24.6 REPORT—1904. 
Balance-sheet, Publication Account, to August 18, 1904. 
RECEIPTS. oS ete Lb 
Printsonly . - 5 : : : : oo L480 
Mounted prints. : : - : : - 19610 0 
Slides . ‘ : : : : ‘ : Beret este (0 
Prints and slides. ; 5 : : . pe es Ue) 
Mounts and slides , : 5 . : : - 426-1050 
Mounts and prints . 3 5 ; : : - TAB 7O 
Prints, mounts and slides : : E i Pipa Ut beasts} 40) 
821 17 0 
Tess arrears unpaid ‘ : : : se Opie 
Total : : 3 3 5 : . 78018 O 
PAYMENTS, 
CF i Py ol 
Preliminary expenses and — oe 2h HOVERS 
Copying negatives . : 5 : ; speeZl ira 
Copyright and DRPCERSE, 5 E : : ‘ 619-0 
Prints. iS ; : x - . 224 1 4 
Mounts and mounting ‘ : ‘ 2 : See) dep sho 
Albums and boxes . - 4 . : : ieee! 6 
Slides and arr: é : : : ; a eLiG (Ome 
Packing . : ; ; 3 = sey lGt 2 al 
Carriage of parcels. : : : ‘ : sped So OHO 
Printing and stationery . . . : ; phe UO. eee 
Office expenses : : . ‘ A : . 7 6 43 
Postage . : : : : oe OS 
Renewing broken slides . - , 5 : Yona 
Sets for new subscribers : ; ; ; . 2712 4 
Interest on working capital . 2 LOO 
Exhibition expenses (St. Louis and London) . ‘ 419 11 
Balance transferred to Committee’s account 
(£136 12s, 2d., less unpaid £4019s.) . a i9byLS 2 
Total . ; : . * A - ap (SOELS GO 
It was pointed out in the Report for last year that in its fourteen 
years’ work of collecting and storing photographs, the Committee had 
spent £101 10s. of the £130 granted to it by the Association. In 
making a clear profit of £130 the Committee may congratulate itself on 
having ‘earned its keep,’ and perhaps it is the only Committee of the 
Association which has ever succeeded in literally doing so. But, besides 
this, by scattering broadcast over the world typical photographs of geo- 
logical features and phenomena it has rendered a service to geological, and 
perhaps to geographical, teaching which cannot be well over-estimated. 
The British Association photographs are forming the nucleus of dozens of 
teaching-collections in the universities, schools, and museums of Britain ; 
and numerous foreign subscribers write that they are only unable to sub- 
scribe to a second series because they now want the funds to accumu- 
late other examples from their own countries. It is not so difficult to 
obtain geological photographs as it was fifteen years ago, for even the 
ubiquitous picture post card is sometimes frankly geological. 
Ata meeting of the Committee held in Cambridge on August 19, 
1904, Dr. J. J. H. Teall, F.R.S., in the chair, it was unanimously agreed 
That this Committee desires to record its admiration of the indefatigable 
energy shown by its Secretary, both in carrying out the original aims 
of the Committee and in bringing to a successful issue the publication 
