1891.] 11 [Lesley. 



ch 



25. vl obr ild xni bnim xin eaed pig ki bimiv nplge cary v xm aeiv iqtlm 



Eber Peleg Peleg Joktan 



ch 



26. v iqthn ild at-almudd v at-xlp v at-eyrmut v at-ire 



Joktan Almodad Sheleph Hazarmaveth Jerah 



27. v at-edurm v at-auzl v at-dqle 



Hadoram Uzal Diklah 



28. v at-oubl v at-abimal v at-xba 



Obal Abimael Sheba 



ch 



29. v at-aupr v at-evile v at-iubb kl-ale bni iqtbn 



Ophir Havilah Jobab Joktan 



30. v iei uiaxbm m-mxa bake spre er eqdin 



Mesha Sephar 



31. ale bni-xm Imxpetm llxgtni barytm Iguiem 



Shem 



ch ch 



32. ale mxpet bni-ne Ituldtm bguiem uinale nprdu eguiin bary aer embul 



Noah 



ALSO OF JUDGES XII, 6. 



ch 



v iamru lu amr-na xblt v iarar *Ut v la ikin 1 dbr bn v iaezu autu v ix- 



Shibboleth Sibboleth 



etliueu al mobrut eirden v ipl bot eeia maprim arboim v xnim alp. 



On the Grapeville Gas-wells. By J. P. Lesley. 

 (Head before tJie American PhilosopJiical Society, March 6, 1891.) 



Mr. John Fulton, General Manager of the Cambria Iron Works, at 

 Johnstown, Cambria county, Pa., has kindly furnished me with the fol- 

 lowing particulars of one of the most important and significant episodes 

 in the strange story of Petroleum in Pennsylvania : 



1. A report to him made October 12, 1888, by Edgar G. Tuttle, then 

 Mining Engineer of the Company. This gives : (a) the number of 

 wells (27 or more) around Grapeville, in Westmoreland county, up to 

 that date sunk and piped by different companies ; (6) the length and 

 sizes of the pipe line to Johnstown ; (c) the pressures of gas at the well, 

 at the 4th, 8th, 12th, 16th, 20th, 24th, 28th, 32d, 36th and 39th mile, and 

 at the Cambria Works terminus. 



2. A second report made to him two years later, February 23, 1891, by 

 M. G. Moore, now Mining Engineer of the Company. This gives : (a) 

 the titles of eleven companies owning 85 gas-wells in the Grapeville dis- 

 trict ; (&) an account of the drilling especially of the Agnew well ; (c) 

 a table showing the decline of pressure at the Westmoreland and Cambria 

 Companies' wells, from 386 Ibs. on April 29, 1889, to 65 Ibs. on February 

 2, 1891 ; (cZ) a full table of the Co.'s thirteen wells, depths, dates of 

 striking gas, the initial pressure of each, subsequently observed pressure 

 at April 29, 1889, December 15, May 26, November 3, December 1, 18.00, 



