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Elsie Stix


Elsie Sticks were plastic ice cream sticks which became useful as an interlocking toy after the ice cream bar was eaten. They were produced in the early 1970s through Borden, Inc., dairy in the United States.

Historically, Elsie Sticks appear to have emerged in the 1950s with U.S. Patent 2,844,910 a construction kit made of wooden ice cream sticks by the Southern Ice Cream Company of Kansas City, MO. This patent was extended in 1972 with U.S. Patent 3,663,717 and U.S. Patent 3,748,778. The new toy design utilized plastic and modified the interlocking stick design.

Elsie Stix were very portable and collectable. Finding Elsie Stix now is very difficult.

Supposedly, Theora Design from Israel, claims to have invented Elsie Stix under a different name. The name of their sticks were Icetix and they were distributed into the US through Borden Dairy.




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Freaky Ice


Freaky Ice is a frozen ice confection, originating in the Netherlands. It is produced by Integrated Beverage Group, Ltd., and contains up to 4.8% alcohol.

In 2004, the New York Division of Alcoholic Beverage Control denied Integrated Beverage Group the permission to sell Freaky Ice in the state, citing the hazard of the product to children. It also criticized IBG on selling a product that would appeal to children.




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Fla-Vor-Ice


imageFla-Vor-Ice

Fla-Vor-Ice is the trademark name for a type of freezie. Unlike traditional popsicles, which include a wooden stick, Fla-Vor-Ice is sold in and eaten out of a plastic tube. Also unlike traditional popsicles, they are often sold in liquid form and require the consumer to freeze them at home. However, a vendor may sell them pre-frozen.

Fla-Vor-Ice is manufactured by the Jel Sert company and has, since its 1969 introduction, come to be the company's top seller. They come packaged in four varieties: Original, Light, Tropical, and Sport. The Original variety includes six flavors - Lemon Lime (green), Grape (purple), Tropical Punch (pink), Orange (orange), Berry Punch (blue), and Strawberry (red). The Tropical variety also includes six flavors, two of which are also included in the Original variety (Berry Punch and Tropical Punch) as well as four other flavors - Summer Punch (red), Citrus Punch (green), Banana (light yellow), and Pineapple (dark yellow). The Light variety includes four of the original flavors (Lemon Lime, Grape, Berry Punch, and Strawberry) but they are sugar-free and low calorie. The Sport variety also has four flavors - Tropical (pink), Grape (purple), Orange (orange), and Blue Raspberry (blue). The Sport pops are the newest to the Fla-Vor-Ice line and include Electrolytes for rehydration purposes. All boxed varieties may be purchased in pop increments of 16 or 24, with the Tropical pops available in bulk cases of 100, and the Original pops also available in cases of 80, 100, 200 or 1,000 pops.



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Froster


Froster is a brand of iced frozen carbonated beverage (however, not carbonated in Canada) sold at Mac's Convenience Stores in Canada and Circle K in the United States.

In 2006, a Froster advertising campaign was run that features a Froster flavour called "Whack". The campaign centres on the Whack flavour and uses double entendres involving the word, such as "I think I could have a Whack every day if I could," as well as humorously bleeping out the word "Whack" in the commercials.

In May 2007, Mac's introduced a controversial advertising campaign for their new WTF Froster beverage. Targeting primarily internet savvy teenage youth, the campaign included posters and a series of viral internet video ads. The controversy stems from the use of the WTF internet slang acronym "", a poster of a nun and goat bowing in the presence of a cup of WTF and video ads portraying sexual innuendo and bizarre or questionable conduct. In response Mac's has pulled the more controversial ads and has stated that it intended WTF to refer to "What's the flavour?".

In 2008, another controversial Froster advertising campaign was launched that uses the acronym "STFU" (which in stands for "shut the **** up"). The website states the acronym means "suck the Froster up".

As of August 2014, the current campaign is "Take It Easy".

The official Froster website lists the flavours:

Other flavours do exist, such as Pepsi. Typically, older Mac's stores will not use "Fanta" or other technically correct names. It is quite common to find Crush labelled flavours, as well as flavours named as bluntly as "Banana".



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Goji%27s



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Golden Spoon


Golden Spoon Frozen Yogurt is a frozen yogurt retail chain headquartered in Rancho Santa Margarita, California. Stores are located in the western United States, mainly in California, Nevada and Arizona, and internationally in Tokyo and Sendai, Japan and Metro Manila, Philippines.

Golden Spoon stores provide a variety of frozen yogurt flavors and toppings. Employees serve the yogurt in cones or cups with their signature golden plastic spoon.



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Golly Bar


Originally launched in 1957 by HB Ice Cream (HB), the Golly Bar is an ice cream formerly sold exclusively in The Republic of Ireland. It was a single rectangular block of vanilla ice cream on a wooden stick. The packaging of Golly Bars depicted an image of a Golliwog, a 19th-century caricature of a blackface minstrel. The Golliwog image was removed from the ice creams packaging in 1992. However, continued concern over any references to the image saw a name change to the Giant Bar. Giant Bars remain available for purchase across The Republic of Ireland though reorganisation of the HB brand by corporate parent Unilever saw the production and ownership of the Giant Bar Brand move to UK company Dale Farm.




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Haunted House Ice Cream


Haunted House ice cream was produced in the UK by a company called Lyons Maid. It first went on sale in July 1973 and cost 4p.

The ice cream itself was white, and a picture was printed on it in edible ink. There were eight pictures in total: Frankenstein's Monster, a spook, a skeleton, a spider and web, some bats, a wicked witch and a creature. The pictures were shown in one of the following colors: pink, orange, red, green and blue. It was impossible to determine which picture was on the ice cream until the wrapper was opened.




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The Icee Company


imageThe Icee Company

The Icee Company is an American beverage company located in Ontario, California, United States. Its flagship product is the Icee (stylized as ICEE), which is a frozen carbonated beverage available in fruit and soda flavors. Icee also produces other frozen beverages and Italian ice pops under both the Icee and Slush Puppie brands. The company's mascot is an animated polar bear.

The Icee Company was founded by Omar Knedlik who is the inventor of the original Icee drink. It became the foundation for the Slurpee and other frozen machine drinks after several machines made by the company were purchased by 7-Eleven in 1965. It has been a division of J & J Snack Foods Corporation since 1988 and distributes product in the United States, Canada, Mexico, Guatemala, China, and the Middle East.

The Icee was invented in 1958 by Omar Knedlik, a Dairy Queen owner in Coffeyville, Kansas. The beverage was the result of faulty equipment in the Dairy Queen owned by Knedlik. His soda machine broke and he began placing bottles of soda in the freezer to keep them cold. Knedlik began selling bottles of the soda which would instantly turn to slush once opened. The frozen soda became popular with the customers of the establishment.

The name ICEE as well as the original company logo were developed by Ruth E. Taylor, a local artist and friend of Knedlik. She developed the name "ICEE", as well as the idea of the logo's icicles hanging from the block letters, which has remained unchanged. She thought of the Polar Bear, but the actual bear mascot had already been created by the Norsworthy-Mercer ad agency . The "ICEE" word with the snow on it was designed by a Mitchell Company staff artist, Lonnie Williams, as part of a cup he designed.

Knedlik partnered with the John E Mitchell Company in Dallas to develop the machine, for which Knedlik received a patent for in 1960. The first machine was made out from a car air conditioning unit which worked by combining and freezing water, carbon dioxide, and a flavor mix. After 5 years Knedlik's idea had become the iconic Icee Machine after drawing the attention of 7-Eleven. The convenience store chain purchased several machines and later changed the name to Slurpee based on the slurping sound people make when drinking the beverage.



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Kwality Wall%27s



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