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t. A London dispatch of the 15th inst., says there is no news to-day of any political importance. The Persia reports the following arrival from a blockaded port Arrived from the part of Charleston, Sept, 8th, Mary Cren, at Liverpool. The Great Eastern was to have sailed for New York on the 10th of September; so, if she left on that day, she had been six days out when met in her crippled condition. Consols closed in London on the 14th inst. at 93 5/8a93¾ for money. In the Liverpool Cotton Market prices had advanced one-eighth of a penny per pound for fair and middling descriptions of American, and holders were firm. The stock in port amounted to $58,000 bales, of which 531, 500 were American. The trade reports from Manchester and Liverpool were unfavorable. Breadstuffs were quiet but steady in Liverpool, with the exception of corn, which tended downward in price. The Emperor of France had denied that he was making extraordinary naval preparations.