Trailer Mahers Vote To Help i In Building Regulatory Laws CHICAGO, Dec. 14. — With the ^ng of the trailer house into the jj,. 0f traffic, new problems of Wh»a.v legislation, of camping fa cilities, "and of merchandising, peer the hoilaon. Trailer coach manufacture™ discussed these pro at their association meeting j ' tlir flrst full-fledged conven tton of the trailer makers to talk mtr the problems of this latest ln „n, of the motor industry, the manufacturers were reminded that ajte legislatures would probably -trodace laws bearing on highway regulations for house trailers this (inter, The manufacturers, howev ,r decided to recommend reason lb!c legislation as to safety and nation, as It becomes necessary, tl'her than fight any or all legls ation. according to W. Russell Wil ,sy secretary - manager of the iYaiior Coach Manufacturers Asso tiation. B\ offering constructive legisla tor. as the need arises, the manu lactUrer, felt they will be contrib itins more to the public welfare and tiso help to prevent the passage of harmful and unconsidered laws, dr, Wilday points out. Laws Already In Effect Many states already have laws fgarriing commercial trailers. These ittlc shops on wheels which move rom one town to another to set up idvertlslng and demonstration leadquarters for their commodities iave had legal restrictions in the arious states for some time, it Is ound Such laws already in exlst ire now apply to house trailers as fell. But the difficulty is that each (ate has its own regulations con ning the length, width, height, ighting arrangement, braking qulpment. and other physical biraeteristlcs. The result is. as nanufacturers see. that a home on rheels moving through many states nay have been manufactured ac ording to restrlctleons in its own (ate but finds itself woefully out rf-step in other localities. More miformltv in state laws appears herefore to be one of the flrst re unites. One of the flrst laws which is ex uded for the home trailer is some ■epilation about the tall light. The ■(d stop light which now flashes on aisenger cars when brakes are ap )!l«d Is missing on the back of trailers. Manufacturers anticipate that laws will probably be enacted requiring this regulation soon. As; far as cluttering up the highway and slowing down traffic is con cerned. It Is believed by the manu facturers that this will be a minor! problem Inasmuch as trailers travel; ; along at the usual speed of the j \ average car and not so slowly as trucks. So many new’ manufacturers have | taken on the trailer as a side-line I in their business that it is esti mated there are now some 500 j firms turning out homes on wheels. | Of these only 50 really have enough j production to be called national I distributors, it was reported, while ; the other 450 are special manufac turers usually of some of truck j bodies who have added trailers to j their production. Only one of all i the automobile passenger car ! manufacturers is now making trail ers. This company has a complete steel construction trailer like a de 1 luxe Pullman on wheels. Trailer Sales Soar The number of trailers being sold j is going ‘‘sky high," the manufac turers find by comparing notes. Each year since 1931, which is be lived to be the year when commer cial sales actually got a good start, the sales have quadrupled over the previous year. In 1936 they were four times of those in 1934, and so on. It is estimated that 150.000 of the new models shown at the re cent automobile shows will be sold next year. Additional trailers traveling about as well as those stationed tempor arily in parking spaces and camps open a new question of camp sani tation and of camp regulations, it 1s found. Trailer colonies for workers are springing up. In Akron, Ohio, a colony for rubber workers now has 11 trailer*. In a suburb of Cleve land and in Detroit there are sev eral camps where workmen live in their trailers and travel back and forth to work from them. In Charleston, W. Va., two years ago on of the supervisors on a PWA project bought a trailer to live near the site W’hile the work was pro gressing. Now there are more than 70 trailers forming a colony there, it was said. The Ollie Trout camp in Miami is preparing to handle 400 house trailers this winter to take care of the influx of winter tourists. Old Homestead Now Passe, Housing Officials Declare PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 14.—Three dess were strewed at Anal meet n?s of the National Association of Sousing Officials conference here. Homes should be built for one imeration instead of for several, in hese days of rapidly changing con ations. Government housing must be “•tie a career service, for efficien T and safety, both physical and inancial. Housing officials should find out 'hat prospective owners or renters rant and what they can afford to »? for it, before starting on new rejects— Instead of going ahead nd building what they believe h«e people ought to want and be Me to pay for. A. C. Shire, technical editor of he Architectural Forum, pointed 5 the advantages of prefabricated “uses, which can be enlarged to 'eet the needs of a growing fam or can be taken down and mov d If environment changes make his desirable. Mrs. May Lumsden, director of he bureau of tenancy of the New '°rk Housing Authority, discussed he problem of “model” projects hich remained unfilled—or are oc upied by wealthier classes than ’0fe they were intended to help. Model houses have been planned ’ '•how their intended tenants how hev should live—without consider how they might like to live, or an afford to live,” Mrs. Lumsden eelared. “It. seems to me that it ,(m'd be better to consult the respective tenants and then work ut * building plan which would " Adapted to their pocket books r,d to their desires.” s"dney Maslen, secretary of the rnement House Committee of the ■narity Organisation Society of "" York City, said official hous hf inspectors should be specially ta‘nw1' not politically appointed. Demolition of slums without pro non of better housing accommo *tlons for their dwellers was de “ed by Landon Post, tenement lriv quickly. Bct^ppn the meetings the hous officials discussed the growing . fr""v °f people of more or less *pendent means, whose jobs do , ’* *hem down to any partte sr> ***** *re able to . th-«lr home* in automobile auerj These trailers, It wa* said, ^ Possibly be the new type of le for a new age for which ear speakers had pled. tr,,'rir«n *n(j European housing | lunch and at a dinner, by Ernest I M. Fisher, director of the division of | economics and statistics of the Fed eral Housing Commission, and by Sir Raymond Unwin, respectively. Mr. Fisher showed a number of motion pictures, which he brought back from London and Stockholm after his inspection of housing work in and near those two cities. J. P. Warbasse, chairman of the Cooperative League of the United States, emphasized that coopera tive ownership of housir#? facilities makes for permanence of occupancy and values by creating a sense of pride and ownership. Edward H. Foley, Jr., director of the legal division, Public Works Ad ! ministration, discussed the probable effects of decentralization of gov ernment housing work, pointing out that in view of benefits and sav ings—such as the marked reduction in crime—which result from Con struction of low-rent housing pro jects to accommodate slum dwell ers. it is desirable to exempt such projects from taxation in order to make the rents as low as possible. Files Damage Suit Claiming $50,000 RUTHERFORDTON, Dec. 14 —A $50,000 damage suit has been filed with clerk of court here by Mrs. i H. W. Helmbold of Lake Lure against! Chimney Rock company. Dr. L. B.j Morse, Lake Lure inn, Stanley Gres- ( ley. Chimney Rock camp, Recce j Combs, Lake Lure camp, H. D. War- j ner. Lee Powers, and J. T. Arnette. ' The suit is the outgrowth of a paper said to have been written by the defendants, circulated in Lake, Lure and Chimney Rock and later | mailed to Mrs. Helmbold, accusing j her and her husband of circulating! derogatory and untrue reports about the sanitary conditions of Lake Lure bathing beach for the purpose of injuring the parties and their business. Mrs. Helmbold asks $25,000 actual damages and $25,000 punitive dam ages. The suit is expected to come; up at the next term of civil court' of Rutherford county next April. ; LAWNDALE YOUTH ENLISTS IN THE U. S. NAVY Mr. Vance Lee Carter, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Carter of route 1, [Lawndale, was enlisted in the U. 8 navy in Raleigh on December 7 and was on that date transferred | to the U. S Naval Training station. Hampton Roads, Va„ where he will undergo twelve weeks of Initial training prior to being transferred to duty with the U. S. fleet. I'M I DAVIS AND LINCOLN TOGETHER " '7 '»t caused v»r between th; Nerth and the South. But In death, thc’r statue* stand together ir the rotunda of he state c.?3:to| at f->ar,Kf