6B I —THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, SEPT. 21, 19681 • • This 'nThat l»% At STIN .Ml IIOI.S "Hey." the voice bellowed. "You using stale ice or some thing? This drink tastes terri ble." Listening in. I learned an earful. First that "stale" ice isn't a figure of speech. It 's a fact. Stale ice has an unpleasant taste not easily detected in ad vancc. but destructive to the l>est mixed drink. Ice gets stale if it's left too long unused in the refrigera tor. It also gets stale if the refrig era tor is not kept thoroughly clean. If eveh a trace of sludge is per mitted. ice al>sorfis this odor. Beware alsiyfTf cheese I lull's allowed to melt and refree/ e. as well as salami and other strong• j smelling foods that are pi aced loosely packed or completely uncovered in the refrigerat or. So watch out for the "st ale" ice gremlins that can destroy even the host prepared »iH'k tails and make your uuvsts lt>ok askance when you tell t hem that your bourbon is If >l pre mium Wild Turkex llu* U*st money can buy. II you're hearing thint.s go bump in the night. look for the Bison Hump —the newest « Irink making the jet stream It's made with two ounees of I 'olish vodka. an egg a .linger of t ream ;i 11 well shaken with ice. strait Ted. and served into a chilled champagne glass Other hits of incidental in telligence picked up from my stentorian "stale" ice informer are that Wyborowa. a na me f«»r Polish vodka, means "quality" in Polish ami that Camp;iri the Italian A|x k r»tif. is getting pop ular as a liner's toast in South America When a man goes to school and learns some big words, he's only half educated. His education will be completed when he learns to translate those big words back into sim ple English that ordinary peo ple can understand. WHAT A 17f5 YEARS IT HAS BEEN! ' TIIE 1 1.1 .-FATED TITANIC The luxury liner TITANIC de |iurl» Southampton. England prior to her maiden Atlantic ami li-»i«lrmu .«rrjinjg nilh an icelwrjc on ihr (>r*nH liank* off Nc* found land. A now book makes clear that while much is written about new gadgets and gimmicks, few people are aware of how much we have gotten rid of; piracy is just one example! When America's oldest stock, fire and marine insurance com pany in America recently cele brated its 175 th anniversary, it was noted that the first life insurance |H>licy written by the firm was on a ship captain for $5,000 in 1794, protecting him against "Algerines and other Barbary corsairs." Since then it has insured the 30 scien tists who built the atomic bomb, officials of the United Nations, and the beauties of the Miss America Pageant. When Insurance Company of North America was found ed in 1792 in Philadelphia's lnde|>endence Hall, the U.S. had been independent from Great Britain for only nine years. That same year the corner stone of the Capital was laid in Washington, D.C.. a group of merchants met in a New York City coffeehouse to or ganize the New York Stock Exchange, and Virginia was the last state to ratify the Bill of Rights. In many ways the history HOOL? "L A BEL" y &EFEK/ZED OEIGINAILS TO THE CLOTH &AMDS, OR FILLETS. - K" \ ATTACHED TO A SISWOP'S Labeling WAS BEGUM " \v!!nfell\ 2,000 YEARS AGO BY A koaaam who &akep his name into jars Containiwg his ointment. . , Znl LABELS OM FOOP COMTA/MtsRS ARE SfIQUIREP By LAW TO TELL THE COMPLETE NAME OF THE PROPUC I. Kit T WEIGHT OH VOC UMf , THE CANNER OR DC", Ik'ltMJ TOR AMD IHE INGREDIENTS. 35 Y/EAK3 rkf.VKHJ&LY THE naimnal i AMNI t-, ASSOCIAIION WAi AHEAO.T 11flMf WITH A PESCl'imvE LABfiIWO PROGRAM WHICH'TOLP THE TkiJIM AKOUT A CAMS INGfcftUIEM T5 IN Simple, familiak, tp^mo. &HE FIRST LABEL PAT EM r WAS GRANTEP IN 107+ K>k A 3*\ BREAKFAST HOMIMY LABEL IO BE X' A «' Vil,, I ATTACHED TO THE SACK., yon ok / vrf .■ 7Wl;| ' ■ABEEL IN WHICH IME ' A Jftt 1 , wTXiI : HOMINY WAS TO W- SOLD. ON THE tgoo's WOVEM LABELS JB CLOTHES WERE COLLECTORS ML ■. W iLri* ITEMS. SOME MADfc IN ENGUNP - • Wk 7r\. OF hap three - > PIMENSIONAL PORTRAITS V OF WASHINGTON PISfctAELI - ' AMP JUCEN VICTORIA. I "LOOK, NO HANDS" - HAYMAKING TODAY A flood example of tli«- Irr lilcililoti* al\an''» in farm iiiacliiiicry i* illu*lrat-l liy the impro\«-m-iit>> through I In- yearit in haymaking. Karly Haymaker* (altme). Automatic llalr \\ ajion (lop ri;lil). World* Kir«l Viitomatic Italer (bottom rijilit). Not IIHI in.inx mo>l I American lartners not t»ril\ ctil | 11\ated crops. the> also grew j their own l.ibor stippl> l>\ j having huue families. There was plentv o| work on the farm, and 1 the more hands there were, the easier it went Hut no matter how main hands, hard work was the lot ot nearly everyone who lived on a farm -li-was a year-round. >un-up to sun-down existence and it was tough and hare A Kven so. there's no doubt farm life had some advantages money couldn't buy and many people who grew up on yester day's farms.look hack with nos talgia. You might even hear one of these not-so-old-timers say ing. The best goldurn times I ever had was puttin' up hay in the hot August sun. drinkin' One can handle a hundred typical enemies, but one bitter individual can be a nasty prob lem, especially if it is a fe male. of INA and that of the nation arc parallel, and the fascinat ing story is now told by dis tinguished historian and prize winning author William H. A. Carr in his book. Perils. Named and Unnamed, pub lished by McGraw-Hill. The title of the book, taken from a phrase in some ancient insur ance policies, is apt - for INA has faced every peril known to man. Most of the company's early l>olicies were on ships and cargoes, many insured against piracy. The "unsinkable" Ti tanic was partly insured by INA. In 1967, the company paid about $600,000 when the oil tanker Torrey Canyon broke up on rocks off the Cor nish coast of Britain, spilling over 90,000 tons of crude oil into the sea. Perils: Named and Unnamed reports these and dozens of other fascinating anecdotes about an insurance company that has paid claims ranging from $4 million for the San Francisco earthquake in 1906 to $300,000 for a cancelled Boy Scout Jamboree and 90 cents for a home-made pie ruined when a golf hall smash ed through a kitchen window. mm I | good well water out of camiin I iars " etc . then drift away {in mistv cvtHl revcrx Balers and Thermos l*»ttles > I have replaced pitchforks and I ! canning jars on most North I American farms, and old stvle. back busting haymaking is little more than a memory—and not always a pleasant one Ttnlay. farming is more a way of making a living for the farmer-businessman and less a way of life for his family. The key to the farmer's new life and productiveness is a dynamic larm technology that's created tremendous advances in ma chinery. seed, fertilizers and methods Some of the more notable ma chinerv advances have helped take the "ache" out of haymak ing Mowers replaced scythes. Form of Hereditary Blindness Diagnosed By Meharry College NASHVILLE, Tenn. - The first diagnosis in America of an extremely rare form of heredi tary blindness was made re cently at Meharry Medical Col lege in Nashville as reported in the August edition of the Ame rican Journal of Ophthalmolo gy- Dr. Axel C. Hansen, head of the Division of Ophthalmo logy, reported on two cases of the disease which he encounter ed in two Negro children seen at the eye clinic at Meharry's teaching hospital, George W. Hubbard. The, two brothers both were afflicted with a disease called Nonie's Disease after a Danish ophthalmologist, who first des cribed the syndrome in 1927. Since then, and until 1966, 35 cases were reported in six families around the world. The syndrome is chaiac- terized by tumors of the retina of both eyes and is found only in males and is sometimes ac companied by mental retarda tion and lo6s of hearing or deafness. "Unfortunately, there is no known treatment for the disease, but families in which the disease occurs may be ad vised that it is inherited, "Dr. Hansen said. According to Dr. Hansen, the disease may be less rare than has been thought, because ■4l > Laundry and I 1 ((ear OfMnccJ I CASH & CARRY OFFICES Cmtr ami Heillowaj Streets Cfcapoi Hill St. at Dak* Uatrwtity M Qatek Aa A Wtak-knhn fU at At«4il« Dr. H H qrhr*-l«, Car. Br*a4 aad Eagltwaad An. ■ I A S lYntient jL>tientJlsc 10 YEAR OLD STRAIGHT ' KENTUCKY BOURBON Uti, ' £§=?- sqio $4.85 HALF QUART » 4/5 QUART t maw ut tuimwc ct. • nwim. mntCri t maw, cmfowu • k moor balers obsolete*! pitchforks and. more recently, automatic bale wagons eliminated the drudgery of lifting and stacking bales by hand. The machine shown aliovc was a big step in bringing "no hands" haymaking to many North American farms. It's a Stackliner' automatic bale wagon made bv New Holland, the farm equipment division of Sperry Hand Corporation. One man. with a Stackliner. can pluck bales from a field, drive to an unloading area and unload all the bafc»s either one at a time or as a complete stack. The Stackliner takes the place of a three man crew and lets the farmer finish his haymaking in less time and with much less effort than he ever could before. it can be misdiagnosed. Symp toms of the disease are very similar to those found In an other eye disorder, retinoblas toma, in which there are tum ors in the eye which are malig nant. Tumors found in patients with Norrie's disease, however, are not malignant and, there fore, cannot spread to other parts of the body such as the brain. The key to diagnosing Nor rie's disease is in the careful study of tjie family history which may reveal male relatives who are blind. Dr. Hansen said, as was the case with the pa tients diagnosed. Since the dis ease is sex-linked, it does not show up in women who may be carrying the defective gene, but there is a 50-50 chance that their male children will have the disease. Also accompanying the dis ease in about two-thirds of the cases is mental retardation and in fewer cases loss of hearing or deafhess. Dr. Hansen's work in diag nosing and publishing his find ings was aided by a grant from the National Institute of Neu rological Diseases and Blind ness which supports free eye screening clinics for pre-school age children and also glaucoma detection clinics for adults. Coca-Cola USA To Make Study Negro Market ATLANTA, Ga.—The dyna mics of food and grocery store buying patterns among the nation's 22,000,000 Negroes will be revealed to marketing management by a new audit re search service just launched by Audits & Surveys, Inc., the second largest marketing re search Arm in the United States Hie new service, called Ne gro Market Index, is keyed to food stores located in metro politan areas with a heavy con centration of Negro population. It enables national and provid ing retail stores, inventory and distribution data on specific brands in various product ca tegories. The Coca-Cola Com pany already has contracted Solomon Dutka, president of Audits & Surveys, disclosed. Dutka explained that the service is based on a unique definition of the Negro market and provides a continuous flow of information on sales trends, competing brand shares and other product movement ele ments. To insure accuracy, he pointed out, the Negro market is viewed as a separate entity, rather than merely as a fraction of the "national market." "TTiis is the first time, to the best of our knowledge, that the Negro market has been clearly segmented," he said. "It has become increasingly apparent to manufacturers that in purchasing certain products Negroes display an influence disproportionate to their actual numbers. But until now there has been a lack of practical Information; this important area has been treated only as part of the whole and not as an individual market with its own dynamics." Product and brand move ment information is derived from a representative sample of grocery stores and super markets - both chain and inde pendent - in which continuous bimonthly audits of food store sales are made. Field work is conducted by Selected Area Surveys, an Audits & Surveys affiliate, specializing in re search among Negro Puerto Rican and other ethnic groups. To obtain meaningful and up-to-date information, repre sentative panels of food stores, each doing virtually all of their business with Negro clientele, have been established in three major metropolitan classifies- These brands keep 2£)70 people working in Durham ■ » v - rj jgr ifl nJ aI ■ . yHHj ——J J Jmtmws*SS&m£Bh »Es|sß»*(S "America's greatest Rift to Indi is shown with her companion, F ; House, New Dehli, India. It took a sightless heroine to open the eves of the world to the injustices growing from old myths about the "helplessness" of the blind. Helen Keller, blind and deaf from infancy, put it this way: "Not blindness but the atti tude of the seeing to the blind is the hardest burden to bear." Throughout a lifetime of awesome personal accomplish ments. she uprooted supersti tions nourished by milleniums of ignorance. Here are some of the most stubborn fallacies, ex ploded bv. the facts of Miss Keller's inspirational career: The blind have a limited ra pacity /or learning. Yet in 1900. Miss Keller en tered RadclifTe College, took all the standard examinations during four years of study and was graduated with a B.A.— i cum laude!'Later, she became the first woman ever to receive an honorary doctorate from 1 Harvard University. I The blind read little or not \ at all. j Yet Miss Keller not only was I an avid reader of braille books i tions across the country: Northern areas, Southern mar kets with 100,000 or more Ne gro population, and Southern areas with less than 100,000 residents. Data are as sembled and reported separate ly for each category. Dutka noted "that with the continu ing and increasing migration of the Negro to large urban cen ters across the nation, the Ne gro today is one of the most urbanized segments of the country's population. It is es timated that 70 percent of all Negroes now reside in metro politan markets. Negro Market Index will foe lis on this Ur banized Negro." Data gathered will reveal shares of major regional brands as well as competing national brands for all product cate gories. Moreover, special analyses will disclose brand shares by type of outlets, con trasting marketing strengths in supermarkets versus smaller j groceries. Other reports will ia," is the way the Indian press described Helen Keller. Here she Polly Thomson, charming I'rime Minister Nehru at Government in Knglish and German but wrote I.'i autobiographical and inspirational works of high lit erary merit. Her first book, "The story of My Life," ap peared in l!) 02 and her last. "Teacher." in lt). r >. r x - Tire blind lire isolated Irom reality. Yet Miss Keller joined the American Foundation for the Blind and the Helen Keller World Crusade for the Blind as counselor on national and international relations and toured 39 countries on the five continents. She was received by kings, queens, premiers and other world leaders, including every American President from Grover Cleveland to John F. Kennedy. She so impressed her hosts that many estab lished pioneering programs for their national blind. The blind are unemployable. Yet Miss Keller convinced hundreds of employers that blind workers are capable of performing the most challeng ing tasks. Today there are blind teachers, lawyers, computer programmers, salesmen and show shares in only those tion bias where brand availabi stores carrying a particular lity is less than 100 percent," brand, "eliminating distribu- Dutka pointed out. SAFINS VTHAN SORRY PROVIDE PROTECTION WITH \ AUTO INSURANCE - _ your rates and bene fits oii ctoto insurance with other companies? Before you renew or start a new policy, check with us. Com pare our low rates. CONSULT US ABOUT OUR INSTALLMENT PAYMENT PLAN Union Insurance & Realty Co. •W FAYITTIVIUi ST. • PHONI MS-US* engineers. Nearly 30,000 blind college graduates hold respon sible positions once closed to I he sightless. The blind are immobilized by tlicir handicap. Yet Miss Keller swam, danced, rode horseback and hiked over the countryside around her Connecticut home. After Miss Keller's death last June, her friends estab lished the Helen Keller Mem orial Fund as a living monu ment. Co-sponsored by the American Foundation for the Blind and the Helen Keller World Crusade, with offices in New York City. The fund com mittee is headed by actress Katharine Cornell, a long-time friend of Miss Keller's. In a public appeal, Miss Cornell said: "I hope that you will join us in this tribute to Miss Keller by making a generous gift to the Memorial Fund in support of the services which were her life work." The Memorial Fund is in the finest tradition of Helen Keller —the blind woman of vision.