THE SCR ANTON TRIBUNE- BATCH D AT MORNING, SEPTEMBER 19, 1896. 9 PETROLEUM, ITS HISTORY AND USES One of the Greatest of Oar Industries Entertalogly Described. ITS ORIGIN BAFFLES THE SAVANTS Many Tbcorici Advanced but None Fits All the Facts Tell of an In teresting and Instructive Paper He cently Read by Dr. W. F. Connor Before the Laekawanua Institute of History agd Science. It has ben said a country Is rich In proportion to its mineral wealth; la that respect, the United States sur passes all others, and Pennsylvania any state in the union. The discovery of petroleum for illuminating purposes has been of Incalculable benefit to the human race, for during the past thirty years and more it has added at least one-eighth to each and every day. of the civilized Inhabitants of the world. The earliest history speaks of petio leum and its various uses, but it was left for Samuel W. Kier. of Plttsburjr, in 1849-50 to discover its value as an illuminant; and from a small refinery of forty gallons a day It has grown to be one of the most gigantic Industries tho orld has ever known, extending ever, across the great Sahara desert In Africa to the remotest corners of the earth. It has made many multi-millionaires; but be it said to the credit of the Standard Oil company that it has never taken undue advantage of its ability to In crease the cost to the consumer: that It pays Its labor the highest wages, anu that there has never been a strike, to my knowledge, among its employes. OIL, IN CRUDE FORM. As taken from the earth petroleum is of a dark brown color, which, by re flected light, appears greenish. It is about as thick as thin molasses, get ting thicker in cold weather, but never freezing. It Is a hydro-carbon of a peculiar penetrating odor which differs largely in the different fields. General ly Its odor is of nnptha, which it con tains, but that which comes from the vicinity of Lima, O., smells like a mix ture of burning sulphur or rotten eggs, and is even found after a brief period in the refined product. For a long time the oil from that region was successful ly used as fuel; It contains a smaller proportion o! lamp oil, but the demands for the latter are In' excess of the amount produced and its use for fuel lias been discontinued. THE FIRST WELL. The first well was drilled near Titus vllle, I'a., in August, 1850, by Colonel Drake, and oil and gas were found at slxty-nlue feet from the surface, and yielded what at that time was a phe nomenal quantity, 400 gallons per day, though by deeper drilling since, a single well has thrown out over 4,000 barrels a duy, equal to 100,000 gallons. Plthole, Venango county, wns the center of early active operations, and the experience of people during these days of excitement would rival the tule of Monte Crlsto or the Arabian Nights. In May, 1865, Plthole was laid out and six months later It had 00 houses, CO of which were hotels, thrih of which cost In constructing over $N0,000 apiece, and its postoftlcc was the second In the state. In one Instance $24,000 was given for tho privilege of drilling a well on a single one-half acre of land; specula tion was rife, men carried as high as $50,000 In their pockets and slept on tho floors of hotels, and many people formed companies and sold lands they never possessed to gullible buyers; and the capital stock of companies in that year reached $1100,000,000. Reaction fol lowed In 1867-08, and machinery that cost $2,500 to $3,000 sold for $25 to $50; but good business men made money and saved It. One well alone earned for Its owners over $3,000,000. But, alas, poor Pitholet Now you would need a trusty guide to locate It THE PIPE LINES. During recent years the surplus oil has been stored in large tanks holding 25,000 to 35,000 barrels, torn down and built up as the flelds changed and ten years ago there was nearly 30,000,000 SATURDAY Giant values at dwarf prices are hard to resist, for they bear very little drain upon the purse. Bargains for Saturday are strictly made to order by us, for values offered for this day are for the day only. They are the real made-to-sell kind, with a figure on them that will make them sell. Think of it!7 7.50 pair Ladies' Hand-sewed Fine Dongola Shoes, extension sole, all sizes and widths, regular price the world over $2.50 to $3.00, our special sale, $1.49. Men's Patent Leather Shoes, sizes 6 to 10, at $1.49. Men's Calf Shoes, sold all over town for $3.00 and $4.00, our Special price only $2.00. 1,000 pair Men's Dress Shoes, all toes and sizes, at 95c, worth $1.25. 675 pair Misses' Fine Shoes, buttons, square toe, worth $2.00, sizes 12 to 2, at $1.00. 200 pair Children's Shoes, sizes 5 to 8, wedge heel, worth 65c. for 45c. 1,000 pair Infants' Shoes, 2 to 5, at 20c. We have a few pair of Ladies' Shoes left at 50c. ' The above are only a few of our great bargains. We want you to be free with us. Come in, go out, look or buy. With our stock and our efforts to please you can't help making Myer Davidow's the Host Popular Shoe Store in town. Remember, there is no trouble to show goods, and you will surely save money by it. We are the sole agents for Stacy, Adams & Co.'s Men's Fine Shoes and Gray Bros.' Ladies' Fine Hand-Turned Shoes. MYE barrels stored on the surface In these large reservoirs. The oil is pumped from the small tanks at the wells to the stations and from them not only into the big tanks, but by a series of sta tions, situated about thirty to forty miles apart, to the seaboard, thus sav ing vast sums of money in barreling and transportation. For a number of years oil was bar relled and sent to Pittsburg on flat boats from Oil Creek, a distance of 132 miles. Later, refineries were built along the creek and large iron tank cars con structed, holding about sixty barrels, on which the refined product was con veyed to all parts of the United States and to the seaports for export to Eu rope. Now large iron tank steamers carry the export oil across the ocean. GEOLOGICALLY CONSIDERED. The geological strata In which oil Is found consists of conglomerate slates and shales. Conglomerate rock is made up of pebbles mixed ,with more or less sand and all cemented into a close, hard rock. These pebbles vary in size and quality in various localities, being usually of quarts, though some times sandstone, and they are found from the size of a pea to that of a goose egg, and occasionally larger. They have evi dently been thrown together In their present shape by the action of water tumbling pushing and rolling them to gether. The conglomerates of the lo cation mentioned belong to the vesper tine formation of the Pennsylvania survey. It is found in situ in its native bed only upon the tops of the highest hills; but pieces of it which have been broken off by their own weight, after the softer rock beneath had been de composed and washed away, are found scattered over the hillsides, sometimes In Immense blocks, which are so en during as to defy the action of the ele ments and bear record In their ruins of the former conditions and changes, which their more yielding neighbors, the sandstones and slates, could not withstand. As found here it is not coarse, the pebbles being rarely larger than hick ory nuts, and they become smaller as we trace this formation westward, while the opposite will hold good as we go eastward. The accompanying vespertine sandstone and slates also becomes finer in their textures, and the whole formation becomes thinner as It spreads westward from 2,600 feet on the Susquehanna river to not more than 100 to 150 feet on Oil Creek. From this thinning down of the mass toward the westward and a corresponding change In the texture from coarse to fine we are led to believe the material from which these rocks are composed was derived from a continent lying on the east or northwest of the Appalachian ranges, previous to their upheaval, and that these materials after being brought down to the sea through the channels of rivers flowing west and southwest were distributed to their present location by the powerful ocean currents that were undoubtedly subject to laws similar to those which govern our present great rivers to the sea. AN ILLUSTRATION. For a familiar Illustration take a long mill pond or lake with a creek flowing into it at one extremity and out at tho opposite, the creek will bring down, es pecially at the time of a Hood, larire quantities of loose stone, pebbles, sand, black mud, vegetable mould, and blue mud or clay; and It will dispose them over the bottom of the pond or lake In the order in which we have named them, that Is, at the upper end of the lake. At the mouth of the creek will be found the large stones, then the smaller ones or pebbles; then, as the current beromes less, the black mud was deposited, and Anally the blue clay, which the water held longest ami carried farthest: and the beds will be found to become thinner as they be come finer in texture, thus correspond ing to the conglomerates, sandstones. slates and shales of the New York state and Pennsylvania formations of the second series. It will be readily inferred from tho above that a sandstone Is only a very fine conglomerate: also that black car bonaceous slates may be attributed to vegetable origin; and, that argillaceous Bhales, or the soapstones of the oil regions, are derived from clayey forma- j tlons. The vergent series of rocks so i called by Professor Rogers is immedi ately below the vespertine and It corre sponds to the Chemung and Portage groups of the New York state geolog SCRANTOPTS ists. This formation consists of sand stones, slates and shales Interspersed with the sandstones. In their layers, varying from five to fifty feet in thick ness, while the slates and shales are found In immense deposits, sometimes 80C or 1.000 feet in thickness. To this series doubtless belong the sandstones, slates and shales which appear in the bluffs along the valley of Oil Creek through its entire length; also the first, second and third sand rocks of the wells with the Intervening slates and shales, and how much deeper It extends is unknown. The fourth sand rock of Plthole corresponds with the third of Oil Creek, because the second is split into a stray sand. The rocks above de scribed are stated to belong to the Paleozoic rocks, because containing the most ancient remains of ancient animal and vegetable life yet discovered, stretching all the way between the gnelsslc formations beneath and the lowest of the coal deposits above. Some times they are denominated "fossilfer ous," "sedimentary" or "secondary" rocks. KEYSTONE FORMATIONS. In ' Pennsylvania, says Professor Rogers, who Is considered the high est authority, and to whom I am In debted for the foregoing description, this class has been deposited during the four earliest periods of the great European divisions, namely the Cam brian, Silurian, Devonion and Curbon lforous. No traces of the fifth or Per mian group, has been found in North America. The prolonged succession of sedimentary action closed with the close of the Cambrian system, belnff terminated by the upheaval of the ocean, In, whose broad bed, and around whose margin thse deposits had collected. The same eminent au thority states that the vergent series abounds In the remains of Marine vegetation, and also that the aggre gate thickness of all the rocks be longing to the class above described measured at their greatest depths not more than thirty-live thousand feet The sand rocks of McKcan county belong to an entirely different strata. AVest of the Alloghenles there Is a dip of the coal strata which crops out In McKcan county on the top of the highest hills of eleven feet to the mile, irregular SO to 21 in oil field on a line 32 degrees west of south, and toward the Gulf of Mexico. This strata over lies the conglomerate or third sand by 60 feet, but here the McKean coun ty third sand underlies that of the lower oil country by 2,200 feet, and if an entirely different composition, be ing reddish In color, resembling choco late grounds and abounding in fire, shells, which are not found in the oth er regions. IJy actual measurement one well on Oil Creek was drilled through 32 feet of earth, 168 feet of slate rock to first sand, .which was 20 feet deep, then through another strata of slate 115 feet to second sand, 25 feet thick, then 110 feet of slate rock to third sand of 20 feet, making in all 470 feet to the top of third sand, which .was 25 feet thick. SHOOTING- A WELL. Some wells flow at Irregular Inter vals, while the quantity of gas In others Is sufficient to blow the oil out. Others have to be piped to ths bottom and the oil pumped or lifted out, often from a depth of 2,000 feet several times a day as It accumulates. After a well has been drilled to the proper depth and sand In order to loosen tho rock and make a pocket for the oil to gather In a torpedo, which consists of a tube of tin 2x4 Inches In diameter Is anchored near its mouth and from 10 to 40 quarts of nitroglycerine poured Into It, and on top Is placed a percussion cap and all lowered, and when In readiness a weight Is dropped down which strikes the cop, exploding the nitroglycerine, nnd then follows a magnltlclent sight. At first there Is heard a rustling sand followed by a noise like distant thund er, which increases In volume, nnl shortly a black column of oil which retains tho form of the tubing, is car ried more than 100 feet up through the derrick, where it spreads out In the form of a spray, and like a sud den shower on a sunny day Is sprinkled over the vicinity of the well, covering the new timber with mud and oil; this is followed by a perfect fusllade of stones of all sizes up to a. goose egg; then all is quite for a little while, when tho well flows again if it is a largo one, or It may continue to flow constantly or at Intervals for 307 LACKAWANNA IS DEMANDS WITH DWAHF PRICES DAY! DQW5 hours or days, throwing out thousands of barrels like a huge hole spouting, or it may cease after being shot and compel its owner to pump the oil out When a big well Is expected arrange ments are made by the erection of large tanks to store the oil and when it first ows it is connected by a series of pipes to them, but when an unusual well Is found and its thousands of barrels are poured into the nearest stream It be comes a source of danger to everyone living along Its torturous, way. Geologists have stated that there was no oil east of the Alleghenles and it was left for the wild-cat driller to de monstrate that large quantities of oil existed In western New York and gas has been found In many places In that state and In paying quantities. In Oswego county, and it would not be surprising to find oil even farther east. Many theories have been advanced as to the origin or causes which lead to the production of oil some of them very Ingenious; but most of them wanting In some essential feature. If oil was always found In the same strata, if It was always of the same uniform character many of these theor ies would be more valuable; but why should the oil found on Oil Creek be of a specific gravity of 57 baum and that from Franklin, less than ten miles away, be of a 20 baum and of an entire ly different character, the former worth $1.00 per barrel for light while the lat ter Is worth six to eight dollars as a lubricant? Again that found In Canada Is Impregnated with aerolelne, a pun gent substance very irritating to the lungs and throat and found In fish oil by the distillation, while nothing of the kind exists In Pennsylvania petro leum. Another writer says 'Uhe transforma tion of wood fibre into oil is a chemical change, taking place always out of contact with atmospheric air, and us ually under water, but by no means connected with any geological period. As for Instance, the coal period with which many intelligent people ossol elate it Dr. Gresner says: "During the pas sage of vegetable substances into coal ther Is an escape of vast quantities of carbon confined with hydrogen; It Is only necessary that he gases of these elements should be condensed to pro duce hydrocarbon oils; the operation Is a decomposing and combining one and the new combinations formed during the transmutation of wood into coal have a close anology to those produced during the distillation of wood without the admission of olr; the gases gener ated In strata of coal and coal strata are always under great pressure which tends to their condensation and tlifa consequent formation of oil." OF VEGETABLE ORIGIN? "That coal has been derived from vegetables Is undoubted; peat and wood are found to pass by Insensible shades into lignite, lignite Into com pact, bituminous coal and the end of tho transformation appears In anthra cite from which nearly all the hydro gen has been expelled and carbon re mains. From the expulsion of oxygen, carbon and hydrogen from wood and tho variety It presents until It forms true coal heat has not been necessary, although It hus doubtless exercised a powerful influence In connection with those chemical changes ever going for ward in the earth. "The condensation of hydrogen nnd carbon producing oil nnd the fact ot strata of conl nnd shale before they reach the maximum of carbonization, giving out theso elements In great quantities under pressure and tho tendency of these gases and oils to difl'uso reasons for finding oil In form ations having no traces of vegeta tion." Another writer supposes "that the petroleum of Pennsylvania arises from the distillation by subterranean heat of the hydro carbon agents resident In the carbonaceous strata underly ing the oil regions." Ptill another says: "That the great beds of anthracite coal of Pennsyl vania on the southern slope of tho Alleghenles are merely the residuary coke, as It were, of a distillation pro cess which has converted their bitum inous matter into oil, and distributed It by some convulsion of the earth through the formations beyond the mountain range." The theory of scientific men of the present day In explanation ot the source of Bait In the sea Is this: "The carbonic acid of the nlr is constantly A DAY SET ASIDE B acting upon the rocks on the surface of the earth, thus turning them to clay and forming carbonates with soda pot ash lime and magnesln set free. These are carried down as carbonates to the sea, where the carbonate decom poses the chloride of calcium of its waters and forms common salt and carbonate of lime. This series of ac tion Is the source ot the salt of the sea ot clays and limestone. Organic living beings do not generate the car bonate ot lime, but appropriate it when formed for them by chemical reactions; and thus great portions of our limestone rocks are made up of fossil remains. In a volume of lime stone there is separated and con densed from the air a large amount of carbonic acid gas. The early at mosphere was therefore very dense and unfit for the sustenance ot the higher forms of life, until by far the greater portion of this gas had been removed by thef ormatlon of the car bonate of lime, and vegetable matter now constituting petroleum." PRACTICAL LESSONS. In the brief time allotted to this pa per I have only been able to touch lightly on this formation feature of petroleum, but the drill has proven that many of the above theories do not hold true and that geologists of great reputations have been put right by its practical tests. It is assumed that for every sixty feet we enter the earth towards its center there is an Increase ot one de gree of heat, but Instances have oc curred In which pellets of lee have been blown from the bottom of a well 600 feet deep, and by the thermometer the temperature has been found in oil com ing to the surface at or below the freez ing point, and I have often found by dipping the fingers into such oil that It was exceedingly cold. A very important question here arises, Does the chemical laboratory of nature reproduce the oil as it Is removed, or do we exhaust the supply? There are wells still pumping that have continu ously supplied oil for upward of twenty-five years, while others are worth less after flowing or pumping for a brief period. A careful estimate of its various wells in different locations a few years ago by the Forest Oil com pany puts the cost of production at an average of 75 cents per barrel. There is considerable expense connected with keeping a well In working order, as paraflne wax collects around the In terior of Us tubing, frequently requir ing that It be pulled out and cleaned. If allowed to stop for a few weeks the production decreases or ceases alto gether, as If the oil found other means of exit. CHEMICAL QUALITIES. v It is a general rule with few excep tions that the harder tho rock tho greyer the color of the sand, the light er colored the oil, the smaller the well and the better Its staying qualities. AVhen first distilled refined oil hna on acid reaction. Is water white to a bluish shade; the lowest grade Is 100 degrees Hash test. That which we generally get is 120 to 150 degrees while headlight runs to 300 degrees. Clean copper remains untounched by refined oil as It contains no oxygen. Clean pottaslum remains blight In it, strong sulphur add decomposes and destroys It. nitric acid changes It as It does other oils to a yellow oily filled; hydrochloric and ncetic acid do not nfTect It at all, neither docs litharge or other metallc oxides nor by hydrates of potassa, soda or lime, nor bl-chlorlde of culclum or many other salts. It Is nearly Insoluble In pure alcohol only 4 to 5 per cent, being, dissolved, but either has the pow er of completely dissolving it, and if the ether Is evaporated It at once as sumes Its former appearance. Resides the above grades of oil there are produced from, crude petroleum naphtha, rhlgollue, an anarsthellc, paraflne wax, cosmollne or vasaline, tar and analine dyes besides a neutral oil that resembles sweet oil and is called albullne. Rheumatism Relieved in fl Hours. "MYSTIC CURE" for RHEUMA TISM and NEURALGIA relieves In three hours. Its action upon the sys tem Is marvelous and mysterious. It removes at once the cause and the dis ease quickly disappears. The first dose great benefits. 75 cents. Sold by Carl Lorenz, druggist, 418 Lackawanna ave nue, Scranton. AVENUE. 307 For TUBni FOR THE FASTEST WHEEL ON EARTH, No Matter Who Rides It B. F. KELLER, ON A SPALDING AT THE National Meet at Wilkes-Barre, SEPTEMBER 16, Was the only man (with on exception) oat ot the entire Mcranton push that woo anything, beating out some ot tba fastest men on the circuit. Again we say, get a bpaldlug sad be happy. C, M. FLOREUgt. .CYCLES At Rock-Bottom Prices, LIST NO. a. Buffalo Princa '86, $36 Imperial '96, 55 Eria '96, 45 Princa '96, 36 Sterns '94, 35 Columbia 93, 25 Cleveland '94, 25 Coventry '93, 15 These are all fitted with pneumatic tires and are in good running order. CHASE & FARRAR BICYCLE SURGEONS, S'SH Linden Street. Opp. Court House. WHEELS (ffi) WHEELS BICYCLES. OS Al AFTER SEPT. 18T. IBM, WE will offer all of the following wheels we may have in stork at Jobber's Prices ; Wolf Anifricnn, Piorco. Ivor-Johnson, WaYerly and Fcatln rBtone I.lue. This ia an opportunity to Kt a pond wheel choap. We still have tho famous "Crawford," a wheel that run a lltrht and easy end wears equal to any 100 machine on tho market Coil and boo what we can do for yon in our Una, I i PERU 321 SPRUCE SI. WE ARE STILL ROOTING B LACKAWANNA One Price to convalescents and invalids ; for e!itt dren or for people with weak digestion . must be carefully prepared from the I most wholesome ingredients. For I such cooking, Cottolene proves in-1 valuable-. It imnarts a delicate flavor I to the food, making it at once pal atable and healthful. -( Cottolene Isnndonbtedlvtlie best.cookJnir material ever nrnifitrprl mnnin twit f (it Unautolo tTd-wTfr mil tttm IsmJ IT ETAIDBAKIW rnMDlMV Chicago,, Ihwltrk, Philadelphia. Plttabsmjfc. EVA M. HETSEL'S Stiperior Face Bleach PotltlTiIj Removes all Field BleoMat Ito mere Freckles. Tan. Sunburn, Black deads, Liver rpote, Pimplos and Ballow Com f lexion if ladies will uso my Munerlor Faco Bleach. Not a conniotic, but a medicine which ants directly oil the skin, retnoyiua: all dleeol erations, and one of the greatest purifying sgents for the complexion in existence. A perfectly clear and spotless complexion can be obtained In erory Instance by its use. Fries it pry nniue. r or sale at it m. ueisere Hair Dressing and Manicure Parlors, 0.10 L wanna ave. Hall orders filled promptly. $330.00 Seal Skin Sacqus. Onr ambition Is to reach the 500,000 mark in circulation, making ns tho largest weekly home mngaaino in tho world. To ac complish this we have decided to glyo abac lutely free, to each lady obtaining in tho etato In which she resides the lament number ot yearly subscriptions for The Household Corn pen Ion by January 1, 18)07. the finest t3UUW Healskin Jacket manufactured by Henry A Newland Co., Detroit In addition to this unprecedented offer wo will pay 2o cents for eacb subscription sent us. Our yearly sub acriptlon trice has been reduced from $1.25 TO 75 CENTS. Bend one cent stamped addressed wrapper for subscription blanks and freo sample copy of paper to Household Publishing Co., DETROIT, MICH, References; Any Bank la Detroit. THB WI3AL AMERICAN TRIP NORTHERN STEAMSHIP COMPANY. The Superbly Appointed and ConimodloM Kte.'l Steamships, NORTHWEST ANU NORTHLAND, American through and Ihrmtch, learo Buffalo 1 wsdnvs snd Fridays 0.30 p.m. for Cleveland, Detroit, Mackinac. The boo, Duluth, and Western Points, passing all places of interest by daylight In connection with THE GREAT NORTHERN RAILWAY, it forms the most direct route, and from OT ary point of comparison, the most delightful nnd cemfortnl lo one t Minneapolis, Ft. Paul, tireat Palls, Holena, Butte. Kpolcane and Pa ct 11 0 coast. The only transcontinental lino running the famous buffet, library, observa tion car. New 07 hour train for Portland Tie Ppoksne. HOTLL LAPAVETTE, Lake Mlnnetonka, 16 nulea from Minneapolis largest and moss beantiul resort in tho west. licketsnud any Information of any agent or A. A. UKAliU, General Passenger agent Buffalo, N. Y. r Y' US AVENUE. Ali. lHitllllli