The evening world. Newspaper, June 20, 1917, Page 1

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oe « Ros* ti i | \ ey Ta ita Wares La ay by EAMERS FROM BOSTON SUN json County, N. J. and TWO CENTS elsewhere. |“ Circulation Books Open to All,” | Copretabt, Ube’ by The Press Publis w York World). “Circulation Booka Open JUNE 20, 1917. 16 PAGES WEATHER—Showers to-night; probably fair to- % 7 EDITION KL Ts, ihabieS to All. B CENT In Grea PRIC E (gnc ne Boa 2WO CENTS eleewhern === . WOODS ORDERS FAUROT TO SPARE NO ONE. IN INVESTIGATION OF RUTH CRUGER CASE Re MORE SHIPS SUNK, i HAILING + GREW UF ONE Bay State of | of Warren Line, Leyland Ship Elele and the Eemdijki Are Lost. CAPTAIN CABL £ S NEWS. The Elele Recently Chartered and Put in Service From Massachusetts Capital. BOSTON, June waived to-do steamers which sailed from Boston- Bay State of the Warren Line, the British ship Elele and the Dutch ship Hemdijki. 20,—Word was re- y of the sinking of three “THE Bay State, which sailed from} Boston May %1 for Liverpool, was @upk by a G an submarine. All members of the crew were) faved. The Bay State, under com mand of Capt. Alexander Fen armed, carried @argo valued a f Atty of $2,000,000, a crew upward @he Bay State, of 6,583 tons grove was bullt in 1910, and was owned by Furness, Withy & Co, 1 ed The sinking of the presum- ably by a German submarine, was reported in a cable message by the Leyland Line from Capt. Plerce, her commander. The vessel left Boston on June § for Manch ster, with a general cargo. The message made no reference to the crew The cablegram from Capt merely stated sel sunk.” Officers Yet the line sald the erew probably had been saved ship arrived here from Alexandria on May 29 with 15,500 bales of Egyptian cotton, valued by port officials at more than $5,000,000, Nearly $2,000,000 The Elele registered 4,841 tons gross and was built at West Hartlepool in 1913, Shipping records give the Br fsb and African Steam Navi Company, Limited, of Liverpool, as her owners. The Leyland L and took out a cargo wor lon tered her some time ago for the Bos ton-European sery Two Americans shipped on the Elele in Boston r several memb t the crew had deserted we Thomas } " of No. 1 vit treet, Naugatuck r 1 aa of Bid rd, Me. ‘The » carried a crew f armed Reports to the a f Duteh steamer Hemdijki, whi I Q May 13 for I the Holland ¢ tails as to the sufet The Kemd va 4 for more ure to obtain the voyos: sel was bui rogistered than h yh Smile a Sun Norwestan Sit New York Kt The Norwegian steamship Ced a freight v f 1128 t register, w t New \ Ma for Liverpool ‘ y submaris celyed here to-u on Federal Porwar had her received and th Trondhjen WORLD TRAVEL BUREAU, ‘elephoue Beekinan 4000—Adri ROM BOSTON; FPORTED SAFE PRESIDENT CALLS FILL ARMY RANKS Fixes June 23 to 30 as Time For This Number of Vol- unteers to Appear. WASHINGTOD jae nt Wil . June 20,—Prest- Ison this afternoon issued the ! fol »wing proclanie ont” “L hereby designate the period | of June 23 to June 30 next as Re- | eruiting Week for the Regu and Upon unmarr nen between the ages of elghteen and f y years who have no de- pe my call who sults vitally nece t themselves for en ng the week herein to the number of war to pres design 000, Waebeay WILSON,” = U8, DESTROYERS “FOR 70000 MENTO 700 GIRLS REPORTED MISSING TO POLICE IN GREATER CITY IN LAST SIX MONTHS lSad Tragedy of Ruth Cruger Brings|Most of Those Who Left Their to Light an Disappearance tives and Friends. That the disappearance of girls even a commoner occurrence than ha to-day when a search of the rec: ning World revealed the police have been asked to find approximately 700 girls. The vast majority of those for were between fifteen and seventeey sought range from thirteen to thirty. ; S0ug! ge In bearing this amazing figure in mind It must be remembered that a |weneral alarm is not resorted to un- til a person has been missing at least twenty-four hours, so that none of these cases are simply stayed out over night. A great many of those reported missing have been restored to their parents and guardians, many more have re- turned home voluntartly—just many the police do not know, as in a lot of cases they are not notified of the return—but a great number 1ve vanished as completely as did ittle Ruth Cruger. MANY LEFT THEIR HOMES OF THEIR OWN ACCORD. A great of these girls veft home of their own accord, but even police are willing to admit that many of the number, especially the very young ones, are lt away, In many of the cases it 1s believed the many the ns of designing startling fact ords at Police Headquarters by The Eve Maude ©. No. 143 FOR RUTH CRUGER. ' it b Hive is ,|Tenth Ave Jan. « sie that since the first of the year the | *9 Togstead; Hacc tttl Ln a waa Sa “ifteen, No, 420|) E¥ery heart of man and woman whom a general alarm was sent out | Bast Seventy-ninth et, Jan. 18. goes deeply in sympathy for th : Rove Ace! 0. 117 Poary|| Cruwer family, and every tongue years old, though the ages of the Bre | Praises tho untiring efforts of the Baneroft, mv ‘on, | futher to, solve the mystery and an. 17, |} clear his child's name from sus- ¢ deere AE ee those of girls who! bow | Amazing List of Homes Ranged From 13 to 30— s Told of by Rela-' Brooklyn Leads in Number Re- | ported—12 Nations Represented. of Ruth Cruger’s age in this city is he ackie Novi wenty-alx, POPULAR FUND URGED TO ERECT MONUMENT as been generally believed was showi | 1207 | enue, “Bron picion. In this he succeeded, and Mrs. Humiston, with her able aids, haw accomplished something which has surprised the world. Thelr work, while in Ita origin @ private affair, has now assumed kreat public therefore, the terest; work accomplish both by the father and Mri dumiston, a @ great service td the community, and Lt now feve that t willing parties people a the to reimburse pnnectedan some way I suggest that your paper s\ic start a subscription pos yuld that pur and also over the » with the like this Ruth her I hope that thi approval, and if it will follow, The wri dealer ving In th of the Cruger family tu erect a monu- of Ruth on Some Cruger, men: Cruge thing died to save honor your joes ny cheek v is a news neighborhood sirls have fallen vi BENONI TASHJIAN men, either being held as prisoners or if free to return being ashamed | ¢ A study . F Jan. 16 LA RUE GIRL WHO FIGURES IN CRUGER MYSTERY sak Dane rationalitle presented | Rosie Sumner, thirteen, No, 86 Sia-| Man Inez Waldwin, sevent ft Niagara A few of t Ussing girls disap-| teenth Street, Brooklyn, Jan f Falls, Jan. 15, peared here w trom Schmidt, twenty-four, N Mary Co ) " Viola Gleen, sixtect Wost ciren clile t the remainder van n Road, Bronx, Jan \ One Hundred and Th eee eons be ie al : ' Morrison, twenty, No. 678 Wh So een, No. 1492 | Jan, 17 2 meee Saray ty venue, Ric 1 $1. Mark's Avenue, Broo Jan. 17 Hevodina Platte, seventeen, No. 33 Make Hundred-Mile Dash to, vorous Brooklyn leads the list inj patios Reux, twentyesix, Ne. 644| Mose Sitzen, fourteer 17 Mienel| Lawton Mitre, Mrockivn, Jan 80 Se ick U 2 this resp’ |Ninth Avenue, Jan. 4 |#" cor, Hrooklvn, Jan. 17 Stasia Ploninaky, sixteen, No, 342 ee to F ick Up the | Every case has its own little story |" Pautine White, thirteen, No. 37 West) Tenrletta Sullivan, twenty-four, No./Twenty-ninth Street, Brooklyn, Jan Survivors, Iaany of them, so far as those still |wiirty-sixth Street, Jan 724 Prospect Place, Jan, 2 | Dora Brunsman, twenty, No. | ——— {unaccounted for, tell of heartbroken] Mary Clark, fourteen, No, 338 East| Mary Grasso, seventeen, No. 186 For-| West Ninety-aixth Street, Jan | eo , 7 . | parents, calling up the Bureau of| Thirty-second Street, Jan. 1 13. Elizabeth Anderson, twenty No. | THE BASE OF THE AMERICAN |X osing Persons day after day in the| Kitty Cohen, seventeen, No. 881 Kelly Iman, #tehteen, No, 10° |204 East Thirty-seventh Street, Jan. 23. | |FLOTILLA IN BRITISH WATERS, | hope that some trace of the lost one |Street, Bronx, Jan. 6 Forty-firat Street, Jan, 14. | Emma Cornell, sixteen, No Six: | us vi 201 East One Gla¢ od) rteen, No. 427 Bast | thet Brooklyn, Jan lune S<3wo Amerioan dears: iaay have been found, Women too| Anna Uva, sixteen, No. 301 East On adys Bodie, thirteen, No, 427 Bast |tieth ; Sa bt en Ha ARNESON: NOLEAYOER | mnAY HAY dap calls or car- | Hundred and Fourteenth Street, Jan. 9%. (ne 4 and Sixty-Afth 8 ov, nineteen, of Albany [have returned here with elghty aur-|poor to pay telephone calls or care | Mitte tet Bette rete Went | ie vivors of two torpedoed British ships, | ft@ trudge to One Hundred and Twenty-seventh, Mary Caldadrone, seventeen, No. 99! Jennie Goldberg. eighteen, of Malder Pia ‘ghit e sunk at tt | parts of th and beg the Syt- | street, Jan. © Ulizabeth Street, Jan. 6 Mass, Jan, 11 7 nips wer nk at the farthest | pathe ) » redouble e Pasolanto, sixteen, No. 421, Celia German, twenty-two, Ne Margaret Kerrigan, seve > point westward in the Atlantic thel morta a r rn iindieh ane Pou t One Hundred and Twelfth Street, (West Sixtcenth Street, Jan. 14 U oats have appeared since the| 1, 4 t the | Street J 1 n Costello, thirty, No West ness campaign began, th Jisappearat Is as been| Ruth Varrell, eighteen, No. 6803 Fi Grace Btitznagel, nineteen, No. 934|Twenty-Afth Street, Ja ; ponne the American as remarkable as yf Ruth Cra- | Avenue, averly Place, Richmond Hill, Jan eo Wasgenhe ‘ penahes : A large nu hem haye| Mamte No. 189 Or- | 99, oh : ™ homes, KoiNg to neigh. | n, No, 16 Goerck One Hundred and Forty-third | antes Avenue, Brooklyn. : ' , poring es on Hs and never an xteen, No. 18 A — be nase | Weet One Hundred and 1 nid k, 8 ave | 168! nue A, Jan . K ? t Jan, 26 ‘iors iW seeding iva fOP Mo: nirteer tronica Hayne, nineteen, No. 718 et Cw § v P wide we arch end in| West Sixt ent eet. Jan. 8 atur Street, Brooklyn, Jan. 19 |? er iy 1 thirty in number, | rajlure Ida M. Satler, eighteen, No. 124 W ee } F McLaughlin, — tw ight si found ane oat, while LIST OF GIRLS AND WOMEN|One Hundred and Twenty-seventis ty * 2 ony een, No, a f i. i. 1, Je : ce ooklyn, Jar Mary Ba x 8 * from the second | WHO WERE REPORTED MISSING, | Street, Jan 1509 Central, isle Carlson, nineteen, No. 159] gtpeet, Jan. 24 ip were picked up from two small Sika In ae ME. OF Birla’ anal Ses? | en, No, 159 Central Pay aera 4 é i Four from | lone ; | Avenue, Brooklyn, Jan. 11 d y ue, Brooklyn, Nov.| Clementine Jones, fou 3 4 SPe Bie, DOERR | women IO) @ Jan, 2 been)” Alice Connors, fourteen, No. 119 Chri . One Mundred and Twenty-sixth ‘ explosion of | reported inst laaee Drie Stella Larznisky, seve ai canks Tan: ae : Mar pinta ¢ irtwen, No! Mae Cump, sixteen, No. 483 Amater- | Mast Seventy-second a Herman, fifte 214 > — § Bast Thirty nd Jan 1. Laan Avenue, Jun, 6 1a Gugitetmo, aixteen tt meaanion, 7 > MAN ID abel Boregurtz pL AG WT] Ruch Ooch, touribon: Sa: tba /Amals ee read. i AS SLAYER OF PAYMASTER =)" 060020004 rivet rankvm sea ws Maar . } Suckman st Brooklyn ee. N Lund 7 \ 4 Forty : I ; —~ f ; Elizabeth Sempe eer en Jar Kugene 1 Park aa Boone Ay Jan. 1 Barrett, tw lad \ ‘ \ i Ls ee ii i ‘ \ \ 4| Pleasant A Kiotow irteen ‘ 1 \ jund Rose firme e ) 1 urd, Q Pron 44g | BHok A . on 4 ‘ : F Marsaret | f . A , y ‘ Sih a A 1 and ¥ f . \ W Cauly Minorey,| Sadie I No. 242| Flore Whitton, thirtee Avenue, Jan ~- une N. J. Rich Com-| East Twer evt, Jun |Hast One Hundred and Kian . Dora Browman, twenty, No 920 West| DUP YOUR py sre pany of that city | gilan Callahan, seventeen, |Jan, 15. th Street, Jan, 23. . a Joba's Medicine, —Advt, Oy INQUIRY INTO WHITE SLAVERY IS COMBINED WITH SEARCH FOR POLIGE FORCE BUNGLERS ‘Revelation Regarding 700 Disap- pearances of Girls Brings Reor- ganization of Missing Persons, Bureau—To Dig Up More Cellars. WIFE TELLS OF COCCHT'S ATI ENTIONS TO GIRLS The Ruth Cruger murder, the assertions of Mrs. Grace Humiston, who found Miss Cruger's body, that there is organized white slave traffic in New York which is responsible for many murders and the astounding revelation taken from official records that 700 yourig yirls—about five a day—have disappeared in this city since the first of the year were all turned over by Commissioner Woods to Inspector Faurot to-day for special investigation and report, Faurot has been detached from all other duty. His authority in the investigation is unlimited and he can have all the men and money he vant he received his orders he began to assemble his special More than a dozen veteran detectives who have had wide experi- ence in homicide investigations were soon gathered as the nucleus of the As soon as statt new organization, Inspector Faurot ts to investigate not only the Ruth Cruger murder but every phase of the police Investigation of that crime. He ts to discover anit Teport the reason why Alfredo Coechi, the only suspect in the Cruger ea: Was allowed to escape, His orders are to spare nobody, and he has chosen ALLN. REGIMENTS ~ TOBENCLUDED IN ere promises Investigation a branch of ice activity which will be devoted usively to a search for young girls Who disappear from their homes. This work has been in the hands of the Bureau of Missing Persons, and it has been discovered that the staff of that Bureau has been utterly inade- quate, Nothing like @ thorough tn: vestigation could be made of any case. National Guard| WOMEN DETECTIVES TO HELP York State, This; IN NEW WORK, tho Faurot o RI ow exe Those Who Saw Service Border to Go to France as a Tactical Unit. at) When President Wilson's call for mobilization on July 15 is sent out, it will include every regiment In New wie ‘ta 4 to-day on very good au-| The bureau, under Acting Capt. ; Division Headquarters in| G?@nt Williams, is to be enlarged, ree Nidice heen | Pe missing girl question is golng to pal Building, It had been) become a branch of specialised believed all along that only the Sixth! police we Incidentally the white 1 ; aw service slave traffic allegations of Mra. a Snilia Humiston will be looked into by fe- R Pe se ; male as well as male detectives Sitid to ue ith cha mun ec r an Robert 1, Moran 2 Caaea a fue’ catnteen | 8 Hoard of Aldermen is arrang g for a@ ¢ » with District ; ji astiaual & Swann, at which will be ingen a tit SV discussed t dvisability of an Al- ct dl Si ci the First manic investigation of the Police ; sbi Mae her Department's sleuthing methods, ou l it was unofficially learned at raps Rp District Attorney's office by Alder men that if they @ in earnest in Division, w to Investigate the Police y if ha es ¥ + ved Ped e , @ raft of information ve aa SPEAHIRALLM ET GREE by Mr, Swann and &! ee TEHLAGI ER will be quickly placed at Pip sareess Lett sal, “It was said at City a ar + | that ff the aldermen begin dig- bird Wield t é ; to certain phases of police Thi apa souren Vii Seaelh af ero is @ likelihood of the in- rir svat piaattet oii dl Aone yi surpassing the Curran inves regi: CELLARS OF coccHl's FORME s ee Q Sixty SHOPS TO BE DUG UP, Tw ity-tirs T ars of repair shops oceu- t t and Seventy-| pied by Coech ore he locatad in West One Hundred and Twenty. " Q t will be dug up with- Fo y in a search for possible -> vi other than Ruth Cruger, MST QUENCHER | Lieut. O'Brien of the Department of eg to ry i elece| Repairs and Supplies has been as- SO " sic * bute, signed by Anspector Faurot te take | (ee a ae ne a a a ee RY ee

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