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It consists of more than 450 of the very latest designs, for I any one of which you would gladly pay 10 cents, best hardwood em broidery hoops, aet of highest grade needles (assorted sizes), gold-tipped bodkin, highly polished bone stiletto and fascinating booklet of instruc tions giving all the fancy stitches so clearly illustrated and explained that any school girl can readily become expert SEVERAL TRANSFERS FROM EACH DESIGN ONLY SAFE METHOD [ All old-fashioned methods using water, benzina or injurious fluids are crude and out-of-date. This ia the only safe method. Others often injure expensive materials. N. B. Out of Town Readers will add 7 cents extra for postage and expense of mailing FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH . ■ . . JULY 16, 1915. GMETT LEAVES THE STATE SEME Chief Engineer of the Water Sup ply Commission to Engage in Private Work Farley Gannett, who has been engi neer of the Water Supply Commission of Pennsylvania for nearly ten years, has resigned to enter private practice of engineering in Harrisburg. In his. letter of resignation Mr. Gannett states that he has desired to take this step for some years in order to take up numerous pcojects which have been brought to his attention, but had re tained his connection with the com mission at the request of the chair man, John Birkinbine, to complete im portant investigations and reports, which have now been finished. Under Mr. Gannett the engineering force of the commission has increased from two to fifty men and the reports have grown from paper-covered pam phlets to volumes containing 800 to 1,000 pages, which are recognized all over the United States as standard for hyarographic reports. It is conceded that Pennsylvania's laws for the supervision of streams excel those of any other eastern state and that they have set an example which has been followed by many. The supervision over the safety of dams is thorough and complete and over 400 dams have been examined in the last two years by the engineers of the commission and several scores of them haye been strengthened as a result. Since 1913 no bridge or encroachment of any kind has been built over, or in a stream in the state unless the engineers of the commission have shown it not to be injurious or have had the plans modi fied so as to make it harmless in time of flood. The system of measuring the flow of streams, instituted by Mr. Gan nett In 1907, Is the most extensive of any state and its results are used and quoted by all engineers. One division of the commission's force of engineers has recently corn pleted a 1,500-page report, showing the location, name and use of every stream in the state. Every one of the SOO water supply systems was visited and described, as well as all the water power plants. Navigation, floods, culm, rainfall and other subjects relating to the streanris are treated in a compre hensive manner, with maps, diagrams and photographs. Mr. Gannett, who is the son of the latf Henry Gannett, president of the Xtticnal Geographic Society of Wash ington, D. C., came to Harrisburg in 1002 after graduating from the Massa chusetts Institute of Technology In Boston to work under James H. Fuertes for the Board of Public Works. He helped design and build the Paxton creek interceptor, made the first sur vey for the Wildwood storage reservoir and park and was assistant engineer during the designing and construction of the filter plant. In 1905 he was invited by the newly appointed Water Supply Commission of Pennsylvania to apply for the position of engineer to the commission and was appointed De cember 1, 1905. Mr. Gannett, who is president of the Engineers' Society of Pennsylvania, has always been interested in the wel fare of engineers and has done much to advance their intei