Pinette & Lynch Open House 2007 Sun Journal

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Sun Journal Special Sections featuring Pinette & Lynch Open House 2007.

Transcript of Pinette & Lynch Open House 2007 Sun Journal

Page 1: Pinette & Lynch Open House 2007 Sun Journal

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S

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16 Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 2007

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Page 2: Pinette & Lynch Open House 2007 Sun Journal

Larry Ross, an elemen-tary school teacher from Canaan, Maine and his Red Hat Entourage made up of school children from the Margaret Chase Smith School in Skowhegan, have also made the long trip down to Arlington for the annual event. Recognizable by their red winter hats, the class and chaperones raise money throughout the school year to help with the wreath-laying.

The Civil Air Patrol has over 65,000 volunteer members nationwide who donate their time and re-sources to train for disaster relief, emergency services, cadet programs and aero-space education for the public. Civil Air Patrol of-ficers and cadets have been involved with Worcester Wreath for several years in decorating and laying wreaths in Arlington Na-tional Cemetery.

When Morrill and Karen Worcester decided to take this project nationwide, the Civil Air Patrol accepted the challenge. And the Blue Bird Ranch of Jonesboro, Maine has donated the truck transportation of wreaths from Harrington, Maine to Arlington Na-tional Cemetery since 1992. Drivers and their families have also participated in the ceremony and wreath-laying.

American Legion and VFW members have volun-

teered their time from the start in 1992. Congregating the Sunday morning before the annual trek, veterans and their families decorate the wreaths with hand tied bows. Veterans from both organizations also partici-pate in the wreath-laying ceremonies in Maine and in Washington D.C.

Annin & Company is the oldest and largest manufac-turer of flags in the United

States. With the introduc-tion of the Wreaths Across America campaign, Annin & Company will be donat-ing both American and ser-vice specific flags for each ceremony wreath that will be used at the over 230 state and national cemeteries and monuments across the country.

Interstate Container and International Paper both support the Arling-ton Wreath Project and

Wreaths Across America by donating the corrugated storage boxes that are used to ship the wreaths from their birthplace at Worces-ter Wreath in Harrington, Maine to their eventual homes adorning the grave markers of our nation’s fallen heroes.

United Parcel Service joined the Wreaths Across America campaign in 2006 by donating all shipping expenses to each of the over

230 state and national cem-eteries and monuments across the country.

Pinette & Lynch Funeral Home and Cremation Ser-vices is proud to support the efforts of the Worces-ter family to honor our nation’s veterans, and they encourage others to be-come involved, as well.

– Excerpts courtesy of Wreaths Across America. FMI, visit www.wreaths-across-america.org.

BISSONNETTE’SPlumbing • Heating • Core Drilling

134 Hersey Hill School RoadMinot, ME

966-3944 • 777-7267

Congratulationsto Jim and

Kevin on yourbeautiful new

facility.Bissonnette’s has been

serving the area communitiesfor over 20 years.

Our family owned businessspecializes in Plumbing,

Heating and Core Drilling.

with your new state of the art

facility and convenient location

York, PennsylvaniaLewiston, Maine

784-4211

CONGRATULATIONS

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S

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15Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 20072 Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 2007

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S

WreathsCONTINUED FROM PAGE 14

Page 3: Pinette & Lynch Open House 2007 Sun Journal

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S

Back then, the company found itself with a surplus of wreaths near the end of the

season. With the help of Senator Olympia Snowe, arrangements were made to place

those wreaths in one of the older sections of Arlington National Cemetery, a sec-tion receiving fewer visitors each year.

A number of other partici-pants began their support for the project. James Prout, owner of Blue Bird Ranch, Inc. generously provided transportation all the way to Virginia. Volunteers from the local American Legion and VFW Posts gathered with members of the com-munity to decorate each wreath with signature red, hand-tied bows. Members of the Maine State Society of Washington, D.C. and John Metzler, Jr., superintendent of Arlington National Cem-etery, worked to organize the wreath-laying, including the incorporation of a special ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S

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14 Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 2007 Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 2007

Welcome to the new

Pinette & Lynch

FUNERAL HOME

AND CREMATION SERVICES

Family Owned

Est. 1888

O n behalf of generations of the Pinette, Dilling-ham and Lynch families, as well as the thou-sands of families it has been our great privi-

lege to serve, it is our great honor to welcome you to the newest and finest facility in the Lewiston-Auburn area to meet memorial and funeral needs of those from throughout central Maine: Pinette and Lynch Funeral Home and Cremation Services, 305 Alfred Plourde Parkway, just behind the Lewiston Ramada hotel.

The beautiful and comforting 11,000 square foot, state-of-the-art facility replaces the aged Pinette locations at 87 Bartlett Street and 1065 Lisbon Street in Lewiston, and we are pleased that the Dillingham & Son chapel, at 62 Spring Street in Auburn, has been renovated and re-mains available to those for whom an Auburn location is more convenient.

Both the Pinette and Lynch and Dillingham and Son chapels are independent, family owned facilities, oper-ated by generations of Lewiston and Auburn families beginning in the 19th century. The newest facility is designed to meet the ever-changing needs of the 21st century, but to do so in ways which are consistent with our more than six generations of compassion, profes-sionalism, comfort and convenience.

We invite you to visit us at anytime to learn about the wide range of options available to the families of today, but especially we hope you are able to join us during our Open House event.

Sincerely,

James and Kevin Lynch

3

Wreaths Across

AmericaT he 2006 holiday season was the 16th con-

secutive year of the initiative begun by Harrington, Maine’s Morrill Worcester to

“renew our commitment to honor the men and women of the armed forces who have served, and those who are currently serving, our country. To each, and especially those who made the ultimate sacrifice, we owe unwav-ering support and a profound debt of gratitude for pre-serving the way of life we all enjoy here in the United States of America.”

Starting in 1992, Worcester Wreath Company began donating over 5,000 wreaths each holiday season to adorn the headstones of fallen veterans at Arlington National Cemetery. In 2006, the effort was broadened into the Wreaths Across America campaign to honor veterans in every state and national cemetery in America.

SEE WREATHS PAGE 15

Jim Lynch

Kevin Lynch

This Pinette & Lynch Funeral Home and Crema-tion Services supplement is published by the Special Sections department of the Sun Journal. Content was supplied by Pinette & Lynch, freelance writer Rich Livingston, and Jeff Haggerty. Editorial and business offices are at 104 Park St, Lewiston, Maine 04243. For advertising rates and information, please call Joyce Franklin at 689-2924, or Jody Jalbert at 689-2913. To learn how you can have your business’ supple-ment published by the Sun Sournal Special Sections department, contact Jeff Haggerty at 689-2991. No part of this publication may be reproduced, in any form, without the written permission of the pub-lisher. All rights reserved. Copyright May 2007 by Sun Journal.

Page 4: Pinette & Lynch Open House 2007 Sun Journal

The new Tribute Room display area illus-trates the full range of options available, in terms of both services and products. It is a one-stop venue for addressing everything as-sociated with providing a fitting tribute or memorial including the kind of service to be conducted; a variety of burial or cremation choices; an extensive array of caskets from the simplest pine to more ornate mahogany, wal-nut, cherry or oak, or metals; embalming op-tions; vaults, burial urns, even cemetery site selection and monuments can all be addressed in one convenient location.

The counselors can help guide you through a variety of considerations that can custom-ize the commemoration to suit the personal-ity, the achievements, the friends and family of the deceased, and to do so with all the dignity, love and devotion such times de-mand.

Pre-planning may or may not include pre-funding: those are decisions that can be discussed during the consultation. Pre-funding as-sures that all funeral expens-es will be paid, even if your estate is financially depleted and inflation has increased the costs of funerals.

Whatever decisions you make, you are encouraged to put your preferences in writing, give copies to family members and your attorney, and keep a copy in a handy place – not as part of a will which will usually not be ad-dressed until after a funeral, and not in a safe deposit box that often cannot be accessed in an emergency. Careful planning and consultation can help anticipate such considerations and ease the logistical difficulties for the survivors as well as alleviat-ing some of the inevitable emotional distress.

The families of Pinette & Lynch and Dillingham and Son have generations of experience helping people through thoughtful, compre-hensive and considerate pre-

planning, and the new location only makes the whole process more convenient and less stressful than ever.

1022 Minot Ave, Auburn, Maine784-1388 • 1-800-638-9000www.shawneesteps.com

American ConcreteIndustries

Congratulationson your

new facility.

BESTWISHES!

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E SP I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S

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4 Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 2007 13Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 2007

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S

Centuries of tradition meets state-of-the-art

T he Pinette Funeral homes on Bartlett and Lisbon Streets that have been replaced by the million-dollar plus facility on Alfred Plourde Parkway were built for a simpler time, ac-

cording to Pinette & Lynch family spokesman, James Lynch. “Napoleon Pinette, who established the first Pinette funeral home in Lewiston in 1912, was something of a visionary,” Lynch explained. “He recognized the need for space in which loved ones could gather comfortably to honor the deceased, and he was among the first to meet those needs with an independent funeral chapel. The first location, at 413 Lisbon Street, was easy to walk to, and was serviced by the trolleys.”

But, funeral needs have changed, and the new cha-pel provides a variety of choices. Accessibility to au-tomobiles has become far more important. Families’ needs have evolved and people now need access to a wider variety of service options than ever before, in order to properly celebrate the life of their loved one. The new Pinette & Lynch Funeral Home and Crema-tion Service can accommodate traditional visitation, cremation and more elaborate events of tribute and memorial processions to a church or cemetery.

At 11,000 square feet, and able to sit as many as 400 for a service, the new facility is among the largest in the state. But, the large chapel can easily be parti-tioned into smaller, more intimate rooms as well, en-abling the facility to serve large or small gatherings with equal sensitivity and comfort.

SEE CENTURIES PAGE 5

Pre-planningCONTINUED FROM PAGE 12

For added convenience, we have memorial monument

displays and floral selections to choose from for your loved one.

The spaciousness and elegance is impressive upon entering the new facility, giving visitors a

sense of warmth and openness.

GracelawnMemorial

Parkhome of Maine’s firstestablished crematory

Congratulates

Pinette/LynchFuneral Homeon the grand openingof its beautiful new

facilities on theAlfred Plourde Parkway

Page 5: Pinette & Lynch Open House 2007 Sun Journal

783-LOVE

539 Webster Street

Lewiston, MELove is a Flower ~ Send Some Today!

Helping you expressyour love through flowers.

GREAT JOBLYNCH BROTHERS

KEEP UP THEGOOD WORK!

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S

RESIDENTIAL – COMMERCIAL – INDUSTRIALSince 1960

Lewiston, Maine 207-783-1695

Thank you for theopportunity of

serving you in yourpainting needs.

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S

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12 Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 2007 5Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 2007

TGATHE GOFF AGENCYEmployee Benefits

786-4118

Best Wishes toJim and Kevin

THE GOFF AGENCYDan & Maureen

Your friends at the

Lewiston, Maine

Welcome to ourNeighborhood!

Congratulations!I am pleased to have played

a part in your move!

Barbara Trafton689-9822

34 Center StreetAuburn, ME 04210

Best WishesIn your new location

“We hope your success continues on for years to come”

CUSTOM BUILDING & REMODELINGBruce

749-9217Matthew577-7595

Edward576-9750

BRIDGTON, MAINERoofing, Siding, Decks, Garages, Remodeling or New Construction. Start to finish.

With parking for 90 cars, garages for processional vehicles, and conveniently situated near outer Lisbon Street and con-nector routes that unify all of Lewiston – not to mention easy access to the Turn-pike, as well – the Alfred Plourde Park-way site is the ideal location from which to deploy processions.

CenturiesCONTINUED FROM PAGE 4

The chapel features full screen video capabilities that enable the family to highlight the happier times and the loved one’s accomplishments, and lots of families are learning just how meaning-ful and comforting an audio/visual tribute can be.

Often, the most difficult stage of the funeral process involves making arrange-ments after an unexpected death occurs, but the new chapel is designed to minimize the discomfort during that process, as well. The new Tribute Room presents a huge selec-tion of caskets illustrated by tasteful, small sectional components, without open covers – much less overwhelming than traditional displays.

The selection of caskets covers the full spectrum of pricing options as well, from minimal to the most ornate. A full array of cre-mation urns, models of burial vaults, along with memorial stationary, visi-tation registers, cemetery monuments and cremation keepsakes is also presented for discreet, tranquil re-view. Arrangements for flowers, or any sort of spe-cial commemoration, can be made right on site.

Easing the burden for those left behind

O ne of the most loving and caring things you can do for your family is reduce the emotional and financial burden during

a difficult time for them, and spare them from the need to make painful decisions quickly and under stress. Many people now include funeral plan-ning as an extension of will and estate planning by designating their own personal preferences in advance and often pre-funding expenses, as well.

Funerals can often rank among the most expen-sive purchases some families will ever make, yet when a loved one dies, grieving family and friends are confronted with dozens of options to be consid-ered, with decisions to be made under enormous time constraints.

• What kind of funeral should it be?• Should you bury or cremate the

body, or donate it to science?• What are you legally required to

buy?• What other arrangements should

you plan?• And, as callous as it may

sound, how much is it all go-ing to cost?

Each year, Americans grapple with these and many other questions as they spend billions of dollars ar-ranging more than 2 million funerals for family members and friends. The increasing trend toward pre-need plan-ning suggests that many consumers want to compare prices and services so that ultimately, the funeral reflects a wise and well-in-formed purchasing decision, as well as a meaningful one.

Pre-planning consulta-tions have always been an important element of ser-vices provided by Pinette & Lynch and by Dillingham and Son, but the practice has been growing in popularity in recent years, and the new chapel on Alfred Plourde Parkway is designed to make the pre-planning process easier still.

Another new offering today in funerals and memorialization is a big screen for

Memorial Tribute Videos. More and more families are seeing the value of photos put to favorite music that shows how

meaningful that life was to their family.

SEE PRE-PLANNING PAGE13

The intent of the new chapel is to preserve the historical legacy of more than a century of caring, compassionate service to the be-reaved of central Maine, but to do so in ways which provide access to the newest technol-ogy, ultimate convenience, complete com-fort, along with the dignity and tradition that have epitomized the ways in which the Pinette, Dillingham and Lynch families have met the needs of Lewiston-Auburn area families for many decades.

Page 6: Pinette & Lynch Open House 2007 Sun Journal

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S

12 Mollison Way, Lewiston • 783-0336

Good Luckon your

New LocationDuane & Steve

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S

MARDEN’Ssurplus & salvage

We supportarea

education

CongratulationsPinette & Lynch Funeral Home

on your new location!• OPEN: M-F 9-8, SAT 9-5, SUN 11-5

· 750 Main Street, Lewiston · 65 West Gray Rd., GrayREMEMBER OUR 30 DAY NO FUSS MONEY BACK GUARANTEE with RECEIPT

Congratulations on your new facility

ST. PETER’S CEMETERYMaine’s Largest Catholic Cemetery

Serving the Lewiston-Auburn Area Since 1876

Community Mausoleum - Cremation NichesMonument Sections - Memorial Sections

Baby Garden - Cremation Garden

217 Switzerland Road, Lewiston, Maine207-782-8721 Fax 207-784-3432

I’m proud to have been the Finished Carpenter

on your beautiful project.- Daniel G. Lagueux

LAGUEUX CONSTRUCTION280 Scribner Blvd., Lewiston • 784-8170

CongratulationsJim and Kevin Lynch

and family.

486 Main Street, Lewiston • 777-1599Fax 777-6484 • In State Toll Free 800-585-1599

Three-quarters of a cen-tury after its inception, the Pinette funeral homes (by now including two loca-tions: 87 Bartlett Street and the newer chapel at 1065 Lisbon Street) owner, Raoul Pinette, a past president of the National Funeral Directors Association, sold the business to James and Kevin Lynch, both of whom were 1982 graduates of the Cincinnati College of Mor-tuary Science.

The Lynch brothers have operated the homes since 1986. During the next 10 years, the Lynch brothers developed a close work-ing relationship with the Dillingham family, which had continued to operate the chapel founded by Civil War veteran Charles Dill-ingham. The Lynch broth-ers acquired the Dillingham & Son chapel in 1996.

The beautifully renovated Dillingham & Son chapel provides visitation rooms that can accommodate ei-ther funeral or memorial ceremonies, and founder Charles Dillingham’s great-great grandson, Jack, re-mains a member of the dedi-cated staff and preserves the family tradition.

The newest Pinette & Lynch Funeral Home and Cremation Services facility replaces the two venerable Pinette locations in Lewis-ton, but the Dillingham & Son chapel will continue to serve those for whom Au-burn is a more convenient venue, at 62 Spring Street.

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6 Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 2007 11Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 2007

Congratulationson your

New Facility!

MAJOR & MINOR REPAIRSAUTO AIR CONDITIONING SERVICE

• STATE INSPECTION STATION • FRONT WHEEL DRIVESPECIALIST • DIAGNOSTIC TESTING • BRAKE SERVICE• STRUTS • TUNE-UPS • SHOCKS • TIRES • BATTERIES

• EXHAUST SYSTEMS • ACCESSORIESRay & Doris Arsenault

Owner/Operators783-0581

1290 Lisbon Street, Lewiston

Watch for ourNew LocationComing Soon!

Design and construction:

Brothers’ visions

I n late 2005, the Bilodeau brothers – Rich-ard and Normand – sold a parcel of land on the Alfred Plourde Parkway, behind the

Lewiston Ramada hotel, to the Lynch brothers – Jim and Kevin. The Lynch brothers retained the services of the Gendron brothers – John and Todd, Gendron & Gendron/General Contractors – to build a state-of-the-art new funeral facility that can provide clients with compassionate, custom services in ways previously un-available in central Maine.

“Generations of families had come to rely on our old facilities on Lisbon Street and on Bartlett Street,” Jim Lynch explained, “but those were built for a dif-ferent era. People tended to conduct their entire lives in small neighborhoods. They’d walk to work, to church, to shop, and for funerals. We’d known for some time that in order to better serve 21st cen-tury Lewiston families, we would need facilities that were more accessible, more comfortable and accommo-dating than our old homes. After searching throughout adjacent areas of Lewiston, the perfect site, behind the Ramada on Alfred Plourde Parkway, became available in 2005.”

While the Lynch brothers knew generally how they wanted the new facility to function, they turned for design help to Dick Dudley,

SEE DESIGN PAGE 7

CompassionCONTINUED FROM PAGE 10

Kevin and Jim Lynch

We are proud to offer to the families we serve another new experience in selecting funeral or memorial merchandise in a more soothing and

open atmosphere that is less overwhelming than the older, traditional way of open lid covers in a crowded selection room. All casket merchandise

is modular with photos showing an open or closed casket that makes merchandise selection easier.

Memorial merchandise includes stationary; keepsakes; cremation urns; cremation jewelry;

and cremation caskets. We also include, for added convenience, memorial monument displays for the selection of a monument for your cemetery lot, and

floral selections for your loved one.

Page 7: Pinette & Lynch Open House 2007 Sun Journal

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S

Proud to be a partof the growing L-A

community

• Civil Engineering

• Environmental Engineering

• Land Surveying

• Transportation Engineering

• Landscape Architecture

• Natural Resources

• Geotechnical Engineering

400 Center Street, Auburn, ME 04210

207-783-5656www.sebagotechnics.com

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S

Congratulations

PINETTE FUNERAL HOME

on the opening of your new facility

Roy I. Snow, Inc.ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS11 Library Avenue - Auburn, ME

(207) 782-3734

1-800-482-7412 • www.ahch.org

HOSPICE HOUSE, 236 STETSON ROAD, AUBURN

BRIDGTON

LEWISTON

OXFORD

WILTON

With local offices in

SKILLED HOME CARE • HOSPICE CARE • SUPPORTIVE CARE • LIFELINE

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10 Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 2007 7Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 2007

Best Wishes toKevin and Jimon your new,

beautifulfacility.

59 East AvenueLewiston, ME • 784-5181

ParentInsurance Agency

“A United Insurance Group Agency”

Best Wishesand

Congratulationson your new

facility!

INTERNATIONALDOOR

Supplier of Overhead Doors,Toilet Partitions and Builders’

Accessories

66 Westminster StreetLewiston784-0622

50 Alfred Plourde Parkway, Lewiston, ME782-7372

[email protected]

an old family friend and New Hampshire ar-chitect. Dudley’s inviting design was predi-cated on an open campus concept, with the building itself dominated by lots of windows to create a warm, light and airy atmosphere, dramatically less austere than that typically associated with funeral homes of the early half of the last century.

The design was intended to be comforting, convenient, even refreshing; to meet the ever expanding needs of modern families; to accommodate services of all sizes, faiths and personal styles.

When the time came to select contractors, there was no debate. “Dave Gendron has been moving snow from our lots since 1978,”

Lynch explained. “He’d bring in a front-end loader at all hours of the night to make sure the homes were ready to receive guests when they needed to be. We’ve simply had a long-term business relationship that made our selection process really easy.”

A seven-month construction cycle to cre-ate the 11,000-square foot, million-dollar plus facility began on May 1, 2006. The same Dave Gendron who has been working at the Pinette funeral sites for years was responsi-ble for site work at the new location and for excavating and pouring the foundation.

The Gendrons selected Maine architects Port City Design, of Portland, to bring Dick Dudley’s vision to fruition. The Gendron building crew was directed by a cousin, Tony Gendron. More than a dozen local area

subcontractors were employed for drywall, plumbing, heating, glass work, siding, over-head doors, painting, carpeting and floors, paving, electrical, sprinklers, etc.

A mild December enabled RC Paving to complete the 90-car parking lot on Decem-ber 6, long after paving season typically has ended. The last cosmetic clean-up work and painting touch-up was still being done on the morning of December 27, 2006, but through the heroic efforts of everyone in-volved with the construction efforts, the chapel was able to accommodate the needs of the family of an accident victim later that same day.

The new Pinette and Lynch Funeral Home and Cremation Services facility opened of-ficially on January 1, 2007.

DesignCONTINUED FROM PAGE 6 Three

centuries of

compassion

T he new Pinette & Lynch Funeral Home and Cremation service is the fulfillment of a legacy that began just after the Civil War and the expansion of the massive textile and footwear mills powered by the

Great Falls, in 1871, with the establishment of Dillingham and Son Memorial Cha-pel, and was strengthened by the arrival, in 1912, of the Pinette Funeral Home.

Napoleon Pinette was a woodsman who worked with F.X. Marcotte Furni-ture and Undertaking in the first decade of the 20th cen-tury as a furniture mover and livery worker. Pinette acquired the charter to the undertaking business from F.X. Marcotte in 1912, and in 1925 established the new concept of a funeral home, originally at 413 Lisbon Street.

Before then, wakes and receptions were held in private homes, but that became impractical as apartments and tenements proliferated at the height of the industrial age. The Lisbon Street Pinette Fu-neral Home was located on the main trolley line that connected all corners of the twin cities as well as the train terminal that served families arriving from Canada. It accommodated the needs of families who simply did not have enough room at home to host friends and relatives at the time of greatest need.

SEE COMPASSION PAGE 11

The new 3,300 sq. ft. Chapel may be divided into three viewing /

gathering rooms that cover multi functions, from

the simplest need to honor

and accomodate families to receive

large groups of family and friends who wish to share

their personal condolences before

and after services.

Page 8: Pinette & Lynch Open House 2007 Sun Journal

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8 Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 2007 9

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S 3 0 5 A L F R E D P L O U R D E P A R K W A Y L E W I S T O N , M A I N E 0 4 2 4 0 2 0 7 - 7 8 4 - 4 0 2 3 www. lynchbro the rs .com

Independent,

family owned,

family-oriented

Celebrating and honoring the life of a deceased loved one is among the most personal, private and poignant processes in which bereaved families and friends will ever engage. Vital to the grieving process and the ability to cope with loss, many families have come to rely on funeral directors to guide them through the difficult scenario, and to do so with compassion, dignity and concern for the particular, special needs of individuals.

Pinette & Lynch Funeral Home and Cremation Services, along with the affiliated Dillingham and Son Memorial Chapel in Au-burn, are members of Selected Independent Funeral Homes®, a 90 year old worldwide association of approximately 1,500 indepen-dent, locally owned funeral homes. Its members operate under the strictest standards and best practices to offer confidence and preserve trust during times of need. As a professional association, they actively monitor their members to help ensure that families receive the best care available.

The Lynch brothers are dedicated to resisting the industry trend toward consolidation into large, corporate organizations. Instead, there is a commitment that Pinette & Lynch will strive to do every-thing possible to meet the specific, individual needs of Lewiston and Auburn families, as their predecessors have done for more than 100 years. No special requests are required – ownership has its privileges – to help meet families’ special or unusual requests. And the families of Pinette, Lynch and Dillingham have been part of the fabric of the local community, members and supporters of a wide range of community organizations and programs.

Every family is different, and not everyone wants the same type of funeral. Funeral practices are influenced by religious and cultural traditions, costs and personal preferences. These factors help determine whether the funeral will be elaborate or simple, public or private, religious or secular, and where it will be held. They also influence whether the body will be present at the fu-neral, if there will be a viewing or visitation, and if so, whether the casket will be open or closed, and whether the remains will be buried or cremated.

Among the choices that must be made are whether one of the basic types of funerals, or something in between, is most appropri-ate. Basic types include Traditional/full service, which usually includes a viewing or visitation and formal funeral service, use of a hearse to transport the body to the funeral site and cemetery, and burial, entombment or cremation of the remains.

More choices and options are available to families, especially with cremation, in which a ceremony can be held before or after cremation. The counselors of Pinette & Lynch are experienced with all options and can help guide families to an appropriate resolution, often at a time when they are least prepared to have to make such decisions.

Raymond “Blackie”

Boulet• Funeral Staff•

Keith Samson• Funeral Staff•

Marc Tremblay• Licensed Funeral Director•

The new sign says it all. Jim and Kevin added their last name to the business they have owned for over 20 years.

1. To provide the public with information about funerals, in-cluding prices, and the functions, services and responsibili-ties of funeral directors;

2. To afford an ongoing opportunity to all persons to discuss or arrange funerals in advance;

3. To make funerals available in as wide a range of price cat-egories as necessary to meet the needs of all segments of our community, and to affirmatively extend to everyone the

right of inspecting and freely considering them all;

4. To quote conspicuously in writing the charge for every fu-neral offered, and to clearly identify the services, facilities, equipment and merchandise included in such quotations;

5. To furnish each family, at the time funeral arrangements are made, with a written memorandum of charges and to make no additional charge without the approval of the pur

chaser;

6. To make no representation, written or oral, which may be false or misleading and to apply a standard of honesty in all dealings;

7. To respect all faiths, creeds and customs; and to give full ef-fect to the role of the clergy;

8. To maintain qualified and competent staff, complete facili-ties and suitable equipment required for comprehensive funeral service;

9. To assure those we serve the right of personal choice and de-cision in making funeral arrangements;

10. To be responsive to the needs of the financially strained, serving them within their means;

11. To comply fully with the requirements of the FTC Trade Regulation Rule (U.S.) on funeral practices.

We pledge to conduct ourselves in every way and at all times in such a manner as to deserve the public trust, and to place a copy of this Code of Good Funeral Practice in the possession of a representative of all parties with whom we arrange funerals.”

More than 40 years ago, Selected Independent Funeral Homes adopted the unique Code of Good Funeral Practice, which commits its members to operate according to the highest standards of public trust:

Staff directory

“As funeral directors, our calling imposes upon us

special responsibilities to those we serve and to the

public at large. An important obligation is to provide

information so that everyone can make knowledgeable

decisions about funeral services and funeral firms.

In acceptance of their responsibilities, and as a condition of their affiliation with Selected Independent Funeral Homes, our members affirm the following standards of Good Funeral Practice and hereby pledge:

Linda GagneSecretary/Bookkeeper

Bruce Ouellette• Funeral Staff•

Roland R. Perreault• Long time Licensed

Funeral Director with Pinette Funeral Home •

Semi Retired

Jack Dillingham• Funeral Staff•

§ §O§ §O

§ §O

Page 9: Pinette & Lynch Open House 2007 Sun Journal

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S

Proud to be a partof the growing L-A

community

• Civil Engineering

• Environmental Engineering

• Land Surveying

• Transportation Engineering

• Landscape Architecture

• Natural Resources

• Geotechnical Engineering

400 Center Street, Auburn, ME 04210

207-783-5656www.sebagotechnics.com

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S

Congratulations

PINETTE FUNERAL HOME

on the opening of your new facility

Roy I. Snow, Inc.ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS11 Library Avenue - Auburn, ME

(207) 782-3734

1-800-482-7412 • www.ahch.org

HOSPICE HOUSE, 236 STETSON ROAD, AUBURN

BRIDGTON

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With local offices in

SKILLED HOME CARE • HOSPICE CARE • SUPPORTIVE CARE • LIFELINE

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10 Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 2007 7Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 2007

Best Wishes toKevin and Jimon your new,

beautifulfacility.

59 East AvenueLewiston, ME • 784-5181

ParentInsurance Agency

“A United Insurance Group Agency”

Best Wishesand

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facility!

INTERNATIONALDOOR

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an old family friend and New Hampshire ar-chitect. Dudley’s inviting design was predi-cated on an open campus concept, with the building itself dominated by lots of windows to create a warm, light and airy atmosphere, dramatically less austere than that typically associated with funeral homes of the early half of the last century.

The design was intended to be comforting, convenient, even refreshing; to meet the ever expanding needs of modern families; to accommodate services of all sizes, faiths and personal styles.

When the time came to select contractors, there was no debate. “Dave Gendron has been moving snow from our lots since 1978,”

Lynch explained. “He’d bring in a front-end loader at all hours of the night to make sure the homes were ready to receive guests when they needed to be. We’ve simply had a long-term business relationship that made our selection process really easy.”

A seven-month construction cycle to cre-ate the 11,000-square foot, million-dollar plus facility began on May 1, 2006. The same Dave Gendron who has been working at the Pinette funeral sites for years was responsi-ble for site work at the new location and for excavating and pouring the foundation.

The Gendrons selected Maine architects Port City Design, of Portland, to bring Dick Dudley’s vision to fruition. The Gendron building crew was directed by a cousin, Tony Gendron. More than a dozen local area

subcontractors were employed for drywall, plumbing, heating, glass work, siding, over-head doors, painting, carpeting and floors, paving, electrical, sprinklers, etc.

A mild December enabled RC Paving to complete the 90-car parking lot on Decem-ber 6, long after paving season typically has ended. The last cosmetic clean-up work and painting touch-up was still being done on the morning of December 27, 2006, but through the heroic efforts of everyone in-volved with the construction efforts, the chapel was able to accommodate the needs of the family of an accident victim later that same day.

The new Pinette and Lynch Funeral Home and Cremation Services facility opened of-ficially on January 1, 2007.

DesignCONTINUED FROM PAGE 6 Three

centuries of

compassion

T he new Pinette & Lynch Funeral Home and Cremation service is the fulfillment of a legacy that began just after the Civil War and the expansion of the massive textile and footwear mills powered by the

Great Falls, in 1871, with the establishment of Dillingham and Son Memorial Cha-pel, and was strengthened by the arrival, in 1912, of the Pinette Funeral Home.

Napoleon Pinette was a woodsman who worked with F.X. Marcotte Furni-ture and Undertaking in the first decade of the 20th cen-tury as a furniture mover and livery worker. Pinette acquired the charter to the undertaking business from F.X. Marcotte in 1912, and in 1925 established the new concept of a funeral home, originally at 413 Lisbon Street.

Before then, wakes and receptions were held in private homes, but that became impractical as apartments and tenements proliferated at the height of the industrial age. The Lisbon Street Pinette Fu-neral Home was located on the main trolley line that connected all corners of the twin cities as well as the train terminal that served families arriving from Canada. It accommodated the needs of families who simply did not have enough room at home to host friends and relatives at the time of greatest need.

SEE COMPASSION PAGE 11

The new 3,300 sq. ft. Chapel may be divided into three viewing /

gathering rooms that cover multi functions, from

the simplest need to honor

and accomodate families to receive

large groups of family and friends who wish to share

their personal condolences before

and after services.

Page 10: Pinette & Lynch Open House 2007 Sun Journal

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S

12 Mollison Way, Lewiston • 783-0336

Good Luckon your

New LocationDuane & Steve

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S

MARDEN’Ssurplus & salvage

We supportarea

education

CongratulationsPinette & Lynch Funeral Home

on your new location!• OPEN: M-F 9-8, SAT 9-5, SUN 11-5

· 750 Main Street, Lewiston · 65 West Gray Rd., GrayREMEMBER OUR 30 DAY NO FUSS MONEY BACK GUARANTEE with RECEIPT

Congratulations on your new facility

ST. PETER’S CEMETERYMaine’s Largest Catholic Cemetery

Serving the Lewiston-Auburn Area Since 1876

Community Mausoleum - Cremation NichesMonument Sections - Memorial Sections

Baby Garden - Cremation Garden

217 Switzerland Road, Lewiston, Maine207-782-8721 Fax 207-784-3432

I’m proud to have been the Finished Carpenter

on your beautiful project.- Daniel G. Lagueux

LAGUEUX CONSTRUCTION280 Scribner Blvd., Lewiston • 784-8170

CongratulationsJim and Kevin Lynch

and family.

486 Main Street, Lewiston • 777-1599Fax 777-6484 • In State Toll Free 800-585-1599

Three-quarters of a cen-tury after its inception, the Pinette funeral homes (by now including two loca-tions: 87 Bartlett Street and the newer chapel at 1065 Lisbon Street) owner, Raoul Pinette, a past president of the National Funeral Directors Association, sold the business to James and Kevin Lynch, both of whom were 1982 graduates of the Cincinnati College of Mor-tuary Science.

The Lynch brothers have operated the homes since 1986. During the next 10 years, the Lynch brothers developed a close work-ing relationship with the Dillingham family, which had continued to operate the chapel founded by Civil War veteran Charles Dill-ingham. The Lynch broth-ers acquired the Dillingham & Son chapel in 1996.

The beautifully renovated Dillingham & Son chapel provides visitation rooms that can accommodate ei-ther funeral or memorial ceremonies, and founder Charles Dillingham’s great-great grandson, Jack, re-mains a member of the dedi-cated staff and preserves the family tradition.

The newest Pinette & Lynch Funeral Home and Cremation Services facility replaces the two venerable Pinette locations in Lewis-ton, but the Dillingham & Son chapel will continue to serve those for whom Au-burn is a more convenient venue, at 62 Spring Street.

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6 Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 2007 11Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 2007

Congratulationson your

New Facility!

MAJOR & MINOR REPAIRSAUTO AIR CONDITIONING SERVICE

• STATE INSPECTION STATION • FRONT WHEEL DRIVESPECIALIST • DIAGNOSTIC TESTING • BRAKE SERVICE• STRUTS • TUNE-UPS • SHOCKS • TIRES • BATTERIES

• EXHAUST SYSTEMS • ACCESSORIESRay & Doris Arsenault

Owner/Operators783-0581

1290 Lisbon Street, Lewiston

Watch for ourNew LocationComing Soon!

Design and construction:

Brothers’ visions

I n late 2005, the Bilodeau brothers – Rich-ard and Normand – sold a parcel of land on the Alfred Plourde Parkway, behind the

Lewiston Ramada hotel, to the Lynch brothers – Jim and Kevin. The Lynch brothers retained the services of the Gendron brothers – John and Todd, Gendron & Gendron/General Contractors – to build a state-of-the-art new funeral facility that can provide clients with compassionate, custom services in ways previously un-available in central Maine.

“Generations of families had come to rely on our old facilities on Lisbon Street and on Bartlett Street,” Jim Lynch explained, “but those were built for a dif-ferent era. People tended to conduct their entire lives in small neighborhoods. They’d walk to work, to church, to shop, and for funerals. We’d known for some time that in order to better serve 21st cen-tury Lewiston families, we would need facilities that were more accessible, more comfortable and accommo-dating than our old homes. After searching throughout adjacent areas of Lewiston, the perfect site, behind the Ramada on Alfred Plourde Parkway, became available in 2005.”

While the Lynch brothers knew generally how they wanted the new facility to function, they turned for design help to Dick Dudley,

SEE DESIGN PAGE 7

CompassionCONTINUED FROM PAGE 10

Kevin and Jim Lynch

We are proud to offer to the families we serve another new experience in selecting funeral or memorial merchandise in a more soothing and

open atmosphere that is less overwhelming than the older, traditional way of open lid covers in a crowded selection room. All casket merchandise

is modular with photos showing an open or closed casket that makes merchandise selection easier.

Memorial merchandise includes stationary; keepsakes; cremation urns; cremation jewelry;

and cremation caskets. We also include, for added convenience, memorial monument displays for the selection of a monument for your cemetery lot, and

floral selections for your loved one.

Page 11: Pinette & Lynch Open House 2007 Sun Journal

783-LOVE

539 Webster Street

Lewiston, MELove is a Flower ~ Send Some Today!

Helping you expressyour love through flowers.

GREAT JOBLYNCH BROTHERS

KEEP UP THEGOOD WORK!

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S

RESIDENTIAL – COMMERCIAL – INDUSTRIALSince 1960

Lewiston, Maine 207-783-1695

Thank you for theopportunity of

serving you in yourpainting needs.

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S

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12 Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 2007 5Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 2007

TGATHE GOFF AGENCYEmployee Benefits

786-4118

Best Wishes toJim and Kevin

THE GOFF AGENCYDan & Maureen

Your friends at the

Lewiston, Maine

Welcome to ourNeighborhood!

Congratulations!I am pleased to have played

a part in your move!

Barbara Trafton689-9822

34 Center StreetAuburn, ME 04210

Best WishesIn your new location

“We hope your success continues on for years to come”

CUSTOM BUILDING & REMODELINGBruce

749-9217Matthew577-7595

Edward576-9750

BRIDGTON, MAINERoofing, Siding, Decks, Garages, Remodeling or New Construction. Start to finish.

With parking for 90 cars, garages for processional vehicles, and conveniently situated near outer Lisbon Street and con-nector routes that unify all of Lewiston – not to mention easy access to the Turn-pike, as well – the Alfred Plourde Park-way site is the ideal location from which to deploy processions.

CenturiesCONTINUED FROM PAGE 4

The chapel features full screen video capabilities that enable the family to highlight the happier times and the loved one’s accomplishments, and lots of families are learning just how meaning-ful and comforting an audio/visual tribute can be.

Often, the most difficult stage of the funeral process involves making arrange-ments after an unexpected death occurs, but the new chapel is designed to minimize the discomfort during that process, as well. The new Tribute Room presents a huge selec-tion of caskets illustrated by tasteful, small sectional components, without open covers – much less overwhelming than traditional displays.

The selection of caskets covers the full spectrum of pricing options as well, from minimal to the most ornate. A full array of cre-mation urns, models of burial vaults, along with memorial stationary, visi-tation registers, cemetery monuments and cremation keepsakes is also presented for discreet, tranquil re-view. Arrangements for flowers, or any sort of spe-cial commemoration, can be made right on site.

Easing the burden for those left behind

O ne of the most loving and caring things you can do for your family is reduce the emotional and financial burden during

a difficult time for them, and spare them from the need to make painful decisions quickly and under stress. Many people now include funeral plan-ning as an extension of will and estate planning by designating their own personal preferences in advance and often pre-funding expenses, as well.

Funerals can often rank among the most expen-sive purchases some families will ever make, yet when a loved one dies, grieving family and friends are confronted with dozens of options to be consid-ered, with decisions to be made under enormous time constraints.

• What kind of funeral should it be?• Should you bury or cremate the

body, or donate it to science?• What are you legally required to

buy?• What other arrangements should

you plan?• And, as callous as it may

sound, how much is it all go-ing to cost?

Each year, Americans grapple with these and many other questions as they spend billions of dollars ar-ranging more than 2 million funerals for family members and friends. The increasing trend toward pre-need plan-ning suggests that many consumers want to compare prices and services so that ultimately, the funeral reflects a wise and well-in-formed purchasing decision, as well as a meaningful one.

Pre-planning consulta-tions have always been an important element of ser-vices provided by Pinette & Lynch and by Dillingham and Son, but the practice has been growing in popularity in recent years, and the new chapel on Alfred Plourde Parkway is designed to make the pre-planning process easier still.

Another new offering today in funerals and memorialization is a big screen for

Memorial Tribute Videos. More and more families are seeing the value of photos put to favorite music that shows how

meaningful that life was to their family.

SEE PRE-PLANNING PAGE13

The intent of the new chapel is to preserve the historical legacy of more than a century of caring, compassionate service to the be-reaved of central Maine, but to do so in ways which provide access to the newest technol-ogy, ultimate convenience, complete com-fort, along with the dignity and tradition that have epitomized the ways in which the Pinette, Dillingham and Lynch families have met the needs of Lewiston-Auburn area families for many decades.

Page 12: Pinette & Lynch Open House 2007 Sun Journal

The new Tribute Room display area illus-trates the full range of options available, in terms of both services and products. It is a one-stop venue for addressing everything as-sociated with providing a fitting tribute or memorial including the kind of service to be conducted; a variety of burial or cremation choices; an extensive array of caskets from the simplest pine to more ornate mahogany, wal-nut, cherry or oak, or metals; embalming op-tions; vaults, burial urns, even cemetery site selection and monuments can all be addressed in one convenient location.

The counselors can help guide you through a variety of considerations that can custom-ize the commemoration to suit the personal-ity, the achievements, the friends and family of the deceased, and to do so with all the dignity, love and devotion such times de-mand.

Pre-planning may or may not include pre-funding: those are decisions that can be discussed during the consultation. Pre-funding as-sures that all funeral expens-es will be paid, even if your estate is financially depleted and inflation has increased the costs of funerals.

Whatever decisions you make, you are encouraged to put your preferences in writing, give copies to family members and your attorney, and keep a copy in a handy place – not as part of a will which will usually not be ad-dressed until after a funeral, and not in a safe deposit box that often cannot be accessed in an emergency. Careful planning and consultation can help anticipate such considerations and ease the logistical difficulties for the survivors as well as alleviat-ing some of the inevitable emotional distress.

The families of Pinette & Lynch and Dillingham and Son have generations of experience helping people through thoughtful, compre-hensive and considerate pre-

planning, and the new location only makes the whole process more convenient and less stressful than ever.

1022 Minot Ave, Auburn, Maine784-1388 • 1-800-638-9000www.shawneesteps.com

American ConcreteIndustries

Congratulationson your

new facility.

BESTWISHES!

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E SP I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S

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4 Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 2007 13Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 2007

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S

Centuries of tradition meets state-of-the-art

T he Pinette Funeral homes on Bartlett and Lisbon Streets that have been replaced by the million-dollar plus facility on Alfred Plourde Parkway were built for a simpler time, ac-

cording to Pinette & Lynch family spokesman, James Lynch. “Napoleon Pinette, who established the first Pinette funeral home in Lewiston in 1912, was something of a visionary,” Lynch explained. “He recognized the need for space in which loved ones could gather comfortably to honor the deceased, and he was among the first to meet those needs with an independent funeral chapel. The first location, at 413 Lisbon Street, was easy to walk to, and was serviced by the trolleys.”

But, funeral needs have changed, and the new cha-pel provides a variety of choices. Accessibility to au-tomobiles has become far more important. Families’ needs have evolved and people now need access to a wider variety of service options than ever before, in order to properly celebrate the life of their loved one. The new Pinette & Lynch Funeral Home and Crema-tion Service can accommodate traditional visitation, cremation and more elaborate events of tribute and memorial processions to a church or cemetery.

At 11,000 square feet, and able to sit as many as 400 for a service, the new facility is among the largest in the state. But, the large chapel can easily be parti-tioned into smaller, more intimate rooms as well, en-abling the facility to serve large or small gatherings with equal sensitivity and comfort.

SEE CENTURIES PAGE 5

Pre-planningCONTINUED FROM PAGE 12

For added convenience, we have memorial monument

displays and floral selections to choose from for your loved one.

The spaciousness and elegance is impressive upon entering the new facility, giving visitors a

sense of warmth and openness.

GracelawnMemorial

Parkhome of Maine’s firstestablished crematory

Congratulates

Pinette/LynchFuneral Homeon the grand openingof its beautiful new

facilities on theAlfred Plourde Parkway

Page 13: Pinette & Lynch Open House 2007 Sun Journal

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S

Back then, the company found itself with a surplus of wreaths near the end of the

season. With the help of Senator Olympia Snowe, arrangements were made to place

those wreaths in one of the older sections of Arlington National Cemetery, a sec-tion receiving fewer visitors each year.

A number of other partici-pants began their support for the project. James Prout, owner of Blue Bird Ranch, Inc. generously provided transportation all the way to Virginia. Volunteers from the local American Legion and VFW Posts gathered with members of the com-munity to decorate each wreath with signature red, hand-tied bows. Members of the Maine State Society of Washington, D.C. and John Metzler, Jr., superintendent of Arlington National Cem-etery, worked to organize the wreath-laying, including the incorporation of a special ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S

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14 Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 2007 Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 2007

Welcome to the new

Pinette & Lynch

FUNERAL HOME

AND CREMATION SERVICES

Family Owned

Est. 1888

O n behalf of generations of the Pinette, Dilling-ham and Lynch families, as well as the thou-sands of families it has been our great privi-

lege to serve, it is our great honor to welcome you to the newest and finest facility in the Lewiston-Auburn area to meet memorial and funeral needs of those from throughout central Maine: Pinette and Lynch Funeral Home and Cremation Services, 305 Alfred Plourde Parkway, just behind the Lewiston Ramada hotel.

The beautiful and comforting 11,000 square foot, state-of-the-art facility replaces the aged Pinette locations at 87 Bartlett Street and 1065 Lisbon Street in Lewiston, and we are pleased that the Dillingham & Son chapel, at 62 Spring Street in Auburn, has been renovated and re-mains available to those for whom an Auburn location is more convenient.

Both the Pinette and Lynch and Dillingham and Son chapels are independent, family owned facilities, oper-ated by generations of Lewiston and Auburn families beginning in the 19th century. The newest facility is designed to meet the ever-changing needs of the 21st century, but to do so in ways which are consistent with our more than six generations of compassion, profes-sionalism, comfort and convenience.

We invite you to visit us at anytime to learn about the wide range of options available to the families of today, but especially we hope you are able to join us during our Open House event.

Sincerely,

James and Kevin Lynch

3

Wreaths Across

AmericaT he 2006 holiday season was the 16th con-

secutive year of the initiative begun by Harrington, Maine’s Morrill Worcester to

“renew our commitment to honor the men and women of the armed forces who have served, and those who are currently serving, our country. To each, and especially those who made the ultimate sacrifice, we owe unwav-ering support and a profound debt of gratitude for pre-serving the way of life we all enjoy here in the United States of America.”

Starting in 1992, Worcester Wreath Company began donating over 5,000 wreaths each holiday season to adorn the headstones of fallen veterans at Arlington National Cemetery. In 2006, the effort was broadened into the Wreaths Across America campaign to honor veterans in every state and national cemetery in America.

SEE WREATHS PAGE 15

Jim Lynch

Kevin Lynch

This Pinette & Lynch Funeral Home and Crema-tion Services supplement is published by the Special Sections department of the Sun Journal. Content was supplied by Pinette & Lynch, freelance writer Rich Livingston, and Jeff Haggerty. Editorial and business offices are at 104 Park St, Lewiston, Maine 04243. For advertising rates and information, please call Joyce Franklin at 689-2924, or Jody Jalbert at 689-2913. To learn how you can have your business’ supple-ment published by the Sun Sournal Special Sections department, contact Jeff Haggerty at 689-2991. No part of this publication may be reproduced, in any form, without the written permission of the pub-lisher. All rights reserved. Copyright May 2007 by Sun Journal.

Page 14: Pinette & Lynch Open House 2007 Sun Journal

Larry Ross, an elemen-tary school teacher from Canaan, Maine and his Red Hat Entourage made up of school children from the Margaret Chase Smith School in Skowhegan, have also made the long trip down to Arlington for the annual event. Recognizable by their red winter hats, the class and chaperones raise money throughout the school year to help with the wreath-laying.

The Civil Air Patrol has over 65,000 volunteer members nationwide who donate their time and re-sources to train for disaster relief, emergency services, cadet programs and aero-space education for the public. Civil Air Patrol of-ficers and cadets have been involved with Worcester Wreath for several years in decorating and laying wreaths in Arlington Na-tional Cemetery.

When Morrill and Karen Worcester decided to take this project nationwide, the Civil Air Patrol accepted the challenge. And the Blue Bird Ranch of Jonesboro, Maine has donated the truck transportation of wreaths from Harrington, Maine to Arlington Na-tional Cemetery since 1992. Drivers and their families have also participated in the ceremony and wreath-laying.

American Legion and VFW members have volun-

teered their time from the start in 1992. Congregating the Sunday morning before the annual trek, veterans and their families decorate the wreaths with hand tied bows. Veterans from both organizations also partici-pate in the wreath-laying ceremonies in Maine and in Washington D.C.

Annin & Company is the oldest and largest manufac-turer of flags in the United

States. With the introduc-tion of the Wreaths Across America campaign, Annin & Company will be donat-ing both American and ser-vice specific flags for each ceremony wreath that will be used at the over 230 state and national cemeteries and monuments across the country.

Interstate Container and International Paper both support the Arling-ton Wreath Project and

Wreaths Across America by donating the corrugated storage boxes that are used to ship the wreaths from their birthplace at Worces-ter Wreath in Harrington, Maine to their eventual homes adorning the grave markers of our nation’s fallen heroes.

United Parcel Service joined the Wreaths Across America campaign in 2006 by donating all shipping expenses to each of the over

230 state and national cem-eteries and monuments across the country.

Pinette & Lynch Funeral Home and Cremation Ser-vices is proud to support the efforts of the Worces-ter family to honor our nation’s veterans, and they encourage others to be-come involved, as well.

– Excerpts courtesy of Wreaths Across America. FMI, visit www.wreaths-across-america.org.

BISSONNETTE’SPlumbing • Heating • Core Drilling

134 Hersey Hill School RoadMinot, ME

966-3944 • 777-7267

Congratulationsto Jim and

Kevin on yourbeautiful new

facility.Bissonnette’s has been

serving the area communitiesfor over 20 years.

Our family owned businessspecializes in Plumbing,

Heating and Core Drilling.

with your new state of the art

facility and convenient location

York, PennsylvaniaLewiston, Maine

784-4211

CONGRATULATIONS

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S

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15Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 20072 Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 2007

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S

WreathsCONTINUED FROM PAGE 14

Page 15: Pinette & Lynch Open House 2007 Sun Journal

P I N E T T E & L Y N C H F U N E R A L H O M E A N D C R E M A T I O N S E R V I C E S

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16 Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine, Thursday, May 17, 2007

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