I have a question or two concerning the link between the alcohol temperance/prohibition movement and the tobacco temperance/prohibition movement. I have read brief statements and hints that the tobacco movement had connections to the alcohol movement during the 1800s and early 1900s, but nothing solid. Was there a connection between individuals and organizations working on alcohol and/or tobacco prohibition issues? For example, following alcohol prohibition Evangelist Billy Sunday declared, "Prohibition is won; now for tobacco". I read one brief statement that in the 1830s the first organized anti-tobacco movement in US began as adjunct to the temperance movement. In the 1890s the Women's Christian Temperance Movement published at least two leaflets, by Lida B. Ingalls, discussing the evils of tobacco, especially cigarettes. In one Ingalls writes, cigarettes are 'doing more to-day to undermine the constitution of our young men and boys than any other one evil'. Didn't Lucy Payne Gaston once work for alcohol prohibition?; she certainly ended her life working on tobacco prohibition. FYI, a tobacco history timeline can be found on Tobacco BBS at the web addresses of: http://www.tobacco.org/History/Tobacco_History.html Larry Breed