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MS Awareness Month

BETTER MADE SNACK FOODS SUPPORTING MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION MONTH IN MARCH 2024

Partial proceeds from the sale of Family and Value size potato chips, and 2.5 ounce bags of pork rinds will be donated to the National Multiple Sclerosis Society

DETROIT, MI – March is Multiple Sclerosis Awareness and Education month and Better Made Snack Foods is pleased to announce that the company is once again partnering with the National Multiple Sclerosis Society in an effort to educate the public about this disease and how it can help. To that end, Better Made will donate partial proceeds from the sale of Family and Value Size Potato Chips, and 2.5-ounce bags of pork rinds to the National Multiple Sclerosis Society located in Southfield, MI.

“We are always happy to partner with the Multiple Sclerosis Society to raise awareness and support education of this disease,” says Dave Jones, President of Better Made Snack Foods. “Multiple Sclerosis is a highly unpredictable, life-altering disease affecting more than 2.3 million people worldwide. I know I speak for the entire Better Made family when I say that we are proud to be a partner.”

Founded in 1930 in Detroit as Cross and Peters, and now in its 93rd year, Better Made continues to develop and provide a wide variety of high-quality award-winning snack foods, including assorted original and flavored potato chips, and potato sticks, gourmet popcorn, pretzels, tortilla chips, pork rinds, and more! The family-owned company uses locally grown potatoes and the finest oils. For more information, please visit www.bettermade.com. You may also follow Better Made on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. Michigan Made – Better Made, now featured all around Michigan in your favorite food outlets.

About Multiple Sclerosis

Multiple sclerosis is an unpredictable, often disabling disease of the central nervous system. There is currently no cure for MS. Symptoms vary from person to person and range from numbness and tingling, to mobility challenges, blindness and paralysis. An estimated 1 million people live with MS in the United States. Most people are diagnosed between the ages of 20 and 50, and it affects women three times more than men. Connect to learn more and get involved: nationalMSsociety.org, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube or 1-800-344-4867.

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