TABLE C. Estimated Revenue for the fiscal year ending November 30, 1862. Int'st on Primary School Lands, part-paid, $72,000 State tax of 2 mills, if so provided by the Legisla ture, assuming the valuation to be fixed by the State Board of Equalization at $160,000,000,.... 320,000 00 Estimated expenses, table B,.. Deficit, $631,400 00 707,540 12 $76,140 12 TABLE D. Estimated Expenses for the Fiscal Year ending Nov. 30, 1863. Deficit for 1862-table C,.... . . Salaries of State Officers and Clerks,....$22,500 00 $76,140 12 TABLE E. Estimated Revenue for the Fiscal Year ending November 30, 1863. State tax of 1862 of 2 mills on the dollar, if provided for by the Legislature on a valuation to be fixed by the State Board of equalization, assumed to be $160,000,000,. Estimated expenses Table D,.... $333,400 00 320,000 00 $653,400 00 594,590 12 TABLE F. Showing the amount paid the six State Institutions for the six years, 1855, to 1860, inclusive, 116,669 971133,300 721175,745 19| 101,788 69| 129,142 63 $772,084 62 Unpaid balance of appropriations and appropriations recommended, both included in estimated expenses for 1861, for these Institutions,.. 115,437 42| 158,429 12 $930,513 74 State tax for six years, 1855 to 1860, inclusive. 1855. 1856. 1857. | 1858. 1859. 1860. |$40,000 00|$65,000 00 $85,065 20❘ $85,065 20|$202,663 00|$154,663 00❘ $632,456 40 Paid above named Institutions, over and above aggregate State tax, $298,057 34 [ No. 3. ] REPORT of the Special Committee to whom was referred certain Resolutions of the General Assembly of Virginia. The special committee to whom was referred the resolutions of the General Assembly of the State of Virginia, passed on the 19th day of January inst., have had the same under consideration, and beg leave to report : That after as thorough deliberation as the brief time allowed your committee would admit, they have failed to discover any good and sufficient reason for any of the intestine strife that seems to exist between portions of the States of this Confederacy, or for the attempts now being made to disrupt the Union and destroy the Federal Constitution; hence they do not feel disposed to recommend any action on the part of the Legislature of this State which shall seem to indicate any necessity for the assembling of a commission of the several States to revise -or amend the Constitution. While agreeing, in the language of the preamble to the resolutions, that the present is an "unhappy controversy which now divides the States of this Union," we are not without the hope that it may soon meetva“ satisfac |