t i J)c 5}j vXXXXXfi» Bi IW:; W :.-:x WNy! .'.vsy.Y ^v.v.v.y.'.y.v.' V OOOQOMfiO» ^iA6l >>!v!a V, or. '•.V» V.V.'. .V.V.V.V.V. •••••••■•••••a HEINEKEN'S FLEET GROWS 1 9 W J M Afl AF A i'.VW.W* MH# ft MM Wa a., .«..a ...a..».. ..a. .a a M M M .................I. v.. a^r. I a M. i.t.la. at, a T» m a I. .MM .a M «...««a. «a a a a a a a a a a» a A a ...a a_Ajr a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a .......a........ a a a a a a a a a a a.a a a a ..a..... a a a a a a a .a. ....a... a. a. ..a. .a. a a aaaaa.aaaaaa.a.i .a a.a.a a a a.a a a .a a a a....... a a a aa ..........a a a a ...aaaaaaaaaaaaa ........a a* aaaaaaaaaaaaa ............a .........a...... aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaaaaa aaa a............... a a a aaaaaaaaaa a. a ...............a ■aaaaaaaaaaaaa .«.«.a. a.... ..a .a.a a a at •aaaaaaaaaaaaa »...a..a.....aa. .....•.•.•a.... i. a. ....a •....•....a... ••..a.aaa.aaaa a ...a. ..a. a. .....a a a •«.-• a a a aaa ••a. a... .a.... a a a a a a a a aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa a a a a aaBaaaaaaaaaaa.aa...a.......aaaa.......*....a... a 1 M M a a a a a a a a a a a a a aaaaaaaaa aaa a a a a a a a a aa I aaaaaaaa.a...a..a.a...................».*.a......a r rirjfifa a a a a a a aaaaaaaaaa... a a. a. a Ö.VJOXOjOCCIX*? J.. a a a a aaa a «a aaa. a a a.aaaaa. a. aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa aa .V .VVf a a rQ aaa a a a a a a a «V» a_a a. a. a a a a a a a a a. aaaaaaaaaa a a a a a A, a a a a a ...........a a a r.ft a a aa. ...a...... .aa a a a a aw* a a aY/W««» a a /VVa aV"a a a a «a a a .V. a a .'a a a a a a a a a t a a iVAV>Y»Y.i.a a a a a a a..«. ...a. r. a aw aaa a aaaaaaaaa a aaaaaaaaaa Universal Wine Liquor Co., Detroit, Michigan, put two specially painted Heineken trucks into service. Our compliments to Mrs. Mary Lalli and Jerome Thomas! VISITORS TO OUR OFFICE Mr. LeeRoy Fernandez, bossman of the Tampa Wholesale Liquors, visited us while on his way to Can ada. He reports many new Heineken's accounts and much repeat business in the Florida West Coast area. Mr. Maurice Pepper on a flying visit to New York paid his respects with a nice order and encouraging sales news from the Georgia territory. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Purvey of Ham ilton, Bermuda came to town and vis ited us. He tells us that in Bermuda, Heineken's outsells all other beers by far and estimates that the total year's business will come close to 60,000 cases. Our compliments and thanks! We had the newest member of our organization with us when we com pleted an arrangement with Mr. Rob ert N. W. Balleisen of Twin Falls, Idaho who will represent us in the States of Idaho, Montana and Wy oming as our special representative. He reveals the existence of Heineken fan clubs in his home state whose members bring back home Heineken's Beer when visiting other cities. Mr. B. Kilroy Thompson, Heine ken's distributor in Nassau, the Bahamas came to tell us the glad tid ings of becoming the proud papa of a baby girl born at the New York Wo men's Hospital. BEER EXPORTS UP A CCORDING to the Netherland Economic Information Service, a Royal Netherland government Bu reau, the Dutch are increasing their beer exports. Some figures were pub lished on the economic significance of the brewing industry in the Nether lands. The Dutch brewing industry con sisting of 70 enterprises employs 4,000 workers. The total capital of Dutch breweries and their affiliate enterprises amounts to over 100 mil lion guilders or $40,000,000. HOW DID "BOOZE" ORIGINATE? Booze is not a word of recent coin age, as commonly supposed. It is an example of a good word that degen erated into slang. In varying forms the term has been part of the English language at least since the fourteenth century. It occurs variously as booze, bouze, bouse and bowse. Apparently it was derived from Middle Dutch buyzen or busen, meaning "to guzzle liquor" or "to drink heavily," and is related to German bausen. The English form was in common use in the time of Edmund Spenser. In the Faerie Queene, written in 1590, the poet refers to Gluttony's imbibing too freely from a bouzing can, and boozy in the sense of being under the influence of liquor is recorded as early as 1529. A similar form of the word occurs frequently in the Scotch of Robert Burns. The late Dr. Frank Vizetelly supposed that booze was the modification of a Turkish word for a kind of liquor and was intro duced into Western Europe and Eng land by the gypsies. In Turkish boza is applied to several different kinds of drinks. It is not probable, that the We have been informed that John M. Signer, Jr., son of our j Albany, New York wholesaler, was recently elected State Com mander of AMVETS. AMVETS are the only nationally chartered by Congress World War II veter ans organization. Our congratula tions! slang term is derived from the sur name of a Philadelphia distiller named E. C. Booz, who during the second quarter of the nineteenth century sold whiskey in bottles stamped E. C. Booz's Long Cabin Whiskey. Such liquor was first produced during the Log Cabin and Hard Cider presiden tial campaign of 1840. Years before that famous campaign Washington Irving had written in Astoria (1836) that a Mr. Hunt "spent forty-five days at New Archangel, boosing and bargaining with its roystering com mander This proves that the verb, if not the noun, was in com mon American use at that time. From "A Book About a Thou sand Things." By George Stimpson

Jaarverslagen en Personeelsbladen Heineken

The Windmill | 1951 | | pagina 4