254 
Brunetti, quoted in Pharm. Journ., Aug. 31st, 1918, may be 
consulted. Viticulture is an important industry in the Struma 
Plain. Several kinds of grapes are grown for wine-making and 
for manufacture into raisins, 
Fruit cultivation should be a financial success in Macedonia 
ost villages. In Ju ms, pears, and peaches of several 
kinds are ripe, as is also a small kind of apricot and the white 
a nullah shrub. In the Struma Plain, elm trees reach a good 
. 
by nibbling down the young shoots, for in the dry summer, 
any young vege tion forms food e scraggy animals. 
Lastly the severe winter winds are not encouraging to tree 
growth. 
EcoLocy. 
As a -feldcecllector the writer found it conveni 
A Py. venient to 
iris an Se into t cy toray divisions, according to 
hy o e gro , hill 1 
praca 24: ie 4 opi groun ill and foothill floras, nullah 
jee seotaits floras.—These were studied on the ‘‘ Lem- 
ak Tat mad. Krusa Balkan. The foothill flora in some 
respects rita s the hill flora to that of the plains, and, of course. 
there is acta? onal i ince the hills ex- 
ages nowhere reach above 1000 m. ech is no alpine vegetation 
ae 1s. 4s JO need to discuss their flora separately from 
t of their foothills. Undeubtedly the most eiikiag plant 
