Courtesy of “Coal Age”
CARS FOR CARRYING EXPLOSIVES INTO MINES
SUPPLEMENTARY READING
| COAL CATECHISM | By W. J. Nicholls |
| THE STORY OF AMERICAN COALS | By W. J. Nicholls |
| A YEAR IN A COAL MINE | By Joseph Husband |
| YEAR BOOK OF THE U. S. BUREAU OF MINES | |
| STORY OF A PIECE OF COAL | By E. A. Martin |
| THE COAL FIELDS OF THE UNITED STATES (U. S. Geological Survey, Professional Paper 100) | By M. R. Campbell |
⁂ Information concerning these books may be had on application to the Editor of The Mentor.
THE OPEN LETTER
Coal is “a burning question,” that has to be met and answered every day. It supplies heat, light and power—and a thousand and one useful by-products—and it is an ever-present, ever-fruitful subject of public and private discussion. We average folk know something of the varied uses of coal in the big affairs of the world, but we know it more intimately and vitally in the forms in which it ministers to our own personal welfare. Coal, in our everyday—and night—life, means heat and light. It means home comfort—and if this “coal comfort” is denied us, or even curtailed, we raise an immediate and mighty outcry. And why not? The health of a community can be fatally affected by a few heatless days. The experience of the past winter has shown us how dependent we are on fuel, not only for luxury and comfort, but for life itself.
Why do we need so much heat? Many of the peoples of the earth get along comfortably with much less heat than we consider necessary. Europeans and South Americans call us a “steam-heated nation.” Why do we have to surrender so completely and abjectly to the domination of Old King Coal? It is true, as Owen Meredith said: “Civilized man cannot live without cooks”; and light is all important in turning night hours to advantage; but why must we be so warm? Humanity was not created in a warm room, nor was the human race nurtured, in its infancy, by a coal fire or a gas stove. Primitive man was his own heater. He had to discover fire, and then exploit its uses. He was originally supplied by nature with a warm body, and he now finds artificial ways of making it warmer. Has not civilization pampered us to a point that has impaired our original heat-giving resources and substituted a forced warmth that has enervated us? The doctors tell us that many diseases come out of artificial heat—indoor diseases, they might be called—the diseases that are treated, and sometimes cured today, by foregoing artificial heat and going back to nature.