Of
Russian-Jewish origin, Pearl Adler was the eldest of nine children of Gertrude Koval and Morris Adler, a tailor who travelled throughout Europe on business. Her early education was from the village
rabbi. The family lived at
Yanow, a city of
Imperial Russia, (later in western
Belarus) near the
Polish border. When Adler was thirteen, her parents sent her with a cousin to the United States to avoid the gathering wave of
pogroms. Halfway through the journey, her cousin decided to turn back home, leaving Adler on her own.
World War I prevented the rest of her family from immigrating to the U.S. until after the end of the war. The war also prevented her from receiving the monthly allowance sent by her father. In the U.S., she lived for a time with friends of her family in
Springfield, Massachusetts, where she cleaned house and attended school and, at age 14, began working in the local paper mill. The following year she moved to
Brooklyn, where she lived for a time with cousins. Ostracized by her cousins, she moved to Manhattan and continued working in a factory. At 19, she began to enjoy the company of theater people in
Manhattan, and shared an apartment with an actress and
showgirl on
Riverside Drive in New York City. The street was known among
Yiddish speakers as "Allrightnik’s Row", suggesting that its residents had "made it". Her new friends were involved in
vaudeville,
Broadway revues,
Tin Pan Alley,
burlesque, and the sleazy
underbelly of show business. They gave her the nickname "Polly." It was at this apartment in 1920 that Adler was introduced to Nicolas Montana, whose business was
procuring women to work in
brothels. Montana set her up in a furnished, two-room apartment across from
Columbia University, where she soon began to procure prostitutes for Montana and his friends, earning $100 a week. One evening, Adler was arrested and charged with procuring, but the case was dismissed for lack of evidence. After a brief attempt to run a lingerie shop, she returned to prostitution, determined this time to succeed in it. She made a point of befriending the police, slipping a $100 bill into a cop's palm whenever she shook his hand. ==Bordello owner==