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Polo Gummies: Fruit flavoured soft gummy sweets in the Polo shape. Sugar free: Sugar free version of the original Polo containing sorbitol. Mini Polos: Small Polos (about 0.5 cm in diameter) with a strong "Super Mint" minty flavour. They were packaged in a box shaped like a Polo Mint. They were also available in an Orange flavour.
Trebor was founded on 4 January 1907 [2] in south west Essex by W.B. Woodcock, Thomas Henry King, Robert Robertson and Sydney Herbert Marks from Leytonstone and was located on Katherine Road in Forest Gate, London. The name Trebor, the spelling of "Robert" backwards, was registered as a trademark four days after the end of World War I. On 18 ...
This is a list of breath mint brands in alphabetical order. ... Polo: Rowntree's: 1948: United Kingdom Pulmoll [fr; de] Kalfany, Zertus: 1945: France Ricola: Ricola ...
A "scotch mint", "pan drop", [15] granny sooker [15] [16] or "mint imperial" is a white round candy with a hard shell but fairly soft middle, popular in Great Britain and other Commonwealth nations and in Europe. Scotch mints were traditionally spheroids, more recently moving toward a larger, discoid shape.
This page was last edited on 17 March 2016, at 17:12 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may ...
Certs Classic Mints were developed by American Chicle and introduced into the North American market in 1956. [2] The "Certs" name originated from its approval by Good Housekeeping (as in "certified by Good Housekeeping "), a magazine that, then as now, bestowed the Good Housekeeping Seal on products that pass its quality and reliability tests.
Chocolate beans were first sold loose in 1938, but were later packaged in a cardboard tube and branded as Smarties. [29] Polo, the distinctive mint with a hole in the centre, was developed in 1939, but its introduction was delayed by the onset of war. [29] Harris was made company chairman in 1941. [26]
In the late 1930s and early 1940s, four new mint flavors were introduced: Molas-O-Mint, Spear-O-Mint, Choc-O-Mint and Stik-O-Pep. During the Second World War, other candy manufacturers donated their sugar rations to keep Life Savers in production so that the little candies could be shared with armed forces as a tasty reminder of life at home ...