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The #1 Selling Real<br />

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781-718-4662<br />

PEABODY WEEKLY<br />

Louise<br />

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617-605-0555<br />

Gale Rawding<br />

617-784-9995<br />

JULY 11, 2019 • VOL. 63, NO. 28<br />

IN THE NEWS<br />

Page 2:<br />

Young Entrepreneurs<br />

are looking for<br />

future CEOs<br />

Page 5:<br />

Debt-free future<br />

for energy facility<br />

investor<br />

Page 9:<br />

Tanners 12’s,<br />

Juniors to play<br />

for state titles<br />

PRSRT STD<br />

ECRWSSEDDM<br />

U.S. Postage<br />

Paid<br />

Permit #66<br />

Peabody, MA<br />

SERVING THE COMMUNITY SINCE 1957<br />

NEWS<br />

16 PAGES • ONE DOLLAR<br />

Sutton Home is where their heart is<br />

By Thor JourGensen<br />

Weekly neWs ediTor<br />

Gloria Deveaux made a lifechanging<br />

decision last year<br />

that led her to a 19th century<br />

estate with its expansive lawn.<br />

The 95-year-old didn’t relocate<br />

from her West Peabody<br />

home to a small country town.<br />

She moved to the Sutton Home<br />

for Women on Sewall Street<br />

just blocks from downtown.<br />

“I didn’t want to be alone<br />

anymore,” she said.<br />

Deveaux is one of 11 women<br />

living in the stately 10-bedroom,<br />

two-story lodging house<br />

on nearly one arce that looks<br />

like it should be surrounded<br />

by rolling fields in Rowley or<br />

western Massachusetts.<br />

One bedroom is assigned to<br />

each resident. The hallways<br />

and common rooms are decorated<br />

with paintings and antique<br />

furniture. For $2,400 a<br />

month, Sutton Home provides<br />

meals, housekeeping, laundry,<br />

medication reminders and<br />

PHOTO | SPENSER HASAK<br />

Barbara Amos is the director of the Sutton Home: a residence for women in Peabody.<br />

other assistance.<br />

Some residents use their income<br />

and savings to pay the<br />

rent while others are supported<br />

by their family.<br />

“We’re basically a lodging<br />

house, but the women feel<br />

safe,” said Susan Smith, secretary<br />

of the Home Board of<br />

Directors. “There is someone<br />

here 24 hours a day.”<br />

Sutton Director Barbara<br />

Amos and her staff will transform<br />

the big front lawn into<br />

a festive place on Sept. 15.<br />

That’s when the charity will<br />

celebrate the 100th anniversary<br />

of the Sewall Street residence<br />

donation by the daughter of its<br />

builder to Sutton.<br />

“It’s going to be a celebration<br />

to recognize everyone who<br />

has kept it going,” said Amos.<br />

SUTTON, PAGE 4<br />

City native hopes to ride ‘Charlie Horse’ to fame<br />

PHOTO | SPENSER HASAK<br />

Gary Leavitt is the author of a<br />

new children’s book, “Charlie<br />

Horse.”<br />

By Bella diGrazia<br />

Gary Leavitt wants to ride<br />

a horse named Charlie to the<br />

big screen.<br />

The longtime writer, radio<br />

personality, and impersonator<br />

recently self-published<br />

“Charlie Horse,” a children’s<br />

book about a disabled horse<br />

whose bravery helps his animal<br />

friends. Leavitt, a Peabody<br />

native has high hopes for the<br />

book, including a PBS television<br />

show, character merchandise,<br />

and a feature film.<br />

“I think the book will appeal<br />

to not only kids, but all age<br />

groups, genders and demographics,”<br />

he said. “Charlie<br />

is a character that is not only<br />

brave, but he’s not afraid to<br />

rely on other people.”<br />

After nearly four decades<br />

in the entertainment industry,<br />

including a role as Bozo the<br />

Clown on WNAC-TV in<br />

Providence in the 1990s, the<br />

58-year-old said he thought<br />

it was time to try something<br />

new. He began writing the<br />

book in 2013, but was disappointed<br />

in the content.<br />

“I couldn’t get it to a point<br />

where it was endearing to<br />

children,” he said. “I put it on<br />

the backburner for a while.”<br />

Four years later, he began<br />

anew. He wrote the story<br />

with a rhyme scheme, hoping<br />

it would be more appealing<br />

to his future young readers,<br />

he said. The 34-page story<br />

was completed a few months<br />

later and he hired illustrator,<br />

Alexandra Sevigny.<br />

HORSE, PAGE 4<br />

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Estate Brokerage in<br />

Peabody*<br />

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Dan Donovan<br />

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Steve Macdonald<br />

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Denise Moynihan<br />

781-872-1200


2<br />

INDEX<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JULY 11, 2019<br />

Classifieds ...............................................................................14-16<br />

Obituary ......................................................................................... 5<br />

Police Log ...................................................................................... 3<br />

Real Estate ..............................................................................14-16<br />

Religious Notes .............................................................................. 7<br />

Seniors ........................................................................................... 6<br />

Sports .......................................................................................9-11<br />

International<br />

Festival website<br />

goes live<br />

As Peabody gears up for<br />

the 36th International Festival<br />

September 8, a new website<br />

will provide real time updates<br />

on all the features and<br />

attractions festival-goers can<br />

expect.<br />

The site, www.ifestpeabody.<br />

com is equipped with a digital<br />

clock counting down the days,<br />

hours, minutes and seconds<br />

until the festival kicks off.<br />

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There is a special section<br />

for Restaurant Week including<br />

applications for those restaurant<br />

owners who wish to participate.<br />

Applications for Fine<br />

Art on Foster Street, entertainment,<br />

and vendors are available<br />

as well.<br />

For more information on the<br />

36th International Festival,<br />

contact Mary Bellavance at<br />

978-538-5704.<br />

PEABODY<br />

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ESSEX MEDIA GROUP<br />

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COURTESY PHOTO<br />

YEA graduates (left to right) Brandon Heath, Mike Axiotakis, Ryan Bey, Sofia Vasconcelos,<br />

Aum Trivedi, Luke O’Leary and Matthew Ciampa<br />

Young Entrepreneurs<br />

looking for future CEOs<br />

In four years, 38 students<br />

ranging in age from 12-18 years<br />

old became CEOs though the<br />

Young Entrepreneurs Academy<br />

(YEA!) founded by the Peabody<br />

Area Chamber of Commerce.<br />

The students live in nine area<br />

communities and attend 15 local<br />

schools, public and private,<br />

including Peabody residents<br />

who attend Higgins Middle<br />

School, St. John the Baptist<br />

School, Simon Youth Learning<br />

Academy, Peabody Veterans<br />

Memorial High School, Bishop<br />

Fenwick, Essex North Shore<br />

Agricultural and Technical<br />

School and St. Mary’s Danvers.<br />

All of the students share<br />

one goal: Create and launch a<br />

business.<br />

The 25-week after-school<br />

program takes them through<br />

every step of developing a real,<br />

money-making business: The<br />

Big Idea, The Pitch and The<br />

Launch.<br />

They receive start-up funds<br />

BOSTON<br />

FENCE<br />

& VINYL<br />

from a panel of investors in the<br />

YEA! version of the television<br />

show Shark Tank.<br />

The students officially launch<br />

their businesses at a trade show<br />

sponsored by the North Shore<br />

Mall.<br />

“This experiential learning<br />

draws students from all over the<br />

North Shore. I’ve even had students<br />

Skype in from Westford<br />

and Carlisle,” said Chamber<br />

YEA! Coordinator Maria Terris,<br />

adding: “These are young<br />

people who have always known<br />

they wanted to create something<br />

more, something different, than<br />

what’s available to them. They<br />

want to build a business and be<br />

their own boss.”<br />

Three of the last four YEA!<br />

winners were Peabody students<br />

chosen by the YEA! investment<br />

panel to represent the<br />

North Shore at the National<br />

Saunders Scholarship Finals<br />

at the Rochester Institute of<br />

Technology in Rochester, New<br />

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Student entrepreneurs’ ideas<br />

include big-dog sturdy leashes<br />

and collars (Lyla’s Leads); athletic<br />

wear (happiwear); protective<br />

burn sleeve for line cooks<br />

(Sizzle Sleeve) and a social service<br />

to collect sports equipment<br />

for under-served communities<br />

(Sports Across America).<br />

“Parents and students rave<br />

about the benefits of the real life<br />

skills that can’t be taught in a<br />

traditional school setting. Now<br />

I’m looking for the next class<br />

of future CEO’s with that entrepreneurial<br />

spirit,” said Terris.<br />

Registration is open for the<br />

fall class and there are only 12<br />

spots available. Classes are held<br />

on Wednesdays, 4-7 p.m. at<br />

the Peabody Area Chamber of<br />

Commerce office, 49 Lowell St,<br />

Peabody, MA 01960.<br />

Contact Terris at (978) 531-<br />

0384 or maria@peabodychamber.com<br />

for more information<br />

on the application process.<br />

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JULY 11, 2019<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 3<br />

Police Log<br />

Arrests<br />

Irwin Robinson, 56, of 61<br />

Weir St. Apt. 1A, Taunton<br />

was arrested following a<br />

motor vehicle crash on<br />

Friday at 2:46 p.m. on<br />

Winona Street on a warrant<br />

from Taunton District<br />

Court and charged with<br />

shoplifting and trespassing.<br />

Vehicle picked up by licensed<br />

operator.<br />

Derek Smith, 48, of 63<br />

Andover St. was arrested<br />

for trespassing on Friday at<br />

7:43 p.m. at Town Variety at<br />

116 Central St.<br />

Corey J. Cedorchuk, 33,<br />

of 25 Beacon Boulevard<br />

was arrested on a courtesy<br />

booking for the Swampscott<br />

Police Department on<br />

Saturday at 10:57 a.m. for a<br />

209A violation.<br />

Maurice V. Works, 20,<br />

at 77 Mattapan St., Apt. 3,<br />

Mattapan was arrested following<br />

a disturbance on<br />

Saturday at 11:50 a.m. at<br />

Citizens Inn at 25 Holten<br />

St.and charged with disorderly<br />

conduct, intimidating<br />

a witness, and assault<br />

and battery on an intimate<br />

partner.<br />

Francisco Quinonez, 37,<br />

of 19 Eutaw St., Apt. 1,<br />

East Boston, was arrested<br />

on Monday at 5:29 p.m.<br />

for unlicensed operation of<br />

a motor vehicle and failure<br />

to signal following a traffic<br />

stop at 20 Newbury and 200<br />

Lake streets.<br />

Nicole Armstrong, 27,<br />

homeless, was arrested<br />

on Monday at 6:30 p.m. at<br />

East End Veterans Memorial<br />

Park at 45 Walnut St. following<br />

a report of a woman<br />

screaming that she wants<br />

to die. She faces charges of<br />

disorderly conduct, possession<br />

of class C and E drugs,<br />

and resisting arrest. She<br />

was taken to Lahey Hospital<br />

& Medical Center and released<br />

and brought to the<br />

police station.<br />

Summons<br />

Austin N. Addonizio,<br />

23, of 18 Intervale Ave.,<br />

was summoned for leaving<br />

the scene, OUI liquor and<br />

Class B drug possession on<br />

Thursday at 1:38 a.m.<br />

Adilson Desousa, 57, of<br />

55 Fulton St., Apt. 1F, was<br />

summoned for unlicensed<br />

operation of a motor vehicle<br />

and failure to stop/yield<br />

Wednesday at 5:40 p.m.<br />

Albert M. Garbarino, 55,<br />

of 15 Lynde St., Salem, was<br />

summoned for two counts<br />

of operating an unregistered<br />

motor vehicle with a suspended<br />

license Wednesday<br />

at 5:25 p.m.<br />

David<br />

George<br />

Stankiewicz, 38, of 6<br />

Bartholomew Terrace, was<br />

summoned for Class A drug<br />

possession Thursday at<br />

6:14 p.m.<br />

Deandre Joseph, 21,<br />

of 10 Kahler Ave., Apt. 2,<br />

Milton, was arrested and<br />

charged with two counts of<br />

disguise to obstruct justice,<br />

disturbing the peace, motor<br />

vehicle breaking and entering<br />

for a misdemeanor,<br />

unregistered motor vehicle,<br />

uninsured motor vehicle<br />

and number plate violation<br />

to conceal ID on Thursday<br />

at 9:53 p.m.<br />

Katya Lemus, 36, of 57<br />

Fairview Ave., Malden,<br />

was arrested on a warrant<br />

Wednesday at 5:49 p.m.<br />

Fabiana DaSilva, 30,<br />

was summoned following a<br />

motor vehicle stop on Wallis<br />

Street on Monday 4:30 p.m.<br />

for unlicensed operation of<br />

a motor vehicle<br />

Fabio Ferreira, 33,<br />

of 56 Mt. Pleasant Ave.,<br />

Leominster, was summoned<br />

following a motor vehicle<br />

stop at 2 Holten and 115<br />

Main streets on Tuesday at<br />

2:21 p.m. for unlicensed operation<br />

of a motor vehicle.<br />

The vehicle was towed by<br />

Mallia’s Towing.<br />

Accidents<br />

Motor vehicle crash into<br />

a sign board on Friday at<br />

2:46 p.m. at 58 Winona St.<br />

See arrest above of Irwin<br />

Robinson.<br />

Caller reported hit and<br />

run crash at 1 Dalton Court<br />

and 142 Washington St. on<br />

Friday at 5:03 p.m. involving<br />

a whte Scion with black rims<br />

who fled down Washington<br />

Street toward Lynn Street.<br />

Reporting party is driving a<br />

gray Honda Accord, no injuries.<br />

Officer reports minor<br />

damage.<br />

A two-car crash was reported<br />

Wednesday at 5:40<br />

p.m. at 2 Sheldon Road<br />

and 20 Margin St. Adilson<br />

Desousa was cited.<br />

A report of a car into a<br />

tree on Thursday at 1:38<br />

a.m. at 614 Lowell St. A<br />

man was found behind a<br />

Lowell Street home severely<br />

injured and was taken to<br />

Salem Hospital. See summons<br />

above for Austin N.<br />

Addonizio.<br />

Motor vehicle crash<br />

into a wall reported at 56<br />

Washington and 5 Aborn<br />

streets on Monday at 4:24<br />

p.m. Officer will document<br />

no injuries and vehicle<br />

towed by Mallia’s Towing.<br />

Report of a motor vehicle<br />

crash on Monday at<br />

5:40 p.m. at 37 Walnut and<br />

20 Wallis streets. Officer<br />

reports no injuries, both<br />

vehicles towed by Mallia’s<br />

Towing.<br />

Motor vehicle crash reported<br />

at 7-Eleven on<br />

Lowell Street on Monday<br />

at 9:01 p.m. Officer reports<br />

incident was minor and parties<br />

exchanged paperwork.<br />

Caller reports she<br />

struck a street sign at 63<br />

Central and 2 Tremont<br />

streets on Tuesday at<br />

12:12 p.m. Officer reports<br />

the Department of Public<br />

Works was notified for sign<br />

replacement.<br />

Hit and run crash reported<br />

on Tuesday at 12:23 p.m.<br />

from Harvard Vanguard<br />

Medical Associates at 2<br />

Essex St.<br />

Animal Control<br />

Report of a dog in a vehicle<br />

at the Boston Sports<br />

Club at 194 Newbury St.<br />

on Saturday at 1:13 p.m.<br />

Officer spoke to vehicle<br />

owner and said if it happens<br />

again there will be a charge<br />

of animal cruelty.<br />

Woman walked into the<br />

police station on Allens<br />

Lane with a stray golden<br />

Retriever named Maggie on<br />

Monday at 3:55 p.m. The<br />

dog’s owner was located.<br />

Caller reports barking dog<br />

on a front porch on Union<br />

Street on Tuesday at 7:15<br />

a.m. Animal control officer<br />

reported the owner contacted<br />

her boyfriend who<br />

forgot to let the dogs in. He<br />

will be leaving work and at<br />

the location in an hour.<br />

Aviv Estates at<br />

Woodbridge at 240<br />

Lynnfield St. reports dog<br />

locked in a car on Tuesday<br />

at 9:14 a.m. Officer spoke to<br />

the reporting party. The vehicle<br />

was gone upon arrival.<br />

Staff of Northeast<br />

Veterinary Hospital at 29<br />

Lowell St. reports a stray,<br />

brown male PitBull was<br />

brought to their office on<br />

Tuesday at 10:44 a.m.<br />

Animal taken to Borash<br />

Veterinary Clinic.<br />

Caller reported she saw<br />

a parakeet-type bird in her<br />

yard at 30 Livingston Drive<br />

on Tuesday at 1:57 p.m.<br />

Animal control officer said<br />

there was no answer on<br />

callback. Message was left<br />

requesting status of bird.<br />

Complaints<br />

Report of a landlord,<br />

tenant dispute at Babiarz<br />

Farm & Greenhouse at 65<br />

Pulaski St. on Friday at 1:07<br />

p.m Landlord was advised<br />

of the civil eviction process.<br />

Suspicious person reported<br />

on Friday at 5:26<br />

p.m. at Town Variety at 116<br />

Central St. Officer reported<br />

he was with the party who<br />

has been banned from the<br />

store and he has moved on.<br />

Loud music reported<br />

by a neighbor at 10 Carell<br />

Road on Friday at 5:38 p.m.<br />

Officer told the resident to<br />

turn the music off for the<br />

night.<br />

Report of a large tree<br />

down at 54 Sutton St. on<br />

Friday at 6:48 p.m. Officer<br />

reports road is passable<br />

but tight and limb must be<br />

removed. Department of<br />

Public Works notified.<br />

Caller from the Jade at<br />

4 Bourbon St. reports employees<br />

are attempting<br />

to prevent an intoxicated<br />

person man from getting<br />

into his silver BMW on<br />

Friday at 11:10 p.m. Officer<br />

reports Benjamin Dorne,<br />

31, of 2 South Shore Ave.<br />

was taken into protective<br />

custody.<br />

Caller from 1315 Crane<br />

Brook Way reports hs upstairs<br />

neighbor is being<br />

loud and running around<br />

on Saturday at 1:32 a.m.<br />

Officer reports the TV will<br />

be turned off for the night.<br />

Owner of Tim’s Barber<br />

Shop at 99 Lynn St. reports<br />

a Mercedes parked<br />

in front of his shop for four<br />

days on Saturday at 9:19<br />

a.m. Officer reports vehicle<br />

towed by Mallia’s Tow,<br />

Caller from 9 Esquire<br />

Circle reports she was assaulted<br />

on Sunday at 12:48<br />

a.m. The victim was checked<br />

by Atlantic Ambulance<br />

and refused further medical<br />

treatment. The officers<br />

spoke with her and she was<br />

not forthcoming with what<br />

had taken place.<br />

Clerk at 7-Eleven at 100<br />

Lynn St. called to report a<br />

man passed a counterfeit<br />

$100 and is still in the store<br />

on Sunday at 3:15 a.m.<br />

Passing motorist near<br />

Sonic Drive-In reports an<br />

elderly man walking on<br />

the side of the highway on<br />

Sunday at 11:17 a.m.<br />

He is described as a white<br />

male wearing a plaid shirt,<br />

shorts and a fedora. The<br />

officer will be speaking<br />

with the man who is on the<br />

sidewalk.<br />

A report of suspicious<br />

activity at 9:08 p.m.<br />

Wednesday at 22 Buford<br />

Road. A caller reported<br />

video footage showed a<br />

suspicious man, possibly<br />

armed, came to her door<br />

earlier that night. Police reviewed<br />

the footage and reported<br />

there was no gun.<br />

Suspicious activity was<br />

reported at 11:20 a.m.<br />

Thursday at 65 Glen Drive<br />

and 157 Russell St. A man<br />

with a toolbelt but no tools<br />

was reportedly going from<br />

door to door. The man was<br />

told he needed to check in<br />

with the police station and<br />

stopped for the day.<br />

A report of suspicious<br />

activity was reported at<br />

4:24 p.m. Thursday at 40<br />

Gardner St. A caller reported<br />

three teenagers were<br />

drinking inside the car.<br />

Suspicious activity was<br />

reported at 8:34 p.m.<br />

Thursday at 10 Harris St.<br />

A caller reported an elderly<br />

man claiming to be a police<br />

officer approached his<br />

family about the party they<br />

were having and told him<br />

the music was too loud.<br />

Police reported the issue<br />

was resolved.<br />

A report of suspicious activity<br />

at 12:57 a.m. Friday<br />

at 18 Keys Drive. A caller<br />

reported two cars with the<br />

trunks open. Police reported<br />

everything was in order and<br />

the trunks were secured.


4<br />

SUTTON<br />

From page 1<br />

Eliza Sutton, a Ladies<br />

Benevolent Society member,<br />

led the charge in 1867 to find<br />

a permanent home for elderly<br />

women in Peabody, according<br />

to a brief history of the dwelling.<br />

The Society built a house on<br />

Washington Street near Oak<br />

Street in 1871 and sold it in<br />

1883 to lease the Sutton mansion<br />

on Main Street. The Sutton<br />

Home for Aged Women was<br />

incorporated in 1899 and the<br />

search for a new home began<br />

several years later.<br />

Sutton Home is where their heart is<br />

In 1919, Lydia Thacher,<br />

daughter of Peabody merchant<br />

Abel Proctor who built the<br />

Sewall Street estate, donated<br />

$5,000 to the Home, setting<br />

in motion a fundraising effort<br />

that resulted in the property’s<br />

purchase for use as a women’s<br />

residence.<br />

Sutton had a handful of residents<br />

when she joined the<br />

board with her husband, retired<br />

Peabody firefighter Stanley<br />

Smith, in 1986, Smith said.<br />

Subsequent changes in board<br />

membership focused the board<br />

on helping women who were<br />

too healthy to go to a nursing<br />

PEABODY WEEKLY<br />

NEWS<br />

(USPS #66)<br />

Telephone: (978) 532-5880 • Fax: (978) 532-4250<br />

Mailing Address: P.O. Box 5, Lynn, MA 01903<br />

News and Advertising Offices: 110 Munroe St., Lynn, MA 01901<br />

Office Hours: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday<br />

www.weeklynews.net<br />

Editor: Thor Jourgensen tjourgensen@essexmediagroup.com<br />

Reporter: Thomas Grillo tgrillo@itemlive.com<br />

Sports Editor: Anne Marie Tobin atobin@essexmediagroup.com<br />

Advertising Reps: Ralph Mitchell rmitchell@essexmediagroup.com<br />

Patricia Whalen pwhalen@essexmediagroup.com<br />

Ernie Carpenter ecarpenter@essexmediagroup.com<br />

Gary Golden ggolden@itemlive.com<br />

Local Subscription Rate: $20 per year (52 issues) • Single Copy: $1.00<br />

Deadlines: News: Monday, noon; Display Ads: Monday, noon;<br />

Classified Ads: Monday, noon;<br />

No cancellations accepted after deadline.<br />

The Peabody Weekly News is published 52 times per year on Thursday by Essex<br />

Media Group, Inc. No issue is printed during the week of Christmas. The Peabody<br />

Weekly News is delivered via US Mail to homes in Peabody. It is also available<br />

in several locations throughout Peabody. The Peabody Weekly News will not be<br />

responsible for typographical or other errors in advertisements, but will reprint that<br />

part of an advertisement in which a typographical error occurs if notified immediately.<br />

Advertisers must notify the Peabody Weekly News of any errors in advertisements<br />

on the FIRST day of insertion. The publisher reserves the right to reject,<br />

omit or edit any copy offered for publication.<br />

PEABODY WEEKLY<br />

N E WS<br />

20<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JULY 11, 2019<br />

home but couldn’t afford to<br />

move into an assisted living<br />

facility.<br />

As a nonprofit, Sutton relies,<br />

in part, on support from<br />

an endowment overseen by the<br />

board, said Amos.<br />

Smith said Amos’ hiring in<br />

2009 propelled the board’s<br />

objectives. Amos and her 11<br />

coworkers maintain close relationships,<br />

where possible with<br />

residents’ families and ensure<br />

women are independent through<br />

associations with friends, outings,<br />

and events and activities<br />

in Peabody.<br />

“She’s our gem,” Smith said<br />

of Amos.<br />

Life at Sutton revolves<br />

around meals. Guests have<br />

hand-made cards bearing<br />

their name next to their plate.<br />

The big front porch is where<br />

resident Janet Golub enjoys<br />

reading on a nice day.<br />

Resident Virginia Pelletier<br />

has lived most of her life in<br />

Peabody and taught school in<br />

Beverly. She has lived in Sutton<br />

for six months and enjoys knitting<br />

prayer shawls.<br />

“I need to be with people and<br />

HORSE<br />

From page 1<br />

Sevigny’s artwork was completed<br />

in less than two years.<br />

Leavitt said he knew the artist<br />

had impeccable skills, so it was<br />

worth the wait.<br />

With help from Gatekeeper<br />

Press, “Charlie Horse” has been<br />

available since June, he said.<br />

It is listed on Amazon.com for<br />

$24 and did not have any customer<br />

reviews.<br />

The Woburn resident said<br />

when he began writing the<br />

book, he had a vision of making<br />

it into a television show for<br />

children. He worked on a theme<br />

song with his 21-year-old<br />

daughter, Renee, and they titled<br />

PHOTO | SPENSER HASAK<br />

Janet Golub, a resident at the Sutton Home in Peabody, enjoys<br />

the shade of the front porch as she reads a novel.<br />

I like being with people here,”<br />

she said.<br />

Smith and Amos said city<br />

officials and elder care community<br />

representatives will be<br />

invited to the celebration. The<br />

it “Friends For Life.”<br />

Leavitt, his daughter, and<br />

her 16-year-old brother, Randy,<br />

spent a lot of time watching<br />

television shows in the 1990s<br />

and 2000s, especially programs<br />

on WGBH’s PBS. Since the<br />

book’s completion, he reached<br />

out to representatives at PBS<br />

twice and pitched the idea to<br />

them, he said.<br />

“From what I heard back,<br />

PBS loved it,” Leavitt said.<br />

“They told me it would be a<br />

long process though for them to<br />

fully review it and analyze how<br />

the market would be.”<br />

The first-time children’s<br />

book author said he hopes to<br />

have “Charlie Horse” on the<br />

PBS screen by September. He<br />

home plans to start its next 100<br />

years with a new name. The<br />

Sutton Residence for Women,<br />

they said, better reflects the<br />

board’s mission to provide<br />

housing for women.<br />

City native hopes to ride<br />

‘Charlie Horse’ to fame<br />

also has a vision of selling five<br />

million copies, getting it to<br />

Oprah Winfrey’s book club, and<br />

telling Ellen Degeneres’ audience<br />

all about Charlie the horse.<br />

Still, he has a long way to go.<br />

Of all the books on Amazon,<br />

it was ranked 407,888 at press<br />

time.<br />

For every book he sells,<br />

Leavitt said he will donate $1 to<br />

the Be My Strength Foundation,<br />

which helps needy and orphan<br />

students in Africa.<br />

“That’s the finish line for me,<br />

as far as getting something I can<br />

hang my hat on,” he said. “The<br />

more money it makes and the<br />

more success it has, the more I<br />

can do to help people.”<br />

Peabody Light forges<br />

RCN cable agreement<br />

MAIL TO PEABODY WEEKLY NEWS, P.O. BOX 5, LYNN, MA 01903<br />

CHECKS AND MONEY ORDERS ALSO ACCEPTED.<br />

MAKE PAYABLE TO: ESSEX MEDIA GROUP, INC.<br />

PEABODY — Peabody<br />

Municipal Light Plant (PMLP),<br />

Charles J. Orphanos Manager<br />

announced that PMLP has entered<br />

into an agreement with<br />

RCN to allow new cables to<br />

be installed on utility poles in<br />

Peabody.<br />

The PMLP agreement was<br />

contingent on the city’s approval<br />

of a franchise to RCN,<br />

a provider of cable television,<br />

high-speed Internet and phone<br />

service.<br />

“We have been working with<br />

RCN over the last few months to<br />

ensure that their fiber optic cable<br />

attachments would not interfere<br />

with other services on the poles.<br />

This has also been a joint venture<br />

of the Lighting Commissioners,<br />

Mayor Bettencourt and other<br />

city officials,” Orphanos said.<br />

Both the city’s agreement and<br />

PMLP’s agreement were necessary<br />

to allow the project to<br />

progress.<br />

Over the next months,<br />

Peabody residents can expect<br />

to see PMLP team members<br />

working on poles to make room<br />

for the new cable.<br />

In some cases, other cables<br />

will be moved up or down on<br />

existing poles. In other cases,<br />

existing poles may need to replaced<br />

to accommodate a safe<br />

distance between the different<br />

utilities on the poles. Most<br />

poles carry lines for cable<br />

TV, telephone, fire alarm and<br />

electricity.<br />

PMLP is the community<br />

owned-not for profit utility<br />

company serving the residents<br />

of Peabody and South<br />

Lynnfield.


JULY 11, 2019<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 5<br />

Debt-free future for energy facility investor<br />

The Massachusetts Municipal<br />

Wholesale Electric Company<br />

(MMWEC), a state agency providing<br />

assistance to local power<br />

providers including Peabody’s,<br />

has retired all the bonds.<br />

The move allows its 28 municipal<br />

utility project participants<br />

to enjoy years of debt-free<br />

ownership in their generating<br />

asset entitlements.<br />

MMWEC made the final payment<br />

of $5.26 million in fixedrate<br />

debt on July 1, 2019.<br />

The Peabody Municipal<br />

Light Plant is a member utility<br />

of MMCWEC which is a nonprofit<br />

corporation. Created by<br />

the state Legislature, MMWEC<br />

is authorized to issue debt to<br />

member utilities like the Light<br />

Plant to help pay for local energy<br />

projects.<br />

MMWEC’s Project No. 6,<br />

which represented a portion<br />

of its ownership in Seabrook<br />

Station, a nuclear plant located<br />

in Seabrook, New Hampshire<br />

was among the final debt<br />

payments.<br />

Earlier this year, MMWEC<br />

redeemed the remaining $1.85<br />

million in auction rate securities<br />

associated with Project No. 6.<br />

In 2018, MMWEC made<br />

the final payments to retire the<br />

bonds issued for its Project No.<br />

3 and Project No. 5, which represented<br />

a portion of its ownership<br />

interests in the Millstone<br />

Unit 3 nuclear power plant in<br />

Connecticut, and Seabrook<br />

Station.<br />

MMWEC has issued more<br />

than $4.7 billion in bonds since<br />

1976 to finance and refinance<br />

its 735-megawatt ownership<br />

interest in Seabrook, Millstone,<br />

the Stony Brook power plant in<br />

Ludlow, MA and Wyman Unit 4<br />

in Yarmouth, Maine.<br />

Through its ownership in<br />

these plants, MMWEC provides<br />

electricity to 28 Massachusetts<br />

municipal utilities, six Vermont<br />

utilities and one Rhode Island<br />

utility.<br />

Payments for the principal<br />

and interest on MMWEC<br />

bonds are derived from contracts<br />

through which municipal<br />

utilities agree to pay a share<br />

of MMWEC’s unit ownership<br />

costs, including the cost of debt<br />

service, unit operation and expenses.<br />

The utilities are entitled<br />

to receive a proportionate share<br />

of the unit’s output.<br />

A major refinancing of<br />

project debt in 2001 helped save<br />

project participants more than<br />

$200 million, and served as the<br />

cornerstone of the MMWEC<br />

debt management strategy.<br />

“The MMWEC financing<br />

program has helped each of its<br />

project participants develop<br />

their own independent power<br />

supply through local control<br />

and decision-making,” said<br />

MMWEC Chief Executive<br />

Officer Ronald C. DeCurzio.<br />

“MMWEC is proud to have facilitated<br />

this program on behalf<br />

of its project participants over<br />

the past four decades.”<br />

Industry sources believe<br />

the MMWEC bond retirement<br />

leaves its project participants<br />

as the only public power utilities<br />

in the country to own nuclear<br />

assets debt-free. Seabrook<br />

Station and Millstone Unit 3 are<br />

expected to operate for years<br />

to come. Millstone Unit 3 is<br />

licensed to operate until 2045,<br />

and Seabrook Station’s operating<br />

license was recently renewed<br />

to 2050.<br />

“Nuclear generation is key<br />

to meeting state and regional<br />

goals aimed at reduced carbon<br />

emissions,” DeCurzio said.<br />

“The municipal utilities’ nuclear<br />

ownership demonstrates<br />

their commitment to supporting<br />

these public policies.”<br />

MMWEC provides a variety<br />

of power supply, financial, risk<br />

management and other services<br />

to the state’s consumer-owned<br />

municipal utilities.<br />

PEABODY — Barbara A.<br />

(Efenecy) Rubano, 85, of Peabody,<br />

died peacefully on Friday<br />

afternoon at her home surrounded<br />

by her family. She was the<br />

devoted wife of the late Robert T.<br />

Rubano, with whom she shared<br />

49 years of marriage.<br />

Born in Lynn, she was the<br />

daughter of the late Alex and<br />

Blanche (Sadowski) Efenecy.<br />

She was raised and educated in<br />

Lynn and graduated from Lynn<br />

Classical High School. During<br />

high school, Barbara loved<br />

swimming, in which she excelled.<br />

She has lived in Peabody<br />

for the past 60 years.<br />

Barbara was a devoted wife,<br />

mother, sister, aunt, cousin,<br />

grandmother, great-grandmother<br />

and friend. She enjoyed entertaining<br />

and hosting many social<br />

gatherings at her home over the<br />

years. She was a kind and generous<br />

grandmother who enjoyed<br />

spending time with her grandchildren<br />

Thomas, Nicole and<br />

Ashlee, and sharing in all of their<br />

endeavors. In addition to her<br />

beautiful grandchildren, she was<br />

blessed with two great-grandsons,<br />

Roby and Mason.<br />

Obituary<br />

Barbara A. Rubano, 85<br />

1934-2019<br />

Barbara was an avid golfer,<br />

and enjoyed traveling to Florida<br />

and Aruba where she loved<br />

spending time with family and<br />

friends. She will be dearly<br />

missed by all.<br />

She is survived by her daughter<br />

and son-in-law, Cynthia<br />

and Robert Yates; her son and<br />

daughter-in-law, Robert and Michelle<br />

Rubano, all of Peabody;<br />

her brother, Michael Efenecy<br />

of Guilford, Conn.; her three<br />

grandchildren, Thomas and Nicole<br />

Rubano and Ashlee Yates;<br />

her two great-grandchildren,<br />

Roby Carney Rubano and Mason<br />

McCarthy; and by many<br />

special nieces and nephews;<br />

and her dear and best friend,<br />

Conrad Correnti of Salem, with<br />

whom she shared many wonderful<br />

years together. She was predeceased<br />

by her sister, Roberta<br />

Efenecy.<br />

Service information: Visiting<br />

hours will be held on Wednesday<br />

from 4-7 p.m. at the CON-<br />

WAY, CAHILL-BRODEUR Funeral<br />

Home, 82 Lynn St., Peabody,<br />

and her funeral service will<br />

be on Thursday at 11 a.m. at<br />

the funeral home to which relatives<br />

and friends are kindly<br />

invited to attend. Burial will<br />

be in St. Mary’s Cemetery, Salem.<br />

Barbara volunteered for<br />

many years for the North Shore<br />

Cancer Walk so if desired, expressions<br />

of sympathy can be<br />

made in her name to the North<br />

Shore Cancer Walk c/o Development<br />

Office, 81 Highland<br />

Ave., Salem, MA 01970. For<br />

directions and online obituary,<br />

visit www.ccbfuneral.com.<br />

Catering<br />

Available<br />

373 Lowell St., Peabody • Tel. 531-3366 • Fax 531-3060<br />

LUNCH M-F 11:30-3PM • Take Out Always Available by Phone, Fax or our Website<br />

SUN-THURS 11:30-10 PM • FRI-SAT 11:30-11PM<br />

www.SuChangsPeabody.com<br />

SKATING CENTER<br />

Located adjacent to Honey Baked Ham in<br />

Saugus Plaza, South Bound Route 1.<br />

MBTA Bus Route 429<br />

781-231-1111<br />

Free Wi-Fi<br />

2 wide screen TVs<br />

Fully Air Conditioned<br />

Fu nctions<br />

From 2-200<br />

SU CHANG’S<br />

Come Relax & Enjoy<br />

Authentic Chinese Cuisine<br />

Remember, take-out is always available for your special function or barbecue<br />

Music Every W ednesday from 6:30 -8:30 pm<br />

SUMMER SCHEDULE<br />

BEGINS SUNDAY JUNE 30TH<br />

Sunday 12 — 6pm.......................$7.50<br />

Tuesday 7:30 —10:30pm..............$8.50<br />

(adults 18years and older)<br />

Thursday 12 — 4pm.....................$7.50<br />

Friday 11am —11pm........$7.50/$8.50<br />

Saturday 12 —11pm.........$7.50/$8.50<br />

Looking for past issues?<br />

Find them on weeklynews.net<br />

• Skates included in price/ Blades $3.00<br />

• Bowling Alleys • 2 Snack Bars• Video Games<br />

• Ice Cream Shop • 2 Skating Floors<br />

• Group Rates (call ahead) • Private Parties Everyday<br />

WWW.ROLLER-WORLD.COM


6<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JULY 11, 2019<br />

Seniors<br />

Fun on the 4th<br />

PETER A.<br />

TORIGIAN CENTER<br />

Activities<br />

Thursday, July 11<br />

8:30 a.m. Quilting. 9<br />

a.m. Walking group, watch<br />

batteries. 9:15 a.m. Whist.<br />

9:30 a.m. Fall risk evaluation,<br />

walk-in blood pressure,<br />

Big Band dancing,<br />

advanced painting. 12:15<br />

p.m. Movie club. 12:30<br />

p.m. Bocce, Bridge. 1 p.m.<br />

Sing-along.<br />

*****<br />

Friday, July 12<br />

8 a.m. Beginner painting,<br />

TOPS weigh in. 9 a.m.<br />

Aerobics, TOPS meeting.<br />

9:30 a.m. Exercise your<br />

brain. 11:15 a.m. Chair<br />

yoga. Noon Open art<br />

studio. 12:30 p.m. Bingo.<br />

1 p.m. Pingpong.<br />

*****<br />

Monday, July 15<br />

9 a.m. Aerobics, duplicate<br />

Bridge, state Sen.<br />

Joan Lovely office hour.<br />

9:30 a.m. Tambourine<br />

team. 10 a.m. Drill team.<br />

11:15 a.m. Zumba. 12:30<br />

p.m. Bridge, model ship<br />

building, Bingo.<br />

*****<br />

Tuesday, July 16<br />

9 a.m. Walking group,<br />

hug-a-bears. 9:15 a.m.<br />

Whist. 9:30 a.m. Peabody<br />

Reacts, exercise with<br />

Edye, Bunka workshop.<br />

10:30 a.m. Line dancing.<br />

Noon Mah Jongg. 12:30<br />

p.m. Crocheting/knitting,<br />

party set up.<br />

*****<br />

Wednesday, July 17<br />

9 a.m. Sewing/repair,<br />

aerobics, rug hooking,<br />

wood carving. 9:30<br />

a.m. Disabled American<br />

Veterans meeting. 10:15<br />

a.m. Zumba. 12:30 p.m.<br />

Model ship building. 2<br />

p.m. Homeless providers<br />

meeting.<br />

Sun brought the crowd to the Ward 2 celebration.<br />

Hanging out at the<br />

photo booth display<br />

at the Peabody Ward<br />

2 July 4th celebration<br />

are (l-r) Aubrey<br />

Stokes 7, Landon<br />

Perrault 2, and<br />

Kristen Bovio.<br />

PHOTOS | JOEBROWNPHOTOS.COM<br />

“I couldn’t put my mother<br />

in a nursing home. Thanks<br />

to AFCNS, I receive monthly<br />

financial support and<br />

a helpful team so<br />

I can care for her<br />

at home.”<br />

Nhung, Caregiver<br />

to mother,<br />

Chinh<br />

Nnaeneka<br />

Ezeadichie<br />

squeezes just a<br />

little too hard<br />

while trying to<br />

catch his egg,<br />

during the Ward<br />

2 egg toss.<br />

978-281-2612<br />

AdultFosterCareNS.com<br />

Celebrating 18 Years<br />

The shirt may say “Like A Boss,”<br />

but 8-year-old Steven Brandenburg,<br />

couldn’t hold on to his egg during the<br />

Ward 2 egg toss!<br />

TOTAL RECALL<br />

In July 2018, the FDA issued a recall alert for certain blood<br />

pressure and heart failure drugs, including angiotensin II receptor<br />

blockers that contained the active ingredients valsartan, losartan,<br />

and irbesartan, which were found to be contaminated with probable<br />

carcinogens. (Branded versions were not affected.) While the<br />

amounts of probable carcinogens were higher than the FDA<br />

deemed acceptable, a patient would have to take the largest dose<br />

possible for four years to realize a minimal cancer risk. Even then,<br />

not all the batches of the medication were affected. However,<br />

patients taking prescription medications regularly should be aware<br />

when medications are recalled over possible safety issues. The<br />

pharmacist may be the most immediate and authoritative source of<br />

this information.<br />

A medication recall is the most effective way to protect people<br />

from a defective or potentially harmful product. Safely disposing of<br />

your recalled medication will reduce the chances of you or others<br />

accidentally taking it, and prevent the drug from contaminating the<br />

environment. For more information, please call VILLAGE<br />

PHARMACY at 781-334-3133. There’s nothing more important to<br />

us than your family’s well-being. Our pharmacists take the time to<br />

counsel you and answer your questions.<br />

HINT: When the pharmacist asks you if you have any questions<br />

regarding the medication you are about to receive, view it as an<br />

invaluable opportunity to make yourself a more informed patient.<br />

Colonial Shopping Center • 590 Main St. Lynnfield, MA 01940 • 781-334-3133<br />

McGruff the Crime Dog joined the fun with Peabody Police Sergent Jim Harkins (left)<br />

and officer Michael Donovan.


JULY 11, 2019<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 7<br />

Religious Notes<br />

All Saints Episcopal Church<br />

of the North Shore<br />

46 Cherry St, Danvers<br />

978-774-1150, allsaintseposcopalnorthshore.org<br />

All Saints Episcopal Church<br />

of the North Shore, formerly<br />

St. Paul’s in Peabody and<br />

Calvary in Danvers, now worship<br />

together in Danvers, across<br />

from the Danvers Town Hall.<br />

Service of Holy Communion<br />

and Homily every Sunday at 8<br />

a.m. and 10 a.m. Summers one<br />

service at 9 a.m. You’ll be welcome<br />

here.<br />

Carmelite Chapel<br />

Northshore Mall, Peabody<br />

978-531-6145<br />

Mass schedule: Monday-<br />

Friday, 8:30 a.m., noon and 3<br />

p.m.; Saturday, 8:30 a.m. and<br />

noon; Sunday Vigil, 4 and 5:30<br />

p.m. Confessions: Monday-<br />

Friday, 11:30 a.m.-noon and<br />

2:30-3 p.m., Saturday, 10:45-<br />

11:45 a.m. and 2:45-3:45 p.m. or<br />

by appointment.<br />

Chabad of Peabody<br />

682 Lowell St., Peabody<br />

978-977-9111, jewishpeabody.com<br />

Chabad of Peabody holds<br />

services weekly. Call or email<br />

Rabbi Schusterman at rabbi@<br />

jewishpeabody.com. For event<br />

times and dates visit the website.<br />

Chabad runs a Hebrew School<br />

for children on Wednesday, and<br />

has an informal weekly drop-in<br />

class on Kabbalah and other<br />

holiday events. Hebrew School<br />

registration is now open. Call<br />

Raizel at the number above or<br />

email her at raizel@jewishpeabody.com.<br />

Community Covenant<br />

Church<br />

33 Lake St., West Peabody<br />

978-535-5321, Rev. Joel<br />

Anderle communitycovenant<br />

life.org.<br />

Community Covenant is a<br />

warm and inviting church in the<br />

Evangelical, Protestant tradition.<br />

All are welcome.<br />

The Reverend Joel Anderle,<br />

our Senior Pastor, officiates<br />

worship services every Sunday<br />

at 11 a.m. Sunday School classes<br />

for all ages are held from 9:45-<br />

10:45 a.m. September through<br />

June.<br />

For more information please<br />

contact the church office. Our<br />

Church is handicap accessible.<br />

Congregation Sons of Israel<br />

Corner of Park and Spring<br />

streets, Peabody<br />

978-532-1624, peabodyshul.<br />

org<br />

Also on Facebook<br />

First Friday of the month<br />

services begin at 7:30 followed<br />

by an oneg. Weekly Saturday<br />

Sabbath services begin at 9 a.m.<br />

followed by a kiddish. Weekly<br />

Sunday morning services begin<br />

at 9 a.m. followed by a kiddish.<br />

Congregation Tifereth<br />

Israel<br />

8 Pierpont St., Peabody.<br />

Services once a month. For<br />

further information contact<br />

president Elliot Hershoff at<br />

978-531-7309.<br />

First United Methodist<br />

24 Washington St., Peabody<br />

978-531-0095, Pastor Seok-<br />

Cheol Shin<br />

Bible-centered praise and<br />

worship service, Sunday at 10:30<br />

a.m. with Holy Communion<br />

every Sunday. All are welcome.<br />

Pastor hours: Mon., Tues. and<br />

Thurs., 1 p.m.-5 p.m. There is<br />

a nursery room. The church is<br />

handicap accessible.<br />

Additional information:<br />

info@ctipeabody.org or<br />

978-531-8135.<br />

New Destiny Christian<br />

Spring Hill Suites, Peabody<br />

978-373-4340<br />

Pastors are David and Mary<br />

Jane Wing. A full Gospel/<br />

Prophetic church. Sunday service<br />

at 9:30 a.m.<br />

North Shore Baptist<br />

706 Lowell St., Peabody<br />

978-535-6186<br />

Sunday: Adult Sunday School<br />

begins at 9 a.m., followed by refreshments<br />

and fellowship time.<br />

Worship Service begins at 10:30<br />

a.m. All are welcome. Monday:<br />

Men’s Group Study at 7 p.m.,<br />

Thursday: Prayer Meeting, 7<br />

p.m.<br />

Visit our website for more<br />

information or to leave a prayer<br />

request.<br />

NorthShoreBaptistChurch.org<br />

Our Lady of Fatima<br />

50 Walsh Ave., Peabody<br />

978-532-0272<br />

Fr. Christopher Gomes, choir<br />

director: Noreen Galopim; organist:<br />

Audrey Sullivan. Office<br />

hours: Monday to Friday, 1-5<br />

p.m. Mass schedule: Monday-<br />

Thursday, 9 a.m. (Portuguese);<br />

Friday at 6 p.m. (Portuguese);<br />

Saturday at 9 a.m. (Portuguese)<br />

(and Vigil at 5 p.m. English);<br />

Sunday 9 a.m. (English); 11:30<br />

a.m. (Portuguese); 6 p.m.<br />

(Portuguese). Confessions:<br />

Saturday, 4-4:45 p.m.;<br />

Baptisms, 2nd and 4th Sundays.<br />

Exposition of the Blessed<br />

Sacrament, every Friday, 5-6<br />

p.m. Religious Education<br />

Classes for Grades 1-6 at 8 a.m.<br />

and Grades 7-10 at 10 a.m. on<br />

Sundays.<br />

St. Adelaide<br />

708 Lowell St., Peabody<br />

978-535-1985<br />

Team Ministry: Rev.<br />

Raymond Van De Moortell, and<br />

Rev. David C. Lewis. Weekend<br />

Mass Schedule: Saturday, 4<br />

p.m., Sunday, 8:30, 10 and 11:30<br />

a.m. Holy Day Masses: 9 a.m.<br />

and 7 p.m.; Latin Mass: 1 p.m.<br />

Sunday. Confessions: Saturday,<br />

3-3:30 p.m.; Baptisms: first<br />

Sunday of the month at 2:30<br />

p.m.; Exposition of the Blessed<br />

Sacrament: first Friday of the<br />

month, 9:30 a.m.-noon and<br />

Wednesdays from 5:30-6:30<br />

p.m. AA Meetings: Thursdays,<br />

7 p.m. Religious Education<br />

classes (grades 1-10) are held in<br />

the church hall on Sunday and<br />

Thursday.<br />

St. Ann’s Parish<br />

136 Lynn St., Peabody<br />

978-531-1480<br />

Rev. Charles Stanley; Richard<br />

W. Cordeau, Deacon 978-531-<br />

1480; M. Ellen Fitzgerald,<br />

Pastoral Associate 978-531-<br />

9625. Office of Religious<br />

Education: 140 Lynn St., M.<br />

Ellen Fitzgerald, Religious<br />

Education Dir., 978-531-5791;<br />

Leanne Amirault, Preschool<br />

Dir., 978-532-3329 or 978-531-<br />

9521. Daily Mass: Saturday at<br />

4 p.m. and Sunday at 8:30 and<br />

10:30 a.m. Daily Mass: 9 a.m.<br />

St. Clare of Assisi Catholic<br />

Community (non-Roman)<br />

32 Ellsworth Road,<br />

Peabody<br />

Rev. Mike Otero-Otero,<br />

O.S.F.<br />

Located at and with courtesy<br />

by St. John Evangelical<br />

Lutheran Church<br />

Saturday Vigil Mass at 3 p.m.<br />

We offer valid seven sacraments<br />

- Baptism, Confirmation,<br />

Holy Communion, Confession,<br />

Marriage, Holy Orders, and the<br />

Anointing of the Sick. Please<br />

call 978-804-2250.<br />

St. John Lutheran<br />

Ellsworth Rd. at King St.,<br />

Peabody<br />

978-531-1731, stjohnpeabody.org<br />

The Rev. Charles N.<br />

Stevenson, pastor. St. John is<br />

a member of the Evangelical<br />

Lutheran Church in America<br />

and Lutheran Congregations in<br />

Mission for Christ. Sunday worship<br />

at 9:30 a.m. with nursery<br />

care provided and coffee and<br />

fellowship following; Sunday<br />

School at 11 a.m.; Bible Study,<br />

Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. Holy<br />

Communion is celebrated the<br />

first and third Sunday of each<br />

month and on certain festivals.<br />

St. John the Baptist<br />

17 Chestnut St., Peabody<br />

(978) 531-0002 http://stjohnspeabody.org<br />

Pastor: Very Rev. John E.<br />

MacInnis, VF; Parochial<br />

Vicars: Rev. Kevin Leaver,<br />

and Rev.<br />

Paul G.M. McManus;<br />

Deacons: Leo A. Martin, and<br />

Chuck Hall;<br />

Winter Mass Schedule:<br />

Monday-Saturday, 6:45 a.m. and<br />

Saturday at 4 p.m, Sunday at 8,<br />

10 and 11:30 am. in Spanish, and<br />

5 p.m.<br />

Other Seasons’ Schedule for<br />

Saturday 4 p.m. Mass and<br />

Sunday 8 a.m. Mass. see:<br />

http://stjohnspeabodynews.org/<br />

Shared Mass Schedule/<br />

Food Pantry on the last<br />

Sunday of the month from 9 a.m.<br />

to 1 p.m. in the Pastoral Center<br />

basement.<br />

Thrift Shop Thursday 9 a.m.<br />

- Noon<br />

Fridays & Saturdays 9 a.m. -1<br />

p.m.<br />

St. John, the Baptist School is<br />

now accepting applications.<br />

Programs available for 2, 3, 4<br />

and 5-year-olds and grades 1-8.<br />

Extended day available for<br />

all Students. Visit: http://www.<br />

stjohns-peabody.com/<br />

Tel. No. (978) 531-0444, ext.<br />

340<br />

St. Thomas the Apostle<br />

3 Margin St., Peabody<br />

978-531-0224, Office Hours:<br />

M-F 9 a.m.-12 p.m. Fax: 978-<br />

531-6517. Pastor: Very Rev.<br />

John MacInnis, VF. Parochial<br />

Vicar: Rev. Steven Clemence.<br />

Pastoral Associate/Coordinator<br />

of Youth Ministry: Dawn<br />

Alves. Coordinator of Religious<br />

Education: Lisa Trainor.<br />

Director of Music Ministry: Dr.<br />

Holly Zagaria. Website: www.<br />

stthomaspeabody.org. Winter<br />

Mass Schedule: Saturday 4<br />

p.m. (English) ~ Sunday 10 a.m<br />

. in English, and 11:30 a.m.,<br />

Brazilian.<br />

Thrift Shop: Saturdays 9<br />

a.m.-2 p.m.<br />

Join Us.<br />

St. Vasilios Greek Orthodox<br />

Church<br />

5 Paleologos St., Peabody<br />

978-531-0777, stvasilios.org<br />

Pastor: Rev. Christopher<br />

Foustoukos; Pastor Emeritus:<br />

Andrew Demotses; Pastoral<br />

Assistant: Deacon Robert Fadel;<br />

Worship schedule: Sunday -<br />

Matins at 8 a.m., Divine Liturgy<br />

at 9 a.m., Church School at<br />

10:30 - 11:30 a.m.; Weekly feast<br />

days as announced: Matins at 8<br />

a.m., Divine Liturgy at 9 a.m.<br />

Second Congregational<br />

12 Maple St., Peabody<br />

978-210-4976, Rev. Alison<br />

Gerber<br />

Worship services at 10:30<br />

a.m. each Sunday. The church is<br />

wheelchair accessible. Childcare<br />

is available during worship service<br />

for children through age<br />

five. Children’s Church during<br />

service, ages 6-12. Sunday<br />

School, ages two through adult<br />

from 9:15-10:15 a.m. For Bible<br />

study and Book Group schedules,<br />

call the office.<br />

South Congregational<br />

60 Prospect St., Peabody<br />

978-531-1964, southchurch.<br />

net<br />

Sr. Pastor: Grant Hoofnagle.<br />

Sunday service is at 10 a.m.<br />

Communion service is the<br />

first Sunday of each month.<br />

Children pre-K through 12th<br />

grade programs during the<br />

worship service. Our Sunday<br />

worship service blends both traditional<br />

hymns and contemporary<br />

praise. Teen Youth Groups<br />

meet on Sunday evenings at the<br />

church. Several small groups<br />

for Bible Study meeting weekly<br />

– if interested in attending one,<br />

call church office for info.<br />

Monthly Fellowship Dinner is<br />

the 2nd Sunday of each month at<br />

6 p.m. in fellowship hall - Prayer<br />

Meeting follows at 7 p.m. All are<br />

welcome.<br />

Sovereign Grace<br />

Community Church<br />

6 Bourbon St., Peabody<br />

978-210-7413<br />

sovG.us, info@sovG.us<br />

We are a family-friendly<br />

church offering a contemporary<br />

Sunday Morning Worship<br />

Service at 10 a.m. Sunday<br />

School is offered during worship<br />

for kids through 5th grade.<br />

There is a full staffed nursery.<br />

For students in 7th-12th grades,<br />

our Youth Group meets Sunday<br />

evenings from 7-9 p.m. Email<br />

Youth Director Will Coley at<br />

will@sovG.us for information<br />

about Youth Group.<br />

Michael Williams, Lead<br />

Pastor. Visit: facebook.com/michaelwillyamz.<br />

Helping people<br />

connect with God, each other<br />

and the needs in our community.<br />

Temple Tiferet Shalom<br />

489 Lowell St., Peabody<br />

978-535-2100, templetiferetshalom.org<br />

The Temple Shabbat Services<br />

are Fridays at 7:30 p.m. The<br />

Temple offers Preschool,<br />

Religious School, Bar and<br />

Bat Mitzvah instruction,<br />

Confirmation classes, Chai Club<br />

and youth groups. Social action<br />

and adult education programs<br />

are an integral component of the<br />

temple.<br />

Temple Ner Tamid<br />

368 Lowell St. Peabody, MA<br />

978-535-2100<br />

office@templenertamid.org<br />

www.templenertamid.org<br />

www.tamidschool.com<br />

Conservative Temple on<br />

the North Shore. Service<br />

schedule: Monday – Thursday<br />

evening minyan service-<br />

7:30 p.m., Friday Evening<br />

– 8 p.m., Saturday morning<br />

Shabbat Service – 9 a.m.,<br />

Sunday morning service – 9<br />

a.m. TNT offers a Religious<br />

School, Israeli Dance Group<br />

– Tuesdays – 8 p.m., Adult<br />

Education, Sisterhood, Men’s<br />

Club & Social Action Group.<br />

Our staff includes Rabbi/Cantor<br />

Richard Perlman, Associate<br />

Rabbi Bernard Horowitz,<br />

President, Adele Lubarsky.<br />

Synagogue Administrator, Beth<br />

K. Hoffman, Religious School<br />

Director, Susan Sugerman.<br />

Prayer to the Blessed Virgin<br />

(never known to fail)<br />

vine, splendor of Heaven, Blessed Mother of the Son<br />

of God, Immaculate Virgin, assist me in my<br />

necessity. O Star of the sea, help me and show me<br />

where you are my Mother. O Holy Mary, Mother of<br />

God, Queen of Heaven and Earth, I humbly beseech<br />

you from the bottom of my heart to succor me in my<br />

necessity (make request). There are none that can<br />

withstand your power. O Mary, conceived without<br />

sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee (three<br />

times). Holy Mary, I place this cause in your hands<br />

(three times). Say this prayer for 3 consecutive days<br />

and then you must publish and it will be granted to<br />

you. Thank you.<br />

P.F.


8<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JULY 11, 2019<br />

‘Where In the World’at<br />

the YMCA this fall<br />

If you could eat dinner anywhere<br />

in the world, where<br />

would you go?<br />

The YMCA of Metro North<br />

serving Peabody, Lynnfield<br />

and other communities is excited<br />

to announce their annual<br />

“Where in the World” celebration<br />

to be held on Saturday,<br />

Sept. 28 at the Torigian Family<br />

YMCA in Peabody.<br />

This event is the Y’s premier<br />

fundraiser of the year,<br />

with all of the money raised<br />

benefiting their youth development<br />

programs.<br />

The Y’s gymnasium will be<br />

transformed into an elegant<br />

travel-inspired event space,<br />

where guests will enjoy bidding<br />

on live and silent auction<br />

items while savoring international<br />

cuisines from local<br />

restaurants.<br />

The evening will conclude<br />

with a raffle drawing to determine<br />

the winner of the grand<br />

prize of dinner for two anywhere<br />

in the world.<br />

Honorary chairs Dave and<br />

Cathy Gravel, of the Peabodybased<br />

company.<br />

GraVoc Associates, are<br />

thrilled to collaborate with<br />

the Y for the third year in a<br />

row to make this fundraiser a<br />

success. GraVoc’s Platinum<br />

Sponsorship of the event allows<br />

the Y to once again offer<br />

the grand prize trip to one<br />

lucky raffle winner.<br />

Raffle tickets are included<br />

with the purchase of an event<br />

ticket, and are also available at<br />

www.metronorthymcaraffle.<br />

org.<br />

The winner does not need<br />

to be present at the event.<br />

Lydia Todd, the winner of the<br />

2017 raffle, enjoyed dinner<br />

in Australia last summer, and<br />

last year’s winner is headed to<br />

Ireland later this month.<br />

“We are proud of the fact<br />

that the Y never turns anyone<br />

away for inability to pay,” says<br />

Kathleen Walsh, President and<br />

CEO of the YMCA of Metro<br />

North. “In fact, we provided<br />

more than $1 million in scholarships<br />

last year, and we’re<br />

able to do that because of the<br />

money we raise at events like<br />

this.”<br />

The Y’s ACCESS scholarship<br />

program allow hundreds<br />

of families in the service<br />

area to be able to enroll their<br />

children in life-saving swim<br />

lessons, summer camps, and<br />

quality preschool and after<br />

school care at Y Academy.<br />

Event tickets are $100 each<br />

or $150 for a pair, and are<br />

available at http://www.bit.ly/<br />

WITW_2019.<br />

Guests who purchase a ticket<br />

before August 1 are invited to<br />

a special “pre-boarding” complimentary<br />

cocktail hour.<br />

Sponsorship opportunities<br />

are still available and the Y<br />

is also accepting donations<br />

of auction items, please contact<br />

Julie Gerraughty at jgerraughty@metronorthymca.org<br />

or visit www.ymcametronorth.<br />

org for more information.<br />

The YMCA of Metro North<br />

formed in 2012 when the<br />

Greater Lynn YMCA merged<br />

with the Melrose Family<br />

YMCA, and serves the communities<br />

of Lynn, Lynnfield,<br />

Melrose, Nahant, Peabody,<br />

Saugus, Stoneham, and<br />

Revere.<br />

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JULY 11, 2019<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 9<br />

Sports<br />

Softball summer in Peabody<br />

Major all-stars playing for state title<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

PEABODY — For a second-straight<br />

year, the Peabody<br />

12-year-old Little League softball<br />

all-stars will be playing for a state<br />

championship.<br />

The Tanners rolled to a 10- 0<br />

mercy-rule win over Woburn<br />

Sunday at Lt. Ross Park to capture<br />

the Section 2 championship.<br />

The Tanners now advance to<br />

the state tournament July 14-15 at<br />

Gonsalves Field in Woburn where<br />

they will play Section 1 champion<br />

Joe Schwartz. The best-of-three<br />

series starts with a doubleheader<br />

Sunday with an “if necessary”<br />

game Monday (TBD).<br />

Avery Grieco (5 strikeouts,<br />

2 walks) dazzled in the circle,<br />

tossing a no-hitter.<br />

Lizzie Bettencourt shined at<br />

the plate, going 3-for-3 with three<br />

RBI and three stolen bases. Pinchhitter<br />

Jaelyn Emerson (2-for-2)<br />

and Logan Lomasney (2-for-3)<br />

each had a double and two RBI.<br />

“Avery did what Avery does,<br />

and that’s throw strikes and make<br />

them hit her,” said Peabody manager<br />

Mark Bettencourt. “The<br />

couple of times she walked<br />

people or made an error, she was<br />

able to work around that.”<br />

The home-town Tanners used a<br />

combination of small ball and aggressive<br />

baserunning to jump out<br />

to a 2-0 lead in the first.<br />

Lomasney and Kiely Doolin<br />

led off with back-to-back singles.<br />

Both scored on Lizzie<br />

Bettencourt’s single.<br />

The Tanners proceeded to put<br />

the game out of reach with a ºseven-run<br />

third.<br />

Doolin reached on an error,<br />

stole second and scored on<br />

Bettencourt’s single. Bettencourt<br />

stole second and scored on<br />

Emerson’s single through the<br />

right side to make it 4-0. Christina<br />

Izaguirre walked, then Ava DiVola<br />

reached on an error. Jessica Steed<br />

singled both runners home.<br />

Lomasney capped the inning with<br />

a 2-run double, scoring Alanna<br />

Sweeney (fielder’s choice) and<br />

Steed to make it 9-0.<br />

Bettencourt led off the fourth<br />

with her third base hit. She stole<br />

second and scored on a clutch<br />

double by Emerson.<br />

“They (Woburn) helped us a<br />

little bit as they didn’t play the<br />

best defense in the world, but<br />

good teams take advantage of<br />

that,” said Mark Bettencourt.<br />

Peabody 4, Woburn 1<br />

The Tanners trailed for the first<br />

time in the postseason, but found<br />

a way to scratch out a win at home<br />

in game one July 2.<br />

Woburn (0-1) led 1-0 lead after<br />

one, and threatened to break the<br />

game open in the second when<br />

it loaded the bases with no outs,<br />

could not push a run across the<br />

plate.<br />

“I gave Avery the game ball as<br />

that was a huge part of this game,”<br />

Bettencourt said. “She could have<br />

folded, she could have given in<br />

and walked a couple of hitters<br />

or given up some hits, but (she<br />

didn’t). Woburn is the best we<br />

played all year, but we went out<br />

and played at a high level.”<br />

Peabody got on the board in<br />

the third. Sweeney led off with a<br />

walk, stole second, advanced to<br />

third on Lomasney’s infield hit<br />

and scored on Doolin’s ground<br />

out to second.<br />

In the fourth, Peabody took the<br />

lead for good. Bettencourt ripped<br />

a leadoff single to left, then stole<br />

PHOTOS | ANNE MARIE TOBIN<br />

Logan Lomasney slides safely into third base during Sunday’s<br />

victory over Woburn.<br />

second and third and scored after<br />

an errant throw to third by the<br />

catcher on the steal attempt.<br />

Sweeney led off the fifth with<br />

a single, stole second and third<br />

and scored on Lomasney’s single.<br />

Lomasney stole second and third<br />

and scored on Doolin’s sacrifice<br />

fly.<br />

In the sixth, Peabody survived a<br />

couple of errors that gave Woburn<br />

runners at first and second. But<br />

Grieco’s sixth strikeout of the<br />

game sealed the win for Peabody.<br />

“We slipped a little there in the<br />

sixth, but we talk all the time about<br />

the need to clear it, shake it and<br />

move on,” said Mark Bettencourt.<br />

“Just get the next one and focus<br />

on the next play not the last one.”<br />

Juniors pushed to the limit, but win sectional championship<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

WAKEFIELD — They were pushed to<br />

the limit, but the Peabody Tanners Little<br />

League softball junior all-stars somehow<br />

found a way to win.<br />

Down by three, the Tanners scored<br />

five runs in the last two innings to clinch<br />

the Section 2 tournament, defeating host<br />

Wakefield 6-4 at Mapleway Park July<br />

3. With the win, the Tanners punched<br />

their ticket to the state tournament at<br />

Woburn’s Gonsalves Park July 13-14.<br />

Peabody will take on Section 1 champion<br />

Jesse Burkett in a doubleheader<br />

July 13 (10, 3) with an “if” game scheduled<br />

for July 14 (TBD).<br />

Peabody had not trailed in the postseason.<br />

But with only two hits, the<br />

Tanners, who won game one at home in<br />

a 13-1 laugher, looked to be in trouble,<br />

trailing 4-1 after five.<br />

Peabody coach Mark Bettencourt was<br />

not worried.<br />

“The confidence for us was we knew<br />

we were not going to score just one run<br />

because there just aren’t too many people<br />

who can hold us to just one run,” he said.<br />

“Their pitcher was good. She threw hard<br />

and threw strikes. But we felt confident<br />

that she was not going to get through our<br />

lineup three times.”<br />

Peabody grabbed a 1-0 lead in the top<br />

of the first. Pitcher Abby Bettencourt led<br />

off with a single, stole second and third<br />

and scored on sister Isabel’s single.<br />

Wakefield answered back with solo<br />

runs in the second and third to take a 2-1<br />

PHOTO | ANNE MARIE TOBIN<br />

Payton Petrillo slides into second base during the all-star game against<br />

Wakefield.<br />

lead. In the fourth, Wakefield had two<br />

runs in and a runner at first with no outs.<br />

Catcher Isabel Bettencourt threw out the<br />

base runner at second on a steal attempt,<br />

then starter Abby Bettencourt buckled<br />

down and got the last two outs on routine<br />

ground balls to end the threat.<br />

With one out in the fifth, Peabody had<br />

the bases loaded but Abby Bettencourt<br />

(2-for-4) was cut down at the plate on a<br />

fielder’s choice.<br />

Down to its last out of the inning, the<br />

Tanners’ bottom of the order was the<br />

game-changer.<br />

Penelope Spack (1-for-2) re-entered<br />

and ripped a single to left to plate Emma<br />

Bloom (2-for-4) and make it a 4-2 game.<br />

Jaeilala Aupont (2-for-2), who had singled<br />

in her first at bat, also re-entered and<br />

kept the rally going with an RBI single to<br />

third, scoring Isabel Bettencourt. Payton<br />

Petrillo (1-for-1, walk) followed with a<br />

huge RBI double to right, plating Stack<br />

to make it 4-4.<br />

“In tourneys like this, you have that<br />

person who comes out of nowhere and<br />

makes a play or gets a hit or makes a catch<br />

or does something,” said Bettencourt.<br />

“Today, we had several girls who did<br />

just that. We had contributions up and<br />

down the order and that’s what you need<br />

to win.”<br />

After Abby Bettencourt (2 earned<br />

runs, 6 hits, 3 strikeouts, walk) retired<br />

the side in order in the bottom of the<br />

sixth, Peabody scored the game-tying<br />

and -winning runs in the seventh.<br />

Bettencourt led off with a single, stole<br />

second and scored when Bloom’s fly ball<br />

to right was dropped. Isabel Bettencourt<br />

(2-for-4) plated Bloom with a single<br />

to right, but ended the inning trying to<br />

stretch the single into a double.<br />

Peabody survived a scare in the bottom<br />

of the seventh. Wakefield had a runner<br />

at second with no outs after a Peabody<br />

error. Shortstop Bloom, second baseman<br />

Hailey Roach and Aupont sealed the win<br />

with putouts, the most challenging being<br />

Aupont’s on a sinking line drive to right.<br />

“Gigi making that catch was a pressure<br />

fly ball with the game on the line and it<br />

was good that she was able to handle that<br />

in a pressure situation,” Bettenourt said.<br />

“Wakefield hit the ball and put the<br />

ball in play. Some plays we should have<br />

made and some plays they had to make,<br />

so it went back and forth. We just made<br />

one more than they did.”


10<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JULY 11, 2019<br />

Bountiful week for major league stars<br />

By Daniel Kane<br />

and Anne Marie Tobin<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

LYNN — The Peabody West<br />

10-year-old all-stars captured<br />

the District 16 championship<br />

Friday night with an exciting<br />

come-from-behind 6-4 win over<br />

Winthrop at Volunteer Field.<br />

Trailing 4-0 through two, West<br />

had only two hits.<br />

But the Peabody bats got going<br />

in a big way, scoring six runs in<br />

the next two innings to take a 6-4<br />

lead.<br />

Peabody starter Jimmy<br />

DiCarlo, aided by his infield,<br />

took it from there, retiring the<br />

side in order on just three pitches<br />

in the fifth. He sweated out the<br />

sixth when a Peabody error with<br />

two outs brought the game-tying<br />

run to the plate. Second baseman<br />

Cullen Pasterick (2-for-2)<br />

slammed the door shut, getting<br />

the final out on a ground ball to<br />

2 Large<br />

Cheese Pizzas<br />

$14.99<br />

punch West’s ticket to the Section<br />

4 tournament, which begins July<br />

15 in Billerica (TBD).<br />

“In the bottom of the fifth,<br />

when he (Pasterick) threw only<br />

three pitches, that gave him the<br />

bottom of the sixth,” said manager<br />

Mark Bettencourt. “He was<br />

at 74 going into that last batter<br />

so he was able to pitch and get<br />

a complete game. Three outs<br />

on three pitches? You don’t see<br />

that often at any level. He threw<br />

strikes and the kids made the<br />

plays behind him.”<br />

Peabody’s struggles began<br />

right away in the first when it fell<br />

behind, 1-0.<br />

After a sloppy second inning<br />

in which the Vikings added three<br />

unearned runs, Peabody finally<br />

straightened out its act.<br />

With one out, Spenser Parziale<br />

(3-for-3) beat out an infield hit,<br />

took second on an errant throw<br />

PHOTO | ANNE MARIE TOBIN<br />

James Smith takes a lead off third base during a tournament game against Salem.<br />

LYNN — A nine-run sixth inning was the difference<br />

for the Peabody 12-year-old all-stars in a 10-1 win<br />

over Saugus National in the District 16 Little League<br />

Tournament at Wyoma’s Charlie Reinfuss Field Sunday.<br />

Jayce Jeanpierre (2-for-3, 4 RBI, 2 runs) hit two<br />

homes run, both in the sixth inning, to pace Peabody’s<br />

offense. Matt Smith (2-for-4, run) knocked in three runs<br />

while Jariel Tolentino (1-for-3, 2 runs) knocked in two.<br />

“We had a real good day at the plate Saturday (22-1<br />

win),” Peabody manager Justin Powers said. “I don’t<br />

know if we just expected that to carry over. We were<br />

hitting the ball right at guys, weren’t really striking out<br />

a ton. We had good at-bats but they were making plays<br />

and that’s a credit to them.”<br />

James Smith (3 innings, earned run, 6 hits, walk, 5<br />

strikeouts) started for Peabody. Noah Crocker (3 innings,<br />

2 hits, 4 walks and 2 strikeouts) relieved Smith<br />

in the fourth and earned the win.<br />

“James and Noah did a great job,” Powers said. “It’s<br />

just a matter of trying to balance the pitch counts and<br />

making sure people are available if we did have to play<br />

in the losing bracket.”<br />

Matt Smith drove in Peabody’s first run with a single<br />

in the fifth to tie the game, 1-1.<br />

In the sixth, Jeanpierre gave Peabody its first lead with<br />

a leadoff solo blast. Tolentino ripped a 2-run, bases-loaded<br />

single to stretch the lead to 4-1. After Crocker walked to<br />

reload the bases, Smith drilled a two-run single.<br />

James Smith singled, setting the stage for Jeanpierre’s<br />

second homer.. After another run came home on a<br />

passed ball, Peabody was up 10-1.<br />

“That (sixth) was a great inning for us,” Powers said.<br />

“Jayce got us going and then closed it out in the end.<br />

We have a great group over here. They all do a great<br />

job together. We hung in there and just kept grinding<br />

and making plays.”<br />

With the win, Peabody moves on to the District 16<br />

final Thursday (TBD) when it can clinch its second district<br />

title in three years.<br />

Peabody 22, Salem 1<br />

There were plenty of post-holiday fireworks Saturday<br />

at Reinfuss Field as Peabody put on a dazzling display<br />

of offense to cruise to a mercy-rule win in three innings.<br />

Salem cashed in on some Peabody miscues in the<br />

top of the first to take a 1-0 lead. After that, it was all<br />

Peabody, which pounded out 14 hits, 10 of them in<br />

the first inning alone when it batted through the order<br />

twice. Toss in five walks and a couple of Salem errors<br />

and it all added up to 14 runs by the time the inning was<br />

mercifully over.<br />

“That was something. We had eight days off from our<br />

last game, and we showed it a little in the first then<br />

we let a couple of easy plays get away,” said manager<br />

Justin Powers. “Luckily we found our way and then we<br />

got the bats going when it started getting contagious.”<br />

Peabody West 10s capture District 16 flag<br />

PHOTO | ANNE MARIE TOBIN<br />

Jimmy DiCarlo pitched a complete game in Peabody’s victory<br />

over Winthrop.<br />

Joey Smith (2-for-2, 2 runs) got the Peabody party<br />

started with a leadoff triple. He scored on Tolentino’s<br />

grounder to second. Crocker (2-for-3, 2 runs), Matt<br />

Smith (2-for-2, 3 runs) and James Smith (2-for-2, 2<br />

runs) followed with singles to load the bases. Backto-back<br />

walks to Jeanpierre (2-for-2, 3 runs) and Tyler<br />

Santos (2 walks 2 runs) made it a 3-1 game. Salem<br />

stopped the bleeding and got the second out on a force<br />

out at home. But it was only temporary as Peabody<br />

went on to score 11 more runs, the big hits being 2-run<br />

doubles from Zach Hartnett (1-for-2, run), Andrew<br />

McKenna (1-for-2, 2 runs) and James Smith and a big<br />

bases-loaded triple by Jake Powers (1-for-1).<br />

Peabody tacked on eight more in the second to trigger<br />

the mercy rule, the big hits being a leadoff double by<br />

Joey Smith, a 2-run single by Jeanpierre and an RBI<br />

single by Mason Clickstein (1-for-2, 2 runs).<br />

to first and scored on a single by<br />

Aidan Horgan (2-for-3). Mark<br />

Bettencourt (2-for-3) blasted a<br />

double to center field to bring<br />

Horgan home. An errant relay<br />

opened the door for Bettencourt<br />

to race all the way home and cut<br />

Winthrop’s lead to 4-3. Pinchhitter<br />

C.J. Olympio (1-for-2)<br />

lined a triple to left. Two batters<br />

later, another Pinch-hitter<br />

Jackson Taylor (1-for-1) brought<br />

Olympio home with a clutch<br />

single up the middle.<br />

West kept its foot on the gas in<br />

the fifth. DiCarlo (1-for-3) beat<br />

out a bobbled chopper back to the<br />

mound, advanced to second on<br />

Parziale’s single and scored on a<br />

wild pitch to make it 6-4.<br />

“This game we got contributions<br />

from so many different<br />

players and that’s what you<br />

want to see in a team,” manager<br />

Bettencourt said. “Places we<br />

didn’t expect came through with<br />

big hits. Jackson had a huge RBI.<br />

That’s a kid who gets only at bat<br />

a game and he came through. C.J.<br />

had that blast to left, again another<br />

kid who usually gets only<br />

one at bat but he took advantage<br />

of it. Marky, Spense, Cullen all<br />

had big hits. There were so many,<br />

they are hard to count.”<br />

West had been a front-runner<br />

all season long, thanks to a dynamic<br />

offense. Its modus operandi<br />

has been to score early and<br />

often, to the point where West<br />

had not trailed in a single game.<br />

That is, until Friday. Some<br />

well-timed advice before the<br />

bottom of the third from the<br />

Peabody coaching squad turned<br />

things around.<br />

“I knew we were going to come<br />

around to hit,” Bettencourt said.<br />

“I did not want them to lose their<br />

confidence. I felt they had lost their<br />

mojo a bit there so we explained to<br />

them we knew they were going to<br />

score runs because we have averaged<br />

almost 10 a game.<br />

“We said they needed to be<br />

patient and if they believed, they<br />

would get this done.”


JULY 11, 2019<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 11<br />

PHOTOS | ANNE MARIE TOBIN<br />

Above left, Joey Sinibaldi singled and scored West’s third run in the top of the fifth. Right, Jason LaRosa doubles in the second inning.<br />

Peabody West major stars eliminated<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

LYNN — The Peabody West<br />

12-year-old all-star team’s hopes to defend<br />

its District 16 title went up in smoke<br />

Friday night with a 5-3 loss to Saugus<br />

American at Charlie Reinfuss Field.<br />

It all happened in the blink of an eye.<br />

West was on cruise control, leading<br />

3-0 going into the bottom of the fifth.<br />

But Saugus took advantage of four walks<br />

and some clutch hitting to plate five runs,<br />

the last four with two outs. Peabody’s<br />

Dylan Annese walked with one out in the<br />

top of the seventh, but Saugus reliever<br />

Cameron Bernard struck out the final<br />

two batters to seal the win.<br />

“In any game walks will kill you and<br />

they killed us today,” said West manager<br />

Tony LaRosa lamenting the fact that<br />

Peabody issued eight walks. “We did<br />

leave people on base, but I told the kids<br />

‘don’t go out with your head down.’ I<br />

wish the result was different as these are<br />

great kids and great baseball players.”<br />

Peabody grabbed a 1-0 lead in the<br />

first. Fronduto doubled to right with one<br />

out and scored on Alex Jackson’s (1-<br />

for-2) single. Two batters later, Joe Keka<br />

(1-for-3) beat out a slow roller to second<br />

to make it a 2-0 game.<br />

Peabody starter Danati Fronduto (4 innings,<br />

5 strikeouts, 4 walks) walked the<br />

first two Saugus batters in the bottom of<br />

the inning, but struck out the next three<br />

to get out of the jam.<br />

West added a run in the top of the fifth,<br />

but let a huge opportunity slip away. Joey<br />

Sinibaldi (1-for-1) led off with a single,<br />

got to second on Ryan Moreschi’s walk,<br />

then scored on Fronduto’s (2-for-2) RBI<br />

double. Jackson followed with another<br />

walk to load the bases with no outs, but<br />

West’s offense stalled.<br />

“It was a huge opportunity and we<br />

didn’t capitalize,” said LaRosa. “They<br />

came out in the next inning more energized<br />

and that was pretty much it.”<br />

After the shaky start, Fronduto regrouped.<br />

He carried a no-hitter into the<br />

bottom of the fourth inning before Colin<br />

Churches broke it up with a single. He<br />

was erased on a textbook 4-6-3 (Michael<br />

Petromelis to Keka to Dylan Annese)<br />

double play. From the second through<br />

fourth innings, Fronduto allowed only<br />

three baserunners, none of whom got<br />

past first base.<br />

“Danati needed to find his groove<br />

and around the second inning is when<br />

he found it and he did well for us,” said<br />

LaRosa. “He went the whole 85 for<br />

us and at that point we had to make a<br />

pitching change.”<br />

In the bottom of the fifth, Saugus took<br />

advantage of three walks to load the<br />

bases with one out. Gael Garcia lofted<br />

a fly ball to Moreschi in center for the<br />

second. Connor Bloom tagged up at<br />

third and scored.<br />

LaRosa appealed the call that Bloom<br />

scored, arguing unsuccessfully that he<br />

left early and that the inning should be<br />

over.<br />

“We tried to appeal the call,” he said.<br />

“We thought he left early. After that,<br />

Saugus made all those plays. It was a<br />

tough one.”<br />

That was all Saugus needed to seize<br />

the momentum. Noah Giron bombed a<br />

3-run triple to give Saugus its first lead<br />

of the game, 4-3. Bernard ripped a single<br />

up the middle to make it 5-3.<br />

Peabody had only six hits, two of them<br />

coming from No. 9 hitters Sinbaldi and<br />

Jason LaRosa (1-2, double).<br />

“I’ve said this from the beginning, that<br />

when you go through this tournament,<br />

you want to stay in the winners bracket<br />

because once you get in the losers’<br />

bracket, it’s a tough, tough haul,” said<br />

manager LaRosa. “But, it was my pleasure<br />

coaching this team as they have a<br />

lot of skill and talent.”<br />

Above, Danati Fronduto follows through on a pitch. Below, Alex Jackson gets<br />

set to run after connecting.


12<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JULY 11, 2019<br />

Peabody Municipal Light Plant M.D.P.U. # 183<br />

201 Warren Street Extension<br />

Peabody, Massachusetts 01960<br />

PEABODY MUNICIPAL LIGHT PLANT<br />

Public Street Lighting Service<br />

ACROSS<br />

1 Sand formation<br />

5 Toyota products<br />

9 Hive of bees<br />

14 Like -- -- of bricks<br />

15 Grab a cab<br />

16 Waterslide<br />

17 Jet-setter’s need<br />

18 Crow’s-nest cry<br />

19 Yanked up a sock<br />

20 Large glacier<br />

22 Doctrine<br />

24 More flavorful<br />

26 Salad ingredient<br />

29 Internet correspondence<br />

31 Workout exercise (hyph.)<br />

33 Parka extra<br />

36 Bryce Canyon site<br />

38 Tibet’s capital<br />

39 IRS time<br />

40 Carry out<br />

42 Yr. parts<br />

43 Galas<br />

45 18-wheeler<br />

46 As well as<br />

47 Boy Scout units<br />

49 Waterfowl<br />

51 Writer -- Greeley<br />

53 Doubter<br />

57 Coffee order<br />

59 Place for camels<br />

60 Grounds<br />

63 Wealthy, to Pablo<br />

65 Word of assent<br />

66 Farm measure<br />

67 Faculty mem.<br />

68 What banks do<br />

69 Artist’s plaster<br />

70 Me<br />

71 Card with three spots<br />

DOWN<br />

1 Boat crane<br />

2 City near Syracuse<br />

3 Rhinoplasty locales<br />

4 Put into law<br />

5 Hats for mademoiselle<br />

6 Sigh of contentment<br />

7 Rampage through the streets<br />

8 Foxier<br />

9 Put on the agenda<br />

10 Pale<br />

11 Puffin’s kin<br />

12 Rural addr.<br />

13 Sz. option<br />

21 Objective<br />

23 Snooze<br />

25 Ceremonies<br />

27 Fringed item<br />

28 Peanut shells<br />

30 Drew together<br />

32 El --, Texas<br />

33 Tool handle<br />

34 Verdi output<br />

35 Bean or Welles<br />

37 Organic material<br />

40 Starbucks order<br />

41 Annoys (2 wds.)<br />

44 Winter quaffs<br />

46 Paving material<br />

48 Brief time<br />

50 Type of parrot<br />

52 Biases<br />

54 Not as wild<br />

55 Pop singer -- Cara<br />

56 Fudge<br />

58 Pull the trigger<br />

60 Help at the checkout counter<br />

61 Hole in one<br />

62 Almost-grads<br />

64 Blimp title<br />

Designation:<br />

Applicable In<br />

Available To:<br />

Rate (Monthly):<br />

Rate Components:<br />

Installation Charge:<br />

Pole Charge:<br />

Connection Charge:<br />

Relocation Charge:<br />

Change of Fixture:<br />

Prompt Payment<br />

Discount:<br />

LED<br />

City of Peabody<br />

Zoning Board of Appeals<br />

Peabody and South Lynnfield<br />

LEGAL NOTICE<br />

Notice is hereby given that the Board<br />

of Appeals of the City of Peabody will<br />

hold a Public hearing on Monday, July<br />

29, 2019 at 7:00 p.m. at the Wiggin<br />

Auditorium, City Hall, 24 Lowell Street,<br />

Peabody, MA 01960 on the application<br />

of JAM 3, LLC, for a Chapter 40B<br />

Comprehensive Permit Application as<br />

it applies to the premise known as 55<br />

Newburyport Turnpike, Peabody, MA,<br />

Map 078, Lot 016. Petitioner seeks to<br />

subdivide the lot and construct 60<br />

rental units. The property is located in<br />

a DDD Zoning District. The application<br />

and plan are available to the public<br />

and can be viewed at the City Clerk's<br />

Office and Board of Appeals Office,<br />

City Hall in advance and prior to the<br />

Public Hearing.<br />

Board of Appeals<br />

Frances Bisazza-Gallugi, Chairperson<br />

Weekly News: July 11, 18, 2019<br />

The Municipalities of the City of Peabody and the Town of<br />

South Lynnfield for public street lighting, on a standard<br />

4175 hour schedule.<br />

For each lamp, including fixture, maintenance, distribution,<br />

and basic energy charges per month :<br />

LED Lamps Monthly Rate Standard KWH<br />

29 Watt 4.44 11<br />

44 Watt 5.48 16<br />

105 Watt 10.31 37<br />

The fixture costs for the new LED Street Lights were<br />

reduced by the proceeds received through the Massachusetts<br />

DOER LED Street Lighting Accelerator Program of<br />

2016.<br />

A one-time installation fee of $65.00 will be charged for<br />

each fixture.<br />

When extra poles are required specifically for street<br />

lighting, there will be a one-time installation charge of<br />

$195.00 per pole, including up to 150 feet of overhead<br />

secondary wire; and a monthly maintenance charge<br />

of $2.50 per pole. This applies to all poles installed or<br />

replaced after April 1, 1980.<br />

Poles shall remain the property of the PMLP. Monthly pole<br />

charge will terminate when the pole is used by PMLP for<br />

any other purpose.<br />

A one-time fee of $35.00 will be charged for the connection<br />

of an existing fixture.<br />

A one-time relocation fee of $35.00 will be charged<br />

for the relocation of each fixture when the relocation is<br />

requested by the customer.<br />

A one-time fee of $35.00 will be charged for the changing<br />

of each fixture to a different type or wattage fixture<br />

when this change is requested by the customer.<br />

Twenty percent (20%) discount will be allowed on the<br />

above rates, if payment is received within fifteen (15)<br />

days after the bill is rendered. The bill is considered as<br />

being rendered fifteen (15) days prior to the discount<br />

date.<br />

Bills Due:<br />

Bills are due when rendered and are considered to be in<br />

arrears if not completely paid within thirty (30) Days after<br />

the date billed.<br />

Purchased Power and Energy charges shall be adjusted as provided in the<br />

Fuel Cost Adjustment: separately filed rate titled: Purchased Power and Fuel<br />

Cost Adjustment. The Prompt Payment Discount shall not<br />

be applicable to this adjustment.<br />

Service Interruptions: Service hereunder is not intended for seasonal or<br />

periodically interrupted use. If service is temporarily<br />

disconnected at Customer’s request or for the non-payment<br />

of arrears, Customer will be charged disconnection<br />

and reconnection fees as established in the Rules and<br />

Regulations of the Peabody Municipal Light Plant.<br />

General Terms<br />

and Conditions<br />

Effective:<br />

All the Rules and Regulations of the Peabody Municipal<br />

Light Plant shall be applicable to service hereunder.<br />

August 1, 2019 Billing.<br />

Date Issued: June 27, 2019.<br />

FILED BY:<br />

Weekly News: July 11, 2019<br />

Peabody Municipal Lighting Commission<br />

Legal Notice<br />

There will be a Tree Removal Hearing on July 12, 2019 @ 8:30am at the<br />

Recreation, Parks & Forestry Department office located at 50 Farm Avenue,<br />

Peabody, MA, for the removal of a Public Shade Tree(s) at the following<br />

location(s).<br />

Address: 1 Tonika Court As per the petition of ( Susan Wysocki)<br />

Peabody, MA 01960<br />

Per Order of Brian Grant, Tree Warden<br />

Weekly News: July 3, 11, 2019<br />

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YARD SALES<br />

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HUCKLEBERRY ROAD E, Sat, Sun, July<br />

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AUTO AUCTION<br />

Notice is hereby given by Four Star Service Inc. 134 Newbury St. Rear Unit R.U.B.<br />

Peabody, Ma 01960 that on July 26, 2019 at 11a.m., a sale will be conducted for<br />

the following vehicles to satisfy the garage lien, thereon for the storage, towing<br />

charges, care and expenses of notice & sale of said vehicle:<br />

2015 Chevorlet Malibu<br />

VIN: 1G11F5SL7FF267786<br />

Reg: 4LW234 MA<br />

Owner: Maven Dr LLC<br />

745 Atlantic Ave 4th FL<br />

Boston, MA 02111<br />

FIND AN AFFORDABLE<br />

PLACE TO LIVE.<br />

CHECK CLASSIFIED!<br />

2003 Infinity G35<br />

VIN: JNKCV54E63M221065<br />

Reg: N/A<br />

Owner: Richard Pedro<br />

9 Cottage St.<br />

Methuen, MA 01844<br />

2018 Chevorlet Malibu<br />

VIN: 1G1ZD5ST8JF214578<br />

reg: 7EW843 MA<br />

Owner: Dana Murray<br />

3 Central St.<br />

Rockland, MA 02370<br />

2008 Chevorlet Tahoe<br />

VIN: 1GNFK13578R228366<br />

Reg: LV76840 MA<br />

Owner: Zackary Thinguri<br />

185 Main St # 43<br />

Malden, MA 02148<br />

2004 Honda Civic<br />

VIN: 2HGES16574H633915<br />

Reg: 9HN381 MA<br />

Owner: Nicole Smith<br />

178 Chestnut St #1F<br />

Lynn, MA 01902<br />

2007 Cadillac CTS<br />

VIN: 1G6DW677X70117040<br />

Reg: N/A<br />

Owner: Linda Jacobs<br />

24 Blaine Ave<br />

Beverly, MA 01915<br />

Any question please call<br />

Four Star Service, Inc. 978-535-9847<br />

Weekly News: July 11, 18, 25, 2019<br />

Every day<br />

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14<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JULY 11, 2019<br />

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Whether you enjoy reading<br />

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For advertising information,<br />

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TM<br />

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JULY 11, 2019<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 15<br />

COLDWELL BANKER<br />

Lynnfield | 3/2 | $559,900<br />

339 Salem Street<br />

Turn of the century Colonial with all the charm,<br />

waiting for your special touches! 3 bedrooms, 2<br />

full baths. Spacious yard – almost 1 acre!<br />

Steve MacDonald 508-982-5005<br />

Search 72515525 on cbhomes.com<br />

Peabody | 5/4.1 | $675,000<br />

155 Bartholomew Street<br />

Phenomenal expanded cape with direct waterfront<br />

and in-law potential. Open concept living and over<br />

sized bedrooms! This home has it all!<br />

Sarah Myles-Lennox 857-523-9733<br />

Search 72517742 on cbhomes.com<br />

Peabody | 3/2.1 | $625,000<br />

7 Lowman Circle<br />

This split entry offers a desirable open<br />

concept, cul-de sac location and is ready for<br />

your immediate occupancy.<br />

Joyce Cucchiara 978-808-1597<br />

Search 72526307 on cbhomes.com<br />

Peabody | 3/2.2 | $619,900<br />

Just listed 28 Pinecrest Ave<br />

West Peabody Colonial with 8 rooms, fenced<br />

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tandem garage.<br />

Joyce Cucchiara 978-808-1597<br />

Search 71784770 on cbhomes.com<br />

Peabody | 5/1.1 | $409,900<br />

Sale Pending 16 Clement Ave<br />

Colonial with 5 bedrooms. 3 full floors of living<br />

area, large rooms, and above ground pool.<br />

Kathi Griffin 781-599-2874<br />

Ruth Kendrew 617-699-8525<br />

Search 72522657 on cbhomes.com<br />

Andover | 4/2.1 | $989,800<br />

8 Mortimer Drive<br />

Custom built Colonial featuring 4 spacious<br />

bedrooms, formal dining room, fireplaced<br />

living room, and fireplaced family room.<br />

Rossetti/Poti Team 781-718-4662<br />

Search 72439800 on cbhomes.com<br />

Beverly | 2/2 | $379,900<br />

251 Rantoul Street, Unit 1<br />

Gorgeous white kitchen with quartz counters,<br />

stainless steel appliances and gas stove.<br />

Bay window for lots of natural sunlight.<br />

Dan Donovan 617-304-9976<br />

Search 72501365 on cbhomes.com<br />

Danvers | 3/2 | $699,900<br />

2 College Pond Drive<br />

Spacious living room with HW floors, 2nd<br />

fireplace, built in shelves and bump out bay<br />

window allowing the sunlight to pour in.<br />

Joyce Cucchiara 978-808-1597<br />

Search 72493739 on cbhomes.com<br />

Danvers | 3/2 | $499,900<br />

Sale Pending 52 Dayton Street<br />

Well maintained Garrison Colonial featuring<br />

3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal dining room,<br />

and large fenced yard with patio.<br />

Rossetti/Poti Team 781-718-4662<br />

Search 72484861 on cbhomes.com<br />

Melrose | 3/1.1 | $749,000<br />

63 Woodland Ave<br />

Tastefully renovated two-story home offers<br />

extensive living space with first-class finishes,<br />

refinished floors, and recessed lighting throughout.<br />

Aziz Aghayev 617-580-2949<br />

Search 72525997 on cbhomes.com<br />

Middleton | 4/3.2 | $935,000<br />

9 Ogden Lane<br />

Sophisticated and modern living space. Open<br />

concept floor plan offers cathedral ceilings,<br />

recessed lighting and hardwood floors.<br />

Karen Johnson 781-367-8482<br />

Search 72521303 on cbhomes.com<br />

Middleton | 4/3.1 | $1,129,999<br />

18 Sawyer Lane<br />

From the moment you enter this impeccable<br />

4-Bedroom Colonial you will feel the<br />

warmth and comfort of this home.<br />

Karen Johnson 781-367-8482<br />

Search 72456613 on cbhomes.com<br />

Middleton | 3/4 | $969,900<br />

9 Overbrook Road<br />

Piece of Paradise in this custom built Colonial that<br />

abuts Middleton Golf Course. Indoor pool, chef’s<br />

kitchen, finished basement and 2 car garage.<br />

Rossetti/Poti Team 781-718-4662<br />

Search 72413335 on cbhomes.com<br />

Salem | 4/2 | $549,000<br />

36 Cedar Street<br />

This 4-5 bedroom custom built Colonial is just<br />

like new. Fireplaced living room and dining<br />

room with bay windows.<br />

Elaine Figliola 781-334-5181<br />

Search 72526763 on cbhomes.com<br />

ColdwellBankerHomes.com<br />

Salem | 3/3 | $415,000<br />

10 Weatherly Drive, Unit 5<br />

Over 2,350 square feet of sun-filled, open living<br />

space in this desirable Dalton-style home, with<br />

its high ceilings, skylights and hardwood floors.<br />

Mark Wade 781-864-9812<br />

Search 72520094 on cbhomes.com<br />

Wilmington | 3/1 | $397,000<br />

22 Pinewood Road<br />

3-bedroom Ranch on corner 10,000 sq. ft.<br />

lot with spacious living room with fireplace,<br />

refinished hardwood floors, and central air.<br />

Shirley Burke 978-767-0351<br />

Search 72506204 on cbhomes.com<br />

The property information herein is derived from various sources that may include, but not be limited to, county records and the Multiple Listing Service, and it may include approximations. Although the information<br />

is believed to be accurate, it is not warranted and you should not rely upon it without personal verification. Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor agents<br />

and are not employees of the Company. ©2018 Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal<br />

Opportunity Act. Owned by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker and the Coldwell Banker Logo are registered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. 240300NE_12/17<br />

Real Estate Transfers<br />

LYNNFIELD<br />

8 BALDWIN LN<br />

$732,000<br />

B: Kristen J Camara &<br />

Nicholas R Camara<br />

S: Donna T Friedman & Ellen<br />

Friedman<br />

816 MAIN ST<br />

$549,000<br />

B: Christopher Ng & Linda<br />

Pham<br />

S: Farzana Amanullah<br />

18 MAPLE ST<br />

$530,000<br />

B: Gurminder S Gidda &<br />

Gurpreet K Gidda<br />

S: Brian Lloyd & Conor H<br />

Maccorkle<br />

PEABODY<br />

84 ABORN ST U:1402<br />

$279,000<br />

B: Holly Travis & Ryan Travis<br />

S: Amy F Carvalho & Michael<br />

M Carvalho<br />

26 AUGUSTUS ST<br />

$400,000<br />

B: Michael J James 2nd<br />

S: Laura E Tarantino & Michael<br />

D Tarantino<br />

24 CALLER ST<br />

$300,000<br />

B: Peabody City Of<br />

S: Clark Steel Drum Co Inc<br />

4701 DEERFIELD CIR U:4701<br />

$485,000<br />

B: Anthony Desalvo Tr, Tr for<br />

Anthony Desalvo RET<br />

S: Laura R Cavignaro<br />

36 EMERSON STREET EXT<br />

$450,000<br />

B: Adilson Dasilva & Erika R<br />

Silva<br />

S: Keyla D Dcarmo &<br />

Sanderson P Do-Carmo<br />

6 ESSEX GREEN DR U:B3<br />

$90,000<br />

B: Northshore Aesthetics Grp<br />

S: Charles J Kontoules Tr, Tr for<br />

Ongyn RT<br />

80 FOSTER ST U:207<br />

$156,500<br />

B: Domenico Ferragamo &<br />

Michelle Ferragamo<br />

S: Carol A Quirion<br />

1 LEDGEWOOD WAY U:22<br />

$295,000<br />

B: Wesco Building&Design Inc<br />

S: Jami J Scheer Tr, Tr for<br />

Scheer FT<br />

Buying a Home?<br />

Selling a Home?<br />

Choose to be with one of the most<br />

respected brands in real estate.<br />

Where you deserve to be TM<br />

TM


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WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JULY 11, 2019<br />

Together<br />

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Commonwealth Real Estate Northrup Associates<br />

Due to our recent business growth and acquisitions,<br />

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Christine Carpenter<br />

Kerry Connelly<br />

Virginia Ciulla<br />

Julie Daigle<br />

Marshall D'Avanzo<br />

Alex DeRosa<br />

Domenic DiMella<br />

Elena Drislane<br />

Sarah Haney<br />

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Lori Kramich<br />

Kara Maciorowski<br />

Penny McKenzie Venuto<br />

Marylin Phillips<br />

Marcia Poretsky<br />

Local Contact<br />

Jaclyn<br />

Numbers:<br />

Prizio<br />

Where (781) you 246-2100 deserve to be TM<br />

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Maureen Rossi DiMella<br />

Patrice Slater<br />

Bernie Starr<br />

Ron Supino<br />

Richard Tisei

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