MISS MARY E. MARTIN, FLORAL PARK, NEW YORK. 
29 
Double Japanese 
Morning Glories . 
Japanese Imperial or 
Giant Morning Glory. 
Like the Herald of the Dawn, the 
dewy trumpets of the Morning Glory 
announce her coming. This new Mam¬ 
moth Morning Glory hag trumpets 
large as moonflowers, often 6 inches 
across, petals beautifully fluted and 
fringed, thicker and more richly colored 
than the common kind. Flowers are 
strangely and beautifully variegated; 
snowy throats bordered with all possi¬ 
ble shades from white and palest pink 
or blue, up to darkest reds and pur¬ 
ples; petals streaked, mottled, striped, 
marbled, and bordered in rare shadings 
of color. Vines begin to bloom when 
2 to 3 feet high, and continue bearing 
by the hundreds until frost. To gain 
time seeds may be started in small 
pots in March or April. Packet, finest 
mixed, 5c.; y 2 oz., 15c. 
Double Japanese 
Morning Glories. 
Japanese Imperial or Giant 
Morning Glory. 
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 flowering kinds, with the addition 
that the flowers are double. Packet, 10c. 
Ruffled and Frilled 
varieties mixed. This mixture contains flowers of all colors, having the petals 
ruffled and fringed. Very scarce. Packet, 10c. 
Brazilian Morning Glory . (Ip s”^.) 
A grand and luxuriant twining vine. The thick 
stems and leaf stalks are covered with reddish-brown 
hairs. The deeply lobed leaves are from 8 to 12 
inches across, flowers about 2 inches in diameter, of 
delicate texture, tinted pink, with five-pointed star of 
satiny pink. 
Packet. IOc.i 3 packets, 25c, 
Large Flowered Morning Glory 
“ TJnr'hactnr ’* This grand new Morning Glory 
IX.Ul*ll. j s remarkable for the large size 
and new color of the flower. Vines strong, growing 
quickly twelve to twenty feet high, with magnificent 
foliage, 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, blending out to an azure- 
blue, bordered with a wide white band around the edge. 
The flowers form in clusters of from three to five, from 
the ground to the top of the vines. Packet, 10c. 
Double Morning Glory , “White 
Tassel This beautiful flower remains open all day. 
It is white, . very 
double and fringed. 
Packet, 10c. 
Boltonia. 
(1000 Flowered 
Aster.) 
One of the showiest 
of our native hardy 
perennials, growing 
4 to 6 feet high, 
with daisy-like flow¬ 
ers in countless 
thousands from 
July to September, 
very effective. 
BOLTONIA AS= 
TEROIDES. White. 
Packet seed. 10c. 
BOLTONIA I-A= 
TISQUAMA. Pink, 
tinged with lilac. 
Packet seed. 1 Oc. 
PLANTS OF BOL= 
TONIA A ST E R = 
OIDES. An excel¬ 
lent plant. 
15c. each ; 2 for 25c, 
Boltonia (1000 Flowered Aster'll 
