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Order Winston cigarettes: Full list
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Winston Classic Cigarettes
 Tar - 10 mg Nicotine - 0.9 mg
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Winston Balanced Blue (Lights) Cigarettes
 Tar - 8 mg Nicotine - 0.7 mg
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Winston Silver (Super Lights) Cigarettes
 Tar - 4 mg Nicotine - 0.4 mg
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Winston White (One) Cigarettes
 Tar - 1 mg Nicotine - 0.1 mg
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Winston Super Slims Blue Cigarettes
 Tar - 5 mg Nicotine - 0.5 mg
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Winston Super Slims Silver Cigarettes
 Tar - 3 mg Nicotine - 0.3 mg
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Winston Super Slims Fresh Menthol Cigarettes
 Tar - 3 mg Nicotine - 0.3 mg
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Winston Super Slims White Cigarettes
 Tar - 1 mg Nicotine - 0.1 mg
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Winston XS Blue Cigarettes
 Tar - 6 mg Nicotine - 0.5 mg
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Winston XS Silver Cigarettes
 Tar - 4 mg Nicotine - 0.4 mg
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Lights, Classic, Gold, Blue Winston cigarettes.
Tobacco news:
WINSTON's `No Bull' ad campaign violates fraud laws, WOODS says
Attorney General Grant Woods said the company's "No Bull" promotion for its Winston cigarettes violates the state's consumer fraud laws. Woods said he is likely to continue a portion of the lawsuit against the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.
The campaign is a lie, according to Woods. A tobacco company doctor admitted in a sworn deposition that both the filter and the paper used to make Winston cigarettes have additives. The state's expert also contends the tobacco in Winston's has pesticides and flavoring agents.
The state is asking Judge Roger Kaufman to halt the campaign. Woods also wants the judge to fashion a "corrective campaign" to inform consumers that the ads were misleading.
Smuggling plot was run out of Winston cigarettes
NBI, one of the affiliates named in the civil lawsuit, was ultimately based in the same building as Tobacco International on North Main Street in Winston-Salem. Although it was directly controlled by FNF-Macdonald, the tobacco group's Canadian subsidiary, NBI's employees were paid through Tobacco company International and they participated in Company Tobacco Co.'s health and dental care and credit-union programs, the lawsuit says.
As part of the sale earlier this year of Tobacco Company International, its agreed to "a very limited" indemnification provision related to Canada, the company said. "In essence, Reynolds agreed to pay for certain potential liabilities against our former international company arising out of investigation of alleged smuggling in Canada," it said.
The roots of Canada's smuggling problem go back to the 1980s. In the lawsuit, Canada alleges that Tobacco Company International established in 1987 a special-markets division in Winston cigarettes, which was operated by Thomas Brock and Franco Gabrielle. The division sold duty-free tobacco to Canada, South Africa, Mexico and the Caribbean.

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