Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
The Box Tops for Education (BTFE) program is an American school fundraising program sponsored by General Mills. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Schools can earn 10 cents for every qualifying product purchased by parents and turned in to the school.
Labels for Education was a marketing program begun in 1973 by the Campbell Soup Company in the United States, and later also in Canada.The program allowing schools to earn books, musical instruments, computers, and other school supplies in exchange for labels or Universal Product Codes (UPCs) on associated products. [1]
Betty Crocker was a leader in the mailin box top space beginning in 1929. Their coupon catalog allowed loyal customers to mail in either money or coupons to purchase items in the catalog. [ 1 ] During the 1930s through 1960s, cereal boxtops were usually the most common proofs of purchase used to claim such premiums.
A cereal box prize, also known as a cereal box toy in the UK and Ireland, is a form of advertising that involves using a promotional toy or small item that is offered as an incentive to buy a particular breakfast cereal. Prizes are found inside or sometimes on the cereal box.
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... In addition to the top six, ... a collection of quotations created a week after Wikimedia launched, [306] ...
The Cereal Box Mystery: 1998 66 The Panther Mystery: 1998 67 The Mystery of the Stolen Sword: 1998 68 The Basketball Mystery: 1999 69 The Movie Star Mystery: 1999 70 The Mystery of the Pirate's Map: 1999 71 The Ghost Town Mystery: 1999 72 The Mystery in the Mall: 1999 73 The Gymnastics Mystery: 1999 74 The Poison Frog Mystery: 2000 75 The ...
This collection also features more than thirty-five minutes of unlockable interviews from Sega of Japan, a "museum" with facts about the games, strategy tips and box art for each game, as well as a "Sega Cheat Sheet" that consists of cheat codes for most games, and a set of unlockable arcade games, (some of which are from the early Sega/Gremlin era).