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LEADER OF THE VISITING SHRIISERS
Dr. Howard M. McKinley, Past Potentate of Islam Temple,
' San Francisco, who has been named Potentate's representative
on the present pilgrimage to 'the Far East of the Nobles of the
San Francisco Temple.
St
To Shrine Geests
Vanguard Of Delegation
From Islam Temple
Here Today
Headed by Mr. Mark L. Moody,
president of Nomad Oasis, S^"-rig
hai, local Nobles of the //^i
.Shrh-ie today are playini J^W^
01 'ijst to visiting- ■FJ:a;^arv\,-if'Sbm
Isle|° Tar.vpVe. Bah "Wftnciscft, tie
vanjfjard of which arrived here this
morning on a pilgrimage to the
F'ar East.
In the special Shrine Supplement
of this edition is published photographs of the officers and heads
of the various committees cf Nomad
Casis, through the courtesy and
cc-operation if the Williams Studio,
126 Bubbling Well Road.
Photographs include those of the
following:
President Mark L. Moody.
Noble W. J. Fronk, vice-president.
Noble William Santiago Van Bus-
kirk, secretary-treasurer.
Ncble W. Imin Hsu, membership
committee.
Noble William Yinson Lee, entertainment committee.
Noble Max Friedman, chairman,
transportation committee.
Noble A. C. Davis, captain of the
patrol.
Noble J. V. Crowe, chairman,
publicity committee.
Noble C. E. Horsman, chairman,
membership committee.
Noble George A. Fitch, chairman,
relief committee. >
Noble H. W. Brooke, chairman,
entertainment committee.
Noble A. E, Sshumacher.
These Nobles of the Mystic Shrine
are leaders in their respective business fields and are active in Shrine
circles.
Japanese Canton
ions Better
Consul-General Kawai
Says More Japanese
Goods Sold
Definite improvement in
Japanese-Cantonese relations is re-
,%f.ted by Japanese Cont'ul-General
vj of Cantor, who is now here
! for tneTSarreiit series oi ':onferenc es
between Japanese' Foreign Office,
Army and Navy officials.
A large quantity of Jiapanese
goods are now being sold in Canton, Mr. Kawai said in an interview with the Shanghai Mainichi,
and there is no longer any anti-
Japanese agitation.
Some Want Naturalized
"Some of the Cantonese intelligentsia," according to Mr. Kawai,
"are earnestly hoping for cooperation with Japan, and some
eccentric ones are even desirous
of being naturalized as Japanese
subjects. General Chen Chi-tang,
chairman of the Military Affairs
Committee in the Southwest, is
maintaining a neutral attitude
toward Nanking and playing his
part well.
"With General Chen, money from
Nanking is everything, and he would
do anything for the acquisition of
money. Nanking, knowing this, is
tryng to throw a sprat of money to
catch a whale, but to no avail.
Deft Handling
"Well aware that Canton does
not like a too weak or a too strong
Kwangsi, Li Tsung-jen, of Kwang-
si, who is a clever man, is deftly
Handling General Chen on the
basis that soft words turn away
wrath. 1
In kddition to Mr. Kawai,
Consuls-General Suma, of Nanking,
and Miuri, of Hankow, are now in
Shanghai. Mr. G. Morishima, chief
of the first section of the Japanese
Foreien Office Bureau of East
Object Description
| Title | "Nomad Oasis host to Shrine guests" Shanghai Evening Post 10/19/1935 |
| Subject (lcsh) | Freemasonry - China |
| Subject (personal name) | Moody, Mark L. (1892-1955); McKinley, Howard M.; Young, John A. |
| Geographic subject (city or populated place) | Shanghai |
| Geographic subject (country) | China |
| Coverage date | 1935-10-19 |
| Contributor | Ken Klein |
| Publisher (of the digital version) | University of Southern California. Libraries |
| Type |
images texts |
| Legacy record ID | prim-m426 |
| Part of collection | Pacific Rim Archive |
| Part of subcollection | Mark L. Moody Collection |
| Rights | © 2009 University of Southern California Libraries |
| Repository name | USC Libraries East Asian Library |
| Repository address | University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089-1825 |
| Repository email | kklein@usc.edu |
| Filename | PRIM-Moody_491_01; PRIM-Moody_491_02 |
Description
| Title | Page 1 |
| Full text | LEADER OF THE VISITING SHRIISERS Dr. Howard M. McKinley, Past Potentate of Islam Temple, ' San Francisco, who has been named Potentate's representative on the present pilgrimage to 'the Far East of the Nobles of the San Francisco Temple. St To Shrine Geests Vanguard Of Delegation From Islam Temple Here Today Headed by Mr. Mark L. Moody, president of Nomad Oasis, S^"-rig hai, local Nobles of the //^i .Shrh-ie today are playini J^W^ 01 'ijst to visiting- ■FJ:a;^arv\,-if'Sbm Isle ° Tar.vpVe. Bah "Wftnciscft, tie vanjfjard of which arrived here this morning on a pilgrimage to the F'ar East. In the special Shrine Supplement of this edition is published photographs of the officers and heads of the various committees cf Nomad Casis, through the courtesy and cc-operation if the Williams Studio, 126 Bubbling Well Road. Photographs include those of the following: President Mark L. Moody. Noble W. J. Fronk, vice-president. Noble William Santiago Van Bus- kirk, secretary-treasurer. Ncble W. Imin Hsu, membership committee. Noble William Yinson Lee, entertainment committee. Noble Max Friedman, chairman, transportation committee. Noble A. C. Davis, captain of the patrol. Noble J. V. Crowe, chairman, publicity committee. Noble C. E. Horsman, chairman, membership committee. Noble George A. Fitch, chairman, relief committee. > Noble H. W. Brooke, chairman, entertainment committee. Noble A. E, Sshumacher. These Nobles of the Mystic Shrine are leaders in their respective business fields and are active in Shrine circles. Japanese Canton ions Better Consul-General Kawai Says More Japanese Goods Sold Definite improvement in Japanese-Cantonese relations is re- ,%f.ted by Japanese Cont'ul-General vj of Cantor, who is now here ! for tneTSarreiit series oi ':onferenc es between Japanese' Foreign Office, Army and Navy officials. A large quantity of Jiapanese goods are now being sold in Canton, Mr. Kawai said in an interview with the Shanghai Mainichi, and there is no longer any anti- Japanese agitation. Some Want Naturalized "Some of the Cantonese intelligentsia" according to Mr. Kawai, "are earnestly hoping for cooperation with Japan, and some eccentric ones are even desirous of being naturalized as Japanese subjects. General Chen Chi-tang, chairman of the Military Affairs Committee in the Southwest, is maintaining a neutral attitude toward Nanking and playing his part well. "With General Chen, money from Nanking is everything, and he would do anything for the acquisition of money. Nanking, knowing this, is tryng to throw a sprat of money to catch a whale, but to no avail. Deft Handling "Well aware that Canton does not like a too weak or a too strong Kwangsi, Li Tsung-jen, of Kwang- si, who is a clever man, is deftly Handling General Chen on the basis that soft words turn away wrath. 1 In kddition to Mr. Kawai, Consuls-General Suma, of Nanking, and Miuri, of Hankow, are now in Shanghai. Mr. G. Morishima, chief of the first section of the Japanese Foreien Office Bureau of East |
| Archival file | prim_Volume10/PRIM-Moody_491_01.tiff |
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