THE NEWS-RECORD, MARSHALL, N. C. Bureau Big Aid to Ex-Soldiers Government Is Finding Places for Disabled Men Who Have Been in School ALL VOCATIONS REPRESENTED Mora Than 100,000. Ara In Training Now, and Ultimately 318,000 Will 1 Hava Bean Rehabilitated Find ' . Job to Fit Man. Washington, D. C A new kind of employment agency la being opened by the government Iost offices of the sort start out In business with a list of alluring positions and Invite Jobless men to apply for them. The govern ment is beginning at the other end. It has a group 4of well trained men on Its hands and Its employment agency 'will try to fit them Into the jobs which are , no doubt available about the coun try, but which are Just now singularly elusive.' The new agency is In the veterans' bureau, and its efforts are to be put forth in behalf of the disabled war veterans who are being rehabilitated under the direction of the bureau. Although it is more than three years since the war ended, the peak of rehabilitation has not been reached, largely because so many of the vet erans have been taking three and four- year courses. To date 16,480 men have completed their training and are employed. More than 100,000 are in training now, and. ultimately 818,000 will have been re habilitated. Many of the disabled men have not begun training. ' They are not yet physically able, their cases are pending, or for some other reason training has been, deferred. The new agency, which calls Itself by the mouth-filling title . of the , Trainee-Employment Section of the Poliahlllf ntlnn tlvfafnn nt tha Vet. erans' bureau, has Just begun Its task, It has men of practically every voca- , tlon on its hands, from dentists and farmers to stenographers and shoe makers. The employment section has begun to establish contracts with organiza tions that are In touch with all angles of the Job market. Where Men Are Needed. : Employment experts of the Veterans' bureau are making a study of the pro fessions and trades to determine which are crowded. A partial ' survey indi cates mm irtumiig hub utrcu jiruviutru , in the past in some vocations which are badly overcrowded, while other lines In which trained personnel Is needed have been overlooked. In fu ture the bureau will consider supply and demand in starting its dlisabled men on new work, 1 A number of doctors are on the list of rehabilitated men, and these, at least, should have no difficulty in es tablishing connections, since small towns all over the country have been calling for doctors. .' Considering the need for farmers, ft is also encouraging to learn that 15,000 veterans are studying some Ehase of agriculture. Some of them ave already found positions which they will enter on graduation. A num ber are going to teach agricultural sub jects In high schools and colleges. One man is going t South America as salesman of agricultural Implements. The students of farming' are being urged to buy land and start In busl-, ness for themselves, and many an planning to do so. ' The men who have been studying trades are placed in union shops for practical experience. When they are able to do a full day's work they are considered rehabilitated and given po sitions. . V; .. ' A man learning a trade or business Js rehabilitated when he has a posi tion, and the government's responsi bility toward him ends. It is more difficult to say when an artist is re habilitated. Is he a full-fledged artist when he paints his first promising pic ture or when he makes his 3rst sale? France Honors Captain Guynemer , to'vl ifef V W'i if v t0msmmm ft ? m&m i President Polncare speaking at the I'arls, of a memorial plaque to Captain the war. " . " AH of the men whom the government has undertaken to have trained were unable to return to their old positions tn . a competitive basis with other jnen. Right Men for the Jobs. The bureau is trying to impress on the public the fact that It need not hesitate to employ the rehabilitated men. The government Is not sending out any one-legged park gardeners. A mun who was so badly Injured about the face that he Is at a disadvantage In meeting people is not -trained to be a traveling salesman. On the other band, the loss of a leg does not af fect the work of a draftsman and a disfigured face is not a handicap to a stock breeder. - ' The employment section Is distinctly proud of the fact that so many of the bureau's trainees have a greater earn ing capacity now than tljey had in their pre-war occupations. A typical case Is that of a man who had been a landscape gardener on a large es tate.' He lost one arm, and Is now an auditor in the government service at $1,200 more a year than he was earning before the war. . ,' The Veterans' bureau says that it is starting its employment services with men of fine caliber. A report has Just come from the University of Florida stating that the average scholarship In its law department is 85.S per cent for trainees of the Veterans' bureau, while other students averaged 79 per cent. Frederick J. Haskln in Chicago. Dally News. Bowlder Keeps Old Feud Alive Burial Lot in Durham, N. H., Has the Only Spite Monument in Existence. DISPUTE OYER WILL IS CAUSE Brother and 8ister Disagree Over What Constitutes a "Suitable Mon ument" Courts Finally Called Upon to Settle Matter. Durham, Nl H. Spite fences are not unusual, and there is the tradition of cutting off the nose to spite the face, but what is probably the only spite monument In existence stands In the little burial lot of the Joy family at Packer's Falls in this town. The out come of years of family disagree ments and controversies, a rough stone, bearing a quotation from the will of Sarah E. (Joy) Griffiths and erected as a reproach to her memory by her brother, Samuel Joy, still stands today in the little burial lot which has been owned by the Joy fam ily since 1780, and the reason for its existence is almost forgotten. A hand chiseled on the rough stone, which is of native) New Hampshire granite and about 4 by 5 In dimensions, points to the handsome marble monu ment towering 15 feet above the ground and bearing the name 'of David F. and Sarah E. Griffiths. Beside the hand is the inscription in large capi tals: "A Suitable Monument and Fit Ud the Lot." It was the manner In which this provision in the will of, his sister, Sarah, was carried out that angered Samuel .and caused him to take such a novel means of perpetu ating the memory, of a fancied in justice. Left Strange Will. The story begins with the marriage of Sarah E. Joy to David F. Griffiths on February 11, 1846. " ! There were two children from the marriage, both of whom died In in fancy, and David also died at the age of thirty-six year and was burled in recent unvelllsg In the Pantheon, Guynemer, famous aviation hero of - -: VICTIM OF CHILD LABOR V- ' This little girl is kept at her task of stringing labels, pay for which is one Cent an hour. A thorough Investiga tion of the child labor conditions In Rhode Island has resulted In startling disclosures of the hardships, long hours and small pay that more than five thousand children have been sub jected to by manufacturers of cheap jewelry, small wares, hosiery and un derwear. the lot of the Griffiths family in Dur ham. It is not clear whether there was any Ill-feeling between .Sarah and her husband, but after his death she moved to Manchester, and in her will she requested that she be buried in the Joy family lot and not with her husband. Sarah survived her husband by 32 years, dying in 1887. She left an es tate of about $4,000 and a will. Her Immediate heirs were Nancy S. Fesler, ber sister, and Samuel, her brother. Apparently Nancy was not avaricious, but the $4,000 would have been of more gratification to Samuel had it not been for the will. The stumbling bfock in the will was the provision that a suitable monument be erected to the memory of Sarah and the burial lot fitted up. Nancy and Samuel, the administrators, differed as to how this provision should be con strued ; Nancy Insisting that an Im posing monument be erected, while Samuel held that a "suitable monu ment" meant merely a simple head stone such as had been erected at the graves of other members of the Joy family buried In the lot. Nancy, however, was firm for the "suitable monument," and insisted that her sister deserved a. more imposing commemoration than a mere head stone. After this controversy over the suit ableness of the monument had gone on for some time, Samuel became bitter. Deciding it was time to let the world know the folly of his sister, Sarah, in leaving such a will, he erected about her grave, which was still without a stone, ' a board fence on which he painted the words, "A $3,000 Grave." Taken Into Court. Up to this point the nephews of Da vid F. Griffiths, Edward and Arloch, had taken no part in the quarrel, feel ing that the affairs of their uncle's wife" did not concern them. But at this overt act, Arlqcb decided that It was time for him to take a hand In the proceedings, and one dark night he removed the fence with its sarcustlc legend and left the grave once more bare. .. Samuel was not to be thwarted m his purpose, however, and his next move was to put up a small stone bear ing the words, "I Am a Socialist" What became of the stone remains a mystery. ' However, the son of Nancy Fesler bad taken sides with bis mother and with the Griffiths brothers and Its 1 disappearance is credited to him. xnree or lour years duo now passea since Sarah's death and the terms of ber will had not yet been carried out. It was a. hopeless deadlock, and after many fruitless conferences between Nancy and Samuel, the case was final ly taken to court. George W. Sanbprn of Kingston was appointed to execute the will, which he did without delay. His action must have given gratifica tion to Nancy, for he caused to be erected a huge monument costing $3, 500, and spent the remainder of the money on a fence to surround the lot. Samuel, defeated on all sides, was still determined on revenge. Deprived of any participation in the estate of his , sister and seeing his opponents victorious In the end, he hired a stone cutter to carve the hand and the words from the will on the block of granite and set It up In the burial lot about 20 feet from the marble shaft over which there had been such bitter feel ing. . ; Cardboard. If the wind rattles bedroom win dows at night, small bits of cardboard tuck into the sides will atop the noise. Eleet'iclty in the Orient In 1003 then? were 600 electric light and power companies in Japan deliv' ertiig 80.000 kllowutts of energy; In 1918 there were 8,400, delivering 1, 820,000 kilowatts. In this matter of electrical growth, Orient and Occident are alike; extensloii, not limitation, Is the diplomatic watchword. . Sometimes There. "They kissed wlieu the Judge grant ed their divorce decree?" "Yes." "There's nothing like parting friends." "But Is it proper for a man and woman to kiss in such a public way when they are no longer married?" "I see no objection to it, provided their future mates are not In court." "Line's Busy." "The new guest must be a lover of solitude." "Yes?" "lie spends most of his time In a telephone booth." "A man Isn't solitary If he's talking to somebody over the wire." "ITmph ! Many a man goes into a telephone booth who doesn't succeed In starting a conversation." Birming ham Age-Herald. Watch Cutlcura Improve Your Skin. On rising and retiring gently smear the face with Cutlcura Ointment. Wash off Ointment In five minutes with Cutlcura Soap and hot water. It 1 wonderful what Cutlcura will do for poor complexions, dandruff. Itching and red rough hands. Advertisement Want Library for Every Ship. During the recent war the American Library association placed for the use of the men of the merchant marine ships a total of 250,000 books. These books were made up Into libraries and shifted from one vessel to another. Recently the American Merchant Ma rine Library association hos been or ganized for the purpose" of carrying on this work, under the slogan, "A Li brary for Every Ship." The Class- mute. Important to Mother Examine carefully every bottle Of CASTOKIA, that famous old remedy for Infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria The Next Best Thing. Little Willie came home from school the other day with a block eye. "Willie, where did you get that black eyeJ" asked mother. "Johnny Smith hit me," answered Willie. "I hope you remember what your Sunday school teacher said about heaping coals on the' head of your enemies?" 'Well, ma, I didn't have any coal, so I just stuck his head in the ash barrel." Misunderstanding. A man from the backwoods of west ern America visited New York for the first time and went Into a restaurant to have .dinner. All went well until the waiter brought him a nnpkln. The eyes of the backwoods mun flamed, and pulling a six-shooter from his pocket he gave the waiter a piece, of his mind. "You take that blamed thing away at once,", he said evenly. "I reckon I have a handkerchief if I want one, without . having them darned hints thrown out." A man who desires money de wo1' not to accumulate much of anything else. The man who can't work or won't take advice is beyond help. , The poorest diet In the world try to live on Is a reputation. to The Old Carriage Maker Had an Important Truth " jl O make each part as strong as the rest," was his way of "building a wonderful, one-horse chaise that wouldn't wear out till judgment day.' r This illustrates a fact that is keeping many doctors busy these days human bodies, like chaises, break down because some part isn't as strong as the others. Very often it's because of ill-balanced food, lacking in some impor tant element of nutrition. This is especially true of ills developed in childhood, and carried on through life. " Grape-Nuts, that world-famous, ready-to-eat cereal, brings the plan of building each part as strong as the rest to serve human need. Grape Nuts contains all the nutriment of those best of the field grains, wheat and barley, including the vital mineral elements, and it is a wonderful r t food for building and Sustaining health and strength, v, The delicious flavor and crispness of Grape-Nuts make it a wel oome"dish whenever you're hungry. Grpe'Nuts i Made by ur4 is Ih Well end aw another mm m is teaxkful for ItiMtMkMiMmnllrattlMofPt-nMi and Sad II t int beueOt. IhidptlniUi mj itoaMch ud boweU, but by tli om of P-ru-u tad Min-t-lla, I am woll tod uow tctln. ialwayi keep few botu la Uim bouM." Mm. OmaS Out, B.I Dilo. l.BoilS, Jf lohola, Iowa Mr, urayi exparunstla Jtnt more evidence mat r-rn-ea quite aa good ramadr for catarrh of tfa tomaeh, bowal or otbiar owa aa It la for cough, eolda and naaal catarrh, fa-ra-na la a wonderfully floe madidna to hvn la the houee for everyday Ilia. 8od to th Pwrvaa Company, Colombo, Ohh tar rae WMaudasadtaaawvfc A wise look won't carry a fellow through life unless he dies young. Left Alone. "His wife charged desertion." "For another lady?" "For golf." It Might Flunk, Too. Teacher In Physics Allen, explain fully how you would graduate a ther mometer. Allen Send It through high school! Science and Invention. Electricity's March. In less than 20 years the electricity produced In America has Increased more , than 15 times, until It Is now five times greater than the energy that every man In the nation could put forth In a year, working eight hours a day. Obeisance to the real "bear for work !" Sure Relief FOR ItlDIGESTIOrj 6 Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief 25$ and 754 Packages. Everywhere) nair l ton i wv: lair itTltaliiaa tha root nd atopa blr falllnr out fllla bald apota rapidly. Try Itt At all irood dragfflBta, 75c, or direct from HESSK-IUU. Oi.iili. M...Mi. 1W An Interruption. "Has that fellow gone?" asked ,the editor of the Chiggersvllle Clarion, as he poked his head through the back door of his sanctum. "Yes, sir," replied the office boy. "He hung around a while, knocked over a couple of paste pots and then left." "It's a good thing I saw him coming In time to get out. I fear he meant violence. I'll not finish writing that edltoriHl I was working on, declaring that whnt this country needs Is a mil itant press with the courage of its con victions." He Knew Politics. An Indiana city famed for Its po litical "scraps," has a budding poli tician. He Is only nine years old. His father was reading the news paper the other morning at the break fast table when he looked up and said : "I see you've re-elected Mrs. T superintendent of schools again." The wife started to comment, but the son bent her to It. "On which ticket?" he asked. The world may owe every man a living, but it takes a hustler to col lect It. Matrimony would be all rljrht if the fools could be kept out of it. THE BODY 'There's a Reason" Poetnm Cereal Co., loo., Bettle Creek, iS3 Strong 11 KING PIN PLUG TOBACCO Known as "that good MncT cHy it-andyou will know why reduce inflamed, swollen ts, Sprains, Bruises, Soft Baecheet Heals BoUa,PeUEvU,Qaittar, FlataJa aad lal acted seree ajolcklr aa It la a poaltive aotlacptle and Sormlclda. Pleaaant to iik doee mot Mlateror remove tha hair, and you can work tha horae. per botUe delivered. Book 7 A tree. TOUNCbc 310 Teapla St., VierieU, kW Areata or Deajera Combination eilf-wrlns-In mop and acrub bruah. Proflta good, Eaalway Cleaner, 40S St. Paul, Baltimore, lid. Agenta "Something New." Every home buya "Mhlnlirit." A rfneattfr! Ramnlti 1(1v Ar.nl. Supply Co., 1201 N. 2Hth, Kani City. Kan. Wnntfcafl Young Men to Loam IT dll lull the BARBER TRADE Best college in the South. Write Charlotte Berber CoIloge,Charlotte, N. C ALL THE KAC.B Eatellelt hoalery. Pure silk, Rtrone, durable; rtitatla 3 pairs. $7.60. Buy direct, save $1. 60. Send 16. ESTELbB ALLEN, 44 W. 133rd, Box 1, NEW YORK. Kings Lead Easy Lives. "What are my engagements for to day?" "Your majesty, you are scheduled to confer the order of the Golden Lem on on the premier of Choko-Sluvla and grant an audience of . 15 minutes to the rajnh of Slambting. In the afternoon it Is announced that you will show yourself at the race course." "Any other affairs of state to com up?" "The heavyweight champion desires the pleasure of your acquaintance, but the Introduction cun be arranged later." "Admit the premier. ' I have a busy day before me." Birmingham Age Herald. If wishing would only fulfill our de sires but there's that troublesomo "If again. The easy job is not difficult to lo cate It Is always the job some other fellow has. A smart man never makes the same mistake, but there are a million kinds of mist tikes. You may know what a man thinks of his father by what his children think of him. BUILDER Mich, am- I 1 I (, J! TalleUorliqmcl l Sold Evernrbert 0 111