Does his bookplate introduce an artist?

David Henry Souter (March 30 1862 to September 22, 1935), Australian artist, was known for the cats that often appeared in his drawings. Here is some background on this artist and journalist.
David Henry Souter.... was born.... at Aberdeen, Scotland, son of David Henry Souter, engineer, and his wife Ann Smith, née Grant. Apprenticed at 12 to a house-painter and signwriter, he acquired a good grounding in drawing at the local art school under instructors from London and earned five shillings each for anatomical illustrations. ....
Moving in 1881 to Natal, South Africa, Souter produced drawings and occasional journalism, started a paper which failed, and became colour sergeant in the Prince Alfred Guards. At Port Elizabeth on 17 February 1886 he married Jessie (Janet) Swanson (d.1931). Deciding against returning to Scotland, they came to Melbourne, but settled in Sydney in 1887. David worked for the printer John Sands for ten years before joining William Brooks & Co. Ltd as an illustrator.
Active on the council of the (Royal) Art Society of New South Wales, in 1888 Souter established its Brush Club for members under 26....
In the 1880s Souter drew cartoons for the weekly Tribune and News of the Week. For forty years from 1895 he had at least one cartoon published in every edition of the Bulletin and had the distinction of naming his own modest price for a drawing. His graceful penwork showed the early influence of Art Nouveau, a style sinuous and flowing. The drawings were strong on the printed page with large black solid areas complementing fine, firm pen lines. His compositions and groupings were helped by the inclusion of the familiar Souter cat which reputedly originated as a result of the artist furbishing an inkblot on one of his drawings. Some of his cat studies are pictured in Bush Babs (1933), a collection of nonsense rhymes he wrote for his children and later illustrated for publication. His cats were featured on Royal Doulton chinaware.
Souter illustrated other books.... and co-edited Art and Architecture in 1904-11 (to which he contributed a series of articles on Australian painters); he was among the first to draw Australian posters and, with Norman Lindsay, to design bookplates. In September 1907 Souter's operetta, The Grey Kimona (1902), was staged in Adelaide by Clyde Meynell and John Gunn. ..... Not least of his many triumphs were two comic strips, 'Sharkbait Sam' and 'Weary Willie and the Count de Main', drawn for the Sydney Sunday Sun in 1921: frame for frame, their inventiveness and composition were remarkable. By 1928 Souter was literary editor of Country Life.
...[David Henry Souter was a] short, thickset and immensely humorous man who never lost his Scottish burr.... Survived by three daughters and two sons, Souter died at his Bondi home on 22 September 1935 and was cremated with Presbyterian forms.
"Some Cats Are Like That" the artist said of this drawing.

And some lives -- are like that.
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