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in 1907 were deported from Shanghai for keeping disorderly
houses have every one of them returned to the port and re-
sumed their former occupations. Most of them appear to
have gone through a ceremony of marriage with low class
foreigners of other nationalities and have so escaped the
jurisdiction of the American Court; the remainder appear
to be defying it. With regard to the inmates of the house
they are with very few exceptions the same women that were
in them when Judge Wilfley started his crusade. They no
longer claim American protection and are not therefore re-
cognised as American citizens by the United States Court,
but, as the Court is perfectly well aware though perhaps
unable to prove, the majority of them are just as American
as the Judge himself. In numbers there are more such
women if anything than there were two years ago, and if we
add to the "American girls" the Russian prostitutes who have
taken up their quarters in Shanghai since, 1906, it will
be found that Judge Wilfley's term of Office here has - chronized with perhaps the largest increase in foreign
prostitution and, I regret to say, venereal disease that
any two years of the history of this port have yet witness-
ed. It is possible, of a urse, that, but for the action
taken by the United States Court, there would have been a
greater influx of women of this class from America than
there has been, hut, if the increase in other foreign pro- stitutes has been at the expense of the "American girl", the community has no reason to be grateful to Judge Wilfley,
As to the credit which the Court has gained by its
action it has been more than counterbalanced, in my opinion by the injury which the washing of their dity linen in pub- lic has done to the good name of American citizens in China and it has been compromised further by the methods adopted by the Judge with whom the end, provided it was a good one
appears in many cases to have justified the means.