Chapter VII
.
[30] X 25
[31] X 41
[32] X 59
[33] X 16
[34] Additional data, Parlor Houses, Appendix IX; also Appendix III, "Inmates of Vice Resorts."
[35] Including apartment houses.
[36] X 112, X 113, X 114.
[37] X 115.
[38] X 117, X 118.
[39] The original copy of this letter is on file. The woman's name and address are X 119, X 120.
[40] X 121.
[41] X 122.
[42] Bryant, X 124.
[43] X 123.
[44] X 125.
[45] X 126.
For further examples, the reader is referred to Appendix X, "Additional Data--Tenements."
[46] X 147.
[47] X 164.
[48] X 182.
[49] New York, A. H. Kellogg Co. (1910), p. 38.
[50] This $800 fee was imposed in Manhattan and the Bronx and was the rate established by the Raines Law at the time of its passage. The rate of $200 was the tax for saloons prior to the passage of the Raines Law.
[51] Report of The Committee of Fourteen, 1912.
[52] X 207.
[53] X 208.
[54] As to this and other hotels, repeated observation at different periods established the notorious character of the places. Corroborative evidence is collected in Appendix XI, "Additional Data, Hotels."
[55] X 253.
[56] X 261.
[57] X 262.
[58] X 246.
[59] X 248.
[60] X 247.
[61] X 250-a.
[62] X 250.
[63] X 251.
[64] X 251-a
[65] Wanted--Female.
[66] X 251-b.
[67] For a statistical summary of vice resorts, see Appendix I.
[68] "Christianizing the Social Order," p. 268.
[69] Mr. Arthur H. Gleason brought out this point in two articles under the title of "The Saloon in New York," published in _Collier's Weekly_, in the issues of April 25 and May 2, 1908.
[70] X 263.
[71] X 264, X 265.
[72] X 265.
[73] X 264.
[74] X 269.
[75] X 274.
[76] X 275.
[77] X 276.
[78] For additional illustrations see Appendix XII--"Additional Data--Saloons."
[79] X 108.
[80] X 295.
[81] X 296.
[82] X 297.
[83] A "line up" is the ruin of a girl who flirts with men and accepts their advances and immoral suggestions. Finally she yields to an invitation to visit a furnished room and the word quickly passes among the "gang." One by one the boys and men, perhaps only two or three, perhaps more, visit this room.
[84] By X 298 at X 299.
[85] X 298, X 299.
[86] For further illustrations, see Appendix XIII--"Additional Data--Miscellaneous Places."
[87] For detailed statistical statements respecting street-conditions, see Appendix VII, p. 281.
[88] X 318.
[89] X 319.
[90] X 320.
[91] X 321.
[92] X 322.
[93] X 328.
[94] X 330.
[95] X 320, X 320-a.
[96] Given by Club X 341.
[97] X 342.
[98] X 343.
[99] X 352.
[100] X 353.
[101] X 357.
[102] X 358.
[103] By the X 362 Club.
[104] X 368.
[105] X 369.
[106] X 370.
[107] X 374.
[108] X 373.
[109] X 376.
[110] For statistical details as to parks catering to prostitution, see Appendix II, "Summary of Resorts Catering to Vice."
[111] A "creep house" is a place where women take men to rob them.
[112] X 382.
[113] X 108-a.
[114] X 46.
[115] X 34.
[116] X 86, X 87.
[117] X 383.
[118] X 384.
[119] X 402.
[120] X 403.
[121] X 407.
[122] X 467.
[123] X 408.
[124] X 258, 409.
[125] X 73.
[126] X 414.
[127] X 416.
[128] X 421.
[129] X 311.
[130] X 68.
[131] X 426.
[132] For further details, see Appendix XIV, "Additional Data--Shipping Women."
[133] X 385.
[134] X 386.
[135] X 385-a.
[136] X 68, X 386-a, X 386, X 387, X 388, X 389.
[137] X 386, X 387.
[138] X 88, X 163, X 393, X 74.
[139] X 386.
[140] X 385.
[141] X 340.
[142] X 396.
[143] X 393.
[144] X 399.
[145] X 400.
[146] X 427.
[147] X 382-a.
[148] X 87.
[149] X 34.
[150] X 501.
[151] X 260.
[152] X 183.
[153] X 463.
[154] X 44.
[155] X 502.
[156] X 518.
[157] Kept by Madame X 519.
[158] X 116.
[159] X 520.
[160] X 50.
[161] X 108.
[162] X 540.
[163] X 51.
[164] X 46.
[165] X 17.
[166] X 59.
[167] Named X 522.
[168] X 507.
[169] X 493.
[170] By X 508.
[171] X 418, X 509.
[172] X 419.
[173] This expression means that the girls should be broken into the business in some private place, until they were fitted for the public houses.
[174] For statistical details, see Appendix III, "Inmates of Vice Resorts."
[175] See