WorldWide Drilling Resource
Nitrate Coated Premium Liners 5x6, 5x8, & 5x10 Gardner Denver 5-1/2x8 & 5-1/2x10 Gardner Denver 7-1/2x8 & 7-1/2x10 Gardner Denver New Pumps In Stock Gardner Denver 4x5 TEE Triplex. Gardner Denver 5-1/2x5 TEE Triplex Gardner Denver 4x5 or 4-1/2x5 Duplex Gardner Denver 5x6 Duplex Gardner Denver 5x6 Air Drive Duplex Gardner Denver 5x8 Duplex Gardner Denver 5-1/2x8 Duplex Gardner Denver 7-1/2x8 Duplex Gardner Denver 7-1/2x10 Duplex Gardner Denver 5-1/2x5 THE Triplex Gardner Denver 5x8 PAH Triplex Call for Prices. We Have a Variety of Brands of Mud Pump Parts and Power Units in Stock. Special or Obsolete Parts Made to Order . Cash for Surplus Mud Pumps . Rebuilt Mud Pumps 4-1/2x6 Gaso Duplex 4-1/2x6 Oilwell Duplex Gardner Denver 4-1/2x8 PA-8 Triplex Gardner Denver 5x6 Duplex Gardner Denver 5x10 Duplex Gaso 5x10 Duplex OVER 300 PUMPS IN STOCK Armstrong Machine Co. Inc. Pocahontas, IA 50574 USA 712-335-4131 ~ 24 Hours 7 Days a Week • Fax: 712-335-4565 800-831-4527 USA & Canada (8AM to 4PM Monday-Friday) armstrongmachine.com amci@armstrongmachine.com Hydraulic Grout Pumps 5”, 6”, & 7-1/2” Rods Heat-Treated & Chromed 5x6, 5x8, & 5-1/2x8 Gardner Denver 5x10 & 5-1/2x10 Gardner Denver 7-1/2x8 & 7-1/2x10 Gardner Denver 26 NOVEMBER 2019 WorldWide Drilling Resource ® In Memoriam Thomas Boone “T. Boone” Pickens, Jr. (1928 – 2019) Born in Holdenville, Oklahoma, May 22, 1928, Thomas Boone “T. Boone” Pickens, Jr. was the son of an oil landman. When he was young, his family moved to Amarillo, Texas, where he grew up and attended high school. After one year at Texas A&M University, he transferred to Oklahoma A&M (now Oklahoma State University), where he earned a degree in geology in 1951. Pickens worked for Phillips Petroleum for three years before striking out on his own in 1954. With $2500 of borrowed money, Pickens and two investors formed an oil and gas firm called Petroleum Exploration Inc., as well as another company Altair Oil & Gas Co., to pursue oil and gas exploration opportunities in western Canada. Then he established Mesa Petroleum, which he took public in 1964. Pickens turned Mesa into one of America’s largest independent natural gas and oil companies with the company producing more than 3 trillion cubic feet of gas and 150 million barrels of oil between 1964 - 1996. He was an advocate for energy independence in the U.S. This self-made oil tycoon never forgot his humble beginnings, he said, “For most of my adult life, I’ve believed that I was put on earth to make money and be generous with it. I’ve never been a fan of inherited wealth.” He gave more than one billion dollars to philanthropic and educational causes including his alma mater Oklahoma State University, the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, the Center for BrainHealth at The University of Texas at Dallas, Scottish Rite Children’s Hospital, the T. Boone Pickens Hospice and Palliative Care Center, the Wilmer Eye Institute at Johns Hopkins University, Big Brothers Big Sisters of North Texas, the Center for Missing and Exploited Children, the Fisher House Foundation, Happy Hill Farm, Jonathan’s Place, Meals on Wheels, the World Cranial Foundation, The Senior Source, USO Dallas/Fort Worth, Special Olympics of Texas, and Jubilee Park (an inner-city Dallas commu nity). He penned a letter to be published after his death (it’s inspiring and worth reading o n LinkedIn.com ) which offers sage advice and insight into what he believed were the keys to his success including, a good work ethic; learning from your mistakes; being humble; embracing change; having faith in spiritual matters and in humanity; staying fit; and not blaming others when you fail. He ends his letter with this, “I left an undying love for America, and the hope it presents for all. I left a passion for entrepreneurship, and the promise it sustains. I left the belief that future generations can and will do better than my own. Thank you. It’s time we all move on.” T. Boone Pickens passed away on September 11, of natural causes. He is survived by his children Deborah, Pam, Michael, Tom, and Liz, as well as 11 grandchildren, and an increasing number of great grandchildren. Th e T. Boone Pickens Foundation will continue to support the many charitable endeavors he embraced during his life.
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