SILVER POLICY
DEMANDS BY CHINA. INTERNATIONAL UNDERSTANDING. REJECTION OF ISOLATION. (United Press Association.—By Electric Telegraph.—Copyright.) Received November 2, 9.30 a.m. NEW YORK, Nov. 1. An international understanding on the future of silver was demanded today by Mr K. C. Li, president of the Chinese Chamber of Commerce, when addressing the National Foreign Trade Convention. Such world accord was necessary “for the permanent good of silver, its producers, and international trade,” Mr Li declared. He doubted whether the question of so-called maladministration of gold could be solved by introducing silver into lawful currency. He insisted that the silver experiment was unsatisfactory to China. Dr Ko-Liang Yih, Consul-General for China in New York, said such doctrines as “Asia for the Asiatics,” or the “Monroe doctrine for Asia” _ were alien to Chinese conceptions of international intercourse. “We reject such national or regional isolation,” he declared.
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Manawatu Standard, Volume LIV, Issue 288, 2 November 1934, Page 9
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142SILVER POLICY Manawatu Standard, Volume LIV, Issue 288, 2 November 1934, Page 9
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