׉?4ׁB!בCט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://lIgme47txyzxjXMpCotmcsZYZWHvmAg8DCtoXofx51w `)׉	 7cassandra://xLz6GafEA95_X7SH9hR7fwpuiQnz3zU2JCycIwmUSxI͛`J׉	 7cassandra://oBPIP2UUgjPrWEzN_O4lULNxCtJ17Zhqp1qDcWpyFnM/`̰ fkdme6qנfkdme6u 	сb9ׁHhttp://angelosoil.comׁׁЈנfkdme6t  9ׁHhttp://www.advocatenews.netׁׁЈ׈Efkdme6X׉ESAUGUS Your Local News & Sports Online. Subscribe & Scan Here!
CAT
D
Vol. 26, No.24
CAT
-FREE- www.advocatenews.net
Published Every Friday
WELCOME, NEW CENTENARIAN!
S
TE
781-233-4446
Friday, June 14, 2024
Leaping over a legal barrier
Land Court ruling paves the way for talks
between the town and a company seeking
to start a retail pot business
By Mark E. Vogler
anctuary Medicinals –
the lone company out
of seven applicants that
obtained a special permit (S2)
last December from selectmen
to locate a retail marijuana
dispensary in Saugus
– hasn’t done anything since
because of a lawsuit fi led by
one of its competitors which
LEAPING | SEE PAGE 15
HONORING A HERO
Keith McDonald, Commander of VFW Post 2346, addressed
a gathering of about 30 people who attended the 80th anniversary
of Staff Sgt. Arthur DeFranzo’s courageous act that
saved fellow soldiers at the expense of his own life 80 years
ago Monday on June 10, 1944, following the invasion of Normandy.
Please see inside for more photos and the story.
(Saugus Advocate photo by Mark E. Vogler)
HAPPY BIRTHDAY! Saugus resident Ruth Robertson says she loves receiving cards, especially
the one that family members made for her apartment door to help celebrate her
turning 100 last Friday, June 7. This photo was taken a day earlier, just before Ruth went
to a birthday party organized for her by the Saugus Housing Authority and residents at
Heritage Heights. Please see inside for more photos and this week’s “The Advocate Asks.”
(Courtesy photo of Joanie Allbee to The Saugus Advocate)
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, JUnE 14, 2024
A sweet Saugus tradition continues
T
he Saugus Historical Society
is planning its annual
Strawberry Festival
for tomorrow (Saturday,
June 15) at the American Legion
Hall (44 Taylor St.) from
10 a.m. to 2 p.m. As in past
years, the festival will be held
Lawrence A. Simeone Jr.
Attorney-at-Law
~ Since 1989 ~
* Corporate Litigation
* Criminal/Civil
* MCAD
* Zoning/Land Court
* Wetlands Litigation
* Workmen’s Compensation
* Landlord/Tenant Litigation
* Real Estate Law
* Construction Litigation
* Tax Lien
* Personal Injury
* Bankruptcy
* Wrongful Death
* Zoning/Permitting Litigation
300 Broadway, Suite 1, Revere * 781-286-1560
lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net
along with the Garden Club
Plant Sale and craft vendors
on the Roby School lawn.
The garden club’s tables will
be set up at 9 a.m. that day
so people can shop before
heading into the nearby Legion
Hall for their shortcakes.
There are a few new craft vendors,
and, as always, a delightful
variety of plants and garden
items to choose from on
the Roby School lawn facing
Main Street.
Strawberry shortcakes will
be served rain or shine, but
last year’s rainy weather on
festival day made it difficult
for vendors on the lawn, so
we hope for better weather
this year. It is a wonderful tradition
to see so many people
from Saugus and beyond turn
out for the festival, both to eat
strawberry shortcake and to
help behind the scenes.
There will also be a silent
auction that features a beautiful
little strawberry quilt handmade
by our well-known Sau425r
Broadway, Saugus
Located adjacent to Kohls Plaza Route 1 South
in Saugus at the intersection of Walnut Street
We are on MBTA Bus Route 429
781-231-1111
We are a Skating Rink with
Bowling Alleys, Arcade and
two TV’s where the ball
games are always on!
PUBLIC SKATING SCHEDULE
12-7 p.m.
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
$9.00
Price includes Roller Skates
Rollerblades/inline skates $3.00 additional cost
Private Parties
7:30-11 p.m.
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
$10.00
Price includes Roller Skates
Adult Night 18+ Only
Private Parties
Private Parties
4-8 p.m. $10.00 8:30-11 p.m. $11.
18+ Adults Only After 7 PM
12-9 p.m.
$9.00
Everyone must pay admission after 6 p.m.
Sorry No Checks - ATM on site
Roller skate rentals included in all prices
Inline Skate Rentals $3.00 additional
BIRTHDAY & PRIVATE PARTIES AVAILABLE
www.roller-world.com
The annual Strawberry Festival is set for tomorrow, along with Saugus Garden Club Plant Sale
By Laura Eisener
This Strawberry quilt by Margie Berkowitch will be among the items featured
in a silent auction at tomorrow’s Annual Strawberry Festival. (Photo courtesy of
Laura Eisener)
gus quilter Margie Berkowitch.
Margie has won countless
awards at the Topsfield
Fair in the crafts pavilion for
her beautiful work. She has
been very generous to donate
a number of strawberry-themed
quilts over the
years for the Saugus Historical
Society festival.
Nahant Woman and Winthrop Man
Plead Guilty to Fraud and Tax Evasion
DeCicco and Avedisian were indicted by a federal grand jury in Jan. 2018
B
OSTON – A Nahant
woman and Winthrop
man pleaded guilty on
Thursday in federal court in
Boston to conspiring to commit
wire fraud and tax evasion.
Gary P. DeCicco, 65, and Pamela
M. Avedisian, 61, each
pleaded guilty to one count
of conspiracy to commit wire
fraud and one count of conspiracy
to defraud the United
States. U.S. District Court
Judge Richard G. Stearns
scheduled DeCicco’s sentencing
for Sept. 18, 2024; Avedisian’s
sentencing date has not
yet been scheduled. DeCicco
and Avedisian were indicted
by a federal grand jury in January
2018.
Between April 2012 and February
2013, DeCicco repeatedly
told the IRS that he did not
have the ability to pay his over
$340,000 tax liability and that
he had very little cash, no vehicles
or real property and no
ownership interest in any asset
with a positive value. However,
DeCicco had ownership
interests in several businesses,
vehicles and real properties
titled in his name and the
names of Avedisian, Lynnway
Auto Sales Inc., and other entities,
in order to conceal those
assets from the IRS during that
time period. In addition, beginning
in March 2013, after the
IRS accepted DeCicco’s proposed
monthly payment plan
(based on the false information
DeCicco provided about
his assets and income), DeCicco
bought and sold numerous
real properties, boats and highend
cars and concealed those
assets and his income from the
IRS, often with Avedisian’s assistance.
In
addition, Avedisian owned
a property in Nahant that was
subject to a mortgage in excess
of $1 million. In October
2015, DeCicco and Avedisian
conspired to defraud the mortgage
holder by proposing the
sale of the property for significantly
less than the outstanding
mortgage, in what is commonly
referred to as a “short
sale.” By their very nature, short
sales are intended to be armslength
transactions in which
the buyers and sellers are unrelated
and act independently,
allowing sellers to cede their
ownership of the property in
exchange for the short-selling
bank’s agreement to release
them from their unpaid mortgage
debt. In order to get approval
for the sale, DeCicco
and Avedisian concealed their
long-term romantic and business
relationships from the
loan servicing company and
falsely represented that Avedisian
could no longer make
payments towards the mortgage
on the property. In fact,
just two months before the
“short sale” closed, Avedisian
purportedly received $3.5 million
from the sale of another asset
to DeCicco.
The conspiracy charges each
provide for up to five years
in prison, three years of supervised
release and a fine of
$250,000. Sentences are imposed
by a federal district court
judge based on the U.S. Sentencing
Guidelines and other
statutory factors.
Acting United States Attorney
Joshua S. Levy; Jodi Cohen,
Special Agent in Charge
of the Federal Bureau of Investigation,
Boston Division; and
Harry Chavis, Jr., Special Agent
in Charge of the Internal Revenue
Service Criminal Investigation,
Boston Field Office made
the announcement today. Assistant
U.S. Attorneys Kristina E.
Barclay and Neil J. Gallagher, Jr.
of the Public Corruption & Special
Prosecutions Unit are prosecuting
the case.
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Page 3
~ The Advocate Asks ~
Saugus resident Ruth Robertson still loves reading, watching “Jeopardy,”
doing crossword puzzles, talking to neighbors and being sociable at age 100
Editor’s Note: For this week’s column, we sat down with Ruth
Robertson, who became Saugus’ latest Centenarian last Friday
(June 7). We interviewed her that day at her apartment at Heritage
Heights, where the day before the Saugus Housing Authority
and residents organized a 100th birthday party for her. She was
born Ruth Smith in Lynn on June 7, 1924. She lived her entire childhood
in Saugus and was a 1941 graduate of Saugus High School.
Ruth was an Honor Roll student who was ranked ninth academically
in her class and had excellent grades – good enough to attend
college. But she wanted to get married instead, to another
Saugonian, Kenneth W. Robertson, who had been drafted and
was expected to go overseas in World War II. They got married in
1942 when Ruth was 18. Fortunately for the couple, the war ended
before Kenneth was due to be airlifted in China. After completing
his tour of duty at various places in the United States, Kenneth
returned with his wife to Saugus, where they raised their family –
two sons and a daughter, all of them who graduated from Saugus
High School. Kenneth and Ruth toured the United States and
took many trips to Great Britain. In 1985, they retired to Dunedin,
Fla., on the state’s west coast. “The climate, the available activities
and the friendly people were just what we wanted for our
retirement,” Ruth wrote in a message to classmates in a program
for their 50th reunion in 1991. “Unfortunately, it didn’t last long
enough, for in December, 1989 Kenny died suddenly of cancer.
I will still make my home in Dunedin, where I keep active year
round.” After living a decade in Florida, Ruth decided to return to
her roots. Her son, Kenneth W. Robertson, Jr., died of a massive
heart attack in 2005. Ruth’s two other children – John Robertson
and Paula (Robertson) Cummings – both living with their families
in Beverly, continue to look after her. Paula does the grocery
shopping for her mother. John is active in his mom’s life, as are the
grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Ruth has a sister, Jean
King, who lives in a Lynn nursing home. She will turn 99 in the fall.
A few hours after our interview, about two dozen members of
Ruth’s family gathered at the Kowloon Restaurant for a special
birthday meal. When the family sang “Happy Birthday,” everybody
within earshot – restaurant staff and customers – stopped what
they were doing to sing “Happy Birthday” to Ruth. Highlights of
this week’s interview follow.
Q: I heard that the residents
of the Saugus Housing Authority
had a surprise party for
you yesterday (June 6).
A: They don’t surprise you
when you’re as old as I am.
See, they had this flyer done
up that residents received
which announced the party
in the Community Room. I got
a cake and lots of cards and
a beautiful bouquet of flowers.
I love flowers and cards.
We had a delicious cake from
Market Basket to go with little
Hoodsies and flat wooden
spoons to eat the ice cream.
We had the room for about
an hour. And it was very nice.
A lot of people came up to me
to wish me “Happy Birthday.”
Everybody was so nice to me.
Q: Thank you for taking
some time on your birthday
House in Lynn.
Q: What was it like, growing
up in Saugus when you
were a kid?
A: You walked to school and
talked to friends. I had to walk
from East Saugus to Saugus
Center. Saugus High was located
at Winter and Central
Streets. It was a nice, easy time
when we were kids. I liked all
of my teachers. I loved school.
Q: Do you have any special
childhood memories?
ASKS | SEE PAGE 4
THE GUEST OF HONOR: On June 6, the
day before she turned 100, Ruth Robertson
had a birthday party – organized
by the Saugus Housing Authority
and its residents. (Courtesy photo of
Joanie Allbee)
to do this interview. We try to
interview Saugus residents
before or after they celebrate
their 100th birthday. Let’s
start out from the beginning.
Where were you born?
A: I was born at the Union
Hospital in Lynn. I came right
home to live in Saugus and I
stayed here until I got married.
Q:
Tell me a little bit about
your parents, please.
A: Walter Smith and Estelle
Gray Smith. My dad was 50
when he got married to my
mother, who was 25. They got
acquainted in GE.
Q: Where did you live in
Saugus?
A: I lived in East Saugus on
Willis Street. It was handy to
go to church. I was baptized
in the Methodist Church of
East Saugus. It was handy for
school. I went to the Mansfield
School.
Q: How many children in
your family?
A: It was my sister and I. I
was born first. My sister is Jean
King and she’ll be 99 in September.
She lives at Abbott
Eastern Bank Building on Rte. 1S
605 Broadway, #301 * Saugus
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, JUnE 14, 2024
Read, Renew, Repeat!
Saugus Public Library launches its Kids 2024 Summer reading Program
(Editor’s Note: The Saugus
Public Library recently issued
the following press release.)
A
s the school year winds
down, the Saugus Public
Library is winding
up. If you’re looking for fun,
educational activities, and
summer programming to support
your kids’ learning, stop
by the Saugus Public Library.
This summer, the Library presents
“Read, Renew, Repeat!”
the 2024 Summer Reading
program. Activities include literacy
support, storytimes, discounted
museum passes, Massachusetts
park passes, and
take & make crafts.
Families are encouraged to
register their kids for the conservation-themed
program
50
This Strawberry quilt by Margie Berkowitch will be among the items featured in a silent auction at tomorrow’s Annual
Strawberry Festival. (Photo courtesy of Laura Eisener)
Gerry
D’Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
Is Your Estate in Order?
Do you have an update Will, Health
Care Proxy or Power of Attorney?
If Not, Please Call for a Free Consultation.
14 Proctor Avenue, Revere
(781) 284-5657
using the Beanstack app. It’s
easy - just download the Beanstack
app, register under the
Saugus Public Library, and
you’re on your way. For more
information, or to register in
person, stop by the Children’s
Room at the library or visit the
Kid’s Summer Reading page
on our website. The Saugus
Public Schools recommend
that students read at least 20
minutes a day this summer.
The program is open to
young people, preschool
through 6th grade. We’ll have
their favorite titles, plus free
ebooks, audio books, comics,
magazines & music you can
download using the hoopla
and libby digital collections.
Did we mention prizes?
We’ve once again partnered
with local businesses to reward
summer reading. Many
thanks to those businesses
who have generously donated!
We’ll
have a full prize cart
plus free books to give away.
In addition, we’ll run drawings
for ice cream, donuts, cookies,
pizza, roller skating, bowling,
mini golf, sports merch, and
grand prize drawings for tickets
to Canobie Lake Park and
the North Shore Music Theater’s
production of Beauty
and the Beast - and more!
In addition, there will be
special visits by Wildlife Encounters,
Vinny the Bubble
Guy, the Saugus Fire & Police
Departments, Star Wars characters,
Toe Jam Puppet Band,
plus bubble, magic, and puppet
shows. Check out the Library’s
online event calendar
for up-to-date information.
The library is here to help
families create a summer reading
routine that is fun for kids
and their families. Turn off
the media before bedtime,
sit with a child, share a book,
or read alongside them. Ask
them questions, but above all,
make it fun!
Research shows that children
who read during the
summer months maintain
literacy skills that they’ve
worked hard to build during
the school year.
According to Reading Rockets.org,
research with 116 fi rst,
second, and third graders in a
school in a middle class neighborhood
found the decoding
skills of nearly 45% of the participants
and the fluency of
25% declined between May
and September.
So, stay smart!
Have fun!
Stop by the library to register
for summer reading, or to
fi nd a just-right book for your
child. It’s all free, all summer
at the Saugus Public Library!
ASKS| FROM PAGE 3
A: We had Fourth of July fi reworks.
They set them off at
Stackpole Field. They were tremendous
fi reworks. We didn’t
have to go to Lynn to watch
them. We could watch them
from our house on Willis Street
Q: You strike me as a very
articulate and intelligent person.
You must have been a
pretty good student in school.
A: Yes. I got a double promotion
when I was in the fi rst
grade. I was only in the fi rst
grade for a couple of months
and they put me in the second
grade. My parents paid a lot of
attention to me.
ASKS | SEE PAGE 5
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Page 5
FUN-damental Basketball Camp Open to Boys and Girls in Local Area
T
he FUN-damental Basketball
Camp, open to
boys and girls in local
area cities and towns, will be
held July 22 to July 26, 2024
at the Immaculate Conception
Parish Center, located at
59 Summer Street in Everett.
The camp will be held between
the hours of 9:00 am
and 1:00 pm for boys and girls
entering grades 3 thru 8 as of
September, 2024. The cost of
the camp is $125.
ASKS| FROM PAGE 4
Q: And you went to Saugus
High. Were you an Honor Roll
student?
A: Yes – Class of 1941. My sister
was in the Class of 1943. I
was an A student and my sister
must have been one, too.
We were always told to do our
studies fi rst and then play.
Q: Did you go to college?
A: I could have gone to college,
but I didn’t want to. I
wanted to get married. It was
war time. My husband, Kenneth
Robertson, was four
years older than me. I wanted
to get married and go with
him. He was all packed up and
ready to go to China. He and
the other men were going to
Tony Ferullo, boys’ varsity
basketball coach at Mystic Valley
Regional Charter School in
Malden, will be the Director of
the camp.
The purpose of the camp is:
To provide all campers with
the fundamental tools to help
them become better basketball
players;
To create a positive atmosphere
where the camper will
learn and have fun at the same
time; and
get airlifted into northern China,
and then the war ended.
He was thankful that he didn’t
have to go. He served in the
states. I followed him to Texas,
the Carolinas and other places.
I was 18 when I got married
in 1942. I was a military wife
for a few years and my husband
went back to work at GE
when his service duty ended.
He was originally from Saugus
and had graduated from Saugus
High. I think he was in the
Class of 1938.
Q: So you wanted to have
a family.
A: I had three children: two
boys and a girl. My daughter
Paula lives in Beverly. My son
John lives in Beverly. My son
Kenneth died of a heart atTo
instill the spirit of the
game into all campers, and inspire
them to continue playing
the game either competitively
or just for fun.
Each camper, who will receive
a T-shirt and certificate,
will participate in various
drills, scrimmages and
individual contests.
Special
guests will speak and share
their personal basketball tips.
An awards ceremony will take
place on the last day of the
tack. They all went to Saugus
High School and graduated. I
have eight grandchildren and
seven great-grandchildren.
I had a wonderful marriage
and a wonderful childhood
and a wonderful life. I was a
very lucky lady.
Q: Well, your mind is still
sharp. What do you credit to
your longevity?
A: Good living: I didn’t abuse
myself. My father always had
a good garden. We always ate
nutritious meals.
Q: Did you have a job?
A: I worked in a bank in
town – the First National Bank
of Boston – for four years.
Q: Were you a bank teller?
ASKS | SEE PAGE 6
camp, and parents and friends
are welcome to attend.
For more information about
the FUN-damental Basketball
8 Norwood St.
Everett
(617) 387-9810
Open Tues. - Sat.
at 4:00 PM
Closed Sun. & Mon.
Announcing our Classic Specials
Dine In Only:
* FREE Salad with purchase of
Entree, Tuesdays & Wednesdays
* Cheese Pizza - Only $10
Catch ALL The
Live Sports
Action On Our
Large Screen
TV’s
Scan & Follow Us on Facebook!
Camp, please contact
Camp Director Tony Ferullo:
857-312-7002 or tferullo@
suff olk.edu.
www.810bargrille.com
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Visit us online at: WWW.SABATINO-INS.COM
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ASKS| FROM PAGE 5
A: No. I sold stock and
shares. I was in the upstairs
offi ce.
Q: So, you were key fi nancial
staff .
A: Yes. I’ve really had such
a nice life and I’m very fortunate,
except I’m old and rickety
right now. It’s very hard
to contend with when you
get my age.
Q: But you still have a
great mind and can carry
on a great conversation.
What’s your daily schedule
like these days?
A: I get up when I feel like
it. I talk to my kids on the
phone. I eat and talk to my
neighbors. I don’t crochet
anymore, but I read and I
have books galore. And my
younger cousin, Harvey
Bridges – he’s a Saugus guy;
I think he’s 93 – he keeps me
supplied with books.
Q: You must be a quick
reader.
A: I am, if they’re good,
or I will put them down.
Some authors I wouldn’t
give the time of day to.
Most of the books I read
are mysteries.
ASKS | SEE PAGE 8
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, JUnE 14, 2024
~ The Old Sachem ~
The Holy Mother
Church – where
D-Day began
T
he Holy Mother Church.
That’s the English translation
of the French
town Sainte-Mère-Église,
where the Allies first invaded
France.
We know about the D-Day
landings in France on June 7
that started our progress to
defeat Germany, but the battle
actually started the day before
in Sainte-Mère-Église. The
United States landed paratroopers
the night before the
Normandy invasion to impede
the German army from counterattacking
the Normandy
landings. In the early morning
of June 6, units from the
U.S. 82nd Airborne and the
U.S. 101st Airborne Divisions
parachuted into the town, and
Sainte-Mère-Église became
the fi rst town liberated by the
Allies in France.
You probably have seen or
Celebrating Our 52nd Year
Chris 2024
heard of John Steele of the
505th Parachute Infantry Regiment
whose parachute caught
on the tower roof and spire
of the local church. He hung
there for two hours pretending
to be dead before the Germans
took him prisoner. He
later escaped imprisonment
and rejoined his division when
U. S. troops of the 3rd Battalion
of the 505th attacked the village
and captured 30 Germans
and killed 11. The action was
portrayed in the movie “The
Longest Day.”
The attack led to innumerable
casualties as fi res broke
out among the weapons fi ring
by both sides. The fi res illuminated
the sky so that the
German soldiers were able to
shoot many of the paratroopers
before they hit the ground.
Many paratroopers were killed
by the fi re and many troopers
hanging from trees and utility
poles were shot.
Lieutenant Colonel Edward
E. Krause of the 505th led the
taking of the town with little
resistance initially. The German
troopers were abed at
5 a.m. and were confused by
the attack. Eventually the Germans
arose and battled the
paratroopers for two days before
the paratroopers were assisted
by U.S. tankers from the
Utah Beach invasion.
Krause and Lieutenant Benjamin
H. Vandervoort each received
the Distinguished Service
Cross for their actions.
“The Old Sachem,” Bill Stewart.
(Courtesy photo to The Saugus
Advocate by Joanie Allbee)
Sergeant George Bowler Tullidge
III received the Bronze
Star and his parents later distributed
“A Paratroopers Faith,”
which was a collection of his
letters home, plus Bible verses.
Second Lieutenant Thomas
J. Tighe of the 70th Tank
Battalion was killed when his
tank was blasted by the Germans
on June 7 and received
the Silver Star posthumously.
Paratrooper Henry Langrehr
crashed through a greenhouse
roof as retold in “The
Longest Day” and on November
6, 2007, received the Legion
of Honor medal from the
President of France, Nicolas
Sarkozy, along with fi ve other
recipients.
Today Sainte-Mère-Église is
celebrated for its part of this
historic Invasion of France,
which led to the demise of
Hitler and his cohort Mussolini
and freed the world of their
hostile environment.
(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.)
Local residents named
to Saint Anselm College’s Dean’s
List for spring 2024 semester
S
aint Anselm College
has released the Dean’s
List of high academic
achievers for the second
semester of the 2023-2024
school year. To be eligible for
this honor, a student must
have achieved a grade point
average of 3.4 or better in the
semester with at least 12 credits
of study that award a letter
grade. College Dean Mark W.
Cronin announced that the
following students from Saugus
have been named to the
Dean’s List for the spring 2024
semester at Saint Anselm College:
Sofi a Del Sonno, Psychology,
2024; Abigail Wallace, Psychology,
2026; Maggie Warner,
Nursing, 2027.
About Saint Anselm College:
Founded in 1889, Saint Anselm
College, which is located
in Manchester, N.H., is a fouryear
liberal arts college providing
a 21st century education
in the Catholic, Benedictine
tradition. Saint Anselm is
well known for its strong liberal
arts curriculum, the New
Hampshire Institute of Politics,
a highly successful nursing
program, a legacy of community
service and a commitment
to the arts.
׉	 7cassandra://oPCAyOtrM-0rh_jooY3s2won5SGsk0OKsmpiObnxJrY0^`̰ fkdme6^׉E	THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, JUnE 14, 2024
Page 7
Pioneer Charter School of Science celebrates 2024 graduates
Graduates from PCSS i and ii were honored in a joint ceremony at rivergreen Park in Everett
O
n Friday, May 31, students
from Pioneer
Charter School of
Science (PCSS) I in Everett
and PCSS II in Saugus graduated
in a united ceremony
at Everett’s Rivergreen Park.
PCSS’s 2024 graduates spent
their formative high school
years studying amid a global
pandemic, a testament
to their determination and
adaptability as they begin
new chapters of their academic
careers.
PCSS, which enrolls students
from communities
north of Boston and the
North Shore, is known for its
collegiate successes. PCSS
college acceptance rates
are commendable. In 2024,
93 percent of PCSS upper
school students plan to attend
a four-year university,
five percent a two-year college
and two percent, vocational
training. Of PCSS II
Upper School students, 90
percent will attend a fouryear
college, five percent a
two-year college, and five
percent vocational training.
Both schools have a 100 percent
acceptance rate.
“Our Class of 2024 graduates
are an exceptional
group of students,” said PCSS
CEO Barish Icin. “We are incredibly
proud of their accomplishments.
These students
have not only weathered
their studies during the
pandemic, but they have excelled.
We believe that they
have bright futures ahead
of them.”
PCSS I and PCSS II’s Class
of 2024 were awarded more
than $11 million in scholarships.
Students from both
campuses have been accepted
to nationally renowned
schools, including
Harvard, Tufts, MIT, Cornell,
Boston College, Columbia,
Dartmouth, Brown and
Wellesley.
PCSS is a rigorous college
preparatory charter
school that aims to prepare
educationally under-resourced
students for today’s
competitive world.
Saugus graduates, pictured from left to right: Back row: Ashley Jean Louis, Kyle Rodrigues, Adam Nouri, Ciao Rodrigues,
Vinicius Da Cunha and Jay Ruiz; front row: Emily Martinez, Fatima Saab, Jose Garcia, Rohita Maddi, Gianna LaMarca and
Dea Bilal.
PCSS I, which is located in
Everett, serves students in
Grades K through 12 from
several communities north
of Boston, including Everett,
Chelsea and Revere. PCSS II,
which is located in Saugus,
serves students in Grades
K through 12 from Saugus,
Salem, Peabody, Lynn and
Danvers.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, JUnE 14, 2024
ASKS| FROM PAGE 6
Q: What’s the best book
you’ve ever read?
A: I don’t know. I’ve read so
many books. I probably read
three books a week. I do like
books – mostly mysteries.
Q: What time do you get up?
A: I wake up at 7 and go
back to bed. I get up when I
feel like it. Sometimes I don’t
get up till 12:30. When you live
to be my age and you can’t
sleep as long as you want to,
what the heck is that?
Q: What time do you usually
go to bed?
A: Around 9 p.m.
Q: Except when you watch
night baseball games. Right?
Red Sox games can go later
than 9 o’clock.
A: Yeah, sometimes.
Q: Do you have somebody
to come and clean your apartment?
A:
Yep. No more housework.
Somebody comes in once a
week and changes my bed
and runs the vacuum around.
Q: You still cook for yourself?
A: Yes. I get my own meals.
I still do all of my cooking. I
don’t make roasts, but I cook
a nice nutritional meal. I have
a big breakfast – Cheerios,
strawberries and bananas or
canned fruit. And I have a balanced
supper – some protein.
I like hamburger, mashed potatoes
and a vegetable. No
coff ee – I don’t drink coff ee
– no caff eine. But a libation
once in a while.
Q: You look pretty good for
somebody who is 100.
A: I’ve always stayed active
and ate well. I want to be at
120 pounds and I am at 120.
SWEET SIXTEEN: That’s how old Ruth
Smith was when she graduated from
Saugus High School in 1941. (Courtesy
photo to The Saugus Advocate)
I’m 5’1”. I’ve never really had a
weight problem.
Q: What are your hobbies?
A: Reading, of course. I read
lots of books. I enjoy doing
crossword puzzles, talking to
my neighbors and being sociable.
Q:
I guess you watch TV?
A: Yes.
Q: Do you have a favorite TV
program?
A: “Jeopardy.” I hate to miss
that. I get it recorded just in
case I have to miss it. I love
“Jeopardy.” I think Ken Jennings
is doing a good job [as
the host].
Q: What about the old guy
that did it all those years?
A: Alex Trebek. I almost forgot
about him. He did it for
many years [37 years] and was
very good.
Q: Are you a Red Sox fan?
A: Of course! I watch the
Red Sox – but not as much
as I did before, when my sister
Jean and I would get together.
Jean lived upstairs,
ANNOUNCEMENT
A SPECIAL BIRTHDAY CAKE: This was the cake for Ruth Robertson’s 100th birthday party, which was held on June 6
in the Community Room at Heritage Heights. (Courtesy photo of Joanie Allbee)
NINTH IN HER CLASS: Ruth Smith was
listed among the top students of her
class on the Honor Roll page of her
High School Yearbook.
(Courtesy to The Saugus Advocate)
and she would come down to
my apartment and we would
watch the game together.
We would have a drink and
popcorn. She could just put
her bathrobe on, come down
and watch the TV with me. I
was the big sister. We used to
have a lot of fun watching the
games. It was only a year or so
ago that she got sick and had
to go into a nursing home. I
miss her and the fun we had.
Q: Do you have a favorite
player?
A: No, I like them all. I think
they’re all good.
Q: Do you watch the Patriots?
A:
Yes. But you don’t really
know who they are with their
helmets on, so you don’t get
to know the players like in
baseball.
Q: Were you a Tom Brady
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fan?
A: More or less. He took advantage
of his good looks and
great health to become successful.
Q:
Anything still left on your
“Bucket List”?
A: Not a blessed thing. I got
everything. My kids take me
out to eat once in a while. I
think I get everything I deserve.
My family is all good.
They care for me.
Q: You are listed in the
FROM THE 1941 SAUGUS HIGH SCHOOL YEARBOOK: “Smitty,” as her classmates
liked to call her, spent most of her school activities on scholastic-oriented
pursuits. (Courtesy to The Saugus Advocate)
town’s Street List as a registered
voter, a Democrat. Do
you still vote?
A: Yes. I don’t go out anymore
to vote. But they send
me the ballot and I vote.
Q: Who was your favorite
president?
A: FDR was probably the
best in my time. I think he was
a fair president, and I think he
was the fi rst one I voted for.
Roosevelt did a very good job
in trying times. I liked Jimmy
Carter, too. He was a nice man
and his wife was a very nice
person, too. Carter was a giving
man.
I always voted because my
mother and father thought it
was a duty for every citizen to
vote. I’ve been a lifelong Democrat
and have always voted
Democrat.
Q: I understand that you are
a former Florida resident, and
you eventually left Florida and
returned to Saugus
A: I lived 10 years in Florida
and I loved it down there. I
lived in Dunedin, on Florida’s
west coast, north of Clearwater.
Unfortunately, I didn’t get
to spend a lot of that time
with my husband, who died
in 1989.
Q: Do you still drive?
A: I gave it up about five
years ago. I worried about the
winters.
Q: Do you have any heroes?
A: No. I never did
Q: Do you have any idols
that you have looked up to
and admired in your lifetime?
A: My husband and my father.
I thought they were both
great. I always looked up to
them as people I really admired.
Q:
As you look back on
your life, what are you most
proud of?
A: Just living day-to-day is
an achievement. But my family
is what I’m most proud of.
No doubt about it. I’ve been
very fortunate to have a great
family. They are the most important
part of my life. We’re
all going out to Kowloon’s tonight
for supper. All the kids
are going to go. My daughter,
who I spoke with earlier
today, is coming down from
Beverly. She’s great. She gets
my groceries for me.
Q: Any advice that you want
to off er to folks who want to
live a long life?
A: I think everybody should
mind their own business and
help people when they can.
Be kind and try to help people
instead of hurting them.
I think if everybody minded
their own business, it would
be a nicer world.
׉	 7cassandra://K4NGVatb3cWrOU_cpMk2_MnCtBUNlpcagPI8tyF6Y3M*^`̰ fkdme6`׉ETHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, JUnE 14, 2024
Page 9
Saugus’ dynamic scholar-athletes win NEC award, prepare for St. Anselm’s
By Dom Nicastro
Jessica Bremberg: helping
make history in basketball,
shining in track
Jessica Bremberg, a standout
student-athlete from Saugus
High School, has had a
year to remember, culminating
in her receiving the prestigious
Northeastern Conference
(NEC) scholar-athlete
award. Bremberg’s accomplishments
on the track and basketball
court are a testament
to her hard work and dedication,
both in sports and in the
classroom.
“It was really great finding
out I won NEC scholar-athlete,”
Bremberg said. “I first heard
about the award my junior year
when my teammate who I had
played field hockey with who’s
also a good close friend of mine
won it. I just think it’s a great
accomplishment to earn to be
able to represent your school
like this around all the great
athletes of the NEC.”
Bremberg’s senior year has
been nothing short of remarkable.
As a key player in both
basketball and track, she has
demonstrated versatility and
excellence. In basketball, she
helped lead her team to a historic
victory over North High
of Worcester in the postseason,
marking Saugus High’s first
tournament win in years.
“It’s been a while since we’ve
had a tournament win for the
program,” she said. “We’ve
made the tournament a lot,
but it’s been a while since we’ve
won a tourney game. It was at
home, and it was a great atmosphere
and great for us to
have that.”
Her track career has been
equally impressive. Specializing
in the 400-meter and triple
jump, Bremberg has consistently
excelled in competitions,
setting high standards for herself
and her teammates.
Bremberg’s leadership extends
beyond her athletic
prowess. As a captain of the
track team, she has played a
crucial role in guiding her teammates,
a responsibility she has
held since her sophomore year.
Along with her co-captain,
Maddie Femino, the duo combined
experience and knowledge
of track, which has been
crucial because leading a track
team is different from captaining
other team sports like basketball.
Bremberg’s
dedication is not
confined to the field of play. Academically,
she stands out as
well, being ranked in the top
five in her senior class and serving
as class president for four
years. Her involvement in various
school activities reflects her
commitment to her education
and community.
“It’s a lot definitely,” Bremberg
said of her schedule. “I
had meetings three of the five
days out of the week. I like to
keep myself busy. It’s a lot of
fun, and I think it makes everything
more enjoyable.”
As Bremberg has now graduated
and is on to her next
chapter – studying and running
track at Saint Anselm’s College
in Goffstown, N.H., where
she plans to major in criminal
justice – she reflected on the
community that has supported
her journey. “I’m gonna’ miss
Saugus next year,” she said. “I’m
gonna be having fun in college,
but I’ll miss the community that
I had in high school.”
At Saint Anselm, she hopes
to continue her success on the
track and pursue her academic
ambitions with the same determination
that has characterized
her high school career.
With her relentless drive and
passion, there is no doubt that
Bremberg has set herself up to
continue to shine brightly in all
her future endeavors.
Braden Faiella: Saugus’
multi-sport standout that
just kept shining
For Saugus High School athletics
this school year, one
name consistently echoed
through the halls and fields of
Saugus High School: Braden
Faiella. Known for his exceptional
prowess across multiple
sports, Faiella’s high school
journey was not only marked
by his athletic achievements
but also by his dedication to academic
excellence. As he transitions
from high school to college
– he’ll go to Saint Anselm’s
in Goffstown, N.H., to play football
– Faiella reflected on the
experiences and mentors that
shaped him, the victories that
defined his athletic career and
the lessons learned that will
guide his future.
What did it mean to you to
get this award?
For me, it meant that I was
more than just a good athlete;
it shows what I can do in the
classroom, too. It’s a validation
of all the hard work I put
in, both on the field and academically.
Tell
me about your academic
accomplishments and
interests reflecting back on
high school. What will you
town choose other schools.
If you could “sell” your experience
at Saugus, what would
you tell someone who is on
the fence about choosing
Saugus or a private school?
I would say that Saugus is unlike
other schools because you
get the fan base of a whole
town behind you. You also get
to have younger kids look up to
you and see why they should
stay in Saugus. The sense of
community and support here
is unmatched, and it’s an experience
you won’t get anywhere
else.
Who have served as some
Jessica Bremberg and Braden Faiella.
focus on in college and why?
All of these accomplishments
mean a lot to me because they
show that I put in so much effort
in the classroom and not
just on the field. In college, I will
be majoring in accounting because
my father was an accountant,
and accounting is one of
the main majors in the finance
world. It’s something I’ve always
been interested in, and I’m
excited to dive deeper into it.
Take me back to each sport
of your senior year and describe
the top individual and
team accomplishments you
are most proud of and why.
For football, the top moment
was beating Voke, a school
we hadn’t beaten in a while.
Getting that opportunity was
great. For basketball, it was
beating Amesbury at home, a
game that people didn’t think
we were going to win, but we
did. For track, qualifying for
the state championships meet
was a huge accomplishment
for me. I was blessed to have
that opportunity. Also, breaking
the school tackle record
for a game, year and season,
and breaking the state all-time
tackle record, were incredible
achievements for me.
What will you miss most
about your experience at
Saugus and why?
I will most miss the crowds we
had at Saugus High School. We
had a great fan base, and a lot of
my friends were there, too. They
got us ready for each game every
week. The support from the
community was incredible and
something I’ll always cherish.
Lots of great athletes in
J&
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Joe Pierotti, Jr.
of your mentors along the
way and how so?
My mentors have been Coach
Cummings, who has helped
me along the way, and also my
friends and family. I also want
to thank Coach Cox, or Mr. Cox,
who has helped me incredibly
by always keeping me positive
and hopeful along the way.
They’ve all played a crucial role
in my development as an athlete
and a person.
What’s keeping you busy
over summer; when does college
start and what’s in store
for you athletically at the
next level?
Over the summer, I am working
out and working at an accounting
firm. I start college on
Aug. 13, where I will be studying
accounting and playing
football at the next level. I’m
looking forward to the new
challenges and opportunities
that college will bring, both academically
and athletically.
S
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Designing and Constructing Ideas that are “Grounds for Success”
Landscaping
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, JUnE 14, 2024
Saugus High School Girls’ Varsity
Lacrosse Sachems Award All-Stars
By Tara Vocino
T
he Saugus High School
Girls’ Varsity Lacrosse
Sachems awarded
Northeastern Conference AllStars
during their banquet last
week at Kowloon Restaurant.
Saugus Middle High School Principal
Brendon Sullivan said teammates
pushed through a rainy, cold start to
the lacrosse season.
The team, shown from left to right: Kneeling: Teaghan Arsenault and Lilah Sullivan; middle row: Madison Carrillo, Eden Miniscalco, Silene Pires Oliveira, Gabriella
Cvijic, Aly Mabee, Brooke Diaz, Janiris Haro, Casey Hanifan, Paige Millea, Natalie Justice, Layla Rodriguez, Emma Gurante and Ava Quiles; back row: Andrea
Montenegro, Amanda Rezendes, Maria Garcia, Caitlyn Dixon, Ashley Rezendes, Audrey Comeau, Tori Carter, Juliana Scalisi, Nina Penachio, Jessica Valley, Juliana
Powers, Violet Hawley, Lily Comeau, Sarah Rovcanin and Sophia Robinson. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
Northeastern Conference All-Stars Aly Mabee (at left) and Ashley
Rezendes are shown during Tuesday’s Saugus High School Girls’
Varsity Lacrosse Sachems banquet at Kowloon Restaurant.
Most Improved recipients Caitlyn Dixon and Silene Pires Oliveira
(at left) with Asst. Coach Georgia Fiore (in center).
Violet Hawley shared fond memories of her season.
Outgoing Captains, shown from left to right: Juliana Scalisi, Violet Hawley and
Nina Penachio.
Incoming Captains, shown from left to right: Tori Carter, Caitlyn Dixon and
Ashley Rezendes.
Asst. Coach Georgia Fiore said the
Saugus High School Sachems fell to
the Gloucester High School Fishermen
in making the tournament.
Seniors, shown from left to right: Juliana Scalisi, Nina Penachio, Jessica Valley, Juliana Powers, Violet
Hawley, Lily Comeau and Sarah Rovcanin.
In with the new – shown from left to right: Nina Penachio, Violet Hawley, Juliana Scalisi, Ashley
Rezendes, Caitlyn Dixon and Tori Carter. Outgoing captains welcomed the new ones.
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Page 11
SHS Boys’ and Girls’ Varsity Track
Sachems Banquet Awards Athletes
Coaches’ Award: Ryan Laws.
Rookie of the Year Award recipient Pharaoh Brandenburg with
Head Coach Steve Cummings during Monday’s Saugus High School
Boys’ and Girls’ Track and Field banquet at Prince Pizzeria.
Northeastern Conference All-Star and Most Valuable Player Award:
Kaeleb Mathieu.
By Tara Vocino
T
Coaches’ Award: Kendall Hatch.
Most Improved Award: Koby Jette (not shown) and Peyton DiBiasio,
who is shown with Boys’ Head Coach Joseph Alba.
Rookie of the Year Awardee: Soraya Mathieu with Girls’ Head Coach
Joseph Alba.
he Saugus High School Boys’ and Girls’ Varsity
Track and Field Sachems gave awards to
top athletes during last week’s banquet at
Prince Pizzeria.
Coaches and incoming captains: Coach Steve Cummings, Justin Bremberg, Angie Lopez, Peyton DiBiasio, Brianna Feldman and Head
Coach Joseph Alba.
Northeastern Conference All-Star and Most Valuable Player Award:
Jessica Bremberg.
Incoming and outgoing captains. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, JUnE 14, 2024
Saugus Gardens in the Spring
Here’s what’s blooming in town this week to make your walks more enjoyable
By Laura Eisener
T
oday, June 14, is Flag
Day, commemorating
the date in 1777 when
the design of stars and stripes
was officially adopted by the
Second Continental Congress.
In the many years since, the
number of stars in the “constellation”
has changed to reflect
the number of states, but
we still have 13 stripes.
U.S. flags and other patriotic
decorations are displayed in
many gardens, and flagpole
beds and planters often have
a red, white and blue flower
combination. Among the
most vivid red of perennials
are several varieties of pinks
(Dianthus spp.). Pinks got their
name from the pinked edges
found on the petals of several
species. The genus includes
both annual and perennial
plants, which can lead to confusion
when choosing them
for gardens or container plantings.
Most perennial varieties
will bloom only in early June,
while the annual types keep
blooming through the summer.
Close relatives of carnations
(Dianthus caryophyllus),
for which Saugus’ Sims Carnation
company was world
famous. The variety ‘Fire Star’
is a perennial with intriguing
bright red clove scented flowers
and bluish green grasslike
foliage. Like most pinks, it is
not usually eaten by deer or
rabbits. At the June 10 80th
anniversary ceremony beside
the DeFranzo Monument on
Main Street, another variety of
bright red pinks were at their
peak of bloom.
In the front garden of David
and Jerri DeFilippis on
Prospect Street, the American
flag waves over a garden
that has an impressive trueblue
delphinium standing
tall in one corner. David enjoys
many kinds of gardening
and spending time outdoors,
which shows in his thriving
Dianthus ‘Fire Star’ is one of the
prettiest of several red varieties of
pinks blooming now.
(Photo courtesy of Laura Eisener)
garden. David is raising some
vegetables as well as ornamental
plants. Beautiful pots
of pansies line the front steps.
Delphiniums are named after
the family of oceanic dolphins
(Delphinidae), because
each individual flower in the
spiky cluster have a curved
spur at the back that might remind
you of a dolphin gracefully
leaping out of the water.
June is known for many
flowers, especially roses, but
they are not the only shrubs
that bloom in June. Weigela
(Weigela florida) has trumpet
shaped flowers that bloom
in June and sometimes sporadically
later in the summer.
Many varieties are grown for
their colorful leaves as well.
Variegated weigela like one
growing in the garden at St.
John’s near Saugus Center has
pale pink flowers and sage
green leaves with white edges.
The dwarf form ‘My Monet’ has
pink flowers and green leaves
with white and pink edges
that keep that color until fall,
and a mature height under
three feet tall. ‘Wine and Roses’
has brighter pink flowers
and wine-red foliage, growing
about five feet tall, while ‘Tiny
Wine’ is a dwarf form with similar
colors.
There are plenty of flowers,
Blue blooms of delphinium stand out in the garden of David DeFilippis in the Saugus Center neighborhood.
(Photo courtesy of Laura Eisener)
Variegated weigela is a beautiful June
blooming shrub that also offers foliage
interest throughout the season.
(Photo courtesy of Laura Eisener)
Bright pink strawberry blossoms herald the sweet fruits of early summer!
(Photo courtesy of Laura Eisener)
but only a few edible fruits
ripen this early in the year, so
strawberries have been eagerly
anticipated for centuries.
Strawberries (Fragaria spp.)
represent the beginning of
a season of abundance. Our
June moon, which this year
will be full next Friday night,
June 21, is known as the strawberry
moon.A few strawberries
have ripened along the
Saugus River near the blacksmith
shop at the Saugus Iron
Works. Tours have resumed for
the season, and the site has
work underway on the waterwheel
that operates the trip
hammer in the forge building.
The new lawn has grown
in where the summer concerts
are held, replacing the gravel
that had protected the soil
from compaction for the past
few seasons. If you look carefully,
you can see the outline
of the new lawn because clover
has not yet grown there,
and the grass is a slightly different
type than the surroundThis
Flag Day display with blue lobelia on some front steps attracts attention
with an unusual blue flower color. (Photo courtesy of Laura Eisener)
ing older lawn.
June is the month for strawberry
festivals all over New England.
Today, June 14, is actually
National Strawberry Shortcake
Day! Hope you enjoy a
shortcake or two at Saugus’
Strawberry Festival tomorrow,
and bring home a few new
plants for your garden.
The Battle of Bunker Hill was
fought on June 17, 1775.
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.
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Page 13
The Sounds of Saugus
By Mark E. Vogler
Good morning, Saugus
Memorial Day is over. Saugus
High School graduation
has come and gone. Covering
those two events, which
occur on consecutive weeks,
usually keeps me busy –
especially with shooting a
bunch of photos, processing
them and selecting them for
photo pages.
Even with a lull in the action
this past week, it seems
like things will get hectic in
the coming weeks between
now and the Fourth of July –
which will be on a Thursday
this year – and is just a day
short of three weeks away.
And next Wednesday, June
19, America will be observing
a relatively new federal
holiday – “Juneteenth” –
which essentially commemorates
the end of slavery in the
United States. On June 19,
1865, Union Army Maj. Gen.
Gordon Granger rode into
Galveston, Texas, to inform
slaves that they were truly
free, setting into motion the
Emancipation Proclamation
that President Abraham Lincoln
had made official in writing
on Jan. 1, 1863 – nearly
two and a half years earlier.
Juneteenth National Independence
Day became an official
federal holiday in 2021
when President Biden signed
it into law. Town Hall and all
other municipal buildings
and federal buildings in Saugus
and across the nation will
be closed in observance of
the holiday.
Today (Friday, Feb. 14) is
Flag Day. Father’s Day is Sunday
(Feb. 16). That’s really
a commercialized holiday.
But for those who celebrate
Mother’s Day, Father’s Day
deserves to be celebrated
equally.
Meanwhile, there are some
activities this weekend that
should draw great interest.
Sunday will certainly be a
family day locally, marked by
cookouts or restaurant reservations
to honor all of the beloved
dads. Tomorrow (Saturday,
June 15), the Saugus Historical
Society will host its annual
Strawberry Festival from
9 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the American
Legion Hall while the
Saugus Garden Club holds its
annual plant sale on the front
lawn of the Roby School on
Main Street.
Next week, the Saugus
Public Library should begin
to feel a spike in the daily
crowds as the library launches
its Kids 2024 Summer
the Pen Pal Program. We received
this email from Laurie,
seeking some publicity
about the program. Not having
any nominations from
our readers for “Shout Outs”
this week, we decided that
Laurie’s email qualified as a
mega “Shout Out”:
The Saugus Senior Center,
along with the fourth-grade
students from the Belmonte
Steam Academy, were thrilled
to participate for the second
year in a row in our Pen Pal
Program. Senior Center Outreach
Coordinator, Cheryl Roberto,
once again joined with
fourth-grade teacher, Brigitte
Vaudo, to promote this wonderful
intergenerational program
that is such a benefit
to both seniors and students.
We begin promoting this program
in September with signups
for Seniors who would like
to have a Pen Pal. Students
are then matched to a senior,
and the communication continues
throughout the school
year with letters exchanged
approximately every other
month. This year, Bernadette
Wilkinson, Council on Aging
Board Member as well as a retired
educator, stepped up and
volunteered to assist in picking
up and delivering the letters.
On Monday, June 3rd, we
were able to host a pizza party
for both seniors and students
to meet their Pen Pals. It was
another great success, and all
participants expressed their
delight and excitement to continue
this program next year!
Reading Program. Please see
a related story in this week’s
issue. Stay tuned for more activities.
Food
Pantry notes
The Saugus United Parish
Food Pantry is open today
(Friday, June 14) from 9:3011
a.m. at 50 Essex St. in the
basement of Cliftondale Congregational
Church.
Legion Breakfasts over
for summer
American Legion Post
210 would like to thank all
those who made the 2023-24
breakfast season such a success,
and wish them a wonderful
summer. We will resume
serving breakfast on
Friday, September 6, 2024.
Sharon’s Sneaker Crew
yard sale tomorrow
Sharon Genovese and her
group – Sharon’s Sneaker
Crew – will be hosting a Jimmy
Fund Yard Sale tomorrow
(Saturday, June 15) at
23 Lily Pond Ave. from 8 a.m.
to 2 p.m. Lots of good items:
TV, bike, furniture and toys.
The second date is Saturday,
June 22. All proceeds will go
to the Jimmy Fund Walk. She
and members of her crew
plan to walk in the Boston
Marathon Dana-Farber Jimmy
Fund Walk this fall. If you
need any more information,
you can call or text Sharon at
617-966-3475 or email her at
sunkin1@aol.com.
Mick Foley at Kowloon
June 19
The Kowloon Restaurant
(Route 1 North in Saugus) is
set to host Mick Foley, professional
world champion wrestler,
for the only one-man live
show this year. The event is
slated for June 19, 2024. The
doors open at 5:30 p.m. and
showtime is 7 p.m.
VIP Super Tickets are
$150.00 per person for Priority
Seating, a photo opportunity
and three autographs.
VIP Tickets are $99.00
per person for Priority Seating,
a photo opportunity and
an autograph. General admission
is $33.00 per person
and includes the show only.
Tickets are available by order
online at Kowloonrestaurant.
com or the Kowloon front
desk or charge-by-phone:
781-233-0077.
Michael “Mick” Francis Foley
is an American retired
professional wrestler and author.
He is currently signed to
WWE, under the company’s
“Legends” program, acting
as a company ambassador.
Don’t miss his only appearance
as Mick discusses
the legendary “Hell In A Cell”
match. For more information
go to www.kowloonrestaurant.com
A
“Shout Out” for the Pen
Pal Program
Saugus Senior Center Director
Laurie Davis wants
to express her gratitude for
all of the people who contributed
to the success of
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.
June events at Kowloon
JUNE 14: Concert Series:
SUNSET VIEW – 7:00 p.m. –
Free General Admission or
$10 Reserved Seating.
JUNE 14: Mai Tai THC-Infused
Seltzer Launch: LIVE
MUSIC – 7:00 p.m. – 21+ only
and Free General Admission.
JUNE 15: Concert Series:
DAVE MACKLIN BAND – 7:00
p.m. – Free General Admission
or $10 Reserved Seating.
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 16
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, JUnE 14, 2024
OBITUARIES
Mr. Christopher
Michael Johnson
Christopher was born in
O
7th
f Pembroke, formerly
of Saugus. Passed
away on Friday, June
at the South Shore Hospital
surrounded by his family
at the age of 53. He was the
beloved husband of Victoria
(Raineri) Johnson of Pembroke.
Melrose
and raised in Saugus
where he remained a resident
until he moved to Pembroke
5 years ago. He was
the son of Walter E. and Joan
T. (Scire) Johnson of Saugus.
Christopher loved to participate
in fantasy sports which
he enjoyed with his cousin and
friends partaking in grilling
steaks and eating ice cream
sundaes. He also liked playing
golf and preparing barbeque.
He was an avid Celtics
and Red Sox fan, loved movies,
reading and was a history
buff. He collected sports
memorabilia, which included
autographed photos of his
favorite basketball player, Larry
Bird. In the summertime,
there was nothing he enjoyed
more than sitting by the pool
with his children.
Besides his wife and parents,
he is survived by his loving
daughters to whom he
was completely devoted; Sydney
Lee Johnson of Somerville,
Madelyn Johnson of Melrose,
Francesca Raineri-Johnson
of Pembroke, and his stepdaughter
Ailis Raineri of Pembroke.
Christopher was the
brother of Jennifer Carpenito
of Peabody. He was also
the proud uncle of Timothy
Gambardella of Peabody, Caitlin
Lucey of Reading and a
Grand Uncle to Cameron Lucey
of Reading. He is also survived
by many uncles, aunts
and cousins.
In lieu of flowers donations
in his memory may be made
to St. Jude Children’s Research
Hospital @stjude.org.
SERVICE INFORMATION
Relatives & friends are invitIRS
Criminal Investigation Division
T
ed to attend visiting hours in
the Bisbee-Porcella Funeral
Home, 549 Lincoln Ave., SAUGUS,
on Monday June 17, 4-8
p.m. A funeral will be held
from the funeral home on
Tuesday at 9 a.m. followed by
a funeral mass in Blessed Sacrament
Church, 14 Summer
St., Saugus at 10 a.m. For directions
& condolences www.
BisbeePorcella.com.
he IRS Criminal Investigation
Division files reports
on an annual basis relating
to investigations relating to
tax fraud, corporate fraud,
money laundering, identity
theft as well as drug trafficking.
The Internal Revenue
Service states that its conviction
rate was 88% in calendar
year 2023. The IRS makes it a
point of continuously releasing
press releases in order to
inform the public of its role
in seeking prosecutions of
people violating the tax laws.
What types of tax fraud
might the IRS look for? Claiming
losses on lottery tickets
that don’t exist, point-of-sale
systems that delete a certain
amount of revenue from being
reported, the filing of
false tax returns, claiming of
fraudulent fuel tax credits,
employee retention tax credits,
paycheck protection plan
forgivable loan applications,
cryptocurrency crimes, narcotics
trafficking, unreported
income, underreported
income, fictitious expense
deductions, etc.
The IRS allocated $38million
in fiscal year 2022 in order
to pay to whistleblowers.
The IRS compensated whistleblowers
between 15% to
30% of the amount of tax
dollars recovered by the IRS,
which amounted to over
Janice (Kearney)
Michalski
O
$143miilion paid to whistleblowers.
Since
2007, the IRS has paid
a whopping $1.1billion to
whistleblowers. 71 percent
of all claims filed by whistleblowers
were denied. A
Whistleblower would file
Form D-3949-A with the IRS,
(Tax Fraud and Identity Theft
Information Report).
The IRS is now using Artificial
Intelligence (AI) in order
to assist in its data gathering
activities. The IRS will be able
to increase its data gathering
activities exponentially with
the use of AI in order to more
efficiently review tax-related
data in order to detect
income tax fraud and other
types of crimes. We’ve entered
a new age where governmental
agencies will have
just one more tool at their
disposal to achieve their objectives.
Joseph
D. Cataldo is an estate planning/elder law attorney,
Certified Public Accountant, Certified Financial Planner, AICPA Personal
Financial Specialist and holds a masters degree in taxation.
f Saugus, formerly of
Charlestown. Died at
Beverly Hospital on
Saturday, June 8th at the age
of 84. She was the wife of the
late Joseph Michalski. Born in
Quincy and raised in Charlestown,
Mrs. Michalski was the
daughter of the late Maurice
and Lillian (Keefe) Kearney.
She has been a resident of
Saugus for the past 55 years.
Mrs. Michalski is survived by
her two daughters, Cara Aloise
and Amy Michalski both of
Saugus; one grandson, Cesare
Aloise; two brothers, Richard
Kearney of Saugus and James
Kearney of Abington; and one
sister, Mary Butler of Woburn.
She was predeceased by her
sister, Joanne Kearney.
Relatives and friends are invited
to attend visiting hours
in the Bisbee-Porcella Funeral
Home, 549 Lincoln Ave., Saugus
on Friday June 14 from
4-7 p.m. A funeral will be held
from the funeral home on Saturday
at 9 a.m. followed by a
funeral mass in St. Margaret’s
Church, 431 Lincoln Ave., Saugus
at 10 a.m. Interment at Riverside
Cemetery in Saugus. In
lieu of flowers, donations in
Janice’s memory may be made
to St. Jude’s Children’s Research
hospital at stjude.org.
Michele Marie
(Healy) Guercio
O
f Saugus. Died peacefully
at her home on
Friday, June 7th, 2024,
following a long and courageous
battle with metastatic
breast cancer. Born on February
24, 1976, she was the
daughter of James H. and
Mary Ann (Haddad) Healy.
Growing up in Lenox, Michele
was the third of four daughters;
all of whom graduated
from the Lenox school system.
Michele was a member
of her high school basketball
team when they went on to
win the Western Mass. Conference
Finals. Michele attended
Regis College and then transferred
to the University of Massachusetts
at Amherst, where
she earned her B.A. in English.
She was employed for
many years within accounting
firms in Boston. Most recently,
her true vocation was
attained when she became a
preschool teacher at Our Lady
of Assumption Catholic School
(OLA) in Lynnfield.
Michele was an avid lover of
nature, enjoying fishing with
her boys and taking trips back
home to The Berkshires. She
loved living near the ocean
and enjoyed many vacations to
the beaches of Cape Cod and
Maine with her family. She was
an ardent sports fan and enjoyed
watching the Celtics and
Red Sox. Michele was thrilled
that her boys shared the love
of sports like she did. She loved
being a sports mom watching
Nathan and Luke playing
the sports that she always enjoyed.
On August 27th, 2005,
she married her best friend
and partner in life, Roy Guercio
of Everett. Being the mother
of two young sons, Nathan
and Luke was her pride and
joy. While she relished her time
with them, cheering on their
athletic and academic endeavors,
the thing she was most
proud of and would often say,
is that she and her husband
raised “good people”. Michele
loved reading, listening to music,
cooking for and with her
family, baking birthday cakes
from scratch, and making all
those who came to her home
feel welcome and loved. Michele
had many interests such
as picking up the clarinet that
she used to play in high school.
Michele adored her Russian
Blue cat Mickey who would always
sit on her and cuddle. She
taught herself how to knit. Michele
loved family and friends
game night She also loved the
challenge of finishing complex
puzzles
Michele leaves her husband
of 19 years and her sons Nathan
(15) and Luke (11). She
also leaves her in-laws, Frank
and Josephine Guercio. and
their daughter, Mary Harkins
and her daughter Mia Harkins;
all of whom were more
than in-laws, they were true
family. She also leaves, Karen
and her husband, Jeffrey
Crofts of Pittsfield and their
children, Abigail and Alexander
Crofts, Susan Healy of Lenox
and her son, Jack Frederick,
and Jennifer Healy of Pittsfield.
Her godparents, Elizabeth
Sheehan of Dalton and
George Haddad of Pittsfield
as well as many aunts, uncles,
and cousins across the state
and the country.
Relatives and friends were
invited to attend visiting hours
on Thursday, June 13th at the
Bisbee-Porcella Funeral Home,
549 Lincoln Ave in Saugus. A
funeral will be held from the
funeral home on Friday morning,
June 14th at 9:30 a.m. followed
by a funeral mass at
10:30 a.m. at her parish, Blessed
Sacrament Church, 14
Summer St. in Saugus. In lieu
of flowers, donations can in
made in her memory to: Our
Lady of Assumption School,
40 Grove Street, Lynnfield, MA
01940 or to the Go Fund Me
set up for her sons at this link:
https://gofund.me/1cf22d2a
Subscribe to the Advocate
Online: www.advocatenews.net
׉	 7cassandra://S3SsncMZs19-Y8-_l-ExUVcM3KMJYbtucwZjbpXVHB0+`̰ fkdme6h׉E#THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, JUnE 14, 2024
Page 15
LEAPING | FROM PAGE 1
challenged the permit. But a
ruling this week by the state
Land Court granted a motion
by Sanctuary Medicinals to
dismiss the part of the lawsuit
filed by Northeastcann which
challenged the S-2 permit issued
to Sanctuary. A fourpage
opinion issued Monday
(June 10) by Judge Michael D.
Vhay determined that Northeastcann
had no legal basis
for challenging Sanctuary’s
S-2 permit.
Sanctuary has submitted
plans to build its dispensary
at 181 Broadway, site of
the former 99 Restaurant. Issuance
of the S-2 permit enables
the company to enter
into a host community agreement
with Town Manager
Scott C. Crabtree.
“Sanctuary is free and clear
from litigation now, so we’re
happy with this ruling,” said
Saugus Attorney Peter Flynn,
who has been working as a legal
consultant for Sanctuary.
“Our clients are just looking
forward to setting up a host
community agreement with
the town manager and moving
forward on this soon and
hope to take this to the town
manager within days,” Flynn
told The Saugus Advocate in
an interview this week.
Flynn explained that Sanctuary
being named as a defendant
in Northeastcann’s
lawsuit against the town “sort
of froze things up,” creating an
environment that wasn’t conducive
to negotiations with
the town, the attorney noted.
“Judge Vhay was very clear
in his ruling that this was a
baseless lawsuit. And it set
us back a quarter of a million
- LEGAL NOTICE -
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND FAMILY COURT
Essex Probate and Family Court
36 Federal Street
Salem, MA 01970
(978) 744-1020
Docket No. ES24P1725EA
Estate of: ELIZABETH ANN THOMAS
Also known as: ELIZABETH THOMAS,
ELIZABETH A. THOMAS
Date of Death: 05/23/2024
CITATION ON PETITION FOR
FORMAL ADJUDICATION
To all interested persons:
A Petition for Probate of Will with Appointment of Personal
Representative has been filed by Joshua D. Sheehan of Peoria,
AZ requesting that the Court enter a formal Decree and Order
and for such other relief as requested in the Petition.
The Petitioner requests that:
Joshua D. Sheehan of Peoria, AZ be appointed as Personal
Representative(s) of said estate to serve Without Surety on the
bond in unsupervised administration.
IMPORTANT NOTICE
You have the right to obtain a copy of the Petition from
the Petitioner or at the Court. You have a right to object
to this proceeding. To do so, you or your attorney must file
a written appearance and objection at this Court before:
10:00 a.m. on the return day of 07/16/2024.
This is NOT a hearing date, but a deadline by which you
must file a written appearance and objection if you object to
this proceeding. If you fail to file a timely written appearance
and objection followed by an affidavit of objections within
thirty (30) days of the return day, action may be taken without
further notice to you.
UNSUPERVISED ADMINISTRATION UNDER THE
MASSACHUSETTS UNIFORM PROBATE CODE (MUPC)
A Personal Representative appointed under the MUPC in
an unsupervised administration is not required to file an
inventory or annual accounts with the Court. Persons interested
in the estate are entitled to notice regarding the administration
directly from the Personal Representative and may petition
the Court in any matter relating to the estate, including the
distribution of assets and expenses of administration.
WITNESS, Hon. Frances M. Giordano, First Justice of this
Court.
Date: June 10, 2024
PAMELA A. CASEY O’BRIEN
REGISTER OF PROBATE
June 14, 2024
dollars, when you consider
the time lost, legal costs and
having to pay rent at the location
where we want to start
our business,” Flynn said.
“We’re ready to start work
on the 99 and converting it
into a facility for our business.
But we need to get the host
agreement set up with the
town manager,” he said.
“As it stands right now,
we’re the only one holding a
permit [to open a retail marijuana
facility in Saugus] and
who is not part of any litigation.
Sanctuary is in the best
position to do business financially.”
A
closer look at the judge’s
ruling
Northeastcann had sought
an S-2 permit for its proposed
site at 1529 Broadway, where
the Avalon Motel is located.
But its application failed
on a 2-2 vote by selectmen.
That prompted a lawsuit early
this year by Northeastcann
against the Town of Saugus,
the Board of Selectmen and
Sanctuary which challenged
two decisions. The first count
of the complaint challenged
the denial of Northeastcann’s
application. The second count
– the one which Judge Vhay
dismissed – challenged the
permit obtained by Sanctuary.
Lawyers
for Sanctuary filed
a motion with the Land Court,
contending that Northeastcann
lacked standing under
state law to challenge Sanctuary’s
special permit. Judge
Vhay agreed. “Abutters to a
property that’s received a
special permit have a rebuttable
presumption that they’re
persons aggrieved,” the judge
wrote in his ruling.
“But Northeastcann doesn’t
own property abutting the
site of Sanctuary’s proposed
marijuana facility. In fact,
Northeastcann neither owns
nor rents any land whatsoever
in Saugus,” Judge Vhay said.
“Northeastcann thus lacks
the statutory presumption of
standing. It nonetheless argues
it has standing sufficient
to survive Sanctuary’s motion
to dismiss on account of (1)
being a party to a letter of intent
to lease the site of its own
proposed marijuana facility
in Saugus and (2) its reduced
chances of getting a license
from the Town of Saugus to
open Northeastcann’s own facility
[assuming the Court reverses
the Selectboard’s decision
denying Northeastcann’s
permit application, the subject
of Northeastcann’s Count
1] now that Sanctuary has its
special permit. Neither argument
is persuasive,” the judge
concluded.
The judge said Northeastcann
would still lack standing
as an abutter if it owned
the property that it plans to
build on. Northeastcann’s
proposed site at 1529 Broadway
is 2.8 miles from Sanctuary’s
proposed site at 181
Broadway.
Since Northeastcann
doesn’t enjoy a presumption
of standing, it must show that
it is “a person aggrieved,” the
judge said. “In other words,”
he added, the permit issued
to Sanctuary must cause
harm to Northeastcann.
“That the granting of Sanctuary’s
special permit may reduce
the chances of Northeastcann
getting a cannabis-facility
is not an interest
Saugus’s Zoning Bylaws or
the Zoning Act expressly protects,”
the judge said.
“Northeastcann concedes
that the Zoning Bylaw doesn’t
cap, for example, the number
of special permits available to
marijuana retailers; instead,
Northeastcann is fearful that,
with a special permit in hand,
Sanctuary will proceed to get
a separate cannabis operating
license (a non-zoning approval),
which in turn will allegedly
reduce Northeastcann’s
chances of getting a
similar non-zoning license,”
the ruling continued.
“Northeastcann cites no authority
that a party’s interest
in obtaining a non-zoning approval
generally, or a cannabis
license in particular, falls
within those interests the
Zoning Act protects, a prerequisite
for claiming ‘aggrieveLEAPING
| SEE PAGE 17
- LEGAL NOTICE -
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND FAMILY COURT
Essex Probate and Family Court
36 Federal Street
Salem, MA 01970
(978) 744-1020
Docket No. ES24P1665EA
Estate of: FRANK A. RECUPERO
Also known as: FRANK RECUPERO
Date of Death: 04/01/2021
CITATION ON PETITION FOR
FORMAL ADJUDICATION
To all interested persons:
A Petition for Late and Limited Formal Testacy and/or
Appointment has been filed by Josephine Henry of Caver, MA
requesting that the Court enter a formal Decree and Order and for
such other relief as requested in the Petition.
The Petitioner requests that:
Josephine Henry of Caver, MA be appointed as Personal
Representative(s) of said estate to serve Without Surety on the
bond in unsupervised administration.
IMPORTANT NOTICE
You have the right to obtain a copy of the Petition from
the Petitioner or at the Court. You have a right to object
to this proceeding. To do so, you or your attorney must file
a written appearance and objection at this Court before:
10:00 a.m. on the return day of 07/19/2024.
This is NOT a hearing date, but a deadline by which you
must file a written appearance and objection if you object to
this proceeding. If you fail to file a timely written appearance
and objection followed by an affidavit of objections within
thirty (30) days of the return day, action may be taken without
further notice to you.
UNSUPERVISED ADMINISTRATION UNDER THE
MASSACHUSETTS UNIFORM PROBATE CODE (MUPC)
A Personal Representative appointed under the MUPC in
an unsupervised administration is not required to file an
inventory or annual accounts with the Court. Persons interested
in the estate are entitled to notice regarding the administration
directly from the Personal Representative and may petition
the Court in any matter relating to the estate, including the
distribution of assets and expenses of administration.
WITNESS, Hon. Frances M. Giordano, First Justice of this
Court.
Date: June 07, 2024
PAMELA A. CASEY O’BRIEN
REGISTER OF PROBATE
June 14, 2024
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, JUnE 14, 2024
SOUNDS| FROM PAGE 13
JUNE 21: Concert Series: UP
ALL NIGHT! – 7:00 p.m. – Free
General Admission or $10 Reserved
Seating.
JUNE 26: Bingo Night with
DJ TOMMY – 7:00 p.m. – Free
General Admission.
JUNE 28: Concert Series:
DAVE MACKLIN BAND – 7:00
p.m. – Free General Admission
or $10 Reserved Seating.
JUNE 29: Concert Series: XS
BAND – 7:00 p.m. – Free General
Admission or $10 Reserved
Seating.
For all tickets, call the Kowloon
Restaurant at 781-2330077
or visit online at www.
kowloonrestaurant.com
SAVE Annual Meeting/
Dinner
Saugus Action Volunteers
for the Environment (SAVE)
will hold its 51st Annual Meeting
& Dinner on Wednesday,
June 26, 2024, at Polcari’s
Restaurant (92 Broadway-Route
1 North, Saugus).
Social time starts at 6:30 p.m.;
dinner buffet begins at approximately
7:00 p.m. The
public is cordially invited and
we hope you can join us for
the mixed buffet consisting of
garden salad, chicken & broccoli
penne, cheese ravioli, assorted
pizzas, rolls and butter,
dessert, coffee and tea. A cash
bar will be available.
Tickets are $35 per person.
Payment can be made
by check or Venmo. For a
printable copy of the regisYour
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SAUGUS ADVOCATE
One year subscription to
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CC# _______________________________ Exp. _____
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Clip & Mail Coupon with Credit Card, Check or Money Order to:
Advocate Newspapers Inc.
PO Box 490407, Everett, MA 02149
tration form, please visit the
https://saugussave.wordpress.
com website on the “News &
Events” page. Please make
payment as soon as possible
(but no later than Wednesday,
June 12) either via mail
to SAVE Treasurer, Mary Kinsell,
11 Sunnyside Ave., Saugus,
MA 01906, with a check
payable to SAVE, Saugus, or
make your payment by Venmo
to @SAVE-org and complete
your forms here: https://
tinyurl.comSAVE6-28. You may
also contact Ann at adevlin@
aisle10.net or Mary at Mkinsell@verizon.net
or, for further
information, please visit
our website at http://www.
saugussave.org. Please let us
know if you are able to join
us for a fun and informative
evening, as well as a wonderful
buffet dinner, as soon as
possible.
Our guest speaker for the
evening, Scott A. Brazis, Saugus’
Solid Waste/Recycling
Coordinator, will give a brief
update on new initiatives
and future plans for the Saugus
Recycling/CHaRM Center.
Free parking is available
on-site, and the facility is accessible
for persons with disabilities.
Summer
track is coming
Coach Christopher Tarantino’s
popular Summer Track
for youths ages five through
18 begins on July 1. The program
is scheduled for 6 to 8
p.m. at the track outside Belmonte
STEAM Academy. Registration
will run from June
24-28. Here is the schedule:
July 1-5: first formal week.
July 8-11: second formal
week.
July 12, 10 a.m.-12 p.m.:
makeup practice (if necessary).
July
12, 6 p.m.: pasta dinner
at Prince.
10. 10. In June 1844, the
YMCA was founded in
London; in 1978 what
band released a song
about the YMCA?
1. 1. June 14 is Flag Day;
what is another word for
half-staff?
2. 2. What comedian who
hosted “You Bet Your Life”
said, “I was married by
a judge. I should have
asked for a jury”?
3. 3. On June 15, 1864, Arlington
National Cemetery
was founded; whose
Virginia estate was turned
into the cemetery?
4. 4. What does COBRA
stand for?
5. 5. On June 16, 1911, IBM
was founded; what does
IBM stand for?
6. 6. What state prison had
a casino for inmates?
7. 7. The European village
of Ingria in what country
has an election with 30
candidates and 46 residents
(plus 26 people
abroad)?
8. 8. On June 17, 1775, was
The Battle of Bunker Hill;
which side had way more
casualties?
9. 9. The Reinheitsgebot
regulates what beverage
production in what country?
11.
11. What wall can you see
from space?
12. 12. On June 18, 1873, Susan
B. Anthony was fined
after her conviction for
voting; what U.S. president
pardoned her posthumously?
13.
13. How many dots does
a six-sided die have?
14. 14. UK supermarket chain
Tesco is trialing using laser-etched
barcodes on
what fruit?
15. 15. What planet has been
called the “Blue Planet”?
July 13, 9 a.m.: in-house
meet at Serino Stadium.
July 15-18: retrain week.
July 20: Summer Showdown,
Cranston, R.I.
July 24: wrap up.
Cost: $250 first year, $200
returning with uniform, $150
if three years or more in summer
program; includes pasta
dinner, t-shirt, uniform and
entry into Summer Showdown.
Please
note that these programs
are not being offered
through the town’s Youth
& Recreation Department.
Please contact Coach Christopher
Tarantino directly with
questions at 781-854-6778
or christophertarantino24@
gmail.com.
CHaRM Center is open
The Town of Saugus recently
announced that the CHaRM
Center is open Wednesday
and Saturday from 8 a.m. to
2 p.m. Residents will be required
to buy a $25 Sticker
to use the Compost Facilities
as well as to recycle hard
plastics. The rest of the Facility’s
features are free to use
for any Saugus resident. Residents
are also allowed three
TVs or computers/CRT monitors
for free per household
each year. The Town of Saugus
reserves the right to refuse
any material if quantity
or quality is questionable.
The final date the CHaRM
Center will be open for the
season is December 14.
However, the Facility will
be open the following winter
dates, weather permitting:
January 18, 2025, from
8 a.m. to 2 p.m.; February
15, 2025, from 8 a.m. to 2:00
p.m.; March 15, 2025, from
8:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.
Please contact Solid Waste/
Recycling Coordinator Scott
16. 16. On June 19, 1865,
Union soldiers arrived
in a community in what
state to announce the
Emancipation Proclamation?
17.
17. In what 1800s opera
would you find the character
Peep-Bo?
18. 18. Claudia Sheinbaum
recently became the first
female president-elect of
what country?
19. 19. How are dulse, kombu
and nori similar?
20. 20. On June 20, 1910,
what singer/guitarist
(known for “Smokestack
Lightnin’” and “Spoonful”)
with a nickname including
the name of an
animal was born?
A. Brazis at 781-231-4036
with any questions.
Brick program for Saugus
War Monument
The Saugus War Monument
Committee, once again, is
sponsoring the Buy-A-Brick
Program to honor all those
who have served their country.
If you would like to purchase
one in the name of
someone who is presently
serving or has served, in
the memory of a loved one,
or just someone from your
family, school, etc., the general
pricing is $100 for a 4” X
8” brick (three lines) or $200
for an 8” X 8” brick (five lines).
Each line is a maximum of 15
characters. The improvement
and upkeep of the monument
on the corner of Winter
and Central Streets rely
on the generosity of donors
through fundraising.
The brick application must
be in by Sept. 10 to ensure
the bricks will be ready for
Veterans Day. Please contact
Corinne Riley at 781231-7995
for more information
and applications.
About The Saugus Advocate
We
welcome press releases,
news announcements,
freelance articles and courtesy
photos from the community.
Our deadline is noon
Wednesday. 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.
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.
ANSWERS
1. 1. Half-mast
2.
3.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Lee’s
4.
Groucho Marx
Confederate General Robert E.
Consolidated Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act
5.
Corporation
6. 6. Nevada
7. 7. Italy
8.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
The British, even though they
won the battle
9. Beer in Germany
10. Village People (“Y.M.C.A.”)
11. The Great Wall of China
12. Donald Trump
13. 13. 21
14. 14. Avocadoes
15. 15. Earth
16.
17.
18. 18. Mexico
19.
International Business Machines
16. Texas (Galveston)
17. Gilbert & Sullivan’s “The Mikado”
19. They are types of seaweed.
20. 20. Chester Arthur Burnet (Howlin’
Wolf)
׉	 7cassandra://BH-PEgaXTps-wdtZsCcMI8H_-gcx75rCr16vrJIGWeU,M`̰ fkdme6k׉ERTHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, JUnE 14, 2024
Page 17
LEAPING | FROM PAGE 15
ment’ … This court will not
be the first to so rule.”
Northeastcann criticized
the town manager
In the lawsuit filed early this
year, Northeastcann lawyers
alleged that Sanctuary Medicinals’
project contained numerous
adverse conditions
that prevented it from being
a marijuana establishment.
In the complaint, the lawyers
were also highly critical of
Town Manager Crabtree and
his use of the seven-member
Marijuana Establishment Review
Committee (MERC) to
make recommendations on
which companies to issue an
S-2 permit. “There is an apparent
political dispute between
the town manager and selectmen
members,” the complaint
said.
“The town manager failed
to follow the bylaws related
to the Host Community
Agreement,” according to the
Northeastcann attorney.
“Selectmen improperly relied
on the findings of the
MERC. Selectmen came to
meetings with preconceived
decisions,” the complaint
said. “Selectmen came to the
meeting for the special permit,
improperly swayed by
the MERC and its flawed process.”
Sanctuary
was only one of
two candidates that received
a recommendation from the
seven-member Marijuana Establishment
Review Committee
(MERC) for the S-2 permit.
The business received a total
of 118 points out of a possible
140 in a scoring system.
“The Respondent’s proposed
location is advantageous,
and its extensive cannabis
experience and current
vertical integration business
model are significant benefits,”
the committee concluded
in its analysis.
“The Respondent appeared
to be one of the strongest positioned
to open, succeed,
and provide minimal or manageable
impact to the surrounding
neighborhood,” it
noted.
MERC report rated Northeastcann
poorly
Northeastcann finished fifth
in the MERC ranking with 32
points. The committee found
the proposed site at 1529
Broadway, the current Avalon
Motel, as “adequate.” But the
committee was concerned
about its proximity to existing
cannabis retail businesses
operating in Malden and Melrose.
Access to the site is difficult,
due to significant traffic
congestion in the immediate
area. In addition, the current
and future development
of Essex Landing has already
added significant traffic and
roadway layout challenges,
according to the committee.
Conclusion: “The lack of an
open retail cannabis business
and verifiable cannabis retail
experience are a concern
to the Review Committee. In
addition, the proposed location
presents negative impact
concerns and challenges.”
At the selectmen meeting
last December, Selectman
Corinne Riley made the motion
to approve an S-2 permit
for Northeastcann, for its proposed
site at 1529 Broadway,
the current Avalon Motel. Selectman
Anthony Cogliano
voted to approve the permit.
But Selectman Michael Serino
and Board of Selectmen Chair
Debra Panetta voted against
it citing their confidence in
the MERC report’s recommendations.
It failed 2-2.
Pat Russolillo, a retired major
in the Massachusetts State
Police, challenged the MERC
findings about access being
an issue for the site.
“The best location was the
Avalon Motel [Northeastcann],
because it would eliminate
that public safety nightmare
and replace it with a
first-class facility,” Selectman
Cogliano said in an interview
after the December meeting.
Selectman Riley also spoke
in support of Northeastcann’s
application. “To me, it’s unfortunate
that the proposed
facility at the Avalon Motel
[Northeastcann] wasn’t one
of the applications approved,
as I feel it would be a better
use of the site than the current
motel with the state renting
rooms to migrants, putting
a strain on our Police Department
and school district,”
she said.
Board of Selectmen Chair
Debra Panetta defended the
way the MERC conducted
business in making its recommendations.
“Both Sanctuary
Medicinals and Uma Flowers
received the highest scores
on location by the Town of
Saugus Marijuana Establishment
Review Committee,” she
said in an interview last December
after the vote.
“As a Selectman, I have
trusted the recommendations
of our Police Chief, Fire
Chief, Public Health Director
and Building Inspector,
where these four individuals
were members of this committee.
I welcome Sanctuary
Medicinals to Saugus, and I
wish them the best of luck,”
she said.
She noted that the Board
of Selectmen’s responsibility
was to grant an S-2 permit
(special permit) based
on the best location, traffic
flow, neighborhood impact,
access/egress, proximity
to schools, circulation
flows, parking and queuing,
etc., “as required by our zoning
bylaws.”
“Once the Board issues the
special permit, it’s the Town
Manager’s responsibility to
enter into the host community
agreement. Then it’s up to
the state, the Cannabis Control
Commission, to issue the
license,” she said.
LEAPING | SEE PAGE 18
- LEGAL NOTICE -
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND FAMILY COURT
Essex Probate and Family Court
36 Federal Street
Salem, MA 01970
(978) 744-1020
Docket No. ES24C0204CA
In the matter of: TERESA ANN FRESINA
CITATION ON
PETITION TO CHANGE NAME
A Petition to Change Name of Adult has been filed by Teresa
Ann Fresina of Saugus, MA requesting that the court enter a
Decree changing their name to: Terry Sage Bernard.
IMPORTANT NOTICE
Any person may appear for the purposes of objecting to the
petition by filing an appearance at: Essex Probate and
Family Court before 10:00 a.m. on the return day of
07/15/2024. This is NOT a hearing date, but a deadline by
which you must file a written appearance if you object to
this proceeding.
WITNESS, Hon. Frances M. Giordano, First Justice of
this Court.
Date: June 05, 2024
PAMELA CASEY O’BRIEN
REGISTER OF PROBATE
June 14, 2024
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with
permission from the publisher, The Warren Group. For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property information visit: www.
thewarrengroup.com.
BUYER1
Arreaga, Guilian G
BUYER2
Lopez, Edisa C
SELLER1
46 Serino Way LLC
SELLER2
ADDRESS
46 Serino Way
CITY
Saugus
DATE
05.10.24
PRICE
750000
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PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://zQlT8EnvdaC3ZLiCKNGa0VxnKbDQOwb3Wo9TM0RD2qQ 	2` )׉	 7cassandra://ZHgjY7lMWFZxSpoQ1SxogeVs3n6WccSY6FMXkGX9bbYͳ`J׉	 7cassandra://VH0T9eRb5i-baspu2UsTPyxJXekt-4ROt6bncxJM1jc4;`̰ fkeme6ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://cXdN0bwRM-p6CshsR6eDtiWRyCgQJx92WCSgECxl3po b`)׉	 7cassandra://55kePUkHygtUKI1YqV-4x1WtpWEft6VlvLb9KBmJOPM̓@`J׉	 7cassandra://zMySxtviTX_Vm6_seGiqmXUSMa3xtZWcTRt0iwCt92w(`̰ fkeme6נfkeme6 '!9ׁHhttp://TrinityHomesRE.comׁׁЈנfkeme6 	Zj
9ׁHmailto:soldwithsue@gmail.comׁׁЈנfkeme6 ̈
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9ׁHmailto:soldwithrosa@gmail.comׁׁЈנfkeme6 ir
9ׁHmailto:listwithlea@yahoo.comׁׁЈנfkeme6 ~Uj	9ׁHmailto:soldwithrosa@gmail.comׁׁЈנfkeme6 ef	9ׁHmailto:soldwithsue@gmail.comׁׁЈנfkeme6 W̈
9ׁHmailto:infowithmango@gmail.comׁׁЈנfkeme6 ̂̇9ׁHhttp://www.mangorealtyteam.comׁׁЈנfkeme6 z̇9ׁHmailto:infowithmango@gmail.comׁׁЈ׉E#Page 18
Advocate Online: www.advocatenews.net
~ School Bus Drivers Wanted ~
7D Licensed School Bus Drivers
THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, JUnE 14, 2024
LEAPING | FROM PAGE 17
Another pending lawsuit
Uma Flowers, LLC, with
Malden Trans is looking for reliable drivers for
the new school year. We provide ongoing training
and support for licensing requirements. Applicant
preferably lives local (Malden, Everett, Revere).
Part-time positions available and based on AM &
PM school hours....15-30 hours per week. Good
driver history from Registry a MUST! If interested,
please call David @ 781-322-9401.
CDL SCHOOL BUS DRIVER WANTED
Compensation: $28/hour
School bus transportation company seeking
active CDL drivers who live LOCALLY (Malden,
Everett, Chelsea and immediate surrounding
communities).
- Applicant MUST have BOTH S and P endorsements
as well as Massachusetts school bus certificate.
Good driver history from Registry a MUST!
-
Part-time hours, BUT GUARANTEED 20-35
HOURS PER WEEK depending on experience.
Contact David @ 781-322-9401.
American Exterior and
Window Corporation
Contact us for all of your
home improvement projects
and necessities.
Call Jeff or Bob
Toll Free: 1-888-744-1756
617-699-1782 / www.americanexteriorma.com
Windows, Siding, Roofing, Carpentry & More!
All estimates, consultations or inspections completed
by MA licensed supervisors. *Over 50 years experience.
*Better Business Bureau Membership.
Insured and
Registered
Complete Financing Available.
No Money Down.
a proposed location at 24
Broadway (Route 1 North)
– the site of a former house
that was torn down – was the
unanimous selection of the
seven-member committee,
achieving a perfect score of
140 total points, based on an
“exceptional” rating by each
member in each of the five
categories that were considered.
But Uma Flowers could
only muster three of the selectmen’s
four votes for the issuance
of an S-2 permit.
Selectman Anthony CogliaWe
follow Social Distancing Guidelines!
* Crack Repairing * Pot Hole Filling
* Striping Handicapped Spaces
* Free Estimates
Tom’s Seal Coating
Call Gary: 978-210-4012
Licensed
& Insured
Free
Estimates
Carpentry * Kitchen & Bath * Roofs * Painting
Decks * Siding * Carrijohomeimprovement.com
Call 781-710-8918 * Saugus, MA
General Contractor * Interior & Exterior
Frank Berardino
MA License 31811
• 24 - Hour Service
• Emergency Repairs
BERARDINO
Plumbing & Heating
Residential & Commercial Service
Gas Fitting • Drain Service
617.699.9383
Senior Citizen Discount
no, who has been an outspoken
critic of the MERC report
and its ranking of Uma Flowers
with a perfect score, cast
the lone vote against Uma
Flowers at the Dec. 12 meeting
when selectmen issued
just one of a possible three
S-2 permits. “I don’t believe
it’s in the top three locations,”
Cogliano said at the December
meeting.
“I’m not going to be boxed
in on the vote,” he said.
Uma Flowers claimed in
its appeal to the Land Court
that Selectman Cogliano appeared
to be biased against
Uma and in favor of Bostica,
LLC – a company managed by
a personal friend. Uma’s complaint
seeks to refer its application
back to the board for
reconsideration with orders
that Cogliano be disqualified
from participating in the public
hearing or voting on the
application. In its appeal, lawyers
for Uma noted that Cogliano
admitted to having a personal
relationship with Raymond
Falite, manager of Bostica
and a personal friend for
30 years. The court complaint
noted that Cogliano had even
filed a conflict of interest disclosure.
During the hearing
process, Cogliano disparaged
Uma and made factually inaccurate
statements about the
company, Uma alleged.
“Mr. Cogliano’s personal interest
conflicted with his public
duty,” the complaint said.
Clean-Outs!
We take and dispose
from cellars, attics,
garages, yards, etc.
Call Robert at:
781-844-0472
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Page 19
MANGO REALTY INC
Let's make your real estate journey a success—schedule an
appointment with us today!
r real estate journey a succes
r real estate journey a succes
Contact Us: 781-558-1091
infowithmango@gmail.com
www.mangorealtyteam.com
Mango Realty - Sue Palomba
Welcome to this beautifully updated 3-bedroom home! The inviting
farmer's porch sets the tone, leading into spacious interiors with a
large eat-in kitchen and a dining room featuring a built-in hutch.
Experience seamless indoor-outdoor living with sliding doors leading
to a beautiful new deck. The home showcases elegant new stairs, a
wide staircase, and a charming walk-up attic. The level yard provides
plenty of space for outdoor activities including shed and the new roof
installed in 2021 offers added peace of mind. Every detail of this
home has been thoughtfully updated to enhance its character and
functionality. This home is perfect for both comfortable living and
entertaining. Join us for an Open House this Thu, June 13 from
5PM- 7PM; Sat, June 15 and Sun, June 16 from 12PM -1:30PM .
Contact Information: Sue Palomba call or text at 617-877-4553 or
email at infowithmango@gmail.com.
6 Granite Road, Saugus, MA 01906
Open House: Thu, June 13 from 5pm - 7pm
Sat, June 15 & Sun, Jun 16 from 12pm -1:30pm
Saugus, MA
Here’s your chance to own not one, but two beautiful pieces of land in the sought-after area of
Saugus. This unique package offers endless possibilities for creating your dream estate or investment
project. Nestled in the tranquil beauty of Saugus, each parcel comes with its own address and a
combined price of $995,000. Don’t miss out on this incredible value! Call Sue at 617-877-4553 or
email at soldwithsue@gmail.com.
Peabody, MA
Discover the charm of this delightful 2-bedroom haven, featuring gleaming hardwood floors and
abundant natural light throughout. This pet-free, smoke-free retreat offers convenient washer/dryer
hookups and requires a 680+ credit score with references. Call or text Rosa Rescigno at 781-8200096
or soldwithrosa@gmail.com.
A nicely maintained split entry ranch on a quiet dead-end street. This well cared for 3-bedroom, 2 full bath home allows for ample living space with 3
spacious living rooms, a bright eat-in kitchen with peninsula, granite counters, and bow window for natural lighting. Walk out of the sliders to a new
large composite deck and enjoy the private outdoor space. Hardwood floors, custom bookcases, closet space, 2 zone heat, and 2 wood burning
fireplaces are other highlights this home has to offer. The finished lower level offers high ceilings and additional living space complete with a wet bar,
laundry, and multiple rooms for guests. This home is tucked away on a quiet side road but is close to public transportation and convenient to Route
One. Open house June 13th, 15th, and 16th. Offers reviewed on and due by 3pm on June 18th. Please do not submit offers prior to 6/18. Send offers in
one PDF by e-mail to list agent. Contact Information: Lea Doherty call or text 617-594-9164 or email at listwithlea@yahoo.com.
Gloucester, MA
Welcome to your new beautiful home! This
gorgeous year-round rental apartment has
all the amenities you will ever need.
Adorned with gleaming hardwood floors,
elegant high ceilings and bathed in natural
light. This well-maintained space exudes
warmth and comfort. With convenient
washer dryer hookups included, keeping up
with laundry has never been easier. To
maintain our standards, we require a credit
score of 680 or higher along with
references. Enjoy a pet-free and smoke-free
environment, fostering a clean and tranquil
atmosphere for all. Call Rosa at 781-8200096
or email at soldwithrosa@gmail.com.
Wakefield, MA
Welcome to this well-maintained home in a desirable Wakefield
neighborhood! Featuring gleaming hardwood floors, the well-lit and
modern kitchen is perfect for all your culinary needs. The versatile
rooms can easily be converted into a home gym or office. Enjoy the
spacious deck, ideal for hosting gatherings, and the beautifully
landscaped yard. Additional highlights include a convenient washer
and dryer, as well as outdoor parking. This home is also conveniently
located near shopping and highways, making it the perfect blend of
comfort and accessibility. Don't miss out on this gem! Contact
Information: Sue Palomba call or text at 617-877-4553 or email at
infowithmango@gmail.com.
Reading, MA
This home offers the main bedroom on the first
floor with a full bath. 2 electric meters. This
property is ideally situated in a prime location,
close to Market Basket for all your grocery
needs, and close distance to the commuter rail,
making your daily commute effortless. Enjoy
the convenience of nearby shopping centers
and major highways, providing quick and easy
access to the airport, as well as a seamless
drive to downtown Boston. The perfect blend of
suburban tranquility and urban accessibility.
Call or text Sue Palomba at 617-877-4553 or
email at soldwithsue@gmail.com.
Sizzling summer days. A red-hot housing market.
Contact us today for a complimentary home market analysis.
26 Houston Avenue, Saugus, MA
List Price: $725,000
18 Edgehill Road, Saugus, MA
List Price:$699,900
8 rooms | 4 bedrooms | 2 bathrooms
1,708 square feet
Welcome to this classic New England style
colonial, a true gem with period details and
modern updates. Don’t miss the opportunity to
make this one your own.
Providing Real Estate
Services for 17 Years
Servicing Saugus, Melrose,
Wakefield, Malden,
all North Shore
communities, Boston and
beyond.
Lori Johnson 781.718.7409
Lisa Smallwood 617.240.2448
TRINITY REAL ESTATE | 321 MAIN STREET| SAUGUS, MA| VILLAGE PARK
TrinityHomesRE.com
781.231.9800
8 rooms | 3 bedrooms | 2 bathrooms
2,226 square feet
Move right into this well cared for raised
Ranch with a peaceful, country like setting
and close to the ponds, yet convenient to
shopping and restaurants.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, JUnE 14, 2024
FOR SALE
FOR SALE- VERY DESIRABLE INDIAN
ROCK NEIGHBORHOOD, OVERSIZED
SPLIT ENTRY ON A LEVEL SIZABLE
LOT. 4+ BEDROOMS, 3 FULL BATHS,
2800+ SQFT. ROOM FOR EXTENDED
FAMILY IN THE FINISHED BASEMENT.
CUSTOM BUILT BY ONE OWNER AND
WELL CARED FOR.
SAUGUS $925,000
CALL DANIELLE FOR DETAILS
978-987-9535
UNDER CONTRACT
FOR SALE- FULLY RENOVATED 4 BEDROOM,
2.5 BATHROOM COLONIAL.THIS HOME HAS
NEW ROOF, SIDING, WINDOWS, GAS HEAT
HVAC SYSTEMS, AND C/A. YOU WILL BE
WOWED BY THE OPEN CONCEPT WITH NEW
KITCHEN WITH HIDDEN PANTRY, CUSTOM
BUILT ENTERTAINMENT CENTER, AND NEW
CUSTOM TILED BATHROOMS. BONUS
FINISHED 3RD FLOOR FOR ADDED SPACE!
THERE IS ALSO NEW RED OAK FLOORING
AND FRESH PAINT THROUGHOUT.
BEVERLY $999,999
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
FOR SALE
FOR SALE- THIS 3+ BEDROOM, 3 BATH
RANCH IS NEWLY RENOVATED AND OFFERS
PLENTY OF ROOM FOR EVERYONE! THE
KITCHEN FEATURES WHITE & GRAY CABINETS
WITH AN ISLAND OPEN TO THE DINING AREA
AND WINDOWS OVERLOOKING THE PRIVATE
BACKYARD, DECK AND IN-GROUND POOL.
THE EXTENDED FAMILY BECAUSE THERE IS
AN IN-LAW UNIT WITH AN ADDITIONAL
KITCHEN, LIVING/ DINING ROOM, BEDROOM,
AND BATH. LYNNFIELD $ 949,900
CALL DEBBIE 617-678-9710
COMING SOON COMING SOON- LARGE STATELY COLONIAL WITH HIGH
CEILINGS AND PERIOD DETAIL THROUGH -OUT. LARGE ROOMS
AND HARDWOOD FLOORS. THREE BEDROOMS AND 1.5
BATHROOMS. NICE SCREENED 3 SEASONED ROOMED TO
ENJOY WARM SUMMER EVENINGS. POTENTIAL FOR
EXPANSION IN ATTIC. SAUGUS
CALL DEBBIE FOR MORE DETAILS 617-678-9710
COMING SOON
COMING SOON- ADORABLE 3 BEDROOM 1 BATH
RANCH WITH GARAGE UNDERNEATH ON A NICE SIDE
STREET. NOTHING TO DO BUT MOVE RIGHT IN.
SAUGUS
CALL JOHN FOR MORE DETAILS 617-285-7117
FOR RENT
SOLD
SAUGUS
LOOKING TO
BUY OR SELL?
COMING SOON COMING SOON- 6 BEDROOM, 2 BATH
COLONIAL RICH IN PERIOD DETAIL
WITH GORGEOUS WOODWORK AND
STAIRCASE. LARGE ROOMS WITH
HIGH CEILINGS. SO MUCH POTENTIAL
IN THIS 3000+ SQFT HOME.
SAUGUS
CALL KEITH FOR MORE DETAILS
781-389-0791
DEBBIE
MILLER
(617) 678-9710
CALL HER
FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE
NEEDS
COMMERCIAL OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT- PRIME LOCATION.
PROFESSIONAL BUILDING JUST OUTSIDE OF SAUGUS CENTER. PLENTY OF
PARKING. THIS SPACE IS PERFECT FOR LAWYERS OFFICE, INSURANCE
COMPANY, REAL ESTATE OFFICE, MORTGAGE COMPANY. WALK IN AREA,
SEPARATE OFFICES, RECEPTION AREA, MENS AND WOMAN'S BATHROOMS,
COMMON CONFERENCE ROOM. CONVENIENT TO ROUTE 1 AND
DOWNTOWN. SPACE COULD BE SHARED, SPLIT OR THE ENTIRE SPACE
COULD BE LEASED. SAUGUS $25 CALL KEITH FOR MORE DETAILS
781-389-0791
SOLD
SOLD
SAUGUS
BUILDABLE LOT
• SAUGUS $175,000 CALL KEITH 781-389-0791 FOR FURTHER DETAILS
MOBILE HOMES
• GREAT YOUNG ONE BEDROOM UNIT IN A VERY DESIRABLE PARK IN MOVE IN CONDITION. 2 CAR
PARKING. LOW PARK RENT OF 410 DANVERS 89,900
• LOT AVAILABLE IN DESIRABLE FAMILY ESTATES COOPERATIVE MOBILE PARK. APPROX 120' X 30'
SEWER AND WATER BRING YOUR UNIT AND HAVE A BRAND NEW BEAUTIFUL HOME....COOP FEE IS
ONY 300- 350 A MONTH PEABODY $99,900
• PRE-CONSTRUCTION. WELCOME TO SHADY OAKS BRAND NEW MANUFACTURED HOME
COMMUNITY. AFFORDABLE YET UPSCALE LIVING , EACH HOME HAS AMPLE SQUARE FOOTAGE
WITH 2 BEDROOMS AND 2 BATHS. OPEN CONCEPT PERFECT FOR ENTERTAINING. HIGH QUALITY
FINISHES FROM TOP TIER APPLIANCES TO ELEGANT FINISHES. OCCUPANCY DATE APRIL 2024
DANVERS PRICES START AT $229,000 FOR 2 BEDROOM, $159,900 FOR 1 BEDROOM
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
SAUGUS
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