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The stock market presented but very little change from the prices of Saturday. Sales were not large. U. S. Bank closed the same as on Saturday. Del. & Hudson receded 1/4 per cent; Kentucky 1/4 per cent; Harlem 1/4 per cent; Utica & Schenectady 1/4 per cent. There was less demand for money today than on Saturday. For several days past, the State Bank has been discontinuing the redemption of certain of the safety fund bills. The following is a list of the banks, the bills of which have been thrown out, on Saturday and today— Chemung Canal Bank, Bank of Whitehall, Essex County Bank, Yates County Bank, Bank of Ithaca, Commercial Bank of Buffalo, Bank of Lyons, City Bank of Buffalo, Bank of Orleans, Commercial Bank of Oswego, Madison Co. Bank, Oswego Bank, Sackett's Harbor Bank, Chautauque County Bank. These are bought by the brokers at 5 per cent discount. The probability is, that all will be discontinued, with the exception of such few as have made arrangements for taking up their own paper. The Bank Commissioners are now here and have sent for the committee of the country banks, for the purpose of endeavoring to make an arrangement with the banks of this city, by which Safety Fund money shall be received at par in payment of their debts. Such a measure is very desirable if it can be entered into at this time. The present uncertain mode of redemption operates very much against the ability of the country banks to grant the necessary facilities in getting the crops to market. The policy of holding back produce for a rise laid the ground work early in the spring for the present difficulties. The banks were thereby prevented from remitting drafts against produce to meet their funds here. The same policy checked the export of grain, which would, if left to its natural prices, have formed the basis for a large amount of sterling bills. This led to the discontinuance of the redemption in this city at the expiration of the year, in June last. The committee of the country banks at that time effected a renewal on modified terms, which were, that a system of internal exchange should be adopted by which the amount thrown upon the city would be redeemed one half. At that time, however, a new cause of difficulty began to manifest itself in the circulation of the bills of the banks under the new system. They were the cheaper currency, and the public had more confidence in them than the Safety Fund. These facts were rapidly driving in the safety fund circulation to an extent which rendered nugatory the effect of the internal exchange, in reducing the amount in the city. The safety fund circulation was rendered much more rapid by the agents of the new banks, who exerted themselves in the interior to exchange the new bills for them and send the safety fund notes in for redemption. At the same time the old cause of difficulty, which was the holding of wheat, continued to operate, and prevented the western banks from sending funds here. The transaction with regard to a state loan and the canal funds, which we mentioned a few days since occurring about that time, caused a second sudden suspension of the redemption. The pernicious system of holding back the crop, is the grand evil, and one to which dealers and farmers adhere with a tenacity which amounts almost to a mania. The process of a reduction in prices is going forward with an irresistable force and cannot be prevented. The crops are immense, far greater than can be consumed in this country, and can find a market abroad only at low prices; holding it back from the market, therefore, has no other effect than to disorder the currency. The following is a table of the leading items of such of the banks as have been refused by the State Bank at their last return, as compared with the same items, at the period of suspension, May, 1837.