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D
Fall Back Your Clock 1 Hour Saturday Night!
all B
ou
AD CATET
D CAT
SACHEM SPORTS GREATS
By Mark E. Vogler
S
ix times during 2023, drivers
drove their cars into
businesses or homes. At
least six more incidents involving
motor vehicles crashing
into buildings have happened
during the first 10 months of
this year, increasing the total to
12 since Jan. 2 of 2023, according
to accident reports obtained
by The Saugus Advocate.
“Distracted driving is probaThis
1954 Bowman football card displays the legendary
Arthur Spinney, one the most famous athletes who ever
played football or any other sport at Saugus High School.
He was a three-time All-Pro off ensive lineman who helped
the Baltimore Colts win two NFL titles. He’s one of 25 Sachems
Hall of Famers selected as The Saugus Advocate’s
“Terrifi c Twenty-Five.” Please see inside for the story.
bly contributing to this,” Saugus
Police Chief Michael Ricciardelli
said in an interview this week,
after reviewing his department’s
accident reports.
“It’s one thing to be talking on
the phone. Texting on the phone
is another thing,” he said.
The motor-vehicle-into-building
statistics appear to be high
over the past two years, according
to Ricciardelli. “But when you
look at all of the reports, there
doesn’t seem to be any real pattern
you can point to,” the chief
ATE
Vol. 26, No.44 -FREE- www.advocatenews.net Published Every Friday 781-233-4446 Friday, November 1, 2024
Motor vehicles vs. buildings
Out of control cars have crashed into a dozen Saugus businesses and
homes over the past two years
added.
“It’s not just elderly people.
You have people of all ages involved
in this,” he said.
The ages for 11 of the motor
vehicle-building accidents
(the driver of one car struck a
building and fl ed) range from a
17-year-old girl to a 90-year-old
woman. Two of the drivers are
in their 20s, two are in their 50s,
two are in their 60s and three are
in their 70s. In the case of several
of the drivers – including last
month’s crashes into the Dunkin’
on Lincoln Avenue in Cliftondale
and the CVS at 1075 Broadway
(Route 1 South), police have notifi
ed the state Registry of Motor
Vehicles (RMV) about the driver
being an immediate threat.
“There are all sorts of circumstances
why these accidents
happen,” Chief Ricciardelli noted.
“When the driver can’t articulate
why it happened, or if a
medical emergency contributed
to it, that’s a concern. And
we would put in for an immediate
threat [notifi cation to the
RMV],” the chief said.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, NOVEmbEr 1, 2024
MOTOR VEHICLES |
FROM PAGE 1
Here is a look at the 12 accidents
involving motor vehicles
going into buildings over
the past two years, based on a
review of the accident reports
and summary comments that
Saugus Police made to The
Saugus Advocate:
Jan. 2, 2023, Macy’s parking
lot, 1201 Broadway (Route
1 South): A 74-year-old Winthrop
man crashed into the
glass front doors of Macy’s in
his 2009 Lincoln at 2:06 p.m.
Summary comment: The driver
said the gas pedal got stuck,
struck Macy’s door entrance.
From the accident report of
Officer Nicholas Cardinale: the
driver said that while reversing
out of his parking space, his vehicle’s
gas pedal got stuck. This
caused him to lose control of
his vehicle, which traveled over
two lanes of traffic and a traffic
island before colliding into the
front entrance. The officer submitted
“an immediate threat”
report to the Registry of Motor
Vehicles.
Jan. 18, 2023, Centerless
Grinding, 192 Central St.: A
20-year-old Malden woman
was in the parking lot when
the car she was in crashed into
the fence at Centerless Grinding
at 8:41 p.m. Summary comment:
stolen MV driven into
fence of business.
From the accident report of
Officer Jacob C. Roy: A male
exited the vehicle wearing a
black ski mask before getting
into a gray Charger with a plate
that came back stolen.
Feb. 19, 2023, Plaster Fun
Time, 880 Broadway (Route 1
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A BIZARRE ROUTE ONE BUILDING CRASH: These two demolished cars wound up inside
the vacant Boston Market on Route North in Saugus when the driver of a Volvo SUV
struck a parked car last November. (Courtesy photo of Saugus Police Chief Michael Ricciardelli)
North): The unknown driver
of a motor vehicle struck the
front brick wall of the business
and left the scene at 12:17 a.m.
Summary comment: MV struck
front of building then fled the
scene. Officer Tyler DiFlumeri
noted that the front brick wall
caved in from the collision.
April 6, 2023, Ocean State
Job Lot, 444 Broadway (Route 1
North): A 76-year-old Peabody
man was pulling into a parking
spot and crashed into the
glass storefront of the building.
Summary comment: Driver
was parking in the lot and
mistook the gas pedal for the
brake pedal, striking the front
of the building. Officer Thomas
Wilson said in his report that
he filed a request to the Registry
of Motor Vehicles for “an immediate
threat.” He noted that
the driver drove onto the curb
and crashed into the handicapped
parking sign before accelerating
into the storefront.
June 17, 2023, Elder Law Office
at 5 Essex St.: A 78-yearold
Malden woman was traveling
around the rotary when
she wound up crashing into
the Elder Law Office. Summary
comment: The car was struck
by another MV, forcing it to
sideswipe the side of a commercial
building, causing light
damage.
Nov. 11, 2023, King Motor
Cars, Inc., 168 Broadway
(Route 1 North): At 7:23 p.m., a
62-year-old Boston man traveling
North on Broadway veered
off the road at a high rate of
speed and struck a parked
car, causing both cars to collide
with the front entryway of
the business. Summary Comment:
Driver veered off the
roadway at high speed (reason
unknown) striking building
(heavy damage). Officer
Stephen M. Poliskey noted in
his report that firefighters and
emergency workers freed the
driver from his car and transported
him to Massachusetts
General Hospital.
The man was later charged
with negligent operation of a
motor vehicle, operating a motor
vehicle with a suspended
license, operating an unregistered
motor vehicle and possession
of a Class A substance.
MOTOR VEHICLES | SEE PAGE 8
׉	 7cassandra://Lu1umzL6T7VpsRLkWqiDdqlat3uGGjJAkT5ZvbX_M-w6` g#L׉E	THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, NOVEmbEr 1, 2024
Page 3
~The Advocate Asks~
A panel picks its “Terrifi c Twenty-Five” among Saugus High School Sports Hall of Famers
Editor’s Note: With 10 former
Sachem Sports Greats
scheduled to be inducted tomorrow
(Saturday, Nov. 2)
into the Saugus High School
Sports Hall of Fame, we decided
to assemble a group of
local sports experts to compile
a list of 10 top Sachem
athletes to add to the list we
published in a Dec. 1, 2017,
article titled “The Fabulous
15.” Those athletes stood out
as the greatest Sachems of all
time among the more than
200 athletes who had already
been inducted since 1987. This
year’s panel includes several
former coaches and Hall of
Fame Committee members
who participated in the 2017
selection. Our list doesn’t rank
the Saugus Hall of Famers individually.
And there’s certainly
room for argument on
behalf of athletes who didn’t
make the list. The purpose is
to spur some discussion and
pride among Sachem sports
fans about sports greats of
the past as the Sachem High
School Sports Hall of Fame
prepares to welcome 10 more
outstanding former student
athletes who competed for
Saugus High School.
H
ere are The Saugus
Advocate’s “Terrific
Twenty-Five” – whose
names are among dozens inscribed
on plaques for people
who make up the Saugus High
School Sports Hall of Fame.
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night (Saturday, November 2), he will be inducted into
the Saugus High School Sports Hall of Fame. (Courtesy Photo
to The Saugus Advocate)
TERRIFIC TWENTY-FIVE | SEE PAGE 10
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, NOVEmbEr 1, 2024
Campaign 2024
in-Person Early Voting ends today as Town Clerk’s Offi ce gears up for next Tuesday’s Presidential Election
By Mark E. Vogler
President Kamala Harris, for
W
i l l
S a ugu s be
viewed as a “blue”
town after next
Tuesday’s election, with a majority
of its voters supporting
the Democratic candidate, Vice
president? Or will the town go
“red” by supporting the Republican
candidate, former President
Donald Trump, in his bid
to return to the White House?
Eight years ago, Donald
Trump was the favorite of Sau425r
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gus voters, beating Hillary Clinton
by 933 votes –51 percent
of the turnout. The Saugus
vote, while not typical of the
sentiment throughout Massachusetts,
resonated loudly
across the country as Trump
shocked the pollsters –losing
in popular votes by close to 3
million to Democratic candidate
Hillary Clinton while winning
the White House by beating
Clinton in the Electoral College,
304 to 227.
But Election Day 2020 in Saugus
turned out diff erently for
Trump in the last presidential
race. He lost his popularity
with voters in Saugus and
throughout the country. Former
Vice President Joe Biden
was the favorite of Saugus voters,
as he beat Trump by 373
votes –capturing 51 percent
of the turnout. On the national
front, Biden beat Trump in
Electoral College votes, 306 to
232, while winning the popular
vote by more than 7 million
votes.
Two weeks of In-Person voting
at the Saugus Public Library
will end today (Friday,
Nov. 1). Voting will take place
from 8:15 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in
the Community Room of the
library at 295 Central St. Residents
who come to cast their
votes should use the Taylor
Street entrance. Most town
residents will go to the polls
Chris Luongo, the Saugus
Republican Town Committee
Chair, predicted that former
President Trump will
carry Saugus as well as the
country in next Tuesday’s
election. (Saugus Advocate fi le
photo by Mark E. Vogler)
to vote for president next Tuesday
(Nov. 5) from 7 a.m. to 8
p.m. in the 10 precincts.
So, will Saugus voters go
blue for the Democrats or red
for the Republicans this time?
The Saugus Advocate put
that question to the chairs of
the Saugus Democratic Town
Committee and the Saugus
Republican Town Committee.
The Democratic Party view
Saugus Democratic Town
Committee Chair Joe Malone
said he expects Vice President
Kamala Harris to carry Saugus
as well as the nation. “I’m very
Joe Malone, the Saugus
Democratic Town Committee
Chair, said he’s confi dent
that Vice President Kamala
Harris will beat former President
Donal Trump in next
Tuesday’s election. (Saugus
Advocate fi le photo by Mark E.
Vogler)
confi dent that Harris will win,”
Malone said in an interview
this week.
“I think people like her optimistic
outlook on life. She always
has a smiling face on. I
think she’s much better than
Hillary or Biden as a candidate.
It’s going to be a close
election, but…Harris will prevail,”
he said.
In Massachusetts’ U.S. Senate
race, Malone predicted that incumbent
Sen. Elizabeth Warren
would win easily over Republican
challenger John Deaton.
“We may have a problem
in the Senate, but we’ll take the
House,” Malone said.
As far as the ballot questions,
Malone said he expects Question
One – which would enable
the state auditor to audit
the state Legislature – will pass
“fairly easily.”
Malone said he believes
Question 2 – which would
eliminate passing the Massachusetts
Comprehensive Assessment
System (MCAS) tests
in mathematics, science, technology
and English in order to
receive a high school diploma
– will pass. “I think MCAS
is gone. I think the teachers
union will prevail on that one,”
Malone said.
He also said he thinks Question
4 – which would allow
CAMPAIGN 2024 | SEE PAGE 7
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Page 5
Making the Square Safer
The town follows through on a selectman riley’s recommendation to
install new fl ashing pedestrian crossing lights in Cliftondale
By Mark E. Vogler
C
orinne Riley wasn’t yet
on the Board of Selectmen
when she recommended
to State Rep. Donald
Wong (R-Saugus) several years
ago that he should go after funding
for fl ashing pedestrian signs
she had seen in a neighboring
community. Wong credited Riley
– his former campaign manager
– with suggesting “a great
idea” to him after he obtained a
$50,000 state grant to buy pedestrian
crosswalk signs in Saugus
more than three years ago.
“When I saw them in Melrose,
that was the fi rst time I ever saw
them, and I thought we needed
to get those here,” Riley told
The Saugus Advocate in an April
2021 interview, shortly after
Wong had announced that he
had sought and received a grant
that could probably buy enough
solar-powered electric signs that
could be installed at 10 intersections,
a pair at each intersection.
Riley had hoped that a few of
the flashing pedestrian crossing
lights would be installed in
Cliftondale. Since the town’s receipt
of the grant three years
ago, fl ashing pedestrian lights
have been installed at intersections
where the Northern Strand
Community Trail passes through
town as well as at other locations
that have been targeted as priorities
for correcting dangerous
traffi c conditions for pedestrians,
cyclists and motorists in the
community.
Town Manager Scott Crabtree
recently announced the installation
of two new sets of fl ashing
pedestrian crossing lights at
high-volume crosswalks in Cliftondale
Square. “The illuminated
fl ashing lights and signage are
designed to capture the attention
of drivers as they approach
crosswalks,” Town Manager Crabtree
said in a press release issued
by his offi ce.
“Having these lighting systems
in place improves safety for
pedestrians and motorists alike,”
Crabtree said.
The solar-powered systems
feature a button that pedestrians
can push to activate fl ashing
warning lights as they cross the
street. Bright yellow pedestrian
signs and diagonal arrow signs
accompany the fl ashing lights to
alert motorists traveling in both
directions about the crosswalks.
The pedestrian crossing lights
are located on Jackson Street
just before the entrance to the
Cliftondale Rotary, with the other
system extending from Banana
Splitz across Lincoln Avenue
to the Mobil gas station.
The lighting systems are funded
through a state grant.
Riley, who has continued to
advocate for the improvements
since being elected to the Board
of Selectmen five years ago,
said she believes the pedestrian
crossing lights represent a proactive
approach to reduce the
chances of accidents involving
pedestrians. “I’m glad the town
has taken this important step to
make it easier for pedestrians to
safely navigate the rotary area,”
Riley said. “The addition of these
flashing pedestrian crossing
lights definitely benefits public
safety in Cliftondale Square.”
The Police Department has
worked with the town in identifying
locations where the fl ashing
pedestrian crossing lights
could be installed. Cliftondale
Square was one of three locations
that Wong had suggested
to selectmen for placing the
crosswalk lights.
“When I fi rst worked with Representative
Wong on getting the
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Pedestrian crossing lights recently installed by the town in
Cliftondale Square, extending from Banana Splitz across
Lincoln Avenue to the Mobil gas station (Courtesy photo to
The Saugus Advocate)
crosswalk fl ashing lights in Cliftondale
Square, I knew that it
was going to be a safety measure
that we’d be able to take to
protect pedestrians crossing the
street,” Riley said in an interview
this week.
“I was very pleased recently
to see additional sets of lights in
other trouble spots where people
try to cross. Because of additional
traffi c using Cliftondale as
a cut-through, it defi nitely isn’t
as safe as it could be, especially
with the big construction trucks
and 18 wheelers that go through
our town,” Riley said.
“But because it’s a public road,
it’s very difficult for the town
to stop trucks from using our
streets. Enforcement of speed
limits and yielding to pedestrians
will be a great help as well,
and it’s not just for cars and
trucks, but for electric bikes and
scooters too. I hope that residents
and other motorists will
also do their part, by focusing
on the road rather than smartphones
while driving,” she said.
Riley suggested that more
needs to be done to make the
streets of Cliftondale safer for
everybody. “An additional step I
would like to see is the addition
of a few traffi c cameras around
Cliftondale. I think that cameras
would provide peace of mind to
residents and business owners
in Cliftondale,” Riley said. “Public
safety is the top priority for
the Board of Selectmen and the
Town Manager, and we’ll continue
to explore all areas to improve
public safety to protect the residents
of Saugus.”
SQUARE SAFER | SEE PAGE 22
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, NOVEmbEr 1, 2024
MEG Foundation salutes a fallen hero
T
Volunteers honor medal of Honor recipient DeFranzo with a tree in his memory for the annual Christmas Tree Festival
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?
For more info,
call (857) 249-7882
he MEG Foundation’s
2024 Christmas Tree
Festival will feature a
tree honoring the late Medal of
Honor recipient Staff Sergeant
Arthur F. DeFranzo when it
opens on Nov. 8. Three young
Saugonians – Loranzo Keegan,
Tommy Jarosz and Zackery
Kahn – are decorating the tree
that pays tribute to DeFranzo,
who was born and brought up
on 16 Prospect Ave., graduated
from Saugus High School
in 1938 and joined the Army
in November of 1940.
On June 10, 1944, he was
near Vaubadon, France, when
he was wounded while rescuC’mon
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ASSEMBLING THE TREE: Left to right: Loranzo Keegan, Tommy
Jarosz and Zackery Kahn volunteered to prepare this artifi cial
tree to honor the late Medal of Honor recipient Staff Sergeant
Arthur F. DeFranzo at the MEG Foundation’s upcoming 2024
Christmas Tree Festival. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate)
ing an injured man from hostile
fi re. Despite his own injuries,
he led an attack on the
enemy and continued to advance
and encourage his men
even after being hit several
more times. He destroyed an
enemy machine gun position
just before succumbing to his
wounds at 25 years old.
For his heroic and selfless
action, DeFranzo was posthumously
awarded the Medal of
Honor seven months later on
Jan. 4, 1945. His body was returned
to the United States in
1947 and laid in state at the
Saugus Town Hall for four days,
and then was given a military
funeral at Riverside Cemetery.
The 14th Annual MEG Christmas
Tree Festival gets underway
at 3 p.m. next Friday (Nov.
8) at the Marleah E. Graves
(MEG) Building (54-58 Essex
St.) and will last through 8 p.m.
The festival continues on Nov.
9 from 3–8 p.m., Nov. 10 from
noon–5 p.m., Nov. 15 from 3–8
p.m. and Nov. 16 from 3–8 p.m.
The Christmas trees are the
main event of the MEG Christmas
Tree Festival, a growing
tradition that raises money for
the MEG Foundation.
Marleah E. Graves was a beloved
Saugus educator who
taught at the old Cliftondale
School for 47 years. The
school and the foundation
were named after her.
A TREE OF HONOR: This tree,
which will be among those to
be raffl ed off at the 14th Annual
MEG Foundation Christmas
Tree Festival, which gets
underway next weekend,
pays tribute to late Medal
of Honor recipient Staff Sergeant
Arthur F. DeFranzo.
(Courtesy photo to The Saugus
Advocate)
׉	 7cassandra://9afbolELuy2iDXDPtdQN8Dx3J_AkyfO8mglMl94FUsg<l` g#P׉ETHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, NOVEmbEr 1, 2024
Page 7
CAMPAIGN 2024 |
FROM PAGE 4
people 21 and older to grow,
possess and use certain natural
psychedelic substances –
may pass also.
The Republican Party view
Saugus Republican Town
Committee Chair Chris Luongo
predicted that former President
Trump would carry Saugus
as well as the country. “I do
believe Trump will get in,” Luongo
said.
“I think the electoral votes
will be a landslide and the popular
votes will be close,” he said.
“Imagine if World War III
starts and we have Kamala as
our commander in chief? That
would be awful. I pray to God
that we take the presidency,
the House and the Senate.
Right now, it’s so close, I don’t
know what’s going to happen.
I hope the country turns
around. I don’t think we can do
another four years [of a Democrat
in the White House],” he
said.
Luongo said he believes
that Trump will carry Saugus.
“I think Saugus will go red this
time for the presidency,” Luongo
said.
“I see a lot of positive feedback
around town,” he said.
Luongo is not optimistic
about the prospects of Republican
Challenger John Deaton
beating incumbent Senator
Elizabeth Warren. “If it were
any other state, John Deaton
would win,” he said.
“I’m not optimistic because
of the system we’re playing
under [in Massachusetts],” he
said, referring to a system of
government which is dominated
by one party (Democrats).
“I don’t believe mailing ballots
out to every household.
I think this system is messed
up,” he said.
“I have no problem with
In-Person voting because you
have a chain of custody when
it comes to the ballots. You
don’t have that with the ballots
that are mailed out,” he said.
Luongo said he would like to
see a system of term limits for
elected offi cials be established
in Massachusetts.
As far as the fi ve ballot questions,
Luongo said he wonders
about Question One and how
it refl ects on the nature of Massachusetts
state government.
“Why would that be a question
– that the state auditor
doesn’t have control over the
state Legislation,” he said.
The Ballot Highlights
The two-page offi cial specimen
ballot includes:
· A showdown between
Democratic Vice President Kamala
Harris and former Republican
President Donald Trump.
· A race for the U.S. Senate,
with Democratic incumbent
Elizabeth Warren seeking another
six-year term over Republican
challenger John Deaton.
·
Five ballot questions, including
several controversial
ones. Question 1 if approved
would authorize the state auditor
to audit the state Legislature.
The measure initiated
by Diana DiZoglio received no
vote from the Senate or House
of Representatives.
Question 2, if passed, would
eliminate the Massachusetts
Comprehensive Assessment
System (MCAS) tests in mathematics,
science, technology
and English in order to receive
a high school diploma.
Question 3, if passed, would
provide Transportation Network
Drivers with the right to
form unions and to collectively
bargain with Transportation
Network Companies.
Question 4, if passed, would
allow people 21 and older to
grow, possess and use certain
natural psychedelic substances
in certain circumstances.
Question 5, if passed, would
gradually increase the minimum
hourly wage an employer
must pay a tipped worker
over the course of fi ve years,
from 64 percent of the state
minimum wage on Jan. 1,
2025, to 100 percent of the
state minimum wage on Jan.
1, 2029.
· Essex County Clerk of Courts
Thomas Driscoll, Jr., a Democrat
seeking reelection in a
race contested by two challengers:
Todd R. Angilly, an unenrolled
candidate from Lynnfi
eld, and Doris V. Rodriguez,
an Independent candidate
from Lawrence.
· A race for the Registry of
Deeds seat for the Essex Southern
District between Eileen
M. Duff, a Democrat from
Gloucester, and Jonathan Edward
Ring, a Rockport Republican.
As
of Aug. 7, there were
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, NOVEmbEr 1, 2024
MOTOR VEHICLES
| FROM PAGE 2
Investigators said they believe
that substance was either fentanyl
or heroin.
Police said the man apparently
lost control of his Volvo
SUV and crashed into the unoccupied
sedan in front of the
shuttered restaurant that once
housed Boston Market.
April 30, 2024, Dunkin’, 42
Hamilton St.: At 8:15 a.m., a
52-year-old woman who was
pulling into a parking spot
drove through a wooden barricade
and into the building,
causing damage to the window
and brick wall. Summary
Comment: Driver said while attempting
to park in lot, she lost
control of vehicle, driving into
the building. Offi ce Jonathan E.
Maes noted in his report that
when the woman was asked
what happened, “she stated
that all she could feel was the
vehicle moving forward as she
was placing it into park.”
May 10, 2024, a home at
329 Central St.: At 3:43 p.m.,
a 90-year-old Saugus woman
leaving the Rockland Trust
drive-through accelerated at
a high speed, running off the
road and striking a fence at
329 Central St. and continued
through the front yard before
striking the left front corner
of the house. She continued
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ANOTHER DUNKIN’ CRASH: For the second time in six
months, one of the town’s Dunkin’ shops was hit by a motor
vehicle last month. This pickup truck didn’t penetrate
the building at 35 Lincoln Ave. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus
Advocate by Lt. Damian Drella of the Saugus Fire Department)
through the yard and struck a
chain link fence at 333 Central
St. Summary Comment: Driver
was pulling out of lot, accelerated
at a high rate of speed,
striking corner of residence.
May 15, 2024, Lavender Nails
at 1539 Broadway: At 9:59 a.m.,
a 60-year-old Providence, R.I.,
woman drove her car into the
business. Summary Comment:
Driver was parking in lot, accelerated
and drove into building
June 30, 2024, a business
at 880 Broadway, Suite C: At
5:25 p.m., a 17-year-old Saugus
woman drove her 2029
Nissan into the front of the
building while trying to slow
down. Summary Comment:
Driver was pulling into lot and
related that the brakes did not
work, striking building (minor
damage). Officer David Harris
said, in his accident report,
“It should be noted that due
to the rain prior to the accident,
the roadway was wet.”
The driver said she was attempting
to slow down when
her brakes were not working
and she continued to press her
brakes when she drove over a
curbed area before colliding
with the building. The crash
caused a broken window and
damage to the exterior wall of
the building.
Oct. 11, 2024, Dunkin’, 35
56-year-old Lynn man struck
multiple vehicles in the parking
lot before crashing his
2006 Ford pickup truck into a
cement trash can and guard
rail. Summary Comment: Driver
related that his vehicle
brakes failed, striking multiple
cars in the lot and then the
building. Offi cer Alison M. Cooper
noted in her report that
the driver claimed to have mechanical
issues with his brakes
and was unable to stop.
But Saugus Police didn’t like
the driver’s response to offi -
cers’ questions. “Upon investigation,
that driver was unable
to explain to offi cers how he
had driven into the building
as a result he was issued a citation
for negligent operation,”
the Saugus Police Department
said in a press release about the
accident.
“In addition, the driver was reported
to the RMV as an immediate
threat. As a result of that report,
he will lose his right to operate
a motor vehicle pending a
hearing, the statement said.
Chief Ricciardelli noted a
positive aspect to this incident.
Dunkin’ didn’t receive enough
damage to be closed for a long
time. “It appears as though the
bollard barriers did what they
are supposed to do and preLincoln
Ave.: At 12:18 p.m., a MOTOR VEHICLES | SEE PAGE 12
׉	 7cassandra://0LXQ8mUm3ZR4tQ3ISHYfj_rs3a-0RUMmeUTKgPbf55s3` g#R׉ETHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, NOVEmbEr 1, 2024
Page 9
~ The Old Sachem ~
The history of women’s
rights in America
By Bill Stewart
O
n March 31, 1776, Abigail
Adams wrote to
her husband and the
Continental Congress to “remember
the ladies and be
more generous and favorable
to them than your ancestors.
Do not put such unlimited
power into the hands of the
husbands. Remember, all men
would be tyrants if they could.
If particular care and attention
is not paid to the ladies,
we are determined to foment
a rebellion, and will not hold
ourselves bound by any laws
in which we have no voice or
representation.”
Earlier the Province of Pennsylvania
(now the state of
Pennsylvania) in 1718 gave
women the right to own and
manage property in their own
name, followed by Maine in
1821. Slowly the states of early
America gave women rights
that only men had before.
Eventually the 19th Amendment
would be passed – granting
women the right to vote.
I will show you the Seneca
Falls Convention, then about
a Massachusetts woman involved
in women’s rights that
you probably never heard of.
The first women’s rights convention
was held in Seneca
Falls, New York, on July 19,
1850. It was formed to discuss
the social, civil and religious
thoughts that women had to
live through in early America.
It was held in the Wesleyan
Chapel and was held over
two days.
The meeting was organized
by local female Quakers and
included Elizabeth Cady Stanton.
The event was planned
when Lucretia Mott, a Quaker
in the Philadelphia area, came
to Seneca Falls. The meeting
had six sessions that included
a lecture on law, a humorous
presentation and many discussions
about the role of women
in society. They prepared two
documents, the Declaration of
Sentiments and a list of resolutions,
to be debated and modified
before being written for
signatures.
They had a heated debate
about women’s right to vote.
Frederick Douglass, the only
African American in attendance,
argued eloquently for
inclusion, and the resolution
was included. One hundred of
the 300 attendees signed the
documents – mostly women.
Mott was a women’s right activist,
abolitionist and religious
reformer from Massachusetts.
She was strongly opposed to
slavery and a supporter of William
Lloyd Garrison and his
American Anti-Slavery Society.
She published a book, “Discourse
on Woman,” and later
founded Swarthmore College.
She was born Lucretia Coffin
on January 3, 1793, in Nantucket,
a child of Quaker parents.
At 13 she attended a Quaker
boarding school in New York
State and eventually she became
a teaching assistant. She
met her future husband, James
Mott, at the school, and they
married in 1811. In 1821 Lucretia
became a Quaker minister
in Philadelphia.
She and her husband became
members of the Society
of Friends, and she identified
increasingly with more
Dear Saugus
Here’s a “big thanks” from the Pumpkin Patch
T
he First Congregational
Church in Saugus
Center extends
a “big thanks” to all who
supported the Pumpkin
Patch this year. A successful
event was the result of all
those who helped unload
the trucks, those who volunteered
to do shifts selling
pumpkins and those
who purchased pumpkins.
This was the 22nd Annual
Pumpkin Patch, which
couldn’t have been done
without the support of the
Saugus community. See
you next year!
The “Pumpkin Patch” organizers
and the First Congregational
Church of Saugus
SEE
YOU NEXT YEAR: A message of appreciation from First
Congregational Church, especially the organizers of “the
Pumpkin Patch.” (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate)
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liberal and progressive trends
in American religious life, and
formed the Free Religious Association
in Boston in 1867.
She died on November 11,
1880, in Chilton Hills, which
is now a part of Philadelphia.
Women’s rights continues
to this day with Hillary Clinton
before (2016) and Kamala Harris
now as candidates for the
Presidency.
(Editor’s Note: Bill Stewart,
who is better known to Saugus
Advocate readers as “The
Old Sachem,” writes a weekly
column – sometimes about
sports. He also opines on current
or historical events or famous
people.)
“The Old Sachem,” Bill Stewart.
(Courtesy photo to The Saugus
Advocate by Joanie Allbee)
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, NOVEmbEr 1, 2024
TERRIFIC TWENTY-FIVE |
FROM PAGE 3
Mike Soper
This 1984 Saugus High
School graduate was a threesports
star for the Sachems.
He was a Northeastern Conference
(NEC) Baseball All-Star for
two years and an MVP in baseball
for NEC. In basketball, he
was the scoring leader in the
NEC. In golf, he was an All-Star
on a championship golf team.
After High School, he played
baseball at the University of
Alabama, where he won the
Paul “Bear” Bryant Award for
baseball. Soper was drafted
out of Alabama by the Cleveland
Indians. He was one of
only two Saugus High baseball
players drafted by the Major
Leagues. While with the Cleveland
Indians organization, he
played for four years. In 1991
he set a Minor League record
as a closer with 41 saves, winning
the Cleveland Indians Minor
League Pitcher of the Year
Award. Shoulder problems
kept him from pitching in the
Major Leagues.
Gerry
D’Ambrosio
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Chris Serino
While at Saugus High, the
1967 graduate starred in football,
hockey and baseball. He
was Saugus Sachems’ MVP in
all three sports in 1967. He
threw for more than 4,000
yards at Saugus High School.
Serino went on to star at American
International College (AIC)
and set records there. He also
played three sports at AIC
and made the college’s Hall
of Fame. His best sport was
baseball, where he was an
All-American. He was hockey
Head Coach at Merrimack College.
He won numerous championships
at Malden Catholic.
The new Saugus High School
sports stadium was named in
his honor.
John Nicolo
Another three-sports star
for the Sachems – he was an
All-Scholastic in baseball and
award-winning football player
for the Sachems at halfback.
Nicolo made All-American in
football and baseball at Ithaca
College. He was named Male
Athlete of the Year at Ithaca in
1980 and was inducted into the
Ithaca College Sports Hall of
Fame. As senior captain and the
team’s shortstop, Nicolo was
named the World Series Most
Valuable Player after setting records
for most runs (nine) and
hits (12) in the. NCAA baseball
championship tournament. He
was also a member of Ithaca’s
1979 national champion football
team. He played for one
season of Minor League baseball
for the Auburn Americans
in the New York-Pennsylvania
League. He was also a football
Head Coach at Saugus High.
Alex Winn
This 1966 Saugus High graduate
was a star center on the
basketball team and is the alltime
leading scorer in Saugus
High School history, scoring
1,610 points. He led the Essex
County League in scoring for
three straight years for the Sachems.
Winn also was a key
player on Saugus High’s 1965
baseball team that fi nished as
Essex County League Champions.
He played right fi eld and
batted .465. He was the second
leading career scorer at
Dartmouth College when he
graduated. He was drafted by
the Detroit Pistons. “He was
the best basketball player who
ever played for Saugus,” Stewart
said.
Arthur Spinney
He became one of the most famous
athletes who ever played
at Saugus High School. He was
an All-Scholastic football player
in 1943 and 1944 at Saugus
High School. After graduating
from Saugus High, he played
end for Boston College and later
made the BC Hall of Fame. He
switched to off ensive guard and
played for eight years for the
Baltimore Colts. Spinney played
for two NFL championship
teams with the Colts: in 1958
and 1959. He was co-captain
of the Colts. He played in “The
Greatest Game Ever Played” –
between the Colts and the Giants
when Alan Ameche scored
CAMPAIGN 2024 |
FROM PAGE 7
22,154 total registered voters
in Saugus. That included
4,928 Democrats, 2,110
Republicans, 14,852 unenrolled
and 59 Libertarians.
Where to vote in Saugus
Precinct/Polling Locations
the
touchdown against the Giants
in 1958, the Sudden Death
Overtime game that led to Baltimore’s
victory and put pro football
in the National Limelight.
He was an assistant coach for
the New England Patriots and
Boston College.
Sardi Nicolo
This 1950 Saugus High graduate
was a halfback who helped
lead the Sachems to consecutive
state football titles in 1948
and 1949. He also played baseball
at Saugus High. He was an
All-Scholastic player who went
on to play football at LSU. He
was John Nicolo’s father.
Kristin Potito Lary
This 1985 Saugus High graduate
was All-Scholastic in fi eld
hockey and basketball for the
Sachems in the early 80s. As a
member of the University of
Southern Maine fi eld hockey
and basketball teams, she has
the unique distinction of going
to the Final Four in two sports
– basketball and fi eld hockey.
She was fi rst team All-American
Division III in fi eld hockey.
Sandra Whyte
This 1987 Saugus High graduate
excelled in fi eld hockey
and softball. Whyte went on
to star in college, too. She was
named the Ivy League’s Woman
Player of the Year in Ice
Hockey for Harvard University
in 1991 and 1992. She was a
member of the National Hockey
Team. She scored a goal and
assisted on two others in Team
USA’s Gold Medal performance
against Canada in the 1998
Olympics – Saugus’ only Gold
Medal Olympian.
Pam Thornton
She was a three-sports star
for the Sachems. She was the
first area high school player
in the early 1980s to score
1,000 career points. She scored
1,080 career points for the Saugus
High basketball team. And
that’s without the three-point
Olisa Obiefuna was also a
two-time All-American in
the Triple Jump at Wingate
University in North Carolina.
(Courtesy Photo to The Saugus
Advocate)
shot, too. She also played softball
and soccer. She continued
her basketball career for Boston
College, where she played
for four years.
Steve Peach
This 1981 Saugus High School
graduate was a three-sport athlete.
He was an All-Scholastic
quarterback for the Sachems.
In baseball, he was a pitcher for
the Saugus champion tournament
team in 1981. In basketball,
he played for Coach David
Soper, who used him as his
sixth man. He was named the
“Sixth Man of the Year” in the
NEC that year. He was heavily
recruited by Syracuse and
Boston College, and he decided
on going to Syracuse, where
he started as a freshman. After
that, he transferred to BC as a
junior and was the backup to
Doug Flutie and was also the
punter for the BC Eagles in the
Cotton Bowl. He was scouted
heavily by the Red Sox and other
professional teams in baseball
as a pitcher.
David Mathews
TERRIFIC TWENTY-FIVE | SEE PAGE 11
1/Saugus Middle High
School Complex – 1 Pearce
Memorial Drive
2/Veterans Early Learning
Center – 39 Hurd Avenue
3/Saugus Senior Center –
466 Central Street
4/Belmonte STEAM Academy
– 25 Dow Street
5/Saugus Senior Center –
466 Central Street
6/Veterans Early Learning
Center – 39 Hurd Avenue
7/Knights of Columbus –
57 Appleton Street
8/Belmonte STEAM Academy
– 25 Dow Street
9/Saugus Middle/High
School – 1 Pearce Memorial
Drive
10/Italian American Club
– 1 Beachview Avenue
׉	 7cassandra://A85OSdD9PkkVtK1Opl1FByqPqS33EtC6CyKflzn9CQ05u` g#T׉E4THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, NOVEmbEr 1, 2024
Page 11
TERRIFIC TWENTY-FIVE |
FROM PAGE 10
Another three-sport athlete
at Saugus High, he was the
quarterback on a strong Saugus
High football team and
led them to a championship
in 1959. He played for four
years on the Saugus High baseball
team. In hockey, Mathews’
best sport, he was a three-year
All-Star in the Essex County
League and was the leading
scorer for Saugus High. He was
recruited heavily and went to
BC and played hockey.
Bob Osgood
This 1970 Saugus High graduate
was a three-sport athlete.
He played football, basketball
and baseball. He was the quarterback
for the Sachems football
team, was heavily recruited
and went to the University
of New Hampshire, where he
was the starting quarterback.
He was also a three-year player
on the basketball team at Saugus
High. He was a right hand
pitcher on a very good Saugus
baseball team – a state tournament
team in 1970. He was
one of the best pitchers in the
league. He was also an outstanding
pitcher at UNH.
Doug Mackie
This 1976 Saugus High graduate
was recognized as the outstanding
lineman of the East
Coast in 1975. He was a high
school All-American. He won
the Massachusetts and New
England discus championship
in track. Mackie later went on
to become an outstanding offensive
lineman for Ohio State.
He played pro ball in the USFL
with Steve Young, Doug Flutie
and Herschel Walker for the
New Jersey Generals. He was
also an offensive tackle for the
Atlanta Falcons and New York
Giants.
Arthur Statuto
He was a 1943 Saugus High
School graduate who starred
in football and played on the
1941 Class C State Champions.
After that, he went to Notre
Dame University, where he
was a member of their 1946
and 1947 National Champion
football teams. He was selected
to the 1948 College Football
All-Star Team. After graduating,
he played professional
football for three seasons with
the Buffalo Bills and Los Angeles
Rams at the offensive center
position.
John “Iron Mike” Harrington
He
was All-Scholastic football
and baseball player at Saugus
High School in 1941. He was a
star halfback on the 1941 state
championship football team. A
serious car accident after graduation
curtailed his playing career.
He later became an assistant
coach at Saugus High
School.
The 10 latest Sachem
Sports greats added to the
list:
LJ McKanas
From the Saugus High Class
of 1997, he was an outstanding
running back and the MVP of
the Sachem football team. He
was an All-Star baseball player
and also starred in indoor and
outdoor track. He was a Decathlon
champ in track at Saugus
High. The grueling event,
one of the most challenging
in sports, consists of 10 track &
field events.
Shawn Sullivan
A 2001 Saugus High School
graduate who is among the
greatest hockey players who
competed for the Sachems, he
established himself as the AllTime
leading scorer with 237
points. He was a four-time NEC
All-Star and a two-time NEC
Most Valuable Player. He went
on to play hockey for four years
at Tufts University.
Kevin Wortman
From the Saugus High Class
of 1987, another great Sachem
hockey player – who went
on to play professional hockey
with the Calgary Flames of
the National Hockey League.
He was a four-time NEC AllStar
and a two-time MVP. He
played hockey for three seasons
at American International
College before playing professional
hockey for more than
a decade.
Doug Waybright
He was a 1945 Saugus High
School graduate who was an
All-Star running back for the
Sachems and received a fouryear
scholarship to play football
for the University of Notre
Dame Fighting Irish. He served
in the military after graduation
and returned to his hometown,
where he was very active
in youth sports. He was
so beloved by the town that
when he died at age 38, officials
named a new elementary
school in his honor.
Norman Peach
From the Saugus High Class
of 1958, he was one of the best
three-sport athletes in school
history. He was an All-Star for
two years in both basketball
and baseball. And he was the
team’s Most Valuable Player
during his senior year as a wide
receiver and defensive back.
Cassandra Anderson
A 2007 Saugus High graduate
who excelled in soccer and
indoor and outdoor track in all
four years, she was inducted
into the Hall of Fame in 2018
with her twin sister, Kelsey. Cassandra
starred for four years as a
varsity member of the SHS track
& field team. She was named
captain in her senior year and
MVP in her junior and senior
years. She won the Drew Female
Athlete of the Year Award
in her senior year. She qualified
for numerous state running
events during her four years.
She went on to star in track at
Holy Cross and was a member
of the 4 by 400 meter relay team
at Holy Cross that still holds the
school record.
Kelsey Anderson
From the Saugus High School
Class of 2007 – like her twin
sister Cassandra – she also excelled
in soccer and indoor and
outdoor track for four years.
She was inducted into the Hall
of Fame in 2018 with Cassandra.
Kelsey was the winner of
the Bill McNeil Award given to
the most competitive woman
female athlete. Kelsey was
a two-time captain of the soccer
team and finished her high
school career as Saugus’ second-leading
career points scorer,
capping her senior season
off with 22 goals and 16 assists.
She was a three-time NEC AllStar
who went on to become a
soccer star at UMass Amherst.
Mark Fauci
A 1990 Saugus High School
graduate, he starred for four
years as a member of the Sachem
football and baseball
teams. He won the NEC Most
Valuable Player Award in football
during his senior year. He
was also an NEC All-Star in
baseball and was the team’s
MVP as catcher. He went on to
star in football as a linebacker
at Boston University and was a
co-captain in his junior and senior
years. He was one of the
stars during the Terriers best
season ever – 1993 – when BU
went 12-1 and finished the regular
season at 11-0. He graduated
in 1994 as an All-American
football player. In 2010, he was
inducted into the Boston University
Athletic Hall of Fame.
Eddie McGuire
From the Saugus High Class
of 1967, he was an outstanding
running back for the Sachems.
He also starred in numerous
track & field events. He
received a scholarship to play
football at the University of Indiana.
He was an All-American
as a defensive end and played
in the Shriners Game. After college,
he entered the U.S. Marine
Corps and was a highly
decorated officer for 20 years.
TERRIFIC TWENTY-FIVE | SEE PAGE 22
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, NOVEmbEr 1, 2024
~ Saugus High School Sachems Sports roundup ~
By Dom Nicastro
SAUGUS BOYS’ SOCCER
AWAITS POSTSEASON
FATE
The Saugus boys’ soccer team tied
Peabody, 1-1, in its regular season finale.
The Sachems finished 6-8-4 with
16 points, just two shy of qualifying
for the postseason via the .500 winning
percentage. The Sachems could
still get in via the rankings system but
will have to wait.
Jhony Castillo scored the goal to tie
it up 1:18 into the second half.
SAUGUS FIELD HOCKEY
SHOWS MOMENTUM
Saugus finished the season 5-12-1.
Jordyn Ripley Deminiski, the goalie,
had 197 saves for the season. She had
an 81.4% save percentage.
Julia Upton had six goals and three
assists. Angelina Dow had five goals,
and Teaghan Arsenault had four goals
and four assists for the season.
“That is great news for us because all
four of the people mentioned will be
back next year,” Saugus coach Barbara
Guarente said. “One of the most exciting
games to watch for the season
was our away game to Marblehead.
We won, 4-1. The game was back and
forth for the entire 60 minutes.”
Audrey Comeau (captain) scored in
the first quarter to tie it up 1-1. She
then netted another goal in the second
quarter putting us up 2-1.
Angelina Dow scored in the fourth
quarter off a penalty stroke, and Sydney
Ferreira finished it up with a goal
off of a corner.
“It was also nice to see both of our
seniors score in the Voke game,” Guarente
said. “Sami Sarnacchiaro (captain)
MOTOR VEHICLES |
FROM PAGE 8
vented the vehicle from going
into the building,” Chief Ricciardelli
told The Saugus Advocate.
“The vehicle came to rest
against the building and there
was no structural damage. I
know that the restaurant was
open for business the next
morning,” the chief said.
Oct. 12. 2024, CVS, 1075
Broadway (Route 1 South): At
about 2:49 a.m., a 28-year-old
scored in the first quarter off a corner
rebound, and Jake Guarnieri scored
in the second quarter off a rebound.
If everyone comes back for next year
we will have a strong team.”
SAUGUS VOLLEYBALL
CLOSES SEASON WITH
OPTIMISM FOR FUTURE
The Saugus High School volleyball
team wrapped up its season with a
7-13 record, a result that didn’t meet
the team’s goal of reaching .500 but
marked another step forward under
Coach Mikayla Niles. In just two years,
the program has achieved nearly 20
wins, a significant improvement for a
team that historically struggled to be
competitive.
“We’re losing, but we’re not losing
to these teams like they’re pulling us
out of the waters...we’re competing
and we’re battling,” she added. Niles
is confident that the team’s progress
is setting a solid foundation for future
seasons.
As the Sachems say goodbye to a
core group of six seniors, Coach Niles
reflected on the impact of each player.
Both starting middles, Gia Saunders
and Abby Woolridge, are among those
graduating, leaving big shoes to fill in
a crucial position.
“There’s no replacing the way that
they play. They’re just dynamite players,”
Niles said.
Saunders, in particular, has established
herself among the top players
in the division in blocks, kills and hitting
percentage.
“She’s made a statement for herself,”
Niles said. “It’s been awesome to be by
her side and watch her grow into this
dynamite and animal of a player.”
Other seniors include Brianna Feldman,
who stepped into the libero poRandolph
man accelerated his
2016 Toyota and struck the
building, causing exterior wall
damage. Summary Comment:
From parked position, driver accelerated
forward, into front of
building (minor damage). Officer
Paulo Marques noted in his
report that the driver left the
area with property damage,
but was later identified. Police
issued a citation, and the man
faces additional criminal complaint
issues, according to the
police report.
sition after an early-season injury sidelined
the team’s regular starter. Feldman
was huge in digs and passes,
stepping up in what Niles described
as a “tough position” and embracing
her role as an “unsung hero” for
the team.
Olivia Chaisson, who played right
side, also made her mark. “She’s a
dancer, so everything she does is just
so precise and fancy,” Niles said, adding
that Chaisson always found a way
to get the ball over the net when the
team needed a reliable play.
Kayla Villafranche and Katie Barletta,
the remaining seniors, contributed
both on and off the court. Villafranche
battled injuries throughout
the season, while Barletta, despite limited
playing time, maintained a strong
presence on the sidelines. “She was
always cheering her team on...it just
shows the type of person she is,” said
Niles.
Looking ahead, Niles is optimistic
about her returning players, particularly
Gabriel De Souza, a sophomore
who made a significant impact as a defensive
specialist and found his rhythm
as libero in the final games.
“I think it’s safe to say he’s found his
calling,” Niles said.
As she reflects on the season, Niles
takes pride in the team’s growth.
“We’re making that shift, and now
we’re battling in there. It’s nice to see
that coaches, players, and parents recognize
it,” she said.
For Niles, the goal is clear: to build
a program that competes fiercely and
consistently, while fostering a supportive
environment that encourages her
players to give “150% always.”
Here are the season leaders for the
Sachems:
Kills: Gia Saunders led with 104 kills.
Hitting percentage: Saunders also
SAUGUS GIRLS SOCCER
CLOSES REGULAR SEASON
STRONG, SETS SIGHTS ON
PLAYOFFS
With a decisive finish to its regular
season, the Saugus High School girls
soccer team capped off a 13-2-3 regular
season record, clinching the No.
8 seed among 68 teams in Massachusetts
Division 3. Following dominant
performances, including a 7-1 victory
over Wakefield and a 3-0 shutout
against Somerville, Coach April Martinez’s
squad is poised to make a deep
playoff run.
Madison Botta was hot in the past
two games, netting four goals and two
assists against Wakefield, followed by
two more goals against Somerville.
Shawn Sewell, Shay Sewell and Selena
Garcia each added goals.
“Selena’s contribution has been fantastic,”
Martinez said.
While the team prepares for its playoff
opener, likely scheduled for early
next week, Martinez plans to focus
on refining key areas like penalty kicks,
set pieces and formation adjustments.
The weeklong rest period also offers a
much-needed break, especially for injured
senior starter Liliana Hernandez,
who remains in a boot but may return
for the postseason.
Reflecting on the season, Martinez is
proud of her team’s journey.
“They did better than expected,” she
said. “I’m very happy with how they
played and worked together.”
tops this with a .241 percentage.
Total blocks: Saunders leads with
36 blocks.
Digs: De Souza has the most with
110.
Serving aces: Aly Mabee leads with
54 aces.
A BAD START FOR 2023: Saugus firefighters moved toward the front entrance of Macy’s
after a 74-year-old Winthrop man crashed into the glass front doors on Jan. 2, 2023. Saugus
police deemed him “an immediate threat” and notified the Registry of Motor Vehicles.
(Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate)
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Page 13
Unified Basketball Team honors its members
By Tara Vocino
T
eammates were
honored during
last
T hurs -
day’s Unified Basketball
Senior Night
against the Swampscott
High School Big
Blue Team at Saugus
High School. They are
coached by team liaison
Leanna Walsh and
Head Coach Mark Cox.
Second season player Nicholas DeRosa was accompanied by his proud
parents: Lori DeRosa and Joe.
Second season player Max Muse was accompanied by his
proud mother, Tracy Muse, during last Thursday’s Unified Basketball
Senior Night against the Swampscott High School Big
Blue Team.
Third season player Adriana Camilo was accompanied
by her teacher, Robert Bruzzese.
Cheerleaders cheered on from the sidelines.
Caitlin Soroko shot the ball.
(Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
Football Sachems fall to Swampscott,
struggle to find momentum
By Dom Nicastro
S
augus High School’s
football team suffered
a tough loss last Friday
night on the road, falling 56-0
to Swampscott in a Northeastern
Conference matchup under
the lights at Blocksidge Field.
The Sachems, now 1-6, struggled
to keep pace with the Big
Blue, whose senior-heavy roster
played with precision and
speed, leaving little room for
Saugus to gain traction.
“That’s a quality team,” Saugus
Head Coach Steve Cummings
said. “I’m not going to
be surprised if they end up
making a really deep playoff
run. They’re very well-coached,
very solid, and you can see it
in how their senior guys have
been playing for three years. It
showed Friday night.”
The game’s first half set the
tone, with Swampscott jumping
out to a 42-0 lead by halftime.
The Big Blue opened the
scoring with a passing touchdown.
On the ensuing kickoff,
Swampscott recovered a fumble,
setting up a 2-yard rushing
TD.
The Sachems’ defense, however,
showed moments of resilience,
with interceptions
by Ryan Shea and Chris Mazin
giving Saugus brief glimmers
of hope.
“Ryan undercut a corner
route in the end zone – he
reads the ball so well,” Cummings
said. “I told him after
the game he might be the
best ball-hawk defensive back
I’ve had in my coaching career.
He just knows when to attack
the football.”
Despite these defensive
highlights, Swampscott’s offense
was relentless. Before
halftime, they added two
rushing touchdowns and another
throwing.
Saugus had its chances to
put points on the board, including
a near-touchdown
pass from freshman quarterback
Eli Fialho. The Sachems
moved the ball at times but
struggled to finish drives, an
issue that has hampered them
throughout the season.
Reflecting on the game,
Cummings emphasized the
challenge of facing such a
high-level team in a competitive
conference.
“Every week, it’s a different
problem to solve,” Cummings
said. “Swampscott’s spread offense
is well-run and difficult to
defend – they do a really good
job with their talent and know
how to get the ball to their
guys in space.”
Looking ahead, Saugus will
focus on ending the regular
season on a positive note as
they prepare to face Chelsea
on the road Friday (6 p.m.).
With just four games remaining
— including two consolation-round
games in the coming
two weeks — Cummings
is urging his team to make
the most of the time they
have left.
“We look at it like, we’ve got
to use these games to get better,”
Cummings said. “We know
we could be sitting at 4-3 if we
executed in bigger spots, but
we’re focusing on how we can
finish strong. Football’s one of
those sports where, once you
hang up the pads, that’s it. So
we’re reminding our seniors
that we have four games left.
We’re going to give everything
we have to send these guys off
on a good note and give the
younger players something to
build on for next season.”
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, NOVEmbEr 1, 2024
Saugus High School Sachems Boys’ Varsity Soccer
players share collegiate choices on Senior Night
Yousef Tuffaba Tufaha
was accompanied
by his proud mother,
Muna Tuffaba.
Leonardo de Paula was accompanied
by his teammates, Carlos Miranda and
Victor Ferreira, during Tuesday’s Saugus
High School Boys’ Varsity Soccer
Senior Night against the Northeast
Metro Tech Grand Knights at Saugus
High School.
Cameron Soroko was accompanied by his proud family: mother Mary Kate Soroko, father Josh
Soroko, brother Nathan Soroko, sister Caitlin Soroko, grandmother Patty Daurghtey, grandfather
Bernie Daurghtey and papa Alan Soroko. He plans to play baseball and study business at
Bryant University. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
Sachems Co-Captain Noah Giron
was accompanied by his
proud family: mother Amanda,
sister Lucia and father Carlos.
He plans to play soccer in
college and study business to
open his own business.
Sachems Co-Captain Isaac
Cesco was accompanied by his
proud mother, Melissa Disario
and sister, Charlotte Reinheimer.
Cesco plans to enter
the Air Force after graduation.
Luis Furia was accompanied
by his cousin, Anthony, and
his brother, Luan.
Brian Ortiz Ramirez was accompanied
by his parents,
Dina Ramirez and Maximiliano
Ortiz.
Marcus Davis was accompanied
by his proud parents,
Heather and Stephen. Davis
plans to become an ICU nurse,
like his mother.
Sachems Co-Captain Xavier
Martinez was accompanied
by his proud parents,
Jesus Martinez and Greicy
Jerez.
Ryan Benhalima was accompanied
by his proud family: mother
Samira Bensafa, father Abdelkrim
Benhalima and sister Sarah Benhalima.
He plans to attend Suffolk
University to study computer science
to work in library security.
The Sachems in their new uniforms. Shown from left to right: Lucas Assis de Oliveira, Victor
Ferreira, Johny Castillo Avila, Andry Fuñez, Cristian Dean, Giovanni Marques, Carlos Miranda,
Matheus Oliveira, Luiz Faria, Marcus Davis, Xavier Martinez, Noah Giron, Yousef Tuffaha, Ryan
Benhalima, Bryan Ortiz, Cam Soroko, Isaac Cesco, Leonardo de Paula, Abraham Costa, Massimo
Pagliiocco and Head Coach Guillermo Sepulveda.
Sachems Co-Captain Abraham
Costa was accompanied by his
parents, Jose Costa and Susana
Fernandes, and girlfriend, Olivia
Oliveira. Costa plans to major in
business management.
Sachems Co-Captain Massimo
Pagliocco was accompanied
by his proud parents,
Gianni Pagliocco and
Kristen Merrill.
׉	 7cassandra://jTfe3Pqn5H-CS2Iy9iXnuLby50xiZQYp1pNmO3kLyVM<` g#X׉E	THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, NOVEmbEr 1, 2024
Page 15
Saugus High and Northeast Metro Tech team up for
Field Hockey Senior Night
Saugus High School Co-Ed Sachems and Northeast metro Vocational regional High School Knights joined
forces for their Varsity Field Hockey Senior Night last Thursday night at Saugus High School.
Shown back row, from left to right, are: Assistant Coach Melanie Mesa, Gemma Morse, Ave Perez, Madison McCarthy, Gabriella
Shae, Jalease Bellard, Isabella Gori, Sophi Grover, and Head Coach Amanda Naso; Shown front row, from left to right,
are: Peyton Cooper, Emma Gurante, Lily Perez, Tatianna Lazo Bonilla, Dellana Wall, Natalie Comeau, and Sofia Lopez, who
attend Northeast Metropolitan Technical Vocational High School. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
Jake Guarnieri would like to
study linguistics to hopefully
be an Italian translator. He was
escorted by his proud mother,
Tyess Guarnieri, during last
Thursday night’s Saugus High
School Varsity Field Hockey
Senior Night at Saugus High
School.
Shown from left to right, are: Gemma Morse, Ave Perez, Sofie
Gignac, Lily Perez and Gabriella Shea, who attends Northeast
Metropolitan Regional Vocational High School.
Saugus High Varsity Field Hockey Captain Sami Sarnacchiaro
would like to study Animal Science/Pre-Veterinarian to become
a veterinarian. She was escorted by her proud mother
Sylvia Sarnacchiaro, her sister Ali Cedrone, her brother-in-law
Matt Cedrone, her sister Sabrina Sarnacchiaro and her brother
Michael Sarnacchiaro.
Malden residents, shown from
left to right, are: Peyton Cooper,
Sofia Lopez and Sophie
Grover, who attend Northeast
Metropolitan Regional Vocational
High School.
Saugus residents, shown from left to right, are: Natalie Comeau,
Emma Gurante, Jalease Bellard, Isabella Gori, Madison McCarthy
and Dellana Wall, who attend Northeast Metropolitan Regional
Vocational High School.
Revere resident Tatianna Lazo Bonilla, who attends the Northeast Metropolitan
Regional Vocational High School, will attend Bunker Hill Community
College for radiology to become an ultrasound technician. Lazo
was escorted by her proud father, Marvin Lazo, her brother Christopher
Lazo Bonilla, her sister Jazmin Lazo Bonilla, her sister Brianna Lazo Bonilla,
Head Coach Amanda Naso, Assistant Coach Melanie Mesa, and
her mother, Flor Bonilla.
Revere resident Tatiana
Lazo Bonilla, who
attends Northeast
Metropolitan Regional
Vocational High
School.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, NOVEmbEr 1, 2024
The Sounds of Saugus
By Mark E. Vogler
Good morning, Saugus
We’re getting into the heart
of a very special time of year
where so many community
events and activities are happening,
which should help to
bring the town together.
Tomorrow (Saturday, May
2), there will be a special ceremony
and banquet at the Saugus-Everett
Elks Lodge #642, at
401 Main St., where 10 of the
town’s most outstanding athletes
of 10 or more years gone
by will be inducted into the
Saugus High School Sports
Hall of Fame. This will be the
first class of athletes to be inducted
since 2018. There have
been 255 student athletes inducted
since the Hall of Fame’s
inception in 1987. For passionate
Saugus High sports fans,
members of the school sports
community, the athletes being
honored and their families, this
will be a special night for everyone
attending.
In today’s paper, we marked
the occasion with an article
about “the terrific twenty-five”
If you have any questions,
please feel free to contact Rev.
Beach at revjbeach@gmail.
com – phone: 781-233-1242.
A new Saugus Advocate
deadline
There are changes going
on in the production process
of The Saugus Advocate, the
town’s only exclusively Saugus
newspaper, which is delivered
to locations all over town on
Fridays. I won’t bore you with
the details, other than to tell
you that I have to make adjustments
in how I do my job
to make sure the paper gets
out on time. My deadlines have
been moved up.
So, if you have an announceTHE
HALLOWEEN RUNNERS: Left to right: Imrane Rahou, Santino Diciero, Naomi Tarantino,
Xavier Mazariegos-Darnell, Liam Marcu, AJ Diciero, Luiz Sena and Coach Steve Boudreau did
a special fun run last Saturday (Oct. 26) at Breakheart Reservation, dressed in Halloween
costumes. They are members of Coach Chris Tarantino’s Elementary School Cross Country
team that attends the Belmonte STEAM Academy. Coach T.’s daughter Naomi, who is now
in the seventh grade, helps out as a mentor while Coach Boudreau is the assistant coach.
(Photo Courtesy to the Saugus Advocate)
selected by a small panel of
Sachem sports experts, which
LET THE PROS
HANDLE IT!
™
Say “NO” to Cleaning
Out Your Gutters.
includes a few former Sachem
coaches and members of the
Hall of Fame
Committee.
Hats off to
those being
honored tonight.
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We’re looking to install our
NEXT GENERATION gutter
guard on your home!
Day observance
set for
Nov. 11
If you are a
proud Saugus
resident who
is very patriotic,
mark on
your calendar
FULL SERVICE GUTTER PROTECTION – SCHEDULE YOUR
FREE INSPECTION NOW! 1-888-617-2908
“Monday, Nov.
11.” Retired
and active servicemen
and
women and
their families
will converge
on Veterans
Park, at the
corner of Winter
and Central
Streets,
which is dedicated
to the
memory of all
Saugus veterans.
There
will be a simple
ceremony with a keynote
speaker, some prayers, perhaps
a High School band or
color guard unit and maybe
some World War II U.S. Army reenactors
on hand. It’s a worthwhile
event if you have the
time. Stay tuned for details.
And at about the same time,
there will be a Field of Flags
planted on the front lawn outside
Saugus Town Hall – courtesy
of the Parson Roby Chapter
of the Daughters of the
American Revolution. This will
mark the Fourth Annual Veterans
Day Field of Flags organized
by the hometown DAR.
An Election Eve Prayer Vigil
Monday
The Rev. John Beach of St.
John’s Episcopal Church is
organizing an Election Eve
Prayer Vigil that will be held
from 6:30-7:30 p.m. on Monday
(Nov. 4) at St. John’s Episcopal
Church in Saugus (at the
corner of Central and Prospect
Streets).
“The vigil is not a partisan exercise,
but a call to remember
that we carry within us hopes
and aspirations for our country
and its future,” Rev. Beach said,
in extending his invitation to
the community at large.
ment, news item or notice that
you want to submit for the Friday
paper, it’s best to email it
to me at mvoge@comcast.net
by Tuesday night. If I receive
something early Wednesday
morning, I will try to get it in.
But if you wait till Wednesday,
your chances of getting something
in that week’s paper are
greatly reduced.
Most of us don’t like change.
But life is full of adjustments. In
my five-decades-plus of newspapering,
I’ve gone from dictating
stories over the phone
from my notebook, to typing
out articles on the old Underwood
Manual typewriter, to using
IBM Selectric typewriters
(you had to type flawlessly and
white out any mistakes before
scanning each page), to using
a teletype machine, to various
typewriters that hooked
up with a telephone and finally
through various computers
– most recently a Dell 2-in-1
desktop that needs to be replaced
within the coming year.
So change is inevitable. And
there will be changes coming
as we continue to produce The
Saugus Advocate.
Food Pantry notes
The Saugus United Parish
Food Pantry will be open today
(Friday, Nov. 1) from 9:3011
a.m. at 50 Essex St. in the
basement of Cliftondale Congregational
Church. The Saugus
United Parish Food Pantry
welcomes all neighbors facing
food insecurity. If you are able
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 17
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Page 17
SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 16
to donate to the food pantry,
you can also stop by during
those hours or drop donations
off at the Saugus Public Library
during library hours.
Legion Breakfasts today
The American Legion Post
210 has begun its 2024-25
breakfast season. There’s a
good deal for Saugus veterans
and other folks who enjoy
a hearty breakfast on Friday
mornings. Doors open at 7:30
a.m., with breakfast served
from 8-9:00 a.m. for an $8 donation.
Veterans who cannot
afford the donation may be
served free.
This week’s “SHOUT OUTs”
We received a nomination
for a “Shout Out” this week
from Joyce Rodenhiser, who
wished to extend some public
appreciation for “all the people
who are preparing for voting
and elections this week.”
“They probably get paid, but
they are so important to our
democracy!”
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.
A Shred-It event for residents
on Nov. 2
The Town of Saugus will
host a document shredding
event for Saugus residents on
Saturday, Nov. 2. The shredding
event will take place behind
the Saugus Department
of Public Works at 515 Main
St. and will run from 8 a.m. to
noon. This event is for Saugus
residents only and there is no
cost to participate.
Please contact Solid Waste/
Recycling Coordinator Scott
A. Brazis at 781-231-4036 with
any questions.
Fall Cleanup begins on
Nov. 12 at Riverside
The Cemetery Department
announced this week that
Halloween decorations lit up the night on Lynn Fells Parkway this week as town residents
enjoyed the festive days of fall. (Photo courtesy of Laura Eisener)
on Tuesday, Nov. 12, Riverside
Cemetery will begin its
fall cleanup of the cemetery
grounds. If you have personal
holiday/seasonal items that
you would like to keep, please
stop by the cemetery and remove
them before Tuesday,
Nov. 12, 2024.
The Cemetery Commission
and Cemetery Department are
not responsible for any personal
holiday/seasonal items
that are not removed from
gravesites by the family on or
before Nov. 12, 2024.
Veterans’ flags will remain
on gravesites until Nov. 12 and
will be removed for the winter
season starting on Tuesday,
Nov. 12 during the fall cleanup.
Flags will be placed back
on gravesites in May for Memorial
Day.
If you have questions about
fall cleanup, please call Maddy
at the Cemetery Department
office at 781-231-4170.
A free program about
trains on Nov. 13
The Saugus Historical Society
meeting on November 13
will feature a mini-symposium
about trains. Todd Geig will be
presenting to the Saugus Historical
Society an overview of
how he came to model railroading
through a fascination
with the legendary Boston, Revere
Beach and Lynn railroad
(aka The Narrow Gauge), which
ran from 1875 to 1940 and was
instrumental in the development
of the North Shore. His
model layout of this historical
local line was on view in the
Lynn Museum last winter.
Also, Bill Stewart, the “Old Sachem,”
will talk about a train
wreck on the Saugus Branch
in 1871. Laura Eisener will
speak about the present developments
on the rail trail of
the former Saugus Branch line,
which will eventually connect
this popular bicycle and walking
trail to the sea.
The program will begin at 7
p.m. at 30 Main St. in Saugus.
It is free and open to the public.
Light refreshments will be
served.
“Saugus 4-1-1” gearing up
for 2025
Selectman Corinne Riley,
who was the driving force behind
a nifty program that helps
newcomers to Saugus – as well
as old-timers – get better acquainted
with their community,
said she regrets that “Saugus
4-1-1” didn’t happen this
fall after successful Saturdays
at the Saugus Middle-High
School over the past two years.
“The Saugus 4-1-1 Committee
would like everyone to know
that the Saugus 4-1-1 event
will be taking place, but will
be held in March 2025,” Selectman
Riley said in a recent announcement.
“Invitations
to all new residents
as well as non-profits
will be mailed out in January.
We are looking forward to having
this wonderful event for
new residents as well as those
who have been here for years
to learn what Saugus has to offer!
More detailed information
will be coming soon,” she said.
Stay tuned for updates on
“Saugus 4-1-1.”
Fall Curbside Leaf Collection
Dates
Town Manager Scott Crabtree’s
office this week released
the dates for the fall curbside
leaf collection: Monday, Oct. 28
to Friday, Nov. 1; Tuesday, Nov.
12 to Saturday, Nov. 16 (oneday
delay this week due to Veterans
Day); Monday, Dec. 2 to
Friday, Dec. 6. Residents may
dispose of leaves curbside on
their regularly scheduled collection
day, between Monday
and Friday on these dates listed.
Leaves should be left outside
at the curb by 7 a.m. on
the appropriate days. Please
ensure that leaf containers
are physically separated from
trash and recycling.
Paper leaf bags are the preferred
method of leaf disposal.
If you are using barrels, they
must be clearly marked with
yard waste stickers. Yard waste
stickers, which are free, may be
obtained at Inspectional Services
in the lower level of Saugus
Town Hall at 298 Central
St., or at the Saugus Department
of Public Works at 515
Main St. Barrel covers must
remain removed so that the
leaves are visible.
Plastic bags, cardboard boxes,
branches and brush will
not be accepted. Please note
that separate trucks collect the
rubbish, recycling and leaves,
so the leaves may be collected
at a different time of day.
“Missed pickups” will not be
conducted.
Please contact Recycling Director
Scott Brazis at 781-2314036
with any questions.
Hammersmith Quilters
Guild Craft Fair is Nov. 6
The Hammersmith Quilters
Guild Craft Fair will be
held Wednesday, Nov. 6, from
7-8:30 p.m. at the Saugus Senior
Center (466 Central St.,
Saugus). The Guild members
will be selling handmade,
beautiful items. Think holiday
shopping! Cash and checks
are recommended. A scissors
sharpener will be available.
www.hqgsaugus.org
Selectmen meet on Nov. 7
The next meeting will be on
Nov. 7, 2024, at 7 p.m. in the
Auditorium in Town Hall – to
be followed by Nov. 19 at 7
p.m.
Here’s what’s going on at
the Saugus Public Library
Five bucks for a bag of books!
The New Friends of the Saugus
Public Library are offering
quite a bargain – $5 for a bag of
books. Purchase a New Friends
of the Saugus Public Library
mesh book bag at the Main
Desk for $5 and fill it with as
many books as you’d like. Proceeds
benefit the New Friends
so they can support public library
services in Saugus.
Pongala Photographs: Susan
Olesiw has been visiting India
and photographing its people
and festivals since 1976.
In her photograph exhibit on
display this month and November
in the first floor reading
room at the Saugus Public
Library, she focuses on the
ninth day of the annual 10-day
Pongala festival held in Trivandrum,
Kerala, South India. It is
the largest gathering of women
in the world; up to two and
a half million women attend
each year, and though primarily
Hindu, the festival is open to
all devotees of any faith. The
color photograph display and
the photo captions are worth
checking out.
MEG’s Christmas Tree Festival
The
MEG Foundation’s 2024
Christmas Tree Festival will
open on Nov. 8, from 3-8 p.m.
and continue on Nov. 9, from
3 to 8 p.m.; Nov. 10, from noon
to 5 p.m.; Nov. 15, from 3 to 8
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 18
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Page 18
p.m.; and Nov. 16, from 3 to 8
p.m. Stay tuned for more details
or contact Linda Ross at
617-686-4645.
Notes from the Town
Democratic Party
Rides to the polls
“The Saugus Democratic
Town Committee encourages
all residents to vote in
all elections, but even more
importantly in the upcoming
Presidential Election on
November 5th. To ensure all
have the opportunity to vote,
we are offering free rides to
your voting location on TuesTHE
SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, NOVEmbEr 1, 2024
day, November 5, from 9 a.m.
to 6 p.m. Reservations appreciated
by Friday, November
1st by contacting Mary Robblee
at (617) 240-5439 or via
email at mrobb48@aol.com
(Same day requests will be
accepted if possible).”
Food pantry donations
“The Saugus Democratic
Town Committee is supporting
and encouraging
food donations to the Saugus
United Parish Food Pantry’s
Thanksgiving Meal Drive.
Donations of any of the below
items are being accepted
through November 8th
by dropping items off at the
donation bin in the Library,
at the Cliftondale Congrega~
LEGAL NOTICE ~
SAUGUS BOARD OF SELECTMEN
PUBLIC HEARING
Notice is hereby given that the Saugus Board of
Selectmen will conduct a public hearing for a Special
Permit on the request of owners Adam Dion,
27 Suffolk St, Chelsea, MA & Ilya Gluskin,
1 Marblehead St., North Reading, MA. Name of
proposed business: Plunge Boston Wellness &
Recovery Studio for cold plunge, sauna, red light,
normatec compression & body work physical therapy.
Business location: 880 Broadway, Saugus, MA.
This Public Hearing will be held at the Saugus
Town Hall, Second floor auditorium, Saugus, MA
on November 19, 2024, at 7:05 PM.
Debra Panetta, Chairman
Meredith K. Casagrande Clerk
November 01, 2024
RON’S OIL
Call
For
PRICE
MELROSE, MA
02176
NEW
CUSTOMER’S
WELCOME
ACCEPTING VISA, MASTERCARD & DISCOVER
(781) 397-1930 OR (781) 662-8884
100 GALLON MINIMUM
tional Church on Fridays from
8:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m., or by
appointment. If you have donation
items that you cannot
drop off, please let Mary Robblee
know by contacting her
at (617) 240-5439 or via email
at mrobb48@aol.com”
• “jarred or canned cranberry
sauce
• “canned corn, green bean,
and carrots
• “canned cream of mushroom
•
“boxed stuffing mix
• “boxed mashed potatoes
• “boxed mac & cheese
• “boxed cornbread mix
• “boxed dessert mix
SDTC November Meeting
“Please join us!
“It is never too late to be involved
in protecting our democracy
and freedoms.
“The November meeting of
the Saugus Town Democratic
Committee will be held at 7
p.m., on Wednesday evening,
November 13th at the Saugus
Public Safety Building, 27
Hamilton Street, 2nd Floor.
We hope to see you then.”
About The Saugus Advocate
We
welcome press releases,
news announcements,
freelance articles and courtesy
photos from the community.
Our deadline is Tuesday
night. If you have a story
idea, an article or photo
to submit, please email me
at mvoge@comcast.net or
leave a message at 978-6837773.
Or send your press release
to me in the mail at PO
Box 485, North Andover, MA
01845. Let us become your
hometown newspaper. The
Saugus Advocate is available
in the Saugus Public Library,
the Saugus Senior Center,
Saugus Town Hall, local convenience
stores and restaurants
throughout town.
Say nr
Sa
a
y Senior
Seni
by Jim Miller
Best Pill Boxes and Medication
Management Tools
Dear Savvy Senior,
Can you recommend some
good pill boxes and medication
reminding devices? I’ve recently
started taking several new prescription
medications along with
some vitamins I normally take
and need to get a pill box that
helps me organize them. What
can you tell me?
Almost 70
Dear Almost,
Pill boxes (a.k.a. pill organizers)
play an important role in keeping
people healthy because they help
you stay on top of your medication
regimen. While there are many options,
here are a few tips to help you
choose, along with some top-rated
pill boxes as recommended by expert
reviewers.
Identify Your Needs?
When choosing an appropriate
pill box for you, you fi rst need to ask
yourself a few questions, such as:
• How many pills do you take
and how big are they? If you take
only a few medications, a smaller pill
box may be suffi cient. But if you’re
taking multiple medications and
large vitamin supplements, you’ll
want to get a large compartment pill
box that can hold your daily dosage.
• Do you take your pills once
a day or multiple times a day? If
you take medications only once a
day, a simple pill box with one compartment
will do. But if you need
to take medications multiple times
a day, you’ll want to get a pill box
with either two, three or four compartments
for each day of the week.
• Do you have problems remembering
to take your medications?
If so, there are organizers that have
built-in alarms and reminding features,
or you can download a free
medication reminding app on your
smartphone.
• Do you have a diffi cult time
opening your medication containers?
If so, there are easy-open
pill boxes or automated medication
dispensers that are ideal for those
with dexterity problems.
• Do you need a portable pill box
for when you’re away from home?
There are smaller portable pill boxes
made for traveling, some of which
have sealed-shut cases that prevent
moisture and dust from entering.
Best Pill Boxes
With help from The New York
Times (Wirecutter) and USA Today
(Reviewed), some of the best pill
boxes in 2024 are off ered by Auvon
and Sukuos which make a variety of
single and multiple compartment
pill organizers that are big, colorful
and easy to open.
Their top-rated options include
the “Auvon Weekly Pill Organizer” for
once-a-day medication users; “Sukuos
AM/PM Weekly 7 Day Pill Organizer”
for twice a day use; “Auvon iMedassist
Moisture-Proof Weekly Pill
Organizer” for four times a day; and
the “Auvon Moistureproof Monthly
Pill Organizer” for those who want to
organize their medications monthly.
Or, if you’re interested in a travel
pill box, the “MUchengbao Travel
Pill Organizer” is considered an excellent
choice.
All of these pill boxes cost around
$10 and are available on Amazon.
com or Walmart.com.
High-Tech Pill Organizers
If you need more help keeping
up with your medication regimen,
there are smart pill boxes that will
organize your pills, remind you to
take them, track your progress and
even text or email caregivers if pills
are missed. A popular option to
consider here is EllieGrid (elliegrid.
com, $149), which connects the pill
box to the EllieGrid app (via Bluetooth)
that you would install on your
smartphone.
Or if you need even more help,
there are automated medication
dispensers like the Hero (herohealth.
com, $45 per month), which is a
comprehensive, Wi-Fi connected,
app-based system that will remind
you when to take your pills and dispenses
them to you.
Medication Reminding Apps
If you’re interested in a medication
reminding app, some top-rated
choices include MyTherapy (mytherapyapp.com)
or Medisafe (medisafeapp.com).
These are free apps
that you can download in the Apple
or Google Play app stores that
will send you timely notifi cations to
take your pills, and reminders to refi
ll your prescriptions.
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.
nior
ior
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Page 19
Saugus Gardens in the Fall
Here’s what’s blooming in town this week to make your walks more enjoyable
By Laura Eisener
F
oliage is still spectacular
around town this week
as we head into November.
A variety of native trees,
mostly maples and oaks, along
the edge of Birch Pond along
Walnut Street have had beautiful
leaf color this fall, as have
trees in Breakheart Reservation
and wooded areas around
the ponds in Golden Hills. Activities
at the Iron Works are
wrapping up for the season,
but the grounds remain open
and there is still at least one
sugar maple (Acer saccharum)
on the upper lawn that has not
lost all its leaves. This classic
New England species is one of
the most renowned for fall color
in Northern New England,
but there are many sugar maples
around here as well. They
are best situated away from
the road or driveways because
their roots do not like road salt,
but they are beautiful shade
trees for other areas.
One of our less-appreciated
native shrubs, staghorn sumac
(Rhus typhina), is radiant
with reds, oranges and occasional
yellow gradations in the
foliage right now. Their compound
leaves may have an
odd number of leaflets, which
can number anywhere from
about nine to over 30 on a single
leaf. The stems are covered
with velvety hairs, which gave
the shrub its common and scientific
names since they resemble
antlers on a deer, still
covered with down. In addition
to the spectacular fall
color, the fuzzy fruits provide
food to a number of birds and
other wildlife through the winter.
These shrubs grow almost
tall enough to be considered
trees, about 15 feet tall. A colony
of sumacs near the edge
of Lynn Woods in North Saugus
was nicknamed “thorn
forest” when I was growing
up, because of the blackberries
growing beneath the sumacs.
It had a magical sort of
feel because of the textures of
the stems and big leaves, very
different than the taller forest
areas nearby. In other parts of
the world these have become
popular garden plants, but
where they are native, they
are still often taken for granted.
Part of the problem is undoubtedly
peoples’ association
of the name sumac with
poison sumac (Toxicodendron
vernix), which can cause a rash
similar to poison ivy (Toxicodendron
radicans), although
allergies to staghorn sumac
are extremely rare.
Sumacs can be found in
many places in Saugus, and
one spot where their reddish
orange fall leaves glow against
the background of green is
at Round Hill, where several
grow near the base of the hill.
Round Hill is the geographical
feature on the town seal
which is seen on most of the
street signs in town. The small
park at the base of the hill on
Round Hill Street is a pleasant
place to relax, and it provides a
nice foreground to the wood‘Pearl
Glam’ beautyberry has
purple fruits and reddish
leaves – one of the most intriguing
garden shrubs in
fall. (Photo courtesy of Laura
Eisener)
ed hillside.
Not far from Round Hill is an
unusual form of ginkgo tree
(Ginkgo biloba) beside Town
Hall that is also at peak foliage
color right now. The leaves
are all golden, and when they
drop they usually do so almost
all at once, or within one or
two days. Ginkgos have very
distinctive fan-shaped leaves
and are not closely related to
any other tree species. This
individual tree lacks a strong
leader, so the crown shape is
like a vase, somewhat similar
to the typical shape of American
elms (Ulmus americana)
and Japanese zelkovas (Zelkova
serrata), although most
ginkgos do have leaders and
are likely to grow into upright
oval trees.
An unusual garden shrub
A sugar maple at the Saugus Iron Works still holds onto some
of its colorful leaves. (Photo courtesy of Laura Eisener)
that turns heads, especially in
fall, is the Pearl Glam beautyberry
(Callicarpa ‘Pearl Jam’). It
is a hybrid shrub with reddish
purple foliage from spring
through fall, but at this time
of year its tiny round fruits ripen
and turn light purple. There
are two species of commonly
available beautyberry with
green leaves, both producing
similar ornamental fruit:
American beautyberry (Callicarpa
americana), which is native
to the southeastern United
States and purple beautyberry(Callicarpa
dichotoma),
which comes from Asia, but
Birch Pond along Walnut Street reflects the fall color from
Lynn Woods. (Photo courtesy of Laura Eisener)
The ginkgo tree beside Town Hall is at peak foliage color this
week. (Photo courtesy of Laura Eisener)
the hybrid ‘Pearl Glam’ has the
addition of the unusual leaf
color – especially bright in fall.
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.
Spectacular foliage color on sumacs stands out at the base
of Round Hill. (Photo courtesy of Laura Eisener)
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, NOVEmbEr 1, 2024
OBITUARIES
Anne (Leo) Berthold
O
f Saugus. Died on Monday,
October 21st at
her home in Saugus.
She was the wife of David Berthold
with whom she shared
48 years of marriage. Born in
Boston, she was the daughter
of the late Robert J. and Anna J.
(Masse) Leo. The former Office
Manager for the Town of Andover’s
Assessors Office, Mrs. Berthold
had retired this past January
after 25 years of service.
An avid reader, she had spent
most of her life in Saugus.
Besides her husband, Mrs.
Berthold is survived by her
two children; Abigail Muro
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Maechaoui, Gabriel
BUYER2
Difilippo, Lauren M
and her husband Christopher
of Arizona and Robert Berthold
of Saugus, one grandson;
Brody. She is also survived
by her brother Vincent
Leo of New Hampshire.
Relatives and friends were
invited to attend visiting
hours in the Bisbee-Porcella
Funeral Home, Saugus,
on Tuesday, October 29th.
A Celebration of Life was
held in the funeral home on
Wednesday. In lieu of flowers,
donations in her memory
may be made St. Jude Children’s
Research Hospital at stjude.org.
Norma
M. (D’Eon)
Knowlton
O
f Saugus. Died at the
Chestnut Woods Nursing
Home on Wednesday,
October 24 at the age of
93. She was the beloved wife of
the late Ralph J. Knowlton with
whom she shared 64 years of
marriage. Born in Boston, and
a lifelong resident of Saugus,
Norma was the daughter of
the late John R. and Rose Emily
(D’Entremont) D’Eon. She
was born into a family of talented
musicians including pianist,
bass guitarist, pedal steel
guitarist, and Sweet Adelines
man’s in Saugus, selecting the
perfect outfits for customers.
Enjoying campfires and playing
horseshoes were favorite
summer pastimes at Epsom
Valley Campground in New
Hampshire. They often rode
motorcycles as members of
the Baystate Riders Motorcycle
Association.
Norma is survived by her
(female singing group), Norma
developed her love of music
and singing (including yodeling)
at a very young age.
Following her twin brothers
Ronnie and Donnie and their
country band, she also enjoyed
many evenings dancing with
her husband, Ralph and joining
her brothers on stage occasionally.
Norma’s
creative side was
not only in the musical genre,
but in her ability to create
beautiful floral arrangements
for family and friends. Also,
Norma was the neighborhood
hairdresser in her early
years, cutting and styling
for those who could not afford
the hair salons. Her great
sense of style also helped her
when she worked at HoffREAL
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.
SELLER1
Brown, Austin C
7 Austin Ct Unit L RET
SELLER2
Brown, Martha J
Sullo, Marianne
1. On Nov. 1, 1938, what horse
having a food’s name won the
“Race of the Century” at Pimlico?
2.
The first long American “pony
express” (1673) connected Boston
and what city?
3. This month is No-Shave November,
which supports helping
what type of patients?
4. According to Guinness World
Records, the farthest distance
to fire a pumpkin is how many
feet: 1,222.99, 5,545.43 or
9,212,76?
5. On Nov. 2, 1889, what two
U.S. states with a name of a
tribe achieved statehood?
6. What country has the most
pyramids: Egypt, Greece or Sudan?
7.
On Nov. 3, 1911, what competitor
of Ford and the Model
T was founded in Michigan?
8. What type of facility has the
sign “Max hug time 3 minutes.
For fonder farewells please use
the car park”?
9. Traditionally, do macarons
and macaroons both have
nuts?
10. On Nov. 4, 1842, who married
Mary Todd?
11. When did Ray Tomlinson introduce
“@” in email addresses:
1971, 1979 or 1982?
12. What Indian was also called
Rebecca Rolfe?
13. November 5 is National Chinese
Takeout Day; in California
during what historical event
did U.S. Chinese restaurants become
popular?
14. What mammal can fly?
ADDRESS
9 Water Wheel Ln
7 Austin Ct #L
CITY
Saugus
Saugus
15. What American city dug a
canal to reverse the flow of its
river to avoid pollution?
16. What antibiotic (discovered
in 1928) was nicknamed “mold
juice”?
17. On Nov. 6, 1639, what communication
method began at
Boston’s Fairbanks’ tavern?
18. What country has the most
saunas per capita: Finland, Iceland
or Japan?
19. Where are starfish eyes located?
20.
November 7 is Return Day
in part of Delaware – a holiday
that includes the parties’
ceremonial “bury the hatchet”
– what does Return Day celebrate?
DATE
10.01.24
10.01.24
PRICE
1125000
299000
ANSWERS
five
children, Patricia Adams
and her husband Gary of Burlington,
Timothy Knowlton
of Saugus, Dorothy DiTomaso
and her husband Robert
of Saugus, Frederick Flammia
and his wife Denise of South
Berwick, Maine, and Denise
Acampa of Naples, Florida.
She was a loving Nana to Alan
DiTomaso, Alison (DiTomaso)
Holmes, April Adams, Amy
(Flammia) Jodoin, Lindsey
Acampa, Stephen Acampa,
and also loved her many nieces
and nephews. Norma was
also blessed with seven great
grandchildren and three great
great grandchildren. She was
predeceased by her siblings,
Chester, Marcella, Larry, Arthur,
Ronald & Donald. Norma
was also survived by many
nieces and nephews.
OBITS | SEE PAGE 21
1. Seabiscuit
2. NYC (Its path was later called the Old Post Road
and parts of it became Route 1.)
3. Cancer
4. 5,545.43 (from an air cannon in Moab, Utah,
in 2010)
5. North and South Dakota
6. Sudan
7. Chevrolet
8. Airport drop-off zone (at Dunedin Airport in
New Zealand)
9. Macarons have ground almonds; macaroons
have coconut, which is actually a fruit.
10. Abraham Lincoln
11. 1971
12. Pocahontas
13. The Gold Rush
14. Bat
15. Chicago
16. Penicillin
17. First post office in America
18. Finland
19. The ends of its arms
20. Announcement of election results (Voters originally
had to travel back two days after an election
to find out the results.)
Call
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Page 21
OBITS| FROM PAGE 20
Relatives & friends were invited
to attend visiting hours
in the Bisbee-Porcella Funeral
Home, Saugus on Tuesday,
October 29. A funeral was
held from the funeral home
on Wednesday followed by
a funeral mass at St. Margaret’s
Church. Interment Riverside
Cemetery, Saugus. In
lieu of flowers donations may
be made to the local Alzheimer’s
Association @ alz.org.
Special thank you to Sarah
Williams for her exceptional
care of Norma.
Michael A. Spallone
O
f Saugus.
Died on Friday
morning
at home surrounded by his
family at the age of 104. He was
the husband of the late Lucy A.
(Gentile) Spallone with whom
he shared 72 years of marriage.
Born in Brighton and
raised in Malden, he was
the son of the late Vincent
and Mary (Tomacelli) Spallone.
A veteran of the United
States Army Corps/United
States Air Force Sgt. Spallone
served during World War
II with the U.S. 19th Supply
Squadron, from 1942-1945.
He worked in the maintenance
and construction department
at Stop and Shop
for 42 years. Mr. Spallone was
a resident of Saugus since
1995 and was an avid gardener.
He
is survived by his two
daughters; Marie A. McCusker
and her husband Mathew
of Saugus, Theresa A. Babine
of Saugus, five grandchildren;
Michael McCusker, Mathew
McCusker and his wife Amy,
Mark McCusker and his wife
Bonnie, Anthony Babine and
his wife Nancy and Michelle
Smith, great grandchildren;
Skyler and his wife Sofia,
Chandler, Emerson, Milania,
Mathew R., Emily, Jake, Lily
and many nieces and nephews.
Mr. Spallone was the
brother of the late Allessandra
Zaia, Margaret Como, Carmela
Robertson and Leonard
Spallone. He was predeceased
by his son in law Edward
Babine.
Relatives and friends were
invited to attend an hour of
visitation in the Bisbee-Porcella
Funeral Home, Saugus, on
Tuesday October 29. followed
by a funeral mass in Blessed
Sacrament Church, Saugus.
Interment Riverside Cemetery,
Saugus. In lieu of flowers
donations in his memory
may be made to St. Jude
Children’s Research Hospital
@ www.stjude.org.
We follow Social Distancing Guidelines!
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9ׁHhttp://www.mangorealtyteam.comׁׁЈנg# ̕
9ׁHmailto:infowithmango@gmail.comׁׁЈנg# j
9ׁHhttp://mangorealtyteam.comׁׁЈנg# ̉
9ׁHmailto:infowithmango@gmail.comׁׁЈנg# g9ׁHhttp://www.mangorealtyteam.comׁׁЈנg# T9ׁHmailto:infowithmango@gmail.comׁׁЈנg# ́
9ׁHmailto:chrstdesousa@yahoo.comׁׁЈנg# d̈
9ׁHmailto:infowithmango@gmail.comׁׁЈ׉E@SQUARE SAFER | FROM PAGE 5
Page 22
In an interview at the time
that Wong announced receipt of
the grant money, Wong stressed
that pedestrian safety was already
a chief neighborhood
concern. “Just wish we got it earlier,”
Wong said of the grant, notTHE
SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, NOVEmbEr 1, 2024
ing that a Saugus couple – Robert
and Judy Hoffman – wound
up getting hit in a crosswalk (on
Central Street in January 2018)
long before the town obtained
the grant. Mrs. Hoffman later
died from injuries she suffered
from the accident.
Wong noted that pedestrians
getting hit by cars has been
an unfortunate occurrence too
often in Saugus – like in April
2021 when a 60-year-old Revere
man in a wheelchair was
treated for injuries after being
struck by a car driven by
a 74-year-old Malden woman
in the area of 1500 Broadway
near Route 99. Wong also recalled
a selectman being hit,
not mentioning Michael Serino
by name.
“I applied for it because I think
it’s very important for prevention
and the safety of our community,”
Wong told selectmen
at that time.
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TERRIFIC TWENTY-FIVE |
FROM PAGE 11
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graduate, he is the only member
on this list who is not a current
Saugus High Sports Hall of
Famer. But he will be tomorrow,
as he is one of 10 former Saugus
sports greats who will be
inducted. The Sachems sports
experts wanted him on this list
because he is considered to be
the greatest track & field athlete
in the history of Saugus
High sports. He only participated
in track during his four years
as a Sachems athlete – in the
winter and spring seasons. He
earned All-American honors in
the Triple Jump during his senior
year. He has nine total state
and division championships.
He qualified for the state in the
55 meters, the 200 meters, the
Triple Jump and the High Jump.
He won seven NEC championships
– twice in the 200 meter,
three times in the Long Jump
and twice in the Triple Jump.
After graduating from Saugus
High, he attended Angelo State
University in Texas, where he
won the conference championship
and received All-America
honors in the Triple Jump. He
transferred to Wingate University
in North Carolina, where he
was a two-time All-American in
the Triple Jump.
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Page 23
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OR REN
REN
OR RENT
For Sale: $699,000
For Sale: $629,000
FOR SALE: $699,000 / This charming 2-bedroom ranch in a desirable
Saugus neighborhood offers cozy living with a fireplace, a spacious main
level, and additional lower-level space—ideal for a home office or family
room. Outside, enjoy a private driveway, fenced-in yard, and room for
gatherings. Just minutes from public transit, Boston, and Logan Airport,
this home combines suburban tranquility with city convenience. Don’t miss
your chance to make it yours! Call Sue at 781-558-1091 or sent us an
email at infowithmango@gmail.com
FOR RENT: PEABODY 2-BEDROOM
WITH HARDWOOD FLOORS AND
APPLIANCES INCLUDED: $2,600/month
FOR SALE: $629,000 / Charming home on a picturesque tree-studded lot in
Saugus, blending comfort with convenience. The first floor features a bright
family room and an inviting oak kitchen with hardwood floors. The main
bedroom offers a private balcony and his-and-her closets. With 2.5 baths, a
spacious deck, and a garage, this home is both functional and serene. Set back
for privacy yet close to amenities. Call Christina at 603-670-3353 or send us
an email at chrstdesousa@yahoo.com
FOR RENT: WAKEFIELD 3-BEDROOM
HOME WITH MODERN AMENITIES AND
PRIME LOCATION! $3,000/month
MANGO REALTY INC
781-558-1091 | infowithmango@gmail.com
www.mangorealtyteam.com
Join the fun with Mango Realty by visiting our
Facebook page, Mango Realty - Sue
Palomba, and participate in our Monday
Trivia for a chance to win a delicious
Thanksgiving pie! To enter, simply like our
page and answer the Monday Trivia questions
we posted. Don’t miss out on this sweet
opportunity to celebrate the season with a
homemade pie! We can’t wait to see your
answers, and good luck! Terms and conditions
apply. The winners of this game will be
announced on our Facebook page.
For Rent: $2,600/mo
FOR RENT: $2,600 per moth / Welcome to your new home in Gardner
Park, a peaceful and desirable Peabody neighborhood! This inviting 2bedroom
apartment features gleaming hardwood floors, abundant natural
light, and convenient washer/dryer hookups. Included are a washer, dryer,
oven, and refrigerator for your convenience. Enjoy this pet-free, smokefree
environment that promotes a clean and tranquil lifestyle. Close to
major commuting routes, parks, schools, shopping, and more—don’t miss
out on this lovely residence! Contact us to schedule a tour!
Looking to buy or sell your property? Call us at 781-558-1091 or email infowithmango@gmail.com.
Visit our website at mangorealtyteam.com for exclusive listings, market reports, and a free home
valuation tool. Let us help with all you real estate needs!
For Rent: $3,000/mo
FOR RENT: $3,000 per month / This inviting home in Wakefield features an
open kitchen/dining area with granite countertops, a dishwasher, refrigerator,
and hardwood floors throughout, seamlessly connected to the living space
with a charming stone fireplace. Enjoy the convenience of in-unit washer and
dryer in a pet-free, smoke-free environment. With a bus line in front, access
to Oak Grove, Boston, and the airport is a breeze. Close to the center of town,
Lake Quannapowit, and major routes. Don’t miss the chance on this lovely
residence! Contact us to schedule a tour.
CONTACT US!
781-558-1091 / infowithmango@gmail.com / www.mangorealtyteam.com
TRINITY REAL ESTATE
Providing Real Estate Services for 17 Years
Servicing Saugus, Melrose, Wakefield, Malden, all North Shore communities, Boston and beyond.
Agent Spotlight
Throughout Patricia’s 30 years in the real estate industry, she
has worked in property management, rentals, and real estate
sales. Working as a rental manager and new agent trainer in the
past has given her the professional experience and expertise
which she demonstrates today while working at Trinity Real
Estate. Throughout her lengthly profession, she has been
rewarded with numerous awards including the top 6% of all sales
professionals in her real estate network.
Patricia Torcivia, REALTOR ® 781.820.0974
Being an exceptional REALTOR® is Patricia’s goal and
passion. As part of that passion, she always strives to delight her
clients, both past and present, and the new ones to come. Her
goal is to make the transaction run as smooth and stress-free as
possible while striving to to get the most money in the least
amount of marketing time. Patricia’s commitment is to you!
PatTorcivia@aol.com
Dale’s experience in real estate started in 1990. Since that time, he
has received various sales awards, been in the top quartile of his
company, and in 2004, was in the top 4% of sales associates and
received the honor of International Presidents Circle.
Dale has been associated with Trinity Real Estate for over a decade
and has been a top producing agent consistently, always placing
his clients top of mind and with high priority. Results are what Dale
provides.
He serves his clients with an array of superior promotional
materials and exceptional marketing expertise. Let Dale show you
how his 34 years in real estate can help you, whether you are buying
or selling a home.
Dale Brousseau, REALTOR ® 617.957.2728
Dalestate73611@gmail.com
The Trinity Real Estate Team
R
ENTED
RENTED
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, NOVEmbEr 1, 2024
38 MAIN ST, SAUGUS
781-233-1401
624 SALEM ST, LYNNFIELD
LITTLEFIELDRE.COM
RENTALS
CLEAN, QUIET STUDIO APARTMENT IN WELL MAINTAINED BUILDING
AVAILABLE NOVEMBER 1ST. THIS 2ND FLOOR UNIT HAS HW IN THE
MAIN LIVING AREA AND GRANITE IN THE KITCHEN, ONE PARKING
SPACE AND ON SITE COIN-OP LAUNDRY LYNN $1,400
NICE 1 BED APARTMENT WHICH IS LOCATED IN AN OWNER-OCCUPIED
HOME. OFFERING FULLY APPLIANCE KITCHEN, BIG LIVING ROOM,
LARGE BEDROOM WITH BIG CLOSET, ALL UTILITIES ARE INCLUDED. NO
PETS AND NO SMOKING AT ALL. PARKING ON STREET WITH A PERMIT.
REVERE $2,000
WONDERING WHAT
YOUR HOME MAY
BE WORTH?
CALL
CHRISTOPHER RIZZA
781-589-9081
FOR A
COMPARATIVE
MARKET ANALYSIS
AND FIND OUT
TODAY!
FOR RENT- COMMERCIAL
OFFICE SPACE IN
PROFESSIONAL BUILDING IN
PRIME LOCATION. SAUGUS CALL
KEITH 781-389-0791 FOR DETAILS
CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
MANUFACTURED HOMES
SPACIOUS 2 BEDROOM UNIT IN PINE GROVE MOBILE PARK IN PEABODY. HUGE
PRIVATE WOODED YARD MUST BE SEEN. LARGE DRIVEWAY, HUGE ENCLOSED
PORCH NICE WOODWORK, NEW STOVE, NICELY MAINTAINED PEABODY $129,900
LARGE 2 BEDROOM MOBILE LOCATED ON A HUGE PRIVATE LOT THAT MUST BE
SEEN. LARGE ADDITION 1,5 BATHS, CARPORT, NEWER OIL TANK, PITCHED ROOF.
LARGE ENCLOSED PORCH SHED AND SO MUCH MORE. SAUGUS $139,900
TWO NEW PRE CONSTRUCTION MANUFACTURED HOMES. BOTH ONE BED WITH
MANY UPGRADES FROM CAR PARKING TO FULL SIZE LAUNDRY, SO MUCH MORE.
DANVERS $189,900
DOUBLE WIDE UNIT WITH APPROXIMATELY 1250 SQFT OF LIVING AREA. 4
BEDROOM LOCATED IN DESIRABLE OAK LEDGE HEIGHTS COOPERATIVE PARK
PEABODY $222,000
SHADY OAKS PHASE 2 NEW CONSTRUCTION: 2 NEW MANUFACTURED 2 BEDROOM
UNITS DANVERS $229,900
NEW MANUFACTURED HOME IN OAK LEDGE COOPERATIVE PARK.QUALITY
THROUGHOUT GOURMET KITCHEN WITH STAINLESS STEEL APPLIANCES,
RECESSED LIGHTING, STATE OF THE ART BATHROOM, FULL SIZE LAUNDRY HOOK
UP, 1OO AMP SERVICE, LARGE DRIVEWAY, NICE YARD PEABODY $249,900
BRAND NEW 2 LARGE BED, 2 FULL BATH WITH HIGH QUALITY FINISHES
THROUGHOUT. OPEN CONCEPT, STAINLESS APPLIANCES AND CONVENIENT
LOCATION. 3+ CAR PARKING WATER, SEWER, AND RUBBISH REMOVAL. PEABODY
$279,900
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
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