xt7tx921cv3c_16 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7tx921cv3c/data/mets.xml https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7tx921cv3c/data/87m1.dao.xml unknown 0.63 Cubic feet 2 boxes The Sherrill Martin papers (1937-1954, undated; .63 cubic feet, 2 boxes) primarily comprise Carrs Fork Coal Company newsletters (1940-1945) containing line-drawing illustrations by Martin accompanying articles and letter-format lectures on mine safety by general superintent P.A. Grady. archival material English University of Kentucky This digital resource may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. Physical rights are retained by the owning repository. Copyright is retained in accordance with U. S. copyright laws. For information about permissions to reproduce or publish, contact the Special Collections Research Center. Sherrill Martin papers Coal mines and mining--Kentucky--Perry County Illustrators. Mine safety -- Illustrations. Newsletters World War, 1939-1945--Economic aspects World War, 1939-1945--Social aspects--United States Couplers Press For Safety text Couplers Press For Safety 2014 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7tx921cv3c/data/87m1/87m1_1/87m1_1_17/6266/6266.pdf undated section false xt7tx921cv3c_16 xt7tx921cv3c _ ` ` · § lm . L 4 · I - V
. _ L, I §I§ § T Q @2%, i f V ' E
I I I I , N ¤
/ x - I//Tghj { /I fig W ( L I `>..—~\
‘_g§.I;. ·;_ I I _ ` Q T ` \;/ I `
I ‘ »»§ ‘ I
· \\C\ L V 4
"Q" _ \·—\ *923 ··v_ ?;}{§§§Q;_E"’ -.... V;:?:;:? -._' ;¥‘i·$E. NiE.§fgf€, EI // ji?
-‘·._L$i2?;;‘ ¤ *.2 T-if- `L , ,
¤>;§=;§.\ <`»»\ ¢~ ‘ /,7*-, »· \ - I S #· ~ , < =4:;. I I
.=§\ I . ._ ` Q-ti`;-I-T n D 0 ` ,
.·q7 » QCLZ/IJ; J, ZY lz; \ `T7"· ‘ Z·v 0 . Q,
’® —>;;··-i_ -_ . ,. I ..
.. ·= E _ » I-__ §Y'*i;`c<,jii, S Z ° --__ I · < °g
,_, - *.»·\>5i'?~·¤ · ~ · ~ ~
I * = J IK ~
I ,;-rj L¥°’Li‘i¥Y%TTS "‘!’>W”" g S J ‘
jg T, E “`?, Q " cg} :/J-jjx;%)K»\*\·L/7/45-* '
A ..; -. T Q `°¤€$` —
. -Z-` (. -- ’» » `__I
JI ¤¢;______ I I§;ZI%· ~X’7//f %T~ I
DO NOT V\/EAR LOOSE CLOTHING, LOOSE
GLO\/E CUEES, LOOSE ·END OE PANT'S I
LEGS, AND I\TC/< · jured or killed. _, M lmother or sister, ever ' _ .
$ / _ gtied a string around- 1 ·'__ l ,
On the other hand", ·‘ifg your finger so that _ ; # L-- ’ E
‘ ’·’ · A you thinkithat by ‘ you would be reminde ` _, _ i _ · "
merely having them. ongwhile in ·tOWI1.l30" buy _ -
i you nothing can heppen§:1_ certain;se and so _ ° ·· · · `
,_ in the way of an acci- Qfor them'? A V A ‘_ u .
dent to you, and you . _ I '_ .. Y`·-` · _
- place faith in themwith-§ If it `takes reminders to _ " 1 E
out being reminded that you must be care- Qmake you work safely, why not adopt a few '
ful, that you must not take chances, that §of them? Suppose your wife tieda little
you will think of your safety at al_l_times,pap3r disc tovyour shirt front- with the "
then if they do not do this for you, they §words B E ·_j,C A R E F U L on it, and ‘
are bad medicine to have. V ‘ A ` . §yo,u-think a lot of your wife and children,
,_ . 1 - {and you are reminded to work safely every
The colored boy..who_carried`the_first rab·-Etime you saw it, what a charm it would
bit's foot did so to be reminded of what Qprove to be. A _, ‘ ,.
happened to the rabbit whose foot it was -_ . ” ‘ V
and who had four of them. One night wh'ile_§Or if you varied this with little discs t
in a water mellon patch this rabbit came §having the words WATCH YOUR TOP or
too close to a razor that he had in. his §SOU’ND YOUR TOP OFTEN and they kept you
hand. j Surely he with only two feet,ha,d to§constantly reminded todo BO, just think L
be more _c_areful·, so he thought, and if he_$wh`a`t they would do for you? . - _
kept the‘rabbit's`foot, it would`be'a re- -‘ `· E` ` E ’ ` _ .· .
minder to stay away from placeswhere V 5If you are a motorman, a couple, a machine E
razors were too much in`.e'vidcnce.. Becausehnan or anyone, handling machinery,· and you _
he was reminded to practice safety first, always reminded to HANDLE WITH CARE,
and he lived to be areal old darky, , "_ v_ §your.chnnces of living to be a real old H ‘
people were led to believe, when they}. Q Qman like the old darky would be much Q
questioned him about his aga and as he ggreater. ,
fingcrgd his cherished rcmimdgr, "that ............ ............... . ...... , .......,,. - ,
was the rabbit's foot that should get all . _... _ ..._
the credit. _._ . _ . . » ./9
Superstition comes from \ [ ` ‘ y . ` .
ay ignorance or fear. During Q j 4
jj , ‘ wartime superstition _ _ F _
XXV G % leaps `sky-high in popu-{ A i .
Q G `elarity. During danger U »\-f E (O
O Q periods, such things J\f . ..
V) E; receive attention `outg __ 4 \ ‘ Y
of all proportion to ( \\
ther times, and our A ·" \ _
R}/service zen are being ri r,. .. \ » ` \_
O lveighed down with medals _|’J { `