I've seen these throughout the east and south. Do western areas have another state
on their cans?
The Internet is great for trivia isn't it?
---
David Jonas (mathlab rep)
Emory University, Atlanta, GA
Internet: djo...@mathcs.emory.edu BITNET: djo...@emory.bitnet
UUCP: {rutgers,ogicse,gatech}!emory!djonas
Because the Bluefield Bottling (Beverage?? ) Company produces and packages
"store brand" soft drinks for many chains, including Kroger and Winn-Dixie.
I _think_ the little West Virginia on the cans, bottles, etc., are the
seal from the state Department of Agriculture -- like the "Reg. Penna"
stuff is on products from Pennsylvania.
|> I've seen these throughout the east and south.
I _know_ BBC does "Big K" for Kroger and "Chek" for Winn-Dixie, so it's
no surpirise you've seen them all over the East, South, and Southeast.
|> The Internet is great for trivia isn't it?
Yeah -- now, if I can just remember where I parked my car after I got
back from lunch... :-)
--
=======================================================================
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Internet: m...@hpuerca.atl.hp.com
NBCS: B4 f+ t w g+ k s+ l+ I barely speak for myself, so
#include <standard.disclaimer> don't make me speak for HP
=======================================================================
>Does anyone out there know why there are mini-representations of the state
>of West Virginia printed or stamped on almost every type of beverage can, bottle,
>two-liter etc.
If you notice on those little representations of WV on the bottle caps,
there is a "1" in the middle of the state. That means West Virginia is
number 1! :-)
As I understand it, the "1" is the state tax that WV charges for each bottle
of beverage that is sold in the state. Since most bottlers do not want to
distinguish between those sold in WV and those sold elsewhere, I guess
they opt to pay the tax and put the stamp on the bottle cap.
I still like the #1 idea though!
Jack (from Buckhannon, WV)
Jack Stansbury "The newest computer can merely compound, at speed, the
ja...@eco.twg.com oldest problem in relations between human beings, and
The Wollongong Group in the end the communicator will be confronted with
(703) 847-4574 the old problem, of what to say and how to say it."
Edward R. Murrow
>Because the Bluefield Bottling (Beverage?? ) Company produces and packages
>"store brand" soft drinks for many chains, including Kroger and Winn-Dixie.
>I _know_ BBC does "Big K" for Kroger and "Chek" for Winn-Dixie, so it's
All this talk of acronyms makes me want a RIPCO bar.
-Mike
>If you notice on those little representations of WV on the bottle caps,
>there is a "1" in the middle of the state. That means West Virginia is
>number 1! :-)
>
>
The Pepsi line of soft drinks in the central NY region all have the WV
symbol. (That's one reason why I drink it.) I also like to tell my
Yankee/ New Englander friends that the 1 means #1.
Janie Sue Shinn js...@cornell.edu
Uh-huh. To keep this in the vein of acronyms -- why don't we plan to
meet on the Rockland Road sometime this fall, at the farm where our
great-grandfathers were born and raised, to see where the C&O cut
their right-of-way along the Greenbrier River? :-)
Greg Ruff
FN...@acad3.alaska.edu
>Does anyone out there know why there are mini-representations of the state
>of West Virginia printed or stamped on almost every type of beverage can, bottle,
>two-liter etc.
Because there's a special tax on soft drinks in WV, and they have to
either affix a little teeny tax stamp on each container or print the state
outline with the number inside representing the number of cents in tax
that have been applied. It's rather like gas pumps having to have that
sticker that states how much of the cost is pure tax.
Why is it everywhere? Because it's cheaper for the companies just to print
them on EVERY bottle rather than just the WV ones.
>I've seen these throughout the east and south. Do western areas have another state
>on their cans?
Dunno about the west, but I see them all the time up here in NYC,
especially on Snapple and "New York brand Seltzer" (which is NOT made in
NY). I even see them occasionally on bottles and cans that have to be
specially printed to comply with the recycling laws here in the Northeast.
--Aaron
>If you notice on those little representations of WV on the bottle caps,
>there is a "1" in the middle of the state. That means West Virginia is
>number 1! :-)
Uh, if you get a three-liter, the state has a "3" in it. :(
Actually,according to state law, supermarkets are supposed to post a sign
listting the tax-per-ounce in the soft drink aisle. Maybe someone still
down there can pop into a Kroger (where I KNOW they post the sign) and
copy it for us.
>As I understand it, the "1" is the state tax that WV charges for each bottle
>of beverage that is sold in the state. Since most bottlers do not want to
>distinguish between those sold in WV and those sold elsewhere, I guess
>they opt to pay the tax and put the stamp on the bottle cap.
They don't have to pay the tax on every bottle, jus the ones actually sold
in WV. It's just cheaper to print them on every one. Just like the "Reg.
Penna. Dept. Agr." You don't really think the PA Dept of Ag really cares
about the food quality in Oregon, do ya? :)
--Aaron
>The Pepsi line of soft drinks in the central NY region all have the WV
>symbol. (That's one reason why I drink it.) I also like to tell my
>Yankee/ New Englander friends that the 1 means #1.
Actually, that brings up a question: Why IS Pepsi so much more popular in
WV/Appalachia, and Coke more popular in, say, the Northeast?
--Aaron
Susan
--
Susan B. Farmer far...@cs.utk.edu Lady Jerusha Kilgore
I can't even find time to clean house and you want me to come up with a .sig?
B.A. in Computer Science ... Graduate Student in Botany
Talk to me about your Trillium species!
Coke was more popular in WNC. Guess it has something to do with being
closer to Atlanta. :-)
Seriously, I saw a fascinating map about a year ago that had the
country colored according to whether Coke or Pepsi sold better in the
area. Both coasts and virtually the entire Deep South/Texas were red
(for Coke, of course) and pretty much the entire middle of the country
was blue (for the awful 'P' word).
Mike Jones | jon...@crd.ge.com
Burns's Balance:
If the assumptions are wrong, the conclusions aren't likely to be
very good.
I noticed the stamp on bottles in Chicago weekend before last - on mineral
water, and several years ago in LA. I'd guess it's all over and more people
than not have no idea what it is or what it represents. I've also seen it
stamped on pop cans.
Kathy
*****************************************
The VA Peninsula is great - but I'm still a country girl at heart!
Be the best you can be - be yourself
Yeah. The state levies a special tax of .01 (sheesh, I'm going to get
this wrong) on every can of soda. (I'm sorry that I *do* forget
exactly what for, but I remember it being for a pretty good cause...)
Jeff
--
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ModemNews Magazine RelayNet:Jeff Green->MODEMNEWS(465)
An Alternative Media TriNet :Jeff Green (Net Chat)
BBS 203.359.2299 CIS :71726...@Compuserve.com
This is news to me. My mother's family(deep SWVA)swears by
Coca-Cola. It used to be, in fact, that in order to receive
permission to marry into her family, 3 basic qualifications had
to be met. The prospective in-law had to: 1)Be a Democrat, 2)
Drive a Ford, and 3)Drink Coca-Cola. And even though we've now
moved to the border of Appalachia, in Montgomery County,
Va(near Virginia Tech), Mom still refuses to allow Pepsi
products into the house.
Having a Coke and a Smile :-),
--Ron Barber
My parents, both from WVA, remember when they used to have to belong to
a quasi club to be even able to sit down and order a cocktail.
Charles Myers
DP Telecomm Tech II
University of Maryland Baltimore County Campus
Baltimore, MD 21228
Internet:cha...@umbc.edu
yellnet:410-455-3806
fax:410-455-1065
ABC = Alcoholic Beverage Commission, a state bureaucracy.
> My parents, both from WVA, remember when they used to have to belong to
>a quasi club to be even able to sit down and order a cocktail.
Kansas is sort of like that too; it's theoretically illegal to serve alcohol
on an airliner flying over Kansas. I visited a restaurant in KS (ca. 1981)
and was told that only private clubs could serve alcohol, but that I could
join the club for 75 cents.
When I was a kid in Breckinridge Co., Ky, a "dry" county, there was a local
gas station where the (generic :-) coke machine randomly contained a bottle
of beer. Of course, all us kids bought our cokes there! Everybody knew
that it was a den of bootleggers but nothing could be done because they were
the sheriff's inlaws.
--
Frank re...@ucs.indiana.edu
Alcoholic Beverage Control??
--
Wanda Wolfe | High flying adored |
wwo...@nyx.cs.du.edu | -- I've been called names |
| But they're the strangest. |
| Tim Rice, _Evita_ |
Anybody else call them poke stores?
Ha! That reminds me...ever hear anybody described as a "yellow-dog
Democrat"? Of course, when spoken it comes out as "yeller-dawg
Democrat". The etymology, as it was explained to me, was somebody who
was so Democratic that he'd vote for a yellow dog if it ran on the
Democrat ticket.
Did anybody's mom besides mine ever tell them they were so stubborn
they'd argue with a fence post? How 'bout "If I gave you the world,
you'd want a fence around it?"
For that matter, what do folks call their grandparents? Mine on one
side were Grandmaw and Grandpaw Jones, and on the other were Jake
(*everybody* called my grandfather that) and Granny Smith (yes,
really). I knew folks who called them Mammaw and Pappaw, and I know
there were others I can't recall. My latitude's too high these days.
Mike Jones | jon...@crd.ge.com
An American's a person who isn't afraid to criticize the President
but is always polite to traffic cops.
My mom said, "You're so stubborn you'd argue a black sheep was white."
>
>For that matter, what do folks call their grandparents? Mine on one
>side were Grandmaw and Grandpaw Jones, and on the other were Jake
>(*everybody* called my grandfather that) and Granny Smith (yes,
>really). I knew folks who called them Mammaw and Pappaw, and I know
>there were others I can't recall. My latitude's too high these days.
>
I was never very close to my father's family, but my mom's parents
were alway Mammaw and Pappaw. Pappaw's mom, the only great-grandparent
I ever knew, was called Big Mommy (since she was about four-foot-nine).
> Mike Jones | jon...@crd.ge.com
>
>An American's a person who isn't afraid to criticize the President
>but is always polite to traffic cops.
>
Scott
>In article <CDqKs...@world.std.com> kie...@world.std.com (Aaron L Dickey) writes:
>>
>>Actually, that brings up a question: Why IS Pepsi so much more popular in
>>WV/Appalachia, and Coke more popular in, say, the Northeast?
>>
>>--Aaron
>>
>Because we know a truely class drink when we drink it! :-)
>Tastes better to me.
Yecch...Pepsi's too sweet and leaves a strange coating on your teeth, IMHO.
--Aaron
>WV got out of the liquor business a couple years ago. All the "state
>stores" (or "poke stores") were sold to private businesses. Not sure
>what's involved in getting a retail liquor license these days, but
>there are not very many of them.
Depends on where in WV you aare. Huntington, Charleston, there are tons
there. Getting a liquor license really only entails not being a felon and
being able to afford the filing fee. I'm sure such places are harder to
find in more rural areas though.
Alcoholic Beverage Commission stores. They were being privatized last count I
had. Like many monopolies, it did not exactly have a wide selection, nor were
they very efficient. But by the same token, all profits did get funneled back
into the state.
>
>
--
Charles Buckley buc...@rtt.colorado.edu
Yes, I have a degree in Aerospace Engineering...would you like fries with that?
Just another West Virginia exile in the land of make believe.
Toby Koosman koo...@utkvx.utk.edu
University of Tennessee
Knoxville, Tennessee USA
Grandparents: Granny and Pa (My dad's were Granny and Pa to him and he
insists on being Pa to my son.) Note that it's Paw, not that yankee "pa".
My mom's paternal grandparents were Grandpa and Grandma; Maternal grandfather
was Poppy. (That's what his children called him to.) Her G'GRandmother
was Grandma Carrico.
My grandmother, Granny, will be 94 the end of this month. If everybody
shows, there should be 74 for the party. :-)
susan (whose roots are in Wise County)
Diana & the equines, the canines and the felines (in WV).
"Don't get all het up about it!" (Translated "don't get upset!") Not sure
what the "het" part is all about. Same translation for "don't get your
bowels in an uproar!"
--
***********************************************************************
Jim Burke "Life is uncertain - eat dessert first!"
Teknekron Software Systems ... bu...@tss.com
phone:(415) 617-2432 ... uunet!tekbspa!burke
het = heated. In other words, don't get all heated up. My grandmother used
het a lot. She het the leftovers so we could snack on them, etc.
alternatively, head of steam , thus "het"