Lyons v. Drucker

106 F. 416, 45 C.C.A. 368, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 3975
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 8, 1901
DocketNo. 17
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 106 F. 416 (Lyons v. Drucker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lyons v. Drucker, 106 F. 416, 45 C.C.A. 368, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 3975 (2d Cir. 1901).

Opinion

LACOMBE, Circuit Judge.

The bill makes profert of the letters patent, which are, of course, before the court for consideration upon demurrer. The specification recites that the invention contemplates certain new and useful improvements in hat boxes or trunks, and has special reference to the rests or supports for -the hats or bonnets. After referring to the perishable character of ladies’ hats or bonnets, and the necessity of securing them against movement, it proceeds:

“It is also well known that the rests or supports for hats or bonnets, as heretofore constructed, are usually of fragile material, and not of sufficient tenacity to allow of the use of an ordinary hat pin as the securing medium, and when tapes or the like are used for holding the hats in place the latter are liable to be damaged or injured to a greater or less degree. The principal object of my invention is to provide a box or trunk with a plurality of hat or bonnet supports, so arranged that several hats or bonnets may be easily and conveniently stored or packed within the box or trunk in a manner that will insure against damage or accident by reason of their becoming loose or jolting iu [417]*417traveling. A further object Is to provide an improved rest for a hat or bonnet having substantially the shape of the tipper part of the human head, and to which a hat or bonnet may be secured at any point by the insertion of an ordinary hat pin. The first object I accomplish by providing a box or trunk with a plurality of rests or supports, one extending inwardly from each of the. sides and from the top and bottom of such box or trunk in such way that, with a. hat or bonnet secured on each and all of these rests, the crowns or trimmings of ¡ill of them will be nested together in the center of the trunk, thus minimizing space, and each liat serving to help retain the other in position. The second object I accomplish by forming each rest or support of buckram in the shape of the fragment of a spheroid, so as to present a smooth, convex, continuous surface, allowing of the insertion of an ordinary hat pin at any point. * ⅞ * [After referring to the drawings, the specification proceeds thus:] Each support, B, is made of buckram shaped over a form. It is thus very light, and does not add appreciably to the weight of the box or trunk. 1 use* buckram on account of its lightness find cheapness, the ease, with which it can be shaped, and its still yet elastic quality, which causes it to retain its form. Bucknmi ⅛ composed of two or more layers of tough linen or heavy fabric glued íogether. A piece of this 'material ⅛ dampened, another piece of similar coarse glue-sized fabric is jilaced upon it. then a piece of material which is used Cor lining the trank or other receptacle. The three are glued together, and (hen the whole is pressed info shape with hot dies. The support thus mude is (hen secured in position. Each support lias a smooth unbroken convex surface especially well adapted to receive and hold a. hat or bonnet. 'The penetrable nature of my buckram support, moreover, allows a common hat pin to be thrust: through the bonnet and support at any point, securing them together in precisely the same manner as n bonnet is se wired to the hair of the wearer. When thus secured, no amount of shaking or tossing about of (he box or trunk can loosen the hat or bonnet from ifs support, and the shape of the support is such lhat it preserves the shape of the hat or bonnet perfectly. As above stated, each support is made tip of a. series of layers or thicknesses of fabric, the inner layers being of tough linen or heavy textile material glued together, all of which and the outer covering (which also forms the lining for the trunk! are penetrated by the insertion of a’securing pin; the inner layers serving, by reason of their tenacity and elasticity. to firmly bind or hold the pin in place. In consequence, when the pints withdrawn, the inner layers of material, being of a springy or elastic nature, will close up The openings made by the pin, thus not weakening the stability of the rest or support, no matter how often the pin may be inserted at the same point, and insuring the holding of the pin in position. Of course, the conformation and size of the support can be varied to suit the taste of the purchaser or the style of the bonnet. I am aware that hat boxes have been provided with cylindrical or frusto-conical rings of pasteboard or paper or stiff gauze, or gauze stiffened with wire, to support the hat or bonnet placed therein; but such supports are objectionable because they do not afford a, firm rounded support for the top of the bonnet, and therefore do not tend to preserve its shape. Moreover, they utterly fail to hold a hat pin securely, especially after the pin has been inserted into the support a number of times. Buckram being a textile material, it has an advantage over paper and pasteboard, because it Is tough and durable. It will not tear, and is springy and elastic when it lias the dome-like form above specified. Consequently, if crushed, it easily resumes iis original form, which would not be tiie case with either paper or pasteboard or gauze. It is not spoiled by use for years, as the holes made by the piercing of a pin do not injure it as they do pasteboard or paper or gauze, rendering them useless in a very short time, on account of one pinhole running into the other. A jar, the jolting of a train, or rough handling in travel will not canse the hole made by the piercing of a pin in buckram to become larger, and allow the pin to drop out, because the buckram is so lino, strong, firm, and tenacious, by reason of the gummy substance it contains. Consequently, no matter how heavy a lady’s hat may be, when attached with a pin or pins to 1he buckram rest there is no fear of its becoming loose, or getting detached, and in consequence getting knocked against the sides of the hat box, which would in all probability be the case with either paper or paste[418]*418board or gauze. Buckram is readily pierced with a pin, but pasteboard is difficult to pierce, so much so that the fragile 'delicate materials of a lady’s hat would be easily destroyed in the effort. Paper and gauze, though easily pierced by a pin, are as easily torn by the pin that pierces them. * * * The advantage of the shape of my hat rest is that no other shape of rest could hold a lady’s hat pinned to it as firmly and securely, and no other shape of rest could preserve uninjured the underneath or pendent trimmings of feathers, flowers, ribbons, and ornaments of the present fashion for a lady’s hat as my form of rest. These underneath 'decorations rest upon it as they would when on a lady’s head. Moreover, the smooth unbroken convex surface affords complete support to the bonnet at all points, and permits the hat pin to be. thrust in wherever it is most desirable, even directly in the middle of the crown. The open-topped supports heretofore used do not sustain the crown of a hat or bonnet, and do not afford the same facilities for securing.it which my support possesses. A support made of gauze stiffened with wire is entirely impracticable, not only because the gauze will not hold the hat pin, but because the wire will soon rust and discolor the hat, while any blow ..tends to bend the wire and destroy the shape of the support. Moreover, the wire frame offers hard lines and projections, which tend to injure a delicate bonnet. The great advantages' of my buckram support are its smooth unbroken convex surface, its tenacious hold upon a hat pin, its practical indestructibility, its great tendency to retain its shape, even with hard usage, and its freedom from anything which might injure the hat or bonnet.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 F. 416, 45 C.C.A. 368, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 3975, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyons-v-drucker-ca2-1901.