None, except perhaps fresher breath for a little while if you suck in the mint/cinnamon ones. After that, it's plain ol' tooth decay like any other sugar-based candy. Actually, there is one additional benefit, although only for entertainment value, to the Wint-O-Green Life Savers: if you bite them in a dark room you'll see triboluminescent sparks, due to the wintergreen (oil that comes from an evergreen plant) being mixed with sugar.
lifesavers
There used to be cotton candy lifesavers in their easter ones but not anymore that I can find :(
Each roll of lifesavers has 14 candies in it.
Clarence Crane - a chocolate manufacturer - invented lifesavers candy in 1912 because he wanted a candy that could withstand summers boiling heat better than chocolate (yum):p
The collective noun for Lifesavers (the candy) is a roll of Lifesavers. There is no collective noun for lifesavers (also called a life ring). However, a noun suitable for the situation can be used, for example a stack of lifesavers, a row of lifesavers, a locker of lifesavers, etc.
Buy M&M's or LifeSavers.
Yes, dissolving a Lifesavers candy in warm water is a physical change. The candy changes from a solid to a liquid state without changing its chemical composition.
Their was a fructose hard candy patent filed for Lifesavers inc in 1980, but there were lifesavers candy manufactured for 80 years before that. The patent would only be valid for 20 years. Prior to 1995, US patents were only valid for 17 years from date of issue.
I think you are referring to Life Savers candy.
None, you don't put it in lifesaver candy. But if I'm wrong, it's probably the flavor you want your lifesavers to be.
Wintergreen Life Savers... in other words candy!!...lol Wintergreen Life Savers... in other words candy!!...lol
The original product packaging for Lifesavers (back in 1912) pictured an old seaman throwing a life preserver to a young female swimmer with the slogan "For That Stormy Breath."