PHOTOGRAPHY—ITS RELATION TO POPULAR EDUCATION. 89 
not the engraver’s interpretation of a subject, but a truthful one, 
such as is seen in nature, and therefore these gentlemen must do 
what photographers are doing—make themselves acquainted with 
r 
Mouch, and the Jungfrau, at different periods from the same spot 
A German has been illustra 
publication, recently brought out, n 2 
by some hundreds of chia peaghin portraits of many distant tribes, 
nc by which means, the author says, it is possible to SS. 
races in a far more intelligent manner than they had heretofore 
me soon : 
Great Britain the Anthropological Society is endeavouring 
to make a collection of photographs of the different types of the 
human race, 
; 
