Friends Joe Blauert, left, of St. Paul, and Scott Johnson of Carver enjoy cigars in 2023 in the smoking lounge at Anthony's ...
Earlier this year, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) proposed a new rule to limit nicotine in cigarettes and ...
Many people understand the risks of cigarettes, but this study sends a clear message: no tobacco product is safe. Whether it’s a cigar after dinner, occasional pipe smoking, or regular dipping—each ...
Data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in 2021 estimates that among U.S. adults: 3.5% smoked cigars 0.9% report pipe and/or hookah use 2.1% used smokeless tobacco products such as ...
This year’s pipe was a Uhle Classic straight (briar, naturally), and the tobacco was as close to the ... as I cleaned out the garage, put away tools that had been hastily abandoned to their ...
PITTSFIELD — Berkshire Pipe and Tobacco is barred from selling tobacco products until the end of the year. The Pittsfield Board of Health unanimously voted to suspend the Tyler Street store's tobacco ...
New Brunswick will receive an estimated $614 million from three tobacco giants for health-care costs related to smoking, with about $147 million "up front" and the remainder "over time," Health ...
After repeat violations, a longtime Tyler Street retailer cannot sell tobacco until the end of the year. On Wednesday, the Board of Health voted to suspend Berkshire Pipe and Tobacco's license ...
An Ontario court has approved a historic $32.5 billion settlement that will see three major tobacco companies compensate provinces, territories and ex-smokers in Canada. In a ruling released today ...
THE 2025 tobacco marketing season officially opened in Harare yesterday, with the government unveiling a stricter regulatory framework aimed at enhancing transparency, ensuring fair trade for ...
smokeless tobacco, and pipe tobacco by shifting production and sale schemes to avoid taxes and oversight, resulting in nearly $4 billion in lost federal revenue between 2009 and 2018,” Durbin said in ...
SAN DIEGO, Calif. (KESQ) - Vaping does not help smokers quit their vice, a study published today by UC San Diego researchers found, refuting a common misconception among tobacco and e-cigarette users.