20 



THE FLORAL WORLD. 



Consumption 

 Now_Gurable 



By the Famous Doctor Yonkerman's Marvel- 

 ous Discovery — State Officials and Great 

 IVIedical IVIen Pronounce it the Only 

 Cure for Consumption, Throat 

 and Lung Trouble. 



A Free Trial Package Will Be Sent by Mail 

 to All Who Write. 



Consumption can at last be cured. Marvelous 

 as it may seem after the many failures, a sure, 



DR. DERK P. YONKERMAN. 



positive and certain cure for the deadly con- 

 sumption has at last been discovered. Cases 

 given up to die and sent back from California 

 hopeless and helpless, are now alive and well 

 through this wonderful cure for consumption. 



Free trial packages of the remedy and letters 

 from grateful people — former consumptives 

 rescued from the very jaws of death are sent 

 free to all who write to Dr. Derk P. Yonker- 

 man, 697 Shakespeare Building, Kalamazoo, 

 Mich. Don't delay— there is not an hour to 

 lose when you have consumption, throat or 

 lung trouble. Send to-day for Free package. 



MOTHERS «"Si?Sf-^ 



^^^^^^ EN-U-RE-SINE 



^^|'=^^^^C£/\^^ cures Bed-Wetting, and in- 



^r.^' faBJw^fc ^j>j^f ■ continence of urine during 

 \ day-time, both in the old 



Fw "^Bir^^B^^^f ^^'^ young. It is the only 



' t'/fe#'''^5\ >.i*I^^^M ^^^^ prepared by a physician 



\wr^'~^i^^^^^^^^ who guarantees it. Ladies 



y'^Ul' ^TiS^ — ^ff jjt:^^ troubled with a frequent de- 



/ jf^S^%s~=^^^ ^^ff\ sire to urinate and a burning 



t(fS^h sensation use it with perfect 



V & success. Send your address 

 \ iSM?*T^MS^^^^I ^- ^- MAY, Drawer 



MlWiwI^i^^W^^ Bloomington, 111., and re? 



^t'iiMi}UdM{Ml^^0^0,W ceive sealed a free sample. 



(Concluded from page 19.) 



ing the winter months. No water is 

 given it until about a month before we 

 wish to place it out of doors again. 

 Then we give it water once in a while 

 — just enough to set the sap flowing. 



During the early part of spring we 

 protect it from frost by covering well 

 with old rugs. Hardly any one passes 

 our home without exclaiming: "What 

 a lovely oleander! How sweet its 

 blossoms smell." 



Minnesota. Anna M. Kath. 



HARDINESS OF THE OLEANDER. 



Oleanders may be planted out of 

 doors anywhere south of Mason and' 

 Dixon's line, except in a mountainous 

 district, where the altitude does not 

 suit them. In winter their tops will 

 be killed, but the roots will not be in- 

 jured. 



I had a large growth of oleanders, at 

 least ten feet high, shading the south 

 windows of my bed-room. They 

 bloomed profusely for years'. One 

 winter they were frozen stiff, and their 

 long, leafless canes rattled in the wind 

 like castanets, until I had them cut off 

 level with the ground, and mourned 

 over my dead beauties as hopelessly- 

 lost. But spring came — and so did the 

 oleanders. From the buried root 

 masses came the shoots with surpris- 

 ing rapidity, taking on size and 

 strength, and leafage, until, at the ap- 

 pointed time, my windows were again 

 s'hadowed with ten feet of greenery, 

 enlivened with the lovely flowers all 

 through the dry, hot summer. 



Since that experience, I wrap and 

 cover the roots carefully in the late 

 fall, and have no further anxiety. 



Has any other Floral World reader 

 had a similar experience? 



Texas. Gretchen, 



