tm 3aib If to. (g> PHILADELPHIA, JUNK 13, 1804. THE FAR-REACHING INFLUENCE OF THE SANITARY COMMISSION. TTIGIILY as we are all coming to appreciate -*" 1 tlie work done by this noble organization, but few of us have yet thought out to their remote results either its present influences upon our soldiers and our armies, or those more enduring effects it is certain to leave upon our national character after its active opera tions shall have come to a close. Some of these are so forcibly presented in the following contribution, written for Our Daily Fair by Mr. J. T. Deadly, from his home at Cedar Lawn, on the Hudson, that we take the liberty of adopting them for the editorial page. We may, in this connection, state that Mr. Deadly has manifested a great interestinourprescntCentral Fair, and done much to aid it by many happy suggestions. The greatest blessings to (lie human race are not always the direct result of the actions that really, under God, produced them. While seeking a good, seemingly to us immeasurably great, we secure another in the future, vaster than the imagination had conceived of. The dis covery of a new hemisphere, important as it was in its immediate effect on science and commerce, revealed but a moiety of the beneficial results that, in the lapse of time, flowed to the whole world. So the Sanitary Commission, which sought solely the amelioration of suffering in the camp and hospital, already sees a wider field opening before it, and results to be ac complished by it, to which the immediate saving of life and suffering is comparatively insignifi cant. Not that the amount of pain it relieves, and the solace it brings to the sick and woun ded—the lives it saves to the country, and the thousands of homes it keeps from being dar kened, and the thousands of hearts it saves from being broken, are not worth all the money it spends, and all the labor it freely gives; for it is impossible to measure the amount of good it does in this respect. Could each contributor follow the sum he bestows to the hospital or battle-field, and see the de spairing eyes it rcillumcs with the light of hope, the tortured frames it restores to com fort, or the life it brings back from the grave, and trace its effect still further, to the home of the sufferer, where blessings are rained on the noble charity that relieved his pains, and brought him back to rejoicing hearts, he would bless God that lie ever put it in his heart to give it his aid and sympathy. Still, there are other results to be reached by the Sanitary Commission, which, appealing less to our sympathies, and especially to our Otje Daily IF 1 :r, :e: senses, have, ncvcrthless, a grander bearing on the destiny of the race. We speak of iron clads, and rifled cannon, and strange, destruc tive missiles of death, as destined to produce marvellous changes in all future wars; but they all combined will not work such marvel lous changes as the Sanitary Commission. In the first place, it will annihilate forever that wide interval that has always existed be tween the army and the people. It prevents the soldier from drifting away from the influ ence of home. It binds him to its tender charities by all that made that home dear; and more than all, holds him with the strong est of all earthly bonds, the sw'ect influence of woman. The flag of the Commission, as it floats over the field, and the initials on its wagons as they traverse the camps, speak to the soldier of woman, in the form of mother, sister, wife, friend ; telling him that her tender hands are ministering to his comfort, and thus throwing a chain around his heart that fastens him to all the amenities, and delights, and pure enjoyments, of domestic and social life; aye, binds him with a power that the rude jest of the bivouac, or the companionship of the camp, cannot break. In short, its tend ency is to keep the army one with the people, thus rendering it impossible for a tyrant to convert it into an instrument for the accom plishment of his own base ends. The love of spoil, and of a life without moral restraint, that makes a great army so dangerous to human freedom, is thus to be overcome by charity. In this country, where the army springs so directly from the people, we may not appreciate at present the magnitude of these results. But does any one suppose that this great charity, born not of man but of God, is going to stop here? Doubtless the mon arcliial and despotic governments of the old world will be slow to adopt it. Always on the watch, to resist the encroachments of demo cratic institutions, they will see in it a direct tendency to bind the army and people together, and thus loosen their hold on the former, ex cept as they use it for purely patriotic ends. On this account it doubtless will work its way slowly, yet surely. They can easier keep out Bteam-power, than this new apostle of love and charity. Wide as the chasm is that one is compelled to leap when he asserts that the Sanitary and Christian Commissions, in their ultimate re sults, are to make the armies of the world the armies of the people and not of Icings, yet we believe it is cleared by no flight of the imagi nation, but is passed by laws as natural and true as those which govern the engineer. We are always in a hurry, and satisfied with nothing but immediate results; but that “ Eternal thought,” that moves on the universe, has ordained that a great and noble charity shall end its full mission on earth only with the earth itself. THE MODEL POST-OFFICE. There is nothing more unjust than the favor itism that is usually exercised at Post-offices. In despotic countries it may do very well to make arbitrary distinctions among individuals, but it is certainly intolerable in a republic, that one man should receive a letter when he asks for it, and another should be refused. Post-offices are supported out of the common funds, for the common benefit, and yet it is within the expe rience of every one, that some persons are turned off without the scratch of a pen, while others receive as many, if not more, letters than they want. It seems not to arise from prejudice against individuals, but to be the result of mere caprice. We, ourselves, have often been told there were no letters for us, when we were really anxious to receive one, and at other times, oftenest on the first days of Janu ary and July, we have received quantities of wretched epistles in those horrid yellow enve lopes, which we felt not the slightest desire for. In the Fair Post-office these evils have been remedied. The Executive Committee, with that wise discretion that regulates all their proceedings, have requested that all their visi tors should be treated alike, and that everyone who asks for a letter at the Post-office should receive one. This request has been strictly complied with, and will be enforced until the close of the Fair. To obtain a letter, therefore, it is only necessary to pay for it. We trust that this great reform will meet, as it deserves, the favor of every one, and that they will show' their appreciation of it by buying early and often. The Post-office Committee have also pre pared abook, called “ The Book of Nonsense,” which any person, without distinction of age or sex, can buy, and which they can either keep themselves or present to a friend. Clubs of any number can be accommodated, and will be supplied with them at the same rate at which they are offered to single purchasers. This advantage, we venture to say, has never before been offered by any publisher, and we hope it will be responded to in the same liberal spirit in which it is made. Persons buying ten copies can have the autograph of any man of distinction, living or dead, written on the fly-leaf, in their own presence, so that they may be satisfied of its authenticity. SOMETHING TO THINE OVER. If the numerous Sanitary Fairs which have been held in many cities had not contributed ono dollar to the object for which they were legitimately destined, they would still have been of incalculable profit to the country, owing to the degree to which they have stimulated domes tic exchanges, or buying and selling in every form; possibly averting a panic, and certainly keeping our minds from much needlessly gloomy thought.