20 OCTOBER 1832, Page 1

The first act of the new French Ministry has been

the creation of sixty-five Peers, to supply the vacancies made in the Chamber by the Revolution of 1831. The following are the names of fifty- nine of them-

Lieutenant-General the Duke de Fesenzac.

The Marquis de Grouchy. Marshal of France.

Count Bereuger, Councillor of State. Count de Caumwille, a Major-General. formerly Memberof the Legislative Body and of the Council-General of the Seine Inferieure.

Count de Chastenai-Lanty, Member of the Council-General of the Cote d'Or. Lieutenant-General Count Edward de Colbert.

Count Desroys (son-in-law of General Iloche), Member of the Council-General of the Allier. Lieutenant-General Count Dutaillis. Count Gerard, Marshal of France. Lieutenant-General Count Charles de la Grange. Lieutenant-General Count Ileudelet.

Count de Labriffe. formerly Member of the Chamber of Deputies, and Member of the

Council-General of the Aube. Lieutenant-General Count Laferriere-Leveque.

Count de Montguyon, formerly Member of the Chamber of Deputies, and Member of

the Council-General of the Oise.

Count de Montlosier. formerly Member of the Constituent Assembly. and Member a

the Council-General of the Puy de Dome. Lieutenant-General Count Morand, Member of the Council-General of the Doubs.

Count Christian de Nicolai, formerly, Ambassador Extraordinary at Vienna, and Envoy Extraordinary and Minister at Baden.

Lieutenant-General Count Oman°. Count Preissac, Prefect of the Gironde, and formerly Member of the Chamber of Deputies.

Count de Rayneval, Ambassador at Madrid.

Count de Reinhard, formerly an Ambassador. Count Roederer, formerly Member of the Constituent Assembly, a Senator, a Coun- cillor of State, and President of the Council-General of the Orne. Count de Rumigny. Ambassador in Switzerland. Count de Target, Member of the Council-General of the Eure. -

Lieutenant-General Viscount de Cans, formerly Minister Secretary of State, and.

Member of the Chamber of Deputies.

Major-General Baron Athalin, formerly Member of the Chamber of Deputies.

Lieutenant-General Baron Berthezene.

Lieutenant-General Brayer, Baron Durand de MareuiL Minister Plenipotentiary at Berlin. Baron de Freville, Councillor of State, and Member of the Council-General of the

Seine.

Baron Grenier, First President of the Royal Court of Mom. Lieutenant-General Baron Haxo.

Lieutenant-General Baron Lallemand.

Baron Malouet, Couseiller Maitre at the Court of Accounts, and formerly Prefect.

Baron M. Faviers, formerly Inspector-in-chief of Reviews, and Member of the Coun-

cil-General ofthe Bas Rhin.

Lieutenant-General Baron Neigre.

Baron Roussin, Vice-Admiral, Member of the Institute.

Baron Silvester de Saey. Member of the Institute. Baron Thermal, Member of the Institute, and formerly Member of the Chamber of

Deputies. Baron Zangiacomi. President of the Court of Cassation. M. Anent, 'Councillor of State..

M. Auberuon, formerly Member of the Chamber of Deputies, Prefect of the Seine at Lieutenant-General Bandrand.

M. de Berbis, formerlv Member of the Chamber of Deputies. M. Bodin Vaux, Member of the Chamber of Deputies. M. Beason. President of the Council-General of the Seine. M. Boyer, President of the Court of Cassation.

N. Causon d'Aunonay. Member of the Council-General of the Avdeehe. M. Cousin, Member of the Institute. M. Deraisues, formerly Prefeet, and Member of the Council-General of the Seine.

N. Dnpleix de Nlezy, formerly Member of the Chamber of Deputies, and Member of the Couueil-General of the Seine et Oise.

M. Maurice Duval, formerly Prefect. M. Felix Faure, First President of the Royal Court of Grenoble, Member ()Nile Coun- cil-General of the Isere, and late Member of the Chamber of Deputies.

M. Gautier, formerly Member and Vice-President of the Chamber of Deputies. N. Humblat Conte, formerly Membn of the Chamber or Deputies. Member of the Council-General of the Saone et Loire.

M. Auguste de Lamoignon, Member of the Council-General of the Gironde.

N. Rousseau, one of the M“yors of the City of Paris. N. Tripier, formerly Member of the Chamber of Deputies. Counsellor at the Court of Cassat ion, and Member of the Council-General of the Seine. N. Villemain, Member of the-Institute, and formerly Member of the Chamber of Deputies. Marshal SOULS' has notified his accession to office to the Royal . Courts, the military divisions, and the various prefectures. He declares that the system of his predecessors will be carefully followed. He is determined to maintain the Monarchy and the_ Charter, as the first great condition of public liberty. Of attempts to disturb the peace of the state, the old Marshal speaks very: decidedly- " Every attempt to excite disorder will be energetically repressed. If the party of the deposed Government again dares to brave the legal authority, rigorous :justice must reach it. Its foolish hopes must be annihilated. Mea- sures will be taken to efface even the traces of the troubles which have agitated some -departments. "Anarehy was 'conquered at Paris on the oth nod 6th of June, by the noble devotedness of the National Guards and the troops of the Line. • The factions in those deplorable days manifested both their audacity and. their weakness. The Government is neither ignorant nor in fear of any of their projects. Sedition would find the country unanimous to give to the Govern- ment all the strength that it might require."

M. Triiins has also addressed the Pr6 ects of departments on the subject of the internal tranquillity. He says- '" There are some 'men. who are hostile to the friends of liberty, and would throw every thing into anarchy and confusion, did we not oppose them : there are others who have conspired against our institutions and attack them by in- trigues, by plots, by civil war, by tile most culpable, the most detestable means.. We must enlighten the first, restrain them, and oppose them by the laws; we, must watch the second, keep an eye on their intentions, and punish them when they act against the established order of things. Our efforts mist tend to pre- vent the errors of the ime, and to counteract the intentiohe of the other but we must end by suppressing them all with determined energy if they should paste to disturb the public tranquillity."

The Ministry are described as divided on the project of march- ing an army into Belgium • to which, moreover, Prussia is said to have declared itself decidedly averse, unless in the event of King WILLIAM'S proceeding to some overt act of aggression against AnopoLD. / The French Press continue their attacks upon the new Ministry / with unrelenting bitterness ; in which, we perceive, they are joined I by the Press of London also. The Times is excessively indignant that M. TRIERS, an ex-editor of a newspaper, should be a Minister; and the Chronicle rails at the theorists, or Doctrinaires as they are called, for their practical inefficiency. If we recollect aright, the denunciation of CAsimIR PERIER'S Ministry was, at its commence- ment, quite as violent, and yet it stood its ground wonderfully. The present Cabinet of France has indeed no PERIER among them. TALLEYRAND seems satisfied, and we look upon him as a better judge than either French journalists or English : he re- turned to London on Monday, having delayed his departure till the Ministry was formed.