr. Chapman's father, who died some years ago, was a grandson of Thomas Campbell and a nephew of Alexander Camp- bell, founder of the Christian Church. The latter also founded Bethany College, West Virginia, in 1841, and was its president until his death in 1866. The mother of Mr. Chapman was a cousin of General John W. Mosby, prom- inent as a Confederate leader during the Civil War. In 1866 Mr. Chapman's parents removed to Kansas City, then little more than a country village, where the family has been located ever since. Arthur obtained his education in the ward schools of Kansas City, supple- mented by a course in Central High School. In the mornings and evenings before and after school he carried papers and did other odd jobs to keep himself supplied with pocket money, and after his graduation he enter-^d the employ of the telephone company as a switchboard operator. Thus did his desire to be independent financially early manifest itself. Leaving the telephone office as soon as opportunity offered, Mr. Chap- man connected himself w^ith the Kansas City, Fort Scott & Memphis Railroad and soon afterward was made chief clerk in the paymaster's office of the Southern Kansas Railroad. While employed in the railroad office he was appointed deputy recorder of deeds of Jackson County and served as secre- tary of the Kansas City Board of Health during the administrations of Mayors Cowherd and Davis. He also worked for a while in the city engineer's office. Mr. Chapman is and always has been a prominent worker in the Demo- cratic party. in 1902 he received the nomination for representative of the Seventh district in the state legislature and was elected by a large majority. About twenty years ago Mr. Chapman engaged in the retail cigar busi- ness and is now^ owner of the large cigar store in the new Kansas City Live Stock Exchange Building and also one at the southwest corner of Twelfth two hundred and eighteen M en of Affairs in K a n s a s C i t y and Main streets, both of which have been very successful. He has also been somewhat active in the real estate field, confining himself almost entirely, however, to assisting in the management of the large estate left by his father. Mr. Chapman, who during his long residence in Kansas City has kept his eyes on its progress in all lines, long ago noted that the city was not keeping pace with others of its class in the matter of good eating places, so he determined when the time was ripe to establish a cafe that should be in keeping with the city's progress along other lines. Accordingly, about a year ago he took a long lease on the southw^est corner of Tw^elfth and Main streets, w^here he has fitted up the finest and most artistic dining rooms in the Middle West. It is to Kansas City what Marline's is to New York. The entire furnishing of Mr. Chapman's new^ cafe was made especially for it and everything from floor to roof is of the highest quality throughout. In decoration, service and cuisine it is the equal of the finest in the country. The kitchen is in a specially constructed room on the roof, removing all odors of cooking from the dining room and assuring plenty of light and air and the best of sanitary conditions in the preparation of food. In this cafe w^as inaugurated the plan, which has since been taken up by the leading hotels of the city, of employing only the highest grade of white men as waiters, Mr. Chapman personally engaging his first crew of workers from the big hotels of New York City. Mr. Chapman is an associate member of the Kansas City Press Club and one of the best friends to newspaper men in Kansas City. tztjo hioidrcd and nineteen M en of Affairs in Kansas City m -r^^ . ^. t -;■ If? % w SESCO STEWART, D. V. S. Secretary and Treasurer of the Kansas City Veterinary College and Dean of the Faculty. lo ESCO STEWART, dean of the Kansas City Veterinary College faculty and secretary and treasurer of the college corporation, was born in Weston, Ontario, March 23, 1855. After com- pleting his preliminary education at Mayville Academy, Mayville, New York, he entered the medical department of Wooster Uni- versity at Cleveland, Ohio, from which he was graduated in 1878. Following his graduation. Dr. Stewart removed to Oakland, he practiced medicine until 1885, when he was graduated from the veterinsrv department of Iowa State College at Ames. He then located at Atlantic, Iowa, where he remained until I 888, when he went to Council Bluffs, Iowa. In 189 1 he entered the government service as veterinary in- spector at South Omaha, Nebraska. The ne.xt year he came to Kansas City, where he followed the same work. In 1901 Dr. Stewart resigned from the government inspectorship to devote his whole time to the Kansas City Veterinary College, in which he had been interested for some years. Since 1893 he had been an instructor in the school and when it was reorganized in 1 906 he was made dean of the faculty and secretary and treasurer of the corporation. He is also a member of the firm of Moore, Stewart & Brown, practicing veterinarians. Dr. Stewart was president and subsequently secretary of the Iowa State Veterinary Medical Association from 1887 to 1892, and secretary of the American Veterinary Medical Association from 1895 to 1903, when he was elected president. He was thrice president of the Missouri Valley Medical Association. On December 25, 1879, Dr. Stewart married Emma B. Beebe of Corry, Pennsylvania, at Oakland, Iowa. They have two children. Belle, now Mrs. C. D. Folse, and Rosa R. Stewart, both resident in Kansas City. I WO III! 11(1 red and twenty Men of Affairs in Kansas City SIDNEY J. HARE One of the Most Prominent Landscape Architects in Kansas City; Member of the Firm of Hare & Hare. IDNEY J. HARE, who with S. Herbert Hare makes up the firm of Hare & Hare, landscape architects, with offices in the Gumbel Building, was born in Louisville, Kentucky, January 26, I860, son of C. C. and Isadora B. Hare, who were natives of Ken- tucky. graduated from the Central High School of Hare took several special courses to prepare landscape architect. From 1885 to 1896 he office as a transitman, leaving that office to engage in his present business. Mr. Hare came to Kansas City in 1868. In 1885 Mr. Hare married Miss Mathilda A. Korfhage. They have a daughter, Nellie M., and a son, T. Herbert. Mr. Hare is a member of the American Civic Association and the Society of Cemetery Superintendents. After being Kansas City Mr. himself for the profession of served in the city engineer's two hundred and twcnt\-ouc Men of A f f a i r s i n Kansas C i t v CHARLES L. FLAUGH Vice-President of the B. T. Whipple Real Estate Company and Former President of the Real Estate Board. iHARLES L. FLAUGH, prominent in Kansas City as an extensive real estate dealer and vice-president of the B. T. Whipple Real Estate Company, was born on a farm in Crawford County, Penn- sylvania, January 6, 1863. son of John and EInora Flaugh. On the paternal side his early ancestors came from Germany and set- tled in Pennsylvania, where Mr. Flaugh's father was born. His mother was a native of Vermont. Mr. Flaugh's education was obtained in the public schools of Western Pennsylvania and in a business college at Titusville, Pennsylvania. December 15, 1885, he married Martha Hunter, youngest daughter of Wilson Hunter of Saegerstown, Pennsylvania. They have four daughters, Zoe, born in Pagosa Springs, Colorado, now Mrs. Howard M. Tufts; Zuvia, born in Saegerstown, Pennsylvania, now Mrs. Thomas G. Buecking ; Helen, born in Kansas City, and Martha, born in Kansas City. Coming to Kansas City in 1887, Mr. Flaugh immediately associated him- self with the Whipple real estate offices and has been with this big concern ever since. Today he is considered one of the first authorities on real estate matters in Kansas City and in 1910 was elected president of the Real Estate Board. He was also a member of Mayor Brown's cabinet, having been called into that council as the representative of the real estate interests. Mr. Flaugh is a member of the National Association of Real Estate Ex- changes and a prominent member of the Commercial Club and the Knife and Fork Club. Itvo liuiidrcd and lweiil\<-tici) Men of Affairs I n Kansas City CHARLES C. GRAVER Real Estate Broker and a Resident and Booster of Kansas City For the Last Fifteen Years. ""HARLES C. CRAVER, prominent real estate broker of Kansas City, was born in Warren, Ohio, son of Owen and Catherine Kistler Craver, both natives of Ohio. Mr. Craver received his education in the common and high schools of Newton Falls, Ohio. He came to Kansas City fifteen years ago and engaged in business, being now one of the best known real estate brokers in the city. In October, 1892, Mr. Craver married Anna L. Detwiler. They have one son. Mr. Craver is a Deniocrat and a man of liberal and progressive views and has always taken a great interest in all movements which have aimed to improve Kansas City. tzvo hundred and tzventx-fhrcc Men of Affairs in Kansas City =m CHARLES A. SMITH Architect for the Board of Education of Kansas City and Originator of Many Ideas in Scientific Construction. IHARLES A. SMITH, one of Kansas City's foremost architects, at present architect for the Board of Education, was born in Steuben, Ohio, March 22, 1866, son of A. L. and Cynthia L. Smith, both natives of Ohio. Mr. Smith came to Kansas City in 1887 and has been closely connected with the construction history of Kansas City since that date. As architect for the Board of Education, he is respon- sible for many of the modern school buildings of which the city now boasts, and many of the plans he has incorporated here, looking to scientific ventilation and other sanitary features, have been adopted throughout the country. June 4, 1898, Mr. Smith married Mary E. Bailey. In politics he is an Independent. He is a member of the Hartwell Hunting Club. ti»jv hundred and iwcnty-four Men of Affairs in Kansas City £2_ A!^^yy>-::~:-^i ^^-c£i;r-;;--s:,,:v:,^||^.| DAVID ALDEN KENDALL i -...r^-"->K_:.. Prominent Lumberman and Automobile Dealer, President of the D. A. Kendall Motor Car Company. ]AV1D ALDEN KENDALL, well known throughout the Central West as a lumberman and interested in the automobile business^ being president of the D. A. Kendall Motor Car Company, was born in Prairie Du Sac, Wisconsin, in 1847, son of Uriel H. and Mary Waterbury Kendall, his father being a native of Vermont and his mother of New^ York. Mr. Kendall followed the common school with a course in Baraboo, Wisconsin, Academy, from which he was graduated in 1867. In !87l he married Eliza M. Taylor of St. Peter, Minnesota. They have four sons, John A., Harry T., Roy O., and Paul E. Mr. Kendall began his business career in the retail lumber business with John Robson of Winona, Minnesota, in 1871, and was interested in lumber yards at Mankato and Sleepy Eye, Minnesota, until 1879. From 1879 to ] 883 he was in the grain business at Clay Center, Kansas, and was secre- tary of the Lansing Lumber Company of Lansing, Iowa, from 1883 to 1889; president of the Sawyer 6c Austin Lumber Company of La Crosse, Wisconsin, from 1889 to 1904; treasurer and genera! manager of the same company at Pine Bluff, Arkansas, until 1 908. He is now interested in lumber yards in Oklahoma and Texas. Mr, Kendall came to Kansas City in 1900 and for several years has been interested in the automobile business. The sales department of his firm has been handled largely by Mr. Kendall's son, Roy O. Kendall. two hundred and hvcnty-fi^'c M en of A f f a i r s I n K a n s a s City I THEODORE GARY President of the Kansas City Home Telephone Company and One of the Largest Individual Stockholders. HEODORE GARY embarked in the telephone business about fif- teen years ago in Macon, Missouri, after having been interested for twenty years in real estate, insurance and banking. He learned that telephony was a good business. He had spent much of his time formerly in efforts to secure business, but now, for the first time in his life, he had plenty without even asking for it. He found that all that was necessary was to take care of the business offered. Good service is all the people demand and everybody is ready to pay cash for it. In a short time after his first telephone investment Mr. Gary secured independent exchanges in the following Missouri cities: Nevada, Joplin* Carthage. Webb City and Carterville; a year later Atchison, Kansas, was added. These plants had to be refinanced and rebuilt, new capital being interested. All these undertakings were promptly accomplished. Less than a year later the exchange at Independence, Missouri, was purchased. Mr. Gary then became interested in the Topeka Independent Telephone Company, Topeka, Kansas. The company was reorganized, refinanced, a complete underground system laid out and built, a fireproof building erected and a new switchboard installed. In 1 908 Mr. Gary formed a company that became the owner of the St. Joseph. Missouri, Independent Company and built a plant in conformity with the best development of the business in that city. This company con- trols a long distance company with pole line mileage of some four hundred miles in territory directly tributary to St. Joseph, Missouri, with exchanges at Tarkio. Missouri, and Hamburg, Iowa. In February, I 9 1 2, the Telephone Securities Company was organized. It purchased the controlling interest in the Kansas City Home Telephone Company and the Kansas City Long Distance Telephone Company, and imme- diately thereafter Mr. Gary was elected president of the Kansas City Home Telephone Company. Mr. Gary, beginning the telephone business in a small w^ay. has grown with it. He has hundreds of stockholders and business associates, all of whom have been enthusiastic Independent Telephone men or investors, most of them two hundred and twenty-six Men of Affairs in Kansas City believing with him that the telephone business is the safest and best business in the world. Besides being president of the Interstate and the International Independ- ent Telephone Associations, Mr. Gary has served on many of the important committees of both bodies, w^as secretary and treasurer and a director of the Missouri Association for many years and was a pioneer in the advocacy of compulsory physical connection of telephone lines and exchanges. He now^ advocates a broad and liberal policy for the associations and stands for all independently owned exchanges being admitted to membership, with a modi- fication of competitive methods in the telephone business to meet present conditions. two hundred and twenty-seven M e of Affairs i n K a n s a s C i f y gjljy^^:^-^ ili^' v^ ;■< } a '<:X -^^^-^-'' CLARENCE W. TOBIE Manager of the William J. Burns National Detective Agency for the Kansas City District. LARENCE W. TOBIE, manager of the Kansas City division of the William J. Burns National Detective Agency, was born in Rantoul, Illinois, May 17, 1869, the son of Hiram S. and Mary E. Tobie, the father being a native of Maine and the mother of Ohio. After obtaining a common school education, Mr. Tobie attended Knox College, Galesburg, Illinois, leaving there in 1887. For the last fifteen years Mr. Tobie has been in detective work and is well known throughout the United States for his efficient work. For ten years he was located in Springfield, Illinois, leaving there in August, 1901, to come to Kansas City. When the now famous William J. Burns decided to open an office in Kansas City to take care of the Western business of his detective agency, he made Mr. Tobie manager of the district, which covers ten states. This was in May. 1910. October 19, 1890. Mr. Tobie married Ida Webster of Pittsfield, Illinois. They have one son, How^ard S. Tobie. Since Mr. Tobie took charge of the Burns agency in Kansas City he has figured in several remarkable cases and has added much to his own and the agency's reputation for quick and reliable work. He is a man of remark- able personality and has always been a close friend of the newspaper fra- ternity. two hundred aud tzvcutv-uine M e of Affair s i n Kansas City ORIN LEROY CURTIS District Manager for the Kissel Kar Company and One of the Best Known Automobile Dealers of the Southwest. LEROY CURTIS, district manager for the Kissel Kar Auto- mpany and one of the widest known automobile men the Southwest, was born in Aurora, Illinois, March 6, 1875, son of Orin LeRoy and Eulalia Rockwell Curtis, his father being a native of Pennsylvania and his mother of New York. Mr. Curtis was educated for a civil engineer, but recog- nizing the future of the automobile industry, he began to study trade conditions and manufacturing methods until he became one of the first experts in his line in the West. He was then made manager of the Kissel Kar interests with headquarters in Kansas City, He is also owner of the Curtis Motor Company. In 1905 Mr. Curtis married Miss Lillian Hauke. two hundred and thirty Men of Affairs in Kansas City JOHN CRAWFORD JAMES President Board of Education, Wholesale China Dealer and President Kansas City, Missouri, Gas Company. ;OHN CRAWFORD JAMES, president of the Board of Education and the foremost china dealer in the state, whose business is one of the principal features of commercial Kansas City, was born in Logansville, Kentucky, July 24, 1848, son of T. M. and Sarah A. James. He w^as educated in Brown University and after being graduated came West, selecting Kansas City as the most promising place to locate. The firm of T. M. James & Sons, dealers in and importers of earthen- ware, china and glassware, was established in 1863 and its business now extends over the entire Southwest. J. C. James has been a member of the firm since 1 872. Mr. James was appointed to the Board of Education in 1 884 and has served continuously until the present, having been president of the board four years. He has been president of the Kansas City. Missouri, Gas Company for the last six years. In politics he is a Democrat, but he has never allowed party prejudice to stand between him and his support of measures which he considered to the best interests of the community. That he has been one of the men always fighting for a better commercial city is shown by the fact that he was elected president of the Commercial Club and served with credit to himself and the organization. In 1873 Mr. James married Miss Fannie Shouse. They have five children. two hundred and thirty-one Men of Affairs in K a )i s a s C i f y iU^'^ W: --'^ ^^Sj «Jk * i^ ■ j 1 ,-vi / '■>.> a ;' ■. —:^-^ Vr7 LOUIS OPPENSTEIN Partner of Oppenstein Brothers, Jewelers, and Member of the Upper House of the City Council. )|OUIS OPPENSTEIN, one of the firm of Oppenstein Brothers, jew- elers, and a member of the upper house of the city council, was born in Chicago, Illinois, in I 874. Going to Colorado when quite a young man, Mr. Oppenstein engaged in the jew^elry business, meeting ^vith success from the first. In 1902 he came to Kansas City and opened a jewelry house, which is now one of the largest and most completely fur- nished in the city. Being a strong Republican and a man of unquestioned integrity, Mr. Oppenstein was made the candidate of that party for the upper house of the city council in 1910 and was elected by an easy majority. Beside his jew- elry business, Mr. Oppenstein is interested in banking, being vice-president of the Mercantile Bank of Kansas City. Mr. Oppenstein is a member of the City Club, the Progress Club and the Elks Lodge. Iwo huudrcd and thirty-two il/ en of A f f a i r s i n K a ii s a s C i t ■m V ■. =:)))=^-^ai^ y >M ^ JOHN R. KELLEY Former Member of the City Council and Owner of the Kelley Cooperage Company. !]OHN R. KELLEY, owner of one of the most extensive cooperage businesses in Kansas City and formerly a member of the city council, was born in Sandusky, Ohio, October I, 1856. Coming to Kansas City in the spring of 1879, Mr. Kelley decided to make this his future home and in 1 88 1 he estab- lished himself in the cooperage business. Starting out on a modest scale, he has built up an extensive business and now has one of the largest shops of its kind in the state. In 1902 Mr. Kelley married Miss Margaret Grulish. Politically Mr. Kelley is a Democrat. tii:o hundred and tJiivtx-thrcc M e 71 of Affairs in K a n s a s C i t y GEORGE KUMPF Prominent Fire Insurance and Real Estate Dealer and Former Member of the Board of Public Works. EORGE KUMPF, well known as a fire insurance agent and real estate dealer, was born in St. Louis, Missouri, March 15, 1858, son of Henry C. and Wilhelmina Kumpf. Mr. Kumpf's father was one of the men prominent in the building of Kansas City. Fie was one of the first members of the school board, its first secretary and served as city auditor four terms, city comptroller three terms and as mayor of Kansas City three terms. Mr. Kumpf, the subject of this sketch, has also been active in municipal affairs and has taken a prominent part in many of the campaigns which have resulted in the city's present standing. He ^vas a member of the board of public works during the administration of W. S. Cowherd and James A. Reed. He is a Republican and a man of liberal ideas. April II, 1 888, Mr. Kumpf married Lena V. Engler. They have two sons and a daughter. As a real estate and insurance agent, Mr. Kumpf is one of the best knovk^n men in Missouri. He has been in business for thirty-four years and during that time has built up an extensive patronage and a remarkable circle of friends. two hundred and thirty-four Men of A f f a i r s i n K a n s a s C i t y ^-■■;yfl>—^^ ■M m ROBERT NESCH President of the Pittsburg Paving Brick Company, One of the Largest in the United States. OBERT NESCH, one of the prominent figures in the brick manu- facturing industry of the Southwest, president of the Pittsburg Paving Brick Company, was born in Switzerland, November 2b, 1852, the son of Henry and Barbara Nesch. Mr. Nesch came to the United States in I 869 and for three years was located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Then he came w^est believing he w^ould find a better field. in 1872 he came to Kansas City, then w^ent to Atchison, Kansas, and later to Pittsburg, Kansas. In 1890 Mr. Nesch aided in the organization of the Pittsburg Paving Brick Company in Pittsburg. The business began \vith a small plant and has ex- perienced a steady grow^th until today it is the largest concern of its kind in the Southwest, doing an extensive business in Missouri, Kansas, Texas, Okla- homa and the southern states. While the company's great reputation has been made in the manufacture of paving brick, it also makes a full line of building brick. Leaving the management of the plant in Pittsburg to his three sons, Mr. Nesch came to Kansas City in 1900 to take charge of the company's general offices. Of late years he has acted only in an advisory capacity, leaving the active management of the company to his sons. Most of the streets in Kansas City, subject to heavy traffic, are paved with this company's product. It is interesting to know^ that thirty million bricks from the Pittsburg plant have been put down about the Kansas City Stock Yards. Mr. Nesch is a Progressive Democrat, a man of liberal views and much interested in the municipal welfare. two hundred and ihirty-fivc Men of Affairs in Kansas City EPHRAIM C. SOOY President of the Kansas City Hay Press Company and a Large Holder of City Real Estate. PHRAIM C. SOOY, president of the Kansas City Hay Press Com- pany, was born in Green Bank, New Jersey, in 1 848, son of Ephraim C. and Lucy M. Sooy. Both his parents were natives of New^ Jersey and his grandfather on the mother's side was prominent in New Jersey slate politics. In addition to the advantages of the pubHc schools Mr. Sooy attended business college in Poughkeepsie, New York. Coming to Kansas City in 1882, Mr. Sooy was associated for some time with the Kan- sas City Milling Company. He then became interested in the Kansas City Hay Press Company, a manufacturing concern which stands high in indus- trial Kansas City. Besides this, Mr. Sooy was at one time president of the Lucky Tiger Mining Company, president of the Hunter Real Estate Company, and now has extensive real estate interests in the city. Mr. Sooy married Evelyn Hamilton in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. They have three children, Mrs. Lucy Sooy Mark, Norman H. Sooy and Elizabeth L. Sooy. A Republican in politics and a man of liberal and progressive views, Mr. Sooy is a Kansas City booster and takes a great interest in all campaigns for municipal betterment. two hufidrcd (Did thirty-six M e of Affairs in K ansa s City -il,- HORACE HAVELOCK ANDERSON President of the Kansas City Transfer Company, the of its Kind in the City. Oldest 'GRACE HAVELOCK ANDERSON, president and manager of the Kansas City Transfer Company and since 18tt7 a conspicuous hgure in commercial Kansas City, was born March I 4, I 656, in Hanover County, Virginia. His ancestors were of distinguished English connections and came to Virginia early in the eighteenth century. Dr. Thomas B. Anderson, grandfather of Horace H., was graduated from Pennsylvania University in 1811 and for fifty- nine years was one of the most prominent physicians in Virginia. Mr. Anderson spent his boyhood in historic Hanover County and his early recollections are of the Civil war. When the slaves were freed in 1866, he was forced at the age of eight, into the field to follow the plow. At night he studied. Later he went to school to Alfred Duke, a highly educated farmer, w^ho taught him Latin, Greek and higher mathematics. Completing his education Mr. Anderson went to live at Topping Castle, an estate belonging to his father. In 1881, he went into the milling busi- ness with an uncle, in Norfolk, Virginia. In 1885 he moved to Charlottesville, Virginia, and engaged in the real estate business. Mr. Anderson came to Kansas City in September, 1887, and entered mercantile life. He at once affiliated with the Commercial Club. For tw^o years he was a traveling salesman. In 1890 he entered the government's em- ploy in the improvement of the Missouri River channel; in 1892 he started in the contracting and paving business and during that year became secretary of the Kansas City Transfer Company. Three years later he gave up the con- tracting and paving business and devoted his entire time to the transfer com- pany, the oldest of its kind in the city. December 17, 1 89 I , Mr. Anderson married Phebe Fleming Brent, a daugh- ter of one of the old families of Kentucky. They have one son, Thomas Brent Anderson. In 1895 Mr. Anderson was made Quartermaster of the Third Regiment, Missouri Infantry, National Guard, staff officer with rank of Captain. The regiment volunteered for regular service in the Spanish-American war and was mustered out in November, 1898. hvo hundred and thirty-seven M e 11 of A f f a i r s i n K a n s a s C i f y ALFRED HOLTMAN Sole Owner of the Hottman Heating Company, One of the Largest Concerns of Us Kind. LFRED HOLTMAN. founder and owner of the extensive business conducted under the firm name of the Holtnian Heating Company, was born in Illinois, his parents being natives of Sweden. With only a common school education, Mr. Holtman early sho^\'ed his ability as a business man and in 1 887 became con- vinced that Kansas City was destined to be one of the greatest industrial centers in the United States. He located here and fifteen years ago established himself in the heating business. While his begin- ning was in a very modest way he has added to his activities annually until today he has one of the largest interests of its kind in the country and has one of the most completely equipped plants in the United States. His success has been "self-made" in every sense of the word. Twenty-one years ago Mr. Hohman married Miss Mary J. Blake. Mr. Holtman is a life member of the Elks and belongs to the Independent Order of Foresters. tzvo hundred atid ihirty-eigUt Men of Affairs in Kansas City \m&' ^^•sgn^ if BENJAMIN ROWLAND BEALL President of the Excelsior Products and Manufacturing Company of Kansas City. ]ENJAiVIIN ROWLAND BEALL was born in Montgomery County. Maryland, in 1865, son of Charles Alexander and Catherine Beall. His father was born in Maryland and his mother was a native of Washington, D. C. The Beall family was established in America in 1658 when Ninian Beall came to America from Scotland, and the family has been prominent in American history since that date. Mr. Beall came to Missouri in 1878. At the age of eighteen years he w^as in the grain business and for tw^enty years w^as a successful dealer in the Missouri River territory. In October, 1900, he married Elizabeth Ermane Thomas at St. Joseph, Missouri. In 1891 Mr. Beall, still in the grain business, moved to Kansas City, be- lieving it to be the logical center of the great Southwest. In 1907 the Ex- celsior Products and Manufacturing Company was organized with Mr. Beall as president. From the first it has been a successful venture. The plant is situated in the East Bottoms and is one of the largest and finest in this sec- tion. The factory, warehouse and yards occupy five acres and the entire plant is up-to-date in its equipment and facilities. The factory is a one story and basement structure, built of concrete and steel and is equipped with spe- cial machinery of the most modern type. The company ships excelsior and sweeping compound to all points west of the Missouri River. The capital stock of the company is $50,000. The executive offices are in the Massa- chusetts Building. Mr. Beall is a Democrat, a member of the Rotary Club, and the Corn- mercial Club, and a man much interested in the industrial w^elfare of the city and state. two hundred and thirtx-nine Men of Affairs i n Kansas City WILLIAM F. HELM President of the William F. Helm Commission Company and Vice-President of the Mercantile Bank. ILLIAM F. HELM, president of the William F. Helm Commission Company, vice-president of the Mercantile Bank, president of the Kansas City Fruit Auction Company and treasurer of the Union Celery Company, was born in Sedalia, Missouri, December 24, 1877, the son of John and Kathryn Helm. He married Anna D. Wurzer in 1901. They have three daughters. Mr. Helm came to Kansas City from Sedalia, in 1 884, and for nine years was connected with the Anheuser-Busch Brewing Association of St. Louis. Leaving this employment, Mr. Helm engaged in the commission business and made a remarkable success from the first. He incorporated the William F. Helm Commission Company in 1905 and his two brothers, O. C. and E. J. Helm, are now associated with him in the management. Besides the main house in Kansas City, which does over a million dollars' worth of business annually, a branch house is maintained in Lawrence, Kansas. Mr. Helm is a member of the Produce Exchange and was at one time president of the organization. He is a member of the Commercial Club and a Shriner. two hundred and forty Men of Affairs in Kansas C i f y n f FLORIAN C. FLORANCE General Broker in Coal and Building Material, Civil Engineer and Railroad Man. JLORIAN C. FLORANCE was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. July 27, 1859, and lived in that city until his maturity. He was educated as a civil engineer, and at the time of his coming West, in 1680, to Kansas City, was connected with the Engineer Corps of the Pennsylvania Railroad. Arriving in Kansas City, Mr. Florance remained in his pro- fession under such well known engineers as John Donnelly, George W. Neir, and Knight & Bontecau, and afterwards was in charge of the Main- tenance of Way of the Missouri Pacific Railroad under Andrew^ Don nan sta- tioned at Sedalia. On his return to Kansas City he was made Chief Engineer of the Fifth Street Cable Line, known at that time as the Shallow Conduit System, which afterward became a portion of the Metropolitan Street Railway System. On account of the strain on his eyesight in this profession he w^as compelled to leave it and go into a commercial business, adopting a general brokerage line of coal and building materials, representing many of the best firms of the Central West, and removed to Independence, Missouri, where his business has been continued until this time. Mr. Florance is a member of the Masonic fraternity, the Commercial Club of Independence, Railroad Club of Kansas City, and other organizations. He is also a veteran of the First Regiment, National Guards of Pennsylvania, and a retired officer of the National Guards of Missouri, having served fourteen years as an officer in the Seventh, Third and Second Regiments. two hundred and forty-one M en of Affair s i n K a n s as C i t THEODORE REMLEY Attorney and Police Commissioner of Kansas City and Former Justice of the Peace, Eighth District. ^ HEODORE REMLEY, prominent attorney and police commissioner for Kansas City, appointed by Governor Herbert S. Hadley, was born December 2, 1866, at Bentonsport, Iowa, son of George and Mary J. Remley. His parents were natives of Greene County, Pennsylvania. After completing the common school course, Mr. Remley entered Oberlin College, at Oberlin, Ohio, from \vhich he was graduated in 1896. October 24, 1899, he married Mabel Eells at Albion, In- diana. They have an adopted son. Master Paul Remley. Since coming to Kansas City in 1884 Mr. Remley has taken a prominent part in Republican politics. In 1906 he was elected justice of the peace of the Eighth district, on the Republican ticket, and served until 1910. In that year Governor Hadley appointed him to the board of police commissioners of Kansas City, in which capacity he is now serving. Mr. Remley is a man of liberal views and his services as police commis- sioner have given general satisfaction. He is a member of Union Lodge 168, I. O. O. P., and of Knights of Pythias Lodge No. I. fzi'o hundred and forty-two Men of Affairs in Kansas City ->"-^-j JOHN R. CROWE President of the J. R. Crowe Coal and Mining Company and Interested in Other Big Enterprises. lOHN R. CROWE, president of the J. R. Crowe Coal and Mining Company, was born in Hamden, Ohio, October 12, 1858, son of David and Susan Leff Crowe. Both parents were natives of Pennsylvania. Starting out with a common school education, Mr. Crowe has made his own opportunities. All his life he has been en- gaged in the mining business. He was located in Joplin, Missouri, for many years, where he was interested in lead and zinc mining. From there he went to Kansas and the J. R. Crowe Coal and Mining Company was es- tablished, the offices first being at Weir City, Kansas. In 1898 Mr. Crowe moved the company's headquarters to Kansas City. The company ope rat ej extensively in Missouri, Kansas and Oklahoma. Besides the J. R. Crow^e Coa'i and Mining Company, Mr. Crowe is interested in several other successful firms, among them being the Baltimore Hotel Company and the Cherokee Fuel Com- pany. In 1887, Mr. Crowe married Margaret Hamilton. They have a son and a daughter. Politically, Mr. Crow^e is a Republican and, while taking no ag- gressive part in the campaigns, he is a man alw^ays awake to the best inter- ests of the city and the Southwest. He is a member of the Commercial Club, the Kansas City Club and is a Mason. two hundred and forty-three Men of Affairs in Kansas City WILLIAM D. OLDHAM Wholesale and Retail Grocer Who Established His Business in Kansas City Thirty-two Years Ago. ILLIAM D. OLDHAM, prominent wholesale and retail grocer, who has been in business in Kansas City since IfitiO, was born in Georgia, January 10, 1861, son of J. C. and Melissa Underwood Oldham. His father was a native of Kentucky and his mother was born in Tennessee. Mr. Oldham was graduated from the school in Doltan, Georgia, in 1879 and the following year came to Kansas City and began the business which has grown into the present extensive wholesale and retc'l trade at 507-9 Main Street. Mr. Oldham is a man who has accom- plished his own success through hard work and an honest business policy. December 25. 1887. Mr. Oldham married Miss E. C. Mitchell, of Mc- Donald, Tennessee. They have two children, a son and a daughter. Politically Mr. Oldham is a Democrat and he takes a keen interest in the things which are of direct benefit to Kansas City. He is a member of the Modem Woodmen. two hundred and forty-four Men of Affairs in Kansas City SAMUEL P. WOODS President of the Woods-Egan Live Stock Commission Company and an Authority on Live Stock. AMUEL P. WOODS, prominent as one of the leading live stock commission men of the Southwest, was born in Henderson County, Illinois, May 19, 1859, son of James H. and Elizabeth Woods. His father was born in Gibson County, Indiana, and his mother in Louisville, Kentucky. Mr. Woods has been in the live stock commission business in Kansas City for about twenty years. He was first interested in the Northwestern Live Stock Commission Company, which six years ago was consolidated with the Evans, Snider, Buell Company. Three years ago Mr. Woods reorganized his business under the firm name of Woods 6c Ott Commission Company and a year later the present company, Woods-Egan Live Stock Commission Company, was organized. It is now one of the most prominent doing business out of Kansas City. December 24, 1883, Mr. Woods married Clara A. Moore. They have five children. hvo hundred atid forty-five i1/ en of Affairs in K a n s a s City JAMES E. TURNER Manager of the Saunders-Turner Lumber Company and One of Kansas City's Substantial Young Men. AMES E. TURNER, manager for the Saunders-Turner Lumber Company, of Kansas City, was born in Bedford, Missouri, April i 1 . I 8b2, the son of Samuel G. and Laura E. Turner. His father was born in Virginia and his mother in Missouri. The ancestral stock all came originally from Virginia. After completing the common school courses, Mr. Turner attendeil Leiand Stanford University in California November Mr. Turner 16, 1910, he married Hortense Taylor. Coming to Kansas City after completing his college work, became associated w^ith the Saunders-Turner Lumber Company of which hi» father is the head. After learning the business he was made manager, w^hich position he now occupies. Hvo hundred and forty-six Men of Affairs i Kansas City ERNEST R. SWEENEY Manager Coal Department Central Coal & Coke Company, One of the Southwest's Laigest Concerns. ^RNEST R. SWEENEY, manager of the coal department of the Cen- tral Coal 6c Coke Company of Kansas City, was born in Fort Scott, Kansas, in February, 1867, son of George R. and Amanda C. Sweeney. His father and mother came from Mercer County, Pennsylvania. Mr. Sweeney is a Republican in politics, but has taken no active part in the variou;, campaigns. His w^ife, before her mar- riage, was Hattie E. Fiske. They have one son, Ben A. Sweeney. The story of Mr. Sw^eeney's advancement w^ith the Central Coal & Coke Company is the story of merited rewa rd for hard work. He first worked for the Keith & Perry Coal Company and in 1882 took the position of weigh- master for the Central Coal & Coke Company at I I I 1 West Twelfth Street; later he was made bookkeeper and then advanced to collector. From this posi- tion he was promoted to manager of the city sales department and then to the management of the entire retail business of the big concern. In 1907 he was made manager of the entire coal department and has served in that capacity to the present date. Mr. Sw^eeney, in common with all the officials of the Central Coal & Coke Company, has always been a friend to the newspaper fraternity. two hundred aud forty-sezni Men of Affairs in Kansas City II t FRANCIS LYMAN OILMAN General Manager of the Missouri and Kansas Telephone Company and a Recognized Telephone Authority. RANCIS LYMAN OILMAN, general manager of the Missouri and Kansas Telephone Company, was born in New Bedford, Massa- chusetts, February 12, 1873, son of Francis Lyman and Frances Thomazine Gilman. His father was born in New Hampshire and his mother in Boston, Massachusetts. Graduating from Harvard University in 1895, Mr. Gilman at once became connected with the telephone and telegraph business, being on the staff of one of the vice-presidents of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company of New York. In 1910 Mr. Gilman came to Kansas City and has been connected with the Missouri and Kansas Telephone Company, of which he is now general manager, since his arrival. In 1896 Mr. Gilman married Harriet Frances Hart. They have a daughter fourteen years old. .\ Republican in politics, Mr. Gilman is a man of liberal views and a recognized expert in the management and maintenance of tele- phone systems. He is a member of the Kansas City Club, the Mid-Day Club, Evanston Golf Club, Engineers' Club, and the Harvard Club. He is also a Mason, being affiliated with the New York lodge. two hundred and forty-eight Men of Affairs in Kansas City mj^^r^-::^^ .■:-S^S^-:^-:^---=='-> ■ ■ ■;SL> <% ::^|t::i^s^/ /-^^> ■- WILLIAM THOMAS GRANT Secretary and Treasurer of the Business Men's Accident Association and Prominent Among Insurance Men. ILLIAM THOMAS GRANT, secretary and treasurer of the Busi- ness Men's Accident Association, was born in Middleport, Ohio, November 30, 1878, son of William H. and Etta J. Logan Grant, who were both natives of Ohio. After completing the common schools, Mr. Grant attended Kansas University in 1902-3. Later he came to Kansas City and went into the insurance business, making a remarkable success from the first and quickly coming to his present place of responsibility. April 29, 1908, Mr. Grant married Miss Frances Downing. They have one daughter. Politically Mr. Grant is a Republican. He is a Knight Templar, a Shriner, a member of the Knife and Fork Club, the Kansas City Athletic Club, the Y. M. C. A. and the City Club. two hundred and forty-nine M e of A f f a i r s in K a n s a s C i t y JOSEPH R. DONEGAN Manager of the Hotel Edward ard the Century Theater; One of the Press Club's First Friends. OSEPH R. DONEGAN, manager of the Hotel Edward and the Century Theater, was born in St. Louis, Missouri, October 4, 187 7, the son of John P. and Mary Byrne Donegan. Both his parents were natives of New York state. His father was a mining pro- moter who opened the first salt mine in W/oming. He died in 1 903 in Nome, Alaska, where he was in the < mploy of the govern- ment. After completing the common school courses. Mr. Donegan attended Christian Brothers College in St. Louis. On leaving school Mr. Donegan be- came associated with Edward Butler and for twenty-three years continued in his employ, working up from a clerical position in the "office to manager of the Butler interests in Kansas. In 1899 Mr. Donegan was sent to Kansas City to take charge of the Century Theater, which was completed in 1900. Mr. Donegan married Rose LeDenardo of St. Louis. Mr. Donegan is a member of the Knights of Pythias, Elks, Moose, Eagles, the Theatrical Mechanics' Association and is an associate member of the Kansas City Press Club, having been one of the men who assisted in its or- ganization in 1910. /t(ne Men of Affairs in Kansas City GEORGE W. TOULMIN Manager* of the Standard Milk Company, Which Supplies Most of Kansas City's Hotels and Restaurants. r^T^^EORGE W. TOULMIN, manager of the Standard Milk Company flu^ti^^^ of Kansas City, was born in Massachusetts, February 2, 1862, £l(li> (if)L son of William B. and Lavina B. Toulmin, both natives of V l^^^\/i ^y V England. fS^^^^^AK ^r. Toulmin came to Kansas City in 1883 and became ^^ga^"'^ J affiliated with the harness and saddlery business for a few years. He then entered the real estate business on his own account and nineteen years ago went into the milk business. Starting in a small way, he began to bring milk to Kansas City from his own farm. Today the company of which he is manager furnishes ninety per cent of the milk consumed in Kansas City's big hotels and restaurants and draws its supply from 330 farms within a radius of fifty miles from the city. Its business is entirely wholesale and includes an ice cream department of considerable proportions. The company still owns its original farm located at w^hat is now Seventy-ninth street and Troost avenue. In 1887 Mr. Toulmin married Aurelia D. Kirk. They have no children. nvo hundred and sixty-two M en of A f f a i r s in Kansas City CARL AUGUST MUEHLEBACH Secretary and General Superintendent of the George Muehlebach Brewing Company and a Bank Director. ;;]ARL AUGUST MUEHLEBACH. secretary and general superin- tendent of the George Muehlebach Brewing Company of Kansas City, one of the largest brewing interests in the state, is a native of Kansas City, having been born November 28, 1887, son of George and Margaret M. Muehlebach, w^ho were pioneers in Kansas City. The father was born in Switzerland, the mother in Illinois. George Muehlebach established the extensive indus- try which is now conducted by his sons. Carl Muehlebach was educated in St. Benedict's School, from which he was graduated in 1904, when he at once took up the task of learning the business details of the great business with which he is now^ connected. As a member of the Kansas City Automobile Club he has been one of the most active men in the city on behalf of the good roads movement. Besides his official connections with the brew^ing company, Mr. Muehle- bach is secretary of the Muehlebach Estate Company and a director in the State Bank of Kansas City. tzvo hundred and sixty-three Men of A f f a i r s i n K a n s a s C i t y FRANK E. WEAR President of the Diamond Window Glass Company and Interested in Several Big Plants in the Southwest. RANK E. WEAR, one of the truly big glass manufacturers in the West, son of James R. and Martha Wear, was born in Pittston, Pennsylvania, May 2, I £57. His parents were natives of New York state. At present Mr. Wear is president of the Diamond Window Glass Company and of the Texas Glass Company, and treasurer of the following concerns: Fredonia Window Glass Company, Fredonia Gas Company, Fredonia Brick Company and the Coffeyville Window Glass Company. Mr. Wear is a Republican in politics, and the Southwest has no more ardent champion and all around booster than he. Many of the towns of the Southwest have been placed on the industrial map by virtue of Mr. Wear's investments. In 1877, Mr. Wear married Mary Dedrick. They have no children. two hundred and si.rty-foiii Men of Affairs i n K a n s a s C i t V ELLIS R. JONES Secretary of the Kansas City Paper House and a Dealer in Paper All His Life. LLIS R. JONES, secretary of the Kansas City Paper House, began handling paper in 1685, when, as a newsboy, he carried a route for the Kansas City Star and the old Kansas City Times. He was born in Port Huron, Michigan, in the paper pulp belt, July 7, 16 73. His father was Elisha S. Jones and his mother, Minne- haha, was born in Ontanogan, Michigan. From the retail business in printed paper that he carried on at the tender age of twelve years, Mr. Jones graduated into the employ of the Kansas City Paper House and his present title, that of secretary of the firm, is an evidence of his successful service. On February 6, 1896, he married Miss Lillian A. Martin, in Independ- ence, Missouri. They are the parents of one child, a son. two hundred and sixty-five M e of Affairs in K a n s a s City A. MORRISON, JR. One of the Leaders in the Movement for Furnishing Pure Milk to the Families of Kansas City. MORRISON, JR., known throughout the Southwest for his inter- est in pure milk, president of the A. Morrison Farm Company, which operates the model dairy at Shawnee Mission, Kansas, was born in Arrow Rock, Missouri, in 1 884, son of A. and Enola Collins Morrison, both natives of Missouri. Mr. Morrison came to Kansas City with his parents in 1892 and received his education in the Kansas City schools. In 1904 he started in the dairy business with three cows. Being a man of liberal views, he soon realized that the old method of dairying was doomed. He was sure that the clean dairy and pure milk would be welcome to the public, and he shaped his policy accordingly. When the pure milk agitation came on it was discovered that Kansas City already had a man in the person of Mr. Morrison who had been working for pure milk for several years. The history of the A. Morrison Farm Company is his history and the public has been much interested in it. As has been stated, Mr. Morrison began business with three cows. He now has 1 7 1 his?h grade cows which he subjects to the most severe tests and which are cared for under sanitary conditions which are the envy of the entire state. He also operates nine retail milk wagons. The products of his dairy are handled after the most scientific methods known. When drav^rn from the cows the milk is immediately cooled and bottled and delivered direct to the consumer, being kept on ice from the pail until it is delivered. The milking is done in buildings which have been especially designed along sanitary lines approved by dairy experts, and in 1911, when the pure milk agitation was at its height, the health department scored this dairy highest of any in the vicinity of Kansas City. Mr. Morrison's success in the pure milk business has been the result of the most painstaking application to the business in hand. Selecting per- sonally his milk cows and growing the feed upon his own farm and under his personal direction, he has brought his dairy up to a standard which is as near perfection as is possible. He is one of the few men in the state who has always invited inspection by the authorities and has always been anxious to co-ooe ate in the pure milk crusade; in fact, many of the methods now generally represented to dairymen as the best and most practical originated in Mr. Morrison's dairy. At various times Mr. Morrison's place and herd have been inspected by the city health department, the state officials and the United States government inspectors, and always it has been found far above the standard required. As indicative of the perfection in Mr. Morrison's methods, in one scoring by the health department his dairy not only was first, but it lacked but lO.I points of being absolutely perfect. In a recent test made by the Kansas City Testing Laboratory the milk from this dairy showed a bacteria count of only 31,680 per cubic centimeter. The requirement of the city health department calls for not more than 300,000 per cubic centimeter, showing that the Morrison dairy product had only one-tenth of the amount found in milk passed as pure. two hundred and sixty-six Men of Affairs in K a n s a s C i t ROBERT KEITH President and Founder Robert Keith Furniture and Carpet Company, Whose Business Extends Over the Entire Southwest. OBERT KEITH, founder of the immense furniture and carpet business which bears his name, was born in Lexington, Missouri. His father. Smith Keith, was a native of Virginia, who came to Missouri in 1839. Robert, after finishing his school educa- tion, engaged in various lines of activity until 1872, when the foundation of the present concern was laid in Leavenworth, Kansas. In 1882 the company removed to Kansas City, occupy- ing a building of four stories and basement at 811-813 Main street. Increasing business demanded more room and in 1887 a building on Walnut street at the rear of the Main street store was erected. The new building contained five stories and basement, seventy-five feet by one hun- dred and fifteen feet, and was connected with the other by means of covered bridges across the alley. These two buildings were occupied until 1891, at which time the company moved into the splendid seven-story and basement building erected by Dr. John Bryant at the southwest corner of Grand avenue and Eleventh street. In the spring of 1901 the company moved directly across the street into a fine seven-story and basement building especially erected for its use by Colonel Thomas H. Swope. In 1906 two additional floors were added, giving the building at present nine floors and basement. About the time the company moved into the Swope building it built a commodious warehouse at Twenty-first street and Baltimore avenue, which it occupied for ten years. This building was sold during its occupancy. A short time before the Baltimore avenue warehouse was vacated the company built a substantia! six-story warehouse and factory at Thirteenth and Charlotte streets. The building at Thirteenth and Charlotte streets and the main store at Grand avenue and Eleventh street afford splendid facilities for conducting the vast business of the company. The firm retails furniture, rugs, carpets, curtains and everything per- taining to floor coverings and draperies, also hand-made mattresses and spring bed bottoms of its own manufacture, and of which it makes a specialty. It is also a wholesaler and does a complete house furnishing business, including interior decorations. Its business extends in large volume over thirteen adjacent states in the West and Southwest. Besides Mr. Keith, president of the company and its founder, the other officers are; Haibert White, vice-president; Frank W. Biggar, second vice- president; William G. Ennis, treasurer, and George W. Taylor, secretary, all of w^hom have spent practically their entire business lives w^ith this one cor- poration, growing up in close touch w^ith its ideals and aims. two hundred and sixty-seven Men of A f f a i r s i n K a n s a s C i t y INDEX Alden, Maurice L ' ' - Alkire, Arthur Newton ^ Anderson, Horace Havelock 23 7 Atwood, John Karricon I '"J Backstrom, Frank G "2 Baird, Charles H 251 Baird, Ralph Byron 8 Barnett, Carl J 8 Beall, Benjamin Rowland Z3V Berger. Albert L 74 Bergfeldt, Charles A 159 Bland, William Thomas _ 157 Bond, George Albert ' 4z Boob, Charles H > 47 Boyle, Louis C ^" Bradley, James T 1 ' 4 Breyfogle, Charles Coe ' ^2 Brown, Arthur C 36 Brown, Bestor Gaston 1 5o Brown, Darius A 12 Brubaker, Jonathan A 79 Brundrett, Ernest Low 151 Burrow, Frank H '90 Carter, Benjamin Franklin 126 Chapman, Arthur 2 I 8 Cherry, Herman G • 66 Clarke, Charles Whittle 1 09 Cleary, John M 216 demons, Charles C 153 Coffin, George O., M.D 95 Cottingham, Arnold Douglas 120 Cowh-rd, William S 127 Craver, Charles C 223 Crockett, Jameo D. M 118 Crowe, John R 243 Crutchcr. Edwin Ruthven 42 Crysler, Charles Sumner ill Culbertson, Jerry 104 Culber^son, William C 7 1 Curtis, Orin LeRoy 230 Darby, C. Harry 92 Davis, William Harrison 255 Dean, Frank J 122 Dillenbeck, Preston K 162 Dixon, George A 83 Dodson, Bruce 13 Doggett, Fred Sterling I 87 Dominick, James Robert 24 Donegan. Joseph R 250 Dowling, Rev. Michael P 35 Downing, John F 1 03 Eaton, Dudley Ward 73 Edson, Job A 1 84 Edwards, George H 148 Egner, John C 37 Eppstein, Samuel 105 Evans, Andrew Forsythe 200 Faxon, Frank A 20 Flaugh, Charles L 222 Hvo hundred and sixix-nine Men of A f f a i r s in K a n s a s C i t y Flick. Robert J 83 Flintom, Albert Dix 144 Florance, Florian C 24 1 Flynn, Matthew A 76 Flynn, Nugent J 154 Foster, Benjamin Butler 196 Foster, John J 198 Fratt, Frederick WilHam 19 French, Clinton D 102 Friedberg, Harry 54 Fyke, Matthew A 107 Gary, Theodore 226 Gilman, Francis Lyman 248 Goebel, Peter W 86 Goldsmith, Joseph M 154 Grant, William Thomas 249 Greene, W. Wallace 134 Griffin, Wentworth Edwin 84 Groff, Warren Noble 164 Grush, Walter L 149 Hagg, Lawrence W 80 Hale, George C 5 7 Hare, Sidney J 221 Hargis, Benjamin Finley 213 Harrington, John Lyle 110 Harrison, George Billingsley 201 Harvey, Ford F 1 82 Harvey, Jacque G. L '. 168 Harzfeld, Jacob A 23 Hazelton, Andrew J 131 Hedrick, Ira Grant 106 Helm, William F 240 Herr, Horace H 7 Hess, Edwin J 68 Higgs, Thomas J 15 High, Samuel Y 93 Hill, William B I 58 Hocker, Richard W 205 Hoefer, Charles Christian 91 Holden, James Franklin 28 Hollinger, Job 98 Holmes, Conway Flowerree 21 Holtman, Alfred 238 Hoover, Frederick Ruthrauff 258 Houchin, James A 172 Hudson, Franklin 18 Hughes, William 30 Hutchings, Charles Frederick 56 Irving, Junius B 136 James, John Crawford 231 Jarboe, Henry Lee, Jr 161 Johnston, Charles Eugene 259 Johnston, John Laurence 197 Johnston, John T. M 14 Jones, Ellis R 265 Jones, Richard B 228 Jones, Robert Harry 72 Jost, Henry L II Kansas City, History of 2 Kansas City Press Club 5 Kansas City Press Club Officers 7 t-vi) hundred and sct'Ciilv Men of Affairs in Kansas City Keith, Charles S 202 Keith, Robert 267 Kelley, John R 233 Kelly, George H 115 Kendall, David Alden 225 King, W. Eugene 40 Kirsten, Julian Girvan 212 Kitchen, John Howard 1 65 Kraua, Philip 133 Kuehne, Charles H 113 Kumpf, George 234 Kundegraber, Edward H 7 Kupper. William John 170 Leidigh, Paul John 32 Lence, William Robert I 08 Lesley, Albert G 48 Littlefield, Walter 64 Lochridge, Wiilard Fislce 8 Lock, George A 38 Long, Robert Alexander 128 McCarty, Richard Justin 99 McCleary, A. S.. M.D 253 Maitland, Alexander, Jr 43 Malcolmson, James Waddell 55 Mann, Conrad H 89 Marks, Thomas Rankin I 80 Martin, Edward L 29 Martin, J. Frank 138 Martin, Robert James I 85 Maxwell, Joseph E 192 Meng, Warren Douglas 8 Meriwether, Hunter Mackeand 123 Merriam, Wiilard 61 Meservey, Edwin Clement 125 Mintun, Val B 77 Moffatt, Edwin Otis 135 Moore, George Gilchrist 90 Morledge, Thomas 167 Morrison, A., Jr 266 Morrow, Thomas R 81 Muehlebach, Carl August 263 Muehlebach. George E 252 Muhlfeld, John Erhardt 169 Mullane, John P 82 Myers, George M 119 Neal, Fernando P 139 Nesch, Robert 235 Nims, Eugene D 210 Noggle, Sherman W 121 O'Malley, R. Emmett 60 Oldham, William D 244 Olmstead, Rev. Edwin B 130 Oppenstein, Louis 232 Orear, Ed T 129 Orthwein, Charles Clemmens 217 Page, James R 27 Pain, Thomas J. B 214 Parker, Charles David 25 Pearson, Archibald Allen 191 Peet, Albert W 52 Peet, William 209 two huiulrcd and scvc>it\-tiiic Men of Affairs in Kansas C i t y Peltzer. Theodor C 207 Peters. Charles C 208 Pollard, John Barton 195 Prescott, John Adams 16 Prescott, John P 150 Prewitt, James Allen 96 Proctor, David M 1 76 Punton, John 44 Remley, Theodore 242 Rider. David Wilson 78 Ridge, Thomas S 34 Riggs, Charles Boynton 50 Riner, Melvin M 260 Roberts. W. B 143 Robertson, Richard 206 Rosenzweig, Grant I I 94 Ruff, Robert Burns 68 Rust, Eugene 181 Sachs, Charles 117 Schmelzer, Charles J 137 Schneider. Will-am B 31 Sebree, Frank P 75 Seitz. John D 186 Serlis, Henry 254 Setzler. Philip 67 Shipley, Charles Pervine 132 Simpson, Charles L 215 Smith, B. Howard 163 Smith, Charles A 224 Smith, Eugene N 8 Smith, Granville M 145 Smith. Matt R 45 Snider, J. Scott, M-D 175 Snoddy, John W 63 Snyder, Robert M., Jr 66 Sooy, Ephraim C 236 Sparrow, Sam I 40 Stevenson, George, Jr 22 Stewart, Sesco. D.V.S 220 Studebaker. Lyman J I 1 Sullivan, John 59 Sulzberger, Ferdinand I 78 Sutherlin, James R 53 Swanger, John E 204 Swearingen, Orson H 47 Sweeney, Ernest R 247 S\veet, Cyrus Bardeen 70 Swenson. Godfrey 58 Swinney, Edward F 94 Tanner, Thomas Jefferson 7 Tebeau, George 171 1 homson, William 41 Thurmond, William R 87 Timmonds, Henry Carroll 177 Tobie. Clarence W 229 Toll. Phil Riley 188 Toulmin, George W 262 Truitt, Elmore Shelton 69 Turner, James E 246 Uhl. August B 199 Vanderslice, Howard 65 Van Horn, Robert Thompson 9 (7i'o hundred and scvcuty-fwo Men of Affairs in K a n s as C i t y Velie. Stephen Henry 146 Vernon, Joseph W 257 Waddell, John Alexander Low 116 Walton, Philip G 256 Ward, Robert Edward 7 Wear, Frank E 264 Weaver, William Christian 124 White, Joseph Edward 174 Wilson, Albert Millen 3 3 Winn. Edwin L 49 Winstanley, Edward 1 60 Winter, Robert L 51 Wirthman, Joseph C 46 Wolf, Frederick A 141 Woods, Samuel P 245 Wornall, Douglas B 179 Wright, George G 261 Zook, Thomas J 26 t~co hundred and seventv-three // D 'h't^ LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 016 088 376 5