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Home & Garden F
& Real Estate
| SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2020
|
INSIDE
ANTIQUES & COLLECTING: No cookies inside this jar, F2 IN THE GARDEN WITH LEE REICH: Spotting a ‘rocket’ in the wild, F3
Flowers in
PROJECT OF THE WEEK: F6 HOME PLAN OF THE WEEK, F7 SUMMER SNAPDRAGONS: Angelface will make you a believer, F9
bloom
New York botanical gardens still blooming behind the scenes, Page F4
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HOME & GARDEN
F2 | SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2020
THE REPUBLICAN | MASSLIVE.COM
Terry and Kim Kovel | Antiques and Collecting
No cookies inside this jar
A
reader sent us a picture of an item in an auction catalog that looked like a cookie jar decorated with racing horses, but it had a strange lid. What else could it be? Why horses on a cookie jar? The lid and the size, 7 inches high, are clues. The jar is a humidor, a container for cigars, cigarettes, pipe tobacco and even cannabis that keeps the tobacco moist and shields it from sunlight, insects and damage. Humidors were necessary and very popular in the late 1880s to early 1900s, when smoking cigars was a sign of masculinity. Most vintage humidor cases are made of attractive wood and lined with Spanish cedar, a wood that holds moisture and does not warp. It also has a pleasant odor and discourages tobacco beetles. But humidors were also made of glass, ceramics, metal or even plastic. The humidor pictured is marked with an “M” in a green wreath, the trademark used by the Morimura Brothers Co., a New York City import firm that operated from 1911 to the 1950s. The humidor is called the Kentucky Derby Scenic. It was probably made by Noritake, a Japanese company.
Q. What’s the best way to
A.
There are a few things you can try, but remember to test them out in an inconspicuous place, like the bottom of the doll’s foot, first. It’s better to have a slightly dirty doll than one that’s ruined. Try rubbing off the dirt with undiluted detergent instead of detergent and water, or use a damp cloth dipped in baking soda and rub it on the doll. Other suggestions include rubbing the doll with an art eraser or using a damp “magic eraser.” Just don’t use anything that contains bleach.
Q. I grabbed a huge sil-
ver-colored pineapple at the opening of a house sale. I discovered that the top opens, and it is lined with white plastic. It is marked M.M. Firenze. I think it’s an ice bucket. I paid $25. Did I get a bargain?
A.
Yes. You bought an Italian ice bucket made in the late 1960s by Fonderia d’Arte. The company made silver colored barware with gold colored trim designed by Mauro Manetti. Examples of this popular aluminum ice bucket sold for $400 to $1,000 this year.
Q. I have two curio cabi-
nets labeled “Jasper.” I purchased them in the 1960s from Harlem Furniture Co. in Dayton, Ohio. I was hoping that you could help me out with finding new keys! Thank you.
A.
If owners of antique furniture collections are lucky, their pieces have the original key. If you don’t see a key, check to see if it’s taped in a drawer or on the back panel. Don’t remove the lock, it will damage the furniture. Call a locksmith. Ask an antiques dealer or auction gallery if it can suggest a locksmith who repairs antiques. There are master keys for most types of locks — old or new, furniture, house or
CURRENT PRICES Current prices are recorded from antiques shows, flea markets, sales and auctions throughout the United States. Prices vary in different locations because of local economic conditions. Fan, electric oscillating, Robbins & Myers, art deco style, 4 blades in wire cage, black paneled base, marked R&M, 18 inches, $60. Cut glass wine goblet, Val St. Lambert, Boris pattern, green cut to clear, crosshatching, diamond cut stem, rayed foot, c. 1920, 7 inches, $150. Advertising boot scraper, duck, scraping bar on back, Kendell O’Brien Lumber, Door & Hardware, painted cast iron, 17 inches, $275. Rookwood pottery vase, yellow daffodils, dark brown ground, swollen neck, marked, Elizabeth Lincoln, 1907, 7 3/4 inches, $355. Mechanical bank, Speaking Dog, cast iron, put coin on tray, girl’s arm lowers, deposits coin, dog’s mouth opens, tail wags, Shepard Hardware, 1885, 8 inches, $480. Disney toy, Stretchy Pluto, Pluto chasing ball, tin lithograph, spring center, 4 wheels, windup, box, Walt Disney Productions, Linemar, 6 3/4 by 3 1/2 inches, $490. Lunchbox, Superman, scenes, To the Rescue, Saves the Plane, No Chains Can Hold Him, Superman’s Friend Is, space for name, tin lithograph, 1954, 7 by 9 inches, $675. Chair, Mira, George Nakashima, walnut & hickory, 7 spindles, curved back, triangular seat, 3 legs, 1 with footrest, 33 inches, $1,150. Bow-shape pin, platinum, rows of old European cut diamonds, beaded accents, Edwardian, Tiffany & Co., 1 5/8 inches, $2,375. Blinking Eye clock, Reclining Lion, dial on chest, painted cast iron, Bradley & Hubbard, c. 1870, 10 1/2 by 5 1/2 by 8 inches, $4,305.
Although this humidor is called “Kentucky Derby,” it may not be an official souvenir of a derby, just a decorative piece made in Japan. It auctioned for $130 at an online sale of Nippon china by the Harritt Group of Indiana.
filing cabinet, even clocks and coin-operated machines.
marked “K.T. & K.” Can you estimate the price?
set of a pitcher and cups, and would like to know their value. She had them for over 85 years. They look like white mother-of-pearl with blue trim. The pitcher has a blue handle on the side and a knob on the lid. There are five perfect cups; one has a chip. They are
Knowles, Taylor & Knowles Co. of East Liverpool, Ohio. Isaac W. Knowles started a pottery in 1853. His son, Homer Knowles, and son-in-law, John Taylor, joined the company in 1870. The company merged with American Ceramic Corp. in 1928.
Q. I inherited my mother’s A. KTK are the initials of the
SEE ANTIQUES, PAGE F3
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clean a rubber doll? I’ve had mine for about 65 years, and it has a lot of sentimental value to me. It closes its eyes when it’s laid down, cries when squeezed and has hair that can be combed. It’s dirty from having been played with then left sitting in a corner. I cleaned it with Dawn detergent and water, but I don’t think it did a thing. Is there something else I can use, or do I just
accept that my neglect stays on the doll?
HOME & GARDEN
THE REPUBLICAN | MASSLIVE.COM
Antiques
SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2020 | F3
Lee Reich | In the Garden
CONTINUED FROM PAGE F2
It closed during the Depression in 1931. The pitcher probably came with six cups. You don’t have the full set and one of the cups is chipped, lowering the value.
Q. I inherited my dad’s
medical schoolbooks from the 1940s and ’50s. They’re all in very good condition. I’ve tried selling them online with no takers, and bookstores in the area won’t take them. Is there a place where I can sell them, maybe at an antique or vintage bookstore?
A.
Textbooks that aren’t current don’t sell well. A medical textbook from the mid-1800s or earlier might have some historic value, especially if it has advertisements in it. An 1865 edition of “Gray’s Anatomy” sold at auction last year for $168. TIP: Wrap jewelry in acid-free tissue or in cotton bags to keep pieces from bumping and scratching. Terry Kovel and Kim Kovel answer questions sent to the column. By sending a letter with a question and a picture, you give full permission for use in the column or any other Kovel forum. Names, addresses or email addresses will not be published. Write to Kovels, The Republican, King Features Syndicate, 628 Virginia Dr., Orlando, FL 32803.
I
Spotting a ‘rocket’ in the wild
T’S A BIRD, IT’S A plane, it’s... dame’s rocket. Dame’s rocket blankets the dappled shade of woodlands and roadsides with its white, mauve, or purple flowers. Unlike Superman, dame’s rocket does not have the strength to overpower ne’er-do-gooders. But dame’s rocket will bowl you over with its sweet scent, especially pervasive on late spring and early summer evenings. You might make the mistake of thinking that dame’s rocket is a native plant. You may, after all, have seen it in Quebec, in Georgia, or as far west as Iowa. But no, dame’s rocket is a native of Europe and western Asia that early on was cultivated in American gardens, then escaped to find a happy home in the wilds of eastern North America. You also might mistake dame’s rocket for phlox. Both have sweetly scented flowers in similar shapes and colors, and flowers of both plants are held clustered atop two or three foot high stalks. Look more closely, though, and you’ll find that phlox flower parts are in fives. Dame’s rocket, in contrast, has four petals. And they are in the shape of a cross, which is a giveaway for members of the cabbage family. That cabbage association
Once grown as a cultivated plant, dame’s rocket is mostly now established in the wild.
is how the “rocket” got into the name. Many cabbage
relatives have this in their name, derived from the Latin
word eruca. The now familiar vegetable arugula — another cabbage kin — has also been called rucola or rocket. And if you think it odd that a kin of cabbage should have a sweet scent, take a whiff of sweet alyssum. Dame’s rocket has a lot going for it. Besides being pretty and scented, the flowers bloom for weeks and weeks. Judging from where the plants have happily settled, they obviously tolerate cold and shade. They even tolerate dry shade, with some sacrifice to how long they bloom. And pests? None to speak of. Dame’s rocket was once a popular garden plant, especially in cottage style gardens. Perhaps it is now so SEE REICH, PAGE F7
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HOME & GARDEN
F4 | SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2020
THE REPUBLICAN | MASSLIVE.COM
Far left, cherry blossoms line the Cherry Walk at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden in New York. Spring remains colorful, but unusually quiet, at some of the city’s botanical gardens as crews work to prune the beauty behind closed gates. Immediate left is Ronnit Bendavid-Val, the horticultural director at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. (BRYAN DERBALLA / THE NEW YORK TIMES)
ical gardens around the city have been deemed essential workers, a designation they agree with. The maintenance required to keep gardens of this size operating and beautiful is endless, with one season’s tasks ongoing even as preparation for a new season begins. “People who visit botanical gardens, this is like a museum
NEW YORK
Botanical gardens still
P
By Nancy Coleman
New York Times
hil Macaluso, a gardener, bikes to work at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden four days a week from his home about a five-minute ride away. The garden is closed, but the trees and everything else in Brooklyn are still growing, even if other aspects of the city’s life have come to a standstill. The garden’s 21 hectares
blooming of cherry blossoms, azaleas, crabapple trees and daffodils are reaching their peak beauty now, and though there are few around to witness it, the two dozen gardeners still work to keep the plants flourishing, the pests and weeds at bay, the lawn mowed. “It’s a garden, you know? It’s not a natural forest,� said Macaluso, 52. “So without people working it, it just kind of goes back to its natural state. We can’t keep it up to the horticultural level that Brooklyn deserves without going in and working.� Gardeners like Macaluso and his colleagues at botan-
SEE BOTANICAL, PAGE F5
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Botanical CONTINUED FROM PAGE F4
of plants,” said Colin Kirk, a gardener at the Queens Botanical Garden. “They’re different than people who visit parks. They’re really interested in gardening.” Kirk bikes to work, too, from his apartment in Jackson Heights. For days after the pandemic hit, he always carried around a note from the garden’s executive director declaring him an essential worker, just in case someone in authority stopped him. He can’t afford to miss any time in the garden — in a prepandemic world, Kirk and three other full-time gardeners had 20-plus volunteers and several seasonal interns to help tend the garden’s 39 acres. Now it’s just the four. “There’s a million things to do,” Kirk said. At the New York Botanical Garden in the Bronx, there are 15 gardeners each day tending to the garden’s 101 hectares — there are 54 total, working on staggered shifts throughout the week. Deanna Curtis, a senior curator and landscape project manager at the New York Botanical Garden, said the mood in the gardens is different without visitors. “When I’m on site now, with even the reduced horticulture staff, if you’re out and about doing something on the grounds, it can be a long
HOME & GARDEN
time before you even see anyone,” she said. “It just has this eerie quality.” The Brooklyn Botanic Garden has found some ways to spread the blossoms outside its gates, horticulture director Ronnit Bendavid-Val said. Staff cut dozens of daffodil bunches recently and brought the bouquets to medical professionals at a nearby hospital; another 800 pansies went to GreenWood Cemetery. But still, Bendavid-Val added, “It does feel like a loss. This incredible explosion of gorgeous blooms right now, and it’s like, where’s the people? People should be seeing it and loving it and appreciating it.” Two employees in Brooklyn usually tend to the indoor pavilions and greenhouses each day, with another three working outside. Macaluso, a general grounds crew gardener who first came to the garden as an intern more than a decade ago, spends most of his time taking care of the grass. “You love the peace and quiet,” Macaluso said. “We get to go and enjoy the garden with nobody else there. In my particular case, I operate a lot of machinery cutting the lawn and doing things, so I don’t have to keep my head on a swivel to watch the little kids running around.” Although there is a tranquility to wandering alone through dozens of tree-lined acres in full bloom, the gardeners said they miss the
SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2020 | F5
“It does feel like a loss. This incredible explosion of gorgeous blooms right now, and it’s like, where’s the people? People should be seeing it and loving it and appreciating it.” HORTICULTURE DIRECTOR RONNIT BENDAVID-VAL
on a private estate or do landscaping or brownstone terraces and things like that because I think myself and a Ramon Santana, a gardener at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, lot of the gardeners in public is one of the horticultural workers keeping the closed preserve gardening see it as a public blooming. (BRYAN DERBALLA / NEW YORK TIMES) service. “You want those gates to be open so people can come in,” regulars — the neighbors this or that. who come routinely with “I chose to work in a public he added. “It’s a little bit sad that you can’t share it with their cameras and their garden,” Macaluso said. everybody.” questions about how to do “I didn’t want to go work
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HOME & GARDEN
F6 | SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2020
THE REPUBLICAN | MASSLIVE.COM
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Sunshine powers solar lighthouse
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(for the curves and angles) and features modular construction. The base, tower and top are built and painted separately, then stacked and fastened together with screws. The solar-powered light on top provides the final finishing touch. The lighthouse stands about 5 feet tall and is 22 inches in diameter at the base. The Lighthouse plan, No. 860, is $9.95 and includes step-by-step instructions with photos, full-size traceable patterns, construction diagrams, a materials list and cutting schedule and a toll-free help line for project questions. The plan includes a color chart and painting key for the color scheme pictured, but the paint is easily customized to suit the builder. Please include $3.95 for postage and handling on all orders and allow about two weeks for delivery. To order by mail, clip this article and send it with a check or money order to U-Bild Features, c/o The Republican, 741B Olive Ave., Vista CA 92083. To order by credit card, call 1-800-828-2453. Visit U-Bild on the web at u-bild.com.
Built primarily from a single sheet of plywood, the lighthouse is as inexpensive as it is easy to build. Wooden pegs, paint and a solarpowered outdoor light (many styles are available at home and garden centers and online) round out the materials list.
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HOME & GARDEN
SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2020 | F7
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planting eventually develops an ongoing population of plants of both ages, providCONTINUED FROM PAGE F3 ing sufficient blooms every rarely cultivated because it year. Unless, that is, you is so abundant in the wild. start with dame’s rockets Perhaps it is now so rarely having double flowers. cultivated because dame’s Seedlings of these double rocket is a biennial, individu- flowered sorts revert back al plants just growing leaves to single forms, so your their first year, flowering the planting would flower every second year, then dying. year, but the flowers would Being a biennial should be single. not discredit dame’s rocket, I plan to move dame’s rocket though, because the plant into my garden, and there a is a self-seeding biennial. A few ways to do this. Plants or
seeds are available commercially. (Note, however, that dame’s rocket is considered invasive in many locations.) If you ever do come across plants of one of those double-flowered dame’s rocket, the way to multiply it is by taking cuttings. Dame’s rocket can be weakly perennial, and new plants made from cuttings taken ever year or so can keep a double-flowered planting going. Those wild plants obviously make abundant seeds
every year, so why not mark a few outstanding plants and collect seeds from them? The blossoms are not double, but still, they are pretty and fragrant. Dame’s rocket seeds germinate readily and the seedlings are easy to grow. Another possible way to get started with dame’s rocket is to transplant just a few wild plants into the garden, then coddle them for a couple of weeks with water and extra shade until roots settle into their new home.
Your first planting, whether from seeds or plants moved from the wild, will plant itself from then on. Have no fear: Although dame’s rocket self-sows, it rarely tries to take over, as do other some self-sowing biennials such as nicotiana or foxglove. Any gardening questions? Email them to me at garden@ leereich.com and I’ll try answering them directly or in this column. Come visit my garden at leereich.com/blog.
HOME & GARDEN
F8 | SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2020
Deeds AGAWAM Federal National Mortgage Association to Aleksandr Kiforishin, 21 Lincoln St., $180,100. Comfortable Living LLC, to Michael Kaelin, 54 Regency Park Drive, $80,000. J. Craig White and Muriel M. White to Adrienne Sibrizzi Oconnor and John Thomas Oconnor, 70 Elmar Drive, $250,000. John W. Schnepp III, and Anna M. Schnepp to Mark A. Berman and Lisa M. Berman, 25 Kosciusko Ave., $379,900. Scott E. Skolnick and Myriam Y. Ulloa-Skolnick to Jessica Calabrese, 48 Anvil St., $347,000. Scott E. Stuckenbruck to Brian P. Mccabe and Ashlee N. Montessi, 33 Forest Ridge Lane, $368,000.
Jonathan R. Friedman and Theresa Marie Buswell to Trustees of Amherst College and Amherst College, 205 So. Pleasant St., and 205 South Pleasant St., $505,000.
Brian J. Berling and Cortney E. Berling to Dianne R. Sagner, trustee, and Julius Menn & Dianne Sagner Trust, 212 North East St., $345,000. Alexandria A. Price and Bernard T. Price to Melisa Bok and Javier Burroni, 16 Heatherstone Road, $365,000. Trinity Construction Group LLC, to W. Bruce Croft and Pamela J. Aselton, 214 Iduna Lane, $596,000. Ernest C. Woo, trustee, Ellen YinLing Lo Woo, trustee, Ellen Yin-Ling Loo Woo, trustee, Ellen Woo, trustee, and Woo Family Revocable Trust to Justin H. Smith, 27 Palley Village Place, $449,900.
M & G Land Development LLC, to Todd A. Santos and Chelsea M. Santos, 389 Michael Sears Road, $379,900. James Stanczak, Lael Hinman Stanczak and Lael H. Hinman to Jennifer L. Dupuis-Krause and Vincent C. Baggetta, 101 Pine St., $549,900. Michael G. Aliberti and Dale E. Aliberti to Ryan Gagne and Meredith Gagne, 150 Warner St., $400,000.
Brandon R. Campbell to Edmond A. Neal, representative, and Robert F. Williams, estate, St. Clair Road, $39,000.
CHESTER Albert Grant Holland to Anthony A. Coughlin and Vicki L Leger, Bromley Road, $8,315. John P. Welch Jr., to Deborah A. Rocque, Kelly L. Auer and Kimberly A. Trust, Smith Road, $20,000.
CHESTERFIELD Wayne A. Hennemann and Betsy L. Hennemann to Thea M. Post and Kai Cooper Neill, 24 Bisbee Road, $350,000.
Aileen Sullivan-Pacella, Joseph M Pacella, Annie Martinez, Guarionex Martinez and College Investments to Narong Sieng, , $254,900. Allen G Croteau and Allen Crotea.u to Orlando E. Morales and Jennifer M. Andujar, 126 Blanchwood Ave., $215,000.
Dianne S. Buck, personal representative, Frank A. Spear, estate, and Frank Alden Spear, estate, to Jacob Bernstein, 172 Ferry St., $232,000.
Edward S. Konieczny and Barbara J. Konieczny to Bonnie Ann Hunt, 1 Honey Hill Road, $164,000.
EAST LONGMEADOW Anthony M. Ferrero to Terry Peckham, 38 Garland Ave., $221,000.
Francis J. Naida to Ralph Jay Gould Jr., 38 Pleasant St., $265,000.
Christian I. Perez and Makenze Dakers-Perez to Cody A. Titus and Kara V. Titus, 156 Hampden Road, $347,000.
EASTHAMPTON
Huguette A. Fecteau to Barry W. Humphrey and Angela J. Nault, 853 Grattan St., $199,900.
Mathew Bean, Jesse Bean and Nathan Bean to Glen Gladstone White Jr., 51 Bay State Road, $144,900. Miroslaw L. Laskowski and Beata M. Laskowski to Beata M. Laskowski, 18 Edgewood Ave., $22,500. MTGLQ Investors LP. to Jerod J. Howell, 79 Acrebrook Drive, $150,150.
Ted J. Pietraszkiewicz and Rachel M. Pietraszkiewicz to Jonathan A. Santiago and Irene Blasco Hebrero, 13 Oliver St., $244,540. Doris C. Ducharme and Stephen Ducharme to Robert E. Ross, 22 Monska Drive, $247,000.
Emily Link to Sarah Elizabeth Dansereau, 37 Frankwyn St.., $257,000. Everly L Trabucco to Justin P. Wilson Gabor, 139 Melwood Ave., $235,000.
Kevin Sullivan and Jacqueline Sullivan to John William Nolen III, and Laura Ann Hanratty, 32 Baymor Drive, Richard B. Tufts, trustee, Sandra E. Tufts, trustee, Richard B. Tufts, Sandra $319,000. E. Tufts and Richard & Sandra Tufts Living Trust to Terry S. Hersey and GILL Roberta A. Hersey, 30 Sandra Road, $361,500. John J. Zywna Jr., and Patricia A. Zywna to Justin D. Simpson, 74 Mountain Nancy J. Batchelor and Kathy Jean Rubera, attorney-in-fact, to Tabitha
SEE DEEDS, PAGE F9
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APR*
Call 413-782-3161 for details
COLRAIN Kenneth P. Herzig and Rita M. Thibodeau to West Branch Cemetery Association, Adamsville Road, $500.
* All rates based on credit score. Rates subject to change. Rate may increase due to loan to value. Loan processing fee of $500 collected at closing. Rate locks good up to 45 days.
MORTGAGE GUIDE
Alison B. Ellis to Hannah E. Hunter-Parker and Bradley T. Cohen, 763 Bay Road, $389,900.
Check rates at: http://findnsave.masslive.com/local-ads/c-13410/bank
Aaron Arcello and Anna Arcello to Aaron E. James and Leah S. Coldham, 29 Hartman Road, $315,000.
3.375% Monson Savings Bank
30 Yr Fixed Rate
APR: 3.391 Points: 0.000 Fees: $333 % Down: 20%
15 Yr Fixed
3.000
0.000
$333 20%
3.029
10 Yr Fixed
3.000
0.000
$333 20%
3.042
APPLY online at monsonloans.com
413-267-4513 www.monsonsavings.com
LIC# 613363 3127463-01
Elizabeth Bernhard Figueroa, trustee, and Ampar Heritage Realty Trust to Emily Stout and Joshua Creaser, 35 Station Road, $415,000.
CUMMINGTON
DEERFIELD
Eagle Home Buyers LLC, to Durane K. Walker and Richard C. Hervieux Jr., 22 Woodbridge Road, Unit 6228D, $144,900.
Judith Pierce to Roberley Ann Bell and James Francis Morris, 53 Harkness Road, $325,000.
Niels Christiansen and Laurie Christiansen to Diane C. McNamara and Tucker D. Swan, 38 Trillium Way, $675,000.
D & H Property Management Inc., to Betty L. Duprey and Nicholas D. Duprey, 2-8 Hisgen Ave., 1 Mayher St., and 106 Parsons St., $1,500,000.
Benneth G. Phelps to Dennis Anderson, 80 Baptist Hill Road, $258,000.
Chocorua Realty Investments LLC, to Gerard St. Amand, representative, Ian Albert and Stephanie Albert, 62 Donald W. St. Amand, estate, and Allen St., $329,000. Donald St .Amand, estate, to Frank N. LaFlamme and Suzanne M. LaLenox Homes LLC, to Anne O’ConFlamme, 386 Grattan St., $140,000. nor, 631 N. Washington St., and 631
BRIMFIELD
M. Griswold, 29-2 Parsons Place, $105,000.
CONWAY
3134415-01
Dianne R. Sagner, trustee, and Julius Menn & Dianne Sagner Trust to Spenser C. Lanier and Erica R. Foley, 715 South East St., $425,000.
Wayne A. Hennemann and Betsy L. Hennemann to Robert A. Kubosiak and Jaime L. Kubosiak, Bisbee Road Off, $5,000.
CHICOPEE
BELCHERTOWN
North Washington St., $366,000. Thomas F. Dacey, estate, and Ralph Kimberly A. Chaisson to Lauren A. Zavarella, representative, to Shane Paschall and Lucas Paschall, 297 Dearborn, 51 Reed St., $191,000. Stebbins St., $424,900. Valerie Christian, representative, and Mary K. Labun, estate, to Joseph BLANDFORD Bouila and Talia N. Sherbo, 82 Kensington St., $189,900. Patricia M. Hebert to Melanie Bilodeau, 1 Nye Brook Road, $375,000.
AMHERST
THE REPUBLICAN | MASSLIVE.COM
LEGEND: The rate and annual percentage rate (APR) are effective as of the publication date. The APR may increase after consummation and may vary. Payments do not include amounts for taxes and insurance. The fees set forth for each advertisement above may be charged to open the plan (A) Mortgage Banker, (B) Mortgage Broker, (C) Bank, (D) S&L, (E) Credit Union, (BA) indicates Licensed Mortgage Banker, NYS Banking Dept., (BR) indicates Registered Mortgage Broker, NYS Banking Dept., (loans arranged through third parties). “Call for Rates” means actual rates were not available at press time. All rates are quoted on a minimum FICO score of 740. Conventional loans are based on loan amounts of $165,000. Jumbo loans are based on loan amounts of $424,100. Points quoted include discount and/or origination. Lock Days: 30-60. Annual percentage rates (APRs) are based on fully indexed rates for adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs). The APR on your specific loan may differ from the sample used. Fees reflect charges relative to the APR. If your down payment is less than 20% of the home’s value, you will be subject to private mortgage insurance, or PMI. FHA mortgages include both UFMIP and MIP fees based on loan amount of $165,000 with 5% down payment. VA mortgages include funding fees based on loan amount of $165,000 with 5% down payment. The Republican does not guarantee the accuracy of the information appearing above or the availability of rates and fees in this table. All rates, fees and other information are subject to change without notice. The Republican does not own any financial institutions. Some or all of the companies appearing in this table pay a fee to appear in this table. If you are seeking a mortgage in excess of $424,100, recent legislation may enable lenders in certain locations to provide rates that are different from those shown in the table above. Sample Repayment Terms-ex. 360 monthly payments of $5.29 per $1,000 borrowed ex. 180 monthly payments of $7.56 per $1,000 borrowed. We recommend that you contact your lender directly to determine what rates may be available to you. To access the NMLS Consumer Access website, please visit www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org. To appear in this table, or report any inaccuracies call 413-788-1050.
THE REPUBLICAN | MASSLIVE.COM
GARDENING
Angelface will make you a believer in summer snapdragons By Norman Winter
Tribune News Service
The day you look at a Wedgewood Blue Summer Snapdragon is the day you will get hooked and believe anything is possible with today’s flowers. It looks as though each flower is a rare piece of hand-painted porcelain. Wedgewood Blue is part of the Angelface series of summer snapdragons, which represents nine different selections with pages of awards. The angelonia or summer snapdragon seems to be on an unstoppable course of rising popularity thanks to varieties like the Angelface series. It seems every year there are new varieties, new colors and habits from their heights and widths to those that trail. Not only are we experiencing the influx of new varieties, but commercial landscapers and savvy gardeners everywhere are creating new and dazzling combinations from the flower border to the mixed container. The Garden Guy has been growing Angelface Perfectly Pink and attracting a lot of attention with its large flowers and sturdy robust branching, I am using them as thriller plants in smoke-stack type containers with Lemon Coral Sedum and Whirlwind Blue Scaevola. I was amazed at the quick branching giving multiple blooming stems. Gardeners, I promise you will love it. Angelface Wedgewood Blue, the variety I mentioned first, has won awards from Oregon State University in the West to Cornell in New York, so you may be wondering about the hot, humid South. Well, it was Top Performer and Best of the Best in University of Georgia Trials and a Perfect Score All Summer at Oklahoma State University. Don’t forget its native range is hot and humid, sweltering with lots of rain. One of the most elegant uses I ever had the opportunity to see and photograph was a container
HOME & GARDEN
Deeds CONTINUED FROM PAGE F8 Road, $307,500.
GOSHEN Goshen Town and Goshen Town Treasurer to Charles E. Amo, 149 S. Chesterfield Road and 149 South Chesterfield Road, $6,000.
GRANBY Joseph C. Cox, Christopher Cox and Christopher A. Cox to Christopher A. Cox, trustee, Trust UW of Pamela Elvira Cox, Christopher A. Cox, Joseph C. Cox and Pamela Elvira Cox, 241 Chicopee St., $184,280. Michael Novak and Ann Marie Novak to Laurence J. Vincent Jr., and Carol M. Vincent, 106 Maximilian Drive, $550,000.
Angelface Perfectly Pink can reach close to 30 inches and serves as the thriller plant in this mixed container with Lemon Coral Sedum and Whilwind Blue Scaevola. (NORMAN WINTER)
with King Tut papyrus grass as a tall but airy thriller and Angelface Wedge Blue used as a drop-dead gorgeous midlevel thriller. Superbells Apricot Punch calibrachoa was the spiller that also mesmerized. The Angelface series offers four standard selections that reach 18 to 30 inches in height, and two extra-sized Super Blue and Super White that can reach a whopping 40 inches. The newest are three that trail and go by the name Cascade: Cascade White, Cascade Pink and Cascade Blue. Those that trail or cascade reach up to 14 inches in height, but with the ability to spread nearly 30 inches. Growing is easy. Select a site in full sun for best blooming. Know that this plant is so tough you can even plant in midsummer as a landscape pick-me-up. Though it is rough and persevering, please do not stick in tight, concrete-like soil. Before you plant, incorporate 2 to 3 inches of organic matter in to your bed, or better yet plant on rained beds using a prepared landscape mix. Norman Winter is a horticulturist, garden speaker and author of “Tough-as-Nails Flowers for the South” and “Captivating Combinations: Color and Style in the Garden.”
GRANVILLE Donald E. Demarais, Debra S. Demarais, Donna A. Cormier and Dorrie L. Holmes to Thomas J. Damato II, 564 South Lane, $220,000.
GREENFIELD G&I IX Apollo SWM LLC, to Derossi Commercial Greenfield LLC, 46 Greenfield St., 53 Silvio O. Conte Drive, 49 Greenfield St. and 64 Adams Road, $14,163,000. Philip J. Brodeur to Erica Cooke and Kevin Cooke, 42B Thayer Road, Unit 1B, $173,000.
SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2020 | F9
HOLLAND David D. Charbonneau to Claire May, 5 Collette Drive, $214,000. John L. Bosacker and Ann A. Bosacker to Timothy M. Gerry, 1 Leisure Court, $176,000. Paul Newsham, Kim Mailloux and Kim Newsham to Michael C.. Lifson and Melissa H Lifson, 64 Leno Road, $247,000.
HOLYOKE Maureen Lucey to David Lucey and Anne M. Lucey, 29 Mayer Drive, South, $310,000.
HUNTINGTON Ruby Realty LLC, to Lindsey L. Bellamy, 14 Stanton Ave., $215,500.
LONGMEADOW Amy L. Cairy and Jeff T. Cairy to Michael Robare, 45 Kenmore Drive, $331,500. Eric P. Rubenstein and Deborah S. Rubenstein to Ryan R. Whitney and Kaitlyn M. Whitney, 32 Morningside Drive, $422,000. Maria Ingani to Marissa Cuff, 7 Briarcliff Road, $449,000. Meadows RE LLC, to Justin Gregory Savage, 7 Quinnehtuk Road, $542,000. Randolph P. Davis, Amy Hilbrich Davis and Amy H. Davis to Vanessa A. Fish and Daniel R. Fish, 251 Park Drive, $875,000.
LUDLOW
Mary F. Grover to PDV Inc., 42 Linden Courtney A. Langieri, representative, Ave., $134,575. Doris Marie Hayward, estate, and PDV Inc., to Charity M. O’Connor Doris Marie Gonthier, estate, to Larry and Edith M. Pullen, 42 Linden Ave., R. Nareau and Nancy C. Nareau, 665 $231,500. Center St., Unit 901, $229,900. Richard M. Hawkins Estate, Douglas Lynda Robbins, representative, A. Hawkins, personal representative, Wanda J. Smolkowicz, Donald S. to Michael A. Koncal, 62 Burnham Smolkowicz, estate, and Donald Road, $140,000. S. Smokowicz, estate, to Ariana Deanna M. Shaw and Kevin R. Shaw E. Quesnel and Ariana Elizabeth Jr., to Julia T. Shaw, 320 Conway St., Quesnel, 62 Pond St., $168,500. $100,000. Vincent C. Cicerchia, Vincent C. John M. Shanahan and Martha Cicerchia Sr., and Margaret H. CicerShanahan to Joshua A. Levin, 253 chia to Melissa J. Picard, 114 Chapin Shelburne Road, $225,000. Greene Drive, Unit 114, $192,900.
HADLEY M. Nancy Wood and Mary Nancy Wood, Jeffrey Wood Revocable Trust, M. Nancy Wood, trustee, and Mary Nancy Wood, trustee, to Andrew D. Stephens and Leonor Ano Stephens, 6 Shattuck Road, $450,000.
HAMPDEN David W. Ashe to Leigh Myers, 105 Woodland Drive, $255,500.
MONSON Theresa S. Martin to Kristina M. Hawley, 58 Crest Road, $265,000.
MONTAGUE Paul N. Grimard Estate, Kevin N. Grimard, personal representative, to Alexander N. Iverson and Brenda L. Snyder, 6 Henry Ave., $187,500. Karl R. Lapan to Cecile Celotto, 6 Chester St., $231,950
NEW SALEM Nathan Harris Rudolph Estate, Nanuette E. Rudolph, personal representative, to Alex Acosta and Sarah Pease, 193 Neilson Road, $123,000.
NORTHAMPTON James Jewell and Janice Pegels to Patricia Irons, 121 Hinckley St., $461,000. Vasoontara Chatikavanij, Vasoontra Chatikavanij and Duangcheun K. Davis, attorney-in-fact, to Jonathan N. Kelley and Katie J. Kelley, Florence Road, $112,000. Gregory Cysz, Michael Cysz, Ronald Cysz, Robert Bernard Jones, administrator, and Sandra Ann Jones, estate, to Gregory Cysz, Michael Cysz and Ronald Cysz, 798 North King St., and 804 North King St., $78,750. Wilmington Savings Fund Society FSB, trustee, Nationstar Hecm Acquisition Trust, Nationstar Mortgage LLC, attorney-in-fact, and Champion Mortgage Co., attorney-in-fact, to Matthew Motamedi and Stephanie Motamedi, 19 Ellington Road, $180,000. Julie E. Steiner to Hillary M. Sackett-Taylor and Andrew C. Sackett-Taylor, 31 Loudville Road, $465,000. Michael P. Jones Jr., personal representative, and Cynthia A. Jones, estate, to NU-Way Homes Inc., Warner Street, $105,000. Daniel R. Herbst to Molly S. Totman and Molly Totman, 20 Pines Edge Drive, $179,000. Richard P. Brunswick to Richard P. Brunswick, trustee, and 74 Maynard Road 2020 Trust, 74 Maynard Road, $100. Joan Elizabeth Dalin, trustee, and Joan E. Dalin Revocable Trust to Gerald A. Hinkle and Lynne Catherine David Hinkle, 78 Coles Meadow Road, $610,000.
ORANGE BHR Properties LLC, to Robert D. Bergquist Sr., 210 Oxbow Road, $120,000. Lee M. Rowe and Shelly A. Rowe to Andrew J. Smith and Barbara M. Smith, 550 South Main St., $299,450. Fannie Mae, by attorney, Federal National Mortgage Association, by attorney, Continental Real Estate Services Inc., attorney, to CHHay Bun, 407 South Main St., $40,000. Eric N. Druzbicki to Frances Deluca Hadsel, 13 Dewey Conrad Ave., $179,805. Donna Dubour to Cheri A. Paretti and Edward C. Paretti Jr., 113 New Athol Road, Unit 109, $200,000.
SEE DEEDS, PAGE F10
HOME & GARDEN
F10 | SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2020
Deeds CONTINUED FROM PAGE F9 Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, trustee, by attorney, Specialized Loan Servicing LLC, attorney, to Krzyszto Perzan, 39 West Main St., $10,000.
PALMER Kristi K. Atkinson-Haley to Ronald J. Allain, 226 Boston Road, $270,000. Kurt Riedi to Cornerstone Homebuying LLC, 35 Fox St., $52,000. Rob D. Collette and Donna M. Collette to Donald J. Dunn, 3096 Main St., Unit 3096, $155,500.
SHELBURNE Butler Investment Trust, Maureen R. Butler, trustee, to Amie M. Redeker, 441 Mohawk Trail, $422,000.
Jill Thurman and Amy Toller to Veasna Pok and Tasha M. Virgilio, 110 Valley Road, $455,900. Christopher J. Abbott to Scott Richard Vander Veen and Sabina Camponogara, 6 Hillside Meadows Drive, $355,000.
SOUTHWICK Emily A. Moccio to Daniel F. Lucia and Angela M. Lucia, 8 Partridge Lane, $357,900.
Homes Inc., Arnold Avenue, $45,000.
$265,000.
Park Avenue Court, Unit 14, $106,000.
Jose E. Martinez and Melly Diaz to Sabrina Watson, 11 Biltmore St., $174,000.
TL Bretta Realty LLC, to Maria D. Rivera, 73-75 Blanding St., $299,900.
O’Connell Family Realty LLC, to ATRH West Springfield LLC, 268 Park St., $630,000.
Juan Santana to Adelzo Lantigua and Yocasta A. Polanco Sanchez, 34 Carew Terrace, $210,000. Kenneth O. Taffe and Margaret E. Taffe to Kenneth Taffe and Sandra Taffe, 33-35 Rochelle St., $100,000. Meg Realty LLC, to Igor F. Santos and Igor F. Dos Santos, 398-400 Franklin St., $260,000. Milagro Rivera to Joel Rojas, 57 Hollywood St., $220,000.
SPRINGFIELD BP LLC, to Brendaliz Hernandez, 11-15 Braddock St., $195,413. Brital1987 LLC, to Miguel Roldan, 20 Eddy St., $190,000. Federal National Mortgage Association to Ana Zunilda Jerez, 86 Pendleton Ave., $130,000. Djion Shepard to We Buyi Houses
THE REPUBLICAN | MASSLIVE.COM
U S Bank, trustee, and RMAC Trust Series 2016-ctt, trustee of, to Maria F. Alban and Angel O. Alban, 870 Wilbraham Road, $120,000.
WESTFIELD Daniel F. Lucia and Angela M. Lucia to Patrick O’Keeffe, 59 Lindbergh Boulevard, $230,000.
Veronica L. Zaler and Veronica L. Cruz to Ricardo Santiago and Jeannette Fernandez-Santiago, 297 Arnold Ave., $308,625.
Dean T. Couture to Christopher Paquette and Courtney Platt, 68 Hagan Ave., $260,000.
Victor M. Lopez Garcia to Edwin Perez, 27-29 Oakwood Terrace, $230,000.
Heath D. McClaflin and Rosanne E. McClaflin to Jessica L. Andrews, 549 Russell Road, Unit 11B, $87,900.
Waheguru S. Khalsa, representative, Nancy Ramos, Jose A. Perez and Nan- and Elizabeth Parkhurst Lancaster , estate, to Caitlin E. Foster, 2175 cy Rios-Perez to Benjamin Heacock, Wilbraham Road, $200.,000. 36 Eddy St., $129,250. New Vision Realty LLC, to Luis Rodriguez, 138 Bay St., $224,000. Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, trustee, and -opt2 Soundview Home Loan Trust 2006-opt2, trustee of, to Hanati Lubega, 616 Armory St.,
Jeffrey K. Fox, Christine J. Coyne and Christine Fox to Emily Mary Nowell and Alexandra C. Nowell, 75 Wilson Ave., $255,000.
Yellowbrick Property LLC, to Elba Rivera, Massasoit Street, $5,000.
Paula J. Ceglowski to John P. Cadigan Jr., and Lauren F. Figy, 87 Llewellyn Drive, $300,000.
SUNDERLAND Ann W. Samson and Raymond
Ponders Hollow Properties LLC, to DHMD Realty LLC, 28 Ponders Hollow Road, $550,000.
SHUTESBURY Mark T. Olszewski to Courtney A. Kinney and Skyler A. Kinney, 174 Locks Pond Road, $330,000.
Your money is 100% safe. 100% insured. Not all banks can say this.
Gail C. Bekier, Stephen J. Ryan, Lucille Ryan, Linda M. Eberson, John D. Ryan Jr., Linda M. Everson and Stephen J. Ryan, attorney-in-fact, to Mark T. Yost and Nadiwska Y. Yost, 16 Lorraine Ave., $210,000.
John Van Dell and Amy Van Dell to El Mostafa Naciri, 41 West Summit St., $135,000.
Geneva L. Pedersen, “aka” Geneva L. Pederson, and Richard Pedersen to Lewis R. Goldstein and Sarah T. Xiques, 129 Christian Lane, $689,000.
bankatpeoples.com · 413.538.9500
Jacob J. Belanger, April J. Belanger and April J. Dupoint to Andrea L. Looney, 117 Russellville Road, $265,000. Linda Dagulis, trustee, Greenfield Savings Bank, trustee, Rosemarie Osmers Living Trust and Linda M. Dagilus, trustee, to Benoit J. Lamontagne and Vernice D. Cowell, 6 Parsons Way, $320,000.
Member FDIC/Member DIF
The FDIC insures all deposits up to $250,000 per depositor. All deposit amounts above the FDIC limits are insured in full by the Depositors Insurance Fund (DIF).
4 Cash LLC, 632 Plumtree Road, $6,000.
Fannie Mae and Federal National Mortgage Association to Dawn Stephen A. McKenna to Nathan Henry Waskiewicz, 62 Melba St., $150,500. and Matthew Henry, 20 Lawrence Frank J. Liberti II, Teresa M. Liberti Ave., $160,000. and Teresa Spaziani to James M. Michael Lucchesi to Candice E. DeLagodich and Cheryl A. Lagodich, 61 mers, 10 Plainville Circle, $477,000. Winterset Drive, $227,500. Candice E. Demers and Tiffany Glendon Grant and Evangeline Grant Brunelle to Tiffany Brunelle, 4 Alvord to Ikia D. Brown, 56 Orlando St., St., $100. $141,400. John T. Pecia and Lou Ann Pecia Glenn E. Shippy and Diane L. Shippy to Timothy J. Pecia, 33 Tampa St., to Magdalena Medina and Luis Lopez, $200,000. 60 Nelson St., $150,000.
SOUTHAMPTON
James Bohonowicz, “aka” James D. Bohonowicz, and Joanne Pliska to Keith Ronald Bohonowicz, 219 River Road/123 River Road, $170,000.
Global Homes Properties LLC, to Joan Prince, 639 Sumner Ave., $275,000. Guilherme F. Rodrigues, representative, Mario D. Cruz Rodrigues, estate, and Mario Da Cruz Rodrigues, estatem to Stephen L. Saxon Jr., and La-Qiana Perez-Saxon, 202-204 Oak St., $230,000. Gyasi Sellers to Farai Hatidani, 129131 Moxon St., $238,000. Jacqueline E. Turner to Nu-Way
$115,000. Rayhana Harvey and Rayhana Washington to Emtay Inc., 171 Dunmoreland St., $86,000. Ricardo Santiago to Tiffany Lynn O’Donnell, 318 Dwight Road, $190,000. Robert A. Sennett to McCarthy Realty Group Inc., 140 Chestnut St., Unit 519, $47,700. Rolando Torres Jr., to Brandon Blaine, 272 Denver St., $142,700. Ruby Realty LLC, to Juan Santana, 15 Kingsley St., $135,000. Deutsche Bank Trust Co. America S, trutee, Rali 2007-qs7, trustee of, and Rali 2007qs7, trustee of, to Madison Property Investors LLC,, 80-82 Leyfred Terrace, $144,000. Springfield City to Sergey Dikan, Newland Street, $2,625. Three Palms LLC, to Edwin P. Rivera and Hector R. Rivera, 176 Florida St,. $255,000. TL Bretta Realty LLC, to Darian Felix and Reina Diaz, 53-55 Farnham Ave.,
3134164-01
Tracy A. Eason to Tracy A. Eason and Michael R. Eason, 68 Chestnut Hill Road, $100.
WHATELY
Can yours?
SOUTH HADLEY
Catherine M. Vieira, Robert J. Downing and Maureen A. Laramee to Christopher Michael Shea and Nicole Renee Shea, 35 Hillside Ave., $224,900.
William J. Cronin and Lee Anne Cronin to Trevor Larson, 55 Jefferson St., $217,000.
R. Samson to Kestrel Land Trust, Cross Mountain Road/Nebo Road, $272,000. Robert H. Adair to Ron W. Ward, “aka” Ronald W. Ward, 17 North Plain Road, $399,000. Courtney A. Kinney and Skyler Kinney to Anthony Ciak, 154 North Silver Lane, $229,000. Jeffrey C. Mish to KDD Properties LLC, 45 Amherst Road, $570,000. Martha E. Lorantos to Benneth Phelps, 158 North Main St., $346,000.
WALES Justin Rose, representative, Kaye S. Worth, estate, Shirley Backofen, representative, and David W. Worth, estate, to Kevin M. Pascale and Amanda M. Pascale, 4-6 Church St., $133,750.
WEST SPRINGFIELD Marina Otero to Yelena Mironova, 27
Robert M. Duda Estate, Ginger L. Houghton, individually and personal representative, to Nicolas M. Wojcik, 23 Conway Road, $295,000.
WILBRAHAM Ambro Development LLC, to Robert T. Olejarz and Theresa A. Olejarz, 2205 Boston Road, Unit D33, $209,000. Custom Homes Development Group LLC, to Jeffrey Keith Fox and Christine Julie Fox, 540 Main St., $442,500. Shelia M. Bolduc and Sheila M. Bolduc to Frederick Kudla and Kevin Michael Kudla, 6 Arbor Lane, $320,000. William E. Dyke Jr., and Ellen B. Dyke to Steven Gregory Otto and Samantha Mitsuye Otto, 351 Springfield St., $378,000.
WORTHINGTON Christopher K. Powell and Carol J. Powell to James A. Ryan and Michelle D. Ryan, 180 Harvey Road, $75,000. Mary L. Gerken-Newcomb, trustee, and Mary L. Gerken-Newcomb Revocable Trust to Kayoung Park and Yunhee Nam, Kinne Brook Road, $85,000.
THE REPUBLICAN | MASSLIVE.COM
HOME & GARDEN
SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2020 | F11
CALL THE PROS Professional Service Directory in Print and Online Place your service ad 24/7. Call (413) 788-1234 or go to: www.MassLive.com
CRANE Ceilings & Walls Restoration Specialist! Veneer plaster systems All drywall finishes. Foundation repairs Family owned and operated since 1960 Call Don (413)949-1269
Real estate for rent
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Amendments Act and Massachusetts Labor and Industries Law, which make it illegal to advertise any preference, limitations or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, national origin, handicap, familial status, sexual orientation which shall not include persons sexual whose orientation involves minor children as the sex object, genetic information, ancestry, children, marital status, or public assistance recipiency, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians, pregnant women and people securing custody of children under 18.
Driveway/Paving
Masonry/Concrete
SPRING SPECIAL
ABC Masonry & Basement Waterproofing STOP ALL WATER LEAKAGE Brick, block, stone, stucco, concrete, chimneys, foundations, hatchways, New & repair. Basement windows, sump pumps, and damp proofing. Lic 120263 569-1611 or 413-374-5377
ASPHALT PAVING
Call Henry at 413-301-3501 • Resurfacing •
• Site Work • • Seal coating • Free est • All Work Guarantee •
PALMER 1 BR ALL APPLCS STOR/LDRY IN BSMNT CTRY LOC NO PETS NO SMOK 1ST LAST SEC $800. BRETON EST. 413-283-6940 Business/ Commercial Property
A1 SPACE AVAILABLE 500-8000sf Lt Manuf Whse, Office, Art space. Indian Orch Mills 543-3321
Animals Birds Cats Dogs Exotic Animals Feed Fish Horses Livestock Pet Services Pet Shows Pet Supplies Pets - Lost & Found Pets Wanted
Rooms Without Board
BELAIR INN - EFFIC WEEKLY RATES stove, 60 channel TV, phone, cable, Rte. 5, West Spfld. 413-781-7825 PEACEFUL, PRIV, SPACIOUS HOTEL ROOM. Sgl person, working locally. Off Rte 147, Nr Big E. 413 781 2300
Cats
1 MALE SIAMESE MIX KITTEN $60.00
(413) 773-9659; 575-1389 Dogs
2 Shihtzu boys, $500./bo. Call 413-309-0001 German Shepherd pups, champion Czeck bloodlines, 4M, 3F, $950/BO (413) 218-2321
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. To report discrimination, call the Office of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) at 1-800-6699777. The HUD TTY telephone number for the hearing impaired is 212-708-1455.
AAA attics, garages, cellars, yards, Demolition & Bobcat work brush removal , etc. Fast, reliable, reasonable and insured.
GERMAN SHORT HAIR Pointers, Brown heads w/White bodies, Liver splash & Blue ticks $400 4 F & 1 M 413-885-4679
YORKIE Tiny Female will be ready for new home April 2nd. Father Biewer color, imported, Mother is traditional color, will have 1st shots & dewormed, $950: Call (413)777-3536
Merchandise Antiques/Collectibles Appliances Articles for Rent Articles For Sale Audio Building Materials Cameras Camping Equipment Clothing Coins and Stamps Construction Equipment Do-In-Yourself Materials Electronics/Compuiters Fitness Equipment Flea Markets Forklifts and Equipment Fuel Furniture, Etc. Good Things To Eat Hot Ticket Items Jewelry Lawn & Garden Lawnmower & Snowblower Machinery & Tools Med. Equipment Sales/Wanted Miscellaneous Musical Instruments Office Equipment Pools, Spas & Accessories Professional Equipment Restaurant Equipment Seasonal Snowmobiles Sports Television Tickets Video Vintage Clothing Wanted to Buy Wood-Burning Stoves
Auctions
SECURED PARTY SALE
BASEBALL, Football Basketball & Hockey cards, 1950’s-present, 50 to 90% off, selling boxes for $4.00. BUYING ALL SPORTS CARDS, ESPECIALLY WANTED CARDS OR ITEMS FROM 1900 TO 1960. RETIRED KOREAN WAR VET 413-596-5783 FRIGIDAIRE Gallery window unit Air conditioner, includes remote $120; (413)782-0223
HAMPTON BAY
AIRCOND 5,000BTU’s $40. Call (860)990-9649 Vatican Stamp Coll. $450. Got stamps? Call Ron 413-896-3324 Stamps wanted Clothing
Designer wedding gown by Mary’s. sleveless sz 10 (a-line) w/pearls, slip & train, $ 99. 413-594-7775
MAJOR
AARON POSNIK & CO. INC. Indust & Comm. Auctions 31 Capital Dr. W. Spfld. 733-5238 www.posnik.com
DouglasAuctioneers.com
ESTATES-ANTIQUES 413-665-2877
Furniture, Etc.
West Spfld. moving, new appli. & furn. Total for all $4,000. Call 478-952-9536.
Lawnmowers & Snowblowers
AIRENS SNOWBLOWER 9. 25HP. Tecumseh enginee, 27in clearning width, elec starter, $350; (413)737-8909
Grass Bagger, Craftsman. $100. Call 413-534-3406 TROY-BILT Gas lawnmower 1/yrs old easy start $250; TROY BILT snowblower 24in $350; (413)782-0223
Appliances
GE 36,000 BTU 40 gal. hot water heater. Hardly used. Great cond. $250. Call 786-4423
West Spfld. moving, new appli. & furn. Total for all $4,000. Call 478-952-9536.
Musical Instruments
PIANO:Yamaha baby grand Tuned, fully regulated, exc. cond., $4,900 deliv. (413) 544-4477
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 20TH AT 11:00 A.M.
Auctions
Trash Removal
Call 413-525-4542
Apartments/Condos, Unfurnished
0-1-2 BEDROOM AGAWAM FREE HEAT & UTILS No pets. 413-786-6323
Trash Removal
1960’S BOSTON CELTICS GAME PROGRAM $50 OR BEST OFFER. Call (860)990-9649
You never know ow what you'll find d inside.
Ceiling/Drywall
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Articles for Sale
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Aaron Posnik
AUCTIONEERS•APPRAISERS
West SpringďŹ eld, MA • Philadelphia, PA 413-733-5238 • 610-853-6655 MA Auc. Lic #161 • PA Auc. Lic. #AY000241L
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HOME & GARDEN
F12 | SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2020
THE REPUBLICAN | MASSLIVE.COM
SAVE ON HOME SECURITY GREAT
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Monitored by ADT ® the #1 home security company in the U.S.
MONITORING MONITORING
850
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ADT 24/7 Monitored Home Security ®
24/7 monitoring provides peace of mind Yard sign and window decals help deter crime Quickly connect to fire and emergency response May qualify for a homeowners insurance discount
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Reply By July 18, 2020
$100 VISA® GIFT CARD
from Protect Your Home!
FREE
WIRELESS REMOTE CONTROL
with panic button. $139 VALUE!
FREE Ask about same-day installation!
7 WIRELESS DOOR/ WINDOW SENSORS
OUTDOOR CAMERA
When you upgrade to ADT Pulse® + Video $299 VALUE! See all offer details below.
GIFT CARD: $100 Visa Gift Card fulfilled by Protect Your Home through third-party provider, Mpell, upon installation of a security system and execution of monitoring contract. $4.95 shipping and handling fee, gift cards can take up to 8 weeks to arrive after following the Mpell redemption process. BASIC SYSTEM: $99 Installation. 36-Month Monitoring Agreement required at $27.99 per month ($1,007.64). 24-Month Monitoring Agreement required at $27.99 per month ($671.76) for California. Offer applies to homeowners only. Basic system requires landline phone. Offer valid for new ADT Authorized Premier Provider customers only and not on purchases from ADT LLC. Cannot be combined with any other offer. The $27.99 Offer does not include Quality Service Plan (QSP), ADT’s Extended Limited Warranty. ADT Pulse: ADT Pulse Interactive Solutions Services (“ADT Pulse”), which help you manage your home environment and family lifestyle, require the purchase and/or activation of an ADT alarm system with monitored burglary service and a compatible computer, cell phone or PDA with Internet and email access. These ADT Pulse services do not cover the operation or maintenance of any household equipment/ systems that are connected to the ADT Pulse equipment. All ADT Pulse services are not available with the various levels of ADT Pulse. All ADT Pulse services may not be available in all geographic areas. You may be required to pay additional charges to purchase equipment required to utilize the ADT Pulse features you desire. ADT PULSE + VIDEO: ADT Pulse + Video installation is an additional $299. 36-month monitoring contract required from ADT Pulse + Video: $59.99 per month, ($2,159.64), including Quality Service Plan (QSP). Doorbell camera may not be available in all areas. GENERAL: For all offers, the form of payment must be by credit card or electronic charge to your checking or savings account, satisfactory credit history is required and termination fee applies. Certain packages require approved landline phone. Local permit fees may be required. Certain restrictions may apply. Additional monitoring fees required for some services. For example, Burglary, Fire, Carbon Monoxide and Emergency Alert monitoring requires purchase and/or activation of an ADT security system with monitored Burglary, Fire, Carbon Monoxide and Emergency Alert devices and are an additional charge. Additional equipment may be purchased for an additional charge. Additional charges may apply in areas that require guard response service for municipal alarm verification. Prices subject to change. Prices may vary by market. Some insurance companies offer discounts on Homeowner’s Insurance. Please consult your insurance company. Photos are for illustrative purposes only and may not reflect the exact product/service actually provided. Licenses: AL-21-001104, AR-CMPY.0001725 AZ-ROC217517, CA-ACO6320, CT-ELC.0193944-L5, DC-EMS902653, DC-602516000016, DE-07-212, FL-EC13003427, EC13003401, GA-LVA205395, IA-AS-0206, ID-ELE-SJ-39131, IL127.001042, IN-C.P.D. Reg. No. – 19-08088, City of Indianapolis: LAC-000156, KY-City of Louisville: 483, LA-F1914, LA-F1915, LA-F1082, MA-1355C, MD-107-1626, ME-LM50017382, MI-3601205773, MN-TS01807, MO-City of St. Louis: CC#354, St. Louis County: 100194, MS-15007958,MT-PSP-ELS-LIC-247, NC-25310-SP-FA/LV, NC-1622-CSA, NE-14451, NJ Burglar Alarm Lic. # -NJ-34BF00021800, NM-353366, NV-0068518, City of Las Vegas: 3000008296, NY-Licensed by the N.Y.S. Department of State UID#12000317691, NYS #12000286451,OH-53891446, City of Cincinnati: AC86, OK-AC1048, OR-170997, Pennsylvania Home Improvement Contractor Registration Number: PA022999, RI-3582, RI-7508, SC-BAC5630, SD- 1025-7001-ET, TN-1520, TX-B13734, ACR-3492, UT-6422596-6501, VA-115120, VT-ES-2382(7C),WA-602588694/ECPROTEYH934RS, WI-City of Milwaukee: PAS-0002966, WV-WV042433, WY-LV-G-21499. 3750 Priority Way South Dr. Indianapolis, IN 46240 ©2017 DEFENDERS, Inc. dba Protect Your Home DF-CD-NP-Q220