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Village Squire, 1975-01, Page 53 3 e 5 d d 5 it e In the fall, with school approaching, he was offered a job as a full-time apprentice. He was nearly 14, the age at which a youngster could legally leave school at the time, and so his mother agreed. So he was launched into the newspaper world with a grade eight education. It was the machines, he recalls now, that got him interested in newspapers, but once inside the newspaper world, he began to realize that all the machines and all the printers were really jufthere to service the men who did the writing, the journalists. So, while he continued to work with the machinery, learn the mechanics of the newspaper business arid fullfill his mechani- cal bent, he also began to become interested in the literary side of the business. During his late teens he quit the Star at Sudbury and headed to Toronto and linotype school. He helped pay the bills by doing the rounds of the Toronto newspapers and getting work replacing typesetters who were ill. Through a friend in the Toronto Star, he also got a chance to pick up some skills in the editorial side. After he finished school he got a job at the North Bay Nugget and while there ran into another strange character around town, a fat man by the name of Roy Thompson who was to go on to some newspaper fame of his own. During the 30's he was back in Sudbury working for the Northern Press but was thrown out of work when the newspaper went bankrupt. He kept busy with another of his many talents, music, for the next while, playing saxophone in a band called the Midnight Ramblers, but his mother was not at all enamoured of this way of making a living and so when a friend told him of a job as a printer in a little town called Palmerston, it• was pressure from mother that helped make up his mind to take the job. He arrived in Palmerston on April 1, 1934, not really an auspicious date to start a new job. He might not have stayed either, if not for his interest in music. He wasn't enthralled by smalltown life and was ready to quit when he became involved in starting up a band with' a group of local men. He stayed and so was on hand when the Observer went broke soon after. It was taken over by a man named Ross Harkness and Art ran the paper for him until Sept. 1938 when once again it went broke. He was encouraged by his mother in law and by several local businessmen who backed him for $100 each, to take over the paper, and he did. And going on forty years later, he's still the proud owner of what he calls "the best little paper in Palmerston." You can miss seeing the Observer office when you drive through Palmerston. It isn't in the main business section but to the south, located what used to be a house but now serves as a crowded shop with living quarters upstairs. Inside, you wonder how so many machines and so many people can all function effectively in the • space allowed. But the inventive genious of Art Carr has seen to it they can. 'Every bit of space is utilized and IT OUR deJANUARY Starts Thursday, Jan. 2, 1975 30% OFF ENTIRE STOCK WOMEN'S WINTER BOOTS MEN'S & SHOES CHILDREN'S Sproule SHOES "Footwear for the Family" 31 KINGSTON STREET GODERICII 524-8505 and ilAPPyini YEAR W. _jos. & Dean Agnew SCHMID'S JEWELLERY AND CHINA LUCKNOW YEAR-EIJD FURI1ITURE CLEARAI10E. JANUARY SALE ON EVERYTHING IN STORE INCLUDING: LAMPS. .MIRRORS, TV. TABLES. HASSOCKS bezuzi 44`113-tv--Se at ILACKSTONE FURNITURE wuT ST. 000lmNc1I VILLAGE SQUIRE/JANUARY 1975, 3