AMERICA AND JAPAN.
_* Another Spy. New York, July 15. The discovery that there is no American law making espionage a penal offence has created surprise. Another Japanese, employed as a servant at Fort Rosecrans, was found in possession of drawings and photographs of defences and copies of Government papers. Ten thousand people at San Diego, California, were intensely excited by an orator alleging that Japanese spies are mapping the entire coast and taking soundings. Viscount Aoki, Japanese Ambassador to the United States, interviewed, declared that it was a hideously wicked act to try to involve the two Powers in war. He declared the relations between the United States and Japan were as friendly now as ever. Referring to the question of mastery of the Pacific, he declared that the Pacific belonged to the world. He believed the race question would adjust itself. The two spies have been released.
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Manawatu Herald, Volume XXIX, Issue 3769, 18 July 1907, Page 3
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148AMERICA AND JAPAN. Manawatu Herald, Volume XXIX, Issue 3769, 18 July 1907, Page 3
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