March 29, or Coca-Cola's Birthday
Zodiac Sign Aries
____________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
Aries, March 29. The vibrations are such that they endow a person born on March 29 with great willpower.
They are cold-blooded, courageous, brave and self-possessed people, and at the same time, romantic and sentimental natures.
They are tormented by constant dissatisfaction in everything, they do not like to sit in one place, they often change their place of residence and work.
They are endowed with these properties at birth. But much will also depend on the upbringing of a person, on what qualities upbringing will give him, where he will live in childhood and adolescence. What luggage will he receive at his parents' house? Much will depend on this in his future life.
***
Aries men born on March 29:
- can be proud of the following characteristics:
- passion,
- enterprise,
- attentiveness,
- competitiveness.
- The Aries man is a classic charismatic and leader who does not accept rivalry with a woman, and therefore, choosing a relationship for life, prefers gentle and passive persons who are ready to completely give him the reins of government.
- At the same time, Aries categorically does not accept not only betrayal, but even flirting on the side.
Aries women born on March 29:
- are not like others in such qualities:
- nobility,
- confidence,
- courage.
- Aries woman is bright, strong, authoritarian and active, with exaggerated self-esteem, experiencing a constant need to be independent.
- By nature, the representatives of this sign are optimists, generous and wasteful natures who prefer impractical gifts - emotions are more important for them than material goods.
- An idealist, philosopher, Aries woman often says what she thinks, without fear of offending her interlocutor.
Main event
Coca-Cola's Birthday - created a recipe for Coca-Cola, most popular drink in the world
March 29, 1886
In March 1886, in Atlanta, Colonel John Pemberton, a pharmacist by education, was trying to find a remedy for a headache.
For this purpose, he cooked an unusual syrup of caramel color. The recipe for the drink included a decoction of coca leaves, sugar and caffeine. Because of its effect, the drink turned out to be quite stimulating. The syrup was sweet and thick.
Pemberton highly appreciated the taste qualities of his creation. He decided to sell it through the pharmacy "Jacobs".
The first portions of the syrup began to be sold here at five cents per glass. At first, the coca was bought in the amount of nine glasses a day.
Later in the drink began to add carbonated water. Around the same time, the drink was called Coca-Cola. The name and original font was invented by Frank Robinson - a friend and partner of John Pemberton.
After the death of Pemberton, the successful businessman Aza Kendler purchased the recipe for Coca-Cola from his widow for $ 2,300.
And then Kendler placed the drink in metal utensils, in which he cooked it together with his own patented "Balsam from the Blood of Plants".
Ten years later, Coca-Cola was strengthened in the name of the "therapeutic drink".
And on January 31, 1893, the Coca-Cola trademark was officially registered in the United States.
Incidentally, it was in the same year in 1893 that a young pharmacist from New Bern, Caleb Bradham, conducted an experiment to create a pharmaceutical mixture of carbonated water, sugar, vanilla, rare oils and cola nuts.
This unusual mixture under the silent name "Brad's drink" began to be sold in pharmacies as a cheerful, firming and digestive drink.
Five years after the invention, Bradham gave the drink a new name - "Pepsi-Cola" and registered it as a trademark. The name was made up of the names of the ingredients - pepsin (digestive enzyme) and cola nut.
Four years later, in 1902, Caleb Bradham organized the Pepsi-Cola Company.
And for more than a century Coca-Cola and Pepsi-Cola have been fighting for the title of the most popular drink in the world.
Also on March 29...
1638 - Swedish Lutherans founded the first permanent European settlement in Delaware.
1696 - Isaac Newton became a director of the London Mint with a huge salary for those times - 2000 pounds per year.
1730 - Moscow acquired a piquant novelty: street lighting with hemp lanterns appeared.
1778 - English captain James Cook became the first European to land on Vancouver Island.
1795 - German composer L. van Beethoven gave a concert in Vienna for the first time.
1836 - died Nadezhda Pushkina (Hannibal), the mother of the great poet A.S. Pushkin.
1848 - Niagara Falls stopped for more than 30 hours because ice jams formed on the Niagara River.
1867 - The North American Act on the creation of Canada was adopted in England.
1871 - Queen Victoria opened Albert Hall in London, where not only opera stars, but also ''Beatles'' and ''Rolling Stones'' performed.
1881 - Raymond Hood was born, the creator of the skyscrapers.
1912 - Antarctica explorer R. Scott made his last entry in his diary, he was only in a few kilometers from his base station.
1918 - Sam Walton, American entrepreneur, founder of the Wal-Mart network.
1927 - In the Canadian province of Ontario, “dry law” was abolished, instead of which government control over the trade in alcohol was introduced.
1940 - ''The Bank of England'' issued the first paper money with a new high degree of protection against counterfeiting. From that moment on, the paper on which the banknotes were printed, a thin metallic thread began to be embedded in. So imagine yourself a magnet and ... go ahead!
1943 - Vangelis was born (his real name is Evangalos Odyssey Papatanasiu), Greek musician. In 1968, together with Demis Roussos, he founded the group "Aphrodites Child". After the collapse of the group, each went his own way. Vangelis releases solo albums, collaborates with the soloist of the group ''Yes'' John Andersen, writes music for the movie (“Blade Runner”, “Chariots of Fire”, etc.). He also wrote music for three documentary tapes by Jacques Yves Cousteau.
1957 - Christopher Lambert was born (his real name is Christoph Guy Denis Lambert), French film actor, famous for his role as highlander Duncan MacLeod.
1968 - Lucy Lawless was born, a New Zealand actress, “warrior queen” from the Xena series.
1973 - The withdrawal of American troops and their allies from South Vietnam was completed: the last American soldier left the devastated lands. That is why today marks the Day of Vietnam War Veterans.
1974 - American spacecraft ''Mariner 10'' took photos of the planet Mercury.
1989 - the first Soviet hockey players allowed to go to the NHL.
1998 - the longest bridge in Europe - ''Vasco da Gama Bridge'' - was opened in Lisbon by the beginning of the world exhibition ''Expo 98'' His discovery was also timed, as it appears from the name, to the 500th anniversary of the first journey of Vasco da Gama.
2000 - died William Pokhlebkin, Soviet and Russian scholar, historian, geographer, journalist and writer. Among the most famous works of Pokhlebkin are “All about Spices”, “Culinary Dictionary”, “Tea. Jam all year round ”,“ History of the most important food products ”,“ Cooking art ”and, of course, the famous“ History of Vodka ”.
2010 - Two explosions occurred in the Moscow metro at the ''Lubyanka'' and ''Park Kultury'' stations of the Sokolnicheskaya Line of the Moscow Metro by two Russian suicide bombers of Dagestan origin. As a result of the explosions killed 41 and injured 88 people.
Any way I'll be subscribing to your feed and I hope you post again soon. Big thanks for the useful info. fufengshui.com
ReplyDelete