Show L IRE B Y MILL A correapDndent writing in this F issue adopts a suggestion that was R made in THE HERALD last year I namely that the old mill building in Liberty Park ba not disturbed Old land marks are daily disappearing disappear-ing The city and its surroundings change appearance every year The 0 older inhabitants as they move about town beyond the c few squares that are daily ° visited by them scarcely f realize that this is the burg with j s which they were so well acquainted tt I only a few years ago There are j certain points that may be protected t f pro-tected and some things preserved against the progress that is metamorphosing met-amorphosing Salt Lake The 35 Y S mill is one of those things and it i 3 J should be maintained in its well t known aspects as long as possible t Thirty years ago it was one of the I J t prominent objects in this part of the l valley and we hope that thirty > years hence those who in their t youth gazed upon its weather I beaten walls jandirambled through its flourcovered rooms1 will have the pleasure of visiting it 1 at will in as near its J 1 old familiar condition as it j is possible to retain It There i j will never be many more interesting i + interest-ing features of Liberty Park than 1 the old mill Its hum has been 1 1 music in the ears of farmers for thirty miles around it is literally J filled with tales of industry of toil j of almost want ot tolls and of l merriment and is iff itself a legend 1 A Let the mill be protected against j the elements its walls covered with ivy and creepers and honeysuckles and the grounds shaded by willow 1 I and ash and boxelder and then t let it stand forever free to the pub I f 1 l1c3 place where all may loiter and ry i 1 reflect upon the days when the work 1 j of reducing this valley from its I 1 desert condition was begun i and the r 1 5 hum of the millstones in their swift revolutions played sweet t music for the tired farmer as he waited for the grinding of hw little I grist t i 1 1 = |