Posts Tagged ‘Flower Shop’
Furnivals Flowers & Gifts closes after 101 years of business
After 101 years of service, Furnivals Flowers and Gifts has closed its doors.CITIZEN PATRIOT – KATIE RAUSCH
Bruce Furnival, owner of Furnivals Flowers Gifts, puts together a flower arrangement at the family’s shop in Jackson.
The owners of the shop, 1105 W. Ganson St., retired from the flower business as of Dec. 31, said Cindy Conant, co-owner.
“It’s time to move on to something different,” Conant said Tuesday.
Still, Conant said she believes moving on might be a challenge. Customers are surprised by the decision, she said, and many are telling the owners they will be missed.
“Jackson will miss one of its crown jewels,” one customer wrote on the shop’s Facebook page.
It was hard to keep up with the economy, Conant said, and there is a lot of competition in the area. Both factors led them to retire.
The shop was opened in 1910 by Conant’s great-grandfather, Albert W. Furnival, and grandfather Albert R. Furnival, she said. Conant owned the business with her father, Gilbert Furnival, and brother, Bruce Furnival.
“It’s sentimental to let it go,” Conant said, “but 100 years is a good milestone.”
No one in the family was interested in taking over the business, she said, but the plan wasn’t to close it down.
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Small business betting on Edmonton downtown arena
The developers of Edmonton’s historic Mercer Warehouse building are betting heavily on the future of the city’s downtown.
The building at the corner of 104th Avenue and 104th Street has been vacant for more than a decade, but renovations are underway to house a restaurant and bar, a coffee shop, a flower shop and a high-end furniture rental company.
The historic Mercer building at 104th Street and 104th Avenue. (CBC)
The 1911 building is across the avenue from where the downtown arena and entertainment district is planned.
“It’s the tipping point for what’s going to happen in the next three to five years,” said Matt Hall who will run the Roast Coffeehouse and Wine Bar. “We’re happy to take that plunge.”
“A lot of corporate events will be going on in the downtown core, and this is the best place to be,” said Ricardo Leal, who’s with the high-end furniture rental company that will be taking over the second floor.
The warehouse, built by scotch and cigar merchant J.B. Mercer, is owned by Devin Pope’s family.
“A big factor is across the street might be a possible is a new arena, which we are really hoping on, but we also have a very cool building in the meantime that has a lot of cool interesting tenants in place,” said Pope, project manager.
The new Mercer Tavern will draw on the building’s history, said Jeff Ruptash one of the bar’s owners.
“In 1922 there was a fire and it was one of the last buildings in the industrial area was left standing, so we’re hoping we can allow that to come through,” he said.
The grand opening for the building is scheduled for the spring.
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Random Acts of Flowers delivers 10,000th bouquet
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (WVLT)– A local non-profit charity takes donated flowers and turns them into beautiful arrangements for patients in East Tennessee hospitals.
It’s called “Random Acts of Flowers” and over the past 3 years they’ve delivered 10,000 bouquets to hospitals, hospice centers and nursing homes.
They take donated flowers from events like weddings, memorial services, bridal shows and floral shops. The flowers are then put together in a fresh and new bouquet.
Visit Random Acts of Flowers to learn more about how you can help!
Larsen Jay, founder of Random Acts of Flowers told us “It’s something for someone else for no other reason than it’s the right thing to do.”
Volunteers spent time putting the flowers together and delivering them twice a week.
Ann Styron, a volunteer told us “You’re taking something that’s going to be thrown in the garbage anyway. But we give the flowers a second life that makes someone else happy.”
You can always help “Random Acts of Flowers” by suggesting to donate flowers from an event. Also, they’re always in need of volunteers and monetary donations.
Visit www.randomactsofflowers.org to learn how you can help!
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Drug agents raid Oklahoma City convenience store for crack pipes
Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs undercover agents said they purchased the illegal drug pipes at the store three times before the raid, beginning in November and as recently as last week. The pipes were confiscated during the Monday morning raid at ZZ Convenience store, 2445 Martin Luther King Ave., in northeast Oklahoma City.
The pipes can be used to take crack and meth, said Rep. Mike Shelton, D-Oklahoma City, who pushed forward a measure that made selling the pipes at convenience stores a crime in Oklahoma. It took effect Nov. 1, 2010.
Agents said at a news conference the pipes being sold at the store have no other use but for taking illegal drugs.
About 30 glass crack pipes disguised as small flower vases were found Monday. Store clerks and the owner could face complaints of selling illegal drug paraphernalia, said bureau Director Darrell Weaver. Other pipes that were bought by undercover officers at the store were disguised as writing pens and sold for about $3.50.
“I’m appalled this morning,” Weaver said outside the store Monday. “The citizens of northeast Oklahoma City deserve better than this.”
Undercover agents bought the pens they say are used for taking drugs on two visits in November and once last week, Weaver said.
The pipes were being sold behind the counter along with steel scouring pads used as a filter for the pipes.
“These are pretty sophisticated smoking devices,” Weaver said.
State Rep. Mike Shelton, D-Oklahoma City, said he purchased similar crack pipes at another convenience store to demonstrate the problem to lawmakers several years ago. He rode along with law enforcement at Monday’s raid.
Among other things, House Bill 3251 imposes a penalty of up to one year in jail and/or a $1,000 fine for retailers who sell meth or crack pipes.
“For the business owners who are selling this paraphernalia, it’s wrong,” Shelton said. “And they should have more respect for the communities they serve and they should have more respect for the families they are hurting.”
Weaver said he hopes Monday’s raid sends a message to other store owners that it is illegal to sell the pipes and the merchandise can be confiscated.
‘We can’t regulate everything in Oklahoma but we can sure regulate those things that are intended for harm,” Weaver said.
He said the clerks were cooperating with agents Monday morning and a report would be forwarded to the Oklahoma County District Attorney’s office. No arrests were reported.
A man who answered the store phone Monday evening identified himself as a manager but would not provide his name. He said he was working when agents came into the store.
“They handed out a warrant, but it wasn’t signed,” he said. “They just did what they wanted to do.”
The man said he thinks the seizure of merchandise Monday was unfair because the pens were ordered from a wholesaler. He said the store is not responsible if people abuse the pens and use them for another purpose.
“That’s not right for them to come in and do that,” he said.
Law officers have been called to the convenience store several other times this year.
Police found a man they think was trying to burglarize the store in March hanging from the ceiling. His death was ruled as an accidental hanging, the medial examiner’s office reported.
In August, store owner Muluneh Zeleke, 55, of Oklahoma City, was ordered to pay $966,416 in restitution to the U.S. Agriculture Department on charges of food stamp fraud. Zeleke could not be reached for comment about Monday’s raid.
CONTRIBUTING: Staff Writers Tiffany Gibson and Juliana Keeping
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Local Coppell Texas Florist Provides the Freshest Possible Flowers – Coppell, TX – Coppell, Texas
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PRLog (Press Release) – Jan 09, 2012 –
Local Coppell Texas Florist Provides the Freshest Possible Flowers
Flower Shop in Coppell, TX – Floral Adventures – www.floristincoppell.com
Floral Adventures a local florist in the Coppell Texas area provides the freshest flowers possible. By getting international shipments of flowers from all over the world they are able to guarantee long lasting quality compared to other competitors. Flowers don’t sit on trucks, and get shipped all over the place like you will find with other florist. By being based right in North Texas next to DFW airport, and Love Field major transportation hubs flights bring in fresh flowers from all over the world.
Ordering online gives you many choices, but they say you can also customize anything you want for that special occasion or event. Casey Weaver owner and one of the florists there tell us they offer a 100% satisfaction guarantee. They find customer service to be one of their most important values in the business.
Floral Adventures services and delivers to Corinth, Denton, Shady Shores, Lake Dallas, Lewisville, Hickory Creek, Little Elm, Oak Point, Highland Village, Coppell, and surrounding areas. With the upcoming Valentines Day this local florist offers free delivery on all deliveries scheduled on the Monday before to beat the rush and get noticed first. Ordering for this special discount must be done by phone or in person. This is the best deal on flower delivery anywhere for your special occasion.
Floral Adventures provides services for weddings, and amazing everyday arrangements for all occasions. Local designers arrange beautiful vases with a wide selection of choices found on their website. Orders placed online, or by phone will arrive the same day often within a few hours of being arranged.
To learn more, visit, http://www.floristincoppell.com/
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Accused Shooter: Store Owner Shot Because He Reached For Gun
Funeral wreaths and flowers line the outside of the Alabama Georgia Grocery store two days after the arrest of a former Belle Glade football player in connection with the shooting death of the popular store owner.
People who know Corey Graham Jr. said they were shocked to hear the 19-year-old college student had confessed to the robbery and killing of Jimmy McMillan.
Graham played football at Glades Central High School before he graduated and was enrolled at Palm Beach State College last year.
“He was a cool guy, always joking around,” Glades Central High School student Marcus Robinson said.
Detectives said an anonymous tipster told them Graham had driven to the store intending to rob it.
Graham’s mother took him to the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office for questioning, where he originally denied involvement, according to the probable cause document.
But detectives noticed Graham was trying to hide his arms and hands and that he had a tattoo saying “Errica” — his mother’s name — which resembled the markings on the gunman’s hands seen on surveillance video.
According to the document, Graham’s father asked his son if he was responsible, and Graham Jr. confessed. When asked why he did it, Graham Jr. said he shot McMillan because the store owner had reached for the gun.
Graham Jr. remains in jail without bond.
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Arizona shootings: One year later
TUCSON – People were talking when the gunman began to fire. They were gathered outside a grocery store near Tucson, a year ago today, to talk to their congresswoman. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords had invited them because she wanted to listen, because democracy is a conversation in which everyone has a say. The bullets stopped the talking.
One year ago, a gunman opened fire on that gathering, striking 19 people including the congresswoman, leaving six dead. As soon as the moment passed, sounds, words and sentences have grasped for meaning. First the cries for help, later the quiet cries of mourning. There were calls for action, assertions of blame. There was anger, too.
In the year since the shootings, the victims and their families have tried to find words to give shape to the tragedy. Talking, they hope, can heal them.
***
More than anything, Ross Zimmerman misses talking to his son.
This hollow of the hiking trail is meant for quiet, but he is talking, always talking — talking about his son.
“They’re going to put his name here, on a bench,” Ross says, taking in Davidson Canyon below, pointing out a den of golden cottonwoods. He likes to imagine that when people come to this part of Arizona, they might consider the bench, maybe read his son’s name out loud.
Gabe Zimmerman, they might say. Maybe they’ll know his story — he was the young one who worked for Giffords, the one with a fiancee. He died that day.
Ross likes to take people out here on the trail, to show off this place that’s been named for his son, pointing out the pineapple cactus forest and the place where the Sonoran and Chihuahuan deserts meet and settle into one another.
His son was like that, too. A social worker. He softened edges, brought people together.
Gabe was a listener, the person Ross would call to “bounce something off of,” he says. Gabe was his hiking partner and best friend, and when Gabe saw his dad walk into a room, Ross remembers, he’d say, “Daddy-O!”
People still want to know how Ross can do it — talk about Gabe, all the time — on camera, to reporters, in his backyard to CNN’s Christiane Amanpour, at meetings, at home.
He explains it the same way every time. The same words he spoke two days after the shooting.
“We want people to remember him,” he says.
***
Once a month, after work, the people touched by the shooting get together to talk.
They are discussing a permanent memorial of Jan. 8, and what it should be.
They drift into a conference room at a Tucson office building, greeting each other with hugs and eyes that linger.
How are you? they ask.
OK, they say.
Empty words, but that’s understood here.
Bill Badger, 75 — who helped hold down the gunman while blood from a bullet graze trickled down his scalp — stands just inside the room. His wife keeps close to his side.
Jim Tucker sits in the back row. He was the one talking to Giffords when she was shot. Tucker was shot, too — in his collarbone and leg.
Ross Zimmerman introduces himself the way he always does at meetings like this:
“I’m Gabe’s dad.”
Ron Barber leads the meeting, sitting at a table up front, resting a hand on his copper-colored cane: his own permanent memorial. The bullets tore through his thigh, his cheek.
He’s Giffords’ district director, in charge of her Tucson office.
Around the room they go, talking about ways to make a memorial for this shooting, this pain bigger than each of them.
Maybe a statue. Maybe a symphony.
They talk about ways to make sure everyone in Tucson gets a say, too.
“I still have people walking up to me in tears — absolute strangers — telling me what that day meant to them,” Barber tells the group at their meeting in November.
They need to think bigger, he coaches.
The victims nod.
***
The words started not long after the shooting stopped.
On the first night, they came in crayon-colored letters, and on cards from the flower shop, and on homemade signs made of construction paper.
“Love will heal,” one sign said.
“Just pray” someone wrote on a poster left outside Giffords’ Tucson office: Send words higher.
Impromptu shrines emerged all over the city, and by a few days after the shooting, words were everywhere. There were small notes on scraps of ribbon tucked into the fence outside Christina-Taylor Green’s elementary school, and sentiments in big letters on the marquee at Tucson’s Rialto Theatre: “We love you Gabby.”
Outside the Safeway, someone glued photos of the six victims to white poster board and wrote in black block letters, “Lord God let Tucson be a better place, that these lives were not lost in vain.”
“A place of hope,” said a sign on the lawn outside University Medical Center, where the pile of cards was deepest, where the candlelight vigil began the night of the shooting and lasted for almost a month.
The media arrived, too — the satellite trucks in rows next to the lawn, for George Stephanopoulos and Brian Williams and even Diane Sawyer, who came quietly to interview Giffords’ husband, Mark Kelly. There was the Washington Post and the New York Times and dozens of TV crews from Japan — hundreds of reporters filling air time and pages and the Internet with the news of the day.
***
A week after the shooting, on a Saturday night, 22-year-old Kameron Norwood sat at a bar near the University of Arizona campus, telling his story to strangers.
Norwood’s neighbor was the judge who died.
His girlfriend interned for Giffords in Washington. His girlfriend’s father had been on his way to see Giffords at Safeway when the shooting began.
Norwood’s own father works at that Safeway. He’s a pharmacist, “though luckily he wasn’t working that day.”
Norwood’s ex-girlfriend works at the hospital.
“She was one of the nurses working when all the bodies came in.”
Tucson is a town as small as that. Everybody was talking about it — where they were, when they heard.
Norwood wanted to tell people that this was his story, too.
***
Some don’t want to talk.
Eric Fuller doesn’t return phone calls anymore. He’s the victim who drove himself to the hospital with bullet wounds in his knee and in his thigh.
Kenneth Veeder doesn’t want to be interviewed. His leg was grazed. It’s fine.
Maureen Roll is the widow of federal Judge John Roll. They have three children, five grandchildren. Roll liked to take the kids to Donut Wheel. The family kindly declines to discuss him.
Kelly O’Brien was engaged to Gabe Zimmerman. People say they see her sometimes, walking along the canal, quiet and alone.
Gabe’s parents call her their daughter, still.
She wears her engagement ring on a chain around her neck, still.
She says no to interviews, still.
Only once has O’Brien spoken publicly about what happened: for two minutes and 43 seconds at a lectern in Washington, D.C., a few months after the shooting, endorsing a ban on large-capacity gun magazines.
She spoke only when she thought her words could change things.
Gabe “made sure to tell me every day that he loved me,” she told the press corps.
She said that part with her eyes closed.
***
Tom Zoellner’s book “A Safeway in Arizona: What the Gabrielle Giffords Shooting Tells Us About the Grand Canyon State and Life in America” is one of five books published about the shooting, so far. Zoellner, 43, is from Tucson. He and Giffords are close friends. This is his fourth book. He wrote it in four months.
Zoellner hasn’t seen his friend Gabby since she was in the ICU at University Medical Center, but he thinks she would be proud of him, of the way he felt compelled to write, to try to explain his home state.
“This book is an attempt to make sense,” he writes. It took him 98,595 words.
***
Ross used to have lunch with his son.
It must have been a week after the shooting, and Ross was alone.
Without really thinking about it, he walked in the front door of the office clutching his brown paper sack, past the sign that says U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, and people held their arms out to hug him.
They shared lunch.
They told stories about his son.
A few of them had been there, standing outside the Safeway, when the bullets began flying, when Gabe died.
In their faces, he saw that these people felt as hunched-over and undone as he did.
On their desks, he saw that they were displaying photos of his son.
After that, Ross went to the Giffords office for lunch every day.
He’s a year into his habit now: five days a week, sometime around noon, brown paper sack, a burrito or a submarine sandwich.
Sometimes, he comforts them. Sometimes, they ask him what Gabe was like as a kid.
Early on, they told him the only other thing he needed to know about his son and that day:
“Gabe was down the line a ways, and for him to have been where he was when he got shot, he had to have sprinted,” Ross explains — sprinted toward the shooting. Gabe ran toward the bullets.
“Back into the middle of things to try and help,” Ross says now. “And he died in the attempt.”
“He might have been diving to see to Ron or Gabrielle, but they tell me he had to have been moving very fast … to get between the shooter and some of the others … And Gabe was very fast … And everything else is …”
Ross stops talking.
He needs a minute before he can start again.
***
“I believe that we can be better,” President Barack Obama said, standing at the University of Arizona on Jan. 12, 2011. “That’s what I believe, in part because that’s what a child like Christina-Taylor Green believed. …
“I want to live up to her expectations. … I want America to be as good as she imagined it.”
After that, in America, there was a lot of talk about being better: on the TV networks, in newspaper editorials.
Are we better?
Mark Kimble is the person in Giffords’ office reporters call when they want answers to such questions. He’s her communications adviser, her former speech writer and her friend.
“I don’t know that we can answer that yet,” he says. “You know, those are the kinds of things I think we can ask after it’s been 10 years, and we can look back, and say, ‘Was this a turning point? Or was this just a minor disruption in the continuing drumbeat of being partisan and uncivil to each other?’ “
***
People have asked Gabrielle Giffords’ husband if Jared Loughner’s parents have tried to get in touch. No, Mark Kelly says, and as a parent, he understands. How they must be hurting. And how could they ever know what to say?
Loughner, then 22, was arrested at the scene. Investigators found his rambling Internet posts, journal entries in which he vowed to kill Giffords.
In the days right after the shooting, his parents offered their only comments: typed sentences that they asked a friend to deliver to the horde of media outside their front door:
“There are no words that can possibly express how we feel,” they said. “We wish that there were … we wish that we could change the heinous events of Saturday. We care very deeply about the victims and their families. We are so very sorry for their loss.”
***
Mark Kimble was there the day of the shooting.
When people ask him what happened, he says, “I have a little script that I kind of replay … without even thinking about it — you know, that I recite. But if someone really probes me and starts asking me questions that make me think about that day, I get a real chill. I mean I can’t describe it, but I get very, very cold … and I still do.”
His script:
“I got there at ten minutes to 10:00 and I went in to Starbucks and I got some coffee. I came out, and Gabe was … setting up tables … I helped him move a couple … He asked me what I thought about a couple of places he was thinking of getting married.”
Gabby arrives. Ron Barber arrives. The event begins. People are asking questions, “and just then, out of the corner of my eye, I see some guy run in the area that we had set up to be the exit from where people were talking, and I was just irritated that he wasn’t following the way Gabe had it set up.
“I looked at him. He started shooting, and initially I thought it was a movie or some kind of performance piece or something. And then I saw Gabby get shot, right in the head, and then I knew it was not.
“And he fired. He hit Ron. He hit Judge Roll. He hit Gabe, and then he ran down the line just waving his gun and shooting everywhere and that’s the last … that’s pretty much what happened. And that’s what I tell people.”
***
She was in the middle of a sentence when the bullet pierced the left side of her forehead, fractured both of her eye sockets and continued on a trajectory through her skull.
It went through the full length of the left hemisphere of her brain, traveling at a thousand feet per second, severing nerve connections that damaged her ability to move the right side of her body, and exited behind her left ear.
She crumpled to the concrete in front of the grocery store.
As everyone else started talking again, Gabrielle Giffords was silent. The bullet took her ability to talk.
It buried her capacity to find words, to string them together into sentences, to make meaning. Her brain injury was like opening a filing cabinet, one neurologist explained, and dumping all of the files on the floor.
A year later — a year of tough therapy for Giffords — and the public has only heard her speak in recordings — once on TV and others released by her staff. The cadences are interrupted and slow, but the words determined.
“I’m trying,” she enunciates. “Trying so hard to get better.”
She hasn’t given a speech in public. She hasn’t said whether she’ll go back to work or run for Congress again. She won’t give interviews.
She’s not ready, her staff says.
Giffords’ husband, Mark Kelly, was having breakfast at home with his wife in December, and told her, ” ‘Hey, Gabby, I can really see a difference between last week and this week’ — just in the ability for her to put a sentence together and put (another) one next to it, and very quickly find the words she needs to communicate, and those things are still improving every day.
“It’s been a really tough year,” he says. “But it is working.”
Last summer, just a few months after the shooting, Giffords called Ross Zimmerman on the phone.
Her husband had finally told her that Gabe was among the dead. Giffords considered Gabe a brother.
“Kelly,” Giffords repeated on the phone, over and over, while Ross listened.
“Kelly. Kelly. Kelly.”
Kelly O’Brien. The girl Gabe loved. Who still won’t talk.
In that one word, Ross Zimmerman heard all there was to say.
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Local community colleges offer horticulture classes
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Florist in Lewisville Opens It’s Doors for Business
PRLog (Press Release) – Jan 08, 2012 –
Floral Adventures, a North Texas based florist is now offering flowers for delivery. The choice of flowers varies from the exotic Oriental flowers to European irises, daisies, roses and even tulips.
People looking to celebrate their birthday, anniversaries or other events now have a great local source for fresh flowers, no longer need to worry that the event is due on a weekend, when none of the florists are available.
Just because the bouquet is ordered on a Saturday, quality is not compromised. Each of these bouquets are arranged by professional floral designers who also design unique gifts that are made of nothing but flowers. And for those looking to choose from unconventional gift ideas, the shop offers gifts and plants to match the occasion that they would be visiting.
A bouquet can be bought from a wide variety of budgets. Guests can choose from a bouquets that range from $45 to even above $150. The price naturally depends on the flowers used and the artwork that goes into getting a perfect floral arrangement.
They also arrange for flowers to be hand arranged and delivered; unlike other service providers who merely delivery the flowers without bothering about packing it right. Each and every bouquet that a customer orders, come hand arranged and delivered.
Our well established connections with suppliers ensure that we get the freshest flowers in the market. Besides Lewisville and Denton, we deliver flowers to Corinth, Shady Shores, Lake Dallas, Hickory Creek, Little Elm, Oak Point, Highland Village, Coppell, and surrounding areas. With special arrangments we will even deliver on Sunday, delivery of some flowers may be substituted, but that is rare, says the spokesperson for the florist. Floral Adventures is the only florist shop will make sure the event goes as planned with coordination services as well.
Finding a florist to deliver flowers on a set schedule can be very difficult. And if available, florists often charge exorbitant prices. People looking to deliver flowers for an emergency can do so, irrespective of the occasion; from anniversaries, to sympathy flower arrangements, Mothers Day, Valentines Day and even Labor Day.
About Floral Adventures: North Texas based florist Floral Adventures, is a family operated and owned shop, committed to offering the finest floral arrangement and gifts, backed by a service that is friendly and prompt. It is the only florists shop to make sure it is on time and fresh.
To know more, visit, http://www.floristinlewisville.com/
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Dozens bring flowers, candles to grocery store where Giffords was shot 1 year ago today
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