8 SEPTEMBER 1832, Page 1

The intelligence from Paris contains little -of interest. The Ministry

is still undecided. SEBASTIAN' is said to be iri a state of convalescence. • The people of Paris artamused from day to day with criminal trials,—a kind of petty warfare, by means of which their passion for martial deeds may at length be blunted. After the case of the Simonians, came that of the National, against which the graver indictment of high treason was preferred, but to no purpose. Then came the trial of an old Carlist Peer, the Marquis of CRONY CH_ANEL, for forging bank-notes. He Was acquitted, chiefly on account of the clumsiness of the forgery, and his having sent the notes to the Bank, where it was impossible they should escape detection. Lastly, there was a trial of two members of the Club of the Friends of the People, for an attack on a grenadier of the National Guard in June last. They were also t, acquitted. The St. Simonians have appealed to the Court of Cassation. The recent trial has made Mcnilmontant quite a fashionable resort.

The cholera has greatly declined at Paris. The last report gives only 26 deaths in all.

The following is from the correspondent of the Courier- "In La Vendee, the excesses of the Chouans, which had slumbered for a moment, are being renewed with redoubled violence ; and it appears from a proclamation which has been seized, that a Lai-ochejaquelin is at the head of the insurgents. That heroic family, whose devotion to the Bourbons in adversity is only equalled by the ingratitude they have experienced in prosperity, recall the bright days of romance and form the only point on which the mind can dwell with pleasure in the history of these unhappy attempts."