June 2010 Newsletter
Gammage Flowers
Bernard Callebaut Chocolate
Happy Fathers Day
 
Bernard Callebaut Dark ChocolateThe Health Benefit of Dark Chocolate

Eating chocolate helps prevent heart disease? Ward off diabetes? Reduce the risk of stroke? Yes, according to recent studies. But it must be dark chocolate, which is high in flavonoids, the natural compounds in cocoa beans that give some chocolate a bittersweet taste.  Milk chocolate contains fewer flavonoids because it's diluted with milk. It also contains more sugar. White chocolate contains no chocolate liquor and therefore no flavonoids. Flavonoids impart colour to fruits, vegetables and herbs. They're also found in legumes, nuts and grains. Dark chocolate, however, contains more flavonoids than any other food, including blueberries. For optimal health benefits, eat dark chocolate that contains at least 70% cocoa solids (cocoa mass). We're happy to report that Bernard Callebaut dark chocolate contains at least 87% cocoa solids. 


 
Bittersweet Chocolate Wafers $26.00
 
Bittersweet Chocolate Wafers 
Bernard Callebaut Bittersweet Chocolate Wafers
Delicate bite-sized wafers of bittersweet Bernard Callebaut chocolate make a light treat to share with friends and family or to cleanse your palette after a meal.
  (approx. 150 g, 60 pieces) 
  
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 Father's Day Vintage
The Origin of Father's Day

The idea for an official Father's Day celebration came to a married daughter, seated in a church in Spokane, Washington, attentive to a Sunday sermon on Mother's Day in 1910-two years after the first Mother's Day observance in West Virginia.

The daughter was Mrs. Sonora Smart Dodd. During the sermon, which extolled maternal sacrifices made for children, Mrs. Dodd realized that in her own family it had been her father, William Jackson Smart, a Civil War veteran, who had sacrificed-raising herself and five sons alone, following the early death of his wife in childbirth. For Mrs. Dodd, the hardships her father had endured on their eastern Washington farm called to mind the unsung feats of fathers everywhere.

Her proposed local Father's Day celebration received strong support from the town's ministers and members of the Spokane YMCA. The date suggested for the festivities, June 5, Mrs. Dodd's father's birthdays were three weeks away-had to be moved back to the nineteenth when ministers claimed they need extra time to prepare sermons on such a new subject as Father.

Newspapers across the country, already endorsing the need for a national Mother's Day, carried stories about the unique Spokane observance. Interest in Father's Day increased. Among the first notables to support Mrs. Dodd's idea nationally was the orator and political leader William Jennings Bryan, who also backed Mother's Day. Believing that fathers must not be slighted, he wrote to Mrs. Dodd, "too much emphasis cannot be placed upon the relation between parent and child."

Father's Day, however, was not so quickly accepted as Mother's Day. Members of the all-male Congress felt that a move to proclaim the day official might be interpreted as a self-congratulatory pat on the back.

In 1916, President Woodrow Wilson and his family personally observed the day. And in 1924, President Calvin Coolidge recommended that states, if they wished, should hold their own Father's Day observances. He wrote to the nation's governors that "the widespread observance of this occasion is calculated to establish more intimate relations between fathers and their children, and also to impress upon fathers the full measure of their obligations."

Many people attempted to secure official recognition for Father's Day. One of the most notable efforts was made in 1957, by Senator Margaret Chase Smith, who wrote forcefully to Congress that "Either we honor both our parents, mother and father, or let us desist from honoring either one. But to single out just one of our two parents and omit the other is the most grievous insult imaginable."

Eventually, in 1972-sixty-two years after it was proposed-Father's Day was permanently established by President Richard Nixon. Historians seeking an ancient precedent for an official Father's Day observance have come up with only one: The Romans, every February, honored fathers-but only those deceased.

In early times, wearing flowers was a traditional way of celebrating Father's Day. Mrs. Dodd favoured the red rose to honour a father still living, while a white flower honoured a deceased dad. J.H. Berringer, who also held Father's Day celebrations in Washington State as early as 1912, chose a white lilac as the Father's Day Flower.

Is Dad an avid gardener?
Garden Snail
Gammage Flowers has an extensive selection of lawn and garden ornaments and accessories. Snails, turtles, toadstools, birdbaths, decorative garden stakes and more.
See in store for more details.
Toad stool
 
 
Feathered FloralFeathered Floral  

A rustic stone container filled with bright blooms of gerbera daisies, sunflowers and mums. Accented with a bird in a nest. 
 
$55.00
 
 
Phalaenopsis OrchidPhalaenopsis Orchid
 
Beautiful long lasting blooms and easy to care for.  Orchid colour and container may vary.
 
$45.00
 
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