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v When away from home ask for THE BEE at hotels and news stands VOL. XLVI—NO. 35. THE OMAHA DAILY BEE OMAHA, FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 28, 19 )16—TEN PAGES. On Tralns, News SING At Hotels, ds, el Sa THE WEATHER FAIR LE° COPY TWO CENTS. FOUR ARE NAMED FOR PLACES ON FARM LAND BOARD President Wilson Expresses Hope That Senate Wil Quickly OConfirm the Nomination. s TWELVE FARM LOAN BANKS Country to Be Divided Into Districts and Institutions Distributed. ['WO OF EACH PARTY NAMED | Washington, July 27.—President \Vilson today nominated Charles E. Lobdell of Great Bend, Kan., Jeorge \V. Norris of Philadelphia, W. S. A. Smith of Sioux City, Ia., and Herbert Quick of Berkeley Springs, W. Va, as members of the farm loan board created under the rural credits bill re- | cently passed by congress. Secretary McAdoo is an ex-officio member of the board. The president hopes nominations confirmed quickly by the senate in order that the organization of the rural credits system be per- fected without delay. select the cities in which the twelve farm loan banks will be locatzd and divide the country into districts for the operations of provisions of the 5ill. Looking for Locations. Secretary McAdoo already has facts on valuable locations for the banks, but the board will make a thorough investigation of the question before meeting. Lobdell and Smith are republicans and Norris and Quick are democrats. The law provides that not more than two of the appointed members of the board belong to the same party. From a list of more than 100 sug- gested by senators, representatives and members of the cabinet the pres- ident selected a lawyer, a farmer, a banker and a student of rural credits problems. Farmer, Lawyer and Banker. Mr. Lobdell is a student of farm- ers’ problems and has had exten- sive experience in loans on farm lands. He was a farmer before study- ing law, served in the Kansas legisla- ture for ten years and was speaker of the Kansas house in 1895. In 1902 he was elected a*judge and served on the ‘bench for nine years, resigning to become president of a bank at Great Bend. He also is president of a loan association axll_? is connected with several banks. He is past pres- ident of the Kansas Bar association and of the Kansas Bankers' associa- tion. Mr. Norris, a graduate of the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania, has been suc- cessively a nmewspaper man, a law- ver and a banker. In 1911 he retired from the banking business to study social and economic questions. Later he became a director and deputy chairman of the federal reserve bank at Philadelphia. Smith is Banker. Mr. Smith, a farmer by occupation, for the last year has been an expert in farm practice in the Department of Agriculture here and has had exten- sive experience in farming problems. As a young man he went to sea and became a ship master. For several vears he served on the loan commit- tee of a national bank in Sioux City. Mr. Quick until a few months ago was editor of Farm and Fireside and for many years has devoted hiniself to a study of rural credits and other farm problems. Early in his career he taught school and practiced law and later was general manager of a telephone company in Nebraska and Jowa. He was nominated three times for mayor of Sioux City and was elected once, serving from 1898 to 1900. He was nominated for su- preme judge in Iowa in 1902, The Weather For Nebraska—Fair and continued warm. For Towa—Generally fair, with con- tinued high temperature. Temperatures at Omaha Yesterday. 0 3 4 . 04 9; Comparative Local 1916. 1915. 1914. 1913, Highest yesterday .. 9 73 97 §7 Lowest yesterday ... 76 67 78 g2 Mean temperature 86 70 88 80 Precipitation ........ .00 1.35 .00 .00 Temperature and precipitation departures from the normal: Normal temperature Txcess for the da Total excess since ) Normal precipitation Deficiency for the day Total rainfall since March 1 Deficlency since aMrch 1... Deflclency for cor. period, 1915... .17 inch Deficlency for cor. period, 1914....2.99 inches Reporis from Stations at 7 P, M. G h .14 Inch, 9.67 Inches .8.11inches Station and State Temp. High- Rain- of Weather. Tp.m. est. fall Cheyenne, clear 88 .00 | 102 00 92 .00 el 100 00 Dodge City, part cloudy 86 ” T Lander, cloar .......... 86 90 .00 North Platte, clear .... 90 " 00 Omaha, clear ... % 00 Pueblo, part clou " 00 Rapid City, clear. 109 09 Salt Lake City, clo 84 10 Santa Fe, part cloudy.. 62 76 33 Sheridan, cloudy........ 88 98 .00 Sloux City, clear . 90 9% 00 Valentine, clear . 9% 95 00 T indicates trace of precipitation. o A WELSH Meteorologist. to have the| The board will | ARMY AND NAYY ' BILLS CARRY BIG TOTALS THIS TIME |Bill Carrying Appropriations | Passes the Senate and Pro- | vides Expenditure of $685,343,017. | MEASURE TO CONFERENCE Two Million Dollars for the Relief of Families of Guardsmen. |RIGHT TO ;/b?E STRICKEN Washington, July 27.—Nearly $700,- 1000,000 for national defensc in the I fiscal year 1917 is the aggregate of %lhc senate today with passage of the army appropriation bill carrying in | round numbers $314,000,000. | This grand total for preparcdness because the army bill will follow the naval bill in conference, where reduc- | tions are probable, despite the firm attitude of President Wilson in sup- porting the liberal response of the senate to the call for adequate de- fense. The Appropriations. The appropriations for prepared- | lows: Army, $515,970,447 Navy, $316,826,843. Fortifications (law), Military academy, Army and defictenc Total, $685,343,017.27. As it passed the senate, the army bill exceeded the appropriations made by the house by more than $131,000,- 000. In the final hours of debate on the measure, the senate agreed to an appropriation of $2,000,000 for relief of dependent families of national guardsmen and regular army soldiers in service in the Mexican emergency. Distributions of the fund is left to the discretion of the secretary of war, but in no case shall any dependent family receive more than $50 a month. Cut Out Right to Vote. An amendment agreed to yester- day, giving the soldicrs on the bor- der tne right to vote in the field at the November election, was elimi- nated from the bill on a point of order just before passage. As soon as the army bill was out of the way the senate took up and passed, after brief debate, the military academy appropriation bill, carrying SZ,ZZB,JX&S?, an increase of $1,019,524 over the house authorization. In the main the senate approved the military committee’s” increase over house ap- propriations in, the army bill, al- though there were a few reduction in hte committee recommendations due to improvement in the Mexican situa- tion, Slayer of Wife and Army Officer Has Bond Refused Spannell, manager of a local hotel, was given a preliminary examination on a charge of killing his wife and Lieutenant Colonel M. C. Butler, United States army, here today be- fore Justice Ragin and remanded to jail wtihout bond to await action of the grand jury, which meects here September 11. Spannell, apparently crazed by jealousy, it is asserted, shot and killed his wife, daughter of John Holland, a leading banker and cattleman of west Texas, and the army officer, a week ago today while the three were riding in Spannell's motor car.” The dence street in Alpine, caused much excitement throughout the ssection. When the prisoner was brought into the court room it seemed obvi- |ous to friends that he was on the verge of a mental collapse. He sobbed a greeting to the few officers present and with bloodshot eyes searched the room. Apparently he paid little attention to the legal phases of the examination, but mum- bled over and over again: “Oh, my little girl, my own little girl” refer- | ring to his S-year-old daughter, now at the home of her grandparents here. Blacklist Protest With Kick in It Filed at London 27, | London, July Among the | strongest protests against the British | government’s blacklist of American | firms is one just received from G. W. J! McNear, head of the Petroleum Prod- ucts company of San Francisco, who points out that his firm is now load- | marino with valuable cargoes of pe- troleum products destined for Aus- tralia and New Zealand. Mr. McNear declares in_his state- ment that a large part of the con- | tents of both ships already has been resold by the Australian and New Zealand merchants and he intimates that if he is prohibited from deliver- ing the cargoes, a heavy compensa- | tion will be demanded. Cutters in East ' 8t. Louis Packing ' Plants Quit Work East 5t. Louis, IIl, July 27.—Meat | cutters employed at the packing | houses here of Swift & Co., Armour | & Co. and Morris & Co. struck today. | Packing company officials say about 300 men walked out, but labor lead- | ers say nearly 3,000 struck, The un- lion leaders assert the strike is due to | the discharge of fifty men who were |leaders in a secret movement to or- ganize the butchers. | proposed appropriations reached in | still is subject to revision, however, | ness, as they now stand, are as fol- Alpine, Tex., July 27.—Harry J.\ shooting, which occurred on a resi-| | ing the steamships Cacique and Wai- | BRITISH WOUNDED BROUGHT IN UNDER GREAT PERIL—This picture shows the bringing in of British wounded during a rain of fire. This photograph shows the manner in which one man courageously carried twenty injured comrades out of the danger zone. | AND THIS 1S WHY I7 CONTINUES Hor Weather Sharps Make Discov- ery That a “Bermuda High” Is Responsible. RELIEF IN NO SIGHT | Washington, July 27.—A “Bermuda ‘\High" is the official cause of the | worst heat wave that has enveloped the country in fifteen years. Trans- |lated from the cryptic language of |the weather sharps, that means a | great area of high pressure air has been mobilizing on the weather drill grounds in the Atlantic off Bermuda for the last month and now has let go the full power of its offensive from the seaboard to the Rocky mountains. For weeks it has stood like a solid wall against heated currents, trying vainly to move out from the interior over the ocean and now as it swirls | moisture from the tropics and sweep- est intensity has not yet struck the Pacific coast, it is expected to do so within the next few days. No relief is promised from the phe- nomena, which in the east has caused sweltering city dwellers to light fires in their homes to dry out the humidity or which in the Mississippi valley is threatening the destroy millions of dollars worth of food crops. Worst Yet to Come. Chief Forecaster Frankenfield said today that the heat wave only had |begun. It is certain to continue ithrough the week and probably longer. None of the conditions essential to a break up are yet evident. The relief which often comes from the north- west is nowhere in sight. During all this month Forecaster | Frankenfield says the huge body of | high pressure atmosphere has been ‘galhcring over the western Atlantic | from Florida and east to the Azores. {1t is very heavy in weight and thick {in dimensions. Heavy air always | flows to a place occupied by light air, | but unfortunately there is at present tan. area of light air in the tropics. | When the heavy air‘arrives there, it | finds there is still lighter air over the | continent. So it moves north in an |enormous sweep, burning hot from | the tropics and heavily laden with sca-borne humidity. It is distribut- |ing this heat and humidity over all | the continental United States in what | officials call the “Bermuda High.” The air in the middle west is be- | coming much heavier and it may form |a local center where the air currents will clash in series of thunderstorms affording speedy relief through a re- adjustment of the areas of high pres- | sure. Officers of Newark Bank Are Held On Conspiracy Charge Newark, N. J., July 27.—Warrants for the arrest of Edward H. Hatch, vice president of the Mutual Trust company of Orange, N. J, closed Monday by the state banking commis- sion, and for Thomas R. Brynes, sec- retary and treasurer of the institu- tion, were issued here today. They are charged with consipracy to de- | fraud the bank out of $306,000. Hatch has for sixteen years been treasurer of N. W. Halsey & Co., a New York and Chicago bond house. yrnes, as treasurer ot the trust com- pany, is alleged to have allowed Hatch to borrow $340,000 without adequate collateral. It is charged, according to the prosecutor, that Hatch with de- posits in the bank of only $34,000 in- duced Byrnes to issue him certifi- cates for the loan, which he hypothe- cated in New York. Byrnes-was held in $25,000 bail and Hatch was placed under guard at his home until he recovers from an ill- ness. ;\ War Summary HEAVY SHELLING of the German lines on the Somme front by British guns is in progress following the British success in capturing Posleres. Apparently this is in preparation for a renewal of the attack. RUMORS THAT an importen$ msval action has ocourred in Scandinavisn waters were met today. by a statement of the British admiralty that it had no reports of any uaval activities in the region indicated. TURKISH CLAIMS to sdvantage over the British In cavalry skirmishes east of Sues | are denled in a British report. | PETROGRAD ANNOUNCES the capture of total of 6,250 prisoners by the Russians | in the fighting of Tuesday, when the Teu- | tonic lines were pressed back In the Slo- \nvh region of Volhynia, | i rapidly along, it is gathering heat and | ing them northward over the contin- | l'ent into the vacuum of so called “low | | pressure arcas.” Although its great- | fifighes Conféi‘g With Fall About Mexican Outlook; New York, July 27.—Charles l-‘,“ Hughes, presidential nominee, m a! long conference here today with i former Senator I'all of New Mexico received a first-hand report of condi-| tions along the Mexican border. | Among the nomince’s other callers | were John C. Eversman, secretary of | the republican congressional cam-; paign committee, and Dwight B. Heard of Arizona, chairman of the Arzonia state committee, SHIPS ARE SUNK ] id Vessels Laden With Timber Bound for British Ports De- stroyed in North Sea. CREWS ARE TAKEN QFF London, July 27.—German sub- marines have started a relentless war | against timber-laden vessels in the North Sea. Four ships, all Nor- wegian, were reported to have been sunk today, They were the. Bams, Siebrid, Juno and Kentgern. The captain and twelve men of the Kentgern were landed today at Shields, where they gave details of the destruction of their vessels, The German submarine commander, after examining the Norwegian vessel's papers is quoted by members of the crew as saying: “Well, 1 suppose I must do it. I am sorry, but it is my duty. I am sick and tired of the whole busiress.” The ship was then saturated with paraffin and set on fire. ' Twenty-eight men, members of the crews of the Norwegian ships Bams, Siebrid and Juno were landed at Rot- terdam today by a fishing smack says a dispatch to Lloyds shipping agency. The three vessels were sunk by torpedoes in the North sea while carrying cargoes of timber. German Steamship Attacked. Berlin, July 27.—(Wircless to Say- ville.)—A delayed report from Ham- burg, dated July 19, received by the Overseas News Agency today, gives details of the previously reported at- ag(ack by a Russian submarine on the German steamer Elbe, off the Swed- ish coast, as follows: “The German trading vessel Elbe, bound from Bondswall to Lulea, Sweden, was attacked off the Port of Ratan, a half mile from the shore, by an enemy submarine, a torpedo being discharged without any warn- ing. The captain of the Elbe, by a rapid maneuver, succeeded in dodg- ing the torpedo, which passed the steamer at a distance of twenty metres and exploded against the cliffs.” Wilson Asks House Dems to Support the Big Navy Measure Washington, July 27.—President Wilson summoned” to the White House today Representatives Padg- ett, Talbott and Estopinal, the rank- ing democratic members of the house naval committee, and told them he be- |lieved it vital that the house adopt | the naval bill as it passed the senate | with the construction program in- ;rludmg four battle cruisers and four | battleships to be built immediately and an crease in the enlisted per- sonnel of the navy, The naval committee at a meeting after the committee agreed to report the bill back to the house with a rec- ommendation that the house disagree to all the senate amendments and send the bill to conference for ad- justment there. By some this was taken as a favorable step for the larger program. Chairman Padgett later reported | the bill with formal recommendation | | for disagreement and conference. A discussion of the senate amendments followed, Representatives Cox of In- diana, Byrnes of Tennessee and other protesting against certain features of the increase. Brigadier General James C. Lee is Dead| New York, {uly 27.—~Army circles | today heard of the death at Hague, | Lake George, N. Y., yesterday of Brigadier General James C. Lee, | United States army, retired. He was |80 ycars old. The funeral will be held in Washington next Sunday. In- | terment will be in Arlington, Va. | | shipments or imporations of medi- LOBECK PRESENTS OMAHA'S CLAINS Sees McAdoo Concerning City as Oandidate for Bank Location. CITES FIGI;R_ES TO SHOW | Washington, July 27.—(Special Telegram.) — Representative Lobeck, realizing that if Omaha was to have a “look in” so far as securing one of the farm loan banks was concerned, action would have to be quick, pre- sented Omaha's claim to considera- tion at the hands of the farm loan board by laying before Secretary Mc- Adoo cogent reasons why Omaha should have consideration. Secretary McAdoo said that for- merly it had been thought wise to locate these farm loan banks in capi- tal cities, but frankly admitted that in the case of Boston, Springfield would be much preferable, althought Boston is the capital. This gave Mr. Lobeck his long de- sired opening to tell the secretary of the advantages held out by Omaha, and that it would be a most vital mis- take on the part of the board if, in its tour through the country, it did nat stop at Omaha, Omaha on the Map. “Don’t make a mistake like the onc you made with reference to“the loca- tion of a branch of the federal re- serve bank,” said Lobeck. “Omaha is on the map and one of the big towns of the country, you can see Lincoln and Omaha in a day, and we insist Omaha should be visited.” Mr. Lobeck recited a series of sta- tistics as to Omaha and then left with Mr. McAdoo a mass of well digested facts relating to the Gate City. Secretary McAddo, seemingly greatly impressed with the showing made by the congressman, promised to give the claims of Omaha and its business men careful consideration. Just as soon as the board is named it will make a tour of the country to collect, at first hand, data and infor- mation to assist it in reaching a con- clusion as to the boundary of the twelve districts into which the coun- try is to be divided. Warrant Dismissed. B. L. Benson of Omaha was ad- vised by Rrepesentative Lobeck to- day that the warrant for the deporta- tion of Vasilios (Bill) Kipriodis, a Greek doing business at Sixteenth and Capitol avenue, had been dismissed on the ground of insufficient evidence. Parshau Airship Hero with Many Honors is Killed London, July 27.—Lieutenant Otto Parschau, recently given the decora- tion of pour le merite for bringing down his eighth enemy aeroplane, has been killed in an air battle, acccord- ing to a Reuter's Amsterdam dispatch which quotes the Frankfurter Zei- tung. President Signs Rivers And Harbors Bill Washington, July 27.—President Wilson today signed the rivers and harbors appropriation bill, carrying approximately $42,000,000. Most of the money is to be spent on existing improvement projects. Protest Against Blacklist Cabled To London by Polk Washmgton, July 27.—-A note to Gireat Britain objecting to the black- listing of American busincss firms as an “invasion of neutral rights" was cabled to London late last night by the State department, E Acting Sccretary Polk, announcing today that the communication had been dispatched, declined to discuss it | further than to say that it contained | “representations.” He said it would he given out for publication Monday. STRIKE NATURAL GAS New Theory is Given for Dis- aster at Oleveland Which Cost Nineteen Lives. FLOW OF GAS IS STRONG Cleveland, O., July 27.—Indications that a well of natural gas was un- covered by the tunnel explosion here last Monday were reported today by L. M. Jones, the government mining expert seat here from Pittsburgh, The flow of gas not only makes recoveries of the bodies in the wreck impossible, but may prevent com- pletion of the tunnel, Mr. Jones said The gas well, according to the ex- pert, is apparently of uncontrollable proportions and the gas similar to that at the suburb of Lake Wood. Despite this development prepara- tions for further exploration were made today. The bodies lie behind a cave-in nearly 300 feet long. Special machinery will be needed to penetrate this wall of muck. It will require several days to install it if the gas clears from the workings. It will then require several days’ dig- ging to reach the corpses, so in any event no more bodies are expected |d to be found for a week or more, Water works officials said today they believe there are only nine bodies in the tunnel instead of eleven as previously estimated. Patrick Kearns, supposed to be entombed, turned up alive today. He had over- stayed shore leave Monday and missed death by a close margin, Jhs- tice Aro, another thought to be with the ill fated force, also has been re- rorled alive. This reduces the total oss of life to ninctecn, The city investigation reached ex- amination of witnesses today. Rumor of Big Naval Fight in the Baltic Sea is Unconfirmed London, July 27.—Officials of the British admiralty informed the As- sociated Press today that they had nothing to report of a new naval ac- tion in Scandinavian waters and had received nothing in any way confirm- ing unofficial reports of naval activ- ity in that region. A report published in a Stockholm newspaper on Wednesday said that prolonged firing had been heard Mon- day coming from the Gulf of Both- nia, which forms the northern arm of the Baltic sea. The newspaper re- port supplied no details. MWo;thIes s ‘-?Cures” for Infantile Paralysis Are Offered For Sale Washington, July 27. — Warning was issued to the public today by the Department of Agriculture to look with extreme suspicion upon any preparation put on the market and of- fered for sale as being effective for the treatment of infantile paralysis. Department officials charged with the enforcement of the food and drugs act, an announcement says, “ex- pect the-outbreak of nfintile paraly- sis will tempt unscrupulous persons to offer for sa?c so-called ‘cures’‘or rem- edies for this dread malady. They, therefore, have issued special instruc- tions to food and drug inspectors to be particularly alert for interstate cines, the makers of which allege they will cure or alleviate this disease, for which at the present time no medici- nal cure is known.” : Inspectors have been instructed to collect samples of all such medicines found in interstate commerce and of- ficials declare the makers will be vigorously prosecuted whenever the evidence warrants action under the food and drugs act. Such remedies offered for impart will be refused en- try. Government officials have noted that in the past whenever a serious epidemic has existed unscrupulous dealers have preyed upon the fear or ignorance of the public by flooding the market with worthless, hastily prepared concoctions for which cura- tive properties, which have no foun- dation whatever in fact, are claimed. In the present infantile paralysi§ epi- demic, inspectors already have dis- covered shipments of a few such mix- tures. In its warning the department points out that the federal law does not apply to preparations made and consumed wholly within a single state, such as patent medicines made within New York state and sold in New York City, the center of:the epi- demic. “Persons buying or using a ‘remedy’ made in their own state, therefore,” the announcement says, “must rely on the protection accorded 1!\cn‘)’ by “their local health authori- ties. %" S RUSS CONTINUE T0 MAKE GAINS IN EAST ARENA Petrograd Reports Capture of More Than 8ix Thousand Tcutons in the Fight of Tuesday. AUSTRIANS IN RETREAT Vicnna Says Troops Are With- drawing Before Superior Pressure. BRITONS FIGHT ALL NIGHT Petrograd, July 27.—(Via London.) —In a battle on Tuesday on the Rus- |sian western front 6,250 Teutons were I'taken prisoner, says the official state- ment issued today by ‘the Russian war department. The Russians also |captured five guns and twenty-two i machine guns s Russian forces operating in the Caucasus are continuing their pursuit of the retreating Turks, the state- ment says. In the Turkish fortress of Erzingan, the capture of which was announced yesterday, the Russians took a depot of war material. Austrians Are Retreating. _Berlin, JuIK 27.—~(Wireless to Say- ville.)—An Austrian withdrawal be- fore superior Russian pressure north of Brody, in northeastern Galicia, is announced by Austro-Hungarian arm: headquarters in its report of July 26. The statement says: “South of Leszinow (twelve miles north of Brody) our troops were with- drawn behind the Bolduka sector be- fore superior enemy forces, Very vio- lent Russian attacks in the ‘vicinity of Radziviloff (six miles northeast of Brody) resulted in_significant Rus- sian advantages. The Russians suf-" fered extraordinarily heavy losses. British Fight All Night, London, July 27.—Throughout the night British troops continued to press the Germans with hand-to-hand encounters at various points on the Somme front in France, says the of- ficial statement issued today. The text of the British, official statement says: . “Throughout the ‘right our artitlery had been active and we continted to press the enemy with hand-to-hand encounters at various points, "“The enemy is using large numbers of gas and tear shells in the battle area. 1 ) “Elsewhere on the British front there was no incident of importance in the last forty-eight hours.” German, Official Report. Berlin, July 27—(Via Ldndot.)— Russian troops last night made'a fu- tile storming attack against the Ger- man positions on ‘the Shara river, norhtwest of Liachovichyj it was an- nounced by the Gernman general staff today. The Russians, it is added, also were sanguinarily repulsed in the re- gion west of Berestechk. British hand gréenade attacks against the German lines to the west of the town of Pozieres, in the Somme region, were repulsed yester- day, according to the announcethent made by the German headquarters to- ay South of the Somme river a French attack, launched at a point northeast of Barleaux, failed, the statement adds. In the Verdun regions several strong French attacks were. carried out in the region of Froide Terre and Fleuty, but they were repulsed. Fight- ing continues at some points. “Everybody Works But Father,” Says "~ Senator Kern Washington, July 27.—“Everybody works but father,” said Senator Kern, democratic leader of the senate, sub- mitting for publication in the Con- gressionat Record a large number of telegrams he received today pro- testing against passage of the child labor bill. Among the messages were: !'Father of a large family, am op- posed to child labor bill.” “I have a young family coming on, dependent on cotton mill. Defeat the Keating bill.* Mayor of Mitchell Asks for Troops Mitchell, S. D., July 27.—Mayeor J. E. Wells today made an appeal to Adjutant General Morris for militia to cope with the lawless harvest hands who are passing through the! by hundreds daily. He requests that the local militia company, now ' at 'the state mobilization camp at Redfield, | be returned to Mitchell. During the last few days the hare vest hands have seized several pas- senger and freight trains and caused alarm among the people of small towns on the railroads. Desirable | i Tenants ° ' who pay their reng promptly. Bt Advertise your vacant rooms in The Bee and, get desirable tenants, are the kind of peopld.