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D
Check Out The Advocate Online
CAT
CAT
ELEVATING THE SPIRIT OF CHRISTMAS
A
ATE
Vol. 25, No. 49 -FREE- www.advocatenews.net Published Every Friday 781-233-4446 Friday, December 9, 2022
Beginning
the marijuana
business in
Saugus
Companies are lining up to pursue special
permits to sell pot
By Mark E. Vogler
uditioning time has begun
for the companies
that want to get into the
business of selling recreational
pot in Saugus.
“I have spoken to at least
12 companies and have
moderated three community
meetings for the CCC
(state Cannabis Control
Commission),” Board of Selectmen
Chair Anthony Cogliano
said in an interview this
week.
“The three locations that
Saugus resident Sean Rock carried his two-year-old daughter Makenzie atop his shoulders
during last Friday’s (Dec. 2) Annual Tree Lighting event on the front lawn at Town Hall. Please
see inside for more photos and stories. (Saugus Advocate photo by Mark E. Vogler)
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DIESEL
TRUCK STOP
are public information at
this point are for the Oye
restaurant, the fi rst fl oor at
Out of Asia, and for All tune
and lube. There are several
others that haven’t been
named publicly and until
they do so I feel it’s my responsibility
to keep them
confidential at least until
they have their community
meetings,” Cogliano said.
Town Manager Scott C.
Crabtree has told selectmen
that he will be done with the
crafting of a Request For Information
(RFI) next week
and will give any and all applicants
30 days to apply, according
to Cogliano.
“After he fi nishes his analysis,
it will be up to the Board
of Selectmen to issue the S-2
permits,” Cogliano said.
“I hope we start the application
process in early February
as I see no need to
drag it out any further. It will
be interesting with so many
companies vying for three licenses.
We will pick the best
ones for our town,” he said.
New zoning regulations
approved by Town Meeting
earlier this year and later
validated by the state Attorney
General as constitutional
require that pot businesses
be located 1,000 feet
from the nearest school or
playground.
Crabtree, with the help
of town counsel, has been
drafting RFIs for pot businesses
interested in locating
in Saugus.
These would essentially be
proposals in which a company
provides information
about the location, its operational
plan, specifi cations for
the facility and a proposed
agreement with the town.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 9, 2022
Pearl Harbor Day Observance
A veteran’s donated flag gets posted at Heritage Heights
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n remembrance of Pearl
Harbor Day on December
7, John Cannon gifted the
Saugus Housing Authority’s
Heritage Heights with
a new U. S. Flag from U.S.
Congressman Seth Moulton.
Congressman Moulton
(D-Salem) arranged for each
Veteran to receive a U.S. flag
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The Saugus Housing Authority’s
Heritage Heights
got a new American flag on
Wednesday (Dec. 7), Pearl
Harbor Day. (Courtesy photo
to The Saugus Advocate by Joanie
Allbee)
that was flown over the U.S.
Capital for the attendees of
the Vietnam Era Veterans
Washington D.C. Road Trip.
Peter Genzali and Guy Moley
assisted with the changing
of the old flag. The new
flag was then lowered to
half-staff, in remembrance
of Pearl Harbor Day.
Every year, the nation observes
Pearl Harbor Day, or
National Pearl Harbor Remembrance
Day, to honor
the 2,403 service members
and civilians who were killed
during the Dec. 7, 1941, Japanese
attack on Pearl Harbor.
Editor’s
Note: Saugus resident
Joanie Allbee is a local
artist and frequent contributor
to The Saugus AdvoJohn
Cannon donated the new American flag that he had
received from U.S. Congressman Seth Moulton (D-Salem)
to the Saugus Housing Authority. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus
Advocate by Joanie Allbee)
THIS WEEK ON SAUGUS TV
Sunday, Dec. 11 from 9–11 p.m. on Channel 8 – “Sunday
Night Stooges” (The Three Stooges).
Monday, Dec. 12 all day on Channel 8 – “Movie Monday”
(classic movies).
Tuesday, Dec. 13 at 8:30 p.m. on Channel 9 – Library
Board of Trustees Meeting from Dec. 8.
Wednesday, Dec. 14 at 3 p.m. on Channel 22 – SHS Hockey
vs. Danvers from Dec. 9.
Thursday, Dec. 15 at 6 p.m. on Channel 9 – School Committee
Meeting ***live***.
Friday, Dec. 16 at 8:30 p.m. on Channel 22 – SHS Hockey
vs. Taunton from Dec. 14.
Saturday, Dec. 17 at 4:30 p.m. on Channel 22 – Girls Basketball
vs. Swampscott from Dec. 13.
Saugus TV can be seen on Comcast Channels 8, 9 & 22.
For complete schedules, please visit www.saugustv.org.
***programming may be subject to change without notice***
Peter
Genzali and Guy Moley fold the old flag that was replaced.
(Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate by Joanie Allbee)
cate. As the daughter of a Purple
Heart Recipient, she has
a special place in her heart
for the men and women who
serve in America’s Armed
Forces and loves to write articles
about local veterans
events.
׉	 7cassandra://Z_IyDpI_TrPG8aJZq81ZCora6JNFadCLmSvRKSMREoc/`̰ coD8K(i׉E=THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 9, 2022
~ Op-Ed ~
Page 3
The End of an Era for Saugus Hockey
By Dwayne Oxley
T
his is a time of year with
many traditions – Thanksgiving
and Thanksgiving Day
Football, Class Reunions,
Christmas, New Year’s and all
other family and friend gatherings;
however, this year, one
local tradition will be missing.
The Saugus High Boys Hockey
Sachems, a very proud,
successful and respected program,
has played its last game
as a stand-alone team. Saugus
High hockey had its inaugural
season back in 1946. The
team competed in the North
Shore Hockey League and later
the Northeastern conference,
and was a perennial contender
for those league titles.
Saugus was a Division 1 team
for a little more than half of
its history, and there was no
separation of public and private
schools come tournament
time. Teams had to win
75% of their games back then,
and Saugus qualifi ed for many
years. Division classifi cations
were transformed, and Saugus
and the other Northeastern
Conference teams began competing
in Division 2. Saugus
won State Championship titles
in 1999, 2003 and 2004 with
former SHS players coaching
those championship teams.
More recently, the team had
some deep tournament runs in
2011, 2012 and 2017. This past
season, after a five-year hiatus,
the Hockey Sachems qualifi
ed for the state tournament,
but an undermanned squad
valiantly bowed out in a fi rst
round 2OT loss. Saugus has always
been known as a hockey
town and its teams were characterized
by their hard work
and determination. So why will
there be no Saugus High Boys
Varsity Hockey Team this year?
Here are my thoughts on this
sad topic. I have had an insider’s
view for many years: a 1982
graduate of SHS, hockey Captain,
Hall of Fame Inductee and
an Assistant Coach for the past
six years. I had also coached an
independent Middle School
team (there was no school
funding available) for fi ve years
overlapping my fi rst year as a
varsity assistant coach. Prior
to that, I had coached Saugus
Youth Hockey for over 20 years,
working closely with the varsity
coaches to prepare players
to play at that level.
First, the youth hockey model
in Massachusetts is broken.
For many years, Saugus had
hundreds of kids playing Saugus
Youth Hockey. Years ago,
we had intramural town hockey
and travel team town hockey.
The intramural league gradually
faded away, but for many
years Saugus had multiple
(three to fi ve) travel teams at
each age group. The proliferation
of “select” hockey was the
end of many youth town hockey
programs. Once a league
for the truly “select” players, it
became a big business where
parents can shop their children
around until they fi nd a team
where they would get more
ice-time as a player on one of
the top two lines. Select hockey
became a very watered-down
product over the years, and
while some do off er excellent
coaching, many have less than
stellar coaching staffs. Many
parents believe they need to
have their children in these
select programs to keep pace
with other players in the children’s
age group, and to keep
that Division 1 college scholarship
dream alive. As players
moved from team to team each
new year, town teams dwindled,
and Saugus Youth HockRoller
World off ers reward for
information that leads to identify
vandal who damaged door
R
oller World, Inc. Owner
and President Gerald
T. Breen said he will offer
a reward for information
that leads to the identification
of the person or people
responsible for vandalizing
his front door on Saturday
night.
“They broke my front door
and it will cost us around
$1,000 to replace it,” Breen
said yesterday of his Rte. 1
south roller rink in Saugus.
He said the door was damaged
just before closing last
Saturday (Dec. 3). Saugus Police
said the door was broken
from the inside.
Police have no suspects
in connection with the incident.
But Breen said he plans
to review security film which
may show the suspects who
damaged the door. “ I think
it’s kids and we want to identify
them so we can put a
stop to this,” he said.
ey was a victim. SYH had been
a feeder to the high school
program. In years past, youth
hockey players grew up wanting
to play for Saugus High –
they weren’t thinking about
college scholarships. If you excelled
in high school, then you
set your sights on the possibility
of playing college hockey
(and many from Saugus
High have played at the collegiate
level). Because we have
no local youth program and
players are constantly changing
teams, there is no sense of
town or school pride, and certainly
no loyalty to the town or
Saugus High.
This leads to the second factor
impacting the demise of
SHS Boys varsity hockey. It is
the state of our public school
system in Saugus. The graduating
class of 1982 was roughly
370 students; the graduating
class in 2012 was 175 students,
and I believe the graduating
class this past year was
around 170. The town census
was 24,746 in 1980 and was
28,619 in 2020 – so the town is
growing, but we have far fewer
students attending our high
school. For the several years
that I was coaching the Saugus
Middle School team, I was
tracking where players went
to high school. More than half
(almost 65%) of those 80-plus
middle school players left the
school system for private-Catholic
schools. Hockey parents
can be a fanatical group – more
so than other sports. Perhaps it
is because of the cost, the travel
and less than ideal hours of
games and practice; and many
are looking for a return on their
investment. Division 1 college
hockey scholarships are a big
carrot for players and parents,
and many move their children
to private/catholic high
schools simply for the exposure
of playing for a Division
1 high school program. Many
parents would tell me it was
for academic reasons, and in
some cases, it may have been,
but many were for purely hockey
reasons. Unfortunately, because
the school system is not
well regarded, it was a convenient
reason to justify their decisions.
The school’s perception
may be worse than reality, but
it is hard to argue with subpar
standardized test scores
at most age levels. While test
scores may not be fully indicative
of a school system’s success,
it is consistent, comparative
data available to parents.
We have a beautiful new
school with all the modern
technology, but that alone is
not enough of a selling point
for parents. In addition to the
academics, parents reference
a lack or order and discipline.
Through stories from teachOP-ED
| SEE PAGE 8
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 9, 2022
Holiday Happenings and Blessings
Town continues a season of celebration and goodwill with the 12th Annual Christmas
Tree Festival at the mEG building in Cliftondale; Santa visits breakheart Sunday
By Mark E. Vogler
his weekend features two
major holiday events in Saugus
which have drawn good
crowds in recent years. Tonight
(Friday, Dec. 9) marks the second
weekend of The MEG FounT
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A Living Nativity will be on display this weekend at New Hope Assembly Church (9 Assembly
Dr., Saugus) tomorrow (Dec. 10, Saturday) and Sunday (Dec. 11), from 2 to 6 p.m.
(Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate)
ting zoo on the front lawn from
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Children who don’t get to
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can go to Breakheart ReserOur
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vation on Sunday (Dec. 11)
from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the
Christopher P. Dunne Visitor
Center (177 Forest St., Saugus).
Grownups are invited
with their children to drop by
Breakheart to meet Santa and
take a photo with him. Families
can also enjoy a few minutes
by the roaring fire, enjoying
the season and the majesty
of Breakheart. Santa will
give the children some candy
canes, and light refreshments
will be served. The Friends of
Breakheart Reservation and
the state Department of Conservation
& Recreation (DCR) is
sponsoring the event.
Here are some of the upcoming
holiday events planned
this month in Saugus:
New Hope Assembly Church
welcomes all to its Living Nativity
this weekend – Dec. 10
(Saturday) and 11 (Sunday)
from 2 to 6 p.m. Visitors to the
event will get to experience
live animals, complimentary
refreshments and festive music.
All are welcome and everything
is free! New Hope desires
those who come to be able to
take a break from the busyness
of the holiday season to
come breathe and share in the
joy of Christmas. Church leaders
invite Saugus residents to
visit the Living Nativity at 9 Assembly
Dr. in Saugus.
The Saugus High School
Band and Chorus will be performing
their winter concert
next week at the Saugus Middle/High
School Complex
Lemoine-Mitchell Auditorium.
The High School Band and
Chorus will perform on Tuesday,
Dec. 13 at 7 p.m. The Saugus
Band Parents Association
will have holiday raffle baskets
and will be accepting canned
goods in exchange for raffle
tickets. The canned goods will
benefit the Saugus United Parish
Food Pantry at the Cliftondale
Congregational Church.
Dec. 13 will also feature
the formal dedication of the
Lemoine-Mitchell Auditorium
at the Saugus Middle/High
School Complex, beginning
at 6:30 p.m. The auditorium
is being named after two renowned
performing arts educators
who taught at Saugus
High School for many years.
On Dec. 17 at noon, the
Parson Roby Chapter of the
Daughters of the American
Revolution (MA0136P) will
observe its second Wreaths
Across America event, helping
both Riverside Cemetery
and the Old Burying Ground
Cemetery to remember and
honor veterans by laying remembrance
wreaths on the
graves of our country’s fallen
heroes.
There will be the lighting of
the Menorah in front of Saugus
Town Hall on Monday,
Dec. 19 at Noon. Rabbi Yossi
will be leading the service.
This will mark the beginning
of Hanukkah, the eight-day
Jewish Celebration.
The Annual Saugus Christmas
Eve Parade organized by
the Saugus Police and Fire Departments
kicks off on Saturday,
Dec. 24.
Editor’s Note: Does your organization,
church or business
have plans for a holiday or holy
event that they would like to
publicize this month? Feel free
to email an announcement or
press release to mvoge@comcast.net,
headlined “Holiday
Happenings and Blessings.”
dation’s 12th Annual Christmas
Tree Festival, which gets underway
at 3 p.m. at the MEG Building
(54-58 Essex St.) and lasts
through 8 p.m. Tomorrow it will
span from 3 to 8 p.m. Santa will
arrive for photos from 4:30 to
6 p.m. There will also be a pet׉	 7cassandra://Qw142DPjpnWmmL49W-to34HOCKT0oq3Z16A9PtDTx0o/`̰ coD8K(k׉ETHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 9, 2022
Page 5
School Department plans dedication ceremony for
Lemoine-Mitchell Auditorium next Tuesday night
By Mark E. Vogler
S
augus Public Schools offi
cials will formally dedicate
the Lemoine-Mitchell
Auditorium at Saugus Middle/
High School on Dec. 13 at 6:30
p.m. The Saugus High School
Winter Concert will follow the
ceremony at 7 p.m. Nancy M.
Lemoine, a popular Saugus
High School drama teacher/
stage director and Jerome J.
Mitchell, a longtime director
of music education and the
Saugus High School band director,
will be honored posthumously.
They both passed
away in 2013.
“By being who they were,
they motivated and empowered
countless students to
go out into the world to affect
and inspire change,”
School Committee Member
Ryan Fisher said.
“It’s really extraordinary
that their work continues after
they’re gone, and I know
they will continue to inspire
so many future students in
this beautiful facility in the
years ahead,” he said.
The two Saugus educators
had previously been honored
with plaques in the
auditorium of the old Saugus
High School. And the
School Committee decided
to extend that honor into
the new building.
Lemoine, a lifelong resident
of Saugus, was a 1975
Saugus High School graduate.
She taught in Saugus
Public Schools from 1987
to 2013. She served as the
drama director and choral
director at Saugus High.
From 1995 to 1997, she also
served simultaneously as
the drama coach and choral
director at the Belmonte
Middle School. She developed
and supervised
several student groups, including
the Show Choir, vocal
quartets and a very successful
student improvisation
troupe called Needs Improvment.
“Nancy’s
greatest joy was
seeing her students grow
into the people she knew
they could be, through their
love of theater and music,”
says the plaque that honors
her.
“Her enthusiasm for life
continues to inspire us and
is a treasured legacy for the
students of yesterday, today
and tomorrow,” it continues.
Mitchell touched many
lives as an exceptional music
educator for the town from
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All items are
made from real
hockey gloves
and used sticks
All items may be
personalized
with engraved
name plate at no
additional cost
Personalized
Phone Holders
Nancy M. Lemoine (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate)
Contact us at puckstardisplays@gmail.com
Puck
Lamps
425r Broadway, Saugus
Located adjacent to Kohls Plaza Route 1 South
in Saugus at the intersection of Walnut St.
We are on MBTA Bus Route 429
781-231-1111
Jerome J. Mitchell (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate)
1949 to 1993. He served as
the leader of the 100th Division
Infantry Band that
toured Europe entertaining
troops during World War II.
After that service, he graduated
from Boston University.
He was soon named director
of the Saugus High School
Band, which evolved into
director of music education
for Saugus Public Schools.
“Mr. Mitchell developed
many musical groups and
squads in which the curriculum
resulted in students who
were inspired to achieve,”
says the plaque that honors
him. “They shared their
talents and musical culture
with confi dence in performances
and parades across
the USA and Canada in the
Music Exchange Program.
He believed in his students
which enabled him to believe
in themselves. Mr.
Mitchell’s passion for music
and teaching is an ongoing
legacy to share.”
Need a hall for your special event?
The Schiavo Club, located at
71 Tileston Street, Everett is
available for your Birthdays,
Anniversaries, Sweet 16 parties
and more?
Call Paul at
(617) 387-5457 for details.
We are a Skating Rink with
Bowling Alleys, Arcade and
two TV’s where the ball
games are always on!
PUBLIC SKATING SCHEDULE
12-8 p.m.
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
$9.00
Price includes Roller Skates
Rollerblades/inline skates $3.00 additional cost
Private Parties
7:30-11 p.m.
$10.00
Price includes Roller Skates
Adult Night 18+ Only
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday Everyone must pay admission after 6 p.m.
Private Parties
Private Parties
4-11 p.m.
Saturday
12-11 p.m.
$9.00
$9.00
Everyone must pay admission after 6 p.m.
Sorry No Checks - ATM on site
Roller skate rentals included in all prices
Inline Skate Rentals $3.00 additional
BIRTHDAY & PRIVATE PARTIES AVAILABLE
www.roller-world.com
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W9ׁHhttp://WWW.SABATINO-INS.COMׁׁЈ׉EPage 6
THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 9, 2022
The Kindness Quilt
How a classroom project at the Veterans Early Learning Center inspired the Hammersmith Quilters
Guild to craft a work of art
By Mark E. Vogler
E
arlier this year, 584 students
at the Veterans Early
Learning Center produced
a giant quilt that oozed with
love from the colored paper
patchworked hearts that were
glued together as a “kindness
quilt” and later presented to
the Saugus Senior Center.
“We were so impressed and
thrilled by this random act of
kindness,” Senior Center Director
Laurie Davis recalled.
“We hung the quilts on the
walls of the Senior Center,
where they stayed until the
Quilters Guild approached us
and asked if they could borrow
the quilt. They wanted to
return the kindness by turning
the color paper squares into
fabric squares and make the
Veteran’s school a fabric quilt
from the squares the children
colored,” she said.
On Wednesday, about 10
months after the kids’ paper
quilt was presented to the Senior
Center, Margie Berkowitch
– the most-veteran member
of the Hammersmith Quilters
Guild who designed and
coordinated the creation of
the cloth quilt – presented it
to four representatives of the
Learning Center.
“We just wanted to bring
some joy to the Senior Center,”
School Counselor Jenna Newhall
said in an interview on
Wednesday (Dec. 7) night after
dinner and a special presentation
by the local quilters guild.
“I never imagined it would
Pictured from left to right: Collaborating on a quilt, from paper to fabric, were Margie Berkowitch
of the Hammersmith Quilters Guild; Veterans Early Learning Center staff Jenna Newhall,
Lorraine Devine, Alison Belyea and Julie Covey and Saugus Senior Center Director
Laurie Davis. (Saugus Advocate photo by Mark E. Vogler)
get to this. In fact, I never knew
that there was a quilt guild.
This was a beautiful thing that
they did, returning the kindness
and love in return for the
quilt we sent,” she said.
Lorraine Devine, a special
The fabric “Kindness Quilt”
crafted by Margie Berkowitch
and other members of
the Hammersmith Quilters
Guild was on display in the
Saugus Senior Center on
Wednesday night (Dec. 7) after
it was presented to representatives
of the Veterans
Early Learning Center. (Saugus
Advocate photo by Mark E.
Vogler)
Senior Center Director Laurie
Davis admires the paper
“Kindness Quilt” that was
displayed on the walls of the
Saugus Senior Center for several
months this year. (Courtesy
photo to The Saugus Advocate)
education
teacher; Alison Belyea,
a fi rst grade teacher; and
Julie Covey, a kindergarten
teacher, were the other Early
Learning Center staff who
were treated to a potluck dinner
prepared by the Quilters
Guild on Wednesday night.
“Something from the
heart”
When people think of the
Hammersmith Quilters Guild,
they think of 86-year-old Margie
Berkowitch – a native Saugonian
who was born in a
house on Wickford Street and
graduated from Saugus High
School in 1954. The quilters
guild has been in existence
since 1982. Margie joined it in
1988. She served in about every
position in the 120-member
organization, which draws
members from several communities
in the area. Margie
is the guild’s oldest and most
veteran member, and she’s
won a lot of prizes for her
quilts over the years. She estimates
she’s made more than
115 quilts. She doesn’t sell
them and gives many of them
away as gifts.
At some point in late winter,
the paper quilts from the
young students – which were
displayed on three diff erent
walls – caught her eye. “When
I looked at them, they looked
like a quilt,” Margie said.
“I was so inspired by this,
I presented the idea to the
guild. It was something from
the heart that I was inspired
to do by these young children;
hopefully, they will continue
to learn and be kind,” she said.
“What the kids did has defi -
nitely touched our hearts.
Look around and you can see
the ‘Be Kind’ signs on the walls
here, which were inspired by
these children. Sometimes,
QUILT | SEE PAGE 7
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Page 7
“The Old Sachem”
New, Good & Bad
By Bill Stewart
T
here is a lot of good news
among our professional
and amateur teams this
week. The USA World Cup
soccer team fought their way
through the fi rst round by accumulating
5 points while
Iran got 3 and Wales got 1.
The USA defeated Iran, 1-0,
and tied England and Wales at
1-1 each. Two stars of the USA
combined to score the tying
goal against Wales: Christian
Pulisic and Tim Weah led the
way against Wales, and Pulisic
scored against Iran for
the victory. The battle with
England resulted in a 0-0
tie, and the Americans advanced
to the round of 16,
beating Iran. In the second
round, they faced the Netherlands,
and the results were
not so good, the USA losing
3-1. Pulisic was again a hero
– crossed to Haji Write, who
smacked it in for the goal. A
majority of the USA players
play in professional leagues
in Europe – playing for Arsenal
and Chelsea, in the Premier
England League, which I
watch every Saturday; Borussia
Dortmund in Germany,
A.C. Milan and Juventus in Italy
and Spain – so our squad
certainly has the experience
although they were the second
least aged team of the
32. We look forward to 2026
when we again get a chance
to root for the USA.
Continuing among the loQUILT
| FROM PAGE 6
adults have little problems;
hopefully, they will look at
the sign and enjoy the day,”
she said.
Margie said she presented
the idea to the guild members,
who embraced it. She then
presented them with a piece
of fabric with the same dimensions
and asked members to
duplicate them – the same
way they were colored by the
students. Then, she gathered
about 300 small quilts to make
one big one.
Nancy Sandreuter did the
machine quilting. Margie oversaw
the whole project. She
said it took her about three
weeks to complete the quilt,
“working each day, a little bit
of the time, to fi nish it off .”
Laurie Davis has a personal
QUILT | SEE PAGE 9
Margie Berkowitch holds the
cloth “Kindness Quilt” that
she was inspired to create
after seeing the paper quilt
crafted by the students of the
Veterans Early Learning Center.
(Saugus Advocate photo by
Mark E. Vogler)
cal winners are the Boston
Bruins, who have set a record
for consecutive home
wins with 14, which rarely has
been done in the long history
of the NHL. David Pastrňák,
Brad Marchand and
Patrice Bergeron lead the offense,
and Charlie McAvoy
is an all-star on defense and
scores a few goals when the
situation is right. The Bruins
on Sunday were 20 wins and
only 3 losses leading the Eastern
Conference, and they are
one point behind New Jersey,
who have played 2 more
games.
Now we move to the Celtics,
who lead the Eastern Conference
of the NBA with an 18
and 5 record. They lead by 5
½ games over the next team,
Brooklyn. Jayson Tatum leads
the squad; Jaylen Brown has
come up with big games; and
Derrick White is improving
every game.
Holy Cross has a playoff
win, beating UNH, 35-10, in
the second round. They will
meet South Dakota State in
the quarter fi nals next week.
St. Mary’s in Lynn and St.
John’s Prep are both State
Champions in their divisions.
Lastly, we look at the inglorious.
The Patriots are in trouble.
It looks like they must
win all of their games to make
the playoffs. They go west
to battle Arizona and stay
west to take on Las Vegas,
two teams they just might
beat on the road. They come
“The Old Sachem,”
Bill Stewart
home to face Cincinnati and
Miami, before ending at Buffalo.
Even if they win the fi rst
two, I have doubts about the
last three.
Their game against Buff alo
was a disaster. The score was
only 24-10, but after the fi rst
period they fell apart. The
questions concern the off ensive
coached by Matt Patricia
and Joe Judge in that they
don’t appear to be at the level
of their predecessor, Josh McDaniels.
The pair have never
coached off ense or quarterbacks,
so the chance of success
is nearly nil. Add that the
off ensive line doesn’t seem
to protect the quarterback
or provide holes for the runs,
and the value sinks to zero.
Watching Mac Jones swearing
to the linemen on the
bench wasn’t pretty. I will still
watch the Pats hoping for a
turnaround but don’t really
expect to see one.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 9, 2022
‘Johnny the K was Absolutely Fabulous’
Super Shout Outs to Saugus Cultural Council and Veterans Early Learning Center PTO
A
huge thank you to the
Saugus Cultural Council
and the VELC PTO for
bringing the amazing enrichment
to the Veterans
Early Learning Center. Johnny
the K was absolutely fabulous.
The Veterans Early
Learning Center loved
listening to and interacting
with Johnny the K! We
would not have been able
to bring this wonderful enrichment
program to the
school if it was not for you.
Johnny the K performs for kids at the Veterans Early Learning Center. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate by Kelley Donahue)
SAVE THE DATE - Saugus High Class BBQ - August 26, 2023 at the Saugus Elks Grove
T
he Saugus High Class BBQ
being held by Pete Nicolo
and Mike Allan. ALL SAUGUS
HIGH CLASSES WELCOMED.
An early invite to assist
some of our classmates,
friends and family members
that may have to make travel
plans to attend.
Most of us have kept in
touch with some of our classmates/friends
throughout
the years. But what about the
classmates/friends that you
would love to see and have
not seen in decades? This is
what made our recent Saugus
High Class BBQ this past September
such a success.
Use this event to reach out
to anyone you would like to
see!
This past Saugus High Class
BBQ had some classmates
traveling from places as far
away as - England, Hawaii,
California, Florida, North Carolina
and other parts of US.
Many old friendships were
rekindled, while new friendships
with old Classmates
were made. Some friends/
classmates had not seen each
other in decades (over 40
years), while so many from
surrounding classes mingled
OP-ED | FROM PAGE 3
together and had a blast.
Don’t wait any longer to
see your Saugus High Class
friends – please join us!
PHOTOS ARE FROM THIS
PAST SEPTEMBER 24TH, 2022
CLASS BBQ HELD AT THE SAUGUS
ELKS
ers within the Middle School/
High School, many students
seem to lack basic respect for
teachers and authority figures,
and there seems to be
little to no consequences for
students who break rules and
are disruptive to others. I have
seen this flow over to sports
as well. All of the above make
it easy for parents to decide to
opt for a private school education
if they have the means
to do so. I am forever grateful
for the education I received
from the Saugus school system.
I can name every teacher
I had in every grade – because
they all had a positive impact
on my life. I hope we can make
changes to keep more students
in our school system,
and that those students are
afforded the opportunity for
a successful and rewarding
high school experience.
For now, the remaining
hockey players at Saugus
High will join forces with Peabody
High (Peabody did not
have a team last year), and the
two schools will compete as a
Co-op team in the Northeastern
Conference this season. A
Co-op is a two to three year
commitment, so there may
be an opportunity down the
road for SHS to have its own
Boys Varsity Hockey team
again. Best wishes to the new
Co-op team for much success.
Finally, thanks to all former
SHS Sachems Hockey players
and coaches for 76 years
of memorable high school
hockey.
׉	 7cassandra://ebK85JEaxxwQv7gMUoLTRA0swapFqYWQjGEvI5n_a0w/F`̰ coD8K(o׉ETHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 9, 2022
Page 9
MALDEN CATHOLIC STUDENTS FROM SAUGUS ACHIEVE HONOR
ROLL – FIRST QUARTER 2022
S
AUGUS, MA. (December 5, 2022) – Malden Catholic students have completed
the coursework required for the fi rst quarter of the 2022-2023 school year.
The school has three categories for outstanding academic performance honors:
President’s List (90 - 100 in all classes), First Honors (85 to 89 in all classes),
and Second Honors (80 to 84 in all classes.)
Malden Catholic Honors – QUARTER ONE
President’s List (90 to 100 in all classes)
Ethan Addazio
Isabella Da Silva
President’s List ............ Saugus, MA
President’s List ............ Saugus, MA
Rachael Burke President’s List ............. Saugus, MA
Caio Cruz
President’s List ............ Saugus, MA
Autumn Ingemi President’s List ............. Saugus, MA
Joseph Laudanno President’s List ............. Saugus, MA
Sabrina Magliozzi
Leyna Nguyen
Lily Nguyen
Vincent Nguyen
Olivia Sullivan
Marina Youssef
Robert Crivello
Hailey Fern
Mia Fronduto
Lucas La Verde
QUILT | FROM PAGE 7
connection to the children’s
paper quilt. Her granddaughter
– Isabella Bluestein, 6, a fi rst
grader at the Early Learning
Center – worked on the quilt
with her classmates. “For me,
it was heart-warming to see
the kids do that with the paper
quilt,” Laurie said.
“And now, it was even more
heartwarming to see Margie
turn the paper quilt into a
cloth quilt,” she said.
How the school
project evolved
Jenna Newhall, a Lynn native,
has been an educator for
six years – the last fi ve in Saugus
Public Schools. As a school
counselor since 2019, it was
her idea to get students from
all levels at the school – preschool,
kindergarten and fi rst
grade – involved in a project
that would do good for
the community. “It was really
a school eff ort – building up
kindness in the classroom and
bringing community into the
classroom. It was really built
on the idea of trying to help
all people,” Jenna said.
“So, the students in all of the
classrooms at all of the grade
levels participated by doing a
small quilt. We took all of the
squares and glued them to
large pieces of bulletin board
President’s List ............. Saugus, MA
President’s List .............. Saugus, MA
President’s List ............ Saugus, MA
President’s List ............. Saugus, MA
Yasmin Saroufi m President’s List .............. Saugus, MA
Steven Streeter
President’s List ............ Saugus, MA
President’s List ............ Saugus, MA
Nicole Uribe Lopez President’s List ............. Saugus, MA
Xinyang Xie
Ryan Young
President’s List ............. Saugus, MA
President’s List ............. Saugus, MA
President’s List .............. Saugus, MA
First Honors (85 to 89 in all classes)
Elias Abourjaili
First Honors ............... Saugus, MA
First Honors ............... Saugus, MA
Michael DiGirolamo First Honors ................ Saugus, MA
Ava Duarte
First Honors ................ Saugus, MA
First Honors ................ Saugus, MA
First Honors ................ Saugus, MA
First Honors ................ Saugus, MA
paper. Our goal for the project
was to get their artwork
into the Senior Center. I wanted
all of the kids to see how
their little parts became one,”
she said.
“This was a massive art
project that was inspired by
kindness and helping someone.
Since coming back from
COVID-19, we’ve all had some
challenges. So, this was a
great spot for us to be in, and
it worked out beautifully for
everyone,” she said.
Jenna cited two children’s
books that she says inspired
the start of the project: “Share
Some Kindness, Bring Some
Light” by Apryl Stott and “The
Kindness Quilt” by Nancy Elizabeth
Wallace. “We knew as a
school community, we wanted
to do something that
would show our youngest
learners that you can always
be a helper and make a diff erence,
no matter who you are,”
she said. “These books provided
beautiful inspiration and
gave us a place to start.”
Jenna said she hopes to be
able to return the favor soon
by having members of the
Quilters Guild visit the Early
Learning Center so they can
meet some of the students
and also be honored in an educational
setting.
“This is just so amazing – so
much kindness all around,” Davis
said.
John Paul Lowrey
Ally Marino
First Honors .................... Saugus, MA
First Honors ................... Saugus, MA
Gianluca Sapienza First Honors .................... Saugus, MA
Alina Truong
First Honors ................... Saugus, MA
First Honors .................. Saugus, MA
Isla Anderson
Olivia Arsenault
Ivan Compres
Second Honors ............ Saugus, MA
Second Honors ............ Saugus, MA
Second Honors ........... Saugus, MA
Second Honors ........... Saugus, MA
Emily Uribe Lopez First Honors .................. Saugus, MA
Molly Warner
Second Honors (80 to 84 in all classes)
Nikolas Agganis
Christopher Femino Second Honors .......... Saugus, MA
Benjamin Hurley Second Honors ........... Saugus, MA
Maximus Iturrondo Second Honors .......... Saugus, MA
Roomy Modestin Second Honors ........... Saugus, MA
Richard Pesaturo
Diego Portal
Kenneth Ramirez
Ashley Reardon
Second Honors .......... Saugus, MA
Second Honors .......... Saugus, MA
Second Honors .......... Saugus, MA
Second Honors .......... Saugus, MA
Nicholas Sambataro Second Honors ......... Saugus, MA
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federal insurance limit of $250,000.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 9, 2022
Great weather and Holiday Spirit draw large crowd
to Saugus Center for Annual Tree Lighting event
A
large crowd showed up
early to Saugus Center
last Friday (Dec. 2) for the
town’s Annual Christmas Tree
Lighting and Festivities. Hundreds
gathered on the lawn
outside Saugus Town Hall to
enjoy more than three and a
half hours of community fun
and fellowship that featured
the arrival of Santa Claus, the
popular petting zoo, hot chocolate,
continuous holiday music,
horse-drawn sleigh rides,
bounce houses, a trackless
train, a booth for kids to get
their photos taken with Santa
Claus and a display of thousands
of colorful holiday lights
in downtown Saugus to welcome
the holiday season. Guy
Moley brightened the holiday
spirits of many Saugus kids
and their parents as he played
the part of Santa Claus for this
year’s event.
(Saugus Advocate photos by
Mark E. Vogler).
Santa’s horse-drawn sleigh arrived in front of the Saugus
Public Library.
Emily Grant and Crystal Cakounes of the Park & Recreation
Department hammed it up at the hot chocolate table.
Santa addressed the crowd.
Brian Cross did the honors
again, as the DJ of the night,
playing holiday music.
Santa made his way toward Saugus Town Hall.
Town Manager Scott C. Crabtree
introduced Santa Claus.
We’re Back!!
North Shore black Women’s Assoc. Annual
mLK Luncheon Jan. 14
T
he North Shore Black Women’s
Association, Inc. is holding its
annual Dr. Rev. Martin Luther King
Jr. Luncheon.Details: Saturday, January
14, 2023, at Anthony’s (105 Canal
St., Malden, Mass.) from 11 a.m.2
p.m. Keynote Speaker: Chief Lester
Baker, Framingham Police Department,
Framingham, Mass. Honorees:
Building Bridges Through
Music, Inc., Lynn, Mass., and Eastern
Middlesex Alcoholism Services, Inc.,
Malden, Mass.
Tickets will not be sold at the door. To
purchase tickets, please visit Eventbrite
at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/
the-28th-annual-rev-dr-martin-luther-king-jr-memorial-luncheon-tickets-440919902297.
There are limited
seats with a capacity of 200 people.
Tickets are $60/per person. No walkins
allowed!
Please visit our website (www.nsbwa.org)
or email nsbwainc@gmail.com.
We look forward to seeing you
there!
The COVID-19 Update
Town reports 31 newly-confirmed cases;
no new deaths
By Mark E. Vogler
T
here were 31 newly-confirmed
COVID-19 cases in Saugus over
the past week through Wednesday
(Dec. 7).
The new cases reported by the
state Department of Public Health
(DPH) over the past week increased
the overall total to 10,177 confirmed
cases since the outbreak of the global
pandemic in March of 2020, according
to Town Manager Scott C.
Crabtree.
There were no new COVID-19-related
deaths over the past week, as the
death toll remained at 100.
“Our hearts and prayers go out to
those families affected by this health
pandemic,” Crabtree said.
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Page 11
Olivia Clark, a fifth-grader at
the Belmonte STEAM Academy,
cuddles a rabbit while
a speckled Sussex bantam
chicken competes for her attention.
The
Saugus Board of Selectmen and Town Manager Scott C. Crabtree gather around the
Christmas tree in the first floor of Saugus Town Hall.
Ada MacQueston, 2, tries to
make friends with a goat at
the Petting Zoo.
Kids reach out to a goat at the Petting Zoo.
Youth and Recreation Department Director Crystal
Cakounes, Santa Claus and Town Manager
Scott C. Crabtree huddle on the top steps of Saugus
Town Hall.
Joleen Jurczyk, of the Animal Craze Traveling
Farm & Petting Zoo, holds her favorite pet: Steven
Strange, the Goat.
Anna Bartmon-Vigneaux, a third-grader at the Belmonte STEAM
Academy, was thrilled to meet Santa.
Precinct 2 Town Meeting
Member Joe Vecchione with
his daughter Amelia, 2 1/2
Dante Miller, a fourth-grader at the Belmonte STEAM Academy,
got to be the first kid to greet Santa.
Precinct 4 Town Meeting Member Maureen Whitcomb with
her son Andrew
Sean Rock carried his daughter
Makenzie, 2, atop his
shoulders.
Brody Crabtree, 9, a fourth-grader at the Belmonte STEAM
Academy, was happy to hang around with Santa.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 9, 2022
Sixty trees to choose from at 12th Annual Marleah E. Graves
Foundation Festival of Trees – extending into this weekend
By Tara Vocino
A
pproximately 50 people
attended last Friday’s
Opening Night of the
12th Annual Festival of Trees
at the Marleah E. Graves (MEG)
Building. According to MEG
Foundation board member
Janice Jarosz, there are approximately
60 trees to raffle off,
with eight new themes this year,
with the majority of them being
children-oriented. Retired Fire
Captain William O’Malley plans
to donate three trees to needy
families.
Originally a school in the
1800s taught by Marleah E.
Graves, whose spirit is rumored
to tour the grounds, the building
now hosts parties, weddings,
baby showers, coalitions
and a recovery group and has
tenants living upstairs. MEG
Foundation board member Linda
Ross said the proceeds from
the two-week event will go
toward upkeep of the building.
Many guests came in between
the town’s Tree Lighting
ceremony on the common last
Friday night.
Belmonte STEAM Academy
fifth-grader Arianna Moscato,
her mother, Barbara, and her
brother, Angelo, all of Saugus,
wished to take home a “Merry
Christmas” tree for its “snow,”
ribbon and other decorations.
Lisa and Martin Walfield were
hoping to take home the “Mickey
& Minnie Christmas Tree,”
which was donated by the Saugus
Lions Club, because they are
Disney fans. The tree featured all
things Disney, including classic
Minnie and Mickey Mouse ears,
stuffed animals and accessories.
Stephen Chapman was hoping
to win the “Wican Yuletide”
tree. “I like the tarot cards, the
top hat and the wooden star,”
Chapman said.
Santa is expected to arrive
from the North Pole on Saturday
night along with a petting
zoo. Hours are 3 to 8 p.m., Friday
and Saturday. Santa will
be present from 4:30 to 6 p.m.,
along with a petting zoo on
the front lawn from 5 to 7 p.m.
Brought back after a COVID-19
pandemic hiatus, a wine and
cookie bar will also serve as a
fundraiser for the Foundation,
with proceeds going toward
the cause. Winners can pick up
trees on Sunday from 8 a.m. to
1 p.m.
Pictured from left to right: Saugus residents Christine Saia, their son Nicholas III, their daughter
Violet, and her husband, Nicholas, donated the “North Shore Christian School” tree (for
a nondenominational school). They liked how the ornaments represent different names
for Jesus through biblical verses. The winner will receive the tree as well as a $50 Fandango
movie pass.
Sharon Hobby was hoping to win the “Mango Realty Inc.” tree
on Saturday, because she likes Cookie Monster.
The ornaments each had a
different name for Jesus.
MEG Foundation Board Member Anthony Speziale poured
a glass of cabernet during Friday’s opening night of the Festival
of Trees at the MEG Foundation building. Donations go
toward the MEG Foundation.
Pictured from left to right: Belmonte STEAM Academy fifth-grader Arianna Moscato, her
mother, Barbara, and her brother, Angelo, all of Saugus. They liked the “snow,” ribbon and
other decorations on this “Merry Christmas” tree, which they hope to win.
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Page 13
Mrs. Claus (at left) and the Sparkle the Elf by the “Bill McAdoo” tree, which was
named in memory of a former board member who passed away.
Lisa and Martin Walfield were eyeing the “Mickey and Minnie Christmas
Tree,” which was donated by the Saugus Lions Club, because they are Disney
fans.
The display of trees on Saturday night at the Festival of Trees.
Guests enjoyed the sparkly nature of this tree, which had
jewelry pieces instead of traditional ornaments.
On Friday, Stephen Chapman was hoping to win the “Wican
Yuletide” tree, because he liked the tarot cards, top hat and
wooden star.
Pictured from left to right: MEG Foundation Board Members Janice Jarosz and Laurie Davis.
Davis, who is also the Senior Center’s Director, said they put some certificates for Senior
Center line dancing, weightlifting and chair yoga classes as ornaments.
Saugus residents
Jeanine Ruszkowski
and Michele Cannizzaro
are pictured
by the “Paparazzi”
tree. (Paparazzi is a
national accessories
vendor.) They liked
the sparkling aspect
of the tree
On Saturday, Jennifer McMasters (at left) and Leanne Wirling
said this tree could be up all year-long, adding that it’s
unique.
(Advocate photos by
Tara Vocino)
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 9, 2022
BBB Tip: Safe online holiday shopping for parents
H
oliday shopping is
in full swing. Many
shoppers are skipping
the stores and heading online
to purchase gifts for their
children, continuing the trend
for several years. How can you
get your holiday shopping
done safely and efficiently?
The following tips, some of
which are from the National
Programs’ Children’s Advertising
Review Unit (CARU) team
of the better Business Bureau
(BBB), will help.
How to safely choose gifts
for kids online
• Guard your privacy (and
your child’s privacy, too!). Plenty
of online retailers offer “hot
toys 2022” lists, but it’s wise to
proceed with caution when
shopping for the season’s hottest
toys. Stores choose toys
they think will sell out quickly,
but they don’t always take a
toy’s safety or data collection
practices into consideration.
Make sure toys are safe and
have good privacy policies
before you buy.
• Purchase apps and connected
toys from Federal
Trade Commission–approved
Safe Harbor member companies
(https://www.ftc.gov/
enforcement/coppa-safe-harbor-program).
Make sure that
none of your child’s personal
information will be collected
without your explicit consent.
Choose apps and toys from
companies that display seals
on their website and toys
from the CARU or another
Safe Harbor.
• Examine toy descriptions
carefully. It’s easy to miss
specific details about toys
when you can’t examine
them in person, so take your
time reading toy descriptions
online. Pay close attention
to age recommendations,
potential choking hazards,
exactly what comes with the
toy and what accessories
you might need to purchase
separately.
• Read plenty of reviews
before you buy. Another good
way to get to know a toy
without actually seeing it first
is to read other consumers’
reviews. Pay close attention to
both positive and negative reviews.
Reviewing videos can
help you better understand
what a toy is like and how it
works. But keep in mind that
many reviewers, bloggers, influencers,
etc., share opinions
that should be taken with a
grain of salt as these individuals
might be getting paid to
post their reviews.
• Keep in mind age recommendations.
Take age
recommendations seriously
since toys meant for teenagers
could be dangerous
for younger children. When
shopping online, age recommendations
might not be
THE BOWERY PRESENTS ANNOUNCES
SPRING 2023 OPENING OF THE
STAGE AT SUFFOLK DOWNS
8500 Capacity Seasonal Outdoor Concert Venue to
Open on Site of Historic East boston racetrack
B
oston, MA (DECEMBER
2022) – Following
the opening of
their newest venue, Roadrunner,
The Bowery Presents
– in partnership with The
HYM Investment Group LLC
(“HYM”) – announces plans
to open a seasonal outdoor
general admission concert
venue at Suffolk Downs,
the legendary East Boston
racetrack.
The Stage at Suffolk
Downs, located in the infield
of The Track at 525 William F
McClellan Highway, will host
up to 8,500 concert goers
beginning spring 2023.
“The Bowery Presents has
always focused on creating
and operating venues where
both fans and artists alike
can have a great experience.
We are confident Suffolk
Downs will join Roadrunner,
The Sinclair and Royale as a
beloved concert venue in
Greater Boston, delivering
on our commitment to keep
the music first,” said Josh
Bhatti, Vice President and
head of the Boston office
of The Bowery Presents, an
AEG Presents Company.
“The Bowery Presents is
honored to have the opportunity
to work alongside
the HYM team to bring The
Stage at Suffolk Downs to
fruition.”
The Stage at Suffolk
Downs is not the track’s
first foray into live music:
The Beatles were the first
band to perform there,
playing to 25,000 screaming
fans in 1966. Since
then, legendary artists
such as The Jackson 5,
Radiohead and Bjork have
also performed. With The
Stage at Suffolk Downs,
The Bowery Presents plans
to honor the site’s musical
legacy, while reinvigorating
the space to bring an
open-air summer concert
experience to all.
“Suffolk Downs has been
thoughtfully designed as
a place that brings people
together and connects
communities,” said Thomas
N. O’Brien, Managing
Partner and Chief Executive
Officer of HYM. “We are
thrilled to partner with
The Bowery Presents who
will help us continue to realize
this vision as we bring
the proud history of live
music back through The
Stage at Suffolk Downs.”
The opening of The Stage
at Suffolk Downs will expand
The Bowery Presents’
owned and operated
venues to three within
the Boston area, joining
the 3,500 capacity Roadrunner
(which opened in
Brighton in March 2022)
and 525 capacity The Sinclair
in Cambridge, (which
just celebrated its 10th
anniversary) alongside the
Royale (exclusively booked
by The Bowery Presents
with 1,200 capacity), and
the company’s hundreds
of annual concert bookings
in theaters and arenas
in the region. The Bowery
Presents is the leading concert
promotion and venue
management company in
the Northeast with venues
in Boston, New York, Philadelphia,
and Maine.
The Stage at Suffolk
Downs’ opening lineup will
be announced at a later
date. Fans are encouraged
to follow along on Instagram
and Facebook, and online
at stageatsuffolkdowns.
com. For a full calendar of
The Bowery Presents’ events
in Boston, visit BoweryBoston.com.
readily
apparent, so do plenty
of research before you make
a purchase.
• Watch out for in-app advertisements.
Many toys
come with connected apps.
These, along with gaming
apps for kids, likely feature
in-app advertisements. Some
in-app ads might be inappropriate
for children. CARU
offers excellent suggestions
for educating your children
about in-app advertising
and what to watch out for as
a parent.
• Double-check small business
web security. Supporting
small businesses this holiday
season is an excellent way to
give back, but remember that
many small businesses pivoted
from making in-person
sales to online sales back in
2020. Some small businesses
might not have the resources
or technical know-how to set
up secure online purchasing.
Call and ask about in-store
purchase hours if a small business
website seems less than
secure. Check BBB’s online
shopping guide.
• Don’t fall for phishing
scams. This year scammers
are looking to trip consumers
up with many phishing
scams. These include compromised
account messages,
fake retail coupons, emails
claiming there’s been a problem
with package delivery,
and more. Read up on phishing
scams to avoid falling
prey.
For more information
To learn more about safe
online shopping, read BBB’s
online shopping resources
(https://www.bbb.org/all/
online-shopping). In addition,
be sure to read BBB’s tips
for avoiding delivery scams.
When possible, shop from
businesses that adhere to BBB
Standards for Trust.
Postal Service Closed
Monday, Dec. 26, and
Monday, Jan. 2
W
ASHINGTON —
This year, Christmas
and New
Year’s Day fall on Sunday,
when Post Office locations
nationwide are already closed.
As a result, all Post Offices will
be closed for the observation
of both federal holidays on
Monday, Dec. 26, 2022 and
Monday, Jan. 2, 2023.
There are no residential or
business deliveries on Dec. 26
and Jan. 2 except for Priority
Mail Express, which is delivered
365 days a year in select
locations for an additional fee.
All Post Office locations will be
open for business and regular
mail delivery will resume after
the holidays on Tuesday, Dec.
27 and Tuesday, Jan. 3.
Some Post Offices may have
extended hours leading up to
the holidays, while others may
have limited hours on Christmas
Eve, Saturday, Dec. 24.
There are currently no plans
for limited hours on New Year’s
Eve, Saturday, Dec. 31. Customers
are advised to always
check with their local Post
Office for hours of operation.
Blue collection boxes with
final collection times before
noon will not be affected by an
early closing Dec. 24. If a box
normally has a final collection
time after noon, its mail may
be picked up earlier that day.
For mail pickup on Dec. 24,
customers are asked to either
put their mail into blue collection
boxes by noon regardless
of the final collection times
posted on the box or take their
items to one of our more than
34,000 Post Office locations.
Customers who are unable
to mail items before the
scheduled collection box pickup
times on Dec. 24 should
visit the online Postal Locator
tool at tools.usps.com to find
Post Office locations that may
be open late.
As a reminder, blue collection
boxes are not serviced on
Sundays or holidays.
The Postal Service generally
receives no tax dollars
for operating expenses and
relies on the sale of postage,
products and services to fund
its operations.
For Advertising
with RESULTS,
call The Advocate
Newspapers
at
781-233-4446
or
info@advocatenews.net
׉	 7cassandra://q82vRUOHtLqrZoriKBPor7FIxVRVxcTIFva4GPmbymE)`̰ coD8K(u׉EsTHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 9, 2022
Page 15
Saugus Gardens in the Fall
Here’s what’s blooming in town this week to make your walks more enjoyable
By Laura Eisener
I
n a month full of holidays,
December is apt to be busy
indoors and out. Decorations
are up everywhere you
look. Friday’s tree-lighting, and
the figures that appeared only
for that day on the town hall
and library lawns, provided a
festive spectacle enjoyed by a
good-sized crowd. Monday, December
12 is National Poinsettia
Day! The plant we call poinsettia
(Euphorbia pulcherrima)
is named after Joel Roberts
Poinsett, a botanist who was
named minister to Mexico by
President John Quincy Adams
in 1825, because he brought
the plant back from Mexico
to his estate in South Carolina.
Poinsett died on December 12,
1851, so this date was chosen to
commemorate the plant when
it became a very popular flower
about two centuries later. The
Ecke family of Encinitas, California,
made poinsettias popular
as a Christmas decoration in
the 1960s. Amazingly, since
they are not usually sold outside
of the Christmas season,
they have now become the
best-selling potted plant in the
United States.
For a period of time, it was
believed that poinsettias were
deadly poisonous to people
and pets, but after further study
scientists are agreed that it is
not deadly. Sometimes it can
create nausea and diarrhea,
but the human and animal
patients recover with no lasting
ill effects.
What most people consider
the flower is actually a whorl
of colorful bracts, or specialized
leaves, which surround
the cluster of small yellowish
or orangish flowers. The
bracts can retain their color
for months, and it is possible
to get them to rebloom under
the right circumstances. When
I was growing up, my best
friend’s mother impressed me
by getting several plants to
bloom another year by keeping
them in a dark room at night to
stimulate the color production.
They normally bloom in rural
areas where there is no intense
artificial light, so the nights are
longer than the daylight hours.
After about two months of
this, some leaves near the tips
should start turning red. Sometimes
home-grown poinsettias
do not have as good a flower
shape as commercial ones, but
it is quite an accomplishment
to get the plants to rebloom
because it needs consistent
treatment at the appropriate
time to get flowers and colorful
bracts by the Christmas season.
While poinsettia is a warm
climate plant that would not
survive cold weather outdoors
in Saugus, many of the trees
and shrubs that serve as popular
holiday decorations thrive
in our climate. Evergreens with
needle foliage, known as conifers
because they produce
seeds inside cones, are especially
popular decorations.
Broadleaf evergreens, which
keep their leaves all winter but
are not closely related to conifers,
can also be very popular
decorations at this time of year.
Holly (Ilex spp.) and English ivy
(Hedera helix) are the subjects
of a popular Christmas carol.
While many holly species are
known for their evergreen foliage,
a local deciduous holly is
also a very popular decoration.
Winterberry (Ilex verticillata)
has vivid red berries that remain
through much of the winter.
It is a locally native shrub
that likes growing in somewhat
damp locations. It is very decorative
all fall, as the berries turn
red in September or October,
but after November when the
leaves fall the fruit is especially
eye-catching. Cut branches
are sold by most nurseries and
many florists and grocery store
floral departments at this time
of year for use indoors and out.
Poinsettias line a table at the MEG building. Again this Friday and Saturday, people can
buy tickets for a chance to win these plants, gift baskets or the beautifully decorated trees
on display. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate by Laura Eisener)
Editor’s Note: Laura Eisener is
a landscape design consultant
who helps homeowners with
landscape design, plant selection
and placement of trees and
shrubs, as well as perennials.
She is a member of the Saugus
Garden Club and offered to write
a series of articles about “what’s
blooming in town” shortly after
the outbreak of the COVID-19
pandemic. She was inspired after
seeing so many people taking up
walking.
Last Friday a penguin on the library lawn was wearing his
reading glasses while waiting for the tree lighting festivities
to begin. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate by Laura
Eisener)
A decoration of Santa driving a fire truck could be seen next
to Town Hall last Friday before the tree lighting festivities.
(Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate by Laura Eisener)
Winterberry (Ilex verticillata) shows its colorful fruit at the
edge of Birch Pond near Walnut Street. (Courtesy photo to The
Saugus Advocate by Laura Eisener)
Colorful bracts, usually red, are the big attraction of the
poinsettia – the actual flowers clustered in the center are
fairly inconspicuous. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate
by Laura Eisener)
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 9, 2022
The Sounds of Saugus
By Mark E. Vogler
Good morning, Saugus!
I’ve been to six Christmas
Tree Lighting events in Saugus
since I became editor of
The Saugus Advocate back in
March of 2016. The 2020 event
was postponed because of the
pandemic.
All things considered, I believe
the one last Friday (Dec.
2) was the best one weatherwise.
It was very comfortable,
and my bare hands didn’t go
numb when I took photographs.
So, it was relatively
mild late autumn conditions,
which proved to be favorable
for the large crowd that turned
out early.
It was too bad that the public
was not allowed to enter
Town Hall and head upstairs
to the second floor auditorium,
which accommodated
a lot of fun events that
were once a regular fabric
of the annual festivities until
COVID-19 struck in March of
2020. I remember the Gingerbread
House contests and face
painting and plenty of warm
space to accommodate those
folks who came to see their
children get photographed
with Santa Claus. I didn’t see
any face-painting this year.
And the Gingerbread House
contest hasn’t been part of
the program for several years.
Photo opportunities with
Santa Claus are still a big
draw. But Santa now poses for
photos with children in a chair
that was set up in front of the
Central Street entrance to the
Saugus Public Library. And
there was an adjacent booth
nearby in case it rained.
All in all, it was a very nice
event – well planned by the
town’s Youth & Recreation
Department, the Department
of Public Works, the Fire Department
and other town
agencies. I enjoyed myself,
walking around in the crowd
and soaking up the atmosphere.
I
spent some time hanging
on the top steps of Town Hall,
talking to Brian Cross, who
served as this year’s DJ for all
of the Christmas music. Brian,
a 2012 graduate of Saugus
High School, was providing
the music for his third tree
lighting event. He’s been coordinating
the town’s Christmas
Eve Parade since 2014.
“I’ve been coming down
here my whole life. It’s one of
those yearly traditions that
Saugus residents enjoy,” he
said.
During the final 20 minutes
of the night, I asked Brian as
to whether he took requests.
He told me he did, but it didn’t
seem like folks were taking advantage
of that opportunity,
so I peppered him with a few
requests, just to see whether
he knew his tunes and had
an extensive collection. Well,
I found out that even if he
didn’t know some tunes, he
could easily find them if he
received a song title.
Brian played Nat King Cole’s
“The Christmas Song,” one
of my favorites that dates
back to 1961. My other requests
were Burl Ives’ “Holly
Jolly Christmas,” “Believe” – the
theme song for the animated
Christmas movie “The Polar
Express” – “The Little Drummer
Boy” sung by Carrie Underwood
and Josh Groban’s
“I’ll Be Home For Christmas.”
Brian was able to get them all
within seconds without any
problems.
So, for me, that was a special
treat, in addition to hanging
out at the petting zoo. Saugus
Tree Lighting 2022 turned out
to be a great night.
A “Shout Out” to Guy
Moley
We didn’t receive any nominations
from readers to recognize
deserving candidates
for “Shout Outs,” so, using the
editor’s prerogative, I will go
with Guy Moley – who had an
extremely busy weekend. On
Friday night, he was down at
Saugus Center playing Santa
Claus. Then, on a rainy Saturday
night, Guy was working
with Mom’s Cancer Fighting
Angels at Fuddruckers, trying
to raise money for a great
cause. Hats off to Guy Moley
this week.
Want to “Shout Out” a
fellow Saugonian?
This is an opportunity for our
paper’s readers to single out
– in a brief mention – remarkable
acts or achievements by
Saugus residents, or an act
of kindness or a nice gesture.
Just send an email (mvoge@
comcast.net) with a mention
in the subject line of “An Extra
Shout Out.” No more than a
paragraph; anything longer
might lend itself to a story
and/or a photo.
We have a winner!
Congratulations to Nicole
Berger for making the right
identification in last week’s
“Guess Who Got Sketched”
Contest. Nicole is one of several
readers answering correctly.
But she was the only one to
have her name picked in a
drawing from the green Boston
Red Sox cap.
Here’s the correct answer, offered
by the person who goes
by the name of The Sketch
Artist:
“The answer to last week’s
sketch is Pastor Joe Hoyle’s
wife Debora De Paula Hoyle.
“Debbie is the Administrative
Assistant of the Cliftondale
Congregational Church.
“Debbie does alot of behind
the scenes administration
tasks effortlessly and with a
smile.
“She helps the Saugus Food
Pantry run smoothly and efficiently!
“Debbie’s
quick to give
praise and recognition to others.
She is caring, sensitive and
compassionate in her ways.
“Saugus Advocate November
23, edition has the ‘Counting
Your Blessings in Saugus’
by Mark E. Vogler Front Page
and on page 2 Pastor Hoyle
and Debbie are giving credit
to others for their generosity
and efforts.
“Pastor Joe Hoyle and Debbie
involve themselves with
an array of outreaches from
tending an information booth
with gifts at the 411 Saugus
Event to weekly 10:30 AM Wed
Bible Studies at the Senior
Center.
“Thank you Debbie for all
you do.
“You shine with such hospitality
and grace to others
“Your hand is generously
extended towards your fellow
man.
Yours Truly,
“The Sketch Artist”
Saugus River Watershed
Council Annual Meeting
Monday
This year’s Annual Meeting
and Dinner of the Saugus River
Watershed Council (SRWC)
features a keynote presentation
by Cindy Lupi from Clean
Water Action, where she coordinates
community-based
efforts to reduce pollution and
promote a cleaner, more sustainable
economy. The event
is set for Monday, Dec. 12 from
6:30–9 p.m. at Spinelli’s on
Route 1 in Lynnfield. The Saugus
River Watershed Council
will also present River Stewardship
Awards, highlight
2022 accomplishments and
elect 2023 board members.
Admission to the annual
meeting of $35 per person
includes the keynote presentation
plus a delicious dinner
buffet. Menu: roast beef, roasted
potatoes, pasta, dinner
rolls, salad and homemade
dessert. A cash bar will be
available. This event is handicap
accessible and open to the
public. Online registration and
payment information is available
under the events section
at https://www.saugusriver.
org/annualmeeting. Preregistration
requested.
This year’s Steward Awards
will be presented to Rep. Jeff
Turco and Jonah Chiarenza.
Debra Panetta, President of
the SRWC, said in a press release,
“Representative Turco
continues to be an environmental
champion for Saugus
and Revere, and I am delighted
that Jeff will be receiving
this award.” Mary Lester,
Executive Director, is very
excited for this award to be
presented to Jonah Chiarenza
from Bike to the Sea. She said
this organization deserves so
much for everything they have
done for the Northern Strand
and all the efforts put forth
with bringing communities
together.
This year’s event will also
feature sale of holiday wreaths
for $40 each. These handmade
wreaths feature fresh
woodland evergreens, pinecones
and other decorative
elements.
They will also be having
an online auction that will
become live that night, raffles
and a 50/50. All proceeds
will benefit the Saugus River
Watershed Council’s environmental
education, SRWC
scholarship and river restoration
programs. Vacations
and more can be bid on here:
https://srwc.betterworld.org/
auctions/saugus-river-watershed-council-2.
The
Saugus River Watershed
Council is a 501 (c) 3 nonprofit
organization founded in 1991
to protect and restore the natTHE
SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 17
—Cont est—
CONTEST SKETCH OF THE WEEK
GUESS WHO GOT SKETCHED? If you know the right answer, you
might win the contest. In this week’s edition, we continue our
weekly feature where a local artist sketches people, places and
things in Saugus. Got an idea who’s being sketched this week?
If you do, please email me at mvoge@comcast.net or leave a
phone message at 978 683-7773. Anyone who identifies the Saugonian
sketched in this week’s paper between now and Tuesday
at Noon qualifies to have their name put in a green Boston
Red Sox hat with a chance to be selected as the winner of a $10
gift certificate, compliments of Hammersmith Family Restaurant,
330 Central Street in Saugus. But you have to enter to win! Look
for the winner and identification in next week’s “The Sounds of
Saugus.” Please leave your mailing address in case you are a winner.
(Courtesy illustration to The Saugus Advocate by a Saugonian
who goes by the name of “The Sketch Artist”)
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 9, 2022
Page 17
THE SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 16
ural resources of the Saugus
River watershed.
Friends of Breakheart
notes
The next event at Breakheart
Reservation sponsored by the
DCR is the First Day Hike on
New Year’s Day. It is a wonderful
way to start the New Year.
Please check newspapers and
flyers for further updates.
Other activities are being
planned to include the famous
Maple Sugaring event
and a park clean up when the
weather improves. If interested
in getting involved with
the Friends Group, please call
781-233-1855 X19.
Happy Holidays and look
forward to seeing you at the
Park.
Superintendent’s Virtual
Coffee
Saugus Public Schools Superintendent
Erin McMahon
announced recently on her
website that she will be holding
a series of coffee meetings
this year to give parents and
caregivers an opportunity to
talk about issues impacting
the district face-to-face. “But
I’ve heard from some families
that in-person meetings
during the school day can be
difficult, she said. “To accommodate
more families, I am
holding a virtual meeting on
Thursday, Dec. 15 from 8:30
to 9:30 a.m. This is open to all
families in the district. To join
the virtual meeting, please use
this link.” [https://us06web.
zoom.us/j/89828336986?pwd=eG44VGsrTnJMNnJnNlFxWWJIbXRHQT09#success]
“As
a reminder, if you have
specific concerns about your
child, please contact your
child’s teacher or principal.
You may also contact my office
at superintendent@saugus.
k12.ma.us.”
Legion breakfasts
Saugus American Legion
Post 210 is hosting its popular
breakfasts from 8-9 a.m.
on Fridays. The price is $8 for
those who are looking for a
delicious meal at Legion Hall.
Bon appétit!
“Holly Jolly” coming to
The Kowloon
The Kowloon Restaurant
announced that the Holly
Jolly Holiday Party with The
Platters® Very Merry Christmas
Show is slated for Friday, Dec.
16 at 8 p.m. Doors open at
6:30 p.m. Showtime is 8 p.m.
The Platters are set to perform
live in concert – playing all
their hits and holiday tunes.
Tickets are $25 per person. All
seats are reserved. The Platters
– hailed a rock and roll,
vocal, and Grammy® Halls of
Fame group – will be joined by
special guests Smokin’ Joe &
the Henchmen. Kowloon food
and beverage services will be
available.
For tickets: online ordering,
front desk.
Compost/Recycling DropOff
Site closing for winter
The Town of Saugus Compost/Recycling
Drop-Off Site
will close for the winter season
on Saturday, Dec.10 at 2 p.m.
The site will be open from 8
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 18
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 9, 2022
Sy eninior
y Senior
eniorenior
o
by Jim Miller
Little Known Property-Tax Relief
Programs Help Seniors Save
Dear Savvy Senior,
I recently learned about a
property-tax relief program for
seniors in the county where I
live. Apparently, there are hundreds
of these programs across
the country that many retirees,
like me, are eligible for but
don’t know about. What can
you tell me about this?
Overtaxed Eddie
Dear Eddie,
Great question! Residential
property-tax refund and
credit programs exist in nearly
every state, but unfortunately
few people know
about them. These programs
can help retirees and many
other Americans by reducing
their property taxes. Here’s
what you should know.
Rising Property Taxes
Property taxes are a major
source of income for local
governments, but while they
help fund key public services,
they can be a fi nancial drain
for many homeowners, especially
retirees, many of whom
live on fi xed incomes.
According to Attom Data
Solutions, a property-data
provider, the average American
household payed $3,785
in property taxes in 2021, but
this amount varies widely depending
on your state’s tax
rate and your home’s estimated
value. For example, New
Jersey residents paid $9,476
per year on average in 2021,
while West Virginia residents
paid $901.
To help ease this tax burden,
most states off er a number
of property-tax relief programs.
But states aren’t always
proactive in letting
people know. It’s up to you,
the homeowner, to fi nd out
what’s available in your county
or city that you may be eligible
for, and to apply.
Relief Programs
Property tax relief programs,
sometimes called exemptions,
release eligible
homeowners from paying
some or all of their property
tax obligation. How long the
exemption lasts can vary depending
on where you live,
and the reason you’re applying
for the exemption.
The tax-relief process varies
by county, city or state. In
general, you’ll have to meet
certain eligibility requirements,
submit an application
and provide documents that
support your request. Most
programs will either reduce,
waive or freeze property taxes
for seniors, veterans, surviving
spouses, disabled and
low-income residents.
But there are some counties
that also offer basic
homestead exemptions to
homeowners regardless of
age or income, and others
that may provide exemptions
to homeowners that have recently
made energy-effi cient
improvements to their home.
Where to Look
The best way to learn about
local property-tax relief programs
and their eligibility
requirements is to visit your
county, city or state website
that collects your property
tax. Most of these sites also
provide applications and instructions,
and will allow you
to apply either online, by mail
or at your local tax offi ce.
Another good resource for
locating programs in your
area is the Lincoln Institute,
which has a property-tax
database that lets you to
browse programs across the
country. To access it go to
ResidentialPropertyTaxReliefPrograms.org.
AARP
may also be able to
help through their Property
Tax-Aide service – see PTAconsumers.aarpfoundation.
org.
This free program, which
is available in 13 states (Arizona,
Colorado, Florida–Miami
Dade County, Illinois-Cook
County, Kansas, Maryland,
Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri,
Nebraska, New Hampshire,
New York and North
Carolina) and the District
of Columbia helps eligible
homeowners and renters apply
for relief.
Send your senior questions
to: Savvy Senior, P.O. Box 5443,
Norman, OK 73070, or visit SavvySenior.org.
Jim Miller is a contributor
to the NBC Today show
and author of “The Savvy Senior”
book.
It’s the Greatest Time of the Year
– Girl Scout Cookie Season!
Girl Scouts in eastern massachusetts is now selling
Girl Scout Cookies;
Support the next generation of women entrepreneurs
(Waltham, Mass.) Today, Girl
Scouts of Eastern Massachusetts
kicks-off the 2023 Girl
Scout Cookie season as Girl
Scouts and their troops rally
the community to support
the world’s largest entrepreneurial
program for girls. The
annual cookie program will run
through Friday, March 10th.
Consumers can support their
local Girl Scouts by purchasing
their favorite varieties including
Thin Mints®, Caramel deLites®,
Peanut Butter Patties®, Adventurefuls™,
Peanut Butter Sandwich,
Lemonades™, Trefoil®,
Caramel Chocolate Chip Cookie
(gluten-free and peanut-free)
and Toast-Yay!™.
In addition to everyone’s
quintessential favorites, Girl
Scouts has a new, online exclusive
cookie, Raspberry Rally,
which is a thin crispy cookie
infused with raspberry flavor
and dipped in the same delicious
chocolaty coating as the
beloved Thin Mints cookies. This
new cookie will be the fi rst in
the Girl Scout Cookie lineup to
be exclusively off ered for online
sale and direct shipment only,
enhancing girls’ e-commerce
sales and entrepreneurial skills.
“The Girl Scouts Cookie Program
is iconic in developing
future women entrepreneurs.
I have heard many times from
THE SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 17
a.m. to 2 p.m. on December
10, prior to closing. The site
will reopen for recycling on the
third Saturday of the month in
January, February and March,
weather permitting.
Please contact Scott Brazis, Director
of Solid Waste/Recycling,
at 781-231-4036 with any questions.
For more information
about the Town of Saugus, visit
www.saugus-ma.gov.
What’s happening at the
Saugus Public Library
For schoolchildren looking
for interesting projects and
programs to participate in this
fall, there’s plenty to do at the
Saugus Public Library. There are
also some very good programs
off ered for grownups, too.
Adult Coloring Group: Come
relax with our continuing Adult
Coloring Group. It’s a great
opportunity to take time to
women that their fi rst experience
in sales was through Girl
Scouts,” stated Girl Scouts of
Eastern Massachusetts CEO
Barbara Fortier. “As we enter
what I think is the greatest time
of year, I encourage people to
remember that when you are
purchasing a box of cookies,
they are not only delicious but
you are supporting a future
entrepreneur.”
The Girl Scout Cookie Program
is the world’s largest entrepreneurial
program for girls.
Girl Scouts’ newly updated
Financial Literacy badges off er
entrepreneurial playbooks for
every age level. From the Cookie
Goal Setter badge earned
as a Daisy to the Entrepreneur
Accelerator for girls in high
school, the Girl Scout Cookie
Program teaches girls fi nancial
literacy, planning, budgeting,
teamwork, innovative thinking,
and confi dent decision making.
Girl Scout Cookies are $5 per
package. There are many ways
to support the Girl Scout Cookie
program this season:
·
If you don’t know a Girl
Scout, visit gsema.org/buycookies
to fi nd a cookie booth
(pop-up shop) near you to purchase
cookies from a local Girl
Scout troop, or to connect with
a local troop’s online cookie
shop to purchase cookies for a
unwind, be creative and have
fun, no experience necessary!
We have pencils and coloring
pages ready and waiting…
See you there! Space is limited;
please call to register (781-2314168
x 3106).
When: Wednesday, December
14 at 10:00 a.m.
Where: Saugus Public Library,
295 Central St., Saugus, Brooks
Room (second fl oor).
Just Sew! Saugonians are
welcome to join a monthly
sewing class for adults that will
be held the third Monday of
each month from 6:30 to 7:30
p.m. in the Community Room
of Saugus Public Library. The
next meeting is Monday, Dec.
19. The class covers basic topics
like sewing buttons, hemming
clothing and mending torn
fabric and will move on to more
advanced topics in the coming
weeks. This class is free. (See
sauguspubliclibrary.org.)
A neat teen group called Manga
& Anime Club: The Manga &
donation or shipment.
If you know a registered Girl
Scout, reach out to them to
find out how they’re selling
cookies.
Customers can make a purchase
in-person or online and
designate their purchase for donation
to Cookies for a Cause to
benefit first responders and
healthcare professionals, the
military and veterans’ services
organizations, local food pantries,
and more.
Visit www.gsema.org to have
Girl Scout cookies shipped directly
to your door. GSEMA will
cover 50% of customers’ shipping
costs for all online Direct
Ship orders of nine packages or
more from February 1st – March
10th.
Girls in grades K–12 can join
Girl Scouts any time during the
year to begin their Girl Scout
journey. As girls grow with Girl
Scouts, they learn hands-on
leadership skills they’ll use to
make their mark through the
Gold Award and beyond. To
join or volunteer, visit www.
gsema.org.
For more information on Girl
Scouts of Eastern Massachusetts,
please visit www.gsema.
org, or follow their social media
channels, Instagram, Facebook,
and LinkedIn, for the latest updates
on the organization.
Anime Club, from all accounts,
is a lot of fun for kids in Grades
6 and up. So, if you are curious,
check out the Teen Room. Chat
with friends! Make crafts! Try
Japanese snacks! Club meetings
will continue on Saturdays,
through May, from 10-11 a.m.
They will be held on Dec. 10,
Jan. 7, Feb. 4, March 4, April 1
and May 13. Please sign up in
advance; call 781-231-4168 or
stop by the Reference Desk.
(https://www.sauguspubliclibrary.org/new-manga-animeclub.../);
Saugus Public Library,
295 Central St., Saugus Mass.
First Baptist Church
presents “Can We Talk…”
First Baptist Church Pastor
Leroy Mahoney invites troubled
people to join others
in a special program called
“Can We Talk … Community
conversations on Trauma and
Healing” the first Thursday
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 19
׉	 7cassandra://MfHgZRuNMac_xVDfqCNJxsXxi3-NbGWDqx9lf_PqpJU%`̰ coD8K(y׉E!THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 9, 2022
Page 19
THE SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 18
of every month, from 6 to 7
p.m. at Rev. Isaac Mitchell Jr.
Fellowship Hall (105 Main St. in
Saugus). “Join us as we gather
in community to share our
stories, thoughts and feelings
about whatever you are going
through,” Rev. Mahoney states
in a written announcement.
“As always, it is a safe space
to come together in community,”
he says.
Wreaths Across America
On Dec. 17 at noon, the
Parson Roby Chapter of the
Daughters of the American
Revolution (MA0136P) is sponsoring
their second Wreaths
Across America event, helping
both Riverside Cemetery and
the Old Burying Ground Cemetery
to remember and honor
veterans by laying remembrance
wreaths on the graves
of our country’s fallen heroes.
“To sponsor your wreath(s)
at $15 each or to volunteer to
help place wreaths on December
17th, please visit www.
wreathsacrossamerica.org/
MA0136P or use the QR code.
There will be a brief ceremony
at noon to honor all branches
of the military followed by
laying wreaths on our fallen
heroes. Invite your friends and
family to join us in honoring
our servicemen and women.
The cut-off date to order is
Nov. 28th.
Your Hometown News Delivered!
EVERETT ADVOCATE
MALDEN ADVOCATE
REVERE ADVOCATE
SAUGUS ADVOCATE
One year subscription to
The Advocate of your choice:
$150 per paper in-town per year or
$200 per paper out-of-town per year.
Name_________________________________________
Address_______________________________________
City_______________ State_______ Zip ____________
CC# _______________________________ Exp. _____
Sec. code____ Advocate (City):___________________
Clip & Mail Coupon with Credit Card, Check or Money Order to:
Advocate Newspapers Inc.
PO Box 490407, Everett, MA 02149
“2021 was our first year sponsoring
this event, which had
over 360 wreaths sponsored.
The community really stepped
up and we are grateful for
all the support we received.
However, there are more than
1500 veterans’ graves in Riverside
and we are hoping
that between the community
and businesses there will be
enough sponsored wreaths to
cover all those graves this year.
“The Daughters of the American
Revolution’s mission is
to preserve American history
and secure America’s future
through education and promoting
patriotism. For more
information on how to participate
or ‘What We Do’ email the
Parson Roby Chapter DAR at
parsonroby.saugusdar@gmail.
com.”
Healthy StudentsHealthy
Saugus
(Editor’s Note: The following
info is from an announcement
submitted by Julie Cicolini,
a member of the Board
of Directors for Healthy Students-Healthy
Saugus.)
Who we are: Healthy Students-Healthy
Saugus (HS2) is
a nonprofit group of volunteers
who are helping to offset food
insecurity in households. HS2
provides students/families who
enroll in the program a supply
of nutritious food for when
school lunches and breakfasts
are unavailable to them on
weekends.
How HS2 can help you: HS2
bags are distributed at Saugus
Public schools on Fridays to take
home. Bags include such items
as peanut butter, canned meals/
soups/tuna/vegetables, pasta,
fruit cups, cereal, oatmeal,
goldfish, pretzels and granola
bars. All food is provided to
children free of charge. It is our
hope these resources will support
the health, behavior and
achievement of every student
9. On Dec. 11, 1980, the Massachusetts
Secretary of
State banned the sale of
what computer stock because
its price was too
high?
1. December 9 is International
Anti-Corruption
Day; President Warren
Harding’s administration
was beset by the Teapot
Dome scandal involving
accepting bribes from
oil companies; what is
known as Teapot Dome?
2. What beverage company
started using Santa Claus
in advertising in 1931?
3. What happens when a
shark loses its teeth?
4. How often does Santa
check his list?
5. On Dec. 10, 1805, abolitionist
publisher William
Lloyd Garrison was
born in what Essex County
community?
6. What color bowtie does
“The Cat in the Hat” wear?
7. In the first single on the
2022 FIFA World Cup official
soundtrack – “Hayya
Hayya (Better Together)”
– what does the Arabic
word “Hayya” mean?
8. What singer had a
best-selling hit in 1953
with “Santa Baby”?
10. In the late 1920s, what
baseball team was known
as Murderers’ Row?
11. On Dec. 12, 1891, the
first game of what sport
was played in Springfield,
Mass.?
12. What author of the 1900
book “The Wonderful Wizard
of Oz” also wrote “The
Life and Adventures of
Santa Claus”?
13. December 13 is National
Cocoa Day; what are the
seeds in a cacao tree pod
called?
14. In what country is Santa
Claus called Babbo Nawho
participates. To sign up go
here to complete online form:
https://forms.gle/gmMGguycSHBdziuE9.
Want
to partner with us: We
would love to partner with
organizations, sports teams,
youth groups, PTOs, businesses
and individuals to assist in
feeding students of Saugus.
To learn more about how you
can partner with us, visit the
Healthy Students-Healthy Saugus
Facebook page or email us
at HS2Saugus@gmail.com
HS2 relies on donations to
create take-home bags for a
weekend full of meals. Checks
can also be sent directly to:
Salem Five C/O Healthy Students-Healthy
Saugus, 855-5
Broadway, Saugus, MA 01906.
Online donations can also be
made at https://givebutter.
com/HealthySaugus.
“Throwback Saturdays”
at Kowloon
The Kowloon Restaurant
announces its December entertainment
calendar with
“Throwback Saturdays,” featuring
DJ RMC spinning hiphop,
top 40, dance, disco and
Latin tunes in the Hong Kong
Lounge on Saturdays at 7:30
p.m. Here’s the December
Comedy Show Lineup:
Brad Mastrangelo: Dec. 9
& 10 –“Comics Come Home”
– Corey Manning and James
Hamilton.
Frank Santorelli: Dec. 17 –
from “The Sopranos” – Matt
Barry and Andrew Volpe.
Comedy shows start at 8 p.m.
Doors open at 6:00 p.m. Tickets
are $20.00 per person. DJ music
from 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. and
9:30 p.m. to 11:00 p.m.
For tickets: online ordering,
front desk or charge-by-phone;
call the Kowloon Restaurant at
781-233-0077.
New Year’s Eve at
Kowloon
Celebrate New Year’s Eve at
the Kowloon Restaurant with
“the biggest and best and
maybe the last” New Year’s
Eve party. Wildfire Band and
Vinyl Groove will perform live
in concert along with DJ RMC.
Dine, dance and ring in the
New Year with a light Kowloon
buffet, Champagne toast and
party favors. Doors open at 8
p.m., and entertainment kicks
off at 9:00 p.m.
Tickets are $75 per guest
and $250 for tables of four
guests. To order tickets, call
1-781-233-0077.
Let’s hear it!
Got an idea, passing
thought or gripe you would
like to share with The Saugus
Advocate? I’m always
interested in your feedback.
It’s been six and a half years
since I began work at The
Saugus Advocate. I’m always
interested in hearing readers’
suggestions for possible
stories or good candidates
for “The Advocate Asks” interview
of the week. Feel
free to email me at mvoge@
comcast.net.
Do you have some interesting
views on an issue that
you want to express to the
community? Submit your idea.
If I like it, we can meet for a
15- to 20-minute interview
over a hot drink at a local
coffee shop. And I’ll buy the
coffee or tea. Or, if you prefer
to continue practicing social
distancing and be interviewed
from the safety of your home
on the phone or via email, I will
provide that option to you as
the nation recovers from the
Coronavirus crisis.
If it’s a nice day, my preferred
site for a coffee and interview
would be the picnic area of the
Saugus Iron Works National
Historic Site.
tale?
15. How are “Bhagavad Gita”
and the “Mahabharata”
related?
16. In which two countries is
Santa Claus called Père
Noël?
17. On Dec. 14, 1994, construction
began on the
Three Gorges Dam on
what river?
18. Reportedly, what is the
world’s deadliest creature:
mosquito, shark or
tsetse fly?
19. What country is the only
one to host the FIFA World
Cup and lose its opening
match?
20. December 15 is Bill of
Rights Day – when in 1791
how many constitutional
amendments were ratified?
ANSWERS
1.
A rock formation in Wyoming and
a nearby oil field
2. Coca-Cola
3. They grow back.
4. Twice
5. Newburyport
6. Red
7. Let’s go!
8. Eartha Kitt
9. Apple
10. The New York Yankees
11. Basketball
12. L. Frank Baum
13. Cocoa beans
14. Italy
15. The “Bhagavad Gita” is part of the
“Mahabharata”
16. Belgium and France
17. Yangtze
18. Mosquito
19. Qatar
20. 10
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Page 20
THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 9, 2022
OBITUARIES
Paul E. Bourque
away on December 3, 2022 at
the age of 92. Paul was born in
Malden, MA on March 6, 1930
and was a Local 67 union carpenter
until he retired in 1995.
He was an avid hunter and
cherished his time at the Maine
camp with all of his buddies.
Paul enjoyed nature, bowlD
evoted
h
u s -
band and father,
passed
ing, spending time with his
family and friends and was
a steadfast Bruins fan. His
thoughtful and quiet demeanor
will be deeply missed.
Paul was the loving husband
of 59 years to Margaret
H. (McInnis) Bourque. Loving
father of Kellie B. Binczyk &
her husband Jeff of Brookline,
Kevin P. Bourque & his wife
Valerie of Saugus and Maureen
E. Economou of Milbury.
Cherished grandfather of Alyssa,
Chloe, Drew & Kyle. Caring
brother of Lillian Surette
of Saugus and the late Richard
Bourque, Frances Deleo,
Yvonne Moffat and Pauline
Bourque. Also survived by
many nieces & nephews.
Visitation was held at the
Gately Funeral Home 79 W.
Foster St. Melrose on Thursday,
December 5, 2022 from
5:00-7:00PM. A Mass of Christian
Burial will be held at Blessed
Sacrament Church, 14 Summer
St. Saugus on Friday, December
9, 2022 at 10:30AM.
Relatives & friends are respectfully
invited to attend. The interment
with military honors
at the VA National Cemetery in
Bourne will be private. In lieu
of fl ower contributions may be
made to Care Dimensions, 75
Sylvan St., B_102, Danvers, MA
01923. To send a message of
condolence please visit www.
gatelyfh.com.
Pauline D.
(Koutroubis) Harritos
O
f Saugus.Born on the fi fth of
February 1939 and passed
away on the 30th of November
2022 at the age of 83 in her Saugus
home surrounded by her
loving family.
Pauline was born in Sparta,
Greece and held up the highest
standards of Spartan Culture
throughout her life. She
was raised in Kastoreio, Sparta,
Laconia, Greece as the daughter
of Master Carpenter Demetrios
I. Koutroubis and Panagiota
D. (Angelopoulos) Koutroubis.
Pauline was a very determined
and hardworking womOBITS
| SEE PAGE 22
~ HELP WANTED ~
Experienced Oil Truck Driver wanted.
Hazmat and CDL required.
Must present driver’s record history.
Please send resume to:
dina@angelosoil.com
or call 781-231-3500
Frank Berardino
MA License 31811
• 24 - Hour Service
• Emergency Repairs
BERARDINO
Plumbing & Heating
Residential & Commercial Service
Gas Fitting • Drain Service
617.699.9383
Senior Citizen Discount
858855-GO-4-GLAS
55-GO-4O- -GL
Call now!
781 233 4446
LAS
LA
AS
We follow Social Distancing Guidelines!
CLASSIFIEDS
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Page 21
THANK YOU TO ALL MY CLIENTS FOR ANOTHER GREAT YEAR
MIDDLETON
REPRESENTED THE BUYERS
TOPSFIELD
SOLD FOR $790,000
LYNNFIELD
LYNN
REPRESENTED THE BUYERS
REPRESENTED THE SELLERS
SOLD FOR $875,000
REPRESENTED THE SELLERS
SAUGUS
LYNNFIELD
SOLD FOR $605,000
SAUGUS
SOLD FOR $600,000
$70K OVER ASKING
REPRESENTED THE SELLERS
REPRESENTED THE SELLERS
SOLD FOR $655,000
$15K OVER ASKING
SWAMPSCOTT
REPRESENTED THE BUYERS
SOLD FOR $2,749,000
WITH KEITH LITTLEFIELD
WAKEFIELD
REPRESENTED THE SELLERS
SOLD FOR $725,000
$105K OVER ASKING
DANVERS
REPRESENTED THE SELLER
SOLD FOR $555,000
$5K OVER ASKING
LYNNFIELD
REPRESENTED BOTH SELLERS & BUYERS
SOLD FOR $540,000
$10K OVER ASKING
SAUGUS
REPRESENTED THE SELLERS
SOLD FOR $885,000
$85K OVER ASKING
NORTH READING
REPRESENTED THE SELLERS
SOLD FOR $590,000
$30K OVER ASKING
REPRESENTED THE SELLER
REPRESENTED THE SELLER
UNDER CONTRACT SELLING
OVER ASKING
SOLD FOR $580,000
miller.deborah@verizon.net | 617-678-9710 | 624 Salem Street, Lynnfield, MA 01940
MA Broker License #9575784 | NH Broker License #079490
LYNNFIELD
REPRESENTED THE SELLERS
SOLD FOR $905,OOO
$5K OVER ASKING
REVERE
REPRESENTED THE SELLER
SOLD FOR $435,000
SOLD FOR $365,900
HAVERHILL
HAPPY NEW YEAR
HAPPY HOLIDAYS
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 9, 2022
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with permission from the publisher, The Warren Group.
For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com.
BUYER1
Burt, Matthew
Dumond, Jeff rey C
BUYER2
SELLER1
101 Walnut Street LLC
Rodrigues, Linda
SELLER2
Saroufi m, Johny M
ADDRESS
11 Somerby Ln
281 Lincoln Ave
CITY
Saugus
Saugus
OBITS | FROM PAGE 20
an who valued education and
passed these values along to
her children. She recognized no
limitations and achieved more
than most with her determination
and love of family. She was
a devout Christian of the Greek
Orthodox faith and loved gardening,
cooking and making a
beautiful home for her family.
The world has been fortunate to
know Pauline Harritos and continues
to benefi t from her legacy.
She was the beloved wife
of the late Leonard J. Harritos
and sister to the late Peter D.
Koutroubis. Pauline is survived
by her three daughters Margaret
L. Cashman, Pamela L. Harritos
and Joanne L. Harritos whom
she loved dearly and gave the
gift of unconditional love and
happiness to. In addition to her
daughters, she is survived by her
nephews James D. Koutroubis
and Peter D. Koutroubis and her
adoring granddaughters Jessica
Cashman and Julia CashDATE
11.15.22
11.14.22
PRICE
700000
800000
man
who gave her much joy,
happiness and light. Additionally,
Pauline is mourned by her
son’s in-law Kevin Cashman,
Craig Hasenstab, Dale Sarno
and her grandnephew Dimitri
Koutroubis and his mother Star
Koutroubis.
Relatives and friends were invited
to attend visiting hours
in the Bisbee-Porcella Funeral
Home, Saugus.A funeral was
held from the funeral home followed
by a funeral liturgy at St.
George Greek Orthodox Church,
Lynn. Interment in Pine Grove
Cemetery in Lynn.
After Selling A Home in your Area I'm left with MORE BUYERS Than Homes
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38 Main St. Saugus
(781) 558-1091
20 Railroad Ave. Rockport
(978)-999-5408
Saugus
The Market is overflowing with buyers looking for homes in your area. This puts you in a
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Reach out to me for a Free Pre-Listing Review 617-877-4553
Saugus
Amesbury
Welcome home. This two family with large units and an
additional living space in the lower level. 5 Baths total. Unit
1 is New which holds a 4 Room 2 bedroom fireplace, washer
and dryer. Unit 2 offers a 6 Room 3 Bedroom and 2 full
baths with a fireplace that leads to dining area with sliding
door overlooking deck where you could view miles of flat
land. Generous size rooms with ceiling fans and plenty of
storage space. 2 tier decks, heated pool. 2 car drive way
with space for 8-10 cars, cabana with a full bath and a
kitchen. Close to shopping malls, transportation, Airport,
and more .....$799,000
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8Find
us on Google and see what our
clients have to say about us!
Saugus
Sue is dedicated and hard working. She will treat
you like family and help you find the right home!
~Ann Salzillo~
Spectacular sun-filled Colonial with exceptional flow and robust
space. Details matter and this lovely home is brimming with beautiful
woodwork, trim and much character. The open concept kitchen offers
stainless appliances and plenty of granite tops which flows to living
room and inviting fireplace which leads to double door going onto the
deck. Balancing things off on the second floor are 3 generous
bedrooms. The main bedroom has a large sitting room, main bath all
leading to a spacious roof top balcony. Large driveway, level yard, 1
car garage and more. ...$668,000
’I've known Sue for years. She is always there for
her clients, very attentive and knowledgeable.
She goes above and beyond for every client she
works with. Whether you are planning to sell or
buy a home, you’d want to have Sue by your side.
~Anastasia Tacewicz~
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Equity Seekers take note. Here is a great
opportunity to get into the Saugus Housing
Market. Owned by the same family for over
70 years and located on a nice level lot. It
could use a new kitchen, bath and new
roof. Living Room has a fireplace, 1 car
garage, level yard. Desirable neighborhood
close to major routes and more...$449,000
Would you like a compliment of wonderful
neighborhood, space, and many amenities
nearby? This private setting townhouse offers so
much. The main level boasts an eat in kitchen,
along with living room and 3 generous bedrooms
on the second floor. the lower level or could also
be categorized as the ground level offers a large
family room or bedroom with a full bath. Did I
mention washer and dryer in the units, 1 deeded
parking, 1 car garage., transportation, nearby
shops, and churches? Make this nestled home a
win ...$369,000
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be at go z
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SAUGUS
Turnkey awaits for new owner. Spectacular sun-filled 3 bedroom
ranch that boasts gleaming hardwood floors throughout,
including central air. The open concept kitchen offers stainless
appliances and plenty of granite counter tops, stainless
appliances, center island that flows into the dining area and open
concept of large living room. If you want a home within a
suburban feel that offers a deck, shed, level fenced yard,
driveway, dead end and more! This lovely property abutts Middle
School and Bike Trail....$579,000
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U N E
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UNDER AGREEMENT
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UNDER AGREEMENT
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UNDER AG R EEMEN
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UNDER AGRE EMENT
UNDER AGREEMENT
׉	 7cassandra://1nNPyst5JjFxTtnZqodSVjUhKfZoFzGKotW11oUSqmo,`̰ coD8K(}׉ETHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 9, 2022
Page 23
Follow Us On:
COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY SALES & RENTALS
Welcome Fall!
Sandy Juliano
Broker/President
A wonderful season to buy
your dream home!
WE KNOW EVERETT!! Call TODAY to sell or buy with the best!
FOR SALE
Condo
1 Riverview
Blvd, Methuen
Building 5,
Unit 204,
2 bed, 2.5 bath
$349,900.
Call Sandy at 617448-0854
for Details!
UNDER
AGREEMENT
BACK ON
THE MARKET!
NEW LISTING BY SANDY, 3 FAMILY, 234 WILSON
AVE., NAHANT $1,600,000. PLEASE CALL SANDY
FOR DETAILS @ 617-448-0854
New Listing
by Sandy
Single
family,
81 Florence
Street,
Everett
SINGLE FAMILY, 21 WALDEN TERRACE, SAUGUS. $849,900.
CALL SANDY FOR 617-448-0854
RENTED BY
RENTED
43 CHARLTON ST,
EVERETT
CALL NORMA
FOR DETAILS
617-590-9143
NORMA AS TENANT’S
AGENT
NEW PRICE: $649,900
NEW LISTING BY NORMA
UNDER
AGREEMENT
COMMERCIAL BUILDING
ON BROADWAY, EVERETT
PLEASE CALL NORMA
AT 617-590-9143 FOR
MORE INFORMATION
NEW LISTING BY
SANDY
Open Daily From 10:00 A
Joe DiNuzzo
- Broker Associate
Norma Capuano Parziale
- Agent
Denise Matarazzo
- Agent
A.M. - 5:00 P.M.00 PM
433 Broadway, Suite B, Everett, MA 02149
www.jrs-properties.com
Follow Us On:
Rosemarie Ciampi
- Agent
Mark Sachetta
- Agent
617-294-1041
׉	 7cassandra://KOHWCsVEXfhC_KaPSFE2FxzLvZbVJ8Em8za1HZxQ75o0E`̰ coD8K(~coD8K(}
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://I1Zc3QGJvXHDmT5-0XYpd9WhoG1ha9y90LkCM2h8l1A G<`)׉	 7cassandra://a3rZu9Xjdk4Z2xtLXeYHQw-upFuWbXsFId_F7a-xn24͟m`J׉	 7cassandra://SobQgnFK5cKLvtMfPUMPhA2f6orN7Zk7VCysqKXGr5Q1G`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://qjmnDgWRF6yrzX2N7dct_bJTtL6eK3DtsavEw_yoTEs %"͠coU8K(ؒנcoU8K(܁ K9ׁHhttp://LITTLEFIELDRE.COMׁׁЈנcoU8K(ځ \9ׁHhttp://CarpenitoRealEstate.comׁׁЈ׉E
Page 24
THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 9, 2022
.............
#
1
Listing & Selling
Office in Saugus
“Experience and knowledge
Provide the Best Service”
Free Market Evaluations CRE
CarpenitoRealEstate.com
View our website from
your mobile phone!
335 Central St., Saugus, MA
781-233-7300
SAUGUS - 5 room Cape offers 3 bedrooms, great
open floor plan, hardwood flooring, convenient 1st
floor bedroom, sunroom, gorgeous, level lot with
storage shed, located in Lynnhurst neighborhood.
Offered at $515,000.
“Congratulations, Karen and Dennis on your
new home and thank you for allowing me to
be your Real Estate Agent.” - Tom Amero
SAUGUS - Desirable Brookdale Condo offers this
spacious 1 bedroom unit, beautiful, updated kit w/
quart counter, peninsula w/seating, built-in desk,
hardwood flooring, great open floor plan, extra
storage, located just outside of Saugus Center.
Offered at $275,000.
SAUGUS - 1st AD - 10 room colonial offers 5-6
bedrooms, 1 ½ baths, wood flooring, located
on Saugus River, home is in need total rehab.
Offered at $499,900.
WONDERING WHAT YOUR
HOME IS WORTH?
CALL US FOR A FREE
OPINION OF VALUE.
781-233-1401
38 MAIN STREET, SAUGUS
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
LYNN - 4 room Ranch offers renovated kitchen
with granite counter & ct flooring, fireplace
lvrm, refinished hardwood flooring, finished
lower level with familyroom, breezeway, 1 car
garage, great location!
Offered at $429,900.
LYNN - 6 NEWLY COMPLETED STORE FRONT
FACADES offers consisting of two condos. ALL
occupied – great income, minimal expenses make
this a great investment, 1031 tax exchange, etc,
centrally located, close to public transportation.
Offered at $2,799,900.
LET US SHOW YOU OUR
MARKETING PLAN TO
GET YOU TOP DOLLAR
FOR YOUR HOME!
LITTLEFIELDRE.COM
624 SALEM ST., LYNNFIELD
FOR SALE
FOR SALE - 3 BED, 2 BATH COLONIAL/ MULTI LEVEL
COMPLETELY RENOVATED WITH 2 CAR CARRIAGE
HOUSE WITH 1BED, 1 BATH ABOVE SAUGUS $799,900
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
FOR SALE
FOR SALE - DESIRABLE WEST PEABODY LOCATION! HOUSE
FEATURING 3 BEDS, 2 BATHS.UPDATED KITCHEN. DECK WITH
LARGE YARD PEABODY $629,000 CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
FOR SALE- LIKE NEW 3 BED,
1 BATH MOBILE HOME WITH
HUGE ADDITION, COMPLETELY
REMODELED.
PEABODY $199,900
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
FOR SALE - SPACIOUS, 2 BED, 2 BATH,
DOUBLE SIDED FIREPLACE, HISTORIC
BROWNSTONE CONDO IN CHELSEA
WATERFRONT DISTRICT WITH AMAZING
CITY AND WATER VIEWS!
CHELSEA $599,999
CALL DANIELLE 978-987-9535
FOR SALE - LOCATED AT THE END OF A
CUL-DE-SAC THIS 3 BED, 2.5 BATH CONTEMPORARY
HAS CONSIDERABLE POTENTIAL.
WITH OVER 3000 SQFT OF LIVING SPACE,
SAUGUS $759,000
LOOKING TO BUY OR SELL
CALL
ANTHONY COGLIANO
CALL HIM FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS!
(857) 246-1305
׉	 7cassandra://SobQgnFK5cKLvtMfPUMPhA2f6orN7Zk7VCysqKXGr5Q1G`̰ coD8K(׈EcoD8K(coD8K(
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