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THE MONEY PANIC IN NEW YORK. [Correspondence of the National Intelligencer NEW YORK, Aug. 25-P. M. The failure of the Ohio Life and Trust Company has had an injurious effect on the stock market, and other failures have created A senection. The truth is stock gambling has become one of the prominent vices of the times, and reform must be brought about by 8A vere suffering, as well upon the innocent and confiding as upon the adventurous portion of the community. The Journal of Commerce, in desoanting upon the above failure, cautions the public against yielding to the effect of a sudden penic, and says "Speculation has carried prices above their aver. age value, and by a natural swing of the pendulum they have in many cases been brought again very low, many of them doubtions for below their proper equilibrium. We have no idea that there will be an ectipse because the cashier of the Obio Life and Trust Company has carried that company beyond its depth, or that business in New York will come to n dead stand in consequence. Let us all take a long breath; there is nobody chasing us; and what we took for an enemy is nothing, after all, but our own shadows." The Post cays: "The real stringency of money that now exists is not in the best established circles of trade, but almost entirely in the more speculative branches; and these will continue to fedi is growing stringency until the annual financial tide reaches in ebb, which is generally within 8 fortnight of New Year's day, before or after. Our banking system is H great conservative element in this emergency, And if its administration will be dispreet, the failure of the Obio Life and Trust Company may result in & public benefit. Indeed, it can only be converted into a pub lic injury by the loss of self possession, and by the sacrifices that Attend a state of anarchy and panic." The financial panic occasioned by the suspension of the Ohio Trust Company was increased by the announcement of the surpension of the houses of DeLannay, Iselin & Clarke, Jno. Thompson and E S. Monroe, bankers and stock brokers, and the reported failure of 8 Hariford bank; the Rhode Island Central Bank of East Greenwich; the Tiverten Bank of Rhode Island; the Farmers' Bank of Wickford; the Warren Bank of Pennsylvania; the Bank of Kanawha, Virginia, and the Hancock Bank of Maine. It is expected that the shock will be seriously telt throughout the West. The Cincinnati Gazette, of Tuesday, 8AV9 the announcement of the suspension of the New York branch of the Ohio Life Insurance and Trust Com pany fell upon the citizens of Cincinnati like a clap of thunder in 8 clear sky. The company, it *says, had been regarded 88 among the safest and most substantial banking institutions in the country, Its business in Cincinnati had been carefully managed and yielded 8 fair profit. On the fourth of July 8 semi-annual cash dividend was declared of four and a-half per cent. A