She Sues Dressmaker for Damages Because She Lost Breach of Promise Suit Says That If the Gown Had Been Ready She Would Have Won. How Far Was the Jury Influenced by the Dress She Wore? w Y M v - Wirt V'2's'' HI Vlfllli tP K "v w -v i v wr i wwmww. 1 u .1 1 v t vve- sue wunc. ir't v n w iyi vawwx . - , v 1 breach THE GOWN SHE HAD TO WEAR. IS3 FLORKNCK WKINKH. n handsome young YV 1 Kngltsh girl, has brought a unit for damages I V I against her dressmaker. Mme. Maurice, claim A s I lug that becuuse Mme. Maurice fulled to deliver hT gown in time she lost the breach of promise milt brought against lier by Harry Michael Lyons, tailor, v ho claimed that she Jilted him. Iyona recovered H.WXi di-mage-s, and Mica Welner wants $1,8(10 to pay that und :t,Jtn for herself as damages. The suit, heavily referred to In London r.s the nonsuit, was lost by MIhs Welner. SI10 claims It was becauHe her dress mnlter failed to deliver the gown with which she expected to dazzle the jury and so net off her beitutv that she woi.M win the suit for damages that wus brought by Lynns because she refused to marry him. She places her estimate or the tlamuKcs she suffered at the hands of Mn.e. Maurice al $",, and declares that because of the failure to deliver the clothes In time she was forced to go upon the witness stand attired In a season old gown. 1 The suit has aroused throughout Knpl-ind a discussion of the question of the Influence of a woman's kowii upon law and equity, or rnther the Influence of proneily garbed lieanty upon a Jury of her peers. Whether dress nnd the benuty of a Blrl weigh more than the argument of counsel will be debn'cd when Miss Welner's suit against her di -.-smaker comes to trial. Gown That She Ordered. Miss Welner ordered from her dressinnKer u champagne colored lace gown, with old rose ribbon, v lth a deep chirring of lace and medallions of rare lace, am. with t lie circular flounce joined to the circular top, the jnlnwiK I eiug hidden In a bouffant mass of filmy lace. At leas' that Is as near as the court reporter In Klng'svlteneh Oour IX. could describo the gown she Intended to wear. That the dressmaker had sufficient time to finish this creation nnd knew In advance the lm portance of the event ut which It was to be worn Is shown by lite facts in the case. Also, It Is asserted, that Mme. Maurice had promised to have the gown completed in good time and failed. Ho Miss Weln. r was forced to go on the stand without her creation, and the Jury, according to her, was not Im pressed by her appenrance as It would have been had she been able to get the champagne colored lace creation to make ihem giddy and liht headed as If they were using the champugne Itself. She told Imr story In a low, demure voice, but she claims that from the first she knew she had lost the effect on the Jury which she lind expec ted to create. In her testimony she "ulniltted that slit had been in love or near love with Mr. Lyons, tailor, of the Minnries. She admitted with a sweet smile that she h.nl n temper of her own. but asserted that It was not as bad a.i his. Then she looked consciously at her gown and spent a moment hating the dressmaker who had disappointed her. , Tells Wherein He Was Unloverly. Mr. Lyons the tailor wti hud the cnuu.g-' to sue a woman for breach of promise sat quietly at his table a short dis tance from the girl who mlht have been Mrs. Lyons had she not broken her engagement. And he heard her recount his shortcomings as a lover In explanation of the fracture of the engagement. " He was violent tempered and he sulked," shcsuld, look ing down at her gown. It wasn't such a bad gown, but it was not up to the standard f the champagne colored lace creation that she ordered. The gown slie wore was a cream colored lace, with a touch of htllotrope here and there, and with it she wore a THE GOWN THAT SHE HAD ORDERED of promise hut, spreading and country maidenish. trimmed with guy lined spi'ng flowers In p:luslon. The gown was short sleeved und yellow suede glovi t l eached to her lbow. It was a gown that had set Lynns' In art In a flutter, but she knew Instinctively that it was failing to Influence the jury. "He wis violent .temperid and he sulked," repeated Miss Welner. g'anelng at the ! suede gloves, us if aware how much bettor they would have looki d If won with the gown that i Hiue not. "Once he sulked because a man npemn the door of a railway carriage for me." She raised her beautiful black eyes to the Jury, hut the effect was killed by the ahs nee i,f the ct.a.npugne colored gown. " Once, when one of my friends wa: going to be mar ried, he sulked because he was not Invl'et1 to the reception. He Bulked once because 1 was late in rea hlng the Ilolborn viaduct station to meet him und go to a Sunday league concert at the Alhambra. Sulked When She Was Late. 'Another time I was late reaching the Hollmrn viaduct to go with him to the theater, and he sulked all evening nnd spoiled my pleasure, although I was wearing a new cloth suit. " Then one evening, when we left the theater. It was ruining, and he went to fetch a cab, and when hv came back and found me nea the stage entrance he sulked all the way home. He had such a winning way when he wus not sulking. He always persuaded me to forgive him before we separated In the evening until the last time. He used to confess that he had a beastly temper, and he begged me with tears that 1 should forgive him and take him back.' She finished her testimony with an appealing glance at the Jury as If asking them to forgive her lor not wearing the champagne colored lace gown. Hnd then Mr. Shearman, K. C, compelled to he ungalh.nt enough o cross-examine the girl, suggested that possibly she had said things at times of which she herself was a little bit repenti.nt. To support his statemi nt he read two extracts from her Irtters, which wen as follows: "I say so much In linger that I don't mean, and could not go to bed be fore I laid written this. I could not rest, flood night, my love, always yours lovingly, Flo." "My Darling: 1 feel terribly grieved that I made you so miserable by my unkind words. It Is not b, 'cause I love you less. You grow dearer to me every clay." .4 Admitted She Had a Bad Temper. Miss Welner then confessed frankly that she had a bit of temper of her own. and sh3 looked as If she realized that had she been wealing the champagne colored lace gown the effect of her conf sslon on the Jury would not have been so telling. esssssssssssssssssssssss Mr. Weiner, the rather, then told the court about a family council that took place after one of the periodical breaks be tween Florence and Mr. Lyons, He rrpiesented that the tailor had bun abnormally sulky at one time, and Miss Welner decided to smash thr engagement, so a family council was called to discuss the question and dcclcb the fate of the engagement. This court of love eousbted of Mr. Welner, Mrs. Wolner, Mrs. Welner's father, Mr Welner's married daughter, her husband, Mr. Welner's eldest son, nnd the sen's wife. Hy a majority of one the women, who gained Mrs. Welner's father over to their side, i.i he was "tender hearted," carried n motion that the tnllor should be given n-inther chance. Mr. Lyons had his other chance, hut go' the sulks again, nnd Miss Welner, without consulting the rest of the family, dropped him as a prospective husband. The facts having ben reviewed the Jury re-tlred. It is understood that they debated the manner In which Miss Welner was gowned, an some of the Jurors thought the cre'ani colored lace was unbecoming, wh le others thought It looked all tight. J Jurors Discussed Her Clothes. The Jury delsited the e.uiHtlon of the comparative becom ingness of cream colored lace with a touch of licllotruie nnd of champagne colored lu-e with old rose ribbon and medal lions of rare old lace, witn the circular flounce jollied to the circular top, the joining being hidden in a IsiutTant mans of filmy lace. And they found that the champagne colored lace was the more becoming. At bast that is the way Miss Welner f els about it. She thinks that the verdict would have been cr.ampugne colored If she had received her dress In time. She Is preparing another creation to ar when she testi fies against the dressmaker, and she confidently expects that It will win her heavy damages against the modiste. Mow One Little Mouse Tied Up the Street Car System ot Three Cities. . liANK nOGUKTT. a young Oneinn.'ttl chemist. "TTX I has In bis possession a mouse- which until a few I days ago was living a peaceful life In the Ked Jl, I end building nnd which sprui. into fame sud denly by tying up the entire stieet cur system of 1'orkopolis and part of the systems of Covington, NewKrt, and layton for twenty minutes during the rush hour In the morning. The mouse, still lively and chipper, IS living In six luslon In a box In 1'oggell's workroom on Sycamore str.-et, where It feeds on the best of cheefce. seemingly tineiMi.-cious that it is one of the merst renowned mice In the w.nhl, not e ven ex e i pting the town mouse and ihe country mouse or the hickory, duknry dock inoque that u-n up the does. That mouse made perhaps Wi perso is late to work one morning, blockaded truth , cost emplityers thousands of de I lars, and the ConolUUt.J Street railway company no one knows Imw much, muddling up their schedules fur half a day Is fore the y could lee str lightened out. All Lines at Fountain Square. The peculiarity of Cincinnati Is that practically every street railway line in th- city loops aroui.d Fountain square, which U 111 Fifth street between Vine ard Walnut, a broad c : planade with the famous Tyler lHvid.i'. fountain In the center. The Vine street cable, the Klin street. Plum street. Fifth street, the Walnut Hills, the Sedambville, the Covlng tnq. Walnut street, I'rl?e Hill, Kast kind, and practically every other line circles In the city exce-pt the Sycamore street line around the esplanude and starts off at tangents toward ti e distant suburbs. It is calculated that more street cars pass the corner of FiMh and Walnul streets in a day than p.is any given point in the- world, which is due to the centralli.itlon of the sys tems and the great number oi cars that rc.i h to the suburbs of the ejuecn city. The sltuutlon was unchanged at T:ln on the morning of M !' a Saturday, the greatest shopping rtay of the Week lit v tie itinatl. when the morning trade and marketing ire espe c'nlly heavy. It huppc'iicd that Mrs. Craee Hiee of Sedanisvllle had come up to town early to do her shopping and marketing for Sun day, and she ulighti'd fr-.nn a ear at the r.mlhwest corner of Walnut aii'l Fifth, opposite the- Federal building. She stepped i T the car, and. turning, started .outh on Walnut, Intending t - go down to Fourth strut the shopping stree t of the city t make some purchases In the great dry go-ids stores thut line liiut tuoruughfaic. Just at that crue ial ln.ctant the mouse came upon the scene. Whether it lan e from the recesses of the county build ing, from the eni store on the corner, or from some other place never will be: known, but it is ei-ita that this mite- of animal life, frightened almost out of Its wits by the rush and roar and wrangle of the triply crowded corner, scurrying hither and thither through a - ishing cr mil of giants that threatened it with death at ev ery ste p. V.' u across the open spaces and sought a safe te fuj:e. And it round Its refuge somewhere in the- myste-rlous in-trlcacle-s of Mrs. Itie-'s tl.n t- pre siiuiabl about where she had her money hldde-n. The Jostling, hurrying crowds had noticed nothing un usual. Newsboys were seiit-ehing the latest news, street car bells weie J.cnglit.g noisily, tin- rumble of truffle, the roar of the crowd we-re all stille d sudd--nly by u scream of ugony as If some lusty woman wa re be ing brutuih murdered. The rushing crowds stopped suddenly, startled by the scream, and, us shrie k after shriek arose with blood curdling uee ents, the crowd stopped, then turned to rush to the rescue of the woman victim. Yelled "Murder, Hep, and Thieves." A Vine street cur, clanging around the curve at the east end of the Fountain square, stopped with a wild jerk thut broke the controller. At the same instant one of John D. l a k & Sons' wagons stopisd suddenly or. the Walnut street curve and humped Into an Kim street car The screams continued. Mrs. Wee wus standing in the- centei of the trucks, screeching at the top of her voice-yelling ' murder," " help," anil " thieves," and clutching wildly tow irds her skirts. Cars began to Idle up all around the square. The crossing ;m!iccnien, unxlous to clear the jam, tried to force their way into the crowd toward the center of dls tcbani e. Wugons, trucks, carriage s, ami Hrce t urs piled up around the streets until Walnut was blockaded us far up as Sixth, the whole- Fountain squaie and Federal square were filled, Vine street and Wilnut street were closed to truffle. The crowds, rushing towards the shopping center from all directions, pushed and jostled to get through tht mass of hu manity. Moinrmcn and grlpmen stood at their posts and Jangled their bells wildly, but the blockade refuied to break. Hero Comes to the Rescue. Within a south us the disarrange d. f. w mil. ut. s Fifth street w.i i bloc ked as far nmike-t. aul the e-ntire street ear sysle-tu wus Mrs. Hiee-, with a death giip on her skirts about the top of the second ruflle, was still screeching. Hugo policemen stood around helpless. No one in the crowd had the presence of mind to know what to do. In fact, no one knew exactly what had happened. Suddenly, from somewhere near the cente-r of the crowd, Frank Uoggett pressed his way forward to take his place among the heroes of this world. He pre ssed c lose to M.s. Jtiee, coolly noil without u quiver at the heroic act lie was i-.bout to perform. " Mouse?" lie ask--d. " Yes," screame d Mrs. Ttic e-. Hoggett stooped, made one lightning like move with his hunl, and, before the g.tnlug crowd could fven speculate on what had happened or imagine what It had seen, he held aloft a kicking, seiuirming mouse. Mrs. Itii e gave one look full of soulfui gratitude toward Iogge lt, then fled, with her blushes rivaling the glow of the morning sun. The Kim street cur motormun dunged Ins bell wildly. The crowd began te melt. The wugon pulle 1 out from In front of the Kim stree t car, and within Ave minutes the cars were i mining again, rushing owards the- suburi i to bring In the 1 1 luted i lerks and shopp is. And Iioggett tes-k the mouse to Ids place of employment as a me-uie-nto. 1