6,145 research outputs found
Candymaking- Hall Candy Co. P.1
John Mount working the candy. Photo by: J. M. Heslop, 1965. Gift of: Robert C. Mitchell
J. G. McDonald Candy Company Monkey
Image shows a woman and a chimpanzee posing for a garden photograph for the McDonald Candy Company.This photo was taken on the roof garden of the McDonald Candy Company building
Letter from John H. Wellons of Wellons Candy Company, to J. A. Howell
Letter from John H. Wellons of Wellons Candy Company, to J. A. Howell, concerning candy sale
Sweet Candy Company, Candy Boxes
Image shows a pile of candy boxes on display at the Sweet Candy Company
J. G. McDonald Candy Company Display (Boxes)
Image shows a display of numbered candy containers
J. G. McDonald\u27s Candy Company
Image shows several men and women working in the office of the McDonald Candy Company
Letter from J. A. Howell to S. B. Simmons. Letter from Thomas Davidson, Jr. and J. A. Howell, to Wellons Candy Company
Letter from J. A. Howell to S. B. Simmons, sending in reports. Letter from Thomas Davidson, Jr. and J. A. Howell, to Wellons Candy Company, concerning money owed
Candy Sale
Photograph used for a newspaper owned by the Oklahoma Publishing Company. Caption: "Mrs. Roy J. Turner, wife of the governor, Wednesday was presented a box of candy by Marilyn Stewart, left, and Kipp Ketcham as Blue Birds and camp Fire Girls stated their annual candy sale.
Nut and Candy Depositor
Patent for a nut and candy depositor for sending the nuts and candy into a dipping machine
Candy elasticity: Halloween experiments on public political statements
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in this record.We conducted experiments during trick-or-treating on Halloween in a predominantly liberal neighborhood in the weeks preceding the 2008 and 2012 presidential elections. We decorated one side of a house porch with McCain material in 2008 (Romney material in 2012) and the other side with Obama material. Children were asked to choose a side, with half receiving the same candy on either side and half receiving more candy to go to the McCain/Romney side. This yields a “candy elasticity” of children's political support. Results vary by age: children ages nine and older were two to three times more likely to choose the Republican candidate when offered double candy for voting Republican compared to when offered equal candy, whereas children ages eight and under were particularly sticky and did not waver in their choice of candidate despite the offer of double candy
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