Address - At the Annual Dinner Meeting of the Rocky Mountain Coal Mining Institute, Denver, June 3, 1931

- Organization:
- Rocky Mountain Coal Mining Institute
- Pages:
- 3
- File Size:
- 199 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1931
Abstract
"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 "comrades" at a meeting of the American Iron and Steel Institute. They carry a note of challenge to all industry, and particularly to the coal industry, where they point the way to the pressing need for operators everywhere to get their feet under one table. It is that note which I would stress to all producers. You have yourselves to blame for your condition. True, there are inter-district competition and competition of substitute fuels, but they'll always be with us, more or less, and the only sensible, sane course is to remove the evils within our respective districts, which can be done only by constructive effort along cooperative lines. It's the same story in Alabama, the same in Illinois and elsewhere. The larger number of the men gathered here are at the front, as it were, in the business of mining coal. They are the men who are doing a remarkable operating job. And naturally, the sessions of this annual meeting treat of news from the front, of technical problems. But, as in actual warfare, those at the front are often uninformed of developments in the rear. They keep on fighting without fully sensing the significance of a disaster at headquarters. You've played your eighteen holes today and evidenced the efficiency of your technique in the, production of coal. It is not amiss to take advantage of this moment, the nineteenth hole, to ponder over what it's all about. After all, what do improvements in the art of mining mean if business policies engulf you in red ink? To the extent that mechanization is a factor in increased overhead, which in turn increases the pressure to produce regardless of market demand, it only aggravates our troubles unless there is the controlling influence of coordinated effort.
Citation
APA:
(1931) Address - At the Annual Dinner Meeting of the Rocky Mountain Coal Mining Institute, Denver, June 3, 1931MLA: Address - At the Annual Dinner Meeting of the Rocky Mountain Coal Mining Institute, Denver, June 3, 1931. Rocky Mountain Coal Mining Institute, 1931.