A L
Beal Mortuary...
We deliver sympathy
| funeral flowers to A L Beal Mortuary in St. Louis
We offer daily
flower deliveries to A L Beal Mortuary, as well
as a three hour rush delivery, plus an optional Sunday delivery.
We are a local
St. Louis flower shop and not a telemarketer a thousand miles
away, pretending to be a St. Louis florist!
Please accept
our condolences if you have come to our site at a time of sorrow
and loss.
Above are
examples of some of the sympathy arrangements that we deliver
to:
A
L Beal Mortuary
4746 W Florissant
St. Louis, MO 63115
(314) 389-9675
You
can order sympathy arrangements starting at $35.95 from:
A.B.P.S. Florist
(We
are an actual flower shop located in St. Louis, MO)
2631 Telegraph
Rd. - Saint Louis, Missouri 63125
Local Number:
314-892-0089
Toll Free Number: 1-866-892-0089
Besides delivery
to A L Beal Mortuary, we also deliver to every other funeral home,
chapel
or Mortuary in St. Louis city and St. Louis county!
We
are not related to A L Beal Mortuary in St. Louis, MO They just
happen to be
one of the better funeral homes in the Saint Louis area
We deliver affordable funeral flowers to A L Beal Mortuary in
St. Louis as a service for you.

ABPS Florist - sympathy funeral flowers for A L Beal Mortuary
delivered in st. louis - next day delivery is preferred but not
required.
In times of bereavement, ABPS Florist
can deliver a sympathy floral arrangement or plant to every funeral
home, chapel or mortuary
in Saint Louis, Missouri seven days a week, and on a Sunday on
the funeral homes located in south St. Louis city or county. We
have very
affordable prices with 3 hour rush service to selected funeral
homes. We use only the freshest flowers arranged in a vase, basket
urn
or an easel spray. Our flower delivery service that we use has
23 A/C vans equipped to only transport flowers. We will check
the visitation
time with the funeral home to make sure we can get it there in
time as soon as an order comes in.
Other
Local Funeral Homes In St. Louis city and County That We Deliver
Sympathy Flowers To:
Advantage
Funeral and Cremation
Alexander
Funeral Home
Ambruster
Donnelly Mortuary
Archway
Memorial Chapel
Austin
Layne Mortuary
Baumann
Colonial Mortuary
Berger
Memorial Chapel
Bopp
Chapel
Buchholz
Mortuary
Calcaterra
Funeral Home
Calvin
F Feutz Funeral Home
Chulick
Funeral Home
Colliers
Funeral Home
Eddie_Randle_Funeral_Home
Feiser
Funeral Home
Fey
Funeral Home
Forever
Oak Hill Funeral Home
Forever
Bellerive Cemetery
Gateway
Mortuary
Gebken
Benz Mortuary
Gerber
Chapel
Granberry
Mortuary
Heiligtag
Fendler Funeral Home
Hilleman
Funeral Home
Hoffmeister
Mortuary
Howard
Michel Funeral Home
Jay
B Smith Funeral Home
Jefferson
Barracks National Cemetery
Kriegshauser
Mortuary
Kutis
Funeral Home
Kutis Affton
Chapel
Kutis
South County Chapel
Lang
Fendler Funeral Home
Lupton
Chapel
McLaughlin
Funeral Home
Oak
Grove Chapel and Crematory
Ortmann
Funeral Home
Ortmann
Stripanovich Funeral Home
O'sullivan-Muckle
Mortuary
Reliable
Funeral Home
RINDSKOPF
ROTH Funeral Chapel
Ronald
L Jones Funeral Chapel
Schnur
Funeral Home
Schrader
Funeral Home
Shepard
Funeral Chapel
Southern
Funeral Home
STYGAR_DREHMANN_HARRAL_Chapel
STYGAR
FLORISSANT Chapel
St.
Louis Cremation
Ted
Foster Funeral Home
Valhalla
Chapel and Mauseoleum
WHITE-MULLEN-Mortuary
Williams
& James Mortuary
John
Ziegenhein & Sons Funeral Home
grave_blankets
Site Map
Funeral
home: establishment where funerals are arranged
Synonyms: funeral chapel, funeral church, funeral parlor, funeral
residence, undertaker's establishment.
A funeral is a ceremony marking a person's death. Funerary customs
comprise the complex of beliefs and practices used by a culture
to remember the dead, from the funeral itself, to various monuments,
prayers, and rituals undertaken in their honor. These customs
vary widely between cultures, and between religious affiliations
within cultures. In some cultures the dead are worshipped; this
is commonly called ancestor worship. The word comes from the Latin
funus, which had a variety of meanings, including the corpse and
the funerary rites themselves.
Funeral
rites are as old as the human race itself. In the Shanidar cave
in Iraq, Neandertal skeletons have been discovered with a characteristic
layer of pollen, which suggests that Neandertals buried the dead
with gifts of flowers. This has been interpreted as suggesting
that Neandertals believed in an afterlife, and in any case were
aware of their own mortality and were capable of mourning.
Last
update:4-28-07