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Track Bonding
By D. C. McKeehan
The importance of properly bonded rail joints has received the attention of The National Research Council, whose committee will investigate several methods now used and determine the merits of each as
Jan 1, 1923
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In Memoriam (ac948f52-2773-4c1e-bded-7164393e8ba2)
"Let us not think of our departed dead As caught and cumbered in these graves of earth; But think of death as of another birth, As a new Freedom for the wings outspread, A new adventure waiting
Jan 1, 1942
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In Memoriam (4ce8ec8c-e01a-40e9-b6c3-9552a8313e60)
T. W. BUTLER JAMES CAMERON WILLIAM MORGAN J. F. CALLBREATH FRANK C. MILLER J. T. RYAN BENEDICT SHUBART Fading away like the stars of the morning, Losing their light in the glorious su
Jan 1, 1941
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Discussion of Treatment of Mine Timber
it may be clearly seen that one of the most rapidly increasing items in mining operations is the cost of the timber alone, to say nothing of the cost of installation. Consequently, any practical means
Jan 1, 1926
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Mechanical Stoking of Domestic Fuel
By Joseph Harrington
It is sufficiently correct to say that domestic solid fuel is universally hand fired and it is almost as correct to state that a very large proportion of hand-fired domestic fires are extremely ineffi
Jan 1, 1925
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The Challenges of Transporting Coal
Jan 1, 2005
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Report of Safety Committee - Report Of Wm. Littlejohn, Gen. Supt., Utah Fuel Co.
By Geo. B. Pryde
Dear Sir: Yours of July 23rd, relative to my appointment on the Safety Committee in connection with the Rocky Mountain Coal Mining Institute. As you say in your letter, "The duty of this committee i
Jan 1, 1923
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Address - At the Annual Dinner Meeting of the Rocky Mountain Coal Mining Institute, Denver, June 3, 1931
By C. B. Huntress
"We have ourselves to blame in the steel industry for our condition." These words were addressed twelve days ago by James A. Farrell, President of the United States Steel Corporation, to his "comrade
Jan 1, 1931
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Low Temperature Carbonization
By J. F. McDermott
The problem of converting our raw coal, and especially those coals that are not suited for long storage, in other words soft, into a fuel which would be at once clean; of a high B. t, u. content and l
Jan 1, 1923
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Why Alternating Current
By C. E. Drennan
Your Chairman and the Program Committee have limited the time allotted to me, and so, with your permission, I will omit the preliminaries, and wade right into my subject. I believe I am safe in takin
Jan 1, 1923
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Advantages of Having Such Men As Fire Bosses Under State Rather Than Corporation Jurisdiction
By R. S. Morton
MR. CHAIRMAN AND GENTLEMEN: To be invited to address the members of The Rocky Mountain Coal Mining Institute on a particular subject is an honor I sincerely appreciate. The subject of this paper is,
Jan 1, 1921
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Multi-Pollutant Regulation and Coal Markets: Winners, Loisers, and Also Rans
By Jerry M. Eyster
The Bush Administration is committed to reducing emissions from existing power plants Candidate George W. Bush said: The key to reducing emissions from older power plants on the federal level is
Jan 1, 2002
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Miscellaneous Discussion
PRESIDENT LITTLEJOHN: Until Mr. Wood comes back, we have a gentleman with us who has been sitting in one of the back seats. He has never gotten up and showed himself, and I think we ought to call on M
Jan 1, 1925
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Coal Mining Today
By Stanley C. Suboleski
Overview ? Ten minutes or ?the hook? ? Focus on Appalachia, productivity and production ? Message: ? Appalachian mining scene has fundamentally changed
Jan 1, 2007
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Minutes of the Twenty-Second Regular Meeting of The Rocky Mountain Coal Mining Institute held at Denver, Colorado February 23, 24 and 25, 1926
The meeting was called to order in the Albany hotel, with the President, John B. Marks, in the chair. At the request of the Secretary, the chairman brought before the Institute the question of a reorg
Jan 1, 1926
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Reducing the Labor Turn-Over--The Next Forward Step
By Eugene McAuliffe
The labor turn-over at coal mines has long been a fertile subject for parade by complaining coal operators, the question invariably occupying a place of prominence in the list of disabilities that ten
Jan 1, 1925
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Flexoid Tubing and Its Application to Coal Mines As a Means of Temporary Ventilation
By George A. Brown
Flexoid tubing for ventilation and some of the reasons for its use in re-opening old workings at the Union Pacific Coal Company's mines at Cumberland, Wyoming. , These mines are located on a bra
Jan 1, 1921
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Discussion
PRESIDENT LITTLEJOHN: Is there any member that has any question to ask Mr. McCleary on the subject? MR. TESCHER: What do you figure it costs to do this? MR. McCLEARY: Between one and a half and one
Jan 1, 1925