@corbet I could get some info about that from wife. I think I've seen similar things in child books around the house.
@corbet Seems to be common in Korean tales. https://literature.stackexchange.com/questions/14928/why-do-many-korean-folk-tales-start-with-back-when-tigers-smoked
@corbet never heard of the story that is shown in the picture as a kid. ‘Tobacco smoking two friends’ might not become a good story tell the kids even in the ‘70s I guess.
@corbet I think there are a series of children's stories in Korean culture where they have similar pictures like this. A few months ago I came across this reddit thread which was quite interesting: https://www.reddit.com/r/ArtHistory/s/GlhjzFC96b
Few users had mentioned that "When tigers used to smoke" is a phrase equivalent of "Once upon a time".
@corbet I used Google Lens to pull up results about Korean Minhwa (Korean folk painting)
A ‘Minhwa’ represents Korean folklore created by unknown artists over centuries. The tiger is a figure associated with the Korean culture and an ugly or misshapen animal can represent foolish or corrupt aristocrats according to legend. This minhwa depicts a tiger smoking a pipe with a rabbit ...
@corbet Back when tigers smoked pipes it was a wise rabbit that offered a tiger a pipe (smoking supresses the appetite).
@corbet See https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WQHZzOotqN0.
Clever Rabbit foils Tiger, who wants to eat it, in the original tale.
So I think the pair of them getting high together is a joke. Just forget the eating and having to think up a way of escaping, settle down with some hash.
@corbet if by stoned you mean opium, then you might be right. This is a Japanese opium pipe: https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQL4nc3wYP5QfaCkjTyOoJs7_-f9HWNSM9Jur5HqCLtmVrtK7XKed-L2OE&s=10
@corbet According to https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_national_animals and https://blog.batchgeo.com/national-animals/,
the Siberian tiger is the national animal of South Korea.
The rabbit is a bit more mysterious.
https://www.farmandpetplace.co.uk/6-pets-which-are-little-known-national-symbols/ says it is the national symbol of Monaco, which is a far trip from South Korea.
Perhaps the rabbit represents China, as per
https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202301/1283137.shtml#:~:text=As%20an%20image%20representing%20China,popping%20up%20here%20and%20there. ?
@corbet My first thought was "Alice in Wonderland." The Cheshire Cat and the Rabbit.
@corbet I remembered after some time. We found some info, the theme is historical. I'll give you a link soon.