Ia The Balkan Review, beginning February 1919, the following are of interest: (1) On SEREIA : The Adriatic, under °Problems of Peace° (March) ; Vesnitch, Mil. R., (The As pirations of Serbia) (May); Yedlowski, Dr.
Yosep, (Thoughts on the Adriatic te) and Price, Crawfurdi (Serbia's Financial a' (lune). (2) ON BULGARIA : ThraCe, under ° roblems of Peace') (April); Venizelos, M. E. K., (Bulgaria and Thrace) (August). The August issue is called the (Bulgatum Peace Number,) and contains mach matter on that state, largely hostile, e.g., Price, Crawfurd, (The Bulgarian Memoranda); °Vardarius° answers J. D. Bourchier's (The Fate of Macedonia,' in the July 1919, International Review. (3) Oit GREECE : The two articles cited above under Bulgaria, on Thrace; Politis, M. Nicholas, (The Standpoint of Hellas) (May) ; Michalocopoulos, M. A., (The Economic Future of Greece) (June).
Nicolas Basilesco's (La Roumanie dans la guerre et dans la paix) (Vol. Paris 1919), is an exceedingly exhaustive discussion of the Rumanian point of view (see also Vol. I, ch. on political parties). G. Clenton Logio's 'Bul garia) (London 1919), is a detailed, sympa thetic analysis of the Bulgarian situation and viewpoint Vladislav R. Sawe's (South-Eastern Europe) (New York 1918), does the same thing for Jugoslavia (written before the Peace Conference) • consult also his article, °The Passing of the Balkans," Yule Review (1919, Vol. VIII, pp. 500-12).
For recent economic information consult Eco nomic Supplement to Review of Foreign Press, published fortnightly in London the General Staff, War Office, especially 1919 numbers for 29 January, 12 February, 12 March, 29 April, 11 June, 25 June, 9 and 23 July The issue for 24 Nov. 1918, contains a detailed exposition of
the Bulgarian land situation. Current History, October 1919, summarizes United States Comp mercial Reports of 30 Aug-ust on Rumania and () September on Serbia, under "Among the Nations" Under this heading will be found a monthly digest of Balkan events.
Marion Newbigin's (Geographical Aspects of Balkan Problems' (London 1915) gives a good general analysis of the transportation and other fundamentally geographical questions (does not include Rumania). For this and other Rumanian economic information, consult 'Die Rumanische Volkswirtschaft) a very fine, accurate little handbook published in Berlin, (1917), for the use of the German army in Rumania. The larger Austrian Army hand book, (Rumanien> (Vienna 1917, 785 pp.),_ is the most systematic statistical treatise on Ru niania, but hastily compiled and aot always accurate. The only way now to get up-to-date statistical information on the Balkans is to write or visit the appropriate ministry in the country concerned. The statistical annals of the Balkan countries are surprisingly good, but are always out of date even when issued— especially true now. The reports of the Amer ican Red Cross Commissions to the Balkans (Serbia, Montenegro, Greece, Albania, Ru mania) contain vahiable sections on economic and social conditions (so far available only in manuscripts). Dominian's (Frontiers of Lan guage and NationalitP (New York 1917) is a valuable and fairly accurate rice handbook. Consult also Seton-Watson's (The Rise of Nationality in The Bailuins' (London 1917).
Out of the flood of propagandist books and pamphlets incident to the Peace Conference, the following seem to have special merit: