The Burning of Chambersburg, Pennsylvania - Part 5
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Part 5

THE FLOUNCED ROBE, AND WHAT IT COST. 16mo., cloth, price 75 cents.

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THE REV. SAMUEL A. PHILIPS' NEW BOOK,

THE VOICE OF BLOOD, IN THE SPHERE OF NATURE AND OF THE SPIRIT WORLD.

BY THE

REV. SAMUEL A. PHILIPS, A. M.,

PASTOR OF THE REFORMED CHURCH, CARLISLE, AND AUTHOR OF "GETHSEMANE AND THE CROSS," "THE CHRISTIAN HOME," ETC.

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Footnotes:

[1] I take great pleasure in this connection to direct attention to a large photographic view of the Ruins of Chambersburg, by Mr. C. L.

Lochman, of Carlisle, as the most satisfactory picture I have yet seen.

The same artist has also prepared a number of smaller pictures and a series of _stereoscopic views_, embracing general views and the most prominent local objects of the town.

[2] Reference is here made chiefly to the New York Herald and the Tribune, both of which sheets have manifested a spirit towards our deeply afflicted sufferers akin to that of our worst enemies. The Tribune, instead of allowing itself to be corrected by the Hon. A. K. McClure, in the Philadelphia Press, turns aside from the subject with miserable jokes, as trivial as they are heartless. And these are our _friends_!

[3] Since the foregoing was written it has been ascertained to a certainty, that there were three thousand men, exclusive of the eight hundred and thirty-one who were in the town; almost as large a force as that which, one year ago, routed Milroy's whole military force, cannon and all, at Winchester.

[4] Among the many thousands who have been quartered and encamped here, I have never heard of a single soldier who did not speak in the most grateful terms of the universally kind treatment towards them from our citizens. For proof I appeal to these thousands among the living, wherever they may now be found.

[5] This and several following paragraphs are quoted, with a few slight modifications, from a brief and well-written article by the Rev. Joseph Clark, in the Philadelphia "Presbyterian" of August 6.

[6] McCausland had also insisted upon burning the town in the _night_, to which Johnson persistently objected. Mrs. Greenawalt, a most worthy and intelligent woman, overheard this consultation of the officers in an adjoining room. The increased horrors which must have resulted if McCausland had not been overruled in his determination, may be imagined.

B. S. S.