A stogie is a long, thin cigar, with the connotation of being cheap--not for the "Aficionado" crowd. They taste like home-grown tobacco.
JR Cigars, after a period of several years without Marsh Wheeling cigars, now carries them again.
http://www.jrcigars.com/jr/index.cfm/hurl/evt=itemDetail/itemcode=MWDE25/DELUXE.html
It's a very cheap, shredded filler machine-made stogie, with a tobacco sheet binder, beneath a natural CT leaf wrapper. When I spoke with the manufacturer 10+ years ago, I was told that the filler was PA Red and Little Dutch. I don't know if that is still true. (JR says the current filler is Dominican. I haven't bought any of the latest.) But I LOVE THEM.
I have rolled some myself with long filler of bottom leaf PA Red and Little Dutch, and CT Shade for the "Light" wrapper; light brown CT Broadleaf for the "Dark" wrapper. I find it truly difficult to roll so thin a cigar with long filler, while still getting a good draw.
The Deluxe Stogie (Hmmm...) has a bite-off head--or clip-off, for the dainty smoker. The Deluxe II has a machine made air hole. The Mountaineer is the same as the Deluxe, only shorter. Old Reliable includes KY fire-cured leaf.
I consider them the ideal smoke for a hike, or mowing the lawn. I first smoked them in 1970, way back when they were made in Wheeling, WV. It's just plain old, good tobacco.
Bob