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Gallery Package - Smoking - Misc
Smoking Children | Smoking Men | Smoking Women

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Still life of a packet of Players cigarettes

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April 1960<br>Woman in a laboratory experimenting with cigarettes.

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Close up of a cigarette in an ash tray

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Teofani Cigarette Factory, Brixton, London, 1916. Over the first half of the 20th century smoking was far more acceptable than it is today. These women appear to cutting the leaves into smaller strips before they are put through a machine that will reduce the leaves further. These leaves will then be rolled and packaged elsewhere in the factory. <br>Credit: English Heritage / HIP / TopFoto

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Teofani Cigarette Factory, Brixton, London, 1916. A woman puts boxes onto the counter while the man to the right of the picture tallies the packets. In the background can be seen several women rolling and packaging cigarettes. This was a time when many more people smoked than today and the health aspects were less often discussed. <br>Credit: English Heritage / HIP / TopFoto

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Tobacco factory, 1780. '1) Negre qui ejambe le Tabac. 2) Negre qui torque le Tabac. 3) Negre qui le met en rolle. 4) Tabac a la pente. Black slaves prepare tobacco by shredding, rolling, twisting and drying. <br>Credit: The Print Collector / HIP / TopFoto

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Chile: warning on cigarette packet (ordered by  the ministry of Health, government of CHile) Watch Out! These cigarettes are killing you

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St. Paul, MN. Welcome smokers sign on a bar. ©Michael Siluk / The Image Works

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Addictions - smoking - health - These are the cigarette-smoking machines that scientists in Britain and America used to find a link between smoking and lung cancer.  The American one can smoke up to a hundred cigarettes at a time - and provide a condensed and concentrated cigarette smoke from which the scientists can draw off impurities.  Now the scientists are using similar machines to try to make smoking safe. -1957

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SMOKING<br>TWO BROAD-SIDES<br>AGAINST TOBACCO<br>KING JAMES<br>PUB 1672<br><br><br><br><br>RK  K MED 35 3<br>

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The Tory MP for Billericay Mrs Theresa Gorman making a clean sweep of National No Smoking Day when she took care of dropped cigarette ends outside the House of Commons. - 8th March 1989 - ©TopFoto

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Arthur Slater, seen behind the bar of the Red Bull Hotel, Stockport, Cheshire, where he has decided to stop selling cigarettes.<br>1964

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© PHOTONEWS SERVICE/OLD BAILEY/<br>PIC SHOWS- A SMOKER ENJOYING A CIGARETTE WHO COULD END UP LIKE ERNEST JONES, WHO DID NOT HAVE THE BENIFIT OF HEALTH WARNINGS ON THE PACKET. MR JONES WAS AT THE HIGH CT TODAY 7/12/98 TO BATTLE AGAINST TOBACCO COMPANIES AFTER HE CAUGHT LUNG CANCER.        -SEE STORY-<br>PIC BY-JACK HILL<br>

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Advertising poster survey for the Baltos &quotcigarettes". France, about 1939.     LAG-10984

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War 1939-1945. Liberation of Paris. Soldiers of the 2nd A.D. with the wood of Boulogne. Sharing tobacco, chewing-gum, chocolate, tooth powder etc... August 1944.

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Smoker's accessoies : gas cigarettes lighter and cigarettes. France, about 1950.

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Cigarette being smoked in a pub, Cambridge, UK.<br>Date: 08.01.2005<br>Ref: B49_086661_0002<br>COMPULSORY CREDIT: Bandphoto / Uppa.co.uk<br><br>

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The Atom, helpful servant of mankind<br>Industrial Uses of Radioisotopes Continues to Increase<br>An atomic detector called a Microfeed is used in cigarette manufacturing factory. The Microfeed automatically controls production, rejecting any cigarette that is underweight overweight or poorly packed.

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Havana, Cuba:  Workers handroll cigars at the H. Uppman cigar factory. The tobacco harvest in Cuba starts in mid-March and continues through April. Many Cuban tobacco farmers raise tobacco on their own land and sell the crop to the Cuban government at prices set by the government, but all of the cigar factories are owned by the Cuban government. About 30 percent of the tobacco grown in Cuba actually ends up on the black market and in counterfeit Cuban cigars. Cuban cigars and the tobacco they're made from has emerged as a chief source of hard currency for Cuba's battered economy.   03/17/01 ©Jack Kurtz / The Image Works<br>

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A scene in the cutting room of the great Players Tobacco factory at Nottingham.<br>c.1890

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North Carolina:  Bundles of freshly cured tobacco in farm near Fayetteville. 2002 ©Michael Edrington / The Image Works

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Vinales, Cuba: A tobacco farmer checks on freshly cut leaves hanging in one of his fields near Vinales, in Pinar del Rio province, in western Cuba, March 17, 2001. Cuban cigars and the tobacco they're made from has emerged as a chief source of hard currency for Cuba's battered economy. ©Jack Kurtz/ The Image Works   <br>

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Havana, Cuba: Workers grade tobacco leaves at the H. Uppman cigar factory in Havana, Cuba, March 17, 2001. The tobacco harvest in Cuba starts in mid-March and continues through April. Many Cuban tobacco farmers raise tobacco on their own land and sell the crop to the Cuban government at prices set by the government, but all of the cigar factories are owned by the Cuban government. About 30 percent of the tobacco grown in Cuba actually ends up on the black market and in counterfeit Cuban cigars. Cuban cigars and the tobacco they're made from has emerged as a chief source of hard currency for Cuba's battered economy. 03/17/01 ©Jack Kurtz/ The Image Works<br>

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Havana, Cuba: Quality control station at the H. Uppman cigar factory in Havana, Cuba, March 17, 2001. The tobacco harvest in Cuba starts in mid-March and continues through April. Many Cuban tobacco farmers raise tobacco on their own land and sell the crop to the Cuban government at prices set by the government, but all of the cigar factories are owned by the Cuban government. About 30 percent of the tobacco grown in Cuba actually ends up on the black market and in counterfeit Cuban cigars. Cuban cigars and the tobacco they're made from has emerged as a chief source of hard currency for Cuba's battered economy. 03/17/01 ©Jack Kurtz/ The Image Works   <br>

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