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SIXTEEN A HONOLULU STAU-BULLETIN, SATURDAY, SEPT, 6, 1913. 2L p' 777'' I))- in 11' Are A- .' -'V )MSSSluII)5I O o '- ' - ; V ''" tnec! then! over vith the Children rcaWldcrs ct.Sc and :7 V:- :7M ' V .v'- J . 7 7 ' v ;.7"-7. '. : ' ' ; : .7 ' 7 77."' ; 7"'"V '; '' ';7.. '.' , 7 7:' 7" ; -7,77 -" J.-vv : ;. V -:-..: 7 '7: :--77'7 77': ' 7 iv'Sw ' J 3 i' ' - - - -I j , ... : ' ' ' ' - 11 '' ' '. - - J . . , .. ' r - '':7. - .;.':;;7;7;;-,7.;..'7-- ' - - - f'"- , ; School Pencils -Mongol ...... .75c c'ox. ;. Maile llima ......... 50s dot. j J- ?;iVaJo ...... .C. . .7 .. .SOs doi. Contarcrco . i .7. r.". . , .'.tOff dct. : ' . ' 1 7:'-"'. -- Hardwood Rulers ,12-incb. o. 90 ...... c each - 13 Inch Brass Edge.. . . .Se ca'-h It inch Srasi Edsc....1fc each : Drawing Pencils i:o." 314 Eaglo Draft Ins. I c each Kchlnocr . . . . V. . . 10c each Pens and Penholdei S" ...... 1Cc,do2. 10c each Composition Books See our big value for 7 . . reiicll :7Ta)Jet3, fccautlfnl floxrer cover designs .....5c - Carters Inks Red a.ni Blaclu All Sires, Loose Leaf Memo ;s . ' 7 National Separate Leaf and ",DIue tlond ' Icose ; leaf tinders 7.. .. ."...40c . each , Water Color Outfits rranka v Nq.3:: Nrw klnJ. SHEET : MUSIC FOR THE I; MUSIC STUDENT. ' . Tonic Sol Fa and 7 7 Silver -Song Series ' 7 r ; : Slanplo Scass. .' OO Young Building i - i r?j7:''!:7'7 n ' i i -Phone 2294 4. Accd: :pli:!i your vrork : 1: . :t v;hite household ; r.p manufactured. 1 u w X .- '7 V.-, Ask Your Grocer 7.r7M: HONOLULU SOAP WORKS, v . - . Makers. . ; -: . ' ' John Una, Fresidec Wilson a pno:- t 4 . x Minnesota, wherp - he csed to be J , -Jurt aa plala aa his name. V Out In ( fj :u. ' jut Cclal envoy to Mexico, Is raid to.be "governor, ami la the natlonar house of f representatives, ot .which he vas a member; for th16; terms, Mr. Llnd his a refutation; for J simplicity, of manner and directness of speech. He jas born in Sweden in 1854, and came lo this country 'with his parents I when he was fourteen. Like thous ! enc8 of other. Swedish . immigrants. tte Linda Went: to Minnesota. John Lind left school when he was seven teen, taught , In a .country school for a couple of years, and then studied at the 'Unlyerslty of Michigan for v two , years, af ter'whlch -he practised law at New Ulri, a small county-seat town In fcls own state. ' After a good many years of practise in the country, he went ' ti ' Minneapolis, where he be came a . member of the law firm of Lind & Ueland But he held office before he went to the city. The New York Sun gives ns the story of his career: " "" . ,. From 1SS1 to 1SS5 he held hla. first political office, receiver at the land "office' In Tracy, Mlnn7 ' In 1887, two years after; he quit the land office he was elected ' to congress, : By this L time he had been pretty well over the rtato and had lived and worked "In half a dozen places.. 7MInnescians In goodly numbers' knew John Llnd for A ca!m, .. self-contained, capable, goed bearted lawyer, who never beat about tho bush, arid. who usually man aged to call the other fellowiblufT. j' Llnd was Jn Congress six ; years BtraTght from 18S7 to " Then the vlQlss'tudes of politics, spared hin not j? --JOj It. Lind htmself ' galvfi out a ,4ittlc7 to j escape 1 being pestered ,went Into! the woods for a day or wo. Within a week he had mailed for 'Alaska without once looking -Mlrineapollswafd. v.: ' - Back' hdlrie' they couldnt under", stand, that' Js the politicians couldn't Running ground in-'', narrow 'Circles, they said John Lind was merely tired and out of sorts and would come back Iroin. Alaska- refreshed; and 'rjelntlgorv ated foif a short run and a long term. When the - traveler - got "' back o Washington. state In August there vas i8' USED 1 "' .'.'':- ii To "represent the industrial growth immense cheerfulness; 1 nans' jtheao2rcatet VtTOl 3 Picture c; folk in Minnesota over word that Lind . vvw . had declined to say anything at all on c". Compafly is Included in ah etlu- his arrival, from the north. Not a V V fv V7 word had been pried out of.him. Thati the ; direction of the Detroit board meant he was relenting declared the, commerce. ; - ; ; . anxious persons In his home state. t4lQ J0;?1 F fi Then came; the awful Wow.' It. was Ur? lJ5? , ttaie, the delayed until the middle of September, t fackard-officials advanced .the regu- rr' O - 1 ( .. i r . . . 'JOHN LINOV and the Odin club. - And : also the Congressman end cx-Governor had made himself a'f very cheerful home indeed at 1775 CcIfax avenue, . Mince-, apolis, a home if urnlshod with Mrs. L.!nd end "ycung .LJnds," and a "pleas aat' resort after a' hard day at tho of- hen in the New York Life Building. ' J So there ycu have ' the outline of John Lind s career plain, severe, can did, an-ryot 'aspiring in its record of and he wont. back to applying : tbe I?8-??.a a'evement, ..- .... lstvs'hfi nd helDed to raaka But nret-' A episode in Ind's life that shows s ty ron var was declared with Spain ! the plain, frank Rerson, he Js. a little -..' i RT9. !f vmi rftmefflW." v . Lini : better . than.. any ether came in 1910. . . ..... . . .... . . . 1 .v. tjn hd Anr- e .Ail fViflf tinilal Aft sa;a liii.e duc aia mucn, wiin uio,- Uj,-iu 1 uuu5i.uuuivii.ui r , t 7 . 7 is Buried! r r-- t r THE AO CLUB HAVE CAME; THE SOLDIERS, HAVE CAME; THEY BOTH HAVE WENT. Both saV they had " a splendiferous - tine; and so they did. .v'- ' , : ,7- ' But the same scenery, the same weather, the same precipices, wa terfalls, tree ferns, and vol cane es are still here, at your, service, for little money and less effort. Railroads and autoa take you anywhere, r - Ililo and vicinity thas more varied and spectacular scenery per aquare, foot than any equal area on God's footstool, t 7 77 . ! Ask any member of the Ad Club or of Co. D, First Infantry, . for particulars.;., : . v : : J , "';.? ' 'j. 11 .i Kilo Board f Trade r. Sv See Hawaii first. i 4. '-" ' result -that he served as first lieu ten snt andnuartermaster of the Twelfth Allnnwsrta Volunteers throughout the wr.r. 7 Seme thought .he shone most as a' ionf.cncnt; others liked the grub he hanacxd rut, and all agreed that in plte cf .that very aober face. of his uo was an honor to the regiment 7 Something left cut? Oh, yes, come to think cf It, Lind'had run for Gov ernor of Minnesota' on the Democratic ticket in 189(J-very bad year, that, for Denrocrata.7 And then he went fnto the war, and 'when he came out , what did he do but let a' lot of pleas- stances 'would'. he be a candidate lor Governor ega.'n.. Having said thfs with nis usual way cf . meaning what he said, Lind started for Alaska, that be!ng a ccol and pleasant place Tfn July, better even than Minneapolis. J What had stirred Lind to a refusal cf a renomlcatlcn was the matter-of county' opt'oh. ' Lind was for it. Months before the convention he had made plain : his'-; belief : that the Demo cratic State platform should contain a county, option plank. But in spite of years and years of experience with their man the politicians went around ed Democrats and fellow citizens Aamefsayicg ever 'and over that John Lind him for Gcrrernor again! ' The note worthy about the nomination this time was that John Lnd was elected. - That was tn 1839, and, he held of - didn't mean.it, not this time. If coun ty. option were quietly ; ignored, and Und were ncmlnated, he wcultfn't re fuse to run, sa?d the politicians. ' ilc :tiU 1S01.7 Fickle Swedes . and i ; Lind had got as far toward Alaska .other Mlnnesotans refused to reelect jas Everett, Wash in July when the jhim. John Lind took hi3 defeat calm-Utate' Convention wa3 held. The poli ily. Ho just stuck around practising J tlclans went around patting each other ! law when he got a chance, which was j on the back at the success of their often, and 7 taen-ran iorjCongress little scheme. The antioptionists wer4 again. . Those who couldn't see himia control of things and they honored for Governor a second time sent him j Lind's scheme of putting itup to the Iback to Washington, and so he spent counties by paying no attention to it tae years 1003 to 1905 listening to de-1 at all in the platform that was adopt i bates, aady. offering a , few remarks,ed wrbcut dissent. 7 flaws. and antendmenta, himself, and Then they nominated Lind for Gov sending home a reasonable amount of i crncr. No one else's name was even Ph oao 2 2 C 5 R caohca l met SLO Q-ir O Oil C O i ILL nyL'S CF HOCK A3TD SAM) FOB COXCRETB WORK. F1EE1T00D AKD COAL. - ct ctttt:m RTRFKT ' . P f tmt S1 I seeds to- make glad -the ' Minnesota wilds or tame places, according to his constituents', surroundings. ' 1 ..Meanwhile either things had come to Lind . v He- was 'made president of the board Of regents 'of his alma ma ster, the .University of Minnesota, and (various clubs tock him in, though not mentioned. That; showed how much they wanted the man. . 7 -', . ' ; ; Lind's son, who is a business man at Everett, and who was entertaining Lis father ere the pilgrimage north, wired the convention, after it had done Its. work7 that it might as well recontene anCdQ the job riebt.7 His ?! badly, including the ..Minneapolis Club (father wouldn't tun; and still meant but was prepared and ready within a few days after Llnd landed from Alas ka, tit took (he shape cf a letter ab solutely refusing to run. 7 7f 77 So there were the politicians, near lyflat. - 7 . r J 7777 v ,J-:JJ They isimply had to hunt atound and find another candidate, and when they had done so everything went wrong. But" John Lind had demonstrated even to. their satisfaction that: : when - he raya a thing he means it. 7 -7: 7. C Mather, (impatiently), "I don't know what will ever become of that child. Nothing pleases him," Father (serenely) "Well make an art crit ic out of n!m.M 1'usk. . ' lar Saturday closing hour by twenty minutes. : This 'time 'cot ibe com pany $2,000 la round figures without taking into account the value rf le time : lost in the course of maliit preparations. ApproxIm'.ely 200 foremen and department heads were notified of the plans and given de tailed instructions. 7 7 7, , The camera wa3 focused from a Taised platform thus giving an excel lent, view cf tho mass of workers as they poured from the factory. ' ; When thrown' upon the screen the picture 'will "shnw the moring mass in the immediate foreground ' with' a background formed by a building 940 feet long.i one of thirty struc'ures which make up the Packard p?anL r IT 1 p3, . .... 1 .S f w ... 4' t U-1 . - ,V,.t 4. O -J I- - - - 1 ! -nf ' rt-; - .. tritlcn cf kz'.:-l'J.::, i rVfS ' ' -" - u f' ""4 3 1 f,- rr- tllu" "'f ' f ',v- I'.-, t.,r- cays. . - .. - To have t:ui::u1 lz'rt tht r-" -t--1 t- - 1 1 '-i r""f r" good. Keep' the tbed purs ar.,1 rich, and have' th ncr.c5 strong. and steady. Avcr's :r:ar.v rilla wni ccrt-!r.!y Co zl this for ycu: ?rpr DR. J. O. AT CO.. Iwoiu Maw . V. H. A. e rtflMfffll l iiiiiPBiB i ip Iff VI 111 1 Han d Baggage that Dependable We don't believe any other kind should: be sold. It's a certainty na other kind should be used. 7 That's whr we handle exclusively the famous "Indestructo," Hand Baggage (lined with Unen. Scotch Plaid and Leather)' Examine our line of Suit Cases and Baps. You'll find the prices right ($10 to $35.) . .; ji-v'::577;-v';."7:-v; 7777;' 7 7-.,:7, " : ' ; V ' ;7V v'v 7 They truthfully say of wIndcstructo": "Not' a complaint yet! Nothing tut-records of good performance." J. 7 7 Jrattti)li&&yu Silk's Toggery, THE STORE FOR GOOD CLOTHES Elks Bldg. Ltd., . j .7; .YAnz 3t j ' n 7- r '( V