00 
MISS MARY E. MARTIN, FLORAL PARK, NEW YORK. 
Double Japanese 
Morning Glories. 
For beauty of flowers and foliage 
these new Japanese Morning Glories 
have no equal. In this double, 
strain the flowers are of the same,, 
rich color variations as those of the /Single fl'owering 
kinds, with the addition that the flowers are double. 
Packet, 35 seeds, 8c.; 2 for 12c. 
Japanese Imperial or 
Giant Morning Glory. 
As the Angel of Morn speeds on the 
rays of early dawn from east to west, 
the dewy trumpets of the Morning 
Glory announce her coming and car¬ 
pet her way from ocean to ocean. 
The flowers of these New Mammoth 
Morning Glories are as large as moon- 
flowers, often 6 inches across, and the 
petals of many are beautifully fringed 
and ruffled. The vines begin to bloom 
when 2 to 3 feet high and continue to 
bear flowers by the hundreds until 
frost. The.flowers are not only large 
but superior in every way to the com¬ 
mon kind. The petals are thicker, which 
give the colors a deeper and richer 
look. The flowers are strangely and 
beautifully marked and colored in a 
way never seen before. Snowy throats 
with blood-red border, velvet plum bor¬ 
dered with white, snow-white through 
all possible shades of blue, and of red 
from palest pink to darkest reds and 
purples. They are streaked, mottled, striped, marbled and bordered m a 
wonderful fashion, and sometimes show rare shadings of ash gray bronU 
brown and slate blue, colors rarely found in any other flowers To gain 
time start the seeds m small pots in the house in March or April, and plant n 
a warm sunny place. Packet, 60 seeds, finest mixed, 5c.; % oz 15c 
Japanese Imperial or Giant 
Morning Glory. 
'Brazilian Morning Glorv Opomcea 
. , ° * r * Setosa.) 
A grand and luxuriant twining vine. The thick stems 
and leaf stalks are covered with reddish-brown hairs 
I he deeply lobed leaves are from 8 to 12 inches across 
® b ,° Ut f^ghes in diameter, of delicate texture,’ 
tinted pink, with five-pointed star of satiny pink 
Packet, 40 seeds, 8c.; 3 packets, 20c. 
Ruffled and Frilled vari ® ties mi pd. This 
e ,, , , . mixture contains flow¬ 
ers of all colors, having the petals ruffled and fringed 
Very scarce. Packet, 50 seeds, 6c. 
Gigantic Etruscan Morning Glories . 
This most wonderful .and beautiful class of Italian 
Morning Glories are almost wholly unknown, and I take 
great pleasure in offering them to my customers. 
they belong to the same class as the Japanese Imperial 
Morning Glories, but have been subjected to very careful 
cultivation and close selection in order to have the va¬ 
rieties distinct and fixed. 
The flower's are very large, petals often frilled and un¬ 
dulating, colors very brilliant and striking. 
The foliage is mottled with silvery blotches, also one 
strain mottled with gold. 
Gigantic Etruscan Mixture includes all different colored 
leaves, all colors and kinds of flowers Pkt„, 60 seeds, 5c. 
Large Flowered Morning Glory 
“Rochester ” g ran< l new Morning Glory 
, v • ’is remarkable for the large size 
and new color of the flower. Vines strong, growing 
quickly twelve to twenty feet high, with magnificeiu 
toiiage, leaves measuring from eight to ten inches across, 
and remaining on the vines close to the ground during 
the entire summer. Flowers four to five inches across, 
deep violet-blue in the throat, Hr.nding out to an azure- 
Diue bordered with a wide white band artfund the edge, 
t ne bowers form in clusters of from three to five, from 
tbe ground to the top of the vines. Packet, 10c. 
Yellow Japanese Morning Glory 
The flowers are light sulphur color, and produced in 
great profusion. The foliage is quite unique, being 
Double Morning Glory, “White 
*rCLSS6t m ** This beautiful flower remains open all 
day. 
fringed. Packet, 10c. 
It is white, very double and 
