Ads
related to: 80s discontinued candy
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Discontinued: 1981. The Mars Candy Company's Marathon Bar was a staple during the 70s. The 8-inch chocolate bar was a long braid of caramel-filled goodness that got its name based on the notion ...
This chocolate-coated version of the Sugar Daddy was produced starting in 1965, according to Old Time Candy, and was eventually discontinued in the ’80s. Today, Tootsie Roll produces Sugar Daddy ...
The 1970s and '80s were filled with memorable but not-so-healthy foods. ... 24 Discontinued '70s and '80s Foods That We'll Never Stop Craving ... bite-sized fruit nuggets were like tiny candy ...
The original packaging used the phrase "Ayds Reducing Plan vitamin and mineral Candy"; a later version used the phrase "appetite suppressant candy". The active ingredient was originally benzocaine, [1] presumably to reduce the sense of taste to reduce eating, later changed in the candy (as reported by The New York Times) to phenylpropanolamine. [2]
Bonkers was a candy offering from Nabisco in the mid-1980s. It consisted of chewable rectangular-shaped candies with tangy filling. The candy came in a large rectangular package with several of them individually wrapped. Common flavors included grape, orange, strawberry, watermelon and chocolate.
The boxes came in four colours reflecting the flavour of the candy inside: red for strawberry, green for lemon, orange for orange, and blue for mint. [1] The advertising campaign, "Ipso Calypso", featured a man eating the sweets and daydreaming about West Indian and Jamaican dancers on a train platform. A woman interrupted the man's daydream to ...
Hershey's Bar None Candy Bar. Hershey's Bar None was introduced to the world in 1987 (and in Canada was called a Temptation). Made of milk chocolate-flavored wafers filled with chocolate cream ...
For as many candy bars as there are on store shelves today, there are countless others that didn't make the cut. And while some of these discontinued candies weren't as popular as, say, a Hershey ...