Mr. Barnhorst. Yes.
Mr. Jenner. Is there a difference in charge or rate for a room depending upon whether you are a member of the YMCA or a serviceman?
Mr. Barnhorst. From what I know, Mr. Oswald—he should have paid $3.75 or $2.25 for a room, 50 cents for membership and $1 for the key deposit. No doubt he paid the room rent because that's on the record and the key deposit or else he wouldn't have gotten a room, but the key deposit isn't listed in the ledger at all. It is a separate account because we refund it and in the ledger we list memberships and we separate that from the key deposits. Because it is in a separate account. Now, I didn't see any membership fee by his name.
Mr. Jenner. But does an ex-serviceman receive this reduced rate?
Mr. Barnhorst. Not if he has been out a minute or more, at least I never give it to him. Now, I always check the ID cards. Mr. Barker, I believe, does not, but of course any serviceman could rattle off his service number 20 years after he got out and I found that out quite early so I have been checking them and I have had several fellows who were trying to get away with it—they usually had forgotten it or say they would be back in a minute and they don't come back and it was embarrassing to me, and Mr. Barker has been there a long time. He wouldn't write up a membership unless he was a serviceman.
Mr. Jenner. These registration cards show——
Mr. Barnhorst. They don't show which one it is.
Mr. Jenner. Would they show the address that the guests gave?
Mr. Barnhorst. We always ask for an address, try to get an address from them. Occasionally we don't. Occasionally they just sort of don't put it on there and you say, "Well, I would like to have an address on there." And they will say, "I plan to stay here." It should show an address on there of some kind.
Mr. Jenner. And among the papers I have asked to have photostated will that appear?