Detention Record of "Fainting Bertha."
- Asylum for the Feeble Minded, Glenwood, Ia. Discharged.
- Insane asylum, Glenwood, Ia. Discharged.
- Insane asylum, Nevada, Mo. Discharged after several escapes.
- St. Bernard's asylum, Council Bluffs, Ia. Discharged.
- Indeterminate sentence at Joliet penitentiary.
- Kankakee, Ill., Asylum for the Insane. Escaped.
- Kankakee, Ill., Asylum for the Insane. Escaped.
- Kankakee, Ill., Asylum for the Insane. Returned to Joliet penitentiary.
- Elgin, Ill., Asylum for the Insane. Escaped.
- Elgin, Ill., Asylum for the Insane. Escaped.
- Present address, Asylum for the Incurable Insane, South Bartonville, Ill.
But even the genial Dr. Zeller and his barless windows and lockless prison proved in time to be enervating to such a restless being as "Fainting Bertha." So, during June, 1908, she made no less than three attempts to escape. She was, however, apprehended in each case before she reached Peoria, and returned to the asylum. The authorities declare that she was really playing for theatrical effect rather than from any desire to get away from Bartonville. Be that as it may, the fact remains that if she desires to get out of Bartonville she probably will, as she is the most resourceful criminal of her sex known to the authorities.
[FRONT.]
A good front is a distinct asset. A good front is made up of neat, clean clothes, on a clean body, the whole housing a clean mind. A man with clean clothes on a dirty body, or dirty clothes on a clean body, is not wanted anywhere in the business world; and there is no place in the heavens above or the earth beneath, or the waters under the earth, that has room for the man with the dirty mind.
But with the clean mind inside the clean body, and neat, simple, clean clothes on the outside of it, the young man has all the essentials of a good front. Anything more is superfluous and tends to make him ridiculous. Simplicity is the keynote.
This moralizing on the value of front is suggested by observations and comparisons of the habits of certain Chicago millionaires, and the ways of some of their cheap clerks, the latter having exaggerated ideas of putting up a false appearance of prosperity.
These comparisons were so striking that they attracted the attention of Detective Clifton R. Wooldridge, and during the course of his regular work he found time to tabulate a little, with startling results.