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4 (80%) 1 vote Save $1.00 at Honey Maid Online: Save $1.00 when you purchase any one (1) Honey Maid Grahams. Valid on 14 oz. or larger. To get more…

4 (80%) 1 vote

Save $1.00 at Honey Maid
Online: Save $1.00 when you purchase any one (1) Honey Maid Grahams. Valid on 14 oz. or larger. To get more exciting offers and updates visit our online site. (Sep-26-2019)

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Nabisco (/nəˈbɪsk/, abbreviated from the earlier name National Biscuit Company) is an American manufacturer of cookies and snacks headquartered in East Hanover, New Jersey. The company is a subsidiary of Illinois-based Mondelēz International. Nabisco’s plant in Chicago, a 1,800,000-square-foot (170,000 m2) production facility at 7300 S. Kedzie Avenue, is the largest bakery in the world, employing more than 1,200 workers and producing around 320 million pounds of snack foods annually. Its products include Chips Ahoy!, Belvita, Oreo cookies, Ritz Crackers, Teddy Grahams, Triscuit crackers, Fig Newtons, and Wheat Thins for the United States, United Kingdom, Mexico, Bolivia, Venezuela, as well as other parts of South America. All Nabisco cookie or cracker products are branded Christie in Canada. Prior to the Post Cereals merger, the cereal division kept the Nabisco name in Canada. The proof of purchase on their products is marketed as a “brand seal”. The Nabisco name became redundant in Canada after Kraft took over. Nabisco opened corporate offices as the National Biscuit Company in the world’s first skyscraper, the Home Insurance Building in the Chicago Loop in 1898. Nabisco’s trademark, a diagonal ellipse with a series of antenna-like lines protruding from the top (“Orb and Cross” or Globus cruciger), forms the base of its logo and can be seen imprinted on Oreo cookies in addition to Nabisco product boxes and literature. It has been claimed in company promotional material to be an early European symbol for quality. It may be derived from a medieval Italian printer’s mark that represented “‘ In 1792, Pearson & Sons Bakery opened in Massachusetts. They made a biscuit called pilot bread for consumption on long sea voyages. Josiah Bent coined the term “cracker” for a crunchy biscuit they produced in 1801. In 1889, William Moore acquired Pearson & Sons Bakery, Josiah Bent Bakery, and six other bakeries to start the New York Biscuit Company. Nabisco dates its founding to 1898, decade when the bakery business underwent a major consolidation. Early in the decade, bakeries throughout the country were consolidated regionally, into companies such as Chicago’s American Biscuit and Manufacturing Company (which was formed from 40 Midwestern bakeries in 1830), the New York Biscuit Company (consisting of seven eastern bakeries), and the United States Baking Company. In 1898, the National Biscuit Company was formed from the combination of those three.

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