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SAUGUS Vol. 22, No. 29 -FREEMom’s Cancer Fighting Angels Car Show – see page 13 ADVOCATE www.advocatenews.net ~ THE ADVOCATE ASKS ~ Paul Delios discusses the rich history and exciting future of Kane’s Donuts, which continues to flourish after six decades Published Every Friday 781-233-4446 Friday, July 19, 2019 Consultant studies organization of Saugus Police Department HOW TO MAKE IT BETTER: Town Manager Scott Crabtree announced this week he has launched a comprehensive analysis of the Saugus Police Department. (Courtesy Photo to The Saugus Advocate). MOST POPULAR: The Honey Dip Donut continues to be the top seller of Kane’s Donuts. Here, Paul Delios displays a tray of fresh favorites. The drive thru for Kane’s Donuts on Route 1 South at Essex Landing is open daily from 5 a.m. to 5 p.m. To celebrate the opening, Kane’s will be serving 99¢ coffee of any size during the month of July. (Saugus Advocate Photos by Mark E. Vogler) Editor’s Note: For this week, we sat down with Paul Delios, president and co-owner of Kane’s Donuts, to talk about the drive thru that recently opened up as part of the new Kane’s Donuts at Essex Landing. ASKS| SEE PAGE 18 ANGELO’S FULL "Over 40 Years of Excellence!" 1978-2019 Regular Unleaded $2.599 Mid Unleaded $2.799 Super $2.859 Diesel Fuel $2.839 KERO $4.759 Diesel $2.559 SERVICE HEATING OIL 24-Hour Burner Service Call for Current Price! (125—gallon minimum) DEF Available by Pump! Open an account and order online at: www.angelosoil.com (781) 231-3500 (781) 231-3003 367 LINCOLN AVE • SAUGUS • OPEN 7 DAYS here have been reports for several weeks about members of the Saugus Police Department being interviewed about a possible reorganization of the town’s law enforcement agency. There have also been rumors that the town is looking at the potential privatization of law enforcement in town. Town Manager Scott C. Crabtree made it official this week that he is considering various options when he announced that he has launched a comprehensive, organizational needs and staffing analysis of the deT partment. The goal is “to ensure that the Town of Saugus is operating in the most efficient, strategic, and structurally sound method in order to continue to serve the residents and visitors of our community to the best of our abilities,” Crabtree said in a written statement issued by his office on Wednesday. “By conducting a comprehensive, in-depth analysis of the Police Department, we will be able to improve and enhance the public safety services in the Town of Saugus,” he said. Crabtree confirmed “an Organizational Analysis of Saugus Police Department” is already underway to improve its overall effectiveness while increasing town-wide safety. New Hampshire consultant hired In a press release issued by his office, Crabtree noted the town has engaged Municipal Resources, Inc. (MRI), a Meredith, N.H.–based municipality support services firm, to conduct and complete an indepth structural review of the department to help plan for STUDIES | SEE PAGE 5 ~ Home of the Week ~ SAUGUS... PERFECT in everyway! This custom CE Colonial offers 11 rms, 5 bdrms, 3 full baths, 2 half baths, grand foyer with elegant split stairway, great open floor plan, living room, dining room, gourmet kit w/amazing granite counters & oversized center island with bar sink & seating, stainless appliances, dining area w/atrium door to an awesome backyard, 1st floor fireplace family room open to sitting area, 1st floor guest bdrm w/private bath, 1st flr laundry room with sink, office, master suite with fireplace, walk-in closet w/center island & dressing area, bath w/sep shower & jacuzzi tub, French doors to study with built-in desks, hardwood flooring throughout, finished lower level with playroom and cigar room with sophisticated ventilation system, 2 car garage, central air, security system, pavers driveway, resort-style back yard with heated inground pool, pavers patio, covered patio with ceiling fan and grill area, professionally landscaped lot, located in Twin Springs. PERFECT IN AND OUT! Offered at $1,400,000 335 Central Street, Saugus, MA 01906 (781) 233-7300 View the interior of this home right on your smartphone. View all our listings at: CarpenitoRealEstate.com Prices subject to change FLEET

Page 2 THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, July 19, 2019 Evans School Playground reconstruction project underway (Editor’s Note: The following story is based on a press release issued by Town Manager Scott Crabtree’s Office.) T own Manager Scott C. Crabtree and the Board of Selectmen are pleased to announce that construction is underway at Evans School Playground in order to build two new, regulation-sized basketball courts, restore surrounding sidewalks, curbing, parking and drainage, and implement security cameras and lighting to increase safety and security on the premises. Work on the project began last week and is slated for completion in October. The upgrades, which were supported by the Board of Selectmen, Finance Committee and Town Meeting earlier this year, are part of an ongoing effort to continue to improve the town’s parks, playgrounds and athletic fields for the children and families of Saugus. This $637,000 investment, which includes a comprehensive plan for reconfiguration of the space at the Evans Park, supports the Town of Saugus’s dedication to continue to make in capital improvements throughout the community. “It is extremely exciting to $3.39 $2.45 GALLON GALLON We accept: MasterCard * Visa * & Discover Price Subject to Change without notice 100 Gal. Min. 24 Hr. Service 781-286-2602 * Corporate Litigation * Criminal/Civil * MCAD * Zoning/Land Court * Wetlands Litigation * Workmen’s Compensation * Landlord/Tenant Litigation observe the Evans School Playground groundbreaking and to know that the park’s reconstruction is underway,” said Town Manager Crabtree. “This playground, which lies in the heart of Saugus, will soon once again serve as a source of pride for residents and families to enjoy.” The current administration and Board of Selectmen have continued to demonstrate their prioritization of Saugus’s parks and playgrounds. In 2016 a brand-new Veterans Memorial Elementary School playground opened for Saugus residents. This new, safer, brightly colored playground features a large play area, wheelchair-acLawrence A. Simeone Jr. Attorney-at-Law ~ Since 1989 ~ * Real Estate Law * Construction Litigation * Tax Lein * Personal Injury * Bankruptcy * Wrongful Death * Zoning/Permitting Litigation 300 Broadway, Suite 1, Revere * 781-286-1560 Lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net GETTING STARTED: Left to right, Selectman Mark Mitchell, Board of Selectmen Vice Chair Jeffrey Cicolini, Selectman Jennifer D’Eon, Board of Selectmen Chair Debra Panetta, Selectman Scott Brazis and Town Manager Scott Crabtree stand near the site of the Evans School Playground reconstruction project, which recently began. (Courtesy Photo by the Town Manager’s Office to The Saugus Advocate) cessible, inclusive playground equipment, new swings and a newly designed basketball court. In 2017 residents celebrated the new Bristow Park, which features a large, handicap-accessible play area that includes swings, slides, a seesaw, shade trees, seating and a nearby water bubbler. The existing field was irrigated and now includes a lacrosse wall, and the Tee-ball field has been rehabilitated with a new infield, backstop, bleachers and players’ benches. The park has been equipped with LED lights and security cameras to increase safety and security. Also included in the park is a new basketball court, bathroom, storage shed and concession stand. The park also features a series of workout stations from playground equipment company Landscape Structures. In 2017 the Town of Saugus also replaced the old tennis courts at the Belmonte Middle School with an expanded facility and regulation-sized courts to accommodate tournament play. The new facility includes five tennis courts with one overlapping pickleball court, and wind screens. These courts are home to the Saugus High School tennis team and are also available for residents’ enjoyment. The Board of Selectmen, Finance Committee and Town Meeting demonstrated support for renovations to Evans Park earlier this year during a Special Town Meeting, during which members voted in favor of the park renovations as part of Saugus’s priorities and overall identified capital needs. “I would like to thank the Board of Selectmen, Finance Committee, Town Meeting and residents of Saugus for their continued support of these important community initiatives,” Town Manager Crabtree said. “Improving and restoring the Town’s parks and playgrounds have been a top priority of mine, this Board of Selectmen, and our Town Manager for years,” said Board of Selectmen Chair Debra Panetta. “I am truly proud to see this vision become a reality for our community and its many children.” To learn more about the project, please contact the Town Manager’s Office at 781-2314111. Spots still available for Northeast Metro Tech’s Summer Sports Clinics W AKEFIELD – Athletic Director Don Heres announces that there are still spots available for students interested in attending a sports clinic at Northeast Metro Tech this summer. Programs are being offered for football, girls volleyball, boys/girls soccer and boys/girls lacrosse. The summer camps are open to Northeast Metro Tech students and middle school students. Camps began this week and run through August. All programs are $125, with a family rate available at $100 per child if siblings sign up. The schedule is as follows: July 16-18: Football: 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. July 23-25: Girls Volleyball: 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. July 30-Aug. 1: Boys / Girls Soccer: 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. August 6-8: Boys / Girls Lacrosse: 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. For program descriptions and additional information, visit Northeast’s athletics page. For questions, contact Heres at dheres@northeastmetrotech.com or 781-2460810 ext. 1250.

THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, July 19, 2019 Page 3 Annoyed by the Noise Board of Health votes to hold Wheelabrator accountable for alleged noise violations; stiff fines and revocation possible dine drink gather enjoy Friday, July 19 at 9 PM THIRD MAN IN The Saugus Board of Health voted “to hold Wheelabrator accountable” for 10 days of alleged noise violations at its trash-to-energy plant on Route 107 in Saugus. (Saugus Advocate Photos by Mark E. Vogler) By Mark E. Vogler H eavy fines and a shutdown of Wheelabrator Technologies, Inc.’s trash-to-energy incinerator are the worst-case ramifications of recent enforcement action initiated by the town’s Board of Health in the wake of numerous noise complaints that date back to mid-June. At a Wednesday night meeting to discuss the complaints, members heard testimony from residents and received a legal briefing before voting 4-0 to issue a show cause notice for Wheelabrator officials to appear at the board’s Aug. 5 meeting to explain what happened, why it happened and what they are going to do to keep it from happening again. “We are not going to turn a blind eye to this,” Board of Health Chair William Heffernan promised, as he addressed a handful of residents who showed up in the Community Room of the Saugus Public Library. “We’ll pursue all legal action to hold Wheelabrator accountable,” Heffernan said. Wheelabrator was invited to – but didn’t attend – what Heffernan described as “an impromptu meeting” he called “to Board of Selectmen Chair Debra Panetta told the Board of Health at Wednesday’s meeting that “Wheelabrator Saugus had an obligation to communicate.” address very contentious noise that was reported over a period of 10 days emanating from the Wheelabrator facility.” Attorney George Hailer, special counsel to the Town of Saugus on Environmental Affairs, advised the board he believes Wheelabrator’s failure to notify the public about the noise ahead of time and the prolonged disruption it caused for residents violated state laws, the Saugus bylaws and Board of Health regulations. “This statue states that an emission of noise of this magnitude is of sufficient intensity to cause an emission of air pollution,” HailBRIEFING THEM ON VIOLATIONS: Attorney George Hailer, special counsel to the Town of Saugus on Environmental Affairs, told the Board of Health he believes that Wheelabrator’s failure to notify the public about the noise ahead of time and the prolonged disruptions it caused for residents violated state laws, the Saugus bylaws and Board of Health regulations. er told the board, referring to alleged violations of 310 CMR 7.10. “From our estimate, it could BOARD OF HEALTH | SEE PAGE 9 Saturday, July 20 at 9 PM Led Zeppelin Tribute Show IN THE LIGHT w/ Guests: CHARING CROSS Friday, July 26 at 8:30 PM NO SHOES NATION Saturday, July 27 at 9PM INTO THE FLOYD GILMOUR'S BREAKFAST Kenny Chesney Tribute Show Saturday, August 24 at 9PM Direct from Las Vegas THE ULTIMATE ALDEAN EXPERIENCE Coming September 14th Boston's legendary.. THE STOMPERS Advance Tickets Now on Sale at: www.breakawaydanvers.com 221 Newbury Street, Danvers For Tickets call (978) 774-7270 or www.breakawaydanvers.com We Carry... * Lifetime Waterproof Warranty * Ceramic, Porcelain & Stone Tile * Hardwood Prefinished and Unfinished, Do-it-Yourselfer Products! Drop by our Showroom and check out our 250 styles of area rugs and other products! 31 Osprey Rd., Saugus * 781-289-9676 Contact@Russoflooring.com

Page 4 THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, July 19, 2019 Fire Chief Newbury stresses water loop is necessary to make Saugus Ridge housing project safe By Mark E. Vogler A n attorney who represents Saugus Ridge developer Toll Brothers Apartment Living insists the town is adding at least $100,000 to its proposed 300unit affordable housing project known as Saugus Ridge by not allowing the developer to use a water pipe ending in a standpipe. But Saugus Fire Chief MiLaw Offices of Terrence W. Kennedy 512 Broadway, Everett • Criminal Defense • Personal Injury • Medical Malpractice Tel: (617) 387-9809 Cell: (617) 308-8178 twkennedylaw@gmail.com 8 Norwood St. Everett (617) 387-9810 www.eight10barandgrille.com Kitchen Hours: Mon-Thurs: 12-10pm Fri-Sat: 12-11pm Sunday: 1pm-10pm Come in & Enjoy our Famous... $12 LUNCH Menu! Choose from 16 Items! Served Monday thru Thursday until 3:30 PM Grilled Rib Eye Steak! Only $22.00 includes Two Sides Every Friday FRESH HADDOCK DINNER Prepared Your Way! Includes two sides Facebook.com/ advocate.news.ma ATM on site chael Newbury was emphatic at a workshop session this week that switching to a water loop that ties into Cliff Road is necessary for safety’s sake. “It’s going to be our largest apartment building in town and is made of wood,” Chief Newbury said. If there were water pressure problems with the water main coming off Route 1, the chief said, he would need water coming in from another direction to fight the fire. He made it clear to Attorney Mark Bobrowski and other representatives of the affordable housing project that the town required a water loop for other housing projects, including the 280-unit AvalonBay Communities. “One hundred thousand dollars is what we added to the budget this morning,” Bobrowski said a workshop meeting on Tuesday morning. The Zoning Board of Appeals could be making a decision on the 40B housing project when it meets at 7 p.m. next Thursday (July 25) at 7 p.m. in the Community Room of the Saugus Public Library. ZBA will consider whether to approve an application by Saugus Residential LLC for a comprehensive permit to authorize the construction of 300 rental apartment units in one structure on about 28 acres at Rear Broadway (Lot #5-21-32-1-22, Plan #1028), located off Broadway (Route 1). Chief Newbury said there wouldn’t be adequate water pressure available to pump the water up the hill to buildings 60 feet tall. “We’re going to advocate for water to come from two directions,” Chief Newbury said, adding that it is a standard recommendation of the Fire Department. “I see this as nothing but an improvement for the people in that area, not a negativity,” the chief said. Precinct 1 Town Meeting Member Ann Devlin, who is also president of the citizens group Saugus Action Volunteers for the Environment (SAVE) said she was glad to see the Fire Department refuse to compromise on the water loop issue. “I think it’s a very valid concern,” Devlin said. “We all know how many water breaks we’ve had on Route 1. Zoning Board of Appeals Member Tom Traverse called the water loop decision “the biggest thing coming out of today’s discussion” – “It’s clear that the standpipe and other alternative proposals will not work.” But Traverse said he is disappointed that the developer has not yet offered ways to minimize the project’s impact on the town. “My concern, at this point, is that Toll Brothers is coming in with a 300-unit project, but what are they going to do for the town? What are they going to do for the Prankers Pond area?” Traverse said. Even if it’s a layer of asphalt added to the roads in the area, Traverse said, he doesn’t think the town is asking for a lot. “We hear you loud and clear,” Bobrowski said, adding that he would be conferring with the developer. Sean Readon, an engineer FIRE CHIEF | SEE PAGE 8 SKATING CENTER www.Roller-World.com | 781-231-1111 Located Adjacent to Rite Aid Pharmacy in Saugus Plaza, South Bound Route 1 MBTA Bus Route 429 FREE WI-FI - 2 WIDE SCREEN TV’S FULLY AIR CONDITIONED SUMMER SKATING SCHEDULE ATTENTION! Begins June 30 Sunday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday 12-6 p.m. $7.50 Monday & Tuesday 7:30-10:30 p.m. $8.50 12-8 p.m. $7.50 Admission after 6 p.m. $8.50 12-4 p.m. $7.50 11 a.m.-11 p.m. $7.50 Admission after 6 p.m. $8.50 12-11 p.m. $7.50 Admission after 6 p.m. $8.50 Skates included in price/Blades $3 Bowling Alleys, 2 snack bars, video games. Ice cream shop, 2 skating floors (group rates call ahead) Private parties every day. BIRTHDAY PARTIES $11.50/Person, min. of 10 kids. Price includes Adm. + Roller Skates. Cake, soda, paper goods, 20 tokens for birthday person plus 100 Redemption Tickets and a gift from Roller World. in one of our private BP Rooms. School & PTO GROUPS Win a trip for 2 to Las Vegas Bellagio Hotel Jet Blue Air 5 days / 4 nights Your school PTO can raffle the trip to make substantial money for your group. Call for details.

THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, July 19, 2019 Page 5 Zachary L. Collins Graduates MIT A Melrose Club 200 Foxwoods Casino Trip – Sept. 10 nother trip to Foxwoods Casino is in the planning Saugonian Zachary L. Collins, the son of Keith F. Collins and the late Kathleen Baginsky-Collins of Saugus, graduated this June from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) with a Bachelor of Science in Computer Science and Engineering. He is currently interning at Facebook in Palo Alto, CA and will return to MIT in the Fall to pursue his Master’s Degree. STUDIES | from page 1 the future needs of Saugus residents and to continue to provide the most secure and strategic police services within the community. This public safety initiative will aid the Town’s administration in identifying and improving best practices throughout the department in order to better serve and protect the public, according to Crabtree. The police department analysis is one of several recent important community initiatives town administration and the Board of Selectmen have been prioritizing as part of a community-wide effort to improve and increase safety within Saugus. The Town of Saugus has also been addressing speeding and pedestrian, bicyclist and motorist safety by working alongside The Engineering Corp (TEC) of Andover, Mass., to finalize and act on a comprehensive, town-wide speed limit analysis. Earlier in the year, the Annual Town Meeting approved a budget for the 2020 Fiscal Year that provides money for three additional officers to staff a new traffic enforcement unit. Crabtree has said he wants to study the structure of the department before determining how to use the new officers. Crabtree has also been considering a modification of the current police administration. He has not yet made a decision on whether to hire Interim Police Chief Ronald Giorgetti on a permanent basis or search for police chief candidates. Crabtree appointed Giorgetti last September to replace retiring Police Chief Domenic DiMella on an interim basis until he decides how he wants to fill the vacancy. DiMella, 59, retired after 29 years on the police force – including the last decade as chief of the department. Giorgetti, 53, was born and raised in Saugus. In 1982 he graduated from Northeast Metropolitan Regional Vocational High School in Wakefield. He earned his bachelor’s degree in criminal justice from Curry College and is a 25-year veteran of the Saugus Police Department. He rose to the rank of sergeant in 2004 after serving for several years as a detective with the department’s drug unit. Giorgetti received a promotion to lieutenant in 2008 and eventually became lieutenant detective in charge of criminal investigations. Recently there has been support and advocacy from the Board of Selectmen, Finance Committee and Town Meetfor Tuesday, September 10. Although the date seems to be quite far away, the 200 Club Trip Coordinator, Irene Thibeau, hopes that people can make their reservations as soon as possible. Because of a change in policy with the bus companies, it is necessary that the 35 seats made available to the group be paid for well in advance of the date. Other aspects of the trip remain unchanged. Please call Irene at 781-665-5058 to make your reservation as soon as possible. As mentioned above, it is necessary that the seats be reserved well ahead of time. As a reminder, it should be mentioned here that you cannot obtain a casino card without a valid picture I.D. If you’ve gone ing to increase police staffing levels, which can help resolve speed and traffic safety issues. Police personnel being interviewed As part of the Saugus Police Department analysis, MRI is conducting a series of site visits and interviews with department members in order to gain an understanding of police operations, the community, special risks, deployment patterns and organizational structure, according to Crabtree. MRI is also identifying and evaluating the strengths and areas of room for improvement within the department by surveying department personnel, he said. Following a detailed data collection period, MRI will put together a final report that identifies opportunities to enhance STUDIES | SEE PAGE 7 to Foxwoods before, you might already have one of their cards. The bus will pick up from the Levi Gould Building (200 West Foster St. in Melrose) at 9:00 a.m.; a second pickup will be at the Cochrane House (80 Grove St. in Melrose) at 9:15 a.m., on Tuesday, September 10. Price per person is $35.00 and the package includes a $10.00 food credit and $25.000 in free slots play. Time at the Casino would be from 11:00 a.m. until 4:45 p.m.; the return trip home would leave Foxwoods at 5:00 p.m. The trip is open to anyone – it is not necessary that you are a senior citizen, or a resident in any of the local senior retirement homes – everyone is welcome. Many people who have gone on the casino trips in the past say it’s an enjoyable luxury motor coach ride with friends and great socialization. The trips are convenient and fun and give folks the chance to gamble, shop the casino retail shops and have a nice lunch to break up the day and relax a bit. And as an added plus, who knows, you might be the one to come home the big winner! Friday, July 19 at 9 PM Back By Popular Demand TIME & AGAIN GIRLS Saturday, July 20 at 9 PM Sunday, July 21 at 9 PM BILLY PEZZULO DJ LOGIK MONDAY'S SHUCK! $1.00 Oysters Book Your Special Events With Us! 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Page 6 THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, July 19, 2019 SABATINO INSURANCE AGENCY Call for a Quote 617-387-7466 Or email Rocco@sabatino-ins.com We cover: * Auto * Home * Boat * Renter * Condo * Life * Multi-Policy Discounts * Commercial 10% Discounts * Registry Service Also Available Essex Tech receives $75,000 grant for security upgrades http://www.sabatino-ins.com SABATINO 564 Broadway Everett, MA 02149 617-387-7466 Hours of Operation are: Mondays - Fridays 9am to 5pm Saturdays by appointment only Essex Tech received a $75,000 Safer Schools and Communities Local Equipment and Technology grant to improve safety and security on campus. (Courtesy Photo) D AUTOTECH 1989 SINCE Is your vehicle ready for the Summer Season?!! AC SPECIAL Recharge your vehicle's AC for the warm weather! Includes up to 1 IL. of Refrigerant* (*Most Vehicles) Only $59.95 DRIVE IT - PUSH IT - TOW IT! CASH FOR YOUR CAR, TRUCK OR SUV! 2013 FORD ESCAPE SE 4WD 2012 VOLKSWAGEN JETTA SE Auto., Leather, Loaded, Excellent Condition, Clean Title, Warranty, ONLY 72K Miles! Trades Welcomed READY TO GO! Loaded with Options, Panoramic Roof, Premium Sound System, Clean Title, Warranty, ONLY 64K Miles! POWER & LUXURY! 781-321-8841 $7,495 Easy Financing Available! 1236 Eastern Ave • Malden EddiesAutotech.com $11,900 We Pay Cash For Your Vehicle! www.reverealuminumwindow.com ANVERS – Superintendent Heidi Riccio is pleased to announce that Essex Tech received a $75,000 Safer Schools and Communities Local Equipment and Technology grant to improve safety and security on campus. Administered through the state’s Executive Office of Public Safety and Security’s Office of Grants and Research, the grant was awarded to Essex Tech to address critical infrastructure concerns and implement new equipment and technology to make its facilities more secure. Schools that applied for the grant were required to have a Multi-Hazard School Emergency Threat Assessment and Response Plan that was developed in collaboration with their municipality. “I want to thank Danvers Town Manager Steve Bartha, Police Chief Patrick Ambrose and Fire Chief Robert Pyburn for working with us and supporting our endeavor to improve the safety of students, faculty and staff at Essex Tech,” Superintendent Riccio said. “This funding will allow us to make critical improvement to our security systems, so we’re extremely grateful to the Baker-Polito administration for recognizing our need.” With the grant funding, Essex Tech will be able to make several improvements to its north and south campuses. (The south campus encompasses the original five Essex Aggie buildings, whereas the north campus features 24 new buildings.) Following are the improvements: • Camera upgrades to the north and south campuses for mobile capabilities. South campus buildings will receive cameras inside and out, while buildings on the north campus will have older cameras replaced so that they are able to be accessed through mobile devices and added to high-traffic areas. • Electronic door keypad system for the south campus. This will put the south campus in line with the north campus security protocols, which limit access to buildings through an electronic keypad system. • Mobile visitor management system for north campus. This will be installed at the school’s main entrance and will require visitors to sign in before the door is unlocked. • School safety training. A group of administrators, faculty and staff, including Essex Tech’s School Resource Officer, will attend a School Safety Advocacy Council training in the fall.

THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, July 19, 2019 Page 7 Pioneer Charter School student wins Thoreau Scholarship Jackie Miller, Senior Administrator of the Henry David Thoreau Foundation, 265 Medford St., Suite 102, Somerville, MA 02143 or call Ms. Miller at 617666-6900. Visit Our Newly Expanded Facility. We will beat competitors pricing! (Restrictions apply.) A KEEN INTEREST IN THE ENVIRONMENT: Aiman Najah, a recent graduate of Pioneer Charter School of Science II in Saugus, stands near his Science Fair project. (Courtesy Photo to The Saugus Advocate) (Editor’s Note: The following story was submitted to The Saugus Advocate by Jackie Miller, Senior Administrator of the Henry David Thoreau Foundation.) A iman W. Najah, a recent Pioneer Charter School of Science II graduate, will be entering college this autumn as a Thoreau Scholar. The scholarship, named for the 19th-century naturalist and author Henry David Thoreau, is a prestigious award given annually to only eight Massachusetts high school seniors. Najah, a Danvers resident and the son of Samira Najah, credits his high school science teachers for fostering his interest in science, and particularly, environmental science. Richea Smith, who teaches engineering, helped Najah develop a science fair project with an environmental focus that was entered in the Massachusetts State Science Fair. Najah’s interest in the environment and awareness of the dangers of climate change were furthered by the daily lessons in his AP Environmental Science class taught by Matthew Sholnick. In the fall, Najah will enter STUDIES | from page 5 the delivery of efficient and effective services to the community. Recommendations will be consistent with recognized best practices as they relate to providing police services in Saugus. The report will provide the department and Town of Saugus administration with the information and recommendations needed to further develop and strengthen the department’s strategic plan, goals and expectations for the future. “This report and analysis will be used as a forward-thinking approach to implementing improvements and enhancements to our police department and the Town as a whole,” Crabtree said. “In Columbia University where he will continue his studies in environmental science. Najah’s sister, Nadine, is also a current Thoreau Scholar at Brown University. The Henry David Thoreau Scholarship is a $20,000, fouryear scholarship awarded to eight students graduating from public or private high schools in Massachusetts. High school seniors awarded the Thoreau Scholarship can enroll in any college and university in the world while they major or minor in an environmental-related field. Thoreau Scholars are encouraged to enroll in internships or study abroad to broaden their awareness and understanding of environmental issues. The Thoreau Foundation further assists its scholarship winners by identifying environmental-related internships, offering internship stipends, and providing networking opportunities. A sign of success of the Thoreau Foundation’s mission to foster environmental leadership is the support past scholarship winners provide to present scholarship winners. To learn more about the Henry David Thoreau Foundation working together as a unified community, by prioritizing these important public safety initiatives, we can address our shared goal of improving speeding and safety within the Town of Saugus.” MRI has served many communities nationwide for more than 25 years, providing an array of professional services for various departments that help meet municipalities’ needs while obtaining maximum value for tax dollars. The company’s expertise includes police, fire, human resources, schools, planning and community development, public health and human services, and assessing. For more information, contact the Town Manager’s Office at 781-231-4111. and the Thoreau Scholarship, please visit thoreauscholar.org. PIONEER CHARTER GRADUATE: Aiman Najah is a recent recipient of the prestigious Henry David Thoreau Scholarship. (Courtesy Photo to The Saugus Advocate) An online application will be available in mid-October. Students have until Feb.1, 2020, to apply. You may also write to 222 Central St. Saugus, MA 01906 (Next to Saugus Iron Works) 781-231-5990 2FREE ND MONTH on 10x10 units No administration fees. 200 new units available. All sizes to fi t your needs. New Customer Specials Offer valid at 222 Central Storage. Must present coupon. Cannot be combined with other offers. Expires 8/31/19. www.222centralstorage.com A.B.C. 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Page 8 THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, July 19, 2019 A different kind of catcher Lawnmower Tune-Up and Repairs • We repair all makes & models! • Authorized • FREE PICK-UP for all Tune-Ups! all m • We r d K-U makes & mo ma akes & mo D KU for all Tun UP fo 1039 Broadway, Revere • (781) 289-6466 Biker’s Outfitter (781) 289 , ee (8) 89 www.bikersoutfitter.com J& • Reliable Mowing Service • Spring & Fall Cleanups • Mulch & Edging • Sod or Seed Lawns • Shrub Planting & Trimming • Water & Sewer Repairs Joe Pierotti, Jr. 505 Broadway Everett, MA 02149 Tel: 617-387-1120 www.gkdental.com • Family Dentistry • Crowns • Bridges • Veneers/Lumineers • Dental Implants • All on 4 Dental Implants • Emergency Dentist • Kid Friendly Dentist • Root Canals • Dentures • Invisalign Braces • Snap On Smile • Teeth Whitening We are the smile care experts for your entire family Dealer By the Old Sachem, Bill Stewart usually highlight players with outstanding records within their sport, but today we look at a very unspectacular player, Morris “Moe” Berg. Moe played for 15 seasons, starting with the Brooklyn Robins of the National League and finishing up with the Boston Red Sox in 1939. In between, he played for Chicago White Sox (1926 to 1930), the I S LANDSCAPE & MASONRY CO. Masonry - Asphalt • Brick or Block Steps • Brick or Block Walls • Concrete or Brick Paver Patios & Walkways • Brick Re-Pointing • Asphalt Paving www.JandSlandscape-masonry.com • Senior Discount • Free Estimates • Licensed & Insured 617-389-1490 Designing and Constructing Ideas that are “Grounds for Success” Landscaping Cleveland Indians (1931), the Washington Senators (1932 to 1934), Cleveland again in 1934, and finally with Boston (1935 to 1939). Throughout his career he was a backup catcher, and he once stated, “I’d rather be a ballplayer than a justice on the U. S. Supreme Court.” A Washington teammate, Dave Harris, once said that “Moe Berg speaks 12 languages and can’t hit in any of them.” Berg had a career batting average of .243 and On-base Plus Slugging (OPS) of .577, not very remarkable statistics. His best season was 1929 when he batted .287 and an OPS of .630, which is slightly better than average. Moe had one great salary year, 1930, when the White Sox payed him $10,000. He finished with the Red Sox at $4,000, and for his 15-year career he made $74,500, a rather low sum for the period. His fielding percentage for the 15 years was .973, about average for the position. Among Moe’s accomplishments were that he was fifth in the league in 1929 with putouts as a catcher, and he caught stealers 41 times, also in 1929, which was third in the league, and his percentage was first at 60.9 in 1928. He had the American League record of 117 errorless games in the 1930s. In addition to baseball, he FIRE CHIEF | from page 4 peer review consultant for the ZBA, said he believes all of the important issues have been covered in the ongoing meetings. “We’re getting to an end point, but the applicant needs to document things a little clearer so we can reach a conBill Stewart The Old Sachem studied foreign languages and graduated from Princeton and then later studied at the Sorbonne in Paris and finally law at Columbia. This got him the nickname of Professor Berg. Berg got his fame with Nicholas Dawidoff’s 1994 biography, “The Catcher Was a Spy: The Mysterious Life of Moe Berg,” which was later adapted by screenwriter Robert Rodat. With his ability to speak foreign languages he was recruited by the intelligence arm of the U.S. government in 1944, the Office of Strategic Services, which was the precursor of the CIA, to determine if the German physicist Werner Heisenberg was close to developing an atomic bomb for the Nazis. Moe had met Heisenberg earlier at scientific programs, and was selected to assassinate Heisenberg at a public lecture in Zurich in 1944, which they both attended. Upon finding out that Germany did not have the bomb, but was nearing success, Heisenberg’s life was spared. The United States later recruited Wernher von Braun to finish the development, and we became the first to create the atomic bomb. clusion,” Reardon said. “In concept, we generally agree on what needs to be done. The question is who is going to do it,” he said. Town officials planned to meet later this week to work on some issues as the ZBA prepares for next Thursday night’s meeting. In House Dental Plan for $399 (Cleanings, X-Rays, Exams twice a year and 20% OFF Dental work) Schedule your FREE Consultations today

BOARD OF HEALTH | from page 3 be in the range of $600,000,” Hailer said of the total fines he believes Wheelabrator could be facing for violating state laws – some that carry a $25,000 fine per violation. As for violating town bylaws, Wheelabrator could also face a possible suspension or modification of its site assignment issued by the town’s Board of Health, which permits the plant on Route 107 to operate, according to Hailer. Additionally, Wheelabrator faces $299-a-day penalties for violating Board of Health regulations, he said. “Holding them accountable” On Hailer’s advice, the Board of Health will work with him on the final language of a draft of the “show cause” letter that will be mailed out to Wheelabrator, advising them of the “show cause” hearing set for Monday, Aug. 5 at 6:15 p.m. in the Community Room of the Saugus Public Library. “I’m disappointed Wheelabrator was noticed, but not here tonight,” Hailer said. The attorney said he urged company officials to show up for the Aug. 5 meeting to explain their position in the wake of violaTHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, July 19, 2019 Michelle Nadeau, Wheelations of “numerous state and local bylaws.” Hailer said he considers the state violations “really an event of air pollution.” In an interview after the meeting, Heffernan told The Saugus Advocate that he wasn’t surprised Wheelabrator officials didn’t appear. With the Board of Health threatening lawsuits against Wheelabrator, the company has been absent from most of the board’s meetings over the past year. “This is the first step to let them know we’re holding them accountable,” Heffernan said. “The fines could be substantial and we could rescind or modify their site assignment. We’re basically asking them to appear and explain what exactly happened, why it happened and what they plan to do so it doesn’t happen again,” he said. “We have our path forward and I hope Wheelabrator is amenable to appearing and addressing the town.” Heffernan said he was on vacation during the time he was deluged by “countless emails” and “countless phone calls.” Wheelabrator Technologies, Inc. responds brator’s Director of Communications and Community Engagement, issued the following response yesterday to the Board of Health’s vote in response to noise complaints: “We have not yet received a letter from the Board of Health so we are not able to comment on its specifics. Wheelabrator operates in compliance with all permits as well as all federal, state, and local environmental and public health regulations, which are among the most stringent of any industry. During repairs earlier this month, the waste-to-energy facility vented steam that was audible to some of our neighbors. We apologize to those neighbors who were inconvenienced by the sound.” Wheelabrator issued press statements Wheelabrator did issue statements to local media last month, explaining that it had to shut down its incinerator on Route 107 in Saugus to make repairs to solve noise problems which have bothered residents in Saugus and Revere over a two-week period. “The facility is in the process of making unavoidable repairs to a steam turbine. DurPage 9 ing the repair process, steam that would normally power the turbine to create clean, renewable energy for local homes and businesses was instead being vented safely into the air,” Wheelabrator Director of Communications & Community Engagement Michelle Nadeau said in a written statement last month. “Although the steam was vented through a silencer to reduce sound to the required standard, the venting was still noticeable in some neighborhoods located in close proximity to our facility,” Nadeau said. Board of Selectmen Chair Debra Panetta and Precinct 5 Town Meeting Member Pamela J. Goodwin were the only two residents among less than a dozen people in the audience who addressed the Board of Health during the public feedback period. There would have been many more people at the Board of Health meeting, except that many of them were at a meeting hosted by the Alliance for Health and the Environment hosted at the Point of Pines Yacht Club in Revere. Panetta said she was told by people attending that meeting that there was standing room only. Panetta reminded the board that people who live near the plant had to endure “that jet noise hovering over their homes for days.” Wheelabrator should have had a solution to the potential noise problem in place before taking apart the turbine and refurbishing it, she said. “I think Wheelabrator should be accountable for what happened,” Panetta said. “I myself received dozens and dozens of phone calls. Unfortunately, we did not have answers for several days before we knew what was going on,” she said. “Wheelabrator Saugus had an obligation to communicate.” The company could have run ads to let people know about the potential work on the turbines, Panetta suggested. Wheelabrator officials also could have notified the Town Manager’s Office, according to Panetta. “They had the responsibility to let people know, especially for the time that went on,” she said. “It doesn’t pay to be silent” Town Meeting Member Goodwin echoed Panetta’s concerns. “Wheelabrator had an absolute obligation to noBOARD OF HEALTH | SEE PAGE 17 WE WORK FOR YOU! * Have your car repaired by Real Manufacturer Certiified Technicians * An I-CAR GOLD CLASS SHOP Highest Certificate in the Repair Industry * Premier Insurance Co. 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Page 10 THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, July 19, 2019 Saugus Faith Notes T he latest listing of upcoming events and programs at Saugus churches and places of worship New pastor welcomed The East Saugus United Methodist Church at the corner of Chestnut and Winter Streets welcomed a new minister, Pastor Patricia Oduor, last Sunday, (July 14th). Worship service is held every Sunday at 10 A.M. followed by fellowship and refreshments in our dining room. Please feel free to come by and visit! Keeping town’s ministries in the public eye The Saugus Faith Community maintains a Facebook Page at https://www.facebook.com/SaugusFaith/. Follow this column and the new Facebook Page for future details of important upcoming events. Healthy Students – Healthy Saugus The Saugus United Parish Food Pantry in collaboration with the Saugus Faith Community, the Saugus School Superintendent, donate food it is suggested you go to BJ’s or Costco, where you can but most of the menu items in bulk at reasonable prices. Examples: you can get 18 packs or 7.5 oz. macaroni and cheese and 8 packs of 5 oz. Tuna. Anyone wanting to doPastor Patricia Oduor and area businesses and organizations are running an initiative called “Healthy Students-Healthy Saugus,” which aims to address food insecurity in the Saugus public school system. Healthy Students - Healthy Saugus launched in October and currently is serving 54 Saugus children with food bags each Friday. Donations of food or checks can be given to anyone of our Saugus United Parish Churches listed below and checks should be made out to “Saugus Clergy Association” with “HS2” in memo line. A list of foods needed and sizes are listed below. Those who may want to buy and nate money, food or has questions about the program can call Dennis Gould, cell 6172474847 or email Dennis atjdgould1969@ aol.com Here is the 4 Week Menu Cycle- Saturday & Sunday WEEK 1 BREAKFAST: 2 Granola Bars SNACK: 2 Bags of Graham Crackers LUNCH: 1 Jar of Peanut Butter (15 oz.) & 1 Jar of Jelly or Jam (15 0z), 1 Loaf of Bread, 2 Apple Sauce Cups (4 oz.) 1 Can of Green Beans (15 oz.) WEEK 2 BREAKFAST: 2 Containers of Cereal (Small Packages. Can get 30 packs at BJ’s) SNACK: 2 Bags of Goldfish Crackers LUNCH: 2 Cans of Tuna Fish (5 oz.), 4 Mayo Packets, 1 Loaf of Bread 1 Can of Peaches (4 oz.), 1 Can of Corn (15 oz.) WEEK 3 BREAKFAST: 2 Packets of Oatmeal (1.5 oz.) can get 36 packs at BJ’s SNACK: 2 Bags of Animal Crackers LUNCH: 2 Cans of Chicken (5 0r 10 oz.), 4 Mayo Packets 1 Loaf of Bread, 1 can of mixed fruit (4 oz.), 1 can of Carrots (15 oz.) WEEK 4 BREAKFAST: 2 Containers of Cereal (small packages, 30 packs at BJ’s) SNACK: 2 Bags of Pretzels LUNCH: 2 Boxes of Macaroni & Cheese (7.5 oz. can get box 18 at BJ’s) 2 Boxes of Apple Juice, 1 Can of Peas (15 oz.) To make grocery donations, please drop off at any one of the following local sites. If you can volunteer to help bag groceries, see the days and times listed. St . John’s Episcopal Church, 8 Prospect St., Saugus. 781-233-1242. Bagging groceries: first Thursdays at 7 p.m. Cliftondale Church of the Nazarene, 60 Essex St., Saugus. 781-233-2886. Bagging groceries: second Thursdays at 4 p.m. First Baptist Church of Saugus, 105 Main St., Saugus. 781-231-1690. Bagging groceries: second Thursdays at 7 p.m. Blessed Sacrament Church, 14 Summer St., Saugus. 781-233-2497. Bagging groceries: third Thursdays at 7 p.m. First Congregational Church UCC, 300 Central St., Saugus. 781-233-3028. Bagging groceries: fourth Thursdays at 4 p.m. New Hope Assembly of God, 9 Assembly Drive, Saugus. 781-233-6384. Bagging groceries: fifth Thursday at 7 p.m. The church will also be a backup site in case another church cannot host on their day. Calling all faiths Got a special event at your parish that you would like to tell the community about? Email the information under the subject line Saugus Advocate Faith Notes to mvoge@ comcast.net . There is no charge for letting the public know about your event.

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Page 12 THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, July 19, 2019 Wakefield Farmers Market brings local farm fare, specialty foods and artisan products to Hall Park E ach Saturday through October 12, 2019, the Wakefield Farmers Market will be located next to Veterans Field (GPS 468 North Ave Wakefield MA). The Saturday, July 27 market will feature lots of local and freshly picked fruits and veggies, flower bouquets that will last for weeks, the yummiest baked goods and breads, syrups, jellies and jams you can only find here. As always, the Market will have a cooking demo, balloon twisting, henna and kids’ activity tent stocked with drawing materials – plus hula hoops, jump ropes and sidewalk chalk, and special events throughout the season. It’s a great place to shop, have a picnic, play or just hang out on the shore of Lake Quannapowitt. Wakefield Town Council members will be answering questions, meeting folks and offering voter registration. Justina Langone, the owner of The Remedy Exchange, which is located at 41 Tuttle St. in Wakefield, will be guest chef in the Market Kitchen Tent. She will be preparing a delicious and healthy dish using produce chosen that morning from the Market’s farmers, thanks to Wakefield Co-operative Bank, the Market Kitchen Tent and Farm/ Food Education sponsor. Here are the vendors expected on July 27: A&D Books, Aaronap Cellars, BOrganics, Coutts Specialty Foods, Deano’s Pasta, Emmett’s Edibles, Farmer Dave’s, Fay Mountain Farm, Flats Mentor Farm, Fork On a Road, Goodies Homemade, Habibi Gourmet Food, Halvah Heaven, Kelly’s Farm, Li~ Guest Commentary ~ Betsy Ross recall is a cheap moral stand By Lewis Waha N ike courted controversy when it cancelled a new line of Betsy Ross flag–stitched sneakers just before the Fourth of July. The American shoemaker, valued at over $130 billion, pulled the shoes after former NFL quarterback and company spokesperson Colin Kaepernick worried on Twitter that the flag was a racist symbol. Anyone claiming moral leadership ought to consider why there was a backlash. It’s not simlac Hedge Farm, Pour Man’s Coffee, Roasted Granola, Roberto’s Seafood, Single Barrel Cellar, Sarah’s Original, Sheepshed, Swiss Bakers, The Bread Shop, Tower Beverages, Ugly Baby Soap Co. and West River Creamery. The market offers “Market Bucks” that can be purchased for use with vendors via credit/debit cards or SNAP/EBT, and will again be matching SNAP purchases up to $10 per visit so that everyone can afford to get fresh and healthy foods at the Wakefield Farmers Market. For HIP benefits, be sure to shop with Farmer Dave’s. The Wakefield Farmers Market runs rain or shine except in dangerous weather (e.g., lightning or hurricane conditions). The market opens at 9:00 a.m. and closes at 1:00 p.m. every Saturday through October 12, 2019. Please visit www. wakefieldfarmersmarket.org for a current listing of vendors, live music and special events and to sign up for the Market’s email newsletter. You can also find the Market on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Tumblr. See you at the Market! Everett Aluminum 10 Everett Ave., Everett 617-389-3839 Owned & operated by the Conti family since 1958 • 57 Years! “Same name, phone number & address for family since 1958 • 61 over half a century. We must be doing something right!” •Vinyl Siding •Free Estimates •Carpentry Work •Fully Licensed •Decks •Roofing • Fully Insured • Replacement Windows www.everettaluminum.com Now’s the time to schedule those home improvement projects you’ve been dreaming about all winter! ply due to middle America’s hypersensitivity to the trashing of national symbols. The hypocrisy is real when a major corporation represents itself as “moral” to a narrow constituency while at the same time putting off everyone else. Aggravating cultural division in a time of deep polarization is anything but moral. Some observers explain away Nike’s offensive move as consistent with its established branding strategy. The Wall Street Journal reports that the shoemaker’s core customers – adolescent males – value brands that “get involved in social issues, have a moral message and express views even if they are controversial.” On CNBC, one CEO observed, “When you start to stray into using a version of the flag that has different meaning for different people, that’s a line you don’t want to cross.” Never mind that flags, like all symbols, always mean different things to different people. The above observations notwithstanding, the sneaker flop contradicts Nike’s branding at least two ways. First, recall the company capitalized on Kaepernick’s image last fall with an ad featuring his face and the caption superimposed: “Believe in something, even if it costs you everything.” Back then, the quarterback was a plausible symbol of conscientious dissent, a hero speaking truth to the powerful NFL. But the spokesman’s role is different this time. Rather than positively expressing what he believes, he’s effectively dictating what Nike – and anyone downstream from their influence – must not express. He’s gone from dissident martyr to censoring cleric, an inconsistency that makes for a culture war loss. Likening Kaepernick to a puritanical religious authority is no stretch. The Washington Post covered the flag’s potential racism as a prospective “contamination.” Rightly suggesting that people of good will should not readily surrender symbols to racists, Alyssa Rosenberg discussed the flag’s possible racist associations in terms of taint, poison, and desecration. This matches how social and legal theorists think about racism. Even if Kaepernick and Nike’s executives are sincere, they are operating within a group morality that, like all others, casts judgments, pronounces taboos, and declares what’s sacred and what’s profane. To be moral in this sense is to police a moral community according to the judgment of its authorities, which leaves those who don’t accept its judgments feeling coerced or excluded. It’s a discomfiting tension for progressives to live with, given that these are the evils they like to tilt against. Just because a corporation’s fan base, its peers, and even presidential candidates eat up and defend its branding doesn’t make it moral. At best, this is only winning the approval of one’s own tribe. Because corporate brands build loyalty through individuals’ voluntary acts of association, their authority is parochial at best. There’s nothing wrong with collecting together a band of people who “believe in something.” But if Senator Ben Sasse is right, what we think of as tribes are often antitribes. The danger is that believing in something slips into being against something and being against some others closely identified with that thing. There’s a second way Nike’s shoe cancellation contradicts its branding: it didn’t “cost everything.” Rather, the company gained billions of dollars in market value by its iconoclasm. According to The Journal, company founder Phil Knight told a business school audience earlier this year, “It doesn’t matter how many people hate your brand as long as enough people love it.” He may as well have endorsed profit at any cost, frayed national political climate be damned. This devil-may-care attitude seems out of step with the corporate social responsibility ethos that progressives embrace. That imperative has firms look beyond maximizing shareholder value to the interests of stakeholders like factory workers and the environment. If ecosystems and socioeconomic groups matter, then why not the nation’s civic climate? It destabilizes society when cultural titans needlessly alienate a large swath of fellow citizens. Nike’s branding has got it backwards. It’s cheap to fire up one’s tribal base by being against something. The true moral leadership that our deeply divided society needs risks disappointing that base for the sake of the common good. It’s past time that America’s commentators, celebrities, and corporate leaders take that risk. It won’t cost everything. Lewis Waha holds an M.A. in Christian Apologetics from Biola University and is a freelance writer focusing on faith in the public square. Summer is Here!

THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, July 19, 2019 Page 13 Mom’s Cancer Fighting Angels Car Show honors K-9 Bruin Lisa Hoffman, who is a Stage 2 Lymphoma survivor, won Best Mustang for her 2005 Ford Mustang Roush. The winner of Kid’s Choice was this chalkboard car owned by Matthew Schell. Cynthia Rosenfield, 6, drew her name, at right, and funny pictures onto the winning vehicle. Grandson Dante Farey, 10 with his grandfather, Paul, of Saugus, admired the Sept. 11 in memoriam car. Dante said he likes the back seat and its originality. By Tara Vocino N Members of the Route 1 Riders Car Club of Saugus posed in front of a 1986 Chevy Monte Carlo SS. Pictured from left to right are Vincent Zappulla, secretary/treasurer; Steven Sacchetti; Leanne Sterling; Cara Sartorelli, vice president; and Paul Mullin. Trophies were awarded in memory of Alfred and Irene Comeau from Mom’s Cancer Fighting Angels. At right, a tribute is given to Bruin, the late Saugus Police Dept. K-9 who died from cancer. His End of Watch was March 14, 2019. early 200 car enthusiasts and hundreds of admirers rolled into the Fuddruckers parking lot on Sunday afternoon to raise $3,500 for the American Cancer Society. Hosted by the Relay for Life team Mom’s Cancer Fighting Angels, the 5th annual cruise night brought in cars, trucks and motorcycles. According to event organizer/Relay for Life team captain Guy Moley, Fuddruckers donated 20 percent of proceeds toward the American Cancer Society. “There are antique, classics, low riders, imports and motorcycles here tonight,” Moley said, adding that the community looks forward to this event yearly. On a sadder note, Officer TimSirena Spina and Hugo Canayes posed by the Fuddruckers burgers and fries with a gorilla. Saugonians Lyla Perduyn, 11, Noelle Conlon, 11, and Emma Guarente, 8, sold lemonade to customer Carol Mahoney from Emma’s Lemonade Stand in Saugus. Parent Leo Guarente (right) said $450 — or all of the proceeds — supported Mom’s Cancer Fighting Angels/Boston Children’s Hospital. Manny Ferrante, of Everett, built this 1923 Ford Roadster – “Stray Cat” – when he returned from serving in Vietnam. He is pictured holding a mailbox featuring Sylvester, the cartoon mascot (or stray cat). Former Saugus residents Stanley, Ellen and Emily Casey admired the “beautiful wor k manship” on this 1934 Ford Sedan – “Betty” – which is owned by Maldonian Joseph Nestor (left). The car boasts 430 horsepower. Wayne Boudreau, of Saugus, has this 1937 Ford Hot Rod “Yellow.” (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino) M aldonians Richard Doucette, Richard Doucette Sr. and Laurie Gardner liked the left-hand drive in the gold Trans Am behind them. They sat in blue lawn chairs while displaying their own red 1955 Chevy Bel Air (at left). othy Fawcett and his canine partner, Bruin, were recognized with a plaque and in memoriam trinket. Bruin, the late Saugus police dog, had to be put to sleep in March when his cancer advanced. Tara Vocino may be reached at printjournalist1@gmail.com.

Page 14 THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, July 19, 2019 THE SOUNDS OF SAUGUS By Mark Vogler H ere are a few tidbits that you might want to know about this week in Saugus. “A shout-out/shout at” Debra Dion Faust emailed us this week to say she wanted to recognize people for both credit as well as criticism. “Here’s a shout out to the town staffers and volunteers who meet at the Senior Center on the third Wednesday of each month to collect, deliver and bag up groceries for distribution to veterans and sometimes their widows; to the town organizations that donate reusable grocery bags for use in that process, and to the recipients themselves for realizing that reusable bags can be returned to be refilled for another month, thus helping to help themselves. I’m proud to be a part of it,” she said. “And here’s a shout at to the self-serving, non-altruistic person who stole an entire case of 100 donated reusable grocery bags stored at the Senior Center, which were intended to facilitate the process . That carries “If you’re not part of the solution, you’re part of the problem” to a ridiculously absurd extreme. Shame on you! Thankful for the media Fae Saulenas said she wanted to recognize “The outstanding, dedicated members of our local free press, Mike Gaffney, Bridget Turcotte and Mark Vogler. “We need them now more than ever,” she wrote. 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. Just send an email (mvoge@ comcast.net) with the mention in the subject line, “An Extra Shout Out.” No more than a paragraph. Anything longer might lend itself to a story and/or photo. Interested in serving your town? The Saugus Town Manager is accepting resumes/applications from Saugus residents for several volunteer positions on the following Boards or Commissions: Board of Health They are responsible for protecting and serving the citizens in health areas, such as: food sanitation, restaurants, markets, compliance with the state sanitary and other health codes as well as emergency preparedness. Medical degree or physicians preferred. Commission on Disabilities The responsibilities of these positions are to answer questions and provide referral guidance regarding disability related issues in accordance with the Mass. General Laws. Historical Commission The Commission’s responsibility is to preserve and register all historical sites in the Town of Saugus. Youth and Recreation The Commission was established for the purpose of carrying out programs including but not limited to, those designed to meet the opportunities, challenges and problems of the youth of the Town. If you are interested in volunteering and are a resident of the Town of Saugus please send in a letter of interest and resume by Friday, August 9, to: Saugus Town Manager, 298 Central Street, Saugus, MA 01906 You may also email your letter of interest and/or resume to Christine Moreschi atcmoreschi@saugus-ma.gov. Memories of Apollo Moon Landing So, where were you on April 20, 1969 if you were alive back then? Do you remember Neil Armstrong leaving his footprint on the moon and watching it on television? I was among more than 34,000 Boy Scouts attending the National Jamboree at Farragut State Park in Idaho, from July 16 to 22. As I recall, we were supposed to watch the lunar landing on a giant cube-shaped screen. But, due to some technological problems with the giant, the scouts didn’t get to see the event live, as was planned. Some of the scouts got to see a delayed showing of the event later, but it wasn’t the same thing as watching it live. But, I do remember learning later that Armstrung, himself an Eagle Scout, sent the scouts greetings from outer space during his trip to the moon. At the time, I was an Eagle Scout and member of Swansea Troop 62. A Blood Drive at Breakheart The Friends of Breakheart are making preparations for their Annual Blood Drive. The American Red Cross Bloodmobile will be at 177 Forest Street in Saugus on Thursday, August 8, from Noon to 5 p.m. Please join the FUN in supporting the FRIENDS of BREAKHEART. There will be Free T-shirts to donors and a free donor raffle! Remember: one pint of blood saves up to three lives. Please call 1-800 RED CROSS or visit redcrossblood.org to schedule an appointment. Every two seconds someone in the U.S. needs blood. Nomination Papers ready Monday Town residents who are considering a run at public office in the town elections, nomination papers will be available at the Town Clerk’s Office at Town Hall this coming Monday (July 22) Word has it that there could be a few openings up for grabs on both the School Committee and the Board of Selectmen. Several of the incumbents on these two local elected bodies may not be running for reelection in the November town elections, according to several reports. Saugus over coffee, anyone? Back during several stints covering local political campaign in the City of Lawrence, I would organize neighborhood groups into several coffee klatches, where the residents would talk about major issues in their respective parts of the city. These were very popular sessions, as they would empower city voters to discuss issues on their mind and their wish lists of projects they liked to see discussed on the campaign trail. These were so successful the citizens essentially set voter agendas for City Council, School Committee and sometimes mayoral races. Do you as a Saugus residents have issues that you would like to see public officials tackle in your neighborhood in town? Would you feel comfortable sitting down with reporter over coffee focusing on what you would like to see done town wide or in a specific neighborhood? Get some of your friends together and let’s have some coffee as you articulate what you think should be an issue tackled by town or school officials. “Silent Night”Hike rescheduled This just in from Stacy Kilb of the state Department of Conservation and Recreation at Breakheart Reservation The “Silent Night” Hike that was cancelled this week has been rescheduled to next Wednesday (July 24), from 8:30 p.m. to10 p.m.. If interested, plan on meeting at the Christopher P. Dunne Visitor Center at Breakheart, 177 Forest St. Saugus. “Experience Breakheart in a whole new light—or lack of light! Reclaim the sanctity of the evening by hiking along Pine Tops Road in reverent silence,” Kilb said. “We will stop at the beach to discuss what we have experienced with all our senses, then take in the view over Silver Lake. Registration required; emailstacy.kilb@mass. gov Flashlights and headlamps are not permitted, but red lamps are OK as they do not inhibit your night vision. This is a 2.5-mile, easy, but medium-paced hike mostly along paved paths. Best for adults and children 8 and up.” A Call For Rumney Art If you want to learn a little more about the Rumney Marsh and be creative, check this one out. Saugus Action Volunteers for the Environment (SAVE) is pleased to announce a call for art for its second annual Rumney Marsh art exhibition, to be held at the Marleah Elizabeth Graves (MEG) Center at 54-58 Essex Street, Saugus, MA on September 20th and September 21st. Entitled Rumney Marsh Through the Seasons, the exhibit will feature art in any medium inspired by the beauty and fragility of the Rumney Marsh Area of Critical Environmental Concern. DATES: ACEC: Rumney Marsh Will run from September 20th through September 21st, with gallery hours from 6:30 – 8:30 each evening. The opening reception on Sept. 20th will include a presentation on the plants of Rumney Marsh by Laura D. Eisener and voting for award winners by attendees. The closing reception on Sept. 21st will include the announcement of winners and presentation of prizes and, at 8:30, the pickup of all artwork. Prizes will include gift cards awarded by SAVE to first and second place winners in both the adult and high school divisions, as well as art materials awards provided by our local Artist & Craftsman Supply awarded to third place winners in both divisions. SPECIFICATIONS FOR SUBMISSIONS: Rumney Marsh MUST be the focus of the art. Each artist must be at least of high school age and may show only one piece of art. Any three dimensional works must be selfsupporting and no larger than 1.5’ x 1.5’ x 1.5’. Works on stretched canvas will be accepted with eye hooks and wire and need not be framed but must be no larger than 30” x 30”. All other works must be framed and ready to hang (with eye hooks and wire) and no larger than 30” x 30” framed. There are no entry fees AND you do not need to be a resident of Saugus. Art drop off will be on Thursday September 19th from 5:30-8:30. Pickup Will be on Saturday, September 21st at 8:30 pm, at the end of the reception.At the time of drop off, each participating artist must fill out an information form (with artist name, price, title of the piece, medium and contact information). artists must sign a release form acknowledging that while every effort will be made to protect artworks there will be no insurance coverage in event of damage or theft and that neither SAVE nor MEG will be SOUNDS| SEE PAGE 15 In addition

THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, July 19, 2019 Page 15 SOUNDS | from page 14 held liable for any damages or theft. Saugus SAVE board members and their family members may exhibit but will be ineligible for any prizes. Finally, any sales must be handled by individual artists after the close of the exhibit. Please join us in celebrating our precious estuarine and salt marsh ecosystem Rumney Marsh! We look forward to seeing your art and to meeting all nature and art lovers at the exhibit and reception. For questions, please contact Kelly Slater at 781-231-6864. Thank you to our community partners, the Marleah Elizabeth Graves (MEG) Center and our local Artist & Craftsman Supply. Saugus Iron Works Open for 2019 Season Saugus Iron Works National Historic Site has opened for the season. The Visitor Center, Museum, and restrooms will have open hours Wednesday-Sunday, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Guided tours, programs, special events, and Junior Ranger Programs will be available throughout the season until Oct. 31. “Due to impacts from the federal government shutdown resulting in hiring delays, we will be open Weds -Sunday instead of the usual seven-day operation,” Chief of Visitor Experience and Community Engagement Susan Russo said. “The grounds however are typically open to visitors seven days a week to birdwatch, picnic, and enjoy the great outdoors! Remember to Carry In, Carry Out.” Visit Saugus Iron Works and “Broadhearth,” the Eastern National Park Store at 244 Central Street in Saugus, Massachusetts or call us at 781233-0050. For the most up-to-date information, visit our website athttps://www.nps.gov/sair or like us on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/SaugusIronNPS Of veterans’ concerns The Saugus Veterans Council says you should mark your calendar for MIA/POW Day, which will be observed on Friday, Sept. 20 at 6 p.m. in Veterans Park at the intersection of Winter and Central streets. In case of inclement weather it will be held at the library. All are welcome to attend this annual ceremony honoring our POW/MIA The Annual Korean War Veterans Day Ceremony will be observed 10 a.m. next Friday, July 26 at Lynn City Hall. All those who served, fought and died in the Korean War and those who are still missing will be honored. Light refreshments will be served. For questions, contact the Lynn Department of Veteran Services at 781-586-6911. CHaRM Recycling Drop-Off Site open tomorrow The Town of Saugus announces that the community’s Center for Hard to Recycle Materials (CHaRM) are open to residents on Wednesdays and Saturdays from 8 a.m. to 2 pm. The site is located behind the Department of Public Works at 515 Main Street. There is no pre-registration or fee required to enter the site, however proof of residency is required. At the CHaRM center, the Town will accept the same recycling items that can be placed outside for curbside collection each week, such as paper, cardboard, bottles, cans, and glass containers. Additional acceptable items include: TVs and computers (up to three per year per address); bulky rigid plastic items such as Little Tikes toys, laundry baskets, Rubbermaid trash barrels, 5-gallon pails, etc.; car tires up to 22” (for a fee of $3); and textiles such as books, clothing, bedding, pocketbooks, belts, and shoes. Plastic bags are not permitted. Residents are kindly asked to empty recyclables out of any plastic bags, and remove the bags from the site. Residents may call Lorna Cerbone at the Solid Waste and Recycling Department at 781-231-4036 with questions or for more information. Town compost site open tomorrow The Town of Saugus announces that the community’s compost site will be open to residents on Wednesdays and Saturdays from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. The site is located behind the Department of Public Works at 515 Main Street. Stickers are required to gain seasonal access to the site. Stickers may be purchased for $25 at the Department of Public Works, and the Inspectional Services Department located on the lower level of Town Hall, 298 Central Street. Stickers may also be purchased at the compost site, by check only. Compo s t s i t e s t i c k - ers must be permanently placed on the lower left corner of residents’ automobile windshields. Vehicles registered out of state are not permitted. Yard waste must be disposed of in brown compost bags or open containers. The Town will accept grass clippings, leaves, and brush. As in years past, no branches or limbs larger than three inches in diameter are permitted. Entry to the compost site without a sticker will not be allowed. Residents may call Lorna Cerbone at the Solid Waste and Recycling Department at 781-231-4036 with questions or for more information. Upcoming selectmen’s meetings Here’s some dates passed on by Wendy Reed, Clerk of the Saugus Board of Selectmen, for meetings through the fall. The Selectmen have extended their meeting schedule through September: Aug. 14, Sept. 4 and Sept. 18. For those who have business before the board or who are interested in attending any of these sessions, the board meets at 7 p.m. in the second floor auditorium at Town Hall, 298 Central St. Main Attractions at the Saugus Public Library There’s always something interesting or entertaining going on at the Saugus Public Library -- for people of all ages -- from young children to senior citizens. Here are a few events to check out: Participate in the Saugus Public Library’s Adult Summer Reading Program and win a prize! Everyone who submits a book form will have their name entered into a drawing for a Kindle Paperwhite! For each book you read this summer, fill out a book form and drop it in the box at Reference, New Books, or Large Print. The form is also available on our website. Summer Reading at the library already began and ends on Monday, August 19. Saugus Public Library, 295 Central Street, Saugus, MA 01906 781-231-4168 or sauguspubliclibrary.org Friendship Storytime on Fridays continues. This special program for children ages 3, which begins at 9:30 am is sponsored by the Coordinated Family Community Engagement Grant. It can help parents nurture their child’s social and early literacy skills with structured story time. Let’s Get Ready For Kindergarten Playgroup! This program, sponsored by the Coordinated Community Engagement Grant, and the summer hours are Wednesdays at 4:30 p.m. It’s recommended for children ages 3 through 5. The library’s Summer reading program is underway. The Children’s Library Director Amy Melton that she has some fresh titles that kids are enjoying. “It’s been going on since June 10, but it’s not too late to sign up,” Amy said this week. “Saugus Public Schools are getting students to read about the American Revolution and Massachusetts history,” she said. Speaking of reading, the New England Patriots’ star receiver Julian Edelman, who received the Most Valuable Player Award in this year’s Super Bowl victory of the LA Rams, is trying to make some friends at the library. He does children’s books and he has donated five copies to the library. Buy A Brick “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 from your family, school, etc., the general pricing is $100 for a 4” X 8” brick (3 lines), $200 for 8” X 8” brick (5 lines), and $500 (5 lines) for a corporate brick. 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 September 30th to ensure the bricks will be ready for Veteran’s Day. Please contact Corinne Riley at 781-231-7995, for more information and applications.” Let’s hear it! Got an idea, passing thought or gripe you would like to share with The Saugus Advocate. I’m always interested in your feedback. It’s been more than three years since I began work at The Saugus Advocate. I’m always interested in hearing readers’ suggestions for possible stories or good candidates for The Advocate Asks interview of the week. Feel free to email me at mvoge@comcast.net. Do you have some interesting views on an issue that you want to express to the community? Submit your idea. If I like it, we can meet for a 15 to 20 minute interview at a local coffee shop. And, I’ll buy the coffee.

Page 16 THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, July 19, 2019 ~ North Shore Baseball League ~ Wings offense can’t get going By Greg Phipps D ifficulty scoring runs continued to be a problem for the Saugus Wings, as they dropped three straight after pulling out a close 6-5 North Shore Baseball League (NSBL) win over the Marblehead Seasiders back on July 11 at Stackpole Field. David Harris, Nick Raimo, Pat O’Regan, Ryan Beliveau and Steve DiBlasi each drove in runs, and Mike Mabee stroked two hits in the victory over Marblehead. Tyler Armstrong relieved starter Justin Horvath in the seventh inning and ended up with the win. That victory brought the Wings to 3-10 and still in contention for a playoff spot. But three consecutive defeats since then had left Saugus at 3-13 and alone in last place. The Wings had four games remaining on the schedule as of early this week. Any chance of making the tournament appears to be a long shot. The Marblehead win was folWings hitter Nick Raimo follows through on this hard hit out on Sunday against Beverly. Saugus’s Jack Devereaux is thrown out attempting to stretch his fourth-inning base hit into a double in Sunday’s loss at Beverly. lowed up with a 10-0 loss in six innings to the Beverly Recs on Sunday at historic Cooney Field in Beverly. Saugus managed just one hit, a fourth-inning single by Jack Devereaux, who was thrown out trying to turn it into a double. The Wings were still in the contest, trailing just 3-0 entering the fourth. But when they Award-Winning Landscaping Servicing the North Shore for over 38 Years failed to score in their half of the fourth, the Recs loaded the bases and plated two to make it 5-0. Five more tallies in the bottom of the sixth closed it out for the home team. Subsequent losses to the North Reading A’s (3-1) on Monday and North Shore PhilSPORTS | SEE PAGE 17 Saugus second baseman Ryan Beliveau awaits the throw to nab a Beverly baserunner attempting to steal on Sunday. NOW BOOKING NEW CUSTOMERS! DON’T WAIT! Call 781-321-2074 Pavers * Walkways * Patios * Driveways * Pool Decks Planting * Perennials * Shrubs * Trees New Lawns * Sod * Hydroseed Flowers/Annuals/Mums * Conventional Seeding * Synthetic Complete Maintenance * Cleanups (Spring & Fall) * Lawn Cutting, Edging & Weeding * Lawn Fertilizer Programs * Trim & Prune Shrubs * Mulching, Thatching Interlock Block * Fire Pits * Sitting Walls * Pillers Landscape Lighting * Design * Install * Repair * Night Illumination

THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, July 19, 2019 Page 17 SPORTS | from page 16 ~ American Legion Baseball ~ Saugus Sr. Legion closing out season lies (9-3) on Tuesday put the Wings in the position of having to perhaps win out in their four remaining games to even have a chance at a playoff berth. Producing offensively has been a major issue for Saugus all season, as the Wings had totaled just 38 runs (less than three per game) in their 16 games to date. Saugus was scheduled to host the fourth place Swampscott Sox on Wednesday and the North Shore Storm on Thursday (after press deadline). They then end the regular season with two games against the second-place Peabody Champions next Tuesday, July 23, and Thursday, July 25, at World Series Park (both scheduled 6 p.m. starts). Saugus’s Greg Reed lashes a base hit in first-inning action Monday in Rowley/ I t has been a pretty quiet campaign for the Saugus Post 10 Senior Legion baseball team this summer. The squad had managed just one win with a single game remaining on the schedule this week. Post 10’s lone victory was a 2-1 home triumph over Methuen on June 28. Saugus Post 10 third baseman Joey Dusablon gets the tag down in time to nail a Newburyport runner in Monday’s loss at Eiras Park in Rowley. had a few other close defeats and stood at 1-13 and in last place in the District 8 standings. Haverhill was leading the league with a 14-2 record followed by Lawrence at 11-3. Post 10 did battle Lawrence hard in a close 4-3 defeat last week. In its secondto-last contest of the summer on Monday at Eiras Park Field BOARD OF HEALTH | from page 9 tify people and this didn’t happen,” Goodwin said. “Wheelabrator needs to be held accountable,” she said. Even before the Board of Health took a vote on member Joia Cicolini’s motion to issue a show cause notice to Wheelabrator, Heffernan urged members of the public to “reach out to” the state Department of Environmental Protection (MassDEP) by writing letters or making telephone calls. “It doesn’t pay to be silent,” Heffernan said. Heffernan said a Wheelabrator official assured him in an email last Friday that there is no longer a noise problem emanating from the plant. But Camille Donnelly, who lives with her daughter and husband on Guild Road in Precinct 10, said she and other residents who live near the plant have continued to hear noises, though not as loud. in Rowley, Saugus gave up an unearned run in the first and eventually fell behind 4-0 to Newburyport. Post 10 fought back and climbed to within two but that’s as close they would get in dropping a 4-2 decision. Saugus was set to finish the season with a game at Andover Wednesday. Massachusetts Department The noises have been particularly tough on her husband, who suffered a stroke about three months ago, she said. “It’s very disturbing. The pollution has been bothering me for years. But now, we’re putting up with the noise, too,” Donnelly said. There was a time when neighbors didn’t mind as much about noises coming from the plant because they were warned in advance, according to Donnelly. “It’s been at least five years since we got a robocall,” she said. Violations at a glance Here are some of the specific laws that Attorney George Hailer, special counsel to the Town of Saugus on Environmental Affairs, says were violated by recent noises emanating from the Wheelabrator trash-to-energy plant: of Environmental Protection (MassDEP) Noise Control Regulation 310 CMR 7.10. “(1) No person owning, leasing, or controlling a source of sound shall willfully, negligently, or through failure to provide necessary equipment, service, or maintenance or to take necessary precautions cause, suffer, allow, or permit unnecessary emissions from said source of sound that may cause noise.” Town of Saugus By-Law 514.00 “Upon determination by the Board of Health that the operation or maintenance of such a facility results in a threat to public health and safety or the environment, the Board may rescind, suspend, or modify the site assignment following due notice and a public Hearing.” Board of Health Regulation, Article 8. 1. Who said, “Age is an issue of mind over matter. If you don’t mind, it doesn’t matter”? (Hint: Mississippi River pilot.) 2. On July 20, 1976, the Viking Lander I spacecraft landed on what planet? 3. Which Olympic sport were women first able to compete in? 4. What geographical region is thought to be the source of the word barbecue? 5. On July 21, 1970, the Aswan High Dam was completed in what country? 6. What Motown group had its first Top 10 hit with “(Love Is Like a) Heat Wave”? 7. A lobster has how many legs? 8. What is a hybrid of a sweet orange and a mandarin orange called? 9. On July 22, 1822, Gregor Johann Mendel, the Father of Genetics, was born; he famously studied what plant? 10. Which U.S. president was the first to hold a televised press conference? 11. On July 23, 1885, what Civil War general died? (Hint: Greek first name.) 12. What Asian city has been called “the Monte Carlo of the Orient”? 13. The film “Summer of ’42” is set on what island? 14. Walt Disney’s Silly Symphonies series inspired what animated comedy film series? (Hint: initials LT.) 15. What is it called when a chunk of ice breaks off a glacier? 16. In which U.S. state were fortune cookies first served? 17. What number does not have a corresponding Roman numeral? 18. On July 25 what circular amusement ride is celebrated with an unofficial holiday? 19. What is the iKini? 20. Which was invented first, email or the World Wide Web? Answers below, please no cheating! FROM PAGE 19 1. Mark Twain 2. Mars 3. Tennis (in 1900) 4. The Caribbean 5. Egypt 6. Martha & the Vandellas 7. 10 8. Clementine 9. Peas 10. JFK 11. Ulysses S. Grant 12. Macau 13. Nantucket 14. Looney Tunes 15. Calving 16. California 17. Zero 18. National Carousel Day (honoring the first U.S. carousel patent issuance in 1871) 19. A bikini made of solar panels 20. Email (1971; World Wide Web: 1989)

Page 18 THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, July 19, 2019 ASKS | from page 1 We also talked about the famous family business – Kane’s Donuts – that his late dad began about six decades ago, Paul’s career as an accomplished chef, a book called “At The Greek Table,” some of his recipes, how he remembers the lunar landing of Apollo 50 years ago tomorrow (Saturday, July 20) and his thoughts on the dinosaur that has become a mascot for Kane’s new location. Delios, a 1979 Saugus High School graduate, was born in Lynn and grew up in Saugus and is a Wakefield resident. He has been married for 25 years to Jean (Johnson) Delios, who is assistant town manager in Reading. She was previously town planner in Saugus (1993-2003). Paul took courses at Salem State College, but didn’t complete his degree. Earlier in his life, he took a course through the American Quality Control Society that helped him get certified as a quality control engineer in the computer industry. According to the book that includes his recipes, he has spent his life in the restaurant and food service industry and has a talent for creating timeless Mediterranean recipes, developed from his family’s deep-rooted relationship with food. He earned his restaurant training at three restaurants his family owned in and around Boston, as well as having had his own catering company, Rosamarina’s, which began in 1990. Meze Estiatorio, the 230-seat restaurant he opened with investors in 2003, became Boston’s premiere Greek restaurant. In 2004 he began a professional relationship with Culinary Entertainment Group’s Simon Malls’ “Super Chefs Live!” tour. He later appeared with Mary Ann Esposito, host of PBS’s “Ciao Italia,” Guy Fieri, Jacques Pepin and Martin Yan. In 2007 he took over the daily operations of his family donut shop on Lincoln Avenue in Saugus. Under his management, Kane’s has consistently been named one of the nation’s 10 top donut shops by MSNBC, Bon Appétit magazine and the Travel Channel’s Donut Paradise. In 2014, Kane’s expanded with a second donut shop at International Place in Boston’s financial district along the Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway. In 2009 he teamed up with Fotios Stamos to publish his recipes at AtTheGreekTable.com, leading to the publishing of the cookbook that bears that name. While living in his hometown, Delios was active in Saugus local government, serving on the Conservation Commission and three terms as a Town Meeting member representing Precinct 3. Highlights of this interview follow. Q: Do you remember when astronaut Neil Armstrong touched off on the moon? A: I was at home on Hamilton Street in Saugus watching the TV in black and white with my mother and father and my siblings, and we were all in amazement. And listening to Walter Cronkite give his news broadcasts – he was an amazement as well. It was a big time for all of us. Q: What were you doing at the time? A: I was just a little child, but I remember mum signing me up for the Reader’s Digest for a little plastic bottle on a lunar module and the Apollo craft. And I remember mum getting that for me when I was a little kid and putting that together. Like any boy that age, my interest grew in science and the space program. And I think we were all kind of amazed and fell in love with it at that time. Q: Tell me how you got involved in Kane’s Donuts. A: My father was always in the food business when he came over from Greece. My dad had a place in Lynn called Mrs. Foster’s Donuts. And he sold out to his partner, who was my brother’s godfather; Dad sold out to him and he thought he was going to retire. Well, that was short-lived. One night he decided he was going to walk down the street and have a cup of coffee with Bob Kane, and lo and behold, Bob Kane had sold the business. And there were a couple of Dunkin’ Donut guys who had bought it. When he found out it was a couple of Dunkin’ guys, he struck a deal with them to buy the business – he and my mom. My father’s name was Peter Delios; my mother’s name was Kay Delios; and they struck a deal with those two guys. Q: Soon after the Dunkin’ This marks the spot of the new drive thru at Kane’s Donuts at Essex Landing. sale? A: Yes, right after the Dunkins bought Kane’s, my father had gone in there, and my father offered to buy it from the Dunkin’ guys. My folks found out they had bought an independent shop, and they didn’t want them to have it. Q: What year was that? A: It was in the late 80’s. Mum A copy of a book for sale at Kane’s Donuts that includes some of Paul Delios’s popular Greek recipes. and dad didn’t want to see the shop go into a Dunkin’, so they bought it. And I got out of electronics – my dad asked me, and I went in there [Kane’s] and started cleaning the place up with them. We took a lot of trash out of the basement. We cleaned up the whole place, and we reopened it with a fresh coat of paint, and we started building back the local following that it had, and we started getting recognized by a lot of people who were leaving the state for retirement and coming back and grabbing donuts. What dad did was bring in all of the old recipes he had from Mrs. Foster’s Donuts, and that’s what we have been using ever since: all the old Mrs. Foster’s Donuts’ recipes that dad had. The way he was doing things over there [Mrs. Foster’s] was the way we did it. Because Foster’s in its heyday was probably five times busier than Kane’s Donuts. Foster’s is no longer in business, because a lot of the independents aren’t out there anymore, because the big corporate machine has managed to place a donut shop just about on every corner. I believe right now there are about 18 of them within a radius of three miles of where we are [Kane’s Donuts on Route 1]. In 2007 they turned the donut shop over to their children, and they asked me if I would be president of the company because I had restaurant experience from the previous restaurants that I owned, and I revisited plans that I had back in 1988, which was to clean up the old – give it a little facelift – but it turned into a little bit more than a facelift, because at that point in time the store was so old that it needed a little more structural rehab. But we cleaned it up, and that was in 2010 when we did the rehab. In 2015, I had a group of investors come in that I was friendly with, and they offered to open a location at International Place in Boston. Q: Nothing wrong with that. A: No. Nothing wrong with that and the store has been Paul Delios relaxes during an interview this week inside the new Kane’s Donuts shop at Essex Landing on Route 1, where the business is celebrating for the month of July with 99¢ coffee in honor of the drive thru opening. (Saugus Advocate Photos by Mark E. Vogler) a very successful location for us. And in 2016 I was doing a fundraiser at Ernie Boch’s airline hangar, and I met Michael Barsamian, who is one of the principals here on the property [Essex Landing], and Mike basically made us an offer that we couldn’t refuse. It was “I will build you a location for your specifications. Just bring all of your equipment in.” With a couple of other modifications that I made to it, they assumed a lot of the costs into the project that they have here. Q: And so you wound up landing at the Landing. A: Yep. We landed at Essex Landing, and it’s been a great experience since we have been here. Q: And I guess you are going to play it by ear as far as whether there will be any future expansion? A: You know, we’re not ones to pull the trigger that quickly. You know, we opened that store in 2015 and we were 60 years at one location, and we wouldn’t have opened this one [at Essex Landing] so soon if it hadn’t been for that generous offer. So, we always stressed getting the location right before we tried to jump to the next one. There’s no need to grow fast. Q: Because there is a lot of curiosity about the dinosaur, let me ask you about that. To me, the previous location of the dinosaur is better than the current spot up on the tall wall. You have to drive by to see it, and it’s not that visible from Kane’s unless you are looking up at the wall as you drive to the exit. A: Well, the dinosaur was on the property that Kane’s Donuts now resides at, and it was actually at the rear end of Kane’s Donuts, which faces Route 1, but in order to do the construction, they had to take the dinosaur and move it to the next lot that’s right next to the property. They are developing multiple lots here, so they moved the dinosaur on top [of the wall], and it’s going to reside there for now. I don’t know where the landlord plans on placing the dinosaur. I couldn’t tell you where its permanent home is going to be. Q: But it’s not that visible unless you are driving down Route 1. A: Well, it might not have even been here, and that’s what people have got to realize, had it not been for the landlord asking the previous owner if he could buy the dinosaur; otherwise, it wasn’t going to be here. Q: But there was a little controversy about kids touching and taking pictures near it, and their not being safe. A: I don’t know why. We brought the dinosaur down for Easter so kids could see it, and the landlord wanted to bring the dinosaur down here so kids could enjoy it during the Easter holiday when they were off from school. It was nothing more than a kindness gesture on their part. The landlord wanted to bring it down so kids wouldn’t be climbing up the hill. Technically, it’s not a landmark. It’s not a landmark in this country unless the National Historical Register says it is; otherwise, it’s a big lawn statue. I know people’s emotions run high when it comes to that dinosaur. I thought it was pretty good of him to bring it down so kids could see it and touch it instead of worrying whether a child climbs up the top of the hill to get at it. Q: Do you have any recommendation on the dinosaur, the final location? A: It’s not mine, so whatever the landlord decides to do with it, that’s their decision. I really don’t have a say on it. They asked me if I could put it down here for the kids [near the donut shop], and I said, “Yeah, that would be great.” I don’t know what all of the fuss was; I really don’t know what all of the fuss was. It’s a two-ton lawn statue. It’s not like somebody was going to move it and knock it ASKS| SEE PAGE 19

THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, July 19, 2019 Page 19 S by Jim Miller Where to Get Help Paying Your Medicare Costs Dear Savvy Senior, Are there any sources you know of that can help me save on my Medicare coverage? I’m 65, and live primarily on my Social Security, and am having a hard time paying my Medicare out-of-pocket costs. Need Some Help Dear Need, There are several financial assistance programs that can help Paul Delios gathers with some of his helpers at the new Kane’s Donuts shop at Essex Landing. In the front row, left to right, are Christine, Delfina, Estelle, Rigo and Trina, holding a small orange dinosaur that Kane’s workers call their mascot. In the rear row, left to right, are Miro, Elizabeth, Jordan and Paul. ASKS | from page 18 over. It befuddles my mind; I just don’t understand it. Q: Tell me about your career as a chef. You are sort of like an Emeril Lagasse of the North Shore. A: I don’t know if I’m an Emeril Lagasse of the North Shore. I had a very successful catering business. I had two very successful restaurants in Charlestown. I cooked for the Italian Institute, which was an honor. Q: So, you are an accomplished chef? A: Yes – self-taught. I have a library at home of cookbooks that I read, just like somebody would read a novel, and I suck it right in, whatever it is. I grew up in this business from the age of four, going into my father’s diner and working on one of the tables with my siblings, so I grew up in the food business. My grandfather on my mother’s side was a grand chef in France; my grandfather on my father’s side had three taverns in Greece – so it’s in the blood, I guess. Q: Any other thoughts that you would like to share about this new location or the business? A: Well, this business is a labor of love. There’s no question about it. It’s long hours. Nothing comes easy to you. Q: How many hours do you put in a day? A: I probably put in excess of 80 hours a week. I don’t go by the day anymore. We employ, now, just about 80 employees in the whole company. Q: Between here and Boston? A: Here, Boston and Lincoln Avenue, and for me, that’s 80 families that I am responsible for, and I try to make sure that we treat everybody as fair as we can. We try to give them as close to a living wage as possible. We all got health benefits, vacation time and sick time here. We try to do it all. Q: I guess you get a lot of Saugus High students? A: We get some Saugus High students. I don’t know what it is – the kids don’t jump out and get a job as much as they used to years ago. They are from a different generation. Q: But you’re still deeply rooted in the town. A: We absolutely are. We try to donate as much as we can, but we set a budget for donations every year so that sometimes people come at us with all kinds of requests, and once we reach our limit, that’s it. Q: So you help out various organizations? A: We try to help out the sports teams. We try to do something for the Veterans Association and things like that – a couple of churches that come in all the time every year. We try to help out as many as we can. It’s so hard; it’s really so hard. The markets for this business aren’t the same as they used to be. I know we’re not the cheapest guys around when it comes to donuts, but we also don’t pay people cheaply either. I think if I opened up my books and payroll, you would be shocked. We pay very well, and that’s the only way we are able to keep consistent help. We have staff that has been with us for over 20 years. You don’t do that if you are nickel and diming your employees; you just don’t do it. My father always believed … and he passed this down to us … “Treat people fairly and you try to give people a decent wage, and people will treat you decently.” And relative to the people we buy food from, we try to buy local. Because if you buy local, they support local and they are going to support you in return, too. The honey comes out of Peabody. The boxes we use, they come out of the old Prince Spaghetti Box Company. The flour comes from up in North Andover. We try to do everything as local as we can. The flour comes out of Bake’n Joy in North Andover, and they have a proprietary blend that they mill for us because we use such a volume of flour. Q: So how has the drive thru been working out? A: The drive thru has been working excellently. We are getting a lot of favorable response – people being able to just swing by and get a coffee and a donut – and a lot of people didn’t realize we do a bunch of sandwiches now, and now they are stopping in. We make a great breakfast sandwich. We use premium stuff. You are not going to go on the highway and find cherry wood–smoked bacon. You will with us. You are not going to find chorizo sausage there or buttermilk fried chicken wrap. And we do a savory coleslaw that’s got a little jalapeno in it, and we got a chipotle chicken sandwich that’s got bacon on there with avocado on there. So people are finding out and they are discovering us, so I’m happy. And the other thing is, it’s nice to see people coming in with their grandparents, or they’re coming here with their kids and they’re coming in with their grandkids – and being able to sit here on the weekend and seeing them sitting outside over there [pointing to the tables outside] – it really is something special, because you are seeing three generations right there. And you put a smile on every one of their faces. How would you feel? Q: I would feel pretty good. A: You would feel pretty darn good, wouldn’t you? Q: Yep. A: That’s how it makes me feel, and it really warms my heart when I see that. lower-income Medicare beneficiaries who are having a difficult time paying their out-of-pocket health care costs. Here’s what’s available, along with the eligibility requirements and how to apply. Medicare Savings Programs Let’s start with a program that helps pay premiums and out-of-pocket costs for Medicare Parts A and B. It’s called the Medicare Savings Program (MSP), and it has several different benefit levels for people based on their income and asset level. At its most generous the program will pay your Part A and B premiums and pretty much all your Medicare deductibles, coinsurance and copayments. At its least generous the program will pay just your Part B premium. To qualify for a MSP, the minimum standard set by Medicare, is an income under 135 percent of the federal poverty level, which at the moment works out to around $1,426 a month for individuals (or $1,923 for married couples). Everything counts towards income, including payouts from 401(k) plans, pensions, Social Security, and help from family members. Medicare also allows states to impose an asset test, which can be as little as $7,730 per individual ($11,600 for married couples), not counting your house or car but counting retirement savings and bank accounts. But some states have made their MSP programs a lot more generous, with much higher income limits and in some cases no asset tests at all. And the program may be called something else in your state. To find out if you qualify or to apply, contact your state Medicaid program. Visit Medicare.gov/contacts or call all 800-633-4227 for contact information. Medication Extra Help For help with Medicare (Part D) prescription drug plan costs, there is another completely separate program called Extra Help. To get it, you’ll need to apply through your local Social Security office. Depending on how low your income is, this program will pay part or all of your Part D prescription drug plan’s monthly premiums, annual deductibles and prescription co-payments. In 2019, individuals with a yearly income below $18,735 ($25,365 for a married couple), and assets under $14,390 ($28,720 for a married couple) can qualify for Extra Help. If you’re eligible to be in a Medicare Savings Program, you will automatically qualify for Extra Help. But because the requirements are slightly different, even if you don’t qualify for a Medicare Savings Program for Part B you might be able to get Extra Help for Part D. For more information or to apply, visit SSA.gov/extrahelp or call Social Security at 800-772-1213. Other Assistance Programs Depending on your income level, needs and location there are many other financial assistance programs that can help like Medicaid, SSI (Supplemental Security Income), PACE (Program of All-inclusive Care for the Elderly), SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program), (LIHEAP) Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program and many others. To help you find out what types of assistance programs you may be eligible for, and learn how to apply for them, go to BenefitsCheckUp.org. This is a free, confidential Web tool designed for people age 55 and older that contains more than 2,500 programs. It’s also possible to get help in person at one of the 87 Benefits Enrollment Centers scattered across the U.S. Call 888268-6706 or visit NCOA.org/centerforbenefits/becs to locate a center in your area. Some centers also offer assistance over the phone. Send your senior questions to: Savvy Senior, P.O. Box 5443, Norman, OK 73070, or visit SavvySenior.org. Jim Miller is a contributor to the NBC Today show and author of “The Savvy Senior” book.

Page 20 THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, July 19, 2019 LIMO DRIVERS Busy North Shore Limousine Co. * Must be 25 years of age or older * Mostly Logan Airport * No experience required 781-587-0081 / 781-581-7777 J.F & Son Contracting Snow Plowing No Job too small! Free Estimates! Commercial & Residential 781-656-2078 - Property management & maintenance Shoveling & removal Landscaping, Electrical, Plumbing, Painting, Roofing, Carpentry, Framing, Decks, Fencing, Masonry, Demolition, Gut-outs, Junk Removal & Dispersal, Clean Ups: Yards, Garages, Attics & Basements. Truck for Hire, Bobcat Services. O Obituaries Lena Lascola f Saugus, passed away peacefully at Hebrew Senior Life July 12, 2019. Extremely loved by all, especially her lifetime companion of 41 years, Edward Pieroni. Lena’s happiness and joy was spending time with her family and especially traveling to Disney World often with Ed and the “kids.” She is survived by her husband Anthony, her partner Edward, her sons Mark and Paul, and her grandchildren Nicholas, Claudia, Robert and Asher. Also survived by Mark’s companion Andrea and Paul’s wife, Margaret. There will be a Private Memorial at Woodlawn Cemetery, Everett. Robert J. “Bob” Durrance O f Saugus, July 11, 2019, loving husband of 57 years to Nancy (Nickerson) Durrance and devoted father of Adam Durrance of Saugus, Eric Durrance and his wife Michelle Durrance of Easton, MA and Lori Hunt of Brunswick, NY, cherished grandfather of Jacob Durrance, Liam Pembleton, Terrason Hunt, JerEVERETT For Sale by Owner Large 2-Family Ultra Modern House FIRST FLOOR 5 Large Rooms 2 Bedrooms 2 Car Off-Street Parking Access to MBTA / Excellent Location $799,000 EVERETT MALDEN REVERE SAUGUS A Call for appointment dvocAte Newspapers Published weekly by The Advocate Newspapers, Inc. • MAIN OFFICE • 573 Broadway, Everett, MA 02149 Mailing Address: PO Box 490407, Everett, MA 02149 Telephone: (617) 387-2200 / (781) 286-8500 (781) 233-4446 / FAX: (617) 381-0800 Email us at: Jmitchell@advocatenews.net info@advocatenews.net James David Mitchell, Publisher James D. Mitchell, Editor The Advocate Newspapers, Inc. are free newspapers published every Friday. This newspaper assumes no financial responsibility for errors in advertisements printed herein, but will reprint without charge that part of an advertisement in which the error occurs. Get great deals now on advertising rates: Call Jim at 781-983-6187 Publishing free every week in Everett, Malden, Revere, Saugus Christine27@comcast.net SPADAFORA AUTO PARTS JUNK CARS WANTED SAME DAY PICK UP HELP WANTED 781-324-1929 Quality Used Tires Mounted & Installed Used Auto Parts & Batteries Family owned & operated since 1946 OFFICE HELP Busy Limo co. 18 years or older No experience necessary 781-587-0081 781-581-7777 857-363-0157 * 617-733-7391 SECOND FLOOR 9 Large Rooms 4 Bedrooms emy and Sean Tammelleo and many nieces and nephews. He was the brother of the late Joyce M. Burns and Mary Lee MacDonald. A Service was held on Sunday, July 14, 2019 at the Conway, Cahill-Brodeur Funeral Home, 82 Lynn St., PEABODY, MA facility. A private family burial was held on Monday in St. Joseph Cemetery, Lynn. Expressions of sympathy may be made to the American Heart Association, 3005th Ave., Suite 6, Waltham, MA 02451 in his memory. Robert was a machinist for the Everett Pattern Co. of Middleton, MA for 15 years prior to retirement. He had a love of cars especially the muscle ones of the sixties. KITCHEN CABINETSStrip & Refinish STRIP & FINISH To Look Like New 508-840-0501 FURNITURE WASTE REMOVAL & BUILDING MAINTENANCE • Landscaping, Lawn Care, Mulching • Yard Waste & Rubbish Removal • Interior & Exterior Demolition (Old Decks, Fences, Pools, Sheds, etc.) • Appliance and Metal Pick-up • Construction and Estate Cleanouts • Pick-up Truck Load of Trash starting at $169 LICENSED & INSURED Call for FREE ESTIMATES! Offi ce: (781) 233-2244 $ $ $ $

THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, July 19, 2019 Page 21 “COMPLETE GLASS SERVICE CENTER” Storefronts & Entrance Doors Window, floor, deck, and gutter Custom Mirrors • Table Tops • Auto Glass Insulated Glass • Window & Screen Repairs 2034 Revere Beach Parkway, Everett 617-389-GLAS MULLIGAN CONSTRUCTION Specializing in: Interior Painting, Exterior Painting, Carpentry, Bathroom Remodeling, Windows, Decks and More! * Licensed & Insured - Mike Mulligan, owner 781-738-6933 Space For Lease 4,500 Sq. Feet +_ Roller World Plaza 425 Broadway (Rte. 1) SAUGUS 2nd Floor-Elevator Direct To Unit Please Call Jerry 617-620-9201 or 781-233-9507 Now Available by Subscription Your Hometown News Delivered! EVERETT ADVOCATE MALDEN ADVOCATE REVERE ADVOCATE SAUGUS ADVOCATE One year subscription to Mold & Waterproofing EXPERTS • Sump Pumps • Walls & Floor Cracks • ALL WORK GUARANTEED - Licensed Contractor - Advocate Call now! 781-233-4446 advertise on the web at www.advocatenews.net JPG CONSTRUCTION Cell phone 781-632-7503 For Great Advertising Rates: Call 781-233-4446 in 508-292-9134 The Advocate of your choice: $80 per paper in-town per year or $100 per paper out-of-town per year. Name_________________________________________ Address_______________________________________ City_______________ State_______ Zip ____________ CC# _______________________________ Exp. _____ Sec. code____ Advocate (City):___________________ Clip & Mail Coupon with Credit Card, Check or Money Order to: Advocate Newspapers Inc. PO Box 490407, Everett, MA 02149 Walter Robinson (617) 415-3933 Frank Berardino MA License 31811 cleaning Power-washing, trash removal & clean up • 24 - Hour Service • Emergency Repairs BERARDINO Plumbing & Heating Residential & Commercial Service Gas Fitting • Drain Service 617.699.9383 Senior Citizen Discount JIM’S HOME IMPROVEMENT — General Contractor — •Kitchens & Baths • Carpentry • Painting (Int. & Ext.) • Cleanouts • Windows • Doors • Decks • Additions • All Reasonable MASS. BUILDER’S LICENSE NO RESTRICTIONS C.S. 065388 NO JOB TOO BIG, NO JOB TOO SMALL Call Jim @ 781-910-3649 Classifieds

Page 22 THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, July 19, 2019 IS YOUR HOME NEXT? The Saugus Real Estate Listings are brought to you by: 53 Jackson Street Saugus, MA 01906 781-813-3325 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 Bishara, Wilma Benoit, Christina Santana, David Mygaga, Ssekyaya DeSouzaSilva-Cezar, L Thevenot, Desiree M Mscharry, Gerald Defilippis, David J Power, Keith T Oconnell, Joanne Lourenco, Marcio A Ball, Kristen J Shrestha, Rita Truesdale, Eric Mcdonough, Ana O Strong, Barbara BUYER2 Souto, Bella Sesangaga, Mark Oliveira-Cezar, Hugo Thevenot, Gary Mcsharry, Cherylann Defilippis, Jerri E SELLER1 Haddock, Mary E Lucacio FT Bradway, Richard Dineen C Diflumeri T Mallette, John F Medina, Maria B SELLER2 ADDRESS 4 Anjo Ln #B Gosnell, Denise Hartnett, Marcilee Diflumeri, Dineen C Mallette, Doreen Medina, Weimar A Cynthia A Alba Esauire T Alba, Bruce A Schmitz, Joanna Yin, Wenyuan Giarla, Catherine P Ciocco, Thomas E Meader FT Shrestha, Shivendra K Truesdale, Mary J Barrett, Paula M Cogavin, Brandon B Gargano, Fernando T Griffin RT Souto, Hermann D Young, Janet R Giarla, Steven A Ciocco, Jaki Meader, William F Digiulio, James M Cogavin, Brendan B Gargano, Rachel R Griffin, Judith A 20 Austin Ct #B 19 Dreeme St 41 School St 6 Buena Vista St 48 Westland Ave 438 Essex St 10 Prospect St 24 Carson St 3 Desota St 14 Jennifer Dr 366 Lincoln Ave 224 Essex St 4 Stanley Ter 34 Clinton Ave 48 Denver St #108 CITY Saugus Saugus Saugus Saugus Saugus Saugus Saugus Saugus Saugus Saugus Saugus Saugus Saugus Saugus Saugus Saugus DATE 01.07.2019 01.07.2019 01.07.2019 28.06.2019 28.06.2019 28.06.2019 28.06.2019 28.06.2019 28.06.2019 28.06.2019 28.06.2019 27.06.2019 27.06.2019 27.06.2019 26.06.2019 26.06.2019 PRICE $312 500,00 $200 000,00 $483 000,00 $700 000,00 $355 000,00 $495 000,00 $650 000,00 $567 000,00 $635 000,00 $560 000,00 $550 000,00 $410 000,00 $421 000,00 $457 500,00 $440 500,00 $415 000,00 N E W OPEN HOUSE - 12-1:30 PM - 21 Bradford Road, West Lynn - 2 homes from Lynnfield line. Gorgeous 3 bedroom 2 1/2 Colonial with 2 car garage. Must see to believe!............................$579,900 53 Jackson St. Saugus (781) 813-3325 PEABODY - 4 finished levels along with each bath welcomes new owner. The lvng rm with granite floors incl. inviting fireplace, cath. ceiling, and dbl. doors leading to an ext. deck. 3rd level has 2 lge. bdrms with full bath incl. jacuzzi - 4 baths makes this home very comfortable! Roof 10 yrs. old, new windows, 2 sep. driveways, fenced level yard, & more. Mins. to Malls, Major Rtes. & Trans. Just move in..............................................$599,0000 Darlene Minincleri & Sue Palomba NORTH REVERE - Single Family, Gorgeous Custom High End All Brick Home. Won’t Last at this Price..................... $1,000,000 Call for a FREE Market Analysis NEW LEASE - Prime Commercial space on Rte. 1S, Saugus. Incredible Exposure 1K Sq. Ft. $2,000 includes all utilities. Call Darlene for Details! Luxury 1-2 & 3 bedrooms starting at $1800 a month! ~ RENTALS ~ SAUGUS - Lots of potential with this 6 Rm, 3 Bdrm. Ranch on Cul De Sac w/ inviting brick fireplace in liv. rm. Kitchen leads to a screened porch and deck and level fenced yd. Additional space in basement that offers Family Room and more. Mins. from Shopping, Boston, Airport, and Transportation................$399,000 WINTHROP - 4 bed, 1 1/2 baths, gleaming hardwood floors all new stainless appliances on two levels..$2500 WINTHROP - 3 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath, kitchen granite w/stainless gleaming hardwood..............................$2600 LYNNFIELD- Luxury high-end Kit. w/stainless appliances & granite counters, pool, gym won’t last...........$2070 SAUGUS - Esquisite Grand Foyer makes 4-5 Bdrm Colonial a home with loads of sunlight beaming thruout. Kitch opens up to lge. family rm. along with pellet stove overlooking backyard......................$499,000 MIDDLETON - Luxury High End Estate 12,000 Sq. Ft....$1,229.000 UNDER AGREEMENT LISTED & SOL;D

THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, July 19, 2019 Page 23 Follow Us On: COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY SALES & RENTALS Summer time is a Sandy Juliano Broker/President wonderful time to buy a new house! WE KNOW EVERETT!! Call TODAY to sell or buy with the best! CALL TODAY TO SET UP A PRIVATE SHOWING AT ANY OF OUR LISTINGS! DON’T FORGET TO ASK ABOUT BUYER AGENCY. IT IS THE BEST WAY TO ENSURE A SUCCESSFUL PURCHASE AND IT’S 100% FREE! COMING SOON LISTED BY NORMA! NEW LISTING BY SANDY! 63 HARVARD ST., CHELSEA NEW PRICE! - $524,900 OFFER ACCEPTED! 20 PLYMOUTH ST., EVERETT NEW PRICE! - $679,900 A 24 SWAINS POND AVE., MELROSE $699,900 OFFER ACCEPTED! 135-137 CHELSEA ST., EVERETT 5 UNITS - $1,200,000 Call Joe @ 617-680-7610 Call Norma @ 617-590-9143 OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY JULY 21, 2019 12:00-1:30 NEW LISTING BY NORMA! 120 ESTES ST., EVERETT SINGLE-FAMILY - $599,900 APARTMENTS-EVERETT 2-BEDROOM 2-BATH $2,200/MONTH Call Sandy for Details! APARTMENTS-EVERETT 1 BEDROOM $1,600/MONTH Call Norma for Details! EVERETT 2-BEDROOM APARTMENT $1,600 SOLD BY ROSEMARIE & SANDY! 30 CHELSEA ST, UNIT 204, EVERETT 2 BED, 2 BATH CONDO - $369,900 2 CARUSO COURT, WEST PEABODY $759,900 PER MONTH EVERETT 1-BEDROOM APARTMENT $1,400 PER MONTH Call Joe for Details! 9 KENMORE DR., DANVERS $1,225,000 Joe DiNuzzo - Broker Associate Norma Capuano Parziale - Agent Open Daily From 10:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M. 433 Broadway, Suite B, Everett, MA 02149 www.jrs-properties.com Denise Matarazz - Agent Maria Scrima - Agent Follow Us On: 617.544.6274 Rosemarie Ciampi - Agent Kathy Hang Ha -Agent Mark Sachetta - Agent

Page 24 THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, July 19, 2019 # 1 Listing & Selling Office in Saugus “Experience and knowledge Provide the Best Service” Free Market Evaluations CarpenitoRealEstate.com View our website from your mobile phone! 335 Central St., Saugus, MA 781-233-7300 SAUGUS INDIAN ROCK FARMS offers this custom 12 rm Contemporary Tri-level 3-4 bdrms, 3 ½ baths, spacious open floor plan, 20’ kit w/granite counters, 1st flr famrm w/gas fp, 1st flr laundry, hdwd, cen air, alarm, au-pair suite, 1 c gar, IG gunite pool, cabana w/kit & half bath, many updates. Great home – Great location...............................................................................................................$779,900. SAUGUS LAST LOT available in Bellevue Heights! Beautiful views, great subdivision surrounded by exclusive, custom homes that are perfectly maintained Build your dream home!....................................................................................$289,900. GEORGETOWN - 1st AD - Ranch style home offers 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, spacious 20’ living room w/cath ceiling and skylights, hardwood , detached 2 car garage, large 40,000 sq. ft. lot, newer roof.................................................$407,000 LYNN - Renovated 7 room, 3 bedroom Colonial, newer kitchen with stainless steel appliances, gleaming hardwood flooring, living room, dining room, level yard, two car detached garage, side street location....................................................$350,000. SAUGUS - RARE Business Zoned parcel with many possibilities. This 34,000 corner lot houses a Federal Colonial style home with amazing details. Please call Saugus Inspectional Services for all permitted uses...................................................$575,000. SAUGUS 1st AD BEAUTIFULLY updated 6 rm Family Colonial NEW kit, 2 NEW baths, NEW cen air, NEW 1st floor laundry rm, NEW deck, NEW fence, hardwood floors, gas heat (2016), gar, level lot, loc in desirable Lynnhurst neighborhood........$499,900. REVERE POINT OF PINES offers this spacious 11 room colonial 3 full baths 3-4 bedrooms, spacious deck, kit w/granite island, dnrm, lvrm, hardwood, familyrm w/wet bar, level lot, great area.........................................................................$525,000. SAUGUS - 6 rooms, 2-3 bedroom cape offers open concept living room/dining room, updated maple kit w/silestone, fireplace, hardwood flooring, security system, fenced yard, 5 yr old roof, one car garage, large deck.....................................$369,900 SAUGUS PERFECT in everyway! Custom CE Col offers 11 rms, 5 bdrms, 3 full & 2half baths, grand foyer w/elegant split stairway, great open flr plan, lvrm, dnrm, gourmet kit w/amazing granite counters & center island w/bar sink & seating, dining area w/atrium door to awesome backyd, 1st flr FP familyrm, , hardwd flrs throughout, finished LL w/playrm. Go to: 5PiratesGlen.com...................................$1,400,000. WONDERING WHAT YOUR HOME IS WORTH? CALL FOR YOUR FREE MARKET ANALYSIS! LITTLEFIELD REAL ESTATE SAUGUS ~ Rehabbed colonial. New windows, siding, new kitchen with quartz counters, stainless appliances, new cabinets. New hardwood flooring throughout house. New heat. Central AC. New maintenance free deck. .........$570,000 SAUGUS ~ Desirable 2 family. Each unit has 2 beds, updated kitchens and baths, vinyl siding, in-unit laundry, rear decks .......$499,000 SAUGUS ~ 2 family new to market! 4 bed, 2.5 bath, granite counters, SS appliances, newer gas heat/AC, prof landscaping, custom paint, new patio, 1 bed apt. .......................$739,000 38 Main Street, Saugus MA WWW.LITTLEFIELDRE.COM 781-233-1401 PEABODY ~ 4 bed colonial, 2.5 baths, central AC, finished basement, SS appliances, hardwood throughout, great cul-de-sac location, gas heat ....................$759,000 Call Rhonda Combe For all your real estate needs!! 781-706-0842 SAUGUS ~ 4 bed, 3 bath colonial. Spacious kitchen, SS appliances, Oversized one car garage, irrigation, gas heat enclosed porch, centralVac, finished lower level...$569,900 SAUGUS ~ 3 bed, 1.5 bath colonial. Open concept 1st floor, 2 car garage, newer gas heat, roof and HW heater, prof landscaping....$426,900 Coming Soon in Lynn: Brand New Construction! Call Rhonda Combe SAUGUS ~ Recently renovated ranch. Kitchen, appliances, heat, AC, roof and vinyl siding all replaced in 2011.Fenced in yard, hot tub, storage shed. .....$384,900 SAUGUS ~ 3 bed ranch, open concept, stainless appliances, private dead end street, newer gas heat, hardwood flooring, 10k lot, garage ..............$435,000 for details! REVERE ~ 2 family located in the Beachmont area, 3 beds, one bath in top unit, 2 beds, one bath lower unit .....................................$639,000 LAND FOR SALE SAUGUS Call Rhonda Combe at 781-706-0842 for details!! Under Contract

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