52 FOREIGN TRADE ZONES shipment trade of this port is restricted to destinations on the Dal- matian coast, and may be considered negligible. The principal articles which arrived by sea and were transshipped at Fiume during the vears 1913, 1925, and 1926 were as follows: A] co cs i ma B08 onium mmm ann as wasn Metallic minerals. ome. 1913 Tons £,648 15, 218 27 1925 Tons 2. 548 Z, 486 1, 897 1928 Tone 34, 166 4,084 5. 009 There is apparently no consignment trade at Sulina, Rumania, as this is but a port of call for ocean-going steamers on their way to the terminals of Galatz and Braila. The transshipment trade is entirely confined to grain, timber, and oil cake brought into the port from upriver ports on lighters and loaded direct on ocean-going steamers. In 1927,84 per cent of the imports of the Greek free port of Saloniki were destined for consumption in Greece, chiefly Greek Macedonia, and in 1926, 85 per cent; while only 14 and 15 per cent, respectively, consisted of transit and reexport business. Statistics for the port show the volume of imports entering the free port during the years 1926 and 1927 as 445,597 tons and 457,928 tons, respectively, while the exports for the same years were 59,769 tons and 44,437 tons, respectively. The entire movement of the Greek free zone for the year 1927 was as follows: Imports of — General merchandise (tons)___ Livestock (head). ._._- Birds (head) _ __.____-- Lumber (cubic meters)... These imports were disposed of as follows: Entered in customhouse at Saloniki for Greek consumption: General merchandise (tons).._.__. Livestock (head). ..... Birds (head) - ccwccmccmcaann. Lumber (cubic meters)... __.--- Reshipped to other Greek ports (fons). oo. In transit to other countries (fons) ___ oo... Remaining in free zone at end of year (fons) __. ._.____. As might be anticipated, not all of the free ports of Europe have shown an important development of trade involving either the trans- shipment of foreign goods or the storing and later sale and distribution of such goods. It is inevitable that this business will be concentrated chiefly at important trade centers having extensive vessel service and extensive commercial relations with other nations. It is not to be expected that the reexport business will in the usual case equal the imports for consumption, nor the domestic exports. The information