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Contents contributed and discussions participated by bailey spoonemroe

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Wrigley.com :: How Gum is Made - 2 views

  • The Wm. Wrigley Jr. Company manufactures chewing and bubble gums with long-lasting flavor and dependable, uniform quality. This includes manufacturing our gum in spotless, air-conditioned rooms and sampling all ingredients before accepting them into any of our 19 factories. After raw ingredients are approved for quality, the first production stage begins.
  • Melting
  • Mixing
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  • Rolling
  • Scoring
  • Conditioning
  • Wrapping
  • Breaking and Coating
  • Packaging
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    how gum is made 
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Wrigley.com :: Our Founder - 1 views

  • William Wrigley Jr. was born in Philadelphia in 1862, at the height of the Civil War. His father, William, Sr., was a soap manufacturer, and as a little boy, young William carried a basket through the streets of Philadelphia, selling Wrigley's Scouring Soap. When he became a teenager, William took a full-time job as a soap salesman for his father. He had a talent for salesmanship, and he drove a horse and wagon from town to town, trying to convince stores to stock Wrigley's soap. William Wrigley Jr. struck out on his own in the spring of 1891 when he was 29 years old. He left Philadelphia for Chicago with just $32 in his pocket and a dream of running his own business. He also had boundless energy and a gift for seeing things from his customers' point of view.
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Wrigley.com :: Heritage Timeline - 0 views

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    this is all good info!!
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William Wrigley | Chewing Gum - 0 views

  • William Wrigley
  • Perhaps one of the most famous names in the gum industry is William Wrigley.  Wrigley was the son of a soap salesman from Philadelphia, and at the age of thirteen, he was also selling soap.  At the age of 30, he moved to Chicago to open a new branch of his father’s company and came up with an idea to provide “premiums” to vendors who purchased a certain amount of soap.  These premiums included baking powder, cookbooks, and umbrellas. 14.  The baking powder sales surpassed the popularity of the soap, so Wrigley made that his primary product and offered gum as a premium, the very same development from John Curtis.  Once again, the premium’s popularity surpassed that of the product, and Wrigley entered the gum industry.  Wrigley hired the Zero Gum Company to manufacture gum for him, and it was here that the Wrigley’s industry started.  He introduced a series of branded gums in 1983, including Juicy Fruit and Spearmint.  In 1898, he founded William Wrigley Jr. Company. 15.  
  • While this type of industry-making is nothing new or special, what set Wrigley apart from his competitors, including the Adams company, was his marketing and advertising.  Wrigley is famously quoted as saying, “Anyone can make gum. The trick is to sell it.”16.  And sell it he did.  Wrigley began by doing a modest advertising campaign in 1906 in Buffalo, Rochester, and Syracuse, with successful results.  The campaign then evolved to massive billboards, placards in streetcars and subways, and one of the first electric signs,
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  • including a massive one in Times Square (the electricity bill of which was an annual $100,000).
  •   The billboards then evolved to a linked line of 117 signs along the railroad between Atlantic City and Trenton, New Jersey advertising Wrigley’s Spearmint.  Between 1915 and 1917, Wrigley sent free samples of gum to everyone with a telephone book, a total of more than 8.5 million, and in another campaign, every child received two sticks of gum when they turned two, reaching 750,000 children. 17.  A brand-recognition study in the 1920s found that 65% of people listed Wrigley as their “top-of-mind” choice for chewing gum, while the nearest competitor scored only 10%. 18.  Wrigley’s advertising campaigns were what truly made gum popular throughout the country and a billion dollar industry.
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    good info look at highleded info on the inventer
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Chewing Gum - American Dental Association - ADA.org - 0 views

  • What is chewing gum? Chewing gum in various forms has been around since ancient times.  The Greeks chewed sap from the mastic tree, called mastiche.  On the other side of the world, the ancient Mayans favored the sap of the sapodilla tree (called tsiclte).  Native Americans from New England chewed spruce sap—a habit they passed on to European settlers.  Today, the base used for most gum products is a blend of synthetic materials (elastomeres, resins and waxes in various proportions).  However, chewing gum is as popular as ever. 
  • What does chewing gum do? The physical act of chewing increases the flow of saliva in your mouth.  If you chew after eating, the increased salivary flow can help neutralize and wash away the acids that are produced when food is broken down by the bacteria in plaque on your teeth.  Over time, acid can break down tooth enamel, creating the conditions for decay.  Increased saliva flow also carries with it more calcium and phosphate to help strengthen tooth enamel. Clinical studies have shown that chewing sugarless gum for 20 minutes following meals can help prevent tooth decay.  In the future, look for chewing gum that delivers a variety of therapeutic agents that could provide additional benefits to those provided by the ability of gum to mechanically stimulate saliva flow. For instance, some gum might contain active agents that could enhance the gum’s ability to remineralize teeth and reduce decay, or enable gum to help reduce plaque and gingivitis.
  • Does chewing gum replace brushing and flossing? No, chewing gum is an adjunct to brushing and flossing, but not a substitute for either. The ADA recommends brushing twice a day with a fluoride toothpaste and cleaning plaque from between your teeth once a day with dental floss or other interproximal dental cleaners.
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  • What is in chewing gum and how is it made? Chewing gum typically consists of: Gum base Artificial sweeteners (such as aspartame, sorbitol or mannitol) Softeners (glycerin or other vegetable oil products) Flavorings and colorings The process for making chewing gum has six basic steps: Gum base ingredients are melted together Other ingredients are added until the warm mix thickens like dough Machines called extruders are used to blend, smooth and form the gum The gum is shaped (flattened or molded into tablet shapes and coated) The gum is cooled for up to 48 hours in a temperature controlled room The gum is packaged. Source: National Association of Chewing Gum Manufacturers.
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    ADA association  REALLY GOOD GUM FACTS!!!
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chewing gum -- Britannica School - 0 views

  • Ingredients
  • The various latexes are taken from trees in much the same way that rubber is obtained. The tree is gashed, and the latex drips into canvas bags. It is then boiled to reduce water content, hardened, and kneaded into blocks weighing about 25 pounds (11 kilograms). After shipment to a gum factory, it is purified by heating and straining before being put into a mixer, a vat in which other ingredients are added. After cooling, the mixture is flattened by rolling machines, cut into sticks, and fed into a machine for wrapping and packaging.
  • This is the process used for the standard stick of chewing gum. Gum is also sold in candy-coated pellets or tablets, soft bubble gum, gum balls, and slabs or sticks of bubble gum. Each type is put through a different process. Some bubble gum, for instance, is extruded, or squeezed through holes while still warm, then cut or shaped before being wrapped.Gum balls are coated with a sealer and then sprayed repeatedly with sugar syrup that hardens. Next they are polished with an edible wax. Candy-coated pellets or tablets are treated in much the same way.Chewing gum is a popular product around the world. Manufacturers are located on almost every continent. However, the world’s largest manufacturer of chewing gum is the William Wrigley Jr. Company of Chicago. Other U.S. manufacturers include the Topps Company and the Ford Gum & Machine Company
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  • . History
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    another on how gum is made (Britannica)
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William Wrigley, Jr. - 0 views

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    relay good information on this page 
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Wrigley.com :: About Us - 0 views

  • Wrigley is a recognized leader in confections with a wide range of product offerings including gum, mints, hard and chewy candies, and lollipops. Wrigley's world-famous brands – including Extra®, Orbit®, Doublemint®, and 5™ chewing gums, as well as confectionery brands Skittles®, Starburst®, Altoids® and Life Savers® – create simple pleasures for consumers every day. With operations in approximately 50 countries and distribution in more than 180 countries, Wrigley's brands bring smiles to faces around the globe. The company is headquartered in Chicago, Illinois, employs approximately 17,000 associates globally, and operates as a subsidiary of Mars, Incorporated. Based in McLean, Virginia, Mars has net sales of more than $30 billion, six business segments including Petcare, Chocolate, Wrigley, Food, Drinks, Symbioscience, and more than 70,000 Associates worldwide that are putting our Mars Principles into action to make a difference for people and the planet through our performance.
  • wy candies, and lollipops. Wrigley's world-famous brands – inclu
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    highlighted things on this page!!!
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Wrigley Company | Wrigley Chewing Gum - Candy Favorites - 0 views

  • William Wrigley Jr., yep, the founder of the Wrigley Company, believed that even with small things, quality matters. More than 100 years later, candy lovers still enjoy the quality of numerous Wrigley Company products including Wrigley chewing gum, Life Savers, Altoids, and more.We have the complete Wrigley chewing gum selection below so you can choose among Hubba Bubba, Orbit, Extra, Eclipse, Big Red, Freedent, 5 Rain, and others. Whether you are looking for minty, sweet, or sugar-free, you’ll find it all here.
  • Besides Wrigley chewing gum, we carry Chunky Candy Bar, Life Savers candy in several varieties including Sour Gummies, and Squeeze Pops. It’s a Wrigley fan’s paradise.
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    highlighted part!
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wrigley company - Google Search - 1 views

    • bailey spoonemroe
       
      fun fact!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1
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Wrigley UK :: Fun Facts - 0 views

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    funn facts on gum
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Wrigley Oral Healthcare Program| About Wrigley - 0 views

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    the health care part about chewing gum
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Wrigley.com :: The Story of Wrigley - 0 views

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    the story of wriglys chewing gum
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Wrigleys Gum Wrapper | eBay - 0 views

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    some of the lables of wriglys chewing gum all difrent ones  
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Wrigley | Popular Chewing Gum and Confections: Orbit, Extra, Skittles and More | Mars - 0 views

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    more over what he made not only gum but plenty more
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Gum Chewing is Good for the Brain | Psychology Today - 0 views

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    is chewing gum good for u? find out here
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How chewing gum is made - manufacture, making, history, used, procedure, industry, mach... - 0 views

  • Kneading and rolling the gum
  • Preparing the chicle
  • Raw Mate
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  • Chewing gum is a sweetened, flavored confection composed primarily of latex, both natural and artificial. Organic latex, a milky white fluid produced by a variety of seed plants, is best known as the principle component of rubber. Used as a snack, gum has no nutritive value, and, when people have finished chewing, they generally throw it away rather than swallow it.
  • The most successful chewing gum company ever is that established by William Wrigley, Jr., in 1892. Although the company, run by the founder's son and grandson after his death in 1932, developed a wide array of flavored gums, it dropped many of these to concentrate on its biggest sellers: "Juicy Fruit," "Doublemint," and "Wrigley's Spearmint." Recently, the company introduced gum for denture wearers, sugar-free gum, cinnamon-flavored gum, and non-stick bubble gum. Like earlier Wrigley products, all have proven popular. The secrets behind the success of Wrigley gums—the company has never made anything else—are strong flavor and prominent advertising. As William Wrigley, Jr., said early in the century, "Tell 'em quick and tell 'em often."
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    about how gum is made
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Wrigley.com :: U.S. Nutrition Information - 0 views

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    more things he invented 
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History & Future - The History of Chewing Gum and Bubble Gum - 0 views

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    good info on chewing gum!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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Wrigley Company - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • The company was founded on
  • April 1, 1891,
  • In 1892, William Wrigley, Jr., the company's founder, began packaging chewing gum with each can of baking powder. The chewing gum eventually became more popular than the baking powder itself and Wrigley's reoriented the company to produce the popular chewing gum.
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  • originally selling products such as soap and baking powder
  • 1891–1932: William Wrigley Jr
  • 1961–1999: William Wrigley III[edit]
  • Changes in gum
  • ew produc
  • Additional products
  • Altoids Big League Chew (until November 2010) Bubble Tape Cool Air Eclipse Excel Hubba Bubba Hubba Fergie Spec Savers
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