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99 Year old Man has Printer Ink in His Veins

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Tonernews.com, December 18, 2012. USA
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    <p><font size=”5″ face=”Arial”><strong>99 Year old Man has Printer Ink in His Veins</strong></font><font face=”Arial”><br />
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    <div class=”cT-imageLandscape”><font face=”Arial”><img src=”http://images.canberratimes.com.au/2012/12/16/3895471/ng-artw-gang-20121216210938539100-620×349.jpg&#8221; alt=”Jim Woods, 99, pictured with a Linotype model 14.” /></font>
    <p><font size=”4″ face=”Arial”>Jim Woods, 99, pictured with a Linotype model 14. <em>Photo: Melissa Adams</em></font></p>
    </div>
    <p><font size=”4″ face=”Arial”>Jim Woods, 99, the inspiration behind and proprietor of the wonderful Queanbeyan Age Printing Museum is testimony to the miraculous medicinal powers of Glauber’s Salts.</font></p>
    <p><font size=”4″ face=”Arial”>(<a href=”http://www.canberratimes.com.au/act-news/and-theres-ink-in-his-blood-still-20121209-2b3xl.html&#8221; target=”_blank”>Last Sunday’s column</a> was about Mr Woods and his museum and we promised a second instalment on Monday from our interview with him at his museum.)</font></p>
    <p><font size=”4″ face=”Arial”>But to go back a step: Mr Woods’ lifelong involvement in printing and newspapers began when he was just six – selling the local paper on the streets of Temora. From that modest beginning he went on to have a long career running country newspapers. He is probably best known in Canberra-Queanbeyan as the owner of the <em>Queanbeyan Age </em> from the 1950s until 1994.</font></p>
    <p><font size=”4″ face=”Arial”>But back to Temora and to his childhood there.In those days, he said, you could leave school at 14, albeit with little prospect of having a job to go to.</font></p>
    <p><font size=”4″ face=”Arial”>But when he was 14 the newspaper company he’d served so loyally as a paper boy, often cycling enormous distances to deliver his papers offered him a job on the printing and production side of the paper.</font></p>
    <p><font size=”4″ face=”Arial”>Mr Woods was a delight to interview. He is a born and enthusiastic story teller and his reminiscences kept coming .</font></p>
    <p><font size=”4″ face=”Arial”>When he recalled the company offering him a job his voice and his eyes showed what a miracle this seemed at the time. <em>”A job!” </em>he marvelled, to make the point that these were hard and depressed times (1928) when jobs were as scarce as ”Bunyip’s teeth”.</font></p>
    <p><font size=”4″ face=”Arial”>He remembered running home with the wonderful news and his his mother telling everyone, ”Jim’s got a job! Jim’s got a job!” But then his father came home and when he heard what kind of job it was, he was not impressed. ”He’s not bloody well going to a printing office.”</font></p>
    <p><font size=”4″ face=”Arial”>”I thought ‘Here’s trouble,’ ” Mr ‘Woods remembered, and a difficult evening followed.</font></p>
    <p><font size=”4″ face=”Arial”>But mum must have triumphed, for his father eventually agreed that his son could give the job a trial. The teenager finished school on a Friday and went to work the following Monday, something almost unheard of during the Depression when the transition was more usually one from school to the dole.</font></p>
    <p><font size=”4″ face=”Arial”>But what were his father’s reservations?</font></p>
    <p><font size=”4″ face=”Arial”>”He had a very good reason. In those days there was still the old setting [of printing type] by hand, leaning over, absorbing the dust. All of dad’s mates who’d been in printing were either dead or dying of lead poisoning,” Mr Woods said.</font></p>
    <p><font size=”4″ face=”Arial”>”But as soon as I got to work the boss gave me a trade union paper. I took it home and I read a paragraph that said if you took Glauber’s Salts you wouldn’t get lead poisoning. So I took Glauber’s Salts every Monday morning for years and as you can see [tapping his chest as proof] I’m still here.”</font></p>
    <p><font size=”4″ face=”Arial”>He is indeed and though Dr Glauber’s efficacious salts are not as popular item as they were way back in the 1930s, they are still available.</font></p>
    <p><font size=”4″ face=”Arial”>Meanwhile, there’s a social and intellectual dose of salts for those visiting the terrific Printing Museum where most of the old printing contraptions are kept in working order.</font></p>
    <p><font size=”4″ face=”Arial”>”We could print a paper tomorrow” Mr Woods said with the help of a team of dedicated printing history geeks.</font></p>

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