N AT THE TEMPLE OF JUSTICE. LO\CD i0. I possibility of their rolling under the I j0ie cxhorse and cart. Of course Mrs.t of anilty and Whelan—A FartherHearing of the Horse Cove 8a;](the Cft8C- , u rx Shejing, ^ FUBTBEB hearing or the Horse aQ(j 8 a(,! Cove case this morning puts another iam’s light on the subject. Quilty, the b Mr. plaintiff, swears that Whelan, the dc- heflt; ;ven- f endant, hit him with an axe; and wit! Cing, further swears that during the night the rried he never attempted to get Ir the On Whelan’s Cart. Noithis This, Whelan denies, and is corrobo- not peti- rated in his statement by Mrs. Tra- tor, ond- vers, who was the only sober person j char- present, and who swears that she saw ^ n un- no axe with Whelan and that Quilty wejdid attempt to get on Whelan’s cart. wai n«l Whelan swears that not only did he -n jnot hit Quilty with an axe, but that ^ the he did not have an axe or other J 7 am- weapon at all. Mrs. Travers’ evi- clel lrned dence was hshiction Thc Host Substantial 2^Cof the whole lot and will probably be *“e ;eyed t^e raeans 0f getting the case dis- a!®?°5. missed. The counsel for the prose- I*7 ,18 cution in his cross-examination of Mrs. onth the 'pravers iaid great stress on one point, the eene, was mos^ anxious to know, that as not some Whelan had no axe when Whelan and bui P08* Quilty were quarreling, why did Mrs. sup ' ®°° Travers shout out to her husband to in I tainly come 5ack tjiat “ there would be mur-Puta* der,” orsonal Some Such Words.Of course he did not look into the Qr( t Mr* *act tbat ** was ab°Ut tbe m^dle °1 Wi./ the night, on a lonely road, with two mu men ’ drunken men going to fight with every dolrnblic I ^ravers ^ad a r'8^lt lo ehoose her . ^ivords wort^s under those circumstances. Thecase was not concluded this morning. ^Mr. F. Morris appeared for Whelan; 8® Mr. M. P. Gibbs for Quilty. j”es Hie ti rcoDi unui »» enn tuc me F°