FOREST AND STREAM 
“The Bes t Tobacc o Made” 
Emphatic Statement by an Eminent Authority—Pipe- 
smokers, Read what John G. Capers Has to Say 
“ When I was Commissioner of Internal Revenue under Presi¬ 
dents Roosevelt’s and Taft’s Administrations, I had a great deal 
to do with tobacco. In the collection of millions of dollars of tax l 
came intimately into contact with the whole business. Tuxedo I 
consider the best tobacco made. I smoke it myself and find it 
soothing and restful, mild, 
fragrant and non-irritating 
to the throat . ” 
JOHN G. CAPERS 
Prominent Washington Attorney 
formerly Commissioner of 
Internal Revenue 
Uncle John Redfern. 
club and the most popular professional in this 
neck of the woods; George Kreger, George Max¬ 
well, the one-armed wonder; J. R. Graham, star 
of the Olympic games at Stockholm; D. Flana¬ 
gan of Minneapolis, and “Skid” Clancy. 
MODERN TENNIS. 
Although many books have been written on 
the subject of tennis by amateurs and profes¬ 
sionals, by champions and would-be champions, 
heretofore they have mainly been of two distinct 
classes. Either the general outline of the game 
and the tennis experiences of the writer or the 
purely technical often too theoretical descrip¬ 
tions of the game. Mr. P. A. Vaile, in his 
“Modern Tennis,” has happily combined these 
two classes and in a book of some 300 pages has 
given us a complete, interesting and extremely 
readable account of tennis as it is played to-day. 
Nothing is omitted, from his opening chapters 
on “The Court” and the “Implements,” through 
lucid explanations of all the technicalities of the 
game, ending with very valuable chapters on the 
“Laws of Tennis.” 
To the man who is not a student of the game 
but who enjoys it alone for the exercise and 
pleasure in the playing, the most interesting are 
Mr. Vaile’s chapters on “Tennis Personalities” 
and The Davis Cup.” The many pictures and 
descriptive plans add greatly to the general 
charm of the publication and are at the same time 
instructive and helpful. 
Mr. Vaile has succeeded in handling a subject, 
of interest to all lovers of sport, in a clear, prac¬ 
tical and extremely interesting manner from 
cover to cover. 
To the tennis “has been” for reminiscences, to 
the present champions for advice, and to the 
inexperienced tyros for instruction we heartily 
recommend this book. (Funk and Wagnalls Co.) 
Mr. Smoker, that s evidence straight from 
an authority that Tuxedo is the top-notch 
smoke of them all. The tobacco that a famous 
Internal Revenue Commissioner chooses for 
his own smoke because he considers it the best 
tobacco made. 
And remember this, men:—that’s picking 
Tuxedo from a mighty big field; for between 
you and us and the account sheet, the 
Government collects $100,000,000 a year in 
revenues from tobaccos. 
CAN ONE SNAP OF A WOLF’S JAWS KILL 
A DEER? 
(Continued from page 397.) 
physical impossibility of the wolf’s being able to 
obtain such a grasp with his jaws on the chest of 
a caribou—a larger animal than the white-tailed 
deer—as would enable him to sink his teeth to 
a sufficient depth to puncture the heart and pro¬ 
duce profuse external hemorrhage. Though the 
exterior surface of the heart of a deer may lie 
but five-eighths of an inch within the chest wall 
of hide, muscle and bone; and though the jaws of 
a wolf may be powerful enough to send the teeth 
through the amount of matter it represents, if 
advantageously presented to his grasp, it is not 
clear how such an advantage could be obtained 
Mr. Capers is now a prominent and suc¬ 
cessful practising lawyer in Washington, 
D.C., and we are glad to include his name in 
Tuxedo’s great list of friends. It’s the 
same old story everywhere Tuxedo is tried: 
Quality tells. 
Don’t quarrel with your pipe and don’t 
quarrel with your tongue. Take your tobacco 
troubles to good old Tuxedo. 
Your pipe’ll be sweet and your tongue’ll 
be sound if you smoke Tuxedo. 
under the conditions described. Furthermore, to 
produce such a hemorrhage as is described, the 
wound in the heart must be deep enough to pene¬ 
trate into its cavities. The body of that organ 
is composed of tough, fibrous, muscular tissue, 
with a blood supply of its own independent of 
the main blood flood that it encloses and pro¬ 
tects, as well as maintains in circulation; and it 
may be considerably injured without producing 
death. The muscular walls of the heart would 
certainly add another five-eighths of an inch 
to the matter, making an inch and a quarter 
in all, to be penetrated by the wolf’s teeth in 
order to produce the hemorrhage described, and 
the consequent weakness that almost immediately 
brought the caribou to earth. It does not seem, 
The Perfect Tobacco for Pipe and Cigarette 
(( Tuxedo can’t bite or blister. That’s all taken out by the famous 
“Tuxedo Process” —the original process which the other brands like so 
well that they try to imitate it. 
And you II find the Internal Revenue Commissioner absolutely right 
as to Tuxedo’s quality. 
Try Tuxedo for a week and you’ll know why Mr. Capers and thou¬ 
sands of other distinguished smokers say that it is “the best tobacco made.” 
YOU CAN BUY TUXEDO EVERYWHERE 
Convenient, glassine wrap- £ Famous green tin with gold 1 A 
ped moisture-proof pouch DC lettering, curved to fit pocket lUC 
In Tin Humidors, 40c and 80c In Glass Humidors, 50c and 90c 
THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY 
