The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Bow’s Emporium

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“I was just wondering if the department store where E. Wilson’s grandfathe­r worked might have been Bow’s Emporium,” emails Bill Munro.

“That is where my own parents worked back in the 1920s and 30s.”

The detrimenta­l impact of smoking and second-hand smoke on humans is widely known, but the effect passive smoking can have on our pets is something that smokers often underestim­ate, or might not even consider.

Research has shown that dogs can be exposed to significan­t amounts of smoke when living in a smoking household. Cats seem to be affected even more than their canine counterpar­ts. This is because smoke particles settle on their fur and cats could then swallow these when they’re grooming themselves.

PDSA vet Olivia Anderson-nathan says: “If pet owners knew the impact that smoking can have on their pets, I’m sure they would want to put measures in place to protect them.

“Vets regularly see the shocking impact of passive smoking on pets, from worsening existing respirator­y problems like asthma through to more serious conditions such as certain cancers like lymphoma, which is twice as likely in cats if they are exposed to cigarette smoke.”

Passive smoking in pooches is linked to breathing problems, difficult-to-treat nasal and sinus cancers in longer-nosed breeds and lung cancer in other breeds.

In cats, their grooming habits mean that once smoke lands on their fur, they can swallow the harmful chemicals through licking.

Cigarette smoke can also harm pet birds and small pets, such as guinea pigs and rats, as they have small and sensitive respirator­y systems.

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