I remember the tv advert for Condor , he took a pull on his pipe looked into the distance and simply said CondorEric, my science master also smoked a pipe, Condor was his preference. So that a few years later, when in the RAF, I started smoking a pipe it was Condor that I chose. I did try other tobaccos but stuck to Condor. Cigarettes were more of a convenience, especially when out and about. Pipes were for relaxing plus it was not easy in the varying tasks that I had to do to smoke a pipe. Like any good pipe smokers you had a few pipes, ranging fro the 'Sherlock Holmes' style to Churchwardens. Becoming a retained firefighter cramped my pipe smoking style and cigarettes were more the norm. Breathing sets are the norm today but were slowly becoming more available in my early service days. Cigarette smoke was nothing compared to the 'smoke eating' of past time firemen. I believe smoking did help in stressful jobs - and I have had one or two. I don't disapprove of the crusade against smokers but what I find hard to follow is the timid approach against road vehicle fumes. I rarely go into towns but when I do I find the air quite unpleasant in them.
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i was thinking same mikejee. it looks like Singapore chow mein .Lyn
Are you sure your photo isn't of worms? !! It looks revolting
Lyn
Are you sure your photo isn't of worms? !! It looks revolting
The wartime Ministry of Transport and Ministry of Labour and National Service produced this advert to be placed on buses during WW2. I'm not sure whether it was ever put on any Birmingham buses but there is a pic in post#276 of a similar advert on a wall looking a bit tattered after a bombing raid.
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OM I thought that a lot of the housewives during the war were war workers, while all the blokes were away fighting
Lots of women had young children to look after and there were many types of jobs that needed doing, not everything was work work; shops, buses being just two examples.OM I thought that a lot of the housewives during the war were war workers, while all the blokes were away fighting
Lots of women had young children to look after and there were many types of jobs that needed doing, not everything was work work; shops, buses being just two examples.
Some young women came from Ireland to do war work and were usually lodgers with women who had spare rooms.
Equally not all men were in the armed forces. Some were too old or failed medicals, others had reserved occupations, their work skills were important to most factories. Miners and certain farm workers were also in that category.
The above are only examples, there probably exists a comprehensive list.