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Salem Candy Cigarettes



Pearls Candy and Nuts NH has been serving sweet people in the Merrimack Valley area since 1976 when Mr. Lenny Pearl opened his first store in Salem, NH. We carry a wide assortment of old-fashioned candy, nostalgic and hard to find items at terrific prices.


Attorney General Eliot Spitzer today announced that R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company and the Attorneys General of 38 states have entered into a settlement that ends the sale of candy, fruit and alcohol flavored cigarettes manufactured and sold by the company.




Salem Candy Cigarettes



Under the settlement, Reynolds agreed to a ban in the United States of its Camel, Kool and Salem flavored cigarettes. The agreement also imposes significant marketing restrictions to prevent Reynolds from marketing a flavored cigarette to youth in the future. The following restrictions apply to any cigarettes manufactured by Reynolds in the future that have a characterizing flavor other than tobacco or menthol:


The name of the cigarette may not be that of a candy, a fruit or an alcoholic beverage, and may not include any of a number of specified terms that evoke imagery of candy, fruit or alcoholic beverages;


Reynolds may not use print advertising, point of sale materials, exterior packaging, or non-age verified direct mail or internet advertising that contain (i) names of a candy, a fruit or an alcoholic beverage, (ii) any of a number of specified terms that evoke imagery of candy, fruit or alcoholic beverages, or (iii) imagery of candy, fruit, sweet desserts or alcoholic beverages; and


The states had asserted that Reynolds was violating the 1998 tobacco Master Settlement Agreement's prohibition on youth targeting through its advertising, marketing and promotion of its flavored cigarettes.


The evidence that led the states to conclude that Reynolds was targeting youth included: use of candy, fruit and alcohol flavors with high youth appeal; use of advertising and packaging with graphics, typography, colors, styles and themes that were enticing to youth; and use of "Scratch and Sniff" and "Lift and Sniff" promotional cards scented with sweet, candy aromas, but with none of the scent of tobacco.


"Selling candy, fruit and sweetened alcohol flavored cigarettes is downright irresponsible, given the appeal of these products to youth. This result reflects a recognition that the Attorneys General, together with the public health community, will not tolerate Reynolds' shameful ploys to introduce our children to smoking and to lure them into a lifetime of addiction to its deadly products," Spitzer said.


The brand styles of flavored cigarettes sold by Reynolds that are banned by the Agreement are: Camel Exotic Blends: Mandarin Mint, Dark Mint, Crema, Izmir Stinger, Twist, Cinnzabar, Mandalay Lime, Aegean Spice, Bayou Blast, Beach Breezer, Margarita Mixer, Midnight Madness, Back Alley Blend, Kauai Kolada, Twista Lime, Winter MochaMint, Warm Winter Toffee, Blackjack Gin, Screwdriver Slots and SnakeEyes Scotch; Salem Silver: Dark Currents, Fire & Ice, Deep Freeze and Cool Myst; and Kool Smooth Fusions: Mintrigue, Mocha Taboo, Midnight Berry and Caribbean Chill.


John L. Kirkwood, President and Chief Executive Officer of the American Lung Association said: "We commend Attorneys General Spitzer and Madigan and the other Attorneys General for ending R.J. Reynolds' blatant attempt to use candy- and alcohol-flavored cigarettes to addict kids. This is an important step forward in our national campaign to curb tobacco use and highlights the need for the U.S. Congress to enact legislation to ensure that these and other tobacco products are regulated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration."


Matt Myers, President of Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, said: "There is no more flagrant recent example of tobacco marketing to kids than RJR's candy and alcohol flavored cigarettes. This landmark settlement achieves a major public health victory for America's kids and families in the never-ending battle to prevent the tobacco industry from marketing to our children."


Joseph A. Califano, Jr., president of the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University, chairman of the Citizens' Commission to Protect the Truth and former U.S. Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, said: "I congratulate the Attorneys General of New York and Illinois and the other Attorneys General for their aggressive moves which have caused RJ Reynolds to stop marketing, producing and selling flavored cigarettes in this country. RJ Reynolds' marketing of these cigarettes was an outrageous attempt to lure children into smoking. Attorneys General Spitzer and Madigan and the other Attorneys General have done a great service for America's children and teens."


Russell Sciandra, Director of the Center for a Tobacco Free New York, said, "In July, a federal judge ruled that the cigarette companies' marketing tactics, of which flavored cigarettes are an egregious example, contribute substantially to youth smoking rates. This agreement plugs one of the big holes in the wall protecting our kids from Big Tobacco's ongoing campaign to recruit new young customers to replace the thousands their products kill every year. We urge all cigarette manufacturers to join this agreement."


"Candy flavored cigarettes now join Joe Camel on the ash heap of defunct tobacco marketing schemes," said Donald Distasio, Chief Executive Officer of the American Cancer Society of New York and New Jersey. "This is a tremendous victory for public health and the Attorneys General's office is to be congratulated. There simply is no defensible reason to create and sell products designed to make it easier for kids to get hooked on smoking, and the time has come for the Food and Drug Administration to take action and start regulating tobacco products."


"I applaud the successful efforts of the Attorneys General to put an end to flavored cigarettes. Simply put, they add to the tobacco industry's arsenal of methods to lure our children into lifelong, deadly tobacco addictions," said Cheryl Healton, Dr. P.H.; President and Chief Executive Officer, American Legacy Foundation.


The Attorneys General alleged RJR, through its advertising, marketing and promotion of flavored cigarettes, was violating provisions of the 1998 tobacco Master Settlement Agreement that prohibited targeting youth.


They also cited RJR's use of candy, fruit and alcohol flavors with high youth appeal, its use of advertising and packaging with youth-oriented graphics, typography, colors and themes, and its use of Scratch and Sniff and Lift and Sniff promotional cards with candy scents.


Nestled in the bustling Shops at Perry Crossing, Schakolad is the perfect stop for fudge, candy, ice cream or hot chocolate. They have the prettiest chocolate boxes, chocolate roses, chocolate-covered strawberries or even chocolate champagne glasses filled with chocolate-covered cherries!


This local fudge shop actually started in the kitchen of its owner, Andrea Snyder. Once she opened The Fudge Kettle in a strip center near Cabin Coffee Company between Avon and Danville on U.S. 36, she also added many vintage candy options.


Walking into the Martinsville Candy Kitchen is like walking back in time into an old ice cream, soda and candy shop! This family-owned, small business originally opened in 1919, so it's 100 years of experience in selling the sweetest concoctions!


They specialize in homemade candy canes, which if you call ahead or time it right you can watch as they demonstrate pulling them by hand. They also sell chocolates and 24 flavors of hand-dipped ice cream.


They carry many of the old classics, like candy cigarettes, Big League Chew and Candy Buttons. So, grab the family and pop in for a "treat yo' self" kind of day. This store usually closes during the winter season.


Just a sampling of the varieties include fine truffles, assorted chocolates, gummies, chocolate-covered nuts and fruits, fudge, salt water taffy, chocolate-covered pretzels (my favorite), candy sticks, suckers, old-fashioned gourmet soda and 22 flavors of ice cream!


The U.S. Food & Drug Administration will move forward with a proposed ban on menthol cigarettes, targeting a pillar of the tobacco industry that has been a marketing hook for generations of cigarette and cigar smokers.


The regulator's move comes more than a decade after the FDA, empowered by the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, declined to pursue a menthol ban under former President Barack Obama. The agency had banned candy flavoring in cigarettes in 2009, but refrained from prohibiting menthol as an additive, in part, because of resistance from Black communities that have long favored menthol cigarette brands.


The proposed ban is expected to face staunch opposition from the tobacco industry and some communities who believe it will push menthol cigarettes underground, leading to law enforcement challenges and worrisome crackdowns by police.


Menthol cigarettes have roots in the 1920's, but sharply grew in popularity with the arrival of minty brands like Kool, Salem and Newport that were marketed as "smoother," "fresher" and more "natural" products. Public health officials view menthol cigarettes as more dangerous than regular tobacco cigarettes because they cover up some of the harshness of smoking, making it easier to develop a stronger nicotine addiction and inhale more of the harmful chemical byproducts of combustion that cause cancer and other diseases.


"For decades, the tobacco industry has been targeting African Americans and have contributed to the skyrocketing rates of heart disease, stroke and cancer across our community," the NAACP said last year. "The tobacco industry is on a narrow quest for profit, and they have been killing us along the way. The NAACP has been calling for a ban on menthol cigarettes and flavored e-cigarettes for years now, and we applaud the FDA's latest plan to do just that. It's about time we prioritize the health and well-being of African Americans."


The tobacco industry has fought vigorously in recent decades against any move to ban menthol cigarettes, spending heavily to lobby against such a move while complying with other measures, such as the removal of "light" brand cigarettes that mislead consumers about health risks. 2ff7e9595c


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