| UICC GLOBALink Presents... |
|
The Tobacco Reference Guide |
| by David Moyer, MD. |
| | Chapter 18 Pipes And Cigars |
| | tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour |
| | Pipes And Cigars: Historical |
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| | In 1762, Israel Putnam returned to his Connecticut home from Cuba, where he had |
| | been a British army officer. Starting an American tradition, he brought back a cache of |
| | Havana cigars. |
| | New York Times magazine, June 29, 1997, p. 34 |
| | tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour saut |
| | By 1900, an estimated four out of five men smoked cigars, and cigars accounted for |
| | nearly 60% of all tobacco sales. In 1903 in the US, there were twice as many cigars |
| | smoked as cigarettes, a total of 6.7 billion. |
| | Tobacco Advertising, p. 81 |
| | tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour saut |
| | "Mark Twain. Albert Einstein. General Douglas MacArthur. Pipe smokers all. But |
| | pipes aren't just consigned to history. They're coming out of tweedy men's clubs and |
| | heading into the hottest nightspots." |
| | USA Today, December 10, 1996, p. 6D |
| | tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour saut |
| | American poet Amy Lowell, a cigar smoker, bought 10,000 Manillas in 1915 as a |
| | hedge against future wartime shortages. |
| | San Francisco Chronicle, August 10, 1997, p. 7 |
| | tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour saut |
| | Cigars smoked in the United States increased from 4 billion in 1907 to 8 billion in |
| | 1929. |
| | A Passion for Cigars, p. 22 |
| | tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour saut |
| | "What this country really needs is a good five-cent cigar." |
| | Thomas Riley Marshall, U.S. Vice-President, 1920, under Woodrow Wilson |
| | tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour saut |
| | tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour |
| | Thursday, July 06, 2000 | Page 17 of 21 |
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Last page of this chapter Copyright (©) 2000 - David Moyer - published on UICC GLOBALink |