WORLD HAPPENINGS OF Brief Resume Most Important Daily News Items. COMPILED FOR YOU Events of Noted People, Government and Pacific Northwest, and Other Thing Worth Knowing. Joseph Slmmonetti was found drowned Tuesday In a Tat of wine, al leged to hare been Illicitly made, at his home in Los Angeles, Cat. A hydro-airplane was launched suc cessfully Monday in tests at the Phil adelphia navy-yard of a catapulting de vice, which sent the NC-9, a two-seated craft, into the air at a speed of 43 miles an hour from a standing start " State department advices from Chi huahua, Mexico, report the capture Monday of four Americans by Mexican bandits. Payment of 25,000 pesos was demanded for their release, which was finally brought about by payment of only 5000 pesos. Examination of the estate of George Goodwin, one of the trainmen who lost their lives in the Pallister tunnel wreck near Kamloops, B. C, Tuesday revealed that he owned a painting pronounced the work of an old master and valued at 60,000. Between 275 and 300 union miners employed at mine No. 26 of the New York Coal company at Floodwood, Ohio, went on strike Tuesday morning as a protest against the check-off In junction issued by Judge Anderson In federal court at Indianapolis. Joseph P. O'Neill, ex-chief federal prohibition Inspector for Wisconsin and ex-chairman of the democratic state central committee, as well as an ex-saloonkeeper, was arrested Tuesday by federal agents, charged with con spiracy to violate the Volstead act. Incll Chambers of Post field, Fort Sill, Oklahoma, Tuesday broke what officials say is the record for high al titude parachute jumping, when he leaped approximately 26,000 feet from an army plane. The stunt was per formed In connection with the Ameri can Legion flying meet The body of Mrs. William F. Cody now lies in the grave with her hus band, "Buffalo Bill," famous scout and Indian fighter, at the top of Lookout mountain, near Golden, Colo. More than 100 persons attended the brief Episcopal ceremony at the mountain top overlooking the plains of Colorado Grain prices in Chicago underwent a severe tumble Tuesday, carrying wheat and oats down to the lowest level reached for 1921. About 6 cents a bushel was cut from the value of wheat for future delivery, May touch Ing 11.06, as compared with $1.12 to $1.12 at Monday's finish. Lack of buying was a feature. What was declared to be an ultim atum was delivered Monday to the Hungarian government by representa tlves of Great Britain, France and Italy, In behalf of the entente, demand ing that Charles be handed over to the commander of the British squad ron, and the Immediate proclamation of his deposition as king. British dclcgntcs to the conference on limitation of armaments will go to Washington resolved that, short of compromising the safety of the em pire or Its sea security, they will go to almost any lengths to meet other great naval powers in a mutual and proportionate effort to relieve their people from the burden of competitive armament After passing Monday discussing the soldiors' bonus, the senate voted to re tain In the tax revision bill $75,000,000 of taxes on corporations which had been proposed for repeal, and lopped off a number of the excise levlus now In force. An amendment proposing a graduated corporation capital stock tux at rates of $1 on each $1000 of stock between $3000 and $3,000,000, and $2 per $1000 on all over $3,000,000 was adopted. The matter of proceeding to procure further reductions in railroad em ployes' wages with the object of re ducing rates la "well In hand" with the various roads and necessary moves to bring the question before the Inter state commerce commission and the railroad labor board will be taken at once, T. DeWItt Cuyler, chairman of the railway executives' association, said In telegram to W. 11. Chandler, president of the Industrial Traffic league. GURHENT WEEK TAX BILL PASSED BY SENATE Reduction in Nation's Levy by Approx imately $730,000,000 Likely. Washington, D. C. The much-re vised tax-revision bill finally was passed in the senate at 1:35 A. M. Tuesday after a session lasting more than 15 hours. It still must run the gauntlet of the senate and house con ferees before it reachesthe president The vote was 38 to 24, three repub licans La Follette, Moses and Norris voting against the bill, and one dem ocrat Broussard supporting it As now drawn, the bill is estimated by treasury experts to yield approxi mately $3,250,000,000 for the fiscal year ending next June 30, or $200,000, 000 less than the existing law. If all of the changes proposed become ef fective, however, the measure ulti mately will reduce the nation's tax bill by approximately $750,000,000. Features of the tax revision bill pro vide repeal of the excess profits tax and all transportation taxes on next January 1 and a reduction of the sur tax rates, with the maximum rate re duced from 65 to 50 per cent. The bill also would repeal taxes on: Parcel post packages. Proprietary medicines, toilet soaps and toilet soap powders, tooth pastes, tooth and mouth washes, toilet pow ders and petroleum jellies. (Stamp taxes.) Pianos and other musical Instru ments. Umbrellas, parasols, sunshades, pic ture frames and articles of wearing apparel costing in excess of certain amounts (so-called luxury taxes). Insurance premiums. Articles made of fur. Moving picture films. Ice cream. Chewing gum. Sporting goods, including billiard balls and tables, pool tables and dice. Admissions where the cost does not exceed 10 cents. Pleasure boats and canoes costing less than $100. Thermos and thermomatlc bottles and Jugs. Portable electric fans. Bonds of indemnity and surety (stamp taxes.) Taxes proposed to be reduced in clude those on: Individual incomes of $5000 or less through Increased exemption of $500 to heads of families and $200 for each dependent. Candies from 5 to 3 per cent. Capital stock issues having a par value of lees than $100 a share (stamp taxes). Cereal beverages from 15 per cent of the sale price to two cents a gallon. Unfermented fruit juices from 10 per cent of the sale price to two cents a gallon. Carbonated beverages from 10 per cent of the sale price to 2 cents a gallon plus 5 cents a gallon on the syrups used in their manufacture. Taxes proposed to be increased in clude: Corporation Income from 10 to 15 per cent. Corporations through repeal of the $2000 normal exemption on those hav ing a capital stock in excess of $25,000. Estate taxes where the total sum exceeds $10,000,000. Medicinal beer, wine (except cham pagne) and whisky. Alcohol when diverted unlawfully for beverage purposes, from $2.2$ a gallon to $6.40 a gallon. Taxes proposed to be changed in clude: Stamp levies on perfumes, essences, toilet waters, extracts, hair oils, etc., to manufacturers, levies at 4 per cent. Retail taxes on fountain drinks to manufacturers, levies of 7V cents a gallon on finished fountain syrups for such drinks. Retail luxury taxes on carpets, rugs, trunks, valises, traveling bags suit cases, hut boxes, purses, pocketbooks, shopping and handbags, portable light ing fixtures Including lamps of all kinds and lamp shades, and tans cost ing In excess of certain amounts, to manufacturers, taxes of 5 per cent. New taxes include: Levies on gifts of property by any person at rates ranging from 1 per cent on the amount between $20,000 and $50.00, to 25 per cent of $10,000,- uuo or more. Manufacturers' tax of 3 per cent on carbonic acid gas to make up part or tne revenue lost in repealing the soda water taxes. Crime Held on Decline. Washington, D. C Attorney-General Dougherty, who. with Chief Justice Taft appeared before the house Judi ciary committee Monday In connec tion with legislation providing for ad ditional federal judges, told the com mittee there was evidence that the recent "crime wave" was gradually diminishing. "But when we have re turned to normal conditions the In crease In civil litigation will more than make up for less criminal cases." Freight Rise Delayed. Washington, D. C Schedules pro posing to Increase freight rates be tween California, Oregon and Wash Ington by 35 per cent on classified shipments by the South Pacific and the Oregon-Washington Railroad A Navigation lines was suspended Satur day by the Interstate commerce com mission until March 6. The Increases would have gone Into effect November 6. Needle Found In Heart. Minneapolis, Minn. A cambric needle was removed from the heart of Dawson Sandles, 2 years old, at the Elliott Memorial hospital at the University of Minnesota late Monday In what surgeons term a most remark able surgical operation. He la ex pected to recover. I RESIGNS IN BODY Emperor Orders All Members to Keep Office Awhile. NO CHANGE OF POLICY Hara Said to Have Died Without Word After He Was Subbed -Throne Honors Late Minister. Toklo. The Japanese cabinet re signed office after a meeting of the members held Saturday morning. The resignation of the cabinet which came as a direct result of the assassination of Premier Hara Friday, will not cause any immediate change in the government as the ministry, in obedience to imperial injunction, will continue In office until further notice from the throne. There will be no change in the pol icy, either diplomatic or domestic, es pecially with the Washington confer ence on limitation of armaments and far-eastern problems, acting Premier Uchlda stated. "The delegates will put forth their best efforts for the sake of world peace, In pursuance of the fundamen tal policies on armament limitation already laid down in the name of the government," he said. Viscount Uchida will take up the affairs of the ministry of marine, to which Premier Hara had been giving attention after the departure of Ad miral Kato, the head of that ministry, for the Washington conference. The Japanese ministry, deprived of its head through the knife of an as sassin Friday, when Premier Hara was stabbed to death by a demented youth, was continuing to function under Vis count Uchlda, the foreign minister, to whose designation as acting premier the Imperial approval was given at the palace shortly after the tragedy. Within an hour after the assassina tion of the premier the cabinet met In extraordinary session, Viscount Uchida presiding. Immediately upon the conclusion of the cabinet session Viscount Uchida, accompanied by Minister of the Interior Tokomani, went to the palace and secured the Imperial approval to the designation of the viscount as temporary premier, which had been decided upon at the cabinet session. Scant information was available at first regarding the identity of the youth at whose hands Premier Hara fell, but it became known that the assassin was a son of a former mem ber of the Samurai, or soldier class, constituting the lower nobility under the Japanese feudal system, who had been a man of Importance during the restoration period. The son, it ap pears, was of an erratic nature, and is regarded as a political fanatic. He was arrested Immediately after the stabbing. Detective Tsunajima, who was escorting Premier Hara, was bad ly cut on the arm and hands In dis arming the assassin. CARCASS BEEF BACK TO PRE-WAR PRICE Chicago. The average wholesale price of carcass beef Is back to the level prevailing In 1914, according to figures made public Sunday In a re view of the meat and livestock situa tion during October, Issued by the In stitute of American Meat Packers. The average wholesale price of car cass beef In 1914 approximated 12 cents, the report said, while at the end of October, 1921, it wag between 11 Vi and 12 cents. Some grades, how ever, are selling higher, while others are selling lower, It was stated. A normal volume of production has been maintained In the packing in dustry for the first nine months of 1921 as compared with the first nine months of 1913, said the statement The total of all kinds of federal In spected meat animals for the first nine months of 1921 is given at 47.1S4.934, while for the same period In 1913 the number was 41.323,010. Government figures showing stocks of meat In cold storage Indicate there was no heavy surplus left on hand as a result of the volume of production, the report says. Holiteln Break Record. Waupaca, Wis. Wisconsin Pride II, purebred Holsteln Frieslan cow, owned by John Erlckson, has just completed a yearly record which gives her the world's championship In the senior 3 year-old class with a production of 1327.94 pounds of butter from 20,502.9 pounds of milk. The figures exceed by a consider able margin the former record held by Lady Aggie Echo Hengerveld, a California cow. JAPANESE CINE ir VOICE or THE &py2avr 7920 &y little '.agowiy ajvz company. CHAPTER III Continued. 12 The rains fell unceasingly for seven lays: not a downpour bnt a constant Irizzle that made the distant ridces tmoke. The parched earth seemed to imack its lips, and little rivulets be pin to fall and tumble over the beds rf the dry streams. All danger of for st fire was at once removed, and Snowbird was no longer needed as a ookoot on old Bald mountain. She jrent to her own home, her companion jack to the valley; and now that his lister had taken his place as house keeper, Bill had gone down to the ower foothills with a great part of !he live stock. Dan spent these rainy lays In toil on the hillsides, bulldinf almself physically so that he might pay his debts. It was no great pleasure, these rainy days. He would have greatly liked to have lingered In the square mountain house, listening to the quiet murmur of the rain on the roof and watching Snowbird at her household tasks. She could, as hpr father had said, make a biscuit. She could also roll up sleeves over trim, brown arms md with entire good humor do a week's laundry for three hard-working men. He would have liked to sit with her, through the long afternoons, as she knitted beside the fireplace to watch the play of her graceful fin jers and perhaps, now and then, to touch her hands when he held the skeins. But none of these things tran spired. He drove himself from day light till dark, developing his body for the tests that were sure to come. The first few days nearly killed him. He over-exercised In the chill rain, snd one anxious night he developed all the symptoms of pneumonia. Such a sickness would have been the one thing needed to make the doctor's prophecy come true. But with Snow bird's aid, and numerous hot drinks, he fought it off. She had made him go to bed, and no human memory could be so dull as to forget the little, whispered message that she gave him with his Inst spoon ful of medicine. She said she'd pray for him, and she meant It too literal, entreating prayer that could not go un heard. She was a mountain girl, and her beliefs were those of her ances tors simple and true and wholly without affectation. But he hadn't relaxed thereafter. He knew the time had come to make the test. Night after night he would go to bed half sick from fatigue, but the mornings would find him fresh. And after two weeks, he knew he hnd passed the crisis and was on the direct road to complete recovery. Sometimes he cut wood In the for est : first the felling of some tnll pine. then the trimming and hewing Into two-foot lengths. The Misters came on his hands, broke and bled, hut finally hardened Into callosities. He learned the most effective stroke to hurl a shower of chips from beneath the blade. His back and limbs hard ened from the handling of heavy wood and the cough was practically gone. His frame filled out. His face became swarthy from constant exposure. He gained In weight One cloudy afternoon In early No vember found Silas Lennox cutting wood on the ridge behind his house. It was still nn open question with hlra whether he and his daughter would attempt to winter on the Divide. Dnn of course wanted to remain, yet there were certain reasons, some very defi nite and others extremely vague, why the prospect of the winter In the snow fields did not appeal to the moun taineer. In the first place, all signs pointed to a hard season. Although the fall had come late, the snows were exceptionally early. The duck flight was completed two weeks before Its usual time, and the rodents had dug their burrows unusually deep. Be sides, too many months of snow weigh heavily upon the spirit The wolf packs sing endlessly on the ridges, and many unpleasant things may hap pen. On previous years, some of the cabins on the ridges below hnd human occupants; this winter the whole re gion, for nearly, seventy miles across the mountains to the foothills, would be wholly deserted by human beings. Even the ranger station, twelve miles across steep ridge, would soon be empty. Of course a few ranchers had homes a few miles beyond the river, but the wild cataracts did not freeze In the coldest of seasons, and there were no bridges. Besides, most of the more prosperous farmers wintered In the valleys. Only a few more days would the road be passable for his car; and no time must be lost In mak ing his decision. Once the snows came In reality, there was nothing to do bnt stay. Sev enty miles across the uncharted ridges on snowshoes Is an undertaking for which even a mountaineer has no fondnew. It might be the wisest thing, after all, to load Snowbird and Dan into his car and drive down to the valleys. The fall roundup would soon be completed, Bill would return for a few days from the valleys with new equipment to replace the broken light ing system on the car, and they could avoid the bitter cold and snow that Lennox had known so long. He chopped at a great log and wondered what would suit him better the com fort and safety of the valleys or the rugged glory of the ridges. But at that instant, the question of whether or not he would winter on the Divide was decided for him. And an Instant was all that was needed. For the period of one breath he forgot to he watchful and a certain dread Spirit that abides much in tlie forest saw Its chance. Perhaps he had lived too long in the mountains and grown careless of them : an attitude that Is usually punished with death. He had just felled a tree, and the trunk was still attached to the stump by a strip of bark to which a little of the wood adhered. He struck a furious blow at it with his ax. He hadn't considered that the tree lay on a steep slope. As the blade fell, the great trunk simply seemed to leap. Lennox leaped too, in a frenzied effort to save his life ; but already the leafy bows, like the tendrils of some great amphibian, had whipped around his legs. He fell, struggling; and then a curious darkness, streaked with flame, dropped down upon him. An hour later he found himself lying on the still hillside, knowing only a great wonderment At first his only Impulse was to go back to sleep. He didn't understand the grayness that He Fell Struggling. had come upon the mountain world, his own strange feeling of numbness, of endless soaring through Infinite spaces. But he was a mountain man, and that meant he was schooled, be yond nil things, to keep his self-control. He made himself remember. Yes he had been cutting wood on the hillside, and the shadows hnd been long. He had been wondering wheth er or not they should go down to the valleys, ne remembered now: the last blow and the rolling log. He tried to turn his head to look up to the hill. ne found himself wholly unable to do It. Something wrncked him In his neck when he tried to move. But he did glance down. And yes. he could turn In this direction. And he saw the great tree trunk lying twenty feet below him, wedged In between the young pines. He was surrounded by broken frag ments of limbs, and It was evident that the tree had not struck him a full blow. The limbs had protected hlra to some extent. No man Is of such mold as to be crushed under the solid weight of the trunk and live to remember It. He wondered If this were the frontier of death (he gray ness that lingered over him. He seemed to be snnrlng. He brought himself back to earth and tried again to remember. Of course, the twilight had fallen. It had been late afternoon when he had cut the tree. His hand stole along his body; and then, for the first time, a hideous sickness came upon him. His hand was warm and wet when he brought It up. The other hand he couldn't stretch tt all. The forest was silent around him, except a bird calling somewhere near the house a full voice, rich and clear, and It seemed to him that It had a quality of distress. Then he recognized It. It was the voir of his own daugh ter, Snowbird, calling for him. He I trlril to answer her. It was only a whisper, at first. Yet she was coining nearer; and her own voice sounded louder. "Here, Snow bird," he called again. She heard him then: he could tell by the startled tone of her reply. The next Instant she was at his side, her tears drop ping on bis face. With a tremendous effort of wT.! he recalled his speeding faculties. "I don't think I'm badly hurt," he told her very quietly. "A few ribs broken and a leg. But we'll hove to winter here on the Divide, Snowbird mine." "What does It matter. If you live?" she cried. She crawled along the pine needles beside him, and tore his shirt from his breast He was rapidly sink ing Into unconsciousness. The thing she dreaded most that his back might be broken was evidently not true. There were, as he Bald, broken ribs and evidently one severe fracture of the leg bone. Whether he had sus tained Internal Injuries that would end his life before the morning, she had no way of knowing. At tills point, the problem of saving her father's life fell wholly Into her hands. His broken body could not b3f carried over the mountain road to physicians In the valleys. They must be transported to the ranch. It would take them a full day to make the trip. even If she could get word to them at once; and twenty-four hours without medical attention would probably cost her father his life. The nearest tele phone was at the ranger station, twelve miles distant over a mountain trail. The telephone line to Bald mountain, four miles off, had been dis connected when the rains had ended the peril of the forest fire. It all depended upon her. Bill was driving cattle Into the valleys, and he and his men hnd In use all the horses on the ranch with one exception. The remaining horse had been ridden by Dan to some distant marshes, and as Dnn would shoot until sunset, that meant he would not return until ten o'clock. There was no road for a car to the ranger station, only a rough steep trail, and she remembered, with a sinking heart, that one of Bill's mis sions In the valley was to procure a -new lighting system. By no conceiv able possibility could she drive down thnt mountain road In the darkness. But she was somewhat relieved by the thought that In all probability she could walk twelve miles across the mountains to the ranger station In much less time than she could drive, by automobile, seventy miles down to the ranches at the foothills about the valley. Besides, she remembered with a gladdening heart that Richards, one of the rangers, had been a student at a medical college and had taken a po sition with the forest service to re gain his health. She would cross the ridge to the station, phone for a doc tor In the valleys, and would return on horseback with Richards for such first aid as he could give. The only problem thnt remnlned was that of getting her father into the house. He was stirring a little now. Evi dently consciousness was returning to him. And then she thanked heaverf for the few simple lessons In first aid that her father hnd taught her In the days before carelessness had come upon him. One of his lessons had been thnt of carrying an unconscious human form a method by which even a woman may carry, for a short dis tance, a heavy man. It was approxi mately the method used In carrying wounded In No Man's Land: the body thrown over the shoulders, one arm through the fork of the legs to the wounded man's hund. Her fntlier was not a particularly heavy mnn, and she was nn exceptionally strong young womnn. She knew nt once that this problem was solved. The hardest part wns lifting him to her shoulders. Only by calling upon her Inst ounce of strength, and tug ging upward with her arms, was she aide to do it. But it was fairly easy. In her desperation, to carry him down the hill. Whnt rest she got she took by leaning against a tree, the limp body still across her shoulders. It was a distance of one hundred yards In all. No muscles but those trained by the outdoors, no lungs ex cept those made strong by the moun tain nlr, could have stood that test. She laid him on his own bed, on the lower floor, and set his broken limbs the best she could. She covered him up with thick, fleecy blankets, and set a bottle of whisky beside the bed. Then she wrote a note to Dan and fastened It upon one of the Interior doors. She drew on her hob-nalled boots' needed sorely for the steep climb and pocketed her pistol. She thrust a handful of Jerked venison Into the pocket of her coat nnd lighted the Inn tern. The forest night had fallen, soft and vlbrnnt nnd tremulous, over the heads of the durk trees when she started out. (TO BE CONTINVED.) Remarkable Diary. Pepys' diary Is a unique work by Samuel Pepys (1032-1703). giving a curious and faithful account of the times In England from 1059 to 10t3. It Includes almost every phase of pub lic and social life, from the gnyetles of the court to the pettiest detail of week day existence. The book Is wr't ten In shorthand, and was not dlscov ered until a century after the author's death. It was deciphered snd puh Hfhed (although In a mutilated form) by Lord Braybrooke In IKS. Duty Still U to Give. It Is another's fault If l.r Is ungrate ful, but Is mine If I do not give. T find one thankful mnn I will oblige a great many that are not so, Seneca.