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Ståhlberg and came
Forest researcher Cajander came to politics in 1922 when president Ståhlberg asked him to take office of prime minister.

Ståhlberg and when
Ståhlberg soon began a very long career as the presenter and planner of the Senate's legislation, during the period when Finland was a Russian Grand Duchy.
As chairman of the council, Ståhlberg was involved in the drafting and re-drafting of constitutional proposals during 1918, when the impact of the Finnish Civil War, and debates between republicans and monarchists on the future constitution, all led to various proposals.
However, he was forced to retire in that year when he was implicated in the kidnapping of the former President of the Republic Kaarlo Ståhlberg, though he finally was acquitted of all charges.

Ståhlberg and won
He shared 5th – 6th at Margate 1936 with P. S. Milner-Barry, but he won their individual game and drew with 2nd to 4th place finishers José Raúl Capablanca, Gideon Ståhlberg, and Erik Lundin ( Salo Flohr won ).
In 1942, he won at Mar del Plata, with 13½ / 17, ahead of Ståhlberg.
In 1944, he won at La Plata, with 13 / 16, ahead of Ståhlberg.
In 1945, he won at Buenos Aires ( Roberto Grau Memorial ), with 10 / 12, ahead of Ståhlberg and Carlos Guimard.
He took second place at Viña del Mar 1945, with 10½ / 13, behind Guimard, then won Mar del Plata 1945 with 11 / 15, ahead of Ståhlberg, and repeated at Mar del Plata 1946 with 16 / 18, ahead of Guimard and Ståhlberg.
Najdorf won at Mar del Plata 1948 with 14 / 17, ahead of Ståhlberg ( 13½ ), Eliskases ( 12 ), and Euwe ( 10½ ).
In 1950, he won at Amsterdam, with 15 / 19, ahead of Samuel Reshevsky ( 14 ), Ståhlberg ( 13½ ), Gligorić ( 12 ), Vasja Pirc ( 12 ), and Euwe ( 11½ ).

Ståhlberg and matches
* Gideon Ståhlberg, Grandmaster who was Sweden's top player for many years and refereed several of Mikhail Botvinnik's world championship matches.

Ståhlberg and against
This included wins against Flohr and Akiba Rubinstein, and draws with Alekhine, Kashdan, Ernst Grünfeld, Gideon Ståhlberg, and Efim Bogolyubov.
Only Ståhlberg and few other Young Finns voted against monarchy.
Karel Opočenský applied the idea against, among others, Gideon Ståhlberg at Poděbrady 1936, Paul Keres at Pärnu 1937, and Erich Eliskases at Prague 1937.

Ståhlberg and players
* The top players of the day: world champion Mikhail Botvinnik, and those who had qualified for ( or been seeded into ) the inaugural Candidates Tournament in 1950: Isaac Boleslavsky, Igor Bondarevsky, David Bronstein, Max Euwe, Reuben Fine, Salo Flohr, Paul Keres, Alexander Kotov, Andor Lilienthal, Miguel Najdorf, Samuel Reshevsky, Vasily Smyslov, Gideon Ståhlberg, and László Szabó.
Once again, his opponents included the world's best players, such as Alekhine, Flohr, Kashdan, Tartakower, Grünfeld, Ståhlberg, and Lajos Steiner.

Ståhlberg and third
Ståhlberg was a National Progressive Party candidate in the 1931 Presidential election, eventually losing to Pehr Evind Svinhufvud by only two votes in the third ballot.

Ståhlberg and after
In 1930, after the kidnapping of progressive president Kaarlo Juho Ståhlberg, the Agrarian League broke off all its ties to the movement and got a new political enemy in the countryside-The Patriotic People's Movement ( IKL ), which was founded after the Lapua Movement was outlawed.
In 1941, he took second, after Gideon Ståhlberg at Mar del Plata, with 12½ / 17.

Ståhlberg and second
He was the second child of Johan ( Janne ) Gabriel Ståhlberg, an assistant pastor, and Amanda Gustafa Castrén.
Ståhlberg invited him as prime minister second time in January 1924.
In 1947, he took second place at Buenos Aires / La Plata ( Sextangular ), with 6½ / 10, behind Ståhlberg, but ahead of Max Euwe.
He was second at Buenos Aires 1948, with 8 / 10, behind Ståhlberg.

Ståhlberg and Stockholm
Keres drew an exhibition match at Stockholm 1938 with Gideon Ståhlberg on 4 – 4 (+ 2 = 4 − 2 ).

Ståhlberg and .
He was accompanied by his friend C. H. Ståhlberg for the majority of the trip.
* January 28 – Kaarlo Juho Ståhlberg, President of Finland ( d. 1952 )
He lost the election in the Parliament to Kaarlo Juho Ståhlberg and left public life.
But eventually the Lapua movement radicalized further, assaulting also Ståhlberg, the Liberal former President of Finland, and Paasikivi like many other supporters turned away from the radical Right.
" Strong right-wing opposition to the outgoing Progressive ( liberal ) President Ståhlberg, Ryti's membership in the same party, and at least some career politicians ' desire for a more approachable and less independent President may partly explain Relander's victory.
He was continually compared to Kaarlo Juho Ståhlberg and his performance as president.
At the same year, the party candidate, an admirer of Ryti, Kaarlo Juho Ståhlberg, was elected the first President of Finland.
In 1923 President Kaarlo Juho Ståhlberg appointed him chairman of the Bank of Finland, a post he remained in until he became prime minister in 1939.
Kaarlo Juho Ståhlberg (; January 28, 1865 – September 22, 1952 ) was a Finnish jurist and academic, who played a central role in the drafting of the Constitution of Finland in 1919.
Ståhlberg was born in Suomussalmi, in the Kainuu region of Finland.
Ståhlberg and his family lived in Lahti, where he also went for grammar school.
Ståhlberg's family had always spoken and supported the Finnish language, and the young Ståhlberg was enrolled in Oulu's private Finnish lycee, where he would excel, and was the primus of his class.
Ståhlberg served as secretary of the Diet of Finland's finance committee in 1891 before being appointed as an assistant professor of Administrative Law and Economics at the University of Helsinki in 1894.
In 1898, Ståhlberg was appointed as Protocol Secretary for the Senate's civil affairs subdepartment.
Ironically, this appointment to a senior position in the Finnish administration was approved by the new Governor General of Finland, Nikolai Bobrikov, whose term in office saw the beginning of the period of Russification, and whose policies represented all that the constitutionalist Ståhlberg was opposed to.
Ståhlberg was elected in 1901 as a member of Helsinki City Council, serving until 1903.
Ståhlberg participated in the Diet of Finland ( 1904 – 1905 ) as a member of the Estate of Burgesses.
One of the most important tasks facing the new constitutionalist Senate was to consider proposals for the reform of the Diet of Finland and, although initially sceptical about some of the proposal, Ståhlberg played a role in the drafting of the legislation which created the Parliament of Finland.
Ståhlberg resigned from the Senate in 1907, due the rejection by Parliament of a Senate bill on the prohibition of alcohol.
In 1908, Ståhlberg was elected as a member of Parliament for the Southern Häme constituency, which he represented until 1910.

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