You should know I the Truth abo^ty | the cigarette? you smoke * ^ - A-5& A great deal of confusion has been caused by certain repre sentations made in cigarette advertising. A clamor of competitive claims has bewildered the public. We have received hundreds of letters asking us the truth about the conflicting claims of various brands. Because Camel first popularized cigarette smoking, because Camel has sold more billions of cigarettes than any other brand, we were the natural people to write to. And we are the natural people to tell the facts about cigarettes. We have always offered an honest cigarette, honestly advertised. - V 1. Question: What is the mildest cigarette? Answer: The fact that a cigarette is insipid and tasteless does not mean that it is mild. The fact that it has been artificially flavored or scented does not mean it is mild. Mildness means that a ciga rette is>so made that it is gentle and non-irritating ' without sacrifice of flavor. This is almost entirely a question of the quality of the tobaccos and the skill in their blending. Practically all of today's popular cigarettes are manufactured and rolled in much the tame way. The difference comes in the tobaccos that are used. While the irritating effects of cheap, raw tobaccos can be removed to some extent by intensive treatment, nothing can take the place -?f the more expensive, naturally fine fobai. mildest cigarette is the cigarette that is madt. j. the best tobaccos. It's the tobacco that com, ts. 2. Question: What cigarette has the best flavor? Answer: There are just three factors th?* control the flavor of a cigarette. The addition of ..rtiflo 1 flavoring. The blending of various tobac o . And the quality of the tobaccos themselves. Quality is by far the most important. Cheap, raw tobacco can be disguised in part by artificial flavoring. But it can never equal the goodness of mild, ripe, costly to baccos. Adding a number of poor things together will not make a good thing. And when you consider that domestic cigarette tobaccos vary in price all the way from 5I a pound up to 40^ a pound, and imported tobaccos from 50^ to $1.15 (the differ ence in cigarette flavors is readily apparent. To bacco men long ago learned to choose, for flavor, the cigarette blended from the costlier tobaccos. It's the tobacco that counts. 3. Question: What cigarette is easiest on the throat? Answer: The easiest cigarette on your throat is the cigarette that is made from the choicest ripe tobaccos. Cheap grades of tobacco are, as you would naturally expect, harsh in their effects upon the throat. And there is a peppery dust occurring to some extent in all tobaccos. Finding its way into many cigarettes, this dust has a decidedly irritating effect. A special vacuum cleaning process has been developed that removes all trace of dust. The abso lute rejection of inferior tobaccos and elimination ?if this dust represent the highest standards ever at ?igarette manufacture. The cigarette that is blended from the most expensive tobaccos under these modern conditions is as non-irritating as any smoke can possibly be. It's the tobacco that counts. 4. Quest Oil: What about heat treating? Answer: This is one of the real superstitions of the tobacco business. All cigarette manufacturers use the heat-treating process. But harsh, inferior, raw tobaccos require considerably more intensive treatment than choice ripe tobaccos. High temper atures conceal, to some extent, the harsh effects of low-cost tobacco, although this parching process may produce a rather flat and lifeless flavor. But neither the heat treatment nor any other treatment can take the place of good tobacco. Heat can never make inferior tobaccos good. It's the tobacco that counts. 5. Question: What cigarette is coolest? Answer: Many myths have been woven around "coolness." The facts are simple: Coolness is de termined by the speed of burning. Fresh cigarettes, containing as they do 12% moisture, burn more slowly than parched, dry cigarettes. That is why they smoke cooler. This makes the method of wrapping very important. Improperly wrapped cigarettes begin to dry out as soon as packed. They smoke hot and dry. I he Humi dor Pack, although more expen sive, gives protection ordinary cellophane cannot equal. It is made of 3-ply, MOISTURE PROOF cellophane, tailored snugly to the package, and WELDED into a seamiest en velope. ik.. .Air cannot get in. Freshness cannot get out. The cigarettes arc always in prime condition. An illusion of coolness can be achieved by adding certain chemi cr.b ;o to'or.ccO. But even chemicals cannot do more than mask the heat of <|uick-burning, dry tobaccos. The coolest cigarette is the freshen cigar?tt?=?-the least irritating, the one that has the costliest to bacco. A cigarette blended from expensive tobaccos tastes cooler than one that is harsh and acrid. It's the tobacco that counts. 6. Question: What is the purest cigarette? Answer: All popular cigarettes are made under sanitary conditions unsurpassed even in the pack ing of foods. All cigarettes are made with practi cally identical modern machinery. Uniformly fine cigarette paper is used. If any single manufacturer should claim superior purity it could only be in terpreted as a confession of weakness unless he pinned his claim exclusively on the tobacco he used. Purity in a cigarette lies in the tobacco used. Choice grades of tobacco from which even the fine dust of the tobacco itself has been removed, are less irri tating, therefore "purer" than inferior tobaccos. It's the tobacco that counts. 7. Question: What about blending? Answer: Even if other manufacturers should in the future use the finer, more expensive tobaccos which go into Camels, they would still be unable to duplicate Camel's matchless blending. Tobaccos are blended to give a cigarette its own distinctive individuality. The characteristic delicacy and flavor of the Camel blend have won not only the esteem of the American public, but the sincere admiration of other cigarette manufacturers, who have spent hun dreds of thousands of dollars and years of effort trying to discover how the costly tobaccos in Camels arc blended. But in vain. Camel's matchless blend is a priceless asset. Yet its fine full flavor is made possible because Camels use m ore expensive tobacco. ^ It's the tobacco that counts. It is a Fact, wall known by leaf tobacco experts, that Camels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE tobaccos than any other popular brand. We actually pay MILLIONS MORE every year to insure your enjoyment. (L J. UTNOIM TOAACCO COMPANY WiMbs Sslee, N. C

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