Salesman for factory-made products.
Furniture designer and detailer.
Other occupations which require more mechanical ability and which pay better wages than straight factory work may be mentioned also. These include:
Foreman of the filing room (saw filing, knife and cutter grinding, etc.).
Factory millwright.
Foreman of the mill room or machine room.
Operator of Linderman machine or of automatic turning machines.
Practically all of the above special positions may be obtained only by men who have had previous training and experience before becoming disabled. These positions will be attractive to such men because they offer better wages and do not require so much manual labor.
PLAN No. 933. QUALIFYING AS A TEACHER
There is a demand for teachers of woodwork and drawing in the schools. If a disabled man with previous experience in the trade has had a high-school education and wants to become an instructor he may find it more profitable to do so than to go back into the trade. His injuries may not prevent the simple movements necessary in demonstrating to a boy or to another man the principles involved in the use of the tools.