l 11 U I w 01 I I Jf r it15c > 8X 7 > I i T 1 < tric l > 1J f > 1 T t II It THE SUNDAY STANDARD OGDEN UTAH SUSJKDAY MOBNINCr MAUGJEE 7 1009 r i II M Z Lff A A r td Alw AlBrVJ A ILl 1iYr 1 IlfiOIF O W = c I I f 1iY5gV UllfL ff6VtfLLf y 1 OF R2TPc2I7T OZJpfJ V > S < 1 = > JtLra = < 1iI C 91 1 I Ze rrln i chtcYhtd for an CloSClPnff N n retrospect of the year IOCS prob IN ably tile most striking thing about the period will be the wonderful ndvnnro made In tho sphere of aerial navigation In no preceding period of equal length line ono fraction of tho accomplishments of 1003 been achieved New records for distance height and practically every thing else wcro made and feats per formed which von ono year previous would have been deemed tho ravings of an unbalanced mind More flights were made In every part of the world In every conceivable typo of aircleaving machine and the public nt large began to respect the propbecles of those who foretold a practical utilization of these strange birds of pnaaage for sport commerce nnd war Apart from the worJdwldo sensational achievements of the Wright brothers whoso wonderful accomplishments on both eldcs of the Atlantic bare been received with such acclaim probably most Interest attaches to the work In Germany of Count Zeppelin with an entirely different type of nlr vessel The Zoppolln airship In not an ncroplnno like the Wrights machines but nn ulr ship combining qualities of a bnlloon yet unlike tho latter In that It In dirigible The Zeppelin was and IsUJere have been MYGrnl a grcnt cylindrical frame work of aluminum pointed at tbe ends nnd covered with linoleum Inside n row of ordinary round balloons arc Inflated Close benoAih the cylindrical cigarshiipcd body of the nlrshlp are suspended gnu dolae which float on tho water often necessary when tho ship Is first launched from Its abed on the waters of Lake Constance where most of tho flights have been held or when alighting on the same body of water The motors nod propellers nro well up on the Ides of the eo called cigar FO that they push right In the Hue tho body has to travel By careful study Count Zeppelin has evolved a serlw of rudders anti propellers which enable him to go Just where he wishes thus realizing most remarkably the dream of nn almost perfectly dirigible airship Thc flight last August of this remarkable creation of the German scien tist over the mountains of the German Swiss frontier heralded around the world awoke that selfsame world to the possibilities of nlrsblps of this kind Even the wreck of tbo Zeppelin IV meant nothing as concerns thin merits of tbo machine for the storm did most of the damage through tho leakage of CUB mingled with the air Inside tho alumi num This mixture made a strong and powerful explosive only ready for n spark of any kind to bring about tho wreck Had the Zeppelin been flying In the nlr at the time she might easily have been caved for to airships nlr means safety Just as water of great depth does to nlcnuiahlps which In shallow water arc lost The wonderful performance of this par tlcnlor Zeppelin was accomplished on Au gust 4 the trip bring from Laky Con stance to Basel nnd Stmsnurc down the flume to Mnycncv n distance of 250 miles Automobiles which attempted to follow It were left far behind so great was the speed of the airship The nccl dent which destroyed tho machine oc curred on the return trip or rather while preparations wero being made for the return from Mnyence Count Zeppelin had telegraphed for more cylinders nnd was wailing for them when n small cyclone arose which dashed the airship held by soldiery to the ground and destroyed It In conjunction with the explosions which came Immediately afterward Throughout all Germany the loss of the wonderful machine was felt to bo n national calamity nnd incspaces nf con dolence und offering assistance were sent In from every corner of tho empire Sub scription lists were opened nt once In Berlin Bremen Stuttgart and other towns and cities In Germany uud Switzer land to provide funds for the construc tion of n successor to the lost airship A check from the Imperial councilor for J f fl m < e Ir ffheZepfleln IfTchfp ll < J s overLclle Coflstdnce fj 1 f t ru ifyi t u 1t 1toU < r 1T 271e t7er72a72 L ae r ana rcZe p Elzrz p022 CO 2ie 2f7Zj on ZiE ZI 121000 nn advance on the budget appro priated by the stale for aeronautical ex periments was sent on to the Count Im mediately Opinions on tho part of experts In re gard to the Zeppelin and Its typo of air ships for practical war purposes follow ing tho accident were many and varied Some felt that it showed the airship would be of value only as a fortress bal loon especially the rigid and semirigid typo like till Zeppelin the other German and French war Imllbonp In contrast to the collapsible kind ordinary war bal loons heretofore lined by tho United State anti other governments All the latter can be deflated nt once which was not true of the destroyed Zeppelin or any of Its predecessors or Its successor which have bad nn aluminum skin which renders such n method of nnfoty Irajvos nlblc Many authorities took the other point of view und asserted tbnt the acci dent to tho Zeppelin was what might happen to any airship and did not dis prove the possibility and the probability of such machines becoming real factors In the wars of the future Where an or dinary airship or balloon could bo punc tured when within gun range the alumi num covering of machines like the Zep pelin would render such a possibility re mote especially from small arms Over one million dollars were sub scribed for the new Zeppelin whose speedy construction wns made possible through the undamaged condition of much of the machinery of the Zeppelin IV The new airship mode Its Initial appear ance In October It carried ten pns Bongcrs and went through evolutions which for speed und stability could not bo surpassed At an average height of 300 feet the machine went through these evolutions and attained n speed of about 21 miles nn hour traveling for over three hours At thc height of 1000 feet n won derful exhibition was given the craft 4rnerianPoaafreaifriJzQd A > Y < L h T7Ar A > o CU > Llr ryl Jtf z p jf Y ZJC7PtlY lt tit W JI Y f t l n X S I J 1i1 war L < I M TZi v rr c t t rlt < t ty ff > v r r 1 5 Gcr7sdzTa r 5v > zz es za2e 2Z7r QZ txllsICeB I ETOULD the Republic of Cuba InpAA SHOULD same government chaos that boo beset her throughout her stormy history she will still have something for which to thank tho provisional govern ment of the United States There will re main the roads that this country has built during the past two years and there Is no way In which the masses of the people Tan escape 0 tasting benefit from them Governor Charles K > Mngoon nnd the American troops have withdrawn from Cuba The work for which they had been sent to tho Island was completed Order bad been brought out of turmoil and government had been restored where guerilla warfare had previously existed l The people had been soothed and quieted from the beat of Latin factional strife and brought into the regular and peaceful pursuits of the many Industrial opportu nities offered by this fair land An elec tion had been held under the guidance of Governor Magoon which had been n bona fide election the first of HH kind In any of thc Latin countries of America for litlhough many of these are republics in name they are such In name only The foundation stone of tho work that this country did In Cuba for the benefit of that people wait the development of com nionlcatlon Into tbo lutrtrior by means of E0o l wagon roads When Governor Mn Kcxja orsumnl control nnd began looking about him for some vital things to do for tho bcneflt of the island ho Immediately hit upon roods Ho laid out n campaign for road Improvement nnd for two yearn y followed It consistently As n result r there U a magnificent highway from one tM to the other of the Island and it IK bleats at a dozen poluts by equally good cross ronds that run down to the tai orts on the const Cuba wan la n frightful condition an to i roads in the beginning such highways M ho Und originated from some cart fol lowing n cow trail In 1U wanderings lu the vogue unknown They ran hither and thither without any system In n desul tory WAr tbo previous Spanish ODd Cuban Itnlnlstrntlons hnd built a patchwork of road here and there but without system oed with no continuance of policy that Would make the different parts of the IAlAnt nccC3ille to each other nnd bring them In touch with the consi towns Those roads that had been built were not of the b st grade and had been very Indifferently malntaloed I From the standpoint of tbo country ns n whole the road over which the farmer was fcfcd to take his produce to market was the crow country cart track ungraded unnrnlnod During the dry season It wns a most Indifferent country rood and dur ing the half of the year In which the rains full It was absolutely Impassible and the fnrmcw weN entirely cut off from communication with the outuldo world This Isolation was occasionally broken by the trip of a pack trainwhich floundered through the mud to the great outside but this was unusual Under these con ditions the people had found It not worth while to buy wagons and even during the dry beacons the pack train was the chief meniiH of transportation The wheel mule was carried on chiefly by means of the carrels the native two wbeeled cart of the Island If the Ingenuity of tbo people had led them to March the world over for a vchlclo less lilted for their purpose they would not have been nble to find It The carretn U n clumsy highwheeled cart with nn unusually narrow tire Upon U may bo placed loads ns great as four and live tons This mines an Imraouko pressure on tho two narrow tires and those cut deeply Into the soft soli of the Island The wheels are set loosely on the axle nnd this load rocks tack uud forth throw Ing nil Its weight now on one wheel nnd now on the other and digging always Into the road In the mud of the old roads these vehicles mink often to the axle anti on tho new road they make constant re pairs necessary The provisional gov ernment exerted all Us Influence to dis courage their use even going so far as to recommend their prohibition or to en forca tho putting of a wider tire upon them Under the old regime eight and ton oxen wore necennnry to haul one of these carts to market and days were need ed for a trip of a few miles Now a pair of mules docs the canto work In a few hours Governor Mngoon found that there woo un accumulation of funds In the Cuban treasury when ho assumed control Tbougn tao people were In a condition of famine the sources of the revenue of the govern ment feN In order and the funds wcro plentiful There wan 13000000 ns n surplus that might bo used In some way deemed most beneficial and the Provi sional Governor decided upon made Thnt was In 1000 and since that tlmo the com pulgn bits bran most actively pushed I In laying down tho plan for the co bBlvo system of roads the Department of Public Works decided on a scheme of roads that would conolst of n highway running cant nnd west from Santiago de Cuba at the uno end of the Island to Los Arroyo do Mantua at the other ex treme This road would cut through the heart of the Inland from end to end fbl lowing ns a general thing the elevated 1 f le 1 Z LTe r LT JarIVLrJwI > nrr rrtlrtiYxtw3tw + i ck zG t r A ei Clian cccccftC2 7KCL2 whCCtJFd7ZS ridge that make up Use watershed From this main trunk line would branch off roads that would lead to the chief barter towns on cacti side nt least ono harbor In each of the six provinces to bo so favored In this way every provlnco would bo connected by good roads with every other and every section of tho Island would IMS given on outlet to market I The plnn hns been consistently follow ed Contracts have been let to nntlvo fluid outside men for tho building of these roads and In some cases where theso bidders were not found to bo Kitlsfac tory the engineers of the nrmy of occu pation have taken hold and pushed the work Nothing has been allowed to stand In the way nail Much R stir of Industry ns the Island never know before has been In progress Realizing thnt the torrential rains of the tropics would soon render dirt roads useless the government undertook to construct n highway built to last It Insisted In the first place on n solid foundation of Tclford macndnm of the best stone native quarries would afford und further thnt tho roads ha finished throughout without neglect of uny de tail necessary to durability The roads were first graded sharp turns being avoided and only nn incline of nix per cent being nllowodr Six Inches of rock In Jagged pieces nu big as n mans two list was placed upon thin grade Then came four Inches of small er stone about the sirs of egg after which tho fine nnrindug stone was pluc d on All of this wan packed Into a compact mass by the Immcnso steam roller In tlmo they will under the action of water and air combine Into one solid rock road n fool thick thnt will bo nearly as permanent us It Is possible to construct a road The roads urn uniformly 31 feet wide of which the heavily paved section ot c = 1 R r cupies 1C feet All culverts nre matte of cement und are built for pcinnn I once Bridges built throughout the lalund arc tho most modern of steel structure where this Is found necessary or are of cement or wood ns the occa sion demanded Where It was found neccAfuiry to protect the roads from Inun dntlou ditches have been dug to drum the lowlands From every standpoint the construction bus been thoroughly modern nnd uptodate and modern too from the standpoint of tho most progres sive nation In tho world A pretty feature of the completed road Is the wellbuilt roadhouse at Intervals of IS miles At these stations live tho caretakers and crown thnt look after the road after It It completed A ape i tlal duty of these caretakers Is to de velop cud plnnt trees along the nd vny So readily do trees grow In Cuba that It Is not dliQcult to foresee tho time lu the not too for distant future when every one of these roads from ono end to the other of the Island will ho n bower of nhmlc In which the traveler can rldo from morning to night with out feeling the rays of the tropical sun These roods will bo like that Samoan thoroughfare of Japan upon which In years gone by a poor baron plant ed choice abode trees because of the fact that bo was n poor man and could serve his country with only his Inbors ills work line outlasted them all and IB hundreds of yearn after his death mill serving the people well The people of Cuba were In a state of revolution and threntened civil war when tho United States Intervened Famine wax nbrond In the land and tbo Indus tries wero paralyzed It Wall In such nn emergency as this that the opportunity to work on the roads was1 given tho peo ple The Intent revolution for instance jf = r Ii < Ii turning to the right nnd left and then spinning completely around at nn angle of T5 degrees It raised Its bow anti Its stern alternately and made short sharp dashes In nay direction the engineer de nlred It was n wonderful display of the absolute control of the rnnchlne lIter In tho some month the Kaisers brother Prlnco Henry who visited this country was n passenger and for n long time steered the machine On this trip the airship which Is pictured herewith stayed up for seven hours Twentylive miles nn hour against tbo wind were scored on tho return trip this was went up to 30 Tho successful trip enjoyed by Prince Henry Induced the crown prince to fly too no In November last Frederick Wll helm boarded the airship and sailed from Frledrlchshafcn to Donnuoschlngen nt linden where the Kaiser himself was met The airship followed the Imperial train Into the town nl un altitude of be tween 400 and GOO feet tho crown prince talking to his royal father through n megaphone nnd the Kaiser acknowledging this by waving his baud Last but not least the Kaiser himself decided lolly with Count Zeppelin On the day scheduled one of his lUlU much resembling the German ruler did ascend anti the news wan telegraphed all over tho world that the Kaiser had gone up Tills was afterwards proven to bo nn error though there Is n certalnty that the Indefatigable Emporor will be found one of these days flying In tho Zeppelin In which he nan over maintained the most thorough Interest This Interest Is so keen thnt largely through his own sug gcstlon following a report by the special commission appointed by the war depart ment the German government bas pur chased tune Zeppelin Tills would seem to establish beyond question the opinion by eminent authorities In regard to the prac ticability for war purposes of this nlr shIpThere There can he no sweet without Its bitter the Llttlo War of August 1000 bad I broken out In the west Plnur del lllo had suffered from 1 cyclone which added + to the strolls lu which her people found themselves Tho prospect of a fight had drown to that province tlm adventurer anti malcontents from n great part of the Island and things looked critical It wns At this Juncture thnt the Provisional Gov ernment decided thnt tbla province wns the point nt which work should be begun Labor on theme rondn was offered to all the Idle and unemployed but with the underutnndlns thnt It was tbe work of pence and that lawlessness should cease The opportunity to wirn nn Immediate competence wan readily grasped by I ho factions nnd fo jn the provjncc vas ngnlu tranquil and before long prosperous The same principle worked throughout the Island nnd with the building of the As tho roads came pence and prosperity various motions were opened up the fnrmluj people Jrnrnedlntely grasped the opportunity that pros offered thorn to market their crops and planting was be gun Despite the shortness of the time since the road building began the oppor tbo making posulblo to tunity they ore farmers Is already being fell and the country Is ogaln In a condition of prosperity perlly Yet the stem 1s still lucom pleto and the time hns been so short that crops have hardly had tlmo to ma ture the unrivaled tobacco lands The area otthe of Cuba that will bu In Ibis wny brought under cultivation will be greatly Increased wIl willhe creased The country will bo opened up rslvo grade of farming to n more progree8lto farming huge sugar p an a in VO The every way huugeesugar dons of the Island may be nddcd to by now ncccaslhle IruIt others thnt am mny ho exported from a greatly JncreawU nnd lack of market Tho liolntlon nrcu the Inland Is with aud Is done owiij f 1 f I t 7 J r f < t v I i b < tfttye r V > ki b < > i t 1g 1Jt 8r m 5 i1 1 rIi t Vol t t r it bcd ttl iy ffi l ZIt k 4 t ifc II > > 00 1 1 l < < 7 N l j1 I W D f t < m tt r 0 2 tt U q f iNJ 1 < 1I fJTr7idZ1 ff obe7eTVt7 ae A7 rhJp fro712 Zf2Q QmeoCzzc2roB tie H J and Count Zeppelins record of a 12hour fllrjbt with his destroyed craft was lost to him last fall when Major Gross semi rigid airship stayed In the air for 13 hours It marks a triumph for the Ger mnu army ofllcors Identified with nero nnatlcy among whom Mnjor Groan who designed the Parscval and new Parseval has long been one of the most cousplcu Otis membirs Professor Schulto of the Technical University nt Duntzlg fol lowed up the performance of Gross with an announcement of plans for n rigid air ship which will exceed thn Zeppelin In spCLil and carrying power Wood Instead of aluminum will be used on the Schutto machine Two IGOhorsupowur BUS motors will propel the ship Count Zeppelin who has done so much for aeronautics In 70 years old Ito Is n retired nrmy officer At thu age of 25 ho was detailed nn lieutenant of cavalry to oliscrvntlou duty with the Union Army In tho Civil War Me Accompanied the cavalry brlpide commanded by Cnrl Schurz and his Oral ascent wns In 11 I balloon sent up to Investigate the Con TTfB IIILE the average reader knows flfl U Hint Michigan Is marvelously vHJ rich along many lines of pro duction few know that some of the most prolltablo salt mines In the entire world nro situated In this ono of the Great Lakes states In 1003 the reports Plato that Michigan turned out over 13 000000 barrels of line suit and In 1007 half n million more and the year before that 7000000 barrels of unit were pro duced the largest record and a tremen dous addition to tbo Industrial activities of the state Tho fnlllnc oft In the Michigan salt In dustry Is not due to lack of demand lack of capital or lack of the raw product It wns caused by the decline In the lum I bering activity In Michigan which affect I ed the fall mining strongly as much of the salt la made from brine which In evaporated by steam which In turn Is n mere waste from the tremendous lumber milling Industry of the commonwealth The bad times affected the lumber re gions tremendously as construction during IOCS up until the mouth of November was not more than GO per cent oc the W = = FJ ff f Ze J LulslazoGuc o cZ i given an opportunity to enjoy her oppor tunities OK she never enjoyed them be fore CorIt It Is hard to appreciate rho fact that these roads In Cuba nro tho best In the world The natural thing would not bo to attribute so progressive n thing to n revolutionracked desultory unstahlo re public In the tropics Yet It Is unques tlonably the truth The why of It can he rendlly understood The whole system has been built within the past two years Itoad building ns n science has been de veloping most rapidly In the Jnat decade ThlugK are now known about road build ing that were not dreamed of live years ago lined building has become U na tional nnd International question and thus country ban shown n very nctlvo Inter est In It Well these roads In Cubn were prac tically built by the United Sautes gov ernment AH the Information thnt has been recently developed as to road build ing was applied In thin Instance The wholo system Is entirely modern Tbnro Li no other system anywhere that has been so recently built nod under ouch WAY hack 1400 years before the JI beginning of tho Christian ern long 1 before Moses lenrned tho myflterlca of the Igyptlnn priesthood there oc curred n period of about SOO years when those dim figures In prehistoric times tbe IIIltlte1 ruled or rather dominated the diplomacy nud the clvlllintlon of tho then civilized world which after nil Included nnly Egypt India Syria Assyria anti n fow sections of Asia Minor border Ing on tho Caspian Sea und the Mediter ranean The Illttlten are known to tho average reader merely from the name appearing In the books of Moses also latter two of these books But this was hundreds of years after the lllttltcs lost their real power as world rulers nnd had become I weak nnd scattered tribes Tho hour of I history wherein tho llltUtex were tho world powor Is dim and rogue Indeed I yet this page of the story of the human nice bRA been greatly cleared up by the discoveries of Dr Hugo Wlncklcr tho famous archaeologist of Berlin nt Bogbnz I Kent In Asia Minor Hero have boon located tho stupendous ruin of thu an cient capital of tho Ulttlto empire the city of Khnttn Hem Dr Wlncklcr dis covered vast tablets of burnt slay on which cuneiform Inscriptions of the most ran historical nnd archaeological value wore carved 3300 years ago The most Important of these cuneiform Inscriptions Is devoted to a great state treaty between n Pharaoh of Egypt of the eighteenth dynasty and tho emperor of the Ulttltes who seems to hnvo ruled over u confederation of tribes largely ro Bembllnt lu political construction tbo divisions of tho Jews into tribes under Solomon numesofl IL Pharaoh of Egypt I nnd Kilttu Sinn emperor of the Illttltos i r i c r 111 4i f federate lines After tho AiutroPrnsslnn Wnr and tho FrancoPrussian War In both of which ho nerved with distinction ho won retired ns a general Than It was he began his loveatlgatlono la aero nautics Some Interesting facts about his airship are It can nnd ban carried 10 persons I nt ono time It is over 410 teat long and 45 feet In diameter Sixteen separate compartments hold the gas for support Ing tho airship Blunt nt thin bow It tapers to tho stern whore tho steering device Is fixed Underneath two Inde r pendent motors each of horsepower are attached to Feprinite platforms Sleeping quarters for the crew are pro vided for and the airship carries n wire less outflL Such Is tho greatest nlrsblp of all times the machine which will ploy I nn Important part In any European war j I Germany may bo Involved In from this tlmo forth only Instead of one the Gcr I roan Army will have n fleet of tdtollnr 1 l machines led forth to bnttlc by the Zep II pelin Itself I C I Michigan Wealthy in Salt Mines II Z records made In any ono of the three i fi i preceding 12 months So tho steam util I r ized In evaporating tbo salt brlno was P not on hand ns It waste product and tbo Bait works showed n correspondingly I smaller output In a doglo county of r Michigan COOO people work regularly In getting up the salt brlno n thousand feet below tho surface of tho ground I III Soda ash useful In tho manufacture of i glass nod soap Is another of the prod I i ucts of brine mines The workings of I these peculiar mines nro struogo to the average reader It seems unusual for miners to go a thousand feet under ground to get snit water nnd to have I the products of a mine pumped up nod I then carried off In enormous pipe lines to tbo factories where the evaporation tnkcs place Yet this Is the method of these mines i which lire mines of brluc and not of salt I as one sees It In commerce These supplies of Knit brine nre of such vast extent thnt untold ages must elapse according to ex pert estimates before there Is any dancer I Jill of extinction of the salt Industries of Michigan t favorable circumstances It Is therefore safe to sty that the reads In Cuba arc better than those In the United States In England In Irunce or nny plnco elee This notion has served Cuba better than Us citizens realize anti better than Cuba herself will acknowledge While giving that Island the possibilities of good N government uuder tho steadying band of II the genial Provisional Governor the United States hits gone further nnd given e her such Improvements na she would never have gotten for herself The lal and has bcruclf paid for this Improve ment as a mutter of fact but It has beau no little expense on the part of the United States to administer tho affairs of Cuba and the spirit back of 1tls ono I novor before shown In the history of the world except In the Philippines Na I tional nnd International philanthropy U anew new thins In the world but this country Is demonstrating tbo possibility of n great nntlon helping n weak one as It s wealthy und wise man might help n poor one Iud show him the way to prosperity t These tbloga are being accomplished nod speak for themselves I When the Hittites Ruled the World t drew up this treaty after the celebrated f brittle of Kodesb wherein the nittltes I tra cud tbe Egyptians fought nearly n drawn battle At this tlmo tbe Hlltltcs had for 200 years or thereabouts been the domi nating factor In UIO diplomatic exchange between the tow really biff untlons of tho known world But after tho bnttlc of Kndcsh had i shown the Hlttltes thnt the Egyptian were becoming n Brent military power tho two kingdoms formed nn offensive nod defcnelvo nlllnnce with provisions I a for extradition especially of political of fenders This acton of tbo domlnntlucr lllttitcs was brought about by Khlttu Hitttes WO Sllns growing dread of this newly formed 1 nnd rnpldly rising power of the Assyrlnn empire which n few hundred yearn later conquered Babylon and the beet section i of the world of partial civilization The making of this treaty which Is tho earliest known treaty ever made by mankind corlCt Lnown 1 kind which leaven us I record of historical value occupied three months and In It ceeoplc nnd tbe the Hlttlto confederation Egypt cnCeternton Hittte Ito powjr of Ilubylonln nil bound themselves to tight against tho owlftly rising power of tho Asayrlnns i Tho Illbllcal referenced of the Bible naturally enough did not reveal the Hit nnhlrly even of ex tile as a world power or trcrno local Importnnco for the early locl 1mIHrtnc S tero Joshua and struggles oC tbo Jews under Johul other Jewish heroes occurred long after under tho tho Hlttllos hall disappeared Iller e tlo surging power of the Assyrian monarchy which under Nebuchadnezzar overcame the Jews and sacked Jerusalem This occurred In tho period of tbo Prophet IS Daniel who saw the Mcdes nod Persians overthrow the Assyrians Just 119 hon drcdjf of years before the Assyrian over came the Hlttltcs In Mceapotanlo j J 7 r t 1f R > = e t > f J