An exhibit displays photos of tobacco barns and warehouses, antique pouches and cigarette tins, and an 1892 Winchester nightrider rifle.
Typical cigarette tins in the United States of the 1920s-1930s stored 50 cigarettes, hence their name "flat fifties" at the time.
As a child, during the Bengal famine of 1943, Professor Sen handed out cigarette tins of rice to starving refugees as they passed his grandfather's house.
He stubbed out his cigarette in the top of the Player's cigarette tin that serves as an ashtray in the waiting-rooms of government departments, and followed her across the corridor.
Since then, I have tried several peanut soup recipes, one of which includes ribs as well as the usual chicken, and another from a 1953 cookbook that calls for "a cigarette tin" of roasted peanuts.
The leopard was dead, and Mark sat down heavily in the leafmould beside the carcass and groped for his cigarette tin.
Now he makes a pack's worth a day ahead, and carries them in a cigarette tin.
He was surprised to see cigarette tins, neatly placed in little pigeonholes, and he opened one of them.
Rufus asked, offering him his cigarette tin, but Sean shoal his head.
Hutton designed escape kits in a small cigarette tin designed to carry small supply of condensed food and foreign currency.