The History of the Yakima Valley, Washington, Comprising Yakima, Kittitas and Benton Counties, The S.J. Clarke Publishing Co., 1919, Volume II, page 253 A. H. HUEBNER. Efficiency may well be termed the dominant note in the character of A. H. Huebner. He has ever done with thoroughness whatever he undertakes and as general manager of the Cascade Lumber Company he occupies a very prominent position in industrial and commercial circles in the Yakima valley. He early realized that if one would win success, he must be willing to pay the price of it -- the price of earnest, self-denying effort, of close application and persistency, and these qualities he assiduously cultivated as the years have passed on. Mr. Huebner was born near Burlington, Iowa, on the 1st of October, 1873, and is a son, of August and Emelie Huebner. He obtained a common school education and then he came connected with the lumber business in Burlington, Iowa, as an employee of the Rand Lumber Company, with which he remained until 1906, when he came to Yakima, where he entered business circles as sales manager for the Cascade Lumber Company. In this connection he has steadily worked upward and was made general manager the same year. Through all the intervening period he has therefore been active in control of the operation of the plant, contributing in marked measure to the success of the enterprise. The Cascade Lumber Company was incorporated in 1902 with H. P. Svendsen of Hudson, Wisconsin, as president and organizer, A. E. Macartney, an attorney of St. Paul, Minnesota, as secretary and Robert E. Slaughter as treasurer. With the death of Mr. Svendsen in 1910, Mr. Slaughter was elected to the presidency. George S. Rankin, of Yakima, was also one of the organizers of the company and in fact was the man who interested the others in the project. The officers at the present writing, in 1918, are: Robert E. Slaughter, president and treasurer; William Carson, of Burlington. Iowa. vice president; C. W. Lockwood, of Eau Claire, Wisconsin, secretary; and A. H. Huebner as general and resident manager. The first sawing was done in 1903 and with the growth of the business the plant was enlarged in 1906. The company owns four hundred acres of land and the two mill ponds cover seventy acres, while the mill plant and yards cover thirty acres. They, employ about three hundred men at the Yakima plant, which does not include a large force of woodmen employed in operation in the lumber woods. The plant cuts from thirty to forty million feet of lumber annually, handling mostly western pine. Their product is sold over the middle west save such as is cut into fruit boxes and sold in thiq section, one-fourth of the product being used in fruit boxes for the local trade. They also manufacture some fir lumber for building purposes. The plant is operated with steam power, the engines having about thirteen hundred and fifty horse power. They manufacture their own electricity for lighting purposes and the business has been most carefully systematized, so that practically all waste is eliminated. They sell all of the waste wood and burn all of the sawdust and in the methods thus adopted they have found the secret of success, which is always the accomplishment of a maximum result with a minimum expenditure of time, labor and material. Mr. Huebner is familiar with every branch of the trade and his well directed efforts and energy are productive of splendid results. One of the effective forces for success with the Cascade Lumber Company is the splendid organization that has been built up. John Rhodes is sales manager and general superintendent and has been with the company for fourteen years, while W. T. Hines has charge of local sales and has been with the company for twelve years. Mr. Huebner has the entire loyalty of his large force of workmen, being fair and just in his treatment and ever conducting his interests on terms that are beneficial alike to employee, creditor and debtor. On the 31st of January, 1900, Mr. Huebner was married to Miss Myrtle Shontz, of Burlington, Iowa, and to them have been born two daughters, Dorothy and Ruth, aged respectively fifteen and ten years. Mr. Huebner is a republican in his political views but not an office seeker, although interested in the success of the party and at no time remiss in the duties of citizenship. He belongs to Yakima Lodge No. 24 F. & A. M., and Yakima Chapter No. 22, R. A. M., and he also has membership in Modern Woodmen Camp No. 550. He is an active member of the Commercial Club, serving on its board of directors and also as its vice president, and is putting forth earnest and effective effort to advance through this organization the welfare and upbuilding of the city. ******************************** Submitted to the Washington Bios Project in December 2007 by Jeffrey L. Elmer. Submitter has no additional information about the subject of this article.