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Show EVELYN IDENTIFIES RECEIPTS WHICH HER MOTHER SIGNED NEW YORK, Feb. 27. At the after-noon after-noon session of the Thaw trial yesterday, yes-terday, Jerome showed Mrs. Harry Thaw fourteen receipts and asked if they were in the handwriting of her mother. "Yes. sir." . The receipts were for various amounts received from the Mercantile Trust company com-pany where White- had deposited a turn of money for Evelyn and her mother. The receipts were signed "Evelyn Florence Flor-ence Nesbit." the mother and daughter having the same names. -Mr. Delmas handed her several photographs photo-graphs and asked by whom they were posed. Mrs. Thaw aald the photographer at the East Twenty-second street atudlo 'posed her for most of the pictures. Mr. Delmat showed Mrs. Thaw a letter aqd atked if a name in It was not that of a prominent New York society woman. Mr. Jerome objected, but after a short argument Mr. Jerome said: "We are prepared to admit that she it a prominent New York woman." "One most prominent?"' atked Mr. Del-mat, Del-mat, t "Decidedly, yes.'? "And the holds a position in the best society in New York?1' "Well, she's in ' the '400,' " tald Mr. Jerome dryly. Mr. Delmat then went into Evelyn Net-bit's Net-bit's first visit to White when she went with Edna Goodrich and that White kissed and caressed Miss Goodrich. She wat not permitted to say if ihe had formed any idea -of. the relatione between Whit and Mist Goodrich. "You taid your brother went to school in 1902. Who arranged for that?" "Mamma and Stanfond White." "Who paid for the schooling?" "Stanford White." "Did you draw any money for youreelf out tha letter of credit which White gave you when you went to Europe in 1903?" i "I did not." "Did you draw any for your mother?" "Yet. in Boulogne? Mamma taw something some-thing tn a thop window. She knew I had the money and I-let her have what the wanted. When Thaw heard of thia, he raited a fuss, and tald I should not have accepted the letter of credit money." ."After you had . refuted to' continue your improper relatione with White, did he have a talk with you, urging you to resume these relations?" Mr. Jerome objected; and wat tut-tained. |