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- Indian on the Tootsie Roll Wrapper - Snopes. com
Claim: A Tootsie Pop wrapper with a picture of an Indian shooting an arrow at a star on it can be redeemed with Tootsie Roll Industries for a free bag of candy Origins: The rumor that
- Does the ‘Indian Wrapper’ Really Earn You a Free Tootsie Pop?
In actuality, the Tootsie company never actually offered any kind of exchange for the “Indian wrapper,” and its website actually dispels the myth (referred to as “the legend of the shooting star”)
- Can you really get a free Tootsie Pop if you find the star? - TODAY
Ever since Tootsie Pop was created in 1931, there has been widespread myth that wrappers which depicted a star shooting from the bow and arrow of a Native American man could get you a free
- who else remembers the rumor that if you found a star on the tootsie . . .
Our local mom and pop grocer gave out free ones if you got the Native shooting the star I remember turning it in at least once
- Tootsie Pop Indian Wrapper Mystery - Native American Shooting Star . . .
Back when I was a child, all we wanted to do was find the mysterious "Indian Wrapper" on a Tootsie Roll Pop Was there any truth to this urban legend? Well, let's travel back in time and
- The Legend Of The Indian On Tootsie Pop Wrappers? - HaphazardStuff
It has been an ongoing urban myth that has plagued Tootsie Pops for generations and would leave millions of excited kids who spotted that Indian and star on their wrappers and went to redeem it for their free Tootsie Pop disappointed
- Tootsie Roll Industries Never Gave Away a Prize if the Wrapper of a . . .
Children all over the world have whipped wrappers off of the beloved Tootsie Pop lollipop searching for an Indian boy shooting a star in hopes of obtaining a free Tootsie Pop Turns out, even though this rumor has been around for over sixty years, Tootsie Roll Industries never endorsed such a prize or contest
- The Legend of the Tootsie Pop Indian — Steve K. McCoy
Origins: The rumor that Tootsie Pop wrappers featuring an Indian can be redeemed for free candy has dogged the Tootsie Roll company since shortly after the introduction of the chewy-centered lollipops in 1931
- RoadTrip America® - Indian on the Tootsie Roll Pop
The story is that if you come across a wrapper with a picture of a boy in an Indian costume shooting an arrow at a star, and you send that wrapper to the company that makes Tootsie Pops, you will receive either a free sucker or a case of suckers
- Dating the Tootsie Roll Pop Wrapper Legend - Straight Dope
Since the creation of the Tootsie Pop in 1931, the meaning and origin of the shooting star on the wrapper has become a topic of discussion and has been in circulation for generations It has been rumored that local convenience stores used to give a free Tootsie Pop to anyone who brought in a wrapper containing the image of the shooting star
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