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HowScier Tattooed bj Heartless Ms a Living Syn Owneri #«* I Religion N Abakiam, On . I Few Survivor I "" Armenian <«* [\ ^Massacres, Is ^Freed of Her t r 1 rliaeous v rvu ^ .. jLsisxig urc men to fby American r. *? p| **odUV*Durdeons # m* KMMfcjK«' y<»IFTY thousand Christian girls, held captive now In Moslem harems in * Asiatic Turkey and In the desert tents of Arabs and Circassians in the * 'Syrian desert, suddenly have been given hopes of freedom and happiness by the \ success of a remarkable scientific experl! ment Just concluded in this country. These young women, nearly all of them between the ages of fifteen and twenty years, were captured by the Turks, Arabs, Circassians and Kurds during the Armenian massacres. The majority of them are Armenian girls and were the moat beautiful of their people. Kept by the tribal chiefs who captured them, because of their exceptional beauty, for their own harems, they were branded, according to Arab and Kurd custom, by the terrible practice of tattooing which these tribes have employed upon their Christian concubines for time , immemorial. Imbedded in flesh and skin with secret * Inks made from Oriental herbs, these J firead tatoo marks always have been int dellible.none of the usual methods employed for the removal of modern tatoolng * have been successful in erasing these marks of shame. The young girl thus marked has been doomed to go through Hfe branded as th« property of her master, Or her master's tribe, much the same as X the horses on the western plains are J. branded with the marks of the ranch to which theyN belong. Z As a result of the Armenian massacres * so many young women were marked with > the tattooed brands of their owners that oolonoo thrftiiffhnnt thfi Phristiftn world found Itself confronted with the human!J tarinn task of discovering some way these ^ unknown Oriental inks, used for centuries Z "by the desert tribesmen, might be removed from the tender faces disfigured by them. >- Otherwise there remained no hope that £ these young women, stolen from their families, might escape some day from their croel bondage. For should they attempt cscape, and even get beyond the clutches of their masters, their horrid markings would bar them from all happiness In the ' world at large. Since long before the armistice sclen; tists in America, spurred by the plight of w these Christian girls, sought the hitherto * unknown method of eradicating the tatooed ; brands. Harvard University was the leader among the great institutions which conducted experiments and investigations. At last success seemed to be promised the board of scientists employed by the university to solve the humanitarian problem, and a commission of these scientists was sent to Asia, seeking there a subject upon whom their new discoveries might be practiced. Even this preliminary task was hard, however, as no young woman thus branded had succeeded in making her way across the desert or through the Moslem cities along the highways, after escaping from the harem where she had been imprisoned, without being caught, her ownership recitgnlzed by her brands, and sent back to be punished.scourged to death, perhaps. Strange as it may Beem, the subject needed for a scientific demonstration of what the scientists believed would save these Christian girls from the scars of their unavoidable shame, eventually was discovered, not in her native land, but in New York City. This was little Narglg Avsklan, eighteen years old, the beautiful daughter of a rich Armenian family of fllvas, who had been driven from her home when the Turks deported her people In 1&15, and sent with her father and mother and brothers and 4f_ ice Geans r Her ister as . abol of ship and e of the the Nargig as Shm S«- II form thm Brand* Warm by Thm Arrow" Arm Shown Botwmmn Hmr Eymm and Bmnmath Hmr Lowmr Lip. i At Each Cornor of Hor Mouth / thm Brand of Hor Matter' a Tribm Botwmmn thm Tribal .J- i~ iL. r;.. Blotch » of F ur pi o Which Stand for Fivt V Daily Prayort of liltun. W,; Thm Data Undor Hmr Chin Aro S y mb o I L Which Only tho Araba 1 of Hot Tribe Can V Translate. \ 4 i.> >v. 1 , v^9|^HHPR^^| ^ *^T sisters Into the desert. Nargig had been the belle of all Slvas. She bad been educated In Constantinople, and was known throughout the city for her proficiency In music, needlework, and for her deiAurenesa and captivating charm. Many times the Turkish governors had cast covetous eyes upon her, but her father was very rich and powerful among the Armenians and she was safe then from Turkish persecution. When the massacres were ordered, however, her's was one of the first homes descended upon. All her father's property was confiscated and he was turned out, j with his family, penniless, and sent upon ( the long walk into exile. After many days of wanderings, during which her mother died from exposure and her father was killed by a Turkish Zaptieh, , Nargig was stolen one night by a band of Kurds. They now were in the Arabian desert, and after a time the beautiful girl was sold, for three horses, to an Arab chieftain, the Sheikh Tashln Melaz. whose trilie had come from the south to harrass 1 the deported Armenians. I The Sheikh Tashin took Nargig, with , 1 others of his prettiest captives, to the city < of Urfa, at the edge of the desert. Here f he put her up for sale In the slave markets of that Moslem city. She was bought by < a wealthy Arab, Abou Seraldz, who lived I with a band of followers Just outsjde the I city. Abou took her to his harem and com- ' polled her to submit to concubinage. 1 It was by the orders of her master. Abou, I that she was tattooed Abou declared his 1 IlkInK for her and gave ordrrs that she be i branded with the distinguishing marks of i 9 » :^:i v iNHMMi r "fm h^ > M i M l ^ >mj ^ J1 1 M Hfy | |\ i j J. ait b| V J #\' v^B >^y j v. H B J Here Are the Four Proceaaei (1) Th* FImK Wm KnswAd with Separated from Ike Muscles Brnea Medicated Solution, and (3) Cora Surface and Cause the Surfaca Fli of Suppuration Were Kept Tightly (4)New Flesh and Skin Grew W Only Pal* Pink Tint* Which R*aa Disappeared Completely in from I Comi hin tribe, go that If she should run away she would be recognized any place on the Arabian or Syrian deserts, where the Arabs and Kurds roam, as belonging to tils particular tribe. It Is one of the un- nrlten laws of the Kurds and Arabs to return to each other runaway slave girls. Accordingly, one morning, before the sun rose, Narglg was dragged from her couch In the harem and taken outaidc. Three if her master's tribesmen held her face to he East, where the first glints of the sun < night fall upon her. according to the anient Arabian custom when branding l ilaves. I One of her captors had within a little ^arthen bucket. In which had been ml*ed 1 ho strange Inks made from herbs and .1 grasses, the secret of which the clvlllied 1 .vorld never has learned Another captor < leld In his hand a long, cruel needle of < ismmered steel. The third bound her feet i hat she might be easily held and pre- < rented from squirming too much In her t igonles. i (C) 10?0. Intrrnatlon*) Feature fkervk*. lac. CrueTTur ^'K >; ;> H|^ ;1 V K r ^>^3^it s ( " ? | ^^ mr*** + flrl^9M^ .iMuiMi aHBaE i of the Removal of the Tattoo Skilled Hand* to That the Skin Wat th; Than (2) the Face Bathed with a ipretie* Which Draw the Ink* to the *h and Skin to Diitolve in a Procesi Bandaged Around the Face for Weeka. here the Old Wai Dioohred Leaving mbled Exce*tive Sunburn* and Which Two to Four Week*, Leaving Nargig ily a* Ever. Just an the first ray of the gun fell upon the party the Arab who brandished the cruel needle sank It Into the poor girl's skin between her eyebrows. She screamed and struggled and begged for mercy, but with the precision of a clock's ticking the needle rose and fell, penetrated with each downward *'i>ke far beneath the skin, into the flesh, and leaving behind It the indellible purple stain whiclj, so far as sclpnee had known since the beginning of Arabian history, could never be removed. Between the girl's eyebrows the needle made a crude arrow of little dots. The »rrow pointed upward."to guide the girl's Future thoughts to Mohammed." Below her lower lip a similar arrow, also pointed upward, "was formed, that "her spoken words might be wafted abore with reversnee to the Prophet." Around the edge [>f her lower lip Ave purple blotches were placed to represent the Ave dally prayers r>f Islam, The hieroglyphic representing Ihe special prayer of her master's trlbo was pricked Into each temple, and the Ure»t Britain Right* 1 PTJKT ' < k's Brand m m / \ 1 « /tt t' ^r "While one cruel Arab held face to the east, a third burie< hot needle bearing the secret first ray* of the morning sun mailta were mad*.an arrow spee< I "The Slave Market" .The Famous jmWxv JP J > ' B^p[^®P''<2i^ v mmsmmmm slave girl brand of the tribe was drawn, with the needle heated to a red heat bo the dots would form a seared line, in the flesh at each corner of her mouth. Other dots in symbolic design were pricked into other parts of her face and across her body, reaching from her throat to below her waist, the needle fixing a series of symbols, each signifying a verse from the Koran. These were variations of the tattooing to which the other thousands of Christian girl captives throughout Syria and Arabia were subjected by their cruel harem masters. Each was marked with the brand of her tribe among the other symbols, and thus each lost hope of ever regaining her freedom, Nargig, however, managed to escape into the city of Urfa, and to find there a true friend who kept her hidden for many weeks in a dark, dank cellar. At last opportunity came for her to be spirited away to Aleppo. From here she was taken in a caravan to Damascus, where there lived a rich uncle, who had ostensibly accepted the Moslem religion as a protection for his life and property. This uncle took her in and succeedod eventually in getting her to Constantinople. Relatives who had come to America many years before learned of little Narglg's plight and brought her to this country. She arrived in New York three months ago. Nargig was taken at once to experts in the art of removing tattoo marks, but each of these told her no method had been discovered to remove these secret inks Imbedded so far Into the flesh. Ordinary (atoning could be erased, hut not this brand of the Arabs. Little Narglg thought she was doomed for life to wear a heavy ell whcnover she appeared on the streets; of Shame! bar feet and another bald bar_ bodjr,_li«^ I deep in iKa landar (Ink of bar faca a red branding ink* of tba Arab*. Ju«t as the fall, upon bar bemarkod faca tba first crual uppoiad to lift bar thought* and all bar/ :h to Mahommad t" never able to show her face except to thel moat Intimate of friends. I Whenever strangers did catch a gllmpsoj of her face they looked with horror and disgust upon the grotesque markings, little ' knowing the tragedy they represented. Friends of the young victim at last were sent to Dr. Edgar T. Strickland, a scientist attached to Sheffield University, In England, who had Joined the Harvard commission in Asia, and who had studied firsthand the proceases of tatoolng employed by the Arabs, and who had examined the faces of many Armenian girls who had been beautiful, hut who had been horribly disfigured by their captors. Dr. Strickland was visiting in America. The scientist at once placed the girl in charge of a New York institute at No. 330 West Ninety-flfth street, where, under the personal direction of Professor Edith Hansen, lately of the Royal Copenhacen University, aoience set about its demonstration that the branded girl captives of the Turks and Arabs may eventually bp restored to their unblemished beauty. ^ The method employed is one of absorption and suppuration. Professor Hansen, reporting the condition of the young girl'.^ face when she entered Into the care of tho institute, said: "The penetration of the electric needle tiar>d in modern tatooing is slight, sinking only into the outer skin. Removal of modern tatoolng. in which the well-known Chinese colored inks are used, la comparatively an easy matter. In the case of Nargig, however, the Arabs had used a hand needle, which was very thick, and which was not even sharp. Evidently they were too cruel to even sharpen their needle or use a thin one. The penetration was uneven. In many spots it went clear through into the inner flesh. In branding the glrl'a nose they jabbed clear through the two skins and into the cartilage. The places chosen for marking were the most tender spota on the face.the temples, the nose, the brow and the region of the under Hp. "First It was necessary to pack the firl's face In compresses, medicated with a solution which softened the skin, enlarged the pores and Increased blood circulation through the color pigment of the skin. After these compresses had been kept in place, changed at frequent interrals, tho skin was carefully-kneaded to break its hold on the flesh beneath. "The compresses were then replaced for another stretch of days, removed periodically that the face might be bathed with medicaments calculated to further soften the skin and begin the necessary process of absorption. "'Suppuration now set in coincident with the absorption. Almoat every hour, day and night, the flesh and skin was kneaded until it was indicated that the poisonous colors which were foreign to the under flesh had begun to spread and slowly to dissolve Into the flesh. There was con slant bathing, and soon the bathing cotton began to be discolored. This was the sign that the colors were seeping out through the pores. "The flesh which had been poisoned bv the unknown inks began to dissolve'and suppurate. Tubes were applied through the compresses nnd the liquidized flesh drawn out The skin which had br. n J poisoned with the markings dissolved and came away also. "At last there was no trace of foreig|^^^| colors In the little girl's face. Then beg^^^^H the simple process of healing When new skin had grown over the places wh^^^^^f the tatoo marks had been the little presented the appearance of having heavily sunburned. This 'sunburn' app^^^^^H ance will gradually disappear in from to four weeks. Then Nargig will be^^^^^H beautiful as ever.more beautiful. perh^^^^^H for the little llnea and wrinkles that gathered also as the natural marks sufferings will have disappeared and^^^^^H fresh bloom of youth will have been^^^^^H V

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HowScierTattooed bj

Heartless Msa Living Syn

Owneri#«* I

Religion NAbakiam, On

.

I Few SurvivorI

"" Armenian<«*

[\ ^Massacres, Is^Freed of Her

t r 1rliaeousv

rvu ^ ..

jLsisxigurcmento

fby Americanr. *? p|**odUV*Durdeons# m*

KMMfcjK«'

y<»IFTY thousand Christian girls, heldcaptive now In Moslem harems in

* Asiatic Turkey and In the deserttents of Arabs and Circassians in the

* 'Syrian desert, suddenly have been givenhopes of freedom and happiness by the

\ success of a remarkable scientific experl!ment Just concluded in this country.These young women, nearly all of them

between the ages of fifteen and twentyyears, were captured by the Turks, Arabs,Circassians and Kurds during the Armenianmassacres. The majority of them are

Armenian girls and were the moat beautifulof their people. Kept by the tribalchiefs who captured them, because of theirexceptional beauty, for their own harems,they were branded, according to Arab andKurd custom, by the terrible practice oftattooing which these tribes have employedupon their Christian concubines for time

, immemorial.Imbedded in flesh and skin with secret

* Inks made from Oriental herbs, theseJ firead tatoo marks always have been intdellible.none of the usual methods employedfor the removal of modern tatoolng* have been successful in erasing these

marks of shame. The young girl thusmarked has been doomed to go throughHfe branded as th« property of her master,Or her master's tribe, much the same as

X the horses on the western plains are

J. branded with the marks of the ranch towhich theyN belong.

Z As a result of the Armenian massacres*

so many young women were marked with> the tattooed brands of their owners that

oolonoo thrftiiffhnnt thfi Phristiftn world

found Itself confronted with the human!Jtarinn task of discovering some way these^ unknown Oriental inks, used for centuriesZ "by the desert tribesmen, might be removed

from the tender faces disfigured by them.>- Otherwise there remained no hope that

£ these young women, stolen from their families,might escape some day from theircroel bondage. For should they attemptcscape, and even get beyond the clutchesof their masters, their horrid markingswould bar them from all happiness In the

' world at large.Since long before the armistice sclen;

tists in America, spurred by the plight ofw these Christian girls, sought the hitherto* unknown method of eradicating the tatooed; brands. Harvard University was the leader

among the great institutions which conductedexperiments and investigations. Atlast success seemed to be promised theboard of scientists employed by the universityto solve the humanitarian problem,and a commission of these scientistswas sent to Asia, seeking there a subjectupon whom their new discoveries mightbe practiced.Even this preliminary task was hard,

however, as no young woman thus brandedhad succeeded in making her way acrossthe desert or through the Moslem citiesalong the highways, after escaping fromthe harem where she had been imprisoned,without being caught, her ownership recitgnlzedby her brands, and sent back tobe punished.scourged to death, perhaps.Strange as it may Beem, the subject

needed for a scientific demonstration ofwhat the scientists believed would savethese Christian girls from the scars oftheir unavoidable shame, eventually was

discovered, not in her native land, but inNew York City.This was little Narglg Avsklan, eighteen

years old, the beautiful daughter of a richArmenian family of fllvas, who had beendriven from her home when the Turks deportedher people In 1&15, and sent withher father and mother and brothers and

4f_

iceGeansr Herister as .

abol ofship and

e of thethe

Nargigas Shm S«-IIform thm Brand*Warm by

ThmArrow" Arm ShownBotwmmn Hmr Eymm andBmnmath Hmr Lowmr Lip. i

At Each Cornor of HorMouth / thm Brand ofHor Matter'a TribmBotwmmn thm Tribal.J- i~ iL. r;..

Blotch » of F ur pi o

Which Stand for Fivt VDaily Prayort of liltun. W,;

Thm Data Undor HmrChin Aro S ymb o I LWhich Only tho Araba 1

of Hot Tribe Can VTranslate. \

4

i.>>v. 1 , v^9|^HHPR^^|

^ *^T

sisters Into the desert. Nargig had beenthe belle of all Slvas. She bad been educatedIn Constantinople, and was known

throughout the city for her proficiency In

music, needlework, and for her deiAurenesaand captivating charm. Many timesthe Turkish governors had cast covetous

eyes upon her, but her father was very richand powerful among the Armenians andshe was safe then from Turkish persecution.When the massacres were ordered, however,her's was one of the first homes descendedupon. All her father's property

was confiscated and he was turned out, jwith his family, penniless, and sent upon (

the long walk into exile.After many days of wanderings, during

which her mother died from exposure andher father was killed by a Turkish Zaptieh, ,

Nargig was stolen one night by a band ofKurds. They now were in the Arabiandesert, and after a time the beautiful girlwas sold, for three horses, to an Arabchieftain, the Sheikh Tashln Melaz. whosetrilie had come from the south to harrass 1

the deported Armenians. IThe Sheikh Tashin took Nargig, with ,

1

others of his prettiest captives, to the city <

of Urfa, at the edge of the desert. Here f

he put her up for sale In the slave marketsof that Moslem city. She was bought by <

a wealthy Arab, Abou Seraldz, who lived Iwith a band of followers Just outsjde the Icity. Abou took her to his harem and com- '

polled her to submit to concubinage. 1It was by the orders of her master. Abou, I

that she was tattooed Abou declared his 1IlkInK for her and gave ordrrs that she be i

branded with the distinguishing marks of i

9

»

:^:iv iNHMMi

r "fm h^ >

M i M l ^>mj^ J1 1 M Hfy| |\ i jJ. ait b| VJ

#\' v^B >^yj v.

HB J

Here Are the Four Proceaaei(1) Th* FImK Wm KnswAd withSeparated from Ike Muscles BrneaMedicated Solution, and (3) CoraSurface and Cause the Surfaca Fliof Suppuration Were Kept Tightly(4)New Flesh and Skin Grew WOnly Pal* Pink Tint* Which R*aaDisappeared Completely in from

I Comi

hin tribe, go that If she should run awayshe would be recognized any place on theArabian or Syrian deserts, where theArabs and Kurds roam, as belonging totils particular tribe. It Is one of the un-

nrlten laws of the Kurds and Arabs to returnto each other runaway slave girls.Accordingly, one morning, before the sun

rose, Narglg was dragged from her couchIn the harem and taken outaidc. Threeif her master's tribesmen held her face tohe East, where the first glints of the sun <

night fall upon her. according to the anientArabian custom when branding lilaves. IOne of her captors had within a little

^arthen bucket. In which had been ml*ed 1ho strange Inks made from herbs and .1

grasses, the secret of which the clvlllied 1

.vorld never has learned Another captor <

leld In his hand a long, cruel needle of <

ismmered steel. The third bound her feet ihat she might be easily held and pre- <

rented from squirming too much In her tigonles. i

(C) 10?0. Intrrnatlon*) Feature fkervk*. lac.

CrueTTur

^'K >; ;>

H|^ ;1 V

K r

^>^3^it s

(

"

? |

^^ mr***

+ flrl^9M^

.iMuiMiaHBaE

i of the Removal of the TattooSkilled Hand* to That the Skin Watth; Than (2) the Face Bathed with a

ipretie* Which Draw the Ink* to the*h and Skin to Diitolve in a ProcesiBandaged Around the Face for Weeka.here the Old Wai Dioohred Leavingmbled Exce*tive Sunburn* and WhichTwo to Four Week*, Leaving Nargigily a* Ever.

Just an the first ray of the gun fell uponthe party the Arab who brandished thecruel needle sank It Into the poor girl'sskin between her eyebrows. She screamedand struggled and begged for mercy, butwith the precision of a clock's ticking theneedle rose and fell, penetrated with eachdownward *'i>ke far beneath the skin, intothe flesh, and leaving behind It the indelliblepurple stain whiclj, so far as sclpneehad known since the beginning ofArabian history, could never be removed.Between the girl's eyebrows the needle

made a crude arrow of little dots. The»rrow pointed upward."to guide the girl'sFuture thoughts to Mohammed." Belowher lower lip a similar arrow, also pointedupward, "was formed, that "her spokenwords might be wafted abore with reversneeto the Prophet." Around the edge[>f her lower lip Ave purple blotches were

placed to represent the Ave dally prayersr>f Islam, The hieroglyphic representingIhe special prayer of her master's trlbowas pricked Into each temple, and the

Ure»t Britain Right*

1

PTJKT ' <

k's Brandm m /

\ 1 «

/tt

t'

^r "While one cruel Arab heldface to the east, a third burie<hot needle bearing the secretfirst ray* of the morning sun

mailta were mad*.an arrow

spee<I

"The Slave Market".The Famous

jmWxv JP J >

'

B^p[^®P''<2i^ v v«

mmsmmmmslave girl brand of the tribe was drawn,with the needle heated to a red heat bo

the dots would form a seared line, in theflesh at each corner of her mouth. Otherdots in symbolic design were pricked intoother parts of her face and across herbody, reaching from her throat to belowher waist, the needle fixing a series ofsymbols, each signifying a verse from theKoran.These were variations of the tattooing

to which the other thousands of Christiangirl captives throughout Syria and Arabiawere subjected by their cruel harem masters.Each was marked with the brand ofher tribe among the other symbols, andthus each lost hope of ever regaining herfreedom,

Nargig, however, managed to escapeinto the city of Urfa, and to find there a

true friend who kept her hidden for manyweeks in a dark, dank cellar. At last opportunitycame for her to be spirited awayto Aleppo. From here she was taken ina caravan to Damascus, where there liveda rich uncle, who had ostensibly acceptedthe Moslem religion as a protection for hislife and property. This uncle took her inand succeedod eventually in getting herto Constantinople.

Relatives who had come to Americamany years before learned of little Narglg'splight and brought her to this country.She arrived in New York threemonths ago.

Nargig was taken at once to experts inthe art of removing tattoo marks, but eachof these told her no method had been discoveredto remove these secret inks Imbeddedso far Into the flesh. Ordinary(atoning could be erased, hut not thisbrand of the Arabs. Little Narglg thoughtshe was doomed for life to wear a heavyell whcnover she appeared on the streets;

of Shame!

bar feet and another bald bar_ bodjr,_li«^I deep in iKa landar (Ink of bar faca a redbranding ink* of tba Arab*. Ju«t as the

fall, upon bar bemarkod faca tba first crualuppoiad to lift bar thought* and all bar/

:h to Mahommad t"

never able to show her face except to thelmoat Intimate of friends. IWhenever strangers did catch a gllmpsoj

of her face they looked with horror anddisgust upon the grotesque markings, little '

knowing the tragedy they represented.Friends of the young victim at last were

sent to Dr. Edgar T. Strickland, a scientistattached to Sheffield University, In England,who had Joined the Harvard commissionin Asia, and who had studied firsthandthe proceases of tatoolng employedby the Arabs, and who had examined thefaces of many Armenian girls who hadbeen beautiful, hut who had been horriblydisfigured by their captors. Dr. Stricklandwas visiting in America.The scientist at once placed the girl in

charge of a New York institute at No. 330West Ninety-flfth street, where, under thepersonal direction of Professor EdithHansen, lately of the Royal CopenhacenUniversity, aoience set about its demonstrationthat the branded girl captives ofthe Turks and Arabs may eventually bprestored to their unblemished beauty. ^The method employed is one of absorptionand suppuration. Professor Hansen,

reporting the condition of the young girl'.^face when she entered Into the care of thoinstitute, said:"The penetration of the electric needle

tiar>d in modern tatooing is slight, sinkingonly into the outer skin. Removal ofmodern tatoolng. in which the well-knownChinese colored inks are used, la comparativelyan easy matter. In the case ofNargig, however, the Arabs had used a

hand needle, which was very thick, andwhich was not even sharp. Evidentlythey were too cruel to even sharpen theirneedle or use a thin one. The penetrationwas uneven. In many spots it went clearthrough into the inner flesh. In brandingthe glrl'a nose they jabbed clear throughthe two skins and into the cartilage. Theplaces chosen for marking were the mosttender spota on the face.the temples, thenose, the brow and the region of the underHp.

"First It was necessary to pack the firl'sface In compresses, medicated with a solutionwhich softened the skin, enlarged thepores and Increased blood circulationthrough the color pigment of the skin.After these compresses had been kept in

place, changed at frequent interrals, thoskin was carefully-kneaded to break itshold on the flesh beneath."The compresses were then replaced for

another stretch of days, removed periodicallythat the face might be bathed withmedicaments calculated to further softenthe skin and begin the necessary processof absorption.

"'Suppuration now set in coincident withthe absorption. Almoat every hour, dayand night, the flesh and skin was kneadeduntil it was indicated that the poisonouscolors which were foreign to the underflesh had begun to spread and slowly to

dissolve Into the flesh. There was con

slant bathing, and soon the bathing cottonbegan to be discolored. This was the signthat the colors were seeping out throughthe pores."The flesh which had been poisoned bv

the unknown inks began to dissolve'andsuppurate. Tubes were applied throughthe compresses nnd the liquidized fleshdrawn out The skin which had br. n Jpoisoned with the markings dissolved andcame away also."At last there was no trace of foreig|^^^|

colors In the little girl's face. Then beg^^^^Hthe simple process of healing Whennew skin had grown over the places wh^^^^^fthe tatoo marks had been the littlepresented the appearance of havingheavily sunburned. This 'sunburn' app^^^^^Hance will gradually disappear in fromto four weeks. Then Nargig will be^^^^^Hbeautiful as ever.more beautiful. perh^^^^^Hfor the little llnea and wrinkles thatgathered also as the natural markssufferings will have disappeared and^^^^^Hfresh bloom of youth will have been^^^^^HV