OCR Text |
Show Sglt Lake County, Utah Thursday, Jum25,l964 ROCKY MOUNTAIN REVIEW Page 6 r twrs-vrmr- v" U If tcrinkles must be written upon our trows, let them not be written upon our heart swf y Retired Savings And Loan Executives Busy Life Keeps Him Young At Heart 4If wrinkles must be written upon our brows, let them not be written iranr the heart The spirit shcjSld not grow old, said JnesA. Garfield, twentieth president of the United States. A gentleman young In heart who lives up to that statement Is Thomas T. Taylor, retired president of Prudential Federal iation Taylor, who retired In 1962, headed Prudential for 36 years. He has watched the Association grow from five employees with assets of a million and a half to Its present 156 employees with assets of oer 160 million. Although retired, he Is one of the busiest men tobefcund He Is chairman of the board Mr Savings and Loan Assoc WATCH Work kepaikim; Guaranteed Over 25 Years Experience 17 JEWEL WATCH off? S125 1 green houses, a small office .building and row after row of flowers growing under the Utah sun. Although Taylor Gardens Is not a landscaping contractor, the company supervised the of the beautiful landscaping 60 by '20 sunken gardens at the Prudential Building, U5 multi-color- plans to supervise construction of the roof garden on the building soon. ed ORIENT . PACIFIC -- JAUNT After his retirement two years ago, he and his wife took a three and one half month trip to the Orient and Pacific. Last fall and win- ter South Main Street. Mr Taylor also said he they Journeyed to Eur- ope, South America and the Carribean. He Raises only hardy peren- ' nial plants and sells only on a wholesale basis Hisbeautl-f- ul blossoms number In the and Include 500 thousands varieties of Irises and 300 varieties of other plants and ground covers Taylor Gardens Is located on the residence of Mr Taylor and his wife of 37 years, Margaret Located at 603 East 5600 South, the gardens are made up of two Portrait Weve been to most parts of the world, except Africa, the Near East and India, he commented, and we expect to visit these places as tlpie goes on. When asked what part of the world he finds most fascinating, Mr. Taylor quickly said, the Orient, because from a tourist standpoint it's more exotic. Reminiscing about his days at Prudential he recalled that the association started In Butte, Montana, In 1916. Itwas then known as the U. S. Building and Loan Association of Montana He started with the associa tion as manager In Butte In 1926 and moved with the organization to Salt Lake In November 1938. 278-9J3- around 78,000 customers In the Intermountain area. It Is the largest mortgage lender In the county and the largest savings association In the Utter mountain area. It has had a very remark- specialized form ofb lng, Prudential Federal Savings and Loan Association deals In sa loans on homes or buildings and home financing Ranking eighty-fift- h In size In the nation out of approximately 6,000 associatPrudential now has ions, A able growth, the board chairman said proudly. Economic conditions were very favorable for home loans during the 30s and at the end (Continued on Page 9) vmMi re Jewelry Cottonwood Village Unit B 6217 Highland Drive 4 TT and a consultant for Prudential, supervises and runs Taylor Gardens, a wholesale gardening business, and has Journeyed almost around the world slm e his retirement started Taylor Gardens so that Id be occupied during the summers aftpr I retired and It gives me the to travel In the opporjitnlty winter months, Mr Taylor said BERNINA AGENCY Cottonwood (located in Fashion Fabrics) SEIISATIOIIAL BARGAIN wm $'5MS)(3)5Q' & NOW ONLY (head only) Desks and 50 Consoles Scissors Sharpened FREE by OFF Factory Method with Bernina Demonstration STOP IN OR CALL 277-192- 2 flowers sold GREENHOUSE CHECK Thomas T. Taylor checks the blossoms on his LC Canhamiana Alba.., known to the layman as an orchid plant. on a wholesale basis at his Taylor Gardens. Retired head of Prudential Federal Savings and Loan Association, Mr. Taylor started his floralbuslness to occupy his time after retirement. for free demonstration ENROLL NOW! i! Day Summer Activity y2 r AM 8:30-11- :30 t Classes Save moneyP Use the TOY VILLAGE coupo. See page 3. MON-F- RI Arts, Crafts, Excursions r 48 Ag es i $5 per week FULL DAY CARE i It takes 20 to make a bargain the year for labor negotiations at Kennecott. Contracts that were agreed upon two years ago between the company and employees are about to expire. Arriving at new agreements that are satisfactory to all concerned is not an easy mat-- , ter, mainly because of numbers. Employees the concentrators, the smelter at the mine, s and the refinery are represented by 19 dif-ferent union locals. Each local is a separate bargaining unit Kennecott negotiates with each unit individually. Accord between all 19 union locals and Kennecott must be reached to complete negotiations. There is no short cut to making a bargain. All parties are giving careful thought to the issues, and the final result will reflect the best judgment of labor and management. Utahns follow the course of negotiations with personal concern, because the entire state has a substantial stake in the economic effect of uninterrupted copper production at Kennecott. This ' AGES c Union Representation International Union of Mine Mill and Smelter Workers, Local 485 International Association of Machinists, Lodge 568 International Brotherhood Brotherhood of of Electrical Workers Local 1081 Operating Engineers Union No 3 Office Employees International Union Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen, Lodge 844 MINE . , 5 I ' 5 Local 286 is Kennecott Copper Corporation 8 SPECIAL Jack and Jill Nursery School union-represente- d I 2-- fully automatic unit with froo Installation All fiborgloss, Nothing Down 36 Months to Pay FACTO HOLESXC 1127 E. 33rd South Phone ' CONCENTRATORS, 486-773- Eve 8 266-902- m tMty Dim U, 4 Iviw H . ORE HAULAGE, POWER PLANT Union Representation International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers, Local 392 System Federation No 155 International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 1438 Order of Railway Con ductors and Brakemen, Local 506 International Union of Mine Mill and Smelter Workers. Local 692 United Steelworkers of America Local 5486 Brotherhood of Locomotive Fire men and Enginemen, Lodge 670 Brotherhood of Railway Carmen of America, Local 1045. OQp r Mftun (IB . (HBQ5BF' -- SMELTER Union Representation United Steelworkers of America, Local 4347 Steelworkers of America, Local 4329. United W cOOREQ mm c Utah Copper Division U Gtanflto CanFO&nn REFINERY Union Representation United Steelworkers of America, Local 4413 United Steelworkers of America, Local 5120 International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local 1845. 5 JIT , |