Last night ' s Gazette announces that the Queen will hold a
levee on Wednesday _next.
It also contains this announcement—" Her Majesty has been pleased to direct letters patent to be passed under the Great Seal, constituting and appointing the Right Honourable Lord Langdale, the Right Honourable Lord Beaumont, Joseph Humphry, Esq., one of her Majesty's Counsel, Henry Bellenden Ker, Esq., Bar- rister-at-law, Walter Coulson, Esq., Barrister-at-law, George Frere, Esq., and Francis Broderip, Esq., her Majesty's Commissioners for inquiring whether the burdens on land can be diminished by the establishment of an effective system for the Registration of Deeds and the Simplification of the forms of Conveyaeee."
A Cabinet Council met and sat for one hour yesterday, at the Foreign office. The Chancellor of the Exchequer has been suffering the last few days under a slight attack of lumbago. We are happy, however, to hear the right honourable gentleman is better this morning, and it is expected he will be able to attend in his place in Parliament on Monday next—Staradard.
The Galway election is over. The polling commenced on Saturday and closed on Tuesday, leaving a seeming majority of seven in favour of Mr. Monahan, the Solicitor-General, over his Repeal-opponent, Mr. O'Flaherty. Each party com- plains of the most excessive frauds throughout the election.