urffncwwiBTiMwrMBPiMMiiai i iWiHMMBwnwig i n ii 1 111 naw:BianmaiiBiHnn'MHHiH'i KJU' ?WfW7W ti'-5 iFvsyJPV. wrwam 1 " - - - ' .vr-.r- - i ,,, ,-,f .TVf . BVBNINa PtmiitO MlBIl-WtejABOTiPritA: TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 2. 1922 BRANDED CHRISTIAN GIRLS IN TURK HAREMS Vf K' BEAR TOR TURE FOR FAITH LIKE EARL Y MAR TYR A raw .wyjk xw wms w ttii"W wi f. iw ' wTTe .: 'vwn:i rpvritv7ir-itmpMiui lm. jw mii MjummmammBBF, wafw .hhjihuuwhm j mi j BBBBBBBjrrav:OT Cress Burned Upen Their Bodies Fails te Make Them Turn te Moslem Religion HOT IRON AND W HIP FOR OBSTINATE ONES Thousands of Captives Still Held at Mercy of Brutal Masters I $ -Ml I I ! i . , ...M I NO LESS brave than the martyrs who wcre stoned and burned te death ', ages age; no less stoical than the early Christians forced Inte the arena te awnit deatn by liens or tigers' claws; even mere tragic than they an the Christian girls taken uwny te the Turkish harems, who buffer daily tortures rather than renounce their faith and become Moslems. Treated with less consideration than the dega which belong te a Turkish household, and bearing the sjmbel of their faith which has been tamed into their skins by the torture of the branding iron, these girls I wait day alter day uciuna tue cieteiy latticed windows of the harem. Day by day and week by week of monotonous, idle existence broken wly by the sharp pain of beatings and ill treatment and the faint raya of t hope that they may be rescued. But while thousands of these girls Bvc been taken from the harems and placed in rcecuc .-.latiens, Ihuti lands mere arc still in captivity. "Anything they wanted would be given te them if they would vc vc eunce Christianity," raid Mrs. Pearl Larsen, who, after spending Ue years in Asia Miner doing med ical work in rescue stations, is new is Philadelphia. "We rescued thousands of girl.'', and tkeujh we have lercn rcscue stations ntabllshed new, there Hre litcinlly theasanrln of ether Christian girls wbe lave born carried by the Turki into tieir barcins and whom we have net rem able te rescue," she said, "and . Biny mere stations are needed." The Turkish women knew nothing the but the life of the hnrem, Mr. I Larsen said, but een te thcra It q u , drab, ini'frable c.ltcnce. Unhappy they would tell her thnt she would net he Injure.) ji ny mere if the would be come n Moslem, but she lefused, and le mock and scorn her they put the sign of the cress upon her, and upon her forehead the Mai of the owner of the harem te denote possession. "There wan another girl be beau tiful, se charming, with such shy dig nity that !.hr reminded jeu of a little I'risellla. Pilotzeu was cupturcd when she was ut the lhipbrutrs Scheel at J llarpoet ami taken into the meuutnins, I where she Has compelled te live for two! and a half jenrs. j "Hera is one of the many remarkable ' BjVAV '40 ' ?x' VAT bbE .BBBBBkV v BBjW .mmmmmmmmmm. . '"' TsaBBBBBBBBaav aaaaaaaaBaaaaaaaaaaaaallBaaaaBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaBaVM&f T. MaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaawM m3BTZt IIh iBb HHaKHHHI 1 V u K.. FBV h Urns Jimi i r----Bb u.v--an 'y- iv&i .. ... - " .. A..n Bu s v aBBaV- ' aMK;.v jaUl urKun narvma -Him - Hundreds of Them, Darin$ Death, Manage te Flee Frem Bendage FREEZE AND STARVE x IN MOUNTAIN WILDS American Flag Is Best Pre tectien and Many Seek I Its Shelter return of a Chiluthn girl who hnd It h the dulj of the Turkl&h rrlre i escaped frrjm hie harem. I brought ue that the fhrlstlan girls de net ta the Rlrl. but hnfere her I plu-'cd an , W,,H, frum the harrms, and If they ( American Q-tg. "Jnke her, If pu dnre, the wrath of ihn M-iirL- u nmire.l forth .! I catrl ...1 ...if..' ., ' ' en mem. t from thin protection,' I said, and with out a word the officer turned and gave the order for his soldiers te go away. "Jt is a very difficult matter te es cape from the harems,'' Mr.-.. Alrpoed said. "Wiills eeen te nine feet hich ctirreund them, and a Rtiard 1j con stantly en duty at the Kate. In the wealthier homes Hare me two guards oeo for the tj.iy and one for the night liut in the poorer home there ii only one, and he h.i a little chelter iirnr the wall where he f-leep-j. BitH of glas.-, brush and an exchanging ledge mule it almost impossible te set ever the wall. "But a fhrittlan girl Is always ready te help nnetb'r ecape and elIlC' times by forming human hdders or making repm of bed clothing they ruau. age tn get, sway. It , alwjjs danger- Mra. Helen Alrgoed, Camden adtoel teadteT. who directed the rescue wmk among Cltristian girla in urnian UHrmi Above Christian girl stolen by the Turks. Kclew Armenian girl, rescued from Turkish harem, hack in nntic costume I K I ' SDlte e I Vv able u i Vv lieu. 7 XSJ" y ceu,d s -O In the I tJHiL 'if f - j? VsB. ;X 'sJii 'i ' jr 7 ' f'W'' ''3Sfr,sSa- y - - ' .Vl' C S&ataa V V , t ' v K.?mMmz, &! t v Armenian girl branded b the Turks with the sign of the cress and with marks denoting Turkish ownership Mrs. Pearl Larsen, medical worker in the orphanage at Harpoot, who telln tery of atiecities by the Turks in branding Christian women who refuse te accept the Moslem faith Harem girl protected from public by traditional Turkish charf g.uc caus of the jealousy which exlsti among the different wivcj of the lord 'i master of the harem, they ipewl ""efc of their time quarreling and Wangling: their bauds and minds al- ''ays idle; prneUns Innumeruble eic- arettea and closely eenliued In the JBn of the harem and the muil. Their weekly vhlt te the Vith l.t their e"l diversion. Average Harem Unlike these Seen in Meuiva The harem ittelf is far fnmi bring a Plioe of beauty. 'The waving plumes, neb brocade, Plashing fountains, and glistening 'Iks are teen only in the movies," jailed rr. Larsen. "I don't think "! Is a barcm een iu the Sultan's M'aee which would approach a merie rem le beeuty. The onus I ww were aw and uncomfortable looking the n V ornaments of auy color and beauty being the ruin en Mm mill nml (lie L'ublena scattered around. "Th r-i..:..i ,.... , , .- vmiBiiuu yiru nre iniccii 10 r" Turklnh Kariueni-the diiirf - ""! the el1 ! I. ...,!. I..,.., i... ,.,!.., ;i - " ii'ti'jiMir I iVHi'in' '"1 UOt CU'll rich in lextiire. One of the girls we icscued Odd us M fOr AAVPtl flllVU kh. HUH A.,1 - BUU OKI """ til T!!? terturea of being bxaudtd Ik: " 07 ustu tn dean ci m mmmtu Mm w fWbrtl and almost unbelleable escapes." said lis. Larsen. O'irls Made a Human Ladder (or Her Escape 1 "The girls formed u human ladder, ami Pilotzeo climbed te the top uud get , ,i.rr Ihn u.alt. Hilt IhCTB hhe WHS In .the mountains. It was cold. She had 1 iicj shelter, no feed, una little clothing. i Ter weeks she reamed the mountains, llWng almost like a little animal, bur lowing Inte the brush, and biding j among the rocks. Sha did net dnrn te truwd in dajtima lest ehe be reeup- tured, se she bid when ir was ngnt and waited till darkuess cams before she Hcd further away down tbe moun tains. "At last aha found her way te the rescue station at Harpoot and we took ber In there. She was only fifteen when we rescued ber she had been captured when she was Just about twelre, "Her family, with the exception of her ulster, wbe was a lovely looking ns she. bad nil been killed In the mas sacre and she was left Blene. A mis mis Menaiy and his ll adopted her sis I or just bclern PiloUeo was captured, and (neught ber te America, where abe Is new attending one of the larga cel- leges. JBHTm A WmW-i 'A iiJ n t ' MWmm s yB"' VBMI .VlMflv' .', BBS ti''l.iK AyBrS ''viB"':-iiPBABBBl ''tMaf TaV'KStl '' BBHBTbT"- V 's iB w 'BB wBBJV BBBk. - iBBBn JP -t'4-I' ini w i avbb 4 s u BcBv jl QIbbbbI JiKi f i bVwbbbIb m vKSi s( . i. JL j V m mA ''idBv BB9Btf! k i'-BJaB; jBJBJbVhBBBBBBF j JtBbBBbV fm anflaWBBBBBK'BBBBxa i,iiiiii..,.iiiiifiiiii I, I, r MiiTrTi-i-jiKjaMM w MaiaaiMaMii-fc-ii"i Native Armenians, captured by Turks two days after this picture was taken S&tvSsSSG rtocue station for ber, and when she read of her pretty clothes, and tbe In teresting thine t4i" was doing and see ing, I'ilotzeo would shnkn her bend und fay, "I am hapPJ ,ew I'0' T am free, nij, 'I nm b.il'IO new that I am liee. things, I de net cute fur thuse.' "My intetpreler was it little Arme nian girl wbe was born iu America. Hrr father hud made money In this country and leturned with bis family lust UfaM the war whea Salraeubb an orphan and after many mentha she escaped. I found her en tbe atreats of Mulatia, exhausted, almost starving, half fainting, and I took her te the ren'im elation, and from that time en sin heinme m guide and I n I m pi , t -i silie w.im iin ilewr .is she itiuld be, und spoke seeial iungimgrs. Speechless at Thought That Rescue Was Near mn4mtUil lf T wnililll ! B3WW "jjaerbar tlrl ' BBBlBjB; wBB I $& flvtt iSt! Ifje In Caeaarra. She wns captured by a Turk and held for three years. H was the merest luek that we managed te reifue her A party of relief work- ,r-va going te Vignrd, Investigating , Christian iiiiiens en the win This fill he as luirdh mere ihnu s child heard the noihe et the autoinebile ,i sound se curious, se new aim strange, us she told us afterward, that she thought something must be about sua an f br- hope, dn' a!mnt imbear- geny of suspense , ulie was help- Even ber voice left her. She net cry out. One of the women party succeeded In bribing the gate-keeper te let ber In, and there she found this girl, swaying us she steed In tbe courtyard, her arms cut stretched, but her elee silent Hhe teuld net even er When the wonder ful fact of her rcsrue was assured, tb three years waiting and longing had aliim-'t made Iiw i'i' ip ibb et" bellnm K. "She hud letn told that h-r fam.l, bad been killed, all th'' Nrmeimins I driven out of the counte, and tint i there was no hope of ber put esmping from the harem. i "W hen we took ut ulth us we found , that obe could epenk Knglish, and we asked her hew U was that after all these ears uway from any IlnglHb. speaking peoples or TnglNh Inllurnec, she stilt remembered tia Hnguage she had learned iu school At d " Iuihm i it te us. Phe said that nft-i ' li' weuh' beat her and terture ber, of en for bems , lit a time, che would taLu a 'iUlc liiblc which she managed te cou.eal in tlve felda of her buruks and whisper tbe Knglisb verses ercr and ever te k r salf." Mra. Helen Alrgoed, M40 Media street, who has been teaching Treneh In the Camden High Scheel tluce her return from Harpoot, where the web In charge of a rescue station, alvi told of the wmk being done te free the girl from the hnn m- nil ' 1 he teod vas plated ou a carved bi i-j tray which ie.-ted en a low atoeL I A spoon was the only tableware w the bundle being of carved iTery i.i cry our am out Ot IMS ninch the eldest seu brought te bapMS. 8b bad never sti SafSataLAaM aaiaau ' American Flag Heat Protection for Girls "The Turks are afraid of Amene.i, and have the greatest reaped for the American Sag," sha aaJd. "One day a TurHaa afloat wltfc tAaaa aekUars aaaaa h aaillM aaat algmaM eij 1 rea i" deiectien means almost certain death 1 lune sen gnls tti Mich agony of fear that the wcill fniut even at the sight of a 'PurVi h efilcer patflng by the rrfcuc home wht.- they were quite eafc. "Turks In the Interior are almost a hw unto themselves," rbe said, "aii'l we found thnt at n place about fuiii' miles fi'iin where e eaablihcd n res cue stutien thnt the nath.'s had net heard ceu that the Ani'iuan n li : w inkers wen1 there, Tin -pm i le i-'datfd t list in us of tltr mitide weii'l seiiiem ptuetratiu. uiieu we get te the e'ty we wtre ferbiddm te 'peak te tn of the wi men, but through j r.- r...i. ti. -. ,- .- . l . it. jt'jiii i iiruiujrp, imii" "I idc HO' "Ini I I i, ,,i villi our outfit ie get m teijeli villi or -lull many of the Christians lone howl "The Turks dn!ik te hate men ph. , " "l,b '"ch ' "f"1""? nod dignity. siciani attend iheii women, and ,:ltidl ( H'lfCS Eut After aceepted Dr I'armulee's offer te treat i Husbattd Is Through tee women in i',' M'ince ler nothing J'ln worn, ii l Ite.i lier uti. ,it 1 hi , nil J she Ir. lined tlirr siems an I m weie able te aid tn nn of i In in Wives in Interior Cheap at 10 Cents "Once when u roan bteught IiIj wife tn a relief station t he treated and was told that It would cost him ?1 1 for the operation he ehrugged his shoul ders ntid said lit great wonder, 'Why should I pay $14 te save u wife when I can buy another for fertr cents'''" "When a Christian glil escape, the Turks nlwii.tt tn te gi i in r ba I a lib d Mt l.nr mi ' t lite mini ..i ul mam mi s-i ugi h in a i IniMian gnl .I'-I.mg (liiit -he t ft it i ti te Ins linrem but she ltd used At lat he si'itt cm of bis Turkish wics with the Christian I around rrt always kept In tiiirnin during eul- l.e ed a 'lurk if bis pirintttd te tbarr I'he women lie ir m pa' " i i llnrt I w in ii ight net the meal with u " 'Oh' nd n that your custom In AincrleaV he asked." " 'es,' I said 'The women always eat with the men in my country.' ',' "re as a great concession lie par mined his ulws te come in and aat some fruit with us, but they remataed standing und were net allowed te alt down i "If Turk takes his women te thn fields, in. him in the shade under au umbrilbi while thev weik, nnd in caa one et tliem-a t'hri-llnii girl tries t eMiipi 'Ii i I'l'iiieJn bai k mid chain i'i '" a iij"ii und I'liinpillcd te slnj thi'i until tin i ,ii I i i.iue, le take 1 Ii flu bai l lieini 'tin 'I mi i Ii i urn it mi. JuHt Ilka elnldiiii when tin i tun amused. Th leugh and clap their hands uud sklb w one baraaa I lemeinher glrra baby te plead for her return, but S04vWJltl(, ta,?J1, wa Ul Lara aha anlm aanllrf that A mU .""""..""."."" n. i: i . rr, Lrr r r.. .":" e iaw go eacx na ler caa aaia n ua ewid. "Divorce Is mch a simple pfeeeaa with thorn, ' she continued. "AU ft Turk- has le de is te caj , 'Leave mV house,' or. without even speaking, brlnf the slippers of his wife and place tbenf In front of her, nnd she is compelled tJ go b.n k tn her own home. If he repoeta of his 'dherce' he cannot bring tbe' woman huek until after she hua baeti nmrried le another man. Then it li all right for him te take another man's wife baek te his harem, but net big own diwireed wife! n , "Ien the tioerer ebis.-es of Turks haf taken the Christian girls into tbelr harems, tine camel entitles a man tfe two wives, iici-erdiiig le their cede, j have teen l hrlstlan girla bciug sold If the tuarket places," she said. "W tacd many of them, but tbcre wera many we were belple te aid. J 1 "The rescue, stations nre usually col lege buildings we have taken ever,' said Mrs. Larsen. "Wc had about 000 'girls at Harpoot. They lived thesi 1 nil the time, of course. Seme of thei taught in our orphanage. Others dip the cooking and tbe housework. Bi(t tLcy all had work of some kind te de a whatever they bad been accustomed te doing. If it was weaving or hand hand eorkmany of them de exquislte hand.' hand.' werkthey de that. That ie tbe differ," ence between the Armenian and Turk ish women. The Armenian woman al ways weike, nttd the Turkish webm& never deeH if i,hc can avoid It. I Weekly Bath Really I Ceremony for Turks I "The Turkish weman'c enlr form it t recreation is her visit te the hatha ones a week. 'I he:c baths ere dirty anil , dark, net beautiful at nil, as we arc accustomed te picture them. Tbe baths i last irtuallj all dey; tbe women pour 1 ing the water, which sprays continn centinn , ally, evir their bodies, always pouring from the top of the head. They thlnic we nre very uncleau because wc bathe in water which i- net running. Tfcey 'ie en the het atones, and then they will bathe again "The richer Turki semi their women iu carriages: the poorer class are com pelled te walk. U ia reully u ceremony a sort of parade this going te the baths. The Turks tuke great pride In decorating their women with all sorts of jewelry and ernaincntv all of which an- ictited Thetn nre stores for that purpose, uud ence the women are safely buck in the harem the Jewelry is strip ped from them and returned te tha renter, liracelets, anklets, chains the women are almost covered with then, but few of them are valuable they arr I just bits of rolered etenes aud chains j of brass;. , "We weie aln.ivs treated with tba gtniesi cetirtfsj when wc visited in Turkish home!," r!.,d Mrc Larsea. "but the women were never permitted te apptar. The hied of the beuse acted iu our gracious heM, and the eldest "ii served us the meal. There were often twelve courier and the greatest Itgnity and ceremeuv was observed. I from the terving of the toffee and" he mined "the offering of cigarette ihe minute we get in the house te the I serving of the last course of fruit. The I oe flee was brought in tups of 'Dngine' j of thniist china with silver and brenrs hoi I'-ri. nd they eat cucumbers just a- in would a banana only skill aud her Ufa ride la as an t sha weula chr tern yagga V; 1 . " A - ftW 4 m, i - 'i'. A..