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Dingee & Conard Guide to Rose Culture
(1898)  Page(s) Front cover.  Includes photo(s).
 
Golden Gate
(1892)  Page(s) 4.  Includes photo(s).
 
Four Valuable Tea Roses, Introduced by the Dingee & Conard Company.
New Tea Rose, Golden Gate.
There are so many beautiful Roses, and they are beautiful in so many different ways, that it scarcely seems possible for any one variety to be the most beautiful of all Roses; and yet if the question was to be decided we are strongly of the belief that the palm would have to be awarded to our New Tea Rose—Golden Gate—introduced by us last year. A cross between Safrano and Cornelia Cook, combining the good qualities of both. The flowers are extra large, and finely formed, and of excellent substance; the buds are long and of the most desirable form; the color is rich creamy white, beautifully tinged with fine golden yellow; the petals are large and broad, and exquisitely bordered and tinted with clear rose. The Golden Gate is a strong healthy grower, and a most profuse and continuous bloomer; will produce more perfect buds and bloom than almost any variety we know. 35 cents each; 3 for $1.
(1894)  Page(s) 36.  
 
THE DINGEE & CONARD COMPANY’S
Eight Superb New Roses
INTRODUCED BY THE DINGEE & CONARD CO.
Golden Gate. This magnificent Rose is the result of a cross between those old and greatly admired varieties, Safrano and Cornelia Cook. The flowers are extra large, very full and finely formed, and of excellent substance; the buds are long an of the most desirable form; the color is rich creamy white, beautifully tinged with fine golden yellow; the petals are large and broad, and exquisitely bordered and tinted with clear rose, making altogether a Rose of the rarest and most indescribable beauty. The Golden Gate is a strong, healthy grower, and most profuse and continuous bloomer; it is excellent for bedding, also for house culture and forcing; in short, we can heartily recommend it as one of the finest and most beautiful Tea Roses ever grown. 20 cts. each.
(1891)  Page(s) 46.  
 
New American Pedigree Roses.
Five Remarkable Novelties, named in honor of the Great African Explorer—Henry M. Stanley, Mrs. Jessie Fremont, Pearl Rivers, Maud Little, Golden Gate—The Henry M. Stanley Set. :
See Illustration, page 6.—We are sure our friends will welcome these Splendid New American Pedigree Roses, which we have the pleasure of offering for the first time this year. They are the rarest novelties of the season, and the mere announcement of their coming has aroused a wide-spread interest that will doubt less absorb the whole stock we have to offer. Each one of these charming novelties is the product of a special union of two of the choicest old sorts, whose good qualities have in this way been combined and improved in the most interesting manner. And when it is considered that these remarkable combinations were made under the most favorable conditions, and in a Southern climate and locality, where Roses reach their fullest perfection, it is natural that they should prove of unusual beauty and value. The work of obtaining these beautiful novelties by artificial hybridization has required years of careful study and patient skill, and it is confidently believed that they will prove highly interesting and reliable additions to our Lists of Beautiful Roses, but few of which have been originated in this country. 
(1892)  Page(s) 4.  
 
Four Valuable Tea Roses, Introduced by the Dingee & Conard Company.
Henry M. Stanley.
This elegant new ever-blooming Tea Rose was named in honor of the great African explorer and introduced by us last year; it makes a beautiful contrast with Golden Gate, as the color is a rare and remarkably beautiful shade of clear amber rose, delicately tinged towards the centre with fine apricot yellow; the petals are beautifully edged and bordered with rich carmine, and on the outer or reverse side pass to a lovely shade of salmon or buff rose; the flowers are large, fine full form, excellent substance and deliciously fragrant, having a rich tea scent. 35 cents each; 3 for $1.
(1898)  Page(s) Front cover.  Includes photo(s).
 
Henry M. Stanley
(1891)  Page(s) 46.  
 
New American Pedigree Roses.
Five Remarkable Novelties, named in honor of the Great African Explorer—Henry M. Stanley, Mrs. Jessie Fremont, Pearl RiversMaud Little, Golden Gate—The Henry M. Stanley Set. :
See Illustration, page 6.—We are sure our friends will welcome these Splendid New American Pedigree Roses, which we have the pleasure of offering for the first time this year. They are the rarest novelties of the season, and the mere announcement of their coming has aroused a wide-spread interest that will doubt less absorb the whole stock we have to offer. Each one of these charming novelties is the product of a special union of two of the choicest old sorts, whose good qualities have in this way been combined and improved in the most interesting manner. And when it is considered that these remarkable combinations were made under the most favorable conditions, and in a Southern climate and locality, where Roses reach their fullest perfection, it is natural that they should prove of unusual beauty and value. The work of obtaining these beautiful novelties by artificial hybridization has required years of careful study and patient skill, and it is confidently believed that they will prove highly interesting and reliable additions to our Lists of Beautiful Roses, but few of which have been originated in this country. 
(1910)  Page(s) 18, 77.  
 
p. 18: La Proserpine, P., 40 c.

p. 77: New Hybrid Polyantha Roses... La Prosperine. Peach-red, center chrome-orange.

[no longer listed in 1918]
(1909)  Page(s) 69, 81.  
 
p. 69: New Hybrid Polyantha Roses... La Prosperine. Peach-red, center chrome-orange.

p. 81: La Prosperine, P., 35 c.
(1907)  Page(s) 17.  
 
New Hybrid Polyantha Roses ...La Prosperine, mod. [growth], Flowers peach-red, center chrome-orange, edged with white rose color. Odd and beautiful. 15c each. Two-year-old plants, 35c each.
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