You should be able to tell by the color, and connections used.
Gas
"Black pipe" is commonly used for natural gas, and is dark grey/black.
All connections will be threaded.
Water
Water lines come in a variety of materials, some of the most common are.
Copper
This will be um... copper, in color.
While there are other ways to join copper pipes, the most common is solder.
Galvanized
Galvanized pipes will be a light grey.
And use threaded connections similar to black pipe.
Plastics
You might also find various types of plastic-ish water pipes. These can come in a variety of colors. Red, blue, white, black, etc.
These may use compression type connections, crimp connections, or various other type or connectors.
Still can't decide?
Try using your other senses.
Touch the pipe.
If it's warm to the touch, it's likely hot water (may not be warm unless hot water was recently used). Hold the pipe and have a helper turn a nearby tap on/off quickly, to see if you can feel vibrations. Try running the water for a bit, then touch the pipe to see if the temperature changes. If the pipe gets colder/hotter, it's likely a water line.
Listen to the pipe.
Put your ear to the pipe, and again have a helper turn on a nearby tap. If you hear the water clearly in the pipe, you found yourself a water line. (make sure the pipe is not in contact with any other pipes when you do this, since sound could be transferred to the other pipe). This is not the most accurate method, but it can sometimes work.
Taste the pipe.
This won't help you at all. I just pictured people licking pipes in my head, and thought it was funny. You could tell your helper to do it, and then laugh at them when they do it. But it's not going to help you figure out what the pipe is.
Best Answer
Ccf stands for 100 cubic feet. So the meter is read 8953 hundred and 9035 hundred, or 895,300 cf and 903,500 cf respectively.
More Info:
When reading a meter, you'll notice each dial has an arrow. This arrow points the direction the needle spins. The number above the dial indicates how much the value increases, per revolution of that needle. For example. If the needle furthest to the right spins from 0, all the way round and back to 0. You've used 1,000 cubic feet of gas. This number is not a multiplier.
Reading the Meter
If the dial is exactly on a number, that's the number you use. If the dial is between two numbers, you'll usually use the smaller of the two. The exception here, is when the dial is between the 9 and 0. In this case, the 9 is actually smaller, and so should be used.
Here's a graphic from The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, explaining how to read a standard 4 dial meter.