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  2. Parle Products - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parle_Products

    Parle Products is an Indian multinational food corporation, which makes biscuits and confectionery products. It is best known for the biscuit brand Parle-G, [2] [3] which is the best-selling biscuit brand in the world, according to a 2011 Nielsen report.

  3. Parle Agro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parle_Agro

    Parle Agro is an offshoot of Parle Products, which was founded in 1929 in British India.It was owned by the Chauhan family of Vile Parle, Mumbai.The original Parle company was split into three separate companies owned by the different factions of the original Chauhan family:

  4. Parle-G - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parle-G

    Parle Products was established as a confectionery maker in the Vile Parle suburb of Mumbai, in 1929. Parle Products began manufacturing biscuits in 1939. In 1947, when India became independent, the company launched an ad campaign showcasing its Gluco brand of biscuits as an Indian alternative to British-branded biscuits. [4] 1947 advertisement

  5. Bisleri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bisleri

    Bisleri International (formerly Parle Exports and Parle Bisleri) is an Indian multinational company which is best known for the eponymous brand of bottled water. The company was started in the 1970s by Ramesh Chauhan, [ 7 ] and sells bottled water and soft drinks.

  6. Parler forms a new parent company to offer 'uncancelable ...

    www.aol.com/news/parler-forms-parent-company...

    The social app Parler will now operate under a new parent company known as Parlement Technologies, which also announced a fresh round of $16 million for the pivot toward infrastructure.

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  8. Thums Up - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thums_Up

    Thums Up was created in 1977, after the American company Coca-Cola withdrew from India due to regulations requiring it to disclose its formula [3] and sell 60% of its equity to an Indian company under a government plan for foreign-owned companies to share stakes with domestic partners.

  9. Limca - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Limca

    In 1992, when the Indian government allowed Coca-Cola to return for operations, at the same time as it admitted Pepsi for the first time, Coca-Cola bought local soft-drink (soda) brands, from Parle Bisleri owner Ramesh Chauhan including Limca, Thums Up (a cola-like drink), Maaza (a mango-juice based drink), Citra (a clear lemon-lime drink), and ...