NEWS OF THE WEEK.
THE new Administration is almost completed. The refusal of Lord STANLEY and Sir JAMES GRAHAM to coalesce with the To- ries, was communicated to Sir ROBERT PEEL at the close of last week : he had therefore no resource but in the Tory party and the Red Tapists, and so he applied himself to put a Ministry together out of the materials within his reach. The following appointments are definitively made.
Sir Rosser PEEL... ........... First Lord of the Treasury, and
Chancellor of the Exchequer.
Duke of WELLINGTON Secretary for Foreign Affairs.
Mr. GOULBURN Secretary for the Horne Department. Earl of ABERDEEN Secretary for the Colonies.
Lord LYNnitnasr Lord Chancellor.
Earl of ROSSLYN Presideqt of the Council.
Lord WHARNCLIFFE Lord Privy Seal. Earl DE GREY First Lord of the Admiralty.
Lord ELLENBOROUGIE President of the Board of Control.
Mr. ALEXANDER BARING President of the Board of Trade.
Sir EDWARD ENATCHBULL --Paymaster of the Forces. Sir GEORGE MURRAY Master. Generalof the Ordnance.
Sir HENRY HARDINGE Irish Secretary. Mr. BERRIES Secretary at War. Lord GRANVILLE SOMERSET First Commissioner of Woods and
Forests.
The above gentlemen, fifteen in number, are members of the Cabinet. The Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland, the Master of the Mint, the Chancellor of the Dutchy of Lancaster, and the Post- master-General are not yet named.
Sir JAMES SCARLETT Chief Baron.
Mr. F. Pouocx Attorney-General. Mr. FOLLETT Solicitor- General.
Sir EDWARD SUGDEN Chancellor of Ireland.
Sir GEORGE CLERK Sir T. F. FREDIANTLE Joint Secretaries of the Treasury.
Lord IVIAnox Under Foreign Secretary.
Mr. G. R. DAwsosr Secretary of the Admiralty. Mr. BONHAM Storekeeper of the Ordnance. Mr. WINTHROP PRAED Secretary to the Board of Control.
Sergeant PENNEFATHER Will be Attorney-General, and MT. DEVONSHER JACKSON Solicitor-General, for Ireland. Sir WIL- LIAM Gosssrr is likely to continue Under Secretary. Sir WIL- LIAM RAE resumes his place of Lord Advocate of Scotland.
The Earl of JERSEY Lord Chamberlain.
Earl HOWE Queen's Lord Chamberlain.
Earl of DENBIGH Queen's Master of the Horse.
The Marquis of CHANDOS declineka seat in the Cabinet, in con- sequence, it is said, of Sir ROBERT PEEL'S refusal to repeal the Malt-tax; to which the Marquis, unhappily for himself, is pledged to the boors of Buckinghamshire. It does not appear that the slightest notice has been taken of the Duke of RICHMOND, in any of the negotiations or arrangements. Mr. PEMBERTON was offered the place of Solicitor-General, but was compelled to decline it, being unable to procure a seat in the next Parliament. Sir CHARLES WETHERELL seems to have been laid on the shelf, as too honest for his party.