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Show EVELYN SPENDS -DAY WITH HARRY IN TOMBS CELL NEW YORK, April 13. Mrs. Evelyn Eve-lyn .Thaw reached the Tombs this : morning while Attorney Delmas was there in consultation with her husband. The three talked together for more than an hour ami then Delmas left the building. "A crowd of newspaper men who had been waiting in the corridor pressed around the . attorney . as he passed through the hall but he stopped only a moment. "You may quote me to the effect that everything is in statu quoi he said to his questioners. Asked if they might expect a formal statement of any kind later in the day, he replied that he would have nothing more to say. Mrs. Thaw looked very pale and worn. She said she intended to remain with her husband until she was com- 1elled to leave atxlhe end of the regu-ation regu-ation visitor's hour. The other members mem-bers of the Thaw family remained closely in their rooms, denying themselves, them-selves, to callers and declining to receive re-ceive communications of any kind. A unique feature of the case, and one which has caused considerable discussion discus-sion in legal circles today, is the publication publi-cation of a signed article by one of the jurors giving a complete story of the deliberations in the jury room. This is said to be the first time such'a thing ever occurred in this jurisdiction. As a rule the juries in great criminal cases have considered their deliberations as secret and confidential. The story written writ-ten by one of the jurors throws some interesting side lights upon the jury-room jury-room procedure. The discussion was largely in the nature of a formal debate de-bate and each speaker, after securing recognition, was permitted to proceed with his remarks . without interruption. interrup-tion. - |