II I Later' from ilexico. Prom, ily , N. 0. Pic.iyuno lily 15. i 1 The steamship Galwaton, Capt. Hal,iland, arrived yesterday from Vera Cruz, touching at Taniiico and Brazos. She . left Vera Cruz at 2 o'clock on this afternoon of the Bth inst., .Tampico on the afternoon of the• 10th, and Brazoa s Santiaip on the evening of the, 11th. She arrived at the S. W. Pass on the night of the 13th, having made a fine run. The Galveston brought no latter news di 'rect fromphe,army of Gen. Scoit, for there had been4to further arriVals of couriers at Vera Cruz. From•Tamilico we have some verbal intel ligence not without interest. The American prisoners had not wive& there, but were at a place about' forty leagues distant—probably Iluejtitla. On the Bth inst., Cul. De Russy, 1 of the Louisin a regiment, left Tampico at . the head of ab ut t 4 hundred men *ntending. to proceed to t e reMpf the prison rs. lie took with him a small force oithe reg ular artillpry, a portion of his own regiment in some of the mounted men of Tampico—a a • viceable description:of force raised in the t yn. It is more than probable that the co n I=oll have a brush with the enemy before li kets back. There are said' to be pretty roti g , parties of guerillas on• the rout "to be followed. 'The editor of the Sunjof Anahuac has seen the Republican', of the :..Bth of June, contain ing Mr. Buchanan's letter, with which we are all familiar, and the pgetended'proceeßings of an Ainericpii council of war. Upon the in formation thus derived the — editor founds an article which we give below. [His views, aie more fully deueloped on the Spanish side, hat the Flnglish article is sufficient.] As to the counsel of war alluded to, the proceedings tvili be fund in the news. from ,the city of Mexico ' . From the Soo of Aimhow, of Om 81.11 ' WHAT COURSEIWILI. GEN. SCOTT Pcasyrtu? —The'late intelligence we have received from Mexico of the correspondence, betwscn Mr. Buchanan and the Mexican MiniAer.of For eign Relations treating of peace, has, it seems to us, altered the course which Gen. Scott was to pursue. We have deferred our remarks until now, because we were afraid to be too hasty in our speculations. It scents most likely-to us that Gen. Scott will not advance any further until he receives orders front Washington to do to: But will the cabinet at Washington give this order? We doubt it very much, because it would throw more difficulties in the wayi of the -ne gotiations., Itortust have struck the mind of every one 'who has read the siorrespoudence above'allud ed to that the tone of the Mexican govern ment has altered very much, if we should judge from the few lines addressed toMr. Bu chanan by the Mexican Premier in answer to his propositions of peace. We.do not bee, in his- letter, any of that arrogance which in eiery instance before; has 'characterised the Mexidan diploinatic corres pondence—but on the contrary a ',pretty polite, c though short answer, in which he- says that he declines answering' to the argements of Mr. Buchanan, until Congress, to whom he ' refers the matter and who have solely the power to decide, shall have acted upon them. 1 Ina note which he a dresses to Ciongress, lie presses them to take immediate action up on them. . But in the meantime what is Gen. Scott to do? Will he take up his line of march for the capital while there are hOpes entertained for pence? This is nut at all probable. ;Wrt therefore came to the conclusion that h e will, pot mine n step forwar i d until all hopes for concluding a treaty of peace are lost. Later Still, • t • • Fr.. thh Nzo. une. U l.l Templed- and Brti'zos Santiago. ESh t. lef Vera Cruz on the 9th, Tampico on ' the • lOth t and the Brazos on the kttli. By this arrival ‘Ve hive letrqs and papers' ;crow Vera Cruz to'the inst.. So far as we can learn by thtin, or by verbal report of the officers of the lialmetto, there - had been no arrival front the gni)). of Gen. Scott since night of the livi inat; We are therefore, can firmed in our opiiiiin that the story brought i here by some one do the Galveston about a courier from Mexic4 with "momentous" news to the sth was "all t' my eye'." NVe can learn kthing whatdver frotiyhei army *or the . Capin , . , The bun of Anahuac of the iith inst. 'gives the following account of the issue of Capt. Mayo's expedition ligiinst - Tatiser Jaranta. Capt. Mayo, U. ti.; N. Governor of Alvara do, as we have said in ti\ previous number, as cended the Alvarado riiiler with, the steamer Petrita a few days ago in pursuit of - a re nowned priest, chic j ' of the Guerillas, Padre Jurattla. Capt. M. went up the river about i 70 toiler*, to a " tonm called Cosamalonpan, where the Padre had capturncd an An - writ:an traders boat with two Men and robbed 200 dol lars from them; but - when he arrived the Mexican had tied, after selling the boat. No resistance was made to - the Governor— he hoisted the American flag, made the al calde paylhe two hundred dollars and return thobuat two-the owner. The Padre, before leaving Cosomalonpan on Friday last, told the people that his inten tion was to go to Tesechoacan and Hacienda of Mopalapam, for the purpose of collectrug 500 horses, to mouct his men, ,at this ttme stationed in the town of Cotnstn, Haciendliit k of Naranjo, and Boca Costal, in number. about (100 effective men: from these places he was to join n Guerilla Chief from Jalapa; Juan Chimacy Reholledo, who is now in the pass of the Ilayna, nine miles from Jalar, with 150 menf nnd collecting us many more ins possible from the neighboring country,, for the purpose of attacking our trains on their way lip: Ile has positive orders to take no prisoners, but to pot to death not only all Americans, hut even every Mexican that he can catch, that has in any /way rendered . ser ices to our countrymen. I - The Sun also reports a fight between a Frenchman named Simon Lamandee t and a Mexican ` named Ramon Bustatnente. The • Mexican stabbed the PrenCiiiimn dangerously and then made his ekeape. A reward of $lOO was °Were liiiMustamente forwith. . had nut left Vera Cruz when the Palmetto t•iiyd, but was exiiected to leave that day optfUrday, the 10th. , - From Trunpic.,o and the Itrazos we have no 'news whatevqr. The Palmetto brought mails from each point at which she ttouched, but they were nutWistributed last night. • - Manuel Alvarez, late American Con , aul 41‘Santa Fe,..ilescribes,the mineral resour c.es,of NeW , Mellen, in which I r resided 20 years as being, varied and' exte~i+ive. In a letter recently published in the St. Lo ris , Reveille, ho states that on the east side of Sandilla Mountains, there is !Army of gold dust and grain, but no workers with skill and capital, because no prPtection could be bad.— ' There are also silver hiipes, and a bed of sit 4:er ore in the Nambe Mountains—ahundanfe of iron ore and lead. Copper abounds every where, and coal is plentiful and of good quali ty it) Many places. Cimrnssiorf.—The Troy Whig says; "Possibly one reason why Gen. Taylor declines to run as. a party candidate, is thdt ho does not wish to bo harrassed by such a flock of office-seeking cormorants, as that which hovered round General Harrison from the time of his election to the hour of his death." Old• Rough and Ready, who never retreated before a foe, recoilingat the bare Idea of those unmerciful ltacheros,the whig,office-seelting corinomnts! We pu some faith in this; and we cannot but think that in repudiating the whig party Gen. T. has made a retreat as ma