Smoking Pipe Tobacco
Smoking Pipe Tobacco
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![]() JAUNTY PIPES BULLDOG ROYAL DUKE DR GRABOW TOBACCO SMOKING PIPE US $7.99
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![]() HOT beautiful Brand New Wooden Smoking Tobacco Pipe US $.99
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![]() JAUNTY PIPES BULLDOG KBB YELLO BOLE TOBACCO SMOKING PIPE US $6.99
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How to ash a tobacco pipe while smoking?
when you're smoking a pipe do you have to ash it as you are smoking it like a normal cigarette or do you just dump the ash when it is finished?
I only dump ash in one of my pipes before I'm done. It's got an overly deep and narrow bowl to it. The rest of them I don't bother with dumping ash until I'm finished. Tamping down the coals a couple of times during your smoke crushes most of the ash.
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Durable Matt Lightweight Brass/Stainless Steel Spike Tamper Reamer 3 In 1 Tobacco Pipe Tool ... |
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Senior Reamer Tobacco Pipe Reamer $13.69 ... |
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Dollar Tobacco Grinder Eisenhower $1 Coin Style Metal + Bounse Free 5x Brass Pipe Screens $6.90 Does the job... |
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Castleford 5 Piece Multi-Fit Tobacco Pipe Reamer Tool $7.95 ... |
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Beautiful Long Churchwarden Briar Tobacco Pipe #4brn1 $34.99 Churchwarden Briar Tobacco Pipe w/ Straight Stem... |
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Butz Choquin Calabash Tobacco Pipe $229.00 Brand new never been used traditional Meerschaum Calabash pipe with African gourd body. Made by Butz Choquin - France. Surprisingly light, this pipe is for those who expect the utmost quality, distinguished looks and great value. Perfect for the Sherlock Holmes enthusiast. Photo used has been supplied by the manufacturer and is representative of the pipe you will receive. We cannot guarantee you ... |
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Vintage Cigarette Promotional Movie: The Sixth Sense DVD (1949) $4.99 The Sixth Sense details cigarette manufacturing and quality control before the link between cancer and cigarettes was confirmed. There are some good shots of tobacco farms and workers plowing and harvesting. Then the film shows the inner workings of the cigarette industry, with nice footage of cigarette manufacture, mostly Lucky Strikes. The most interesting part of the film, however, is the foota... |
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Click N Vape all In One Vaporizer W/Wind Proof Torch Lighter $5.99 Smoke any time with the touch of a button. No more carrying around grinders and tins, you can leave your pipe, rolling papers and even your lighter at home. Click-n-Smoke is the most compact vape style pipe on the market so you can leave that bulky table vaporizer at home! This pipe is all you need! Featured here is the first huge innovation in decades that will change the way you smoke.... Foreve... |
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Easy Use Premium Herbal Vaporizer with Digital display (Black) $28.00 You are buying a brand new VP100 digital vaporizer. It comes with a free vaporizer whip, replacement screen. Total Value for this package well over 00 now you can get it for more then 50% off. We also offer 30 days warranty if for any reason product is defective send it back to us we will replace.... |
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3 Bundles Zen Pipe Cleaners Hard Bristle - 132 Count $1.22 Quick & to the point. 3 bundles of ZEN pipe cleaners hard bristle, there are 44 in each bundle, giving you a 132 TOTAL!! Each pipe cleaner measures appromiately 6 inches long, making cleaning even easier. ZEN the name you know & can trust for all your cleaning needs & 420 help!! These are the ideal length for many PRE-SCHOOL, KINDERGARTEN, ELEMENTARY & JR. AND HIGH SCHOOL TEACHERS, AS WELL AS SU... |
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Clay Tobacco Pipes $20.59 Although clay tobacco pipes are still made today their place in history is the seventeenth, eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Until about 1890 the clay pipe was as commonplace as the tankard of ale and the mug of tea, but competition from the briar pipe, the cigar and the cigarette brought the clay-pipe industry to an end about 1900. Many people remember using clay pipes for blowing bubbles when they were children, and some can recall seeing navvies, or their grandfathers, smoking them. These old pipes are now being eagerly looked for and picked up by the hundreds, and the enthusiastic finder is confronted with many questions. The aim of this book is to answer these questions and to record the part the humble 'clay' once played in our society. |
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Collecting Antique Meerschaum Pipes: Miniature to Majestic Sculpture $49.95 Collecting Antique Meerschaum Pipes: Miniature to Majestic Sculpture, 1850Ð1925 is an illustrated guide to the smoking utensils made of a mineral that has been used since at least the early 1700s and which is, today, still a popular material. In the last decade, a surge in interest in tobacco collectibles has already spawned many books on cigarette lighters, cigar-box labels, and snuff boxes and bottles. This book now comes at a time when antique meerschaums are taking center stage, and collecting them is like buying blue-chip stocks. Ben Rapaport is one of the few internationally recognized authorities on the subject of antique pipes, and in this, his second book published by Schiffer, he has created a powerful and convincing tour de force in word and picture that evidences why so many pipe collectors have a fervent passion for these exceptional works of art. Ranging from very diminutive and expressive cigarette holders to massive sculptured pipes, these instruments were produced by many talented, skilled, and unknown craftsmen working in a cottage industry trade 150 years ago. The caliber of their handiwork and the myriad imaginative meerschaums they produced cannot be duplicated anywhere in the world today. Now, this volume is a permanent record of their unrivaled genius. |
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Oxford And Cambridge Nuts To Crack; Or, Quips, Quirks, Anecdote And Faceti Of Oxford And Cambridge Scholars, By The Author Of Faceti $19.99 Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free.This is an OCR edition with typos.Excerpt from book:Salisbury, says Dr. Pope, " I overheard him say, . ' / wish I had Jive hundred pounds.' ' That's a large sum for a philosopher,' observed Dr. Pope; ' what would you do with so much ? ' 'I would,' said he, ' give it to my sister for a portion, that would procure her a good husband.' A few months after," adds his memorialist, " he was made happy by receiving the above sum," which he so much desired, "for putting a new life into the corps of his new prebend." INVETERATE SMOKERS. Both Oxford and Cambridge have been famous for inveterate smokers. Amongst them was the learned Dr. Isaac Barrow, who said " it helped his thinking." His illustrious pupil, Newton, was scarcely less addicted to the "Indian weed," and every body has heard of his hapless courtship, when, in a moment of forgetfulness, he popped the lady's finger into his burning pipe, instead of popping the question, and was so chagrined, that he never could be persuaded to press the matter further. Dr. Parr was allowed his pipe when he dined with the first gentleman in Europe, George the Fourth, and when refused the same indulgence by a lady at whose house he was staying, he told her, " she was the greatest tobacco-stopper he had ever met with." The celebrated Dr. Farmer, of black-letter memory, preferred the comforts of the parlour of Emmanuel College, of which he was master, and a "yard of clay " (there were no hookahs in his day), to a bishopric, which dignity he twice refused, when offered to him by Mr. Pitt. Another learned LOVER OF TOBACCO, And eke of wit, mirth, puns, and pleasantry, was the famous Dr. Aldrich, Dean of Christ Church, Oxford, the never-to-be-forgotten composer of the good old catch— " Hark, the merry Christ-Church bells," and of another to be sung by four men smoking their pipes, whic. |
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Smoke Rings and Roundelays - Pipes and Tobacco $66.45 Originally published in London 1924. A wonderful collection of prose and verse on the joys of smoking, tobacco, pipes snuff etc, since Raleigh's time. Contents include: History. - Tobacco. - Pipe Songs and Fancies. - Woman and the Weed. - Some Great Pipemen. - Cigars. - Cigarettes. - Snuff. - Virtues of the leaf. - Parodies. - Pipe Varieties. - Tobacco and Books. - Philosophy of Smoke. - Recipes and Hints. - Smoking Accessories. - Bibliography.etc Many of the earliest books, particularly those dating back to the 1900s and before, are now extremely scarce and increasingly expensive. Home Farm Books are republishing these classic works in affordable, high quality, modern editions, using the original text and artwork. |
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Smoking, Culture And Economy in the Middle East $214.35 This book demonstrates how the history of Egypt's tobacco habits from the water pipe to the Marlboro Light mirrors wider socio-economic developments. Shechter begins in the mid 19th century, when tobacco was produced for export to the West and shows how in the early 20th century the marketing and consumption of tobacco reinforced social stratification. In the contemporary Middle East, Shechter finds that smoking habits have become intertwined with generational and identity politics. Engaging with cutting-edge social theory and a diverse range of source material, this is a stimulating and informative read. |
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St Nicotine of the Peace Pipe $15.57 The book has no illustrations or index. It may have numerous typos or missing text. However, purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original rare book from the publisher''s website (GeneralBooksClub.com). You can also preview excerpts of the book there. Purchasers are also entitled to a free trial membership in the General Books Club where they can select from more than a million books without charge. Original Publisher: London: G. Routledge; Publication date: 1909; Subjects: Tobacco; Smoking; Tobacco pipes; History / General; Self-Help / Substance Abuse |
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St. Nicotine of the Peace Pipe $15.9 Publisher: London: G. Routledge; New York, E. P. Dutton Publication date: 1909 Subjects: Tobacco Smoking Notes: This is an OCR reprint. There may be typos or missing text. There are no illustrations or indexes. When you buy the General Books edition of this book you get free trial access to Million-Books.com where you can select from more than a million books for free. You can also preview the book there. |
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Stories of Scottish Sports, by Rockwood $19.99 Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free.This is an OCR edition with typos.Excerpt from book:A QUEER FIND, BUT A QUEERER FINISH. "WHY can't you give us a yarn yourself?" said Jack last night, over my unfit condition with gout, as I was in,the midst of my growling. "You used to have the reputation of going well, and I think a hunting story, like good port, always improves with age." " Do," said Fred. " Do, M'Doogal, like a good fellow. If we can't have the fun we can at least have the flavour; give us one of your wildest and your best." I filled up the bowl of my pipe from his tobacco- pouch, which he kindly flung near to me on the sofa, where, wrapped up, I had been a prisoner all the afternoon. It was the smoking-room. At the request of Jack, who delighted to draw out the old Highland keeper into quaint expressions, Rory occupied a seat on the floor, where, with the machine attached to the framework of an ordinary cutty-stool, he kept himself busily engaged turning in the rims of some freshly-filled cartridges, which were wanted next day for rabbit- ferreting, the only class of work for which, in my then condition, I was abl,e. " Some whisky and water, please." Jack filled me a good glass and made it "ekal," as old Weller used to say; and kindly lighting my new-filled pipe, I laid my head back and began. " Ahem ! Many years ago two horsemen—one good looking and fair, and the other dark-looking and " " Now, look here," said Fred ; " we don't want anything in that style, just go ahead in your old G. R. R. way." " Well, then, after a glorious season's cub-hunting the " " No, nor that either," said the incorrigible; " that is not you, leave that to the hunts correspondents. Go on again." " Well, then, Chudley Gorse was the fixture, and right glad was I to see that fine old sportsman Sir Squiram Scrubbs in the saddle. ' Hounds, gentlemen, hounds,' s... |
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The Jalasco Brig $19.43 Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free.This is an OCR edition with typos.Excerpt from book:COLLISON'S TREASURE TROVE CHAPTER I. One Collison, a trader, was looking lazily out upon the sea from his store window, smoking his pipe of strong black ' Barratt's Twist' tobacco, and wondering what he should do to pass the day, when a woman came up the rocky, winding path from the village, and said, " Talofa, Pita, ke malolo /foe?"1 " I am well, mother," he replied good- naturedly, glancing carelessly at the woman (who was a stranger to him) and noting that she was old and toil-worn bycontinuous labour in the taro patches and yam plantations. The remains of a print teputa, or bodice, hung loosely from her wrinkled neck, and partly concealed the upper portion of her figure, and around her waist were many folds of tappa, as old and ragged as the bodice. She was evidently some poor widow or dependant, and had, he thought, no doubt come to beg. And presently, as if to confirm him in his opinion, she looked up timidly and said hesitatingly— 1 Good-day, Peter; are you well 1 " Pita." " Aye, mother. What wouldst thou ?" " I am Monoa, and a stranger to thee, for I live on the itu papa (ironbound coast) and thou hast never before seen me. But thou hast been kind to my son." "Who is thy son, good mother?" said the trader. "Marengo Lima-tasi.1 And now he is sick and like to die, and I am old and poor, 1 Marengo, the One-handed. and come to thee. Wilt give me vaila/akau (medicine) for my son ? " " Aye, willingly," replied the trader sympathisingly, " for Marengo hath been a good son to thee, and 'tis hard that he hath not two hands wherewith to work as other men, for he is strong and of good heart." The old woman smiled, well pleased, and then Collison asked her to describe the nature of her son's illness, and was soon satisfied that the man had taken a ... |
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The Jalasco Brig $14.14 Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free.This is an OCR edition with typos.Excerpt from book:COLLISON'S TREASURE TROVE CHAPTER I. One Collison, a trader, was looking lazily out upon the sea from his store window, smoking his pipe of strong black ' Barratt's Twist' tobacco, and wondering what he should do to pass the day, when a woman came up the rocky, winding path from the village, and said, " Talofa, Pita, ke malolo /foe?"1 " I am well, mother," he replied good- naturedly, glancing carelessly at the woman (who was a stranger to him) and noting that she was old and toil-worn bycontinuous labour in the taro patches and yam plantations. The remains of a print teputa, or bodice, hung loosely from her wrinkled neck, and partly concealed the upper portion of her figure, and around her waist were many folds of tappa, as old and ragged as the bodice. She was evidently some poor widow or dependant, and had, he thought, no doubt come to beg. And presently, as if to confirm him in his opinion, she looked up timidly and said hesitatingly— 1 Good-day, Peter; are you well 1 " Pita." " Aye, mother. What wouldst thou ?" " I am Monoa, and a stranger to thee, for I live on the itu papa (ironbound coast) and thou hast never before seen me. But thou hast been kind to my son." "Who is thy son, good mother?" said the trader. "Marengo Lima-tasi.1 And now he is sick and like to die, and I am old and poor, 1 Marengo, the One-handed. and come to thee. Wilt give me vaila/akau (medicine) for my son ? " " Aye, willingly," replied the trader sympathisingly, " for Marengo hath been a good son to thee, and 'tis hard that he hath not two hands wherewith to work as other men, for he is strong and of good heart." The old woman smiled, well pleased, and then Collison asked her to describe the nature of her son's illness, and was soon satisfied that the man had taken a ... |
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The Smoker's Guide, Philosopher And Friend; What To Smoke - What To Smoke With - And The Whole What's What Of Tobacco, Historical, Botanical $14.14 Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free.This is an OCR edition with typos.Excerpt from book:CHAPTER IX. TOBACCO IN THE ARTISTIC POINT OF VIEW. This is a point of view in which the Weed figures to great advantage. The Art-devotee and the Art-critic owe everything to the inspiring Weed; and the first condition to become a painter or sculptor, is not to go through the Academy, nor to have studied your lines, and the arrangement of your palette ; no ; it is to learn to smoke, for "smoking" is the grand merit of every picture. Art is nothing without "smoke," which is perfectly well-known to the Critics, although but imperfectly known to artists, except to such as old Turner, the wily, and one or two others who have "coined a mint of money" in these, our days, simply by knowing how to manage their "smoke." Without the pipe—and a "piper"—there is no salvation in the Royal Academy. Now, this science is so absorbing that sometimes we stick to it, and after fifteen years' study a man becomes a perfect colourer of pipes. We might cite a great number of unknown geniuses, whose pictures indeed we have never seen, but whose cutty we should at once recognize by the ingenious labour of the colouring, which has marbled with a " warm " tint the magical recipient of the inspiring Weed. Happy indeed are those great artists—philosophical artists—unknown to fact and fame. They do not suffer from the caprices of exhibitions and their critics —all smoke-nuisances of the foggiest hue—and their divine perfections remain unquestioned. Their pictures are in their head; there they behold and enjoy them, boasting of their perfections—of course without the risk of contradiction. What becomes of these great artists ? Why, they become professional colourers of pipes ! The thing is a natural sequence. You are fond of smoking —but your pocket is empty. Well, |
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Thoughts And Stories On Tobacco For American Lads $20 Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free.This is an OCR edition with typos.Excerpt from book:LETTER IV. James Tenney Killed By The Fibst Quid; Ok Tobacco A Murderer. Dear Billy:— I told you the other day that Tobacco injured the health and shortened life. It would be strange if it did not, because it is a poison, a very active poison; and this you will find everywhere confirmed by men of science and sense. Two drops of the oil of Tobacco, says Dr. Mussey, was sufficient to distroy life in cats in three or four minutes. Two drops, on the tongue of a red squirrel, destroyed life in one minute. A Hottentot, placed the end of his pipe to the mouth of a snake, the effect was instantaneous; with a momentary, convulsive motion, the snake untwisted itself, and never stirred again. . I have known an empiric, says Dr. Eberle, destroy in less than twenty minutes the life of a charming little boy, by an immoderate injection of Tobacco. People at the Sandwich Islands, we are told, carry smoking so far, that they sometimes fall down senseless, and suddenly die. Cases are reported in Medical Journals, of babes being poisoned by sleeping in the same bed, or living in the same room, with fathers who used this poison in great'quantities. The Salem papers say, in so many words, that James Barry, twelve years old, was lulled by smoking cigars. Whilst I am now writing, a lady assures me, that a little child in the town of L , picked up a quid and put it into its mouth, thinking it a raisin, (a quid that the hired man had thrown upon the floor,) and died of the poison during the day. There is no end, my Billy, in stating authorities, or in stating fatal occurrences, in illustrating the point I have in view. Doctors at home and abroad, in great numbers, agree in saying that Tobacco is extremely hurtful, and sometimes fatal to life. Dr. Twitchell, a p... |
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Tobacco. From The Seed To The Warehouse $20.75 Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free.This is an OCR edition with typos.Excerpt from book:HISTOLOGY. Tobacco—"Genus Nieotiana." CHAPTER I. The derivation of the name Tobacco is in dispute. Some historians ascribe it to the Indian Tabacos, a pipe. Thia name was given by the natives of the Carribee Islands to the pipe in w.hich they smoked the leaves of the plant. Others trace it to one of the Provinces or States of Mexico, Tabasco, whilst still others claim its derivation from Tobasco an Island in the gulf of Florida. It would appear that the moet direct and indisputable testimony is that which claims for it derivation from " TaBacos," the name which the Spaniards heard the natives use when speaking of the pipe in which they made use of the fragrant plant, The genus name, Nicotiana, is said to have been derived from Jean Nicot, an ambassador from France to Portugal, who first in 1560 conveyed a ship load of the weed from Lisbon to France. Nicot, hence Nicot-iana. The knowledge of Tobacco and its uses was unknown to Europeans until after the discovery of America by Columbus. When that adventurer and his followers landed at an island which he named Hispaniola, in honor of the country which had encouraged his great enterprise, he found the natives smoking a plant, the perfume of which was fragrant and grateful, and they afterwards learned that from theearliest ages, it had been the custom of the natives to offer it in their sacrifices lo the divinity, under the helief that its aroma was more grateful to him than any other incense. The priests also of these aborigines, beforedeclaring their oracle?, were in the habit of intoxicating themselves by its means; and the medicine men employed it in divining the nature of maladies. Thus, then, the Spaniards acquired first a knowledge of its uses and virtues, and on their return home introduced it into Spain an |
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Tobacco. From The Seed To The Warehouse $14.14 Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free.This is an OCR edition with typos.Excerpt from book:HISTOLOGY. Tobacco—"Genus Nieotiana." CHAPTER I. The derivation of the name Tobacco is in dispute. Some historians ascribe it to the Indian Tabacos, a pipe. Thia name was given by the natives of the Carribee Islands to the pipe in w.hich they smoked the leaves of the plant. Others trace it to one of the Provinces or States of Mexico, Tabasco, whilst still others claim its derivation from Tobasco an Island in the gulf of Florida. It would appear that the moet direct and indisputable testimony is that which claims for it derivation from " TaBacos," the name which the Spaniards heard the natives use when speaking of the pipe in which they made use of the fragrant plant, The genus name, Nicotiana, is said to have been derived from Jean Nicot, an ambassador from France to Portugal, who first in 1560 conveyed a ship load of the weed from Lisbon to France. Nicot, hence Nicot-iana. The knowledge of Tobacco and its uses was unknown to Europeans until after the discovery of America by Columbus. When that adventurer and his followers landed at an island which he named Hispaniola, in honor of the country which had encouraged his great enterprise, he found the natives smoking a plant, the perfume of which was fragrant and grateful, and they afterwards learned that from theearliest ages, it had been the custom of the natives to offer it in their sacrifices lo the divinity, under the helief that its aroma was more grateful to him than any other incense. The priests also of these aborigines, beforedeclaring their oracle?, were in the habit of intoxicating themselves by its means; and the medicine men employed it in divining the nature of maladies. Thus, then, the Spaniards acquired first a knowledge of its uses and virtues, and on their return home introduced it into Spain an |
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Zippo Lighter Peterson Pipe Gift Set $115.95 When Friedrich and Heinrich Kapp opened their business in 1865 they could scarcely have dreamt that they with their partner Charles Peterson would go on to become Dublin s most fashionable and respected manufacturer of fine smoking pipes. In 1890 Peterson invented a revolutionary new system that allowed surplus tobacco moisture to drain into a specially designed reservoir within the carved briar. The dedicated team of craftsmen at Peterson today continues the skills and craft that Charles Peterson applied to his original invention over a century ago. Coupled with a patented gradiated stem the Peterson System provides one of the driest smokes ever. Zippo enhances the genuine classic Peterson pipe with a classic high polish chrome Zippo lighter. The special pipe lighter insert allows a strong steady flame that doesn t burn the pipe bowl. This distinctive gift set is not just a pipe dream. But it is available only while supplies last. In Attractive Gift Box. Brushed Chrome finish. Standard size. Wind Resistant. Lifetime Warranty. Engravable. Lifetime Zippo warranty: Classic patented design. One handed opening: Unmistakable Zippo click . Welded hinged lid: Durable metal construction. Zippo s are made in USA: Refill with Zippo Fluid. |


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