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Home & Garden F |
| SUNDAY, OCTOBER, 15, 2023
& Real Estate
INSIDE
REICH: Changing color in early fall is bad news for sugar maples, F3
TAKING OVER: Skelly, Home Depot’s 12-foot tall skeleton, which debuted three years ago, has transformed decorating. But he’s not just for Halloween, F4 SKYROCKETING RATES: 30-year mortgage rate hits 7.57%, the highest level since December 2000, F7 WMASS DEEDS, F7
No Fright Nights There’s nothing wrong with ditching the blood and gore when decorating for Halloween. Page F2
F2 | SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2023
THE REPUBLICAN | MASSLIVE.COM
HOME & GARDEN
Halloween doesn’t have to mean ‘spooky’ Decorations get gory, but some prefer to dial it down By KIM COOK
Associated Press
For some people, the scarier the better when it comes to Halloween decorations. A zombie girl with glowing eyes who rips the head off her teddy bear? OK. A 6-foot-tall, chainsaw-wielding hulk who emits bloodcurdling screams and buzzing? Trick or treat! Decorating with scary stuff can be part of the fun. But other people, including those with little kids, find the aesthetic disturbing, and prefer their Halloween without the gore. “I want to preserve my little ones’ innocence as long as possible, and the creepy, mischievous, evil side of Halloween brings up topics I don’t want my child to know about until they’re old enough to understand it’s fake,” says Jamie Morrissey, who has three children under 3 in suburban New York. For those after a more dialed-down but still spooky and dramatic look, there are plenty of decorations and themes. Some play off of old science and wizardry, with celestial illustrations and apothecary elements. Some take a playfully gothic turn. There’s the traditional orange-and-black color scheme, but no reason to stick only to that. (Note: As for fake cobwebs and dangling lights, wildlife experts urge people not to put them up. Animals can get tangled and trapped in them, leading to injury or death.)
Ghosts, jack-o’-lanterns and more But Watson acknowledges it’s no fun to be a Halloween Scrooge, either. She finds the handmade ghosts from Mollie Jenkins Pottery “just the right mix of sweet and spooky.” Jenkins is a Columbus, Georgia, ceramic artist who found herself with a little ex-
Above: Decorating for Halloween with scary stuff can be fun, but other people, including those with little kids, find the aesthetic disturbing. Right and on the cover: Basic pumpkins that light up can offer a non-frightening aesthetic. (UNSPLASH PHOTOS)
tra white clay one fall semester while pursuing her B.F.A. at Auburn University. “My mom’s always loved decorating for the holidays, and growing up we had spooky Halloween candlesticks along with big terracotta jack-o’-lanterns. I took a spin off of those, creating my whimsical ghost,” she said. Her little specters have developed a following, and sell out every year on her site. Decorating for a party Inviting some friends over for a spooky soiree? For a Hogwarts feel, hang some of Balsam Hill’s battery-operated “floating candles” over a party table or entry. The retailer also has stacked black pumpkin lights with cat faces, and glittery black twig trees. Crate & Barrel’s got a twiggy, matte-black wreath for a mantel or door. Or create a modern Halloween village with a few of their matteblack haunted houses. Lauren McIntosh, an artist in Berkeley, California, has
created a collection of glassware and napkins for Anthropologie with illustrations including a fortune-teller’s palm, ravens, night-blooming flowers, and mystical moon and star patterns. Also for Anthropologie, London ceramicist Francesca Kaye has an endearing array of bats, cats, owls and ravens on trays, mugs, lanterns and a
candelabra. Dodell-Felder shares a party idea connected to the movie “Beetlejuice,” which gets a new installment as early as next year. “I’m a huge fan of Tim Burton, and recently ended up purely by accident at a Beetlejuice-themed bar. It had black-and-white striped décor SEE DECOR, PAGE F6
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Basic black or a Halloween rainbow Jessica Dodell-Feder, HGTV Magazine’s executive editor, bleeds the color from her decorations. “I love keeping everything black and white, then using natural elements that have a little bit of a creepy factor like bats, snakes, bugs or Venus fly traps,” she says. “Think black-painted branches stick-
ing out of an urn; framed faux moth specimens; black-painted faux snakes ‘crawling’ across the center of a table like a runner.” At the other end of the spectrum, if you want to take your Halloween a little bit ‘90s, a little bit Barbiecore, then professional crafter Kara Whitten of Austin, Texas, has some zingy, rainbow-hued, Halloween-themed ideas at her site, akailochiclife. She offers garlands of multicolored pumpkins or phrases, like “Hocus Pocus” or “I Put a Spell on You.” She has instructions for spatter-painting faux pumpkins in day-glo colors. Another craft idea that kids and adults can do together: Submerge a few white tapers in warm water until they’re soft enough to bend into curvy shapes. Then with a permanent marker add facial features. Once they’ve cooled and hardened again, you’ve got some candle ghosts for the table. There’s a DIY video on Whitten’s blog. Betsy Cribb Watson, Southern Living’s senior homes and features editor, favors fall colors. “I’m not huge on Halloween, so I love leaning into the season’s abundance of natural colors instead: sage greens, burnt oranges, golden yellows and chocolate browns,” she says. “Plus, when you skip the zombies in favor of fall color, you can enjoy your decorations from the start of the season through Thanksgiving.”
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HOME & GARDEN
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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2023 | F3
Lee Reich | In The Garden
Sugar maples’ early fall color is cause for concern
S
ple, yet having good stress tolerance, include tuliptree (Liriodendron tulipfera), hackberry (Celtis occidentalis), and European alder (Alnus glutinosa). If fall color in addition to stately proportion were desired, one might plant gingko (Ginkgo
biloba), sassafras (Sassafras albidum), or honeylocust (Gleditsia triacanthos; the cultivar “Moraine” is a good choice, as it is thornless and fruitless). Red maple (Acer rubrum) varieties such as “Autumn Flame” and “Red Sunset” also might be
included in this latter category. No American elms, please. 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.
Sugar maples are magnificent trees in autumn but are suffering from a number of environmental affronts these days. (LEE REICH PHOTO)
bark of young trees, a situation never experienced by a young maple growing up in the shade of larger trees. Once trees are weakened, other problems arise: maple wilt, anthracnose, various types of scale insects, borers, verticillium wilt, and dieback. An important part of the the cure, in some cases the only cure, for these conditions is not spraying, but, rather, maintaining trees in a vigorous condition. To prevent or forestall the demise of sugar maples, trees should be accorded first-class treatment. The next best site to that found in native forests would be a well-drained soil, where the trees either are mulched or underplanted with a groundcover to keep lawnmowers and lawns at bay. Protect young trees from sunscald by painting the bark each fall with white latex paint, or wrapping the bark with some sort of covering. Keep trees vigorous with correct fertilization and watering. On less than ideal sites, other tree species should be planted. Trees with the grand stature of sugar ma-
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UGAR MAPLES ARen’t faring well these days. Ironically, the manifestation of their troubles is that for which we value them so highly — their fiery, fall color. Trouble is lurking when this fall color appears too early in the season. The problem usually can be traced to a tree’s roots. In order to thrive, sugar maple needs the best of soil conditions. Interestingly, horticultural texts of a half-century or more ago all concur that the sugar maple “does well in almost every soil.” Are our standards for “good soil” changing? Climate change is surely putting more stress on the plants. Perhaps the trees that were young a half-century or more ago are just now beginning to show signs of old age and senescence. To get a sense of the best conditions for sugar maples, think of their native habitat. You’re at once transported to the woods, where only dappled shade reaches the forest floor. Here, the air is redolent of rotting leaves, which carpet the ground along with a few ferns and small shrubs. Contrast the natural habitat with that of maples along streets or in lawns. Such trees have to contend with asphalt over their roots. Foot traffic, car traffic, or even heavy construction equipment, compacts the soil, squeezing out life-giving oxygen, and impeding root growth. Suburban maple roots live in a periodically saline environment as de-icing salts wash off walkways and roads in winter. In lawns, maples’ roots must commingle and compete with voracious grass roots. Suburban trees might be further traumatized with above-ground insults. Lawnmowers and weed whips occasionally swipe at their bark. Brutal midsummer heat is compounded as it reflects off hot asphalt. And the sun beats directly on the
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HOME & GARDEN
F4 | SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2023
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Home Depot just can’t top Skelly, the 12-foot king of Halloween By Rachel Kurzius
The Washington Post
There’s Madonna. There’s Beyoncé. There’s Taylor. And then there’s Skelly - the 12-foot-tall lawn decoration that changed the whole Halloween game when he debuted three years ago. Credit pandemic boredom (Skelly hit the market in the summer of 2020); Skelly’s unusually impressive size; or maybe the fact that skeletons are, quite literally, bare bones enough to work with nearly any style of home or decorative display. Whatever the case, Skelly’s star has thoroughly blasted through the usual limitations of plastic pumpkins, Styrofoam grave markers and other All Hallows adornments. He makes year-round appearances at bar mitzvahs, graduations and, with the right seasonal flair, holidays such as Christmas and the Fourth of July. The problem for his handlers back at Home Depot: Skelly has achieved such dizzying levels of celebrity that they can’t find an act to follow him. “So, obviously you ask like,
Inferno, left, towers 12 feet tall, just like the original Skelly, right, and also is sold out. (HOME DEPOT)
‘Hey, what’s next after Skelly?’” says Lance Allen, who oversees all of Home Depot’s holiday decorations and is the one responsible for bringing the giant skeleton into our lives to begin with. “I will keep trying to get lightning to strike again, but really, everything was perfect in that storm when we created that item.” Still, Allen is confident that he
has, at least, discovered a few supporting players. A moving, talking, seven-foot-tall witch named Lethal Lily, for instance, might just be this year’s breakout talent. She has already sold out online, because “everybody embraced her so well,” Allen says. (He declined to provide hard numbers for any of the Home Depot product sales.) Predator of the Night, an an-
repellents, and lots of alternative plant choices. Cost is $20 members, $30 nonmembers; • “Stonemasonry: An Overview,” Oct. 21, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. This workshop will focus on the steps taken to start new projects and methods for fixing existing problems. It will start with classroom demonstration and Q&A, followed by a walk of the grounds examining masonry and looking at techniques for fixing stone projects that have been worn down over time. After an in-depth look at the basics on the planning board and in the field, the instruction will move to masonry tools, finishes and fabrication. With these new skills, each participant will create a birdbath or planter to take home. Cost is $140 members, $160 nonmembers. To register or for more infor-
mation, visit berkshirebotanical.org. Berkshire Botanical Garden is located at 5 West Stockbridge Road.
GARDEN NOTES HAMPDEN
Garden club The Hampden Garden Club will host “The Tulip: Not Just Another Pretty Face” on Oct. 19 at 7 p.m. at Academy Hall, 625 Main St. Guest speaker Ginny Blake, who is also a club member, will share the history of the spring bulb. For more information, call Lil at 413-566-1137. Guest fee is $5. STOCKBRIDGE
Garden programs Berkshire Botanical Garden presents these upcoming programs: • “Deer Defense,” Oct. 21, 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Learn from Cornell research on how to protect your garden with three categories of proven methods against deer: barriers,
WEST SPRINGFIELD
Club meeting The West Springfield Garden Club will meet on Oct. 19 at 6 p.m. at Storrowton Tavern, 1305 Memorial Ave., on the grounds of the Eastern States Exposition. After a short business meeting, the evening’s speaker, Bob Whitney, will demonstrate floral design styles, color theory, care and handling, and arrangement mechanics. Those interested in attending should contact Joan at graceshad@ msn.com by Oct. 16. Send items for Garden Notes to pmastriano@repub.com two weeks prior to publication.
imatronic beast with a visible rib cage and blood-red veins rippling through his 12-foot wingspan, also has made a promising debut, according to Allen. “Even standing next to Skelly, it looks great.” He also points to Jack Skellington, a version of “The Nightmare Before Christmas” character that moves, sings songs from the movie and looms one hulking foot taller than Skelly. The other decoration that’s already sold out is - you guessed it - another 12-foot skeleton. This one is named Inferno and was introduced in 2021. It looks something like a cross between Skelly and a Jack-o’-Lantern battling ‘roid rage. Really, those last two seem an awful lot like sequels to Skelly, just with more special effects. Not that you can blame Home Depot for leaning into what works. As Allen sees it, Skelly started a whole new trend in Halloween decor. “Back then, an eight- or nine-foot item was huge. And then here we come out with this 12-foot item,” he says. It shifted the scale, and now you can find giant skeletons, witches and other creatures of the night at most stores selling Halloween decor. But it appears that nothing hits quite like a 12-foot skeleton. Home Depot had a flash sale for a limited supply of Skellies and Infernos in April, a good half-year ahead of Halloween, and customers bought up all of them. Then, Skelly was officially launched online for spooky season in mid-July, and he landed in brick-and-mortar stores Labor Day weekend. Not surprisingly, he sold
Since 1985
out fast online (Home Depot wouldn’t say precisely how long it took “due to competitive reasons”), with resellers offering him up on Facebook Marketplace at inflated prices. And finding him in stores requires the commitment of a paparazzo staking out a Kardashian. Members of Skelly Facebook groups post his whereabouts whenever they spot him. Late in September, there was a flurry of sightings in Canadian Home Depots, sparking a frenzied online discussion about the various complications that might ensue while trying to bring him back over the border. It took Amanda Mallory, a Halloween devotee in Hurricane, W.Va., years to track down a Skelly of her own. She found out about this summer’s drop date from a Facebook group. “So I stayed up all night in July and finally snagged one,” she says. To fit her “Tibia Swift” concert-themed lawn display starring her entire skeleton collection, she bedecked her Skelly in a glittery outfit that she found at Goodwill, along with a sign that reads, “In My Eternal Rest Era.” (Following the news that Taylor Swift may be dating Travis Kelce, Mallory dressed one of her smaller skeleton concertgoers in the NFL player’s Kansas City Chiefs jersey.) Mallory wants her Halloween decorations to bring joy to people, especially kids, which is why she’s always skipped some of the more gruesome animatronics that are available. To her and other Skelly devotees, his charm stems from the fact that he’s more playful than petrifying.
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HOME & GARDEN
F6 | SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2023
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Terry & Kim Kovel | Antiques & Collecting
The ‘feet’ on this table are the real deal If a piece of furniture is described as having paw or claw feet, it usually means they were carved or molded. For some pieces, like this table, furniture “legs” and “feet” can be taken literally. The table, made of zebra hide, complete with zebra legs and hoof feet, sold for $500 at a Hindman auction. Buying, selling and collecting pics made of animal hides or other taxidermy requires care. It’s always a good idea to check federal and state laws on selling animal parts before a sale or purchase. And once you have your piece, it takes careful cleaning and storage. Don’t keep taxidermy in bright sunlight; do dust it at least every other week and keep watch for moths and other insects.
but you would have to send your dishes to a laboratory to test for cadmium.
Q. We’re getting ready for
a sale and wonder if an old windup toy airplane is worth anything. It’s red and yellow with black trim and has two propeller engines and an 18-inch wingspan. “Flying Fortress 2095” is printed on one wing and “Army” on the other. It’s marked “Marx Toys.” What do you think it’s worth?
A.
The Flying Fortress was a B-17 bomber made by Boeing and used by the United States Army Air Corps during World War II. Louis Marx & Co. sales and estate auctions, not tains any lead, cadmium or made several versions of the at specialized bottle auctions arsenic in its manufacturing. toy Flying Fortress aeroplane or shows. They may also sell (their spelling) with sparking at sales of whiskey or liquor Historically, lead was Crown Distillers sugmachine guns. The first, made bottles held by national auction added to glazes to keep dishes about 1940, was red and silver gested I contact you to see houses. We have seen vintage durable and colors bright. Cad- and had four engines with metal if an unopened bottle from unopened Crown Royal bottles mium is another heavy metal 1968 is worth anything. propellers. The second version sell for about $150 to $200 used in colored glazes, espehad red celluloid propellers. Crown Royal is a blended recently. If the original box and cially colors like orange and The red and yellow version with bag are included, the price will yellow. They are generally con- two engines, like yours, was Canadian whiskey that was first made in 1939 and first sold be higher. Empty bottles sell for sidered safe if they are bound made about 1941. One in good much less, about $20 to $50. If in the glaze and the piece has in the United States in 1964. condition sold for $130 a few you intend to sell your Crown been fired properly. However, Twentieth-century mass-proyears ago. The price you can leaching can be a concern if the get at a sale will depend on the duced bottles do not sell for as Royal bottle with its contents, check state and federal laws for dishes are chipped or cracked, condition. If it has dents or paint high of prices as 19th-century selling alcohol. or if they are used for acidic bottles, and serious bottle loss or if the engines don’t spark, foods. Arsenic is more likely to it will sell for less. collectors, the ones who dig I have acquired an entire leach from unglazed ceramics up antique bottles from old set of Seltmann Weidman or aluminum cookware than dumps, will not be interested TIP: Don’t store antique Vienna White dishware and glazed ceramic dishes. Seltin them. Unopened whiskey furniture in the attic, near a would love to use it every day, mann is still in business in Ger- fireplace or near a heat duct. bottles from the 1940s, ’50s but I need to know if it conmany and, according to their and ’60s tend to sell at house Basements can be damp or hot website, its current products and are not a good place for busts might add a “Night at are “lead- and cadmium-free.” furniture. the Museum” vibe. However, the site does not say when this started. If you conTerry Kovel and Kim Kovel CONTINUES FROM PAGE F2 Creative but gentle tact the company, they may be answer readers’ questions sent with neon green elements. In San Francisco, Emily able to tell you. We cannot say to the column. Send a letter with The drinks were served on Reaman works in interior for sure if your dishes contain one question describing the size, dry ice, and they had olddesign, and she’s also got a heavy metals. According to material (glass, pottery) and timey portraits on the walls. preschooler. While he loves the pattern-matching service what you know about the item. You couldn’t look away!” she some “spooky” things, she’s Replacements.com, Seltmann Include only two pictures, the says. careful about her decorating. made Vienna White from object and a closeup of any marks For “an elevated Halloween “I don’t have cobwebs or 1980 to 2002. The Council of or damage. Be sure your name party,” The Spruce’s editorial skeletons hanging by my the European Committees set and return address are included. and strategy director, Carofront door,” she says. “But I limits for the amounts of lead By sending a question, you give line Utz, suggests setting up a do add lights to the trees, and and cadmium used in dishes in full permission for use in any tablescape with luxe textures my son and I decorate gourds 1984. As of 2020, the German Kovel product. Names, addresses like velvet, and adding orange, with paint and glitter that we Federal Institute for Risk or email addresses will not be purple and green candlesticks keep out during Halloween, Assessment proposed lowering published. Questions that are in different shapes and sizes. then use on the Thanksgiving these limits. You can buy a lead answered will appear in Kovels Sculptured Greek or Roman table.” testing kit at a hardware store, Publications. Write to Kovels, Check state and federal laws before buying or selling anything made from animal hide or taxidermy, like this table that sold for $500 at a Hindman auction. (COWLES SYNDICATE INC.)
Q.
A.
A.
Q.
Decor
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. Waterford, letter opener, Lismore, glass handle, box, 8 1/2 inches, $25. Nautical, chart, mariner’s, four boat diagrams, world map, star charts, portraits of historical navigators, c. 1940, 24 x 43 inches, $40. Match holder, two hunters, deer head crest, rabbit, game bird, cast iron, wall mount, 11 x 5 inches, $70. Purse, beaded, pink roses, green leaves, yellow ground, multicolor geometrics around base, drawstring top, 6 x 5 inches, $110. Folk art, dovecote, pine, slatted door and walls, painted blue, yellow frame, brown roof, 1800s, 20 inches, $345. Clock, Howard Miller, Triad, round, black dial, three circles in center, red, green, light blue, red frame, 622414, enameled acrylic, Irving Harper, 1975, 9 inches, $525. Photograph, Gitanes, black and white, street scene, group of children in shadow, two on bicycles, Arles, France, frame, 25 1/2 x 21 inches, $705. Rug, Keshan, red field, central medallion and pendants, flowering vines, navy blue main border, ivory and light-blue guard borders, late 20th century, 13 feet x 10 feet 2 inches, $1,260. Tool, chest, top handle, hinged side, folds open, fitted interior, drawers, door, compartments, painted brown, with tools, 1800s, 29 1/2 x 17 inches, $2,520. Pottery, midcentury, plate, Motifs No. 17, brushed glaze, red, white, yellow and blue shapes, black trim, marked, Madoura, Pablo Picasso, 1963, 10 inches, $4,410.
The Republican, King Features Syndicate, 628 Virginia Dr., Orlando, FL 32803 or email us at collectorsgallery@kovels.com.
HOME & GARDEN
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30-year US mortgage rate surges By ALEX VEIGA
Associated Press
Home loan borrowing costs rose for the fifth straight week, keeping the average long-term U.S. mortgage rate at its highest level in more than two decades and taking another bite out of prospective homebuyers’ purchasing power. The average rate on the benchmark 30-year home loan rose to 7.57% from 7.49% last week, mortgage buyer Freddie Mac said Thursday. A year ago, the rate averaged 6.92%. Borrowing costs on 15-year fixed-rate mortgages, popular with homeowners refinancing their home loan, also increased. The average rate rose to 6.89% from 6.78% last week. A year ago, it averaged 6.09%. High rates can add hundreds of dollars a month in costs for borrowers, limiting how much they can afford in a market already out of reach for many Americans. They also discourage homeowners who locked in rock-bottom rates two years ago from selling. The average rate on a 30-year mortgage is now more than double what it was two years ago. The average rate climbed above 6% in September 2022 and has remained above that threshold since. This marks the first 12-month period that the benchmark mortgage rate has been at 6% or higher since the early 2000s. It’s now at the highest level since Dec. 1, 2000, when it averaged 7.65%. The elevated rates combined with a near-historic low level of homes for sale nationally have kept home prices near all-time highs even as sales of previously occupied U.S. homes have fallen 21% through the first eight months of this year versus 2022. “Though buyers have shown signs of adjusting to the higher-rate environment, limited inventory has kept home prices elevated, cutting further into the buying power of shoppers hoping to find a suitable home,” said Hannah Jones, an analyst at Realtor.com.
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2023 | F7
Deeds
and Xiao Wei Chen, 33 Phillips St., $995,000.
AGAWAM
Margaret E. Collins and Arlen D. Collins to Christopher Prather and Carla Carpenter, 551 South Pleasant St., $775,000.
Clyde L. Simpson Family Irrevocable Trust, trustee of, and Lori A. Keeley, trustee, to Kyle Keeley, 60 Roberta Circle, $256,000. Helen S. Robbins to Taylor Jane Burroughs, 16 Corey Colonial, Unit 16, $221,000.
Lilia Mereshko to Kyle Stocks and Christine Stocks, 13 Kathy Terrace, $425,000. Golden Gates Realty Associates LLC, to Isaiah Pagan, 48-50 South Westfield St., $360,000.
Pamela Murphy, trustee, Bruce Holden, trustee, Stebbins Family Trust, trustee of, and Stebbins Family Revocable Inter Vivos Trust, trustee of, to Jennifer White, 12 Federal St., Extn., $280,000. Pine Crossing Construction Inc., to Charmarc Family Trust, trustee of, Marcel J. Grondin, trustee, and Charlotte A. Grondin, trustee, 106 Villa Drive, Unit #35, $489,900. Terrell Carter and Kim Johnson to Jonathan Rodriguez, 519 Cooper St., $385,000. Viet Q Nguyen and Trang T Do to Fhamida Khan and Khan E. Shamrat Mojammal Islam, 42 Windermere Drive, $751,000.
AMHERST Knight Properties LLC, and Knight Realty Group LLC, to Celia Huang
Luis R. Santana to Alexandra McNally, 120 South St., $276,000. Matthew Dabrowski, Alycia Galaska, Alycia Dabrowski, Marie C. Garczynski, representative, Robert A. Garczynski, estate, and Robert Garczynski, estate, to Odlaire Alexandre, 37 Fisher Road, $346,000.
Fannie Mae and Federal National Mortgage Association to Jacqueline Marie Lajara, 171 Prospect St., $99,755.
Fred L. Perry to Amherst BCRE LLC, 650 Main St., $1,092,000.
BELCHERTOWN
Griffin A. Bazzeghin, Nigel F. Bazzeghin, Seth M. Kenny and Damon Alexander Bazzeghin, estate, to Western Mass Hilltown Hikers Inc., 9 Prospect St., $36,000. Noelle Winn, trustee, and Katherine M. Riiska Family Trust, trustee of, to Trevor Taylor, 0 Round Hill Road, $15,000.
Marie Caldwell, 425 Mill Valley Road, $100.
Eric E. Rouleau and Kristina C. Rouleau to Reid D. Wagstaff and Mikayla Q. Wagstaff, 18 Cordner Road, $310,000.
CHICOPEE Adam Deady, representative, Sandra A. McInerney, estate, and Marissa Deady to Adam Deady, 56 Cortland St., $106,157.
BLANDFORD
Adrienne Realty LLC, to Kbocker Realty LLC, 0 Montgomery Street, $550,000.
Michael L. Goff to Beacon Home Luis A. Lizardi Jr., to Autumn Tayler Buyers LLC, 9 Cobble Mountain Road, $210,000. Bradway and Jakub Bartnik, 263 Suffield St., $440,000. Mark D. Olson to PCR Agawam LLC, 21 Dwight St., $2,475,000.
P. Nolan, 79 Ruskin St., $265,000.
CHESTER
Heritage Ventures LLC, to Patrick Ross K. Hartman and Angelique Moretti and Caroline Seymour, 963 J. Hartman to Paul R. Duval and Main St., $265,000. Anna K. Duval, 732 Daniel Shays Highway, $389,900. Jie Chen and Zhaoqing Zhang to Jeffrey J. Benoit, 14 Briarcliff Drive, Matthew Caldwell to Matthew $350,000. Henry Caldwell V, and Madison Kyle R. Stocks and Christine L. Stocks to Tanner Sousa and Nicholle Sousa, 30 Belmont Ave., $325,000.
Shire Home Solutions LLC, to Troy E. Schinkel and Holly R. Schinke, North Street, $40,000.
CUMMINGTON Lisa J. Lashway, Lisa J. Lashway, personal representative, Don Wells, estate, Don P. Wells, estate, Marissa Wells, Marissa Wells, personal representative, Guy Robert Wells, estate, Guy R. Wells, estate, Tyler Wells and Cheyenne Wells to Lyle Morrin Hazel, 51 Main St., $100,000.
EAST LONGMEADOW Carl C. Zimmerman and Donna L. Zimmerman to Jaime H. Cisneros and Lorena E. Cisneros, 60 Pease Road, $740,000.
Daugherty Realty LLC, to Rytaygav LLC, 105 Industrial Drive, Ciara Murphy, Melanie Murphy $1,950,000. and Melanie Fredette to Debra M. Burdeau, 43 Lorimer St., $315,000. Debra H. Katz to Dina MacKenzie, 5 Heritage Circle, $599,000. Debra M. Burdeau to Karen Lamoureux and Leah Lamoureux, 163 Farid Enterprises LLC, to New Path Chapel St., $353,000. Counseling LLC, 246 North Main
BRIMFIELD Dale Ann Descoteau to Delfino Farias Bonanca and Palonsky Miranda, 129 Old Palmer Road, $325,000.
St., Unit 1A, $115,000.
Harry Melendez III, and Kimberly Melendez to Rolando Saravia, 547 Broadway St., $350,000.
Robert Kazan and Constance J. Kazan to SRV Properties LLC, 119 Sturbridge Road, $191,000.
Marygrace A. Larabee to John M. Normoyle and Paige I. Hebert, 72 Cooley Ave., $385,000.
James Gutierrez and Justin James Gutierrez to Megan Noonan and Miranda Noonan, 44 Fanwood Ave., $315,000.
Tonya L. Olsen and Kerri A. Polakowski to John David Holdcraft, 8 Hillside Drive, $175,500.
US Bank Trust, trustee, and VRMTG Asset Trust, trustee of, to David Larocca, 26 Oak Bluff Circle, $255,000.
James M. Roy, Cari M. Dodge, Robert F. Roy and William E. Roy to Nicholas Alvarez and Noreen Harrington Alvarez, 23 Greenleaf St., $210,000.
BUCKLAND John T. McConnell, trustee of the John T. McConnell Investment Trust, and Carol McConnell, trustee of the Carol McConnell Investment Trust, to Steven C. Parsons and Patricia A. Reed, 119 Elm St., $680,000.
EASTHAMPTON
Janice Morris to Thomas Gardiner, 88 Saratoga Ave., $175,000. Joseph Thibault and Stephen Thibault to Elizabeth K. Ryan, 194 Montgomery St., $281,000.
Carrie Ann Ledoyt to Joanne Rideout, 21 Sears St., Unit 3, Glassworks Condominium, $300,000.
Joyce M. Fournier, estate, Joyce May Fournier, estate, and Laura L. Kuhnel, representative, to Edward
Bruce Wayne King, trustee, and Bruce Wayne King Revocable Trust to Margaret Haddad, trustee, and Margaret Haddad Living Trust, 532 East St., $100. Chris M. Patnode to David Pruskin and Gary Einsidler, 29 Center St., $418,300.
SEE DEEDS, PAGE F8
MORTGAGE GUIDE 7.375%
30 Yr Fixed Rate
APR: 7.417 Points: 0.000 Fees: $480.35 % Down: 20%
15 Yr Fixed 10 Yr Fixed
7.125
0.000 $480.35 20%
7.192
7.000 0.000 $480.35 20% 7.093 APPLY online at monsonloans.com
413-267-4513 www.monsonsavings.com
LIC# 613363
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 $548.250. 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 $548.250, 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 $5.37 per $1,000 borrowed ex. 180 monthly payments of $7.65per $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 413-788-1165
HOME & GARDEN
F8 | SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2023
Deeds CONTINUES FROM PAGE F7 Bennett K. Bishop and Cynthia P. Bishop to Christopher Mikal Chenier, 11 Lawson Drive, $387,000. Keri A. Davidson-Bravman, Keri Ann Davidson and Richard Bravman to John Joyce and Mary Joyce, 35 Phelps St., $503,000. ARC Investments LLC, to Nada Kawar, 24 Summer St., $530,000. Lindsay L. McGrath and Patrick D. McGrath to Susan Sayre and Thomas Sayre, 29 Kingsberry Way, $762,000. Theresa J. Kinlock, Cynthia A. Malinowski, Matthew R. Kinlock Jr., Kirsten M. Perras and Kyle D. Kinlock to Heidi K. Kuester and Peter J. Curro, 19 Loudville Road, $511,000.
GOSHEN Janine Nye and Thomas Nye to Michelle A. Bond and Robert Zuraw, Fuller Road and West Road, $55,000.
Corissa E. Tripp, 99 Meadow Lane, $425,000. William Spencer and Linda Spencer to Hillary E. Smith, 23-25 Haywood St., $335,000. Kevin M. Steiner, personal representative of the Estate of Mary L. Steiner, to Joshua M. Levin, 150 Green River Road, $313,000. Charles W. Saunders Inc., “fka” C.W.S. Realty Inc., to Betty Saunder, 377 Main St., Unit 10, 377 Main Street Condominium, $110,000.
Gates St., $33,507. Francis R. McAnulty III, Ann Marie Matlock and Mary Frances Higgins to Katharina Kowalski and Forest Loomis-Dulong, 155 Norwood Terrace, $247,000. Frederick G. Destromp and Lhea Destromp to Sarah Eileen Harper and Stacy Harper, 19 Dillon Ave., $305,000. Jill M. Evans to Nicholas P. Boccio, Maple Crest Circle, Unit 24G, $130,000.
Annemarie M. Monahan, trustee of the Monahan Investment Trust, to Eagle Real Estate Ventures LLC, 11 Conway St., $1,000,000.
Kerry M. Mikalchus and John R. Mikalchus to Madison Marie Sullivan and Jacob Bihler, 12 Scott Hollow Drive, $375,000.
Mark S. Richardson, personal representative of the Estate of Sally Tam Richardson, “aka” Sally T. Richardson, to Zachary Fry and Jamie Lee Fry, 462 Leyden Road, $292,500.
Lori Ann Young and Michelle L. Sliwa to Kevin Gagnon and Breanna R. Robinson, 298 Apremont Highway, $325,000.
Jeffery A. Lovell, personal representative of the Estate of George L. Lovell, to Dauntless Path LLC, 110 Cottage St., $130,000.
HADLEY
Paula G. Brunault to Lawrence S. Fieber and Abigail Rae Fieber, 186 Pleasant St., $390,000. Robert J. Lewandowski, Michael P. Lewandowski and John E. Lewandowski to Michael J. Crum, trustee, Anne L. Crum, trustee, and Crum Family Trust, trustee of, 7 Nicholls Drive, $375,190.
Donald R. Dion to Noelle Pierce and Denise Stankiewicz Inter Vivos GRANBY Antonio Torres, 9 Cold Spring Lane, Trust, trustee of, Mary Ann Miles, Steven L. Seaha and Cheryl A. Sea- $100,000. trustee, and Gary O. Stankiewicz, ha to John Campbell and Sharron trustee, to Oliver Auto Body Campbell, 12 Pine Brook Circle, Realco LLC, Rear Beacon Avenue, HAMPDEN $329,900. $991,000. David Gallant and Cheryl A. Gallant Winchester Realty LLC, to 728 Guy George and Darlene George to Weifeng Liu and Huihui Wu, 187 to Brian Dussault and Alysa ChenHampden LLC, 728 Hampden St., kus, Hollow Road, Lot 1, $150,000. Kendall St., $680,000. $2,400,000. Clyde A. Brown, personal representative, Dolores Stewart, estate, and Dolores A. Stewart, estate, to Megliola Realty LLC, 44 Taylor St., $76,483. Cornelius T. Gallagher to Rachel A. Kremer, 48 Granby Heights, $230,000. Kotowicz Custom Homes LLC, to Eduardo Matos and Yamaira Encarnacion, 69 Carver St., $558,000. Marguerite C. Johnson and Matthew Johnson to Randolph Lisle and Erika Grundstrom, 274 Batchelor St., $485,000. J.L.N. Properties LLC, to Cassandra M. Os and Randall L. Hoy, Carver Street, $200,000.
GRANVILLE Peter B. Crowley and Anne Marie Torizzo to Emily Olszewski and Lisa Olszewski, 1012 Main Road, $340,000. Robie Peter Breedon, James Goodreau and James Goudreau to Kenneth Ronald Breedon and Rebecca Louise Breedon, 0 Rear Main Road, $20,000.
GREENFIELD Frank Charles Wong, personal representative of the Estate of Yoshiko Wong, to Nathaniel A. Tripp and
David Gallant and Cheryl A. Gallant to David B. Dussault and Patricia J. Dussault, 551 Glendale Road, $650,000.
Holyoke Redevelopment Authority to Partnership Appleton Redevelopment Limited, 191 Appleton St., $200,000.
Leona T. Grundstrom to Jillian A. Lombardi, 48 Allen Crest St., $350,000.
Yasmin Thahir to Melvin Bladimir Fuentes Pena, 2027-2029 Northampton St., $385,000.
Susan A. Jeanroy, Susan A. Delrosso and Justin A. Jeanroy to W. Michael Hamilton and Daniel R. Collier, 175 Stafford Road, $725,000.
HATFIELD Terence J. Kennedy and Adeline S. Kennedy to Angelica Harakas, 33 Elm St., $695,000.
HUNTINGTON JVD Investment Properties LLC, to Jenna Francis Webb and Tanner James Parks, 4 Crescent Circle, $300,000.
LEYDEN
Donald R. Adams and Kathleen A. Adams to 168 Kately Hill LLC, 168 Karen F. Hosley to Jamison A. Bradshaw and Alexandria S. Moore, Kately Hill Road, $781,000. 12 Scotland Road, $700,000. Donald R. Adams and Kathleen A. Adams to 168 Kately Hill LLC, 6 Food Bank of Western MassachuStephen Lane, $319,000. setts Inc., and Western Massachusetts Food Bank Inc., to Myers Logistics LLC, 97 North Hatfield Road, $2,150,000.
HOLLAND Darleen Griffin to Amy C. Grossi, Vinton Road, Lot A, $75,000.
HOLYOKE Dubs Capital LLC, to Northern Flooring & Remodeling LLC, 36-38
THE REPUBLICAN | MASSLIVE.COM John Phillips and Yulia Ozerova, 1562 Longmeadow St., $330,000. Marc J. Zerbe and Madona Zerbe to George J. Gikas and Cheryl A. Gikas, 93 Green Willow Drive, $900,000. Nadine Buckley to Barclay Street Holdings LLC, 80 Barclay St., $312,000. Phyllis J. Gregorski, Jennifer M. Niece and Michael J. Gregorski to Ernest Abramian and Diana Abramian, 41 Wilkin Drive, $420,000. Saundra B. Reilly to Charles Beresford and Shilpa Gulati, 720 Longmeadow St., $937,000.
LUDLOW Brian A. McDaniel and Nicole M. McDaniel to Melissa Brennan, 1459 Center St., $462,000. Daniel T. Matias, trustee, and J & H Irrevocable Trust, trustee of, to Carvalho Properties LLC, 16 Cady St., $400,000. Diane D. Cousineau and Diane D. Asselin to Brian A. McDaniel and Nicole M. McDaniel, 1459 Center St., $280,000. Michael Georgiadis to P & E Properties Inc., 608 Center St., $260,000. Midamerica Properties LLC, to Northeastern Investments LLC, Sewell St., $1,648,000. Robert J. Willis and Wanda M. Willis to Michael S. Gove, trustee, and JM Realty Trust, trustee of, 77 Winsor St., Unit 103, $87,500. Robert J. Willis and Wanda M. Willis to Michael S. Gove, trustee, and JM Realty Trust, trustee of, 77 Winsor St., Unit 104, $87,500.
MONTAGUE Pioneer Valley Redevelopers LLC, and Obear Construction Company Inc., to L Street Corporate Management LLC, 110 L Street and 132 L Street, $1,350,000.
MONTGOMERY Dallas S. Deogburn and Caitlin Deogburn to Kimberly Devine, 11 Pineridge Drive, $470,500.
NORTHAMPTON William E. McCarthy Jr., to Ryan Flynn-Kasuba and Rachel Flynn-Kasuba, 64 Lyman Road, $625,000. O’Connell Hawley LLC, and O’Connell Development Group Inc., to Jonathan Arpino and Donna S. Arpino, 10 Hawley St., $695,000. Suzanne Forman to Aaron M. Madow and Lauren Greenberg, 85 Washington Ave., $950,000. Donna Shoup, trustee, David Malinoski, trustee, David Malin, trustee, Ellyn Bradford, trustee, Steven E. Malinoski, trustee, Steve Malinoski, trustee, and Marie T. Malinoski Irrevocable Real Estate Trust to Vasudev P. Patel, trustee, and PRP Realty Trust, 124 Haydenville Road, $405,000. Alloy LLC, to 209 Earle Street LLC, 209 Earle St., $6,000,000. Durai Rajasekar and Nirmala Rajasekar to Reliance Holdings Corp., 159 Pine St., $431,000.
Ronald Stephenson and Deborah A. Stephenson to Drew Nalewanski and Elizabeth Martins, 212 Woodland Circle, $680,000.
Patrick A. Boughan, Elizabeth T. Boughan and Elizabeth Tighe Boughan to Elizabethe Tighe Boughan and Joanne Palmieri Tighe, 9-11 Harold St., $100.
Theresa E. Small to Joseph R. Conway, trustee, and Mack Na Servicing Trust, trustee of, 208 East St., $80,000.
Sofia A. Frydman, Amy J. Lee and Amy Jo Lee to Molly E. Moses and Jennifer L. Wenz, 18 Dickinson St., $512,000.
Thomas R. Bamber and Angela M. Bamber to Jason R. Duke, 26 Higher Brook Drive, $325,000.
Urban Health Technologies LLC, to Richard Jaescke and Sandra Jaescke, Fair Street Extension and Strong Road, $90,000.
Whitetail Wreks LLC, to David Harold Porter Jr., Balsam Hill Road, Lot 74, $154,900. Whitetail Wreks LLC, to Nicholas K. Goggin and Kelly M. Cieboter, Turning Leaf Road, Lot 98, $179,900.
LONGMEADOW MIDDLEFIELD Christopher R. Bernd and Abigail Bernd to Kevin Connolly and Susan C. Beaudry to Michael A. Jennifer Connolly, 76 Meadowbrook Bero and Jana L. Gross, 162 Skyline Road, $516,000. Trail, $249,900. Elizabeth Anne Manitsas and Michael Nicholas Manitsas to Michael MONSON Wray and Jill Wray, 121 Hawthorn St., $369,900. Stephen Rickson and Martha RickJonathon B. Hall Jr., Jonathan B. Hall Jr., and Denise Marie Hall to
Teresa O’Connor to Christopher Fish Sr., and Donna Casler, 20 Hilltop Drive, $360,250.
son to Nelson McLeod and Karen McLeod, Macomber Road, $12,000.
Peter J. Duggan Jr., and Stacy L. Duggan to Sydney Elisabeth Thomson and Michael Lee Brownell, 114 Woodland Drive, $775,000. Ruth Ann Matilda Turchinetz and Tildy Turchinetz to Sara Seligmann, Bradley Seligmann and John Raymond Haines, 30 Grandview St., $375,000. Anne Zimmerman to Thomas Strojny, 17 Trumbull St., and 17 Trumbull Road, $225,000. Diana S. Fried and Michael J. Schvarczkopf to Alexandra Scott Porter, 4 Mountain Laurel Path and 600 Florence Road, $620,000.
SEE MORE DEEDS, PAGE F9
HOME & GARDEN
THE REPUBLICAN | MASSLIVE.COM
More Deeds CONTINUES FROM PAGE F8 Edward J. Severance, personal representative, and Marilyn Severance, estate, to Max Christian Hebert, 63 Park St., $417,000. Karen Laice Axelsson to Karen Laice Axelsson, trustee, and Karen Laice Axelsson Trust, 13 Edwards Square, $100.
ORANGE
$280,000. Joseph W. Topor Jr., personal representative, Glenn Choquette, estate, and Kristen Lee Robertson to Waheed Azam, trustee, and DKL Realty Trust, 2089 Memorial Drive, $151,622. Kenneth C. LeBlanc and Jeannine A. LeBlanc to Flying Monkey LLC, 46 East Carew St., $335,000. Andrew R. Beaudry to Celestial L&P LLC, 124 College St., $100. Estelle B. Brin to Leven Realty Group LLC, and KMAK LLC, 376 Newton St., $295,000.
Jr., and Sean M. Oshea to Richard Pineiro Rios, 3 East St., $265,000. Christopher N. Larrivee to Alan K. Holota, 53-55 Hope St., $291,000. Claire Grenier to Josue I. Garces, 33 Merrill Road, $216,000. D&M Realty & Investments LLC, to Northern Flooring & Remodeling LLC, 213 Pine St., $60,000. Dang Quach to Jaden G Rivera, 133-135 Commonwealth Ave., $300,000.
Cindy A. Desorcy and Earl F. Bagg to Robert H. Adams and Brenda Ann Adams, Ferry Street, $10,000.
Richard Sheridan, personal representative of the Estate of John Bernard Avila, and Richard Sheridan, trustee of the 475 East Main Street Avila Realty Trust, to Roy A. Sorli Jr., trustee of the 475 East Main Street Realty Trust. 475 East Main St., $128,000.
Leyla Ann Kayi and John Kayi to Paul J. Mazzariello and Carole Anne Ernesto Padilla and Tatiana Padilla Mazzariello, 504 Alvord Place, to Estrellita Encarnacion, John $365,000. Alexander Zapata and John Alex6 Carew Street LLC, to Quarry Car ander Zapata Jr., 24 Kenilworth St., Wash LLC, West Main Street, $100. $269,000.
PALMER Ann F. Allen, trustee, David J. Allen, trustee, and David J. Allen & Ann F. Allen Living Trust, trustee of, to Carol A. Thomson, trustee, David G. Thomson, trustee, and Thomson 2016 Family Trust, trustee of, 19 Old Farm Road, $450,000. Anthony M. Wilkins and Amanda J. Wilkins to Hayden James Hulsart and Aimee Ullery, 39 Shaw St., $311,000. Blake Lamothe to Felix Campos and Aida Torres, 4188 Main St., $295,000. David Leland Hawkins Jr., and Amanda Theresa Leigh-Hawkins to Laura M. Kasica, 121 River St., $345,000.
Catherine W. White and Matthew E. Boucher to Matthew Edward Boucher, 17 Jonathan Judd Circle, $110,000. Patrick Schnopp and Jessica A. Schnopp to Jordyn Chartier and Chad Stutz, 6 Montgomery Road, $315,000. Alysa Breyer, trustee, William D. Breyer & Alba Q. Breyer Irrevocable Trust, and Alba Breyer to Darlene Sattler, 32 Middle Road, $430,000. Joan E. Slowick and Susan C. Slowick to French Oxendine, trustee, Tara G. Roch, trustee, and French Oxendine Living Trust, 22 Pomeroy Meadow Road, $430,000.
Alden St., $315,000. Robert P. Militello, representative, and Richard Militello, estate, to Natanael Velez, 108 Grandview St., $270,000. Stephen A. Otto and Heather A. Otto to Estuardo Robles and Erin Robles, 21 Kingsley St., $267,500. Szu-Ming Li to Empyre Property Investments LLC, 94-96 Byers St., $220,000.
Tia Godette to Lermon Hibbert, 101 Eduardo Diaz and Carmen L. Rodri- Mulberry St., Unit 318, $125,000. William McMahon and Dale Varney guez to Erika Vaughn and Adeola to Ashley Brown, 27 Amity Court, Vaughn, 17-19 Algonquin Place, $350,000. $265,000.
Kathleen Oneschuk to Christopher J. Woodcock and Joanne Woodcock, North Main Street, $50,000.
SOUTHAMPTON
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2023 | F9
Erlinda Rock and Linda Rock to Ricardo Rodriguez and Maria Rodriguez, 25 Shelby St., $250,000.
Grahams Construction Inc., to Rosa Colas, 130 West Crystal Brook Drive, $565,000. Hedge Hog Industries Corp., to Shanique Gonzoles, 93 White St., $405,000. James M. Santamaria to KSM Home Properties LLC, 17-19 Ruskin St., $260,000. Jill C. Wray, Jill C. Livingstone and Michael D. Wray to Joshua Morse and Margaret Katleyn Bowlin, 47 Brighton St., $300,000. Jorge Mateo and Alexandra A. Mateo to Danisha M. Phillips, 28 Bushwick Place, $240,000. Jose R. Ortiz to Omar A. Galva, 410 Liberty St., $384,500. Joseph P. Riendeau to Ericka Gonzalez Carrillo, 23 Kenwood Park, $160,000.
William R. Wagner to New Heights Realty LLC, 130-132 Tavistock St., $260,000.
WALES Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp., to Christian Velazquez, 92 Stafford Holland Road, $180,000.
WARE
WEST SPRINGFIELD Adam Drollett, representative, and Margaret A. Drollett, estate, to Adam Drollett, 1-3 High St., $210,000. Aga Brothers LLC, to Sabir Mukhammadiyev, 21 Russell St., $345,000. Bellanese Barnack-Guzman to Jorge D. Cuenca, 126 Craiwell Ave., $290,000. James Gryszkiewicz, Linda S. Gryszkiewicz and Linda S. Bowker to Melissa Ann McClain and Philip Gerard McClain, 53 Woodmont St., $295,900. Kathleen M. Balestri-Veronesi and John M. Veronesi to Malcolm Pradia and Mia Copeland-Brock, 354 Rogers Ave., $351,000. Kyle Gemme to Breanne Skrivanic and Charles Skrivanic, 80 Brush Hill Ave., Unit 16, $140,000. Marian Santandreu Mirabal to Michael T. Aberdale, 189 Circle Drive, $277,500.
Antroy Newton Cleghorn and Karen June Beliah to Eric Wiliams, 14 Prospect St., $100.
Mary Jo Sullivan to Charles J. Reilly III, trustee, and Charles J. Reilly III, Revocable Indenture Of Trust Of, trustee of, 1314 Union St., $375,000.
Judith A. Green and Judith Green to Judith A. Green and Michael S. Green, Monson Turnpike Road, $100.
Sandra E. Doucette, Robert W. Lacas Jr., and Wendy S. Crosier to Brian J. Kolodziej, 1011 Elm St., $175,000.
James B. Bisnette and Linda M. Bisnette to Anibal Estevan Antuna, 22 Greenwich Plains Road, $385,000.
Sharon A. McCarthy to Alexa M. Morganstein, 38 Buckingham Ave., $263,000.
Herbert L. Harris and Elizabeth M. Harris to Eric Glazier and Erin Tierney, 46 Coffey Hill Road, $390,000. Felix Campos and Aida Torres to Ursule Isidore, 40 Church St., $340,000.
Stephanie Tindell and Eric Tindell to Tania L. Mendez-Gross and Stephen M. Johnson, 105 Pine St., $315,000. Timothy R. Kendrick and Nina J. Kendrick to Ganna Kochetkova, 445 Cold Spring Ave., $137,500.
Walter M. Chlastawa to CorElizabeth A. Talbot to Andrew Rich- nerstone Homebuying LLC, 116 Kelnate Realty LLC, to Sharina De ter, 3 Indian Hill Road, $334,000. Greystone Ave., $212,200. Donna M. Casler and Donna M. Donald C. Furlani, trustee, and Leon Bermudez and Catherine Stanley to Kerri R. Karnbach and Roman M. Misiaszek, Bozena Donald C. Furlani Revocable William D. Berte and Gina R. Bermudez Sanabria, 17-19 Ambrose Nathan M. Tenczar, 2028 East St., Misiaszek, Zbigniew Sucharski Indenture Of Trust Of, trustee of, to Berte to Eric Tindell and StephaSt., $330,000. $256,000. and Zofia Sucharski to Zbigniew Vladimir Vilkhovoy, 6 South Loomis nie N. Tindell, 19 Heritage Lane, Black Rock Capital Investments Sucharski and Zofia Sucharski, 23 St., $300,000. $385,000. LLC, to 31 Denton Circle LLC, 31 Smith Ave., $100. John W. Henderson and Christine PELHAM William J. Viecelli and Joyce ViecelDenton Circle, $100. Roman M. Misiaszek, Bozena J. Winch to Madison Winch and li to Raymond Depelteau and Ellen Marian C. Rice to Christopher H. Luz M. Rivera and Carlos J. Rivera Misiaszek, Zbigniew Sucharski Christopher Malloy, 19 George Depelteau, 62 Beech Hill Road, Rice and Eric Richard Spokas, to Logan R. Collins and Jennifer and Zofia Sucharski to Roman M. Loomis Road, $251,000. Unit 28, $439,900. Butter Hill Road, $100. Gorman Collins, 19 Catalina Drive, Misiaszek and Bozena Misiaszek, Taylor S. Cook, Laura J. Cook and $359,900. 23 Smith Ave., $100. S&L Cook LLP, to Varroa Haven WESTFIELD Marcin Korepta, trustee, and 263HSBC Bank U.S.A. NA, trustRUSSELL Realty LLC, 526 College Highway, 265 Roy Street Realty Trust, trustee ee, Fremont Home Loan Trust, $600,000. Brett Tabor and Autumn Tabor to Karen G. Pedercini, representative, of, to Y & E Legacy LLC, 37-39 Newrez LLC, attorney-in-fact, Richard Steven Brandos and Haley Craig A. Pedercini, representative, Porter St., $330,000. New Penn Financial LLC, attorBrandos, 107 Ridgeview Terrace, Edward G. Stewart, estate, and SPRINGFIELD ney-in-fact, Shellpoint Mortgage $450,000. Mason Capital Ventures LLC, to Edward Stewart, estate, to James Servicing, attorney-in-fact, PHH Rina Khan and MD Fazze Rabbi, Aaron Stonacek to James Gilbert Christine N. Greene and Todd Boggs and Isabelle Boggs, 732 Pine Mortgage Corp., attorney-in-fact, and Justine Gilbert, 211 Breckwood 254 Oakland St., $360,000. Greene to Halil Ibrahim Kuzu, 11 Hill Road, $735,000. and Ocwen Loan Servicing LLC, Boulevard, $258,000. Fowler Ave., $395,000. Michael J. Couture to Ashley Ann to Park Otis LLC, 27-31 Otis Ave., Wynter R. Bachetti and Jonathan Cotto Candelaria and Ezequiel Cynthia P. Ryan, Dana S. Phelps $115,000. E. Hatch to Kelsey Martin and John ACM Prime Alamosa Reo LLC, Otero Quiles, 161 Penrose St., to Napolitano Roofing Of Masand Deborah L. Szenda to Kirill Ducharme, 146 Blandford Stage $240,000. sachusetts LLC, 19 Schuyler St., Okhrimenko and Yeva Meleshko, Road, $272,000. WENDELL $110,000. 24 Sherwood Ave., $339,000. Miche Mede to Better Builders Construction LLC, and For Better Allene J. Curto to Ana Colon, 96 Daniel M. Masciadrelli, Daniel Valerie Demerski, personal repreSOUTH HADLEY General Management LLC, 240Strong St., $237,500. N. Masciadrelli and Marisa B. sentative of the Estate of Katrina 242 College St., $80,000. L. Chicorka, to Donald Kuzmeskus, Masciadrelli to John Leydon and Thanh Thuan Tran and Thinh Thi Bridget T. Burris, Maureen P. ElMelissa Leydon, 100 Hillcrest Pham to Robert A. Watchilla and lington, Kathleen C. Long, Stephen R M Blerman LLC, and Rm Blerman 95 Lockes Village Road, “fka” 47A Leritz Ruiz, 59 Washington Ave., A. O’Shea, William L. Sabadosa LLC, to Quwadeesha Parris, 20 Locks Village Road, $242,533. Circle, $523,000.
SOUTHWICK
F10 | SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2023
THE REPUBLICAN | MASSLIVE.COM
Auctions
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PUBLIC AUCTION TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17 AT 11:00 A.M. (ET) TH
OWNER’S SALE
LANDSCAPING MASONRY INVENTORY • FLATBED TRUCK • FORKLIFT •
• SKID STEER LOADER • SUPPORT EQUIPMENT • (ASSETS NO LONGER NEEDED IN THE CONTINUING OPERATIONS OF)
COOK BUILDERS SUPPLY CO 210 AGAWAM AVENUE WEST SPRINGFIELD, MASS. TO BE SOLD ON THE PREMISES AND BY LIVE INTERNET BIDDING
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TERMS OF SALE: 25% DEPOSIT CASH, WIRE TRANSFER OR CERTIFIED CHECK 15% BUYERS PREMIUM APPLIES ON ALL ONSITE PURCHASES 18% BUYERS PREMIUM APPLIES ON ALL ONLINE PURCHASES OTHER TERMS TO BE ANNOUNCED AT TIME OF SALE INSPECTION: MORNING OF SALE – 8:30 A.M. TO 11:00 A.M.
Aaron Posnik
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PUBLIC AUCTION THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19TH at 1:00 P.M.
MORTGAGEE’S SALE OF REAL ESTATE
• BELCHERTOWN •
6 ROOM / 3 BEDROOM SINGLE STORY
RANCH STYLE HOME WITH
TWO CAR ATTACHED GARAGE 21 Hickory Hill BELCHERTOWN, MA To be Sold on the Premises
Features: • Single Story Ranch Style Home • ±1/3 Acres of Land • • Total of (6) Rooms w/ (3) Bedrooms & (2½) Baths • • ±1,846 S/F of Living Area • Forced Warm Air Heat • • Air Conditioning • Full Basement • Vinyl Siding • Fireplace • • Zoned: R1-Residential • Tax Parcel ID: 238/3.42 • ★ TWO CAR ATTACHED GARAGE ★ Sale Per Order of Mortgagee Terms of Sale: Attorney Thomas J. Hamel $10,000.00 Initial Deposit Cash or Certified Funds. Of the firm of Courtney, Lee & Hamel, P.C. Deposit to be Increased to 10% of Purchase Price 31 Wendell Ave., Pittsfield, MA within 5 Business Days of Auction Date. Attorney for Mortgagee 5% Buyer’s Premium Applies. Other Terms to be Announced at Time of Sale
Aaron Posnik
AUCTIONEERS•APPRAISERS
West Springfield, MA • Philadelphia, PA 413-733-5238 • 610-853-6655 MA Auc. Lic #161 • PA Auc. Lic. #AY000241L
www.posnik.com • E-Mail:info@posnik.com
PUBLIC AUCTION
PUBLIC AUCTION
PUBLIC AUCTION
MORTGAGEE’S SALE OF REAL ESTATE
MORTGAGEE’S SALE OF REAL ESTATE
MORTGAGEE’S SALE OF REAL ESTATE
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26TH at 11:00 A.M
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31ST at 11:00 A.M.
• SPRINGFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS •
• BRIMFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS •
• (1) COMMERCIAL OFFICE UNIT • (1) STORAGE UNIT • • (14) INTERIOR ATTACHED GARAGES • • (9) OUTSIDE DETACHED GARAGES • “Known As SUMNER PLACE At FOREST PARK”
WITH
• (30) RESIDENTIAL CONDOMINIUM UNITS •
34 Sumner Avenue SPRINGFIELD, MA
To Be Sold In Its Entirety And Individually At The Premises
BUILDING: Four Story Brick Condominium Building • ±1¼ Acres of Land (±53,325 S/F) • ±122’ Frontage on Sumner Avenue • (2) Curb Cuts on Sumner Avenue • Public Water & Sewer • Slab Foundation • Flat Roof • Passenger Elevator • (4) Common Stairwells • Sprinklered (Retail & Storage Spaces, Mechanical Rooms) • Central Fire Alarm • Smoke Detectors • Pull Stations • Common Amenities: Laundry Room, Storage Rooms, Main Lobby & All Surface Parking Spaces • CONDOMINIUM UNITS: Units range in size from ±590 to ±925 S/F • (30) One & Two Bedroom Units (22) Two Bedroom Units & (8) One Bedroom Units • (1) Commercial/Office Unit (±2,710 S/F) • (1) Storage Space (±1,498 S/F) • Each Unit: Gas-Fired HVAC Units • Central Air Conditioning • Sheetrock Walls • Units Individually Metered • Carpeted, Vinyl & Ceramic Tile Flooring • INTERIOR GARAGES (ATTACHED): (14) One Car Garages • Ranging in Size from ±236 S/F to ±247 S/F • OUTSIDE GARAGES (DETACHED): (9) One Car Garages • Ranging in Size from ±260 S/F to ±268 1% BROKER INCENTIVE OFFERED!!
Sale Per Order Of Mortgagee Attorney John W. Davis Of The Firm Of Halloran & Sage LLP, 1380 Main Street, Springfield, Ma Attorney For Mortgagee Terms of Sale Entirety: $75,000.00 Initial Deposit by Certified or Bank Check. Individual: $10,000.00 Initial Deposit Per Unit, by Certified or Bank Check. Deposits to be increased to 10% of Purchase Price Within 5 Business Days. 5% Buyer’s Premium Applies Per Unit. Other Terms To Be Announced At Time Of Sale.
±20 ACRE EQUESTRIAN FACILITY
INDOOR RIDING ARENA & STABLES 121 Haynes Hill Road BRIMFIELD, MA To be Sold on the Premises
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3RD AT 11:00 A.M.
• NORTHAMPTON, MASSACHUSETTS • ±21,335 S/F
(3) LEVEL
COMMERCIAL
OFFICE BUILDING
“CLOSE PROXIMITY TO DOWNTOWN NORTHAMPTON”
47 Pleasant Street
NORTHAMPTON, MA
LAND: ±20 Acres of Land • Private Well • Gravel Driveway & Vehicle Parking • Zoned: Agricultural Residential • Deed Reference: Book 19657, Page 348 • IMPROVEMENTS: Single Building Equestrian Facility • STABLE: 30’x45’ (±1,350 S/F) Wood Framed w/ Water & Electric • INDOOR RIDING AREA: 72’x144’ (±10,368 S/F) • Pole Construction • Peaked Roof • • Doors (Either Side) • Light Panel Windows • Sand Riding Surface • Viewing Room • STABLE COMPLEX AREA: ±7,486 S/F w/ Upper & Lower Levels • Concrete Slab Floor • Horse & Grooming Stalls • Tack Room • Mechanical Room • Feed Room • • General Purpose Room • Office • 2ND FLOOR: Rough Framed (Apartment) • Hay Storage •
LAND: ±0.43 Acres (±18,731 S/F) • Paved Parking for ±25 Vehicles (Rear) • ±130’ Frontage on Pleasant Street • ±150’ Frontage on Armory Street • Public Water & Sewer • Zoned: Central Business (CB) • Assessor’s ID: 32C, Lot 40 • IMPROVEMENTS: (3) Level Commercial Office Building • ±21,335 S/F of Building Area • Gas FWA Heat • Central Air Conditioning • Full Foundation (Partially Finished) • Brick Exterior • Flat Rubber Membrane Roof • Masonry Wood & Steel Construction • Common Hallways, Stairwells & Elevator • (2) Restrooms Per Floor • Ceramic Tile, Carpeted & Hardwood Floors • Exposed Brick Walls & Beam Ceilings • LOWER LEVEL: Office Unit (±2,773 S/F) • (35) Storage Units (±4,100 S/F) • FIRST FLOOR: (4) Office Units (Ranging in Size from ±1,745 S/F to ±2,778 S/F) • SECOND FLOOR: (2) Office Units (±2,708 S/F & ±3,145 S/F •
Sale Per Order of Mortgagee Terms of Sale: Attorney Jonathan R. Goldsmith $20,000.00 Deposit Bank Treasurer’s Check or Of the firm of Goldsmith, Katz & Argenio, P.C. Certified Funds. Deposit to be increased to 10% 1350 Main Street, Springfield, MA of Purchase Price within 5 Business Days. Attorney for Mortgagee 5% Buyer’s Premium Applies. Other Terms to be Announced at Time of Sale
Sale Per Order of Mortgagee Terms of Sale: Attorney Jonathan C. Sapirstein $50,000.00 Initial Deposit Is Required At Time Of Of the firm of Sapirstein & Sapirstein, P.C. Auction In Bank Or Certified Funds.Deposit to be 1500 Main Street, Springfield, MA increased to 10% of Purchase Price Within 5 Attorney for Mortgagee Business Days. 5% Buyer’s Premium Applies. Other Terms to be Announced at Time of Sale
AUCTIONEERS•APPRAISERS
AUCTIONEERS•APPRAISERS
West Springfield, MA • Philadelphia, PA 413-733-5238 • 610-853-6655
West Springfield, MA • Philadelphia, PA 413-733-5238 • 610-853-6655
www.posnik.com • E-Mail:info@posnik.com
www.posnik.com • E-Mail:info@posnik.com
Aaron Posnik MA Auc. Lic #161 • PA Auc. Lic. #AY000241L
To be Sold on the Premises
1% BROKER INCENTIVE OFFERED!!
Aaron Posnik MA Auc. Lic #161 • PA Auc. Lic. #AY000241L
Aaron Posnik
CLASSIFIEDS CLASSIFIEDS AUCTIONEERS•APPRAISERS
West Springfield, MA • Philadelphia, PA 413-733-5238 • 610-853-6655 MA Auc. Lic #161 • PA Auc. Lic. #AY000241L
www.posnik.com • E-Mail:info@posnik.com
In print in The Republican or online at MassLive.com
In print in The Republican or online at MassLive.com
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2023 | F11
THE REPUBLICAN | MASSLIVE.COM
MORTGAGEE’S SALE OF REAL ESTATE AT PUBLIC AUCTION
CALL THE PROS
Monday, October 16, 2023 3:00 PM-SPRINGFIELD 150 Cloran Street
Professional Service Directory in Print and Online
Thursday, October 19, 2023
Place your service ad 24/7. Call (413) 788-1234 or go to: www.MassLive.com
sgl fam, 1,133 sf liv area, 0.23 ac lot, 5 rm, 2 bdrm, 1 bth, Hampden: Book 15305, Page 289
10:00 AM-AMHERST 502 Station Road
sgl fam, 1,268 sf liv area, 0.69 ac lot, 6 rm, 3 bdrm, 2 bth, Hampshire: Bk 11923, Pg 99
12:00 PM-SPRINGFIELD 558 Dickinson Street a/k/a 4 Virginia Street 2 fam, 3,381 sf liv area, 0.13 ac lot, 15 rm, 9 bdrm, 2.5 bth, Hampden: Bk 24042, Pg 151
1:00 PM-AGAWAM 44 Colonial Avenue
Driveway/Paving Stanley and Son’s Paving Third Generation - Driveway, p arking lots, etc. - All types of paving - Estimates gladly given - All work guaranteed - Senior Citizens discount
413-246-7999 anytime
sgl fam, 972 sf liv area, 0.43 ac lot, 5 rm, 3 bdrm, 1 bth, Hampden: Bk 22212, Pg 98
sgl fam, 1,710 sf liv area, 0.1 ac lot, 11 rm, 6 bdrm, 3 bth, Hampden: Bk 7778, Pg 450
3191947-01
Auctioneer makes no representation as to the accuracy of the information contained herein.
NORTH CHELMSFORD (978) 251-1150 www.baystateauction.com MAAU#: 1029, 2624, 2959, 3039, 2573, 116, 2484, 3246, 2919, 3092, 3107, 0100030, 3099
Animals Birds Cats Dogs Exotic Animals Feed Fish Horses Livestock Pet Services Pet Shows Pet Supplies Pets - Lost & Found Pets Wanted
Cats
ANTIQUE AUCTION
FRI, OCT. 20, AT 6 P.M.
Panamanian collection and deaccessions (from a prominent museum) including important paintings, prints, glass and china, Pre-Columbian pottery, sculptures, Furniture - Early, Victorian, Custom and Modern, jewelry, sterling, oriental rugs, and more.
PREVIEW: THURS. 8AM - 4PM & FRI. 8AM - 6PM VIEW CATALOG ONLINE www.DouglasAuctioneers.com
Tag Sales
Bengal Kittens, 2 available, male & female, $400, will be dewormed and 1st set of shots, Call or Text for more info. 802-323-2538 Kitten for sale, male, 2 month old, looks like a tiger, $190, call for details 413-244-8046 Maine Coon Bengal Siamese mix kittens, 1M $25.00 & 1F $50.00. Call (no text) 413-777-9659
Dogs
Tag Sales AGAWAM Multi-Family. Beekman Place Estates. New Owners/Merchandise Fri. 10/13, Sat. 10/14, Sun. 10/15, 9am-4pm.
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 413-3745377ABC MasonryABC MasonryABC Masonry
Dogs
2:00 PM-CHICOPEE 37-39 Erline Street
TERMS: Cashier’s or certified check in the sum of $5,000.00 as a deposit must be shown at the time and place of the sale in order to qualify as a bidder. No CASH. No personal checks will be accepted. Cashier/certified checks should be made out to whomever is going to bid at the auction. The balance to be paid within thirty (30) days at the law offices of Korde & Associates, P.C.900 Chelmsford Street, Suite 3102, Lowell, MA 01851, Attorney for the Mortgagee.
Masonry/Concrete
11 month old female German Shepherd/Lab mix, Good temperament, walks on leash, very friendly, $250, call or text 802-323-2538 6
Yorkshire mix, home raised, $550 or best offer, male and female avail. hypoallergenic, dewormed, call or text 413291-4429 8 weeks, AKC pure bred Boston Terrier Puppies, 4 available (2M & 2F) Call 413-207-4664
AKC German Shepherd Pups, 4m & 3 f, Black & tan, black & red, and sables. AKC paperwork & all shots/worming up to date, written hip-andhealth guarantee, parents on premises, raised in country setting, $1400, call 978-249-3724
Teddy Bear Puppies, pure white $650/ea. For info. text or call Lori 413-966-9152
Golden Retriever female, 1 1/2 years, sweet, vet checked, perfect home only $750. 413-531-1373, 413-367-2405 Labrador Puppies, 10 (5 blk 5 brn). 4 wks old, $400 each, mother and father on scene, 413-364-7944
Miniature Schnauzers, 1M & 1F, Salt & Pepper color, current vaccinations, 7yrs old, $300 each, call 413-596-8190 Puppy, 2 months, mixed Husky w/Labrador. $900. Call 413-244-8046
Snowthrower, 26 in selfpropelled, 2-stage electric start, night light, $425. Call 413-594-4905
Two Raleigh Venture 20in & 14in bikes, one Polaris 20 in Swimano gear bike for sale, $150 for all three or best offer, call 413-3887694.
Clothing Clarks Navy Blue slip-on sneakers, 7N, Never worn, $45 or B/O, 413-583-4266
Med. Equip Sales/Wanted Full adjustable medical bed w/remote control, like new, $500. Call 413-537-0650
Musical Instruments Lowrey Royale Organ, beaut., walnut finish, incl. Tufted bench, cost $60K, ask. $1,620. 413-519-8108
Wanted To Buy
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
Articles for Sale
Border Collie pups, 8 weeks, black and white, vet-checked, shots, wormed, $700, 860-449-2246 English Golden Retriever puppies M/F. Both parents on premises. Many generations loved and shown. Reserve now. Ready Oct. 20, 2023 413531-1373
Articles for Sale Jewelry Cabinet w/ 8 drawers, 2 side panels and mirror full of sanitized modern fashion jewely, $750 or best offer. XXL Snow leopard fox fur coat, never worn, $50. XXL Silver Puffercoat w/ fox fur collar, never worn, $50, Ask for Lisa in Ludlow, 413-949-5445
1,000’s of sports cards, all big stars, at least 50% off. 1950’s to present. BUYING ALL SPORTS CARDS, RETIRED VETERAN Selling at $2.50 per box. CALL 413-596-5783
2022 National Purple Heart $5 Gold Proof coin. Issued by US mint, low mintage with box, COA, $730./best offer, call 413-426-7063
Collector pays cash for stamp collections, lrg or sml. Call RON for sale or eval. 413-896-3324
Cash paid, LP records 45’s, CD’s, reel-to-reel tapes. Rock, Jazz, Blues, Classical. Scott 518-424-8228
Auctions Auctions AARON POSNIK & CO. INC. Indust & Comm. Auctions 31 Capital Dr. W. Spfld. 733-5238 www.posnik.com DouglasAuctioneers.com
ESTATES-ANTIQUES 413-665-2877
MORTGAGEES’ REAL ESTATE AUCTIONS TO BE SOLD ON THEIR RESPECTIVE PREMISE
MONDAY OCTOBER 23, 2023 1:00 PM-SPRINGFIELD, MA 49 WORTHY STREET DEPOSIT $5,000
MONDAY OCTOBER 30, 2023 11:00 AM WEST SPRINGFIELD, MA 71 CAYENNE STREET DEPOSIT $5,000
TUESDAY OCTOBER 31, 2023 2:00 PM - FLORENCE, MA 16 FAIRFIELD AVENUE DEPOSIT $5,000 TERMS OF SALES: DEPOSITS IN THE AMOUNTS SPECIFIED ABOVE ARE TO BE PAID BY THE PURCHASER(S) AT THE TIME AND PLACE OF EACH SALE BY CERTIFIED OR BANK CHECK. ALL BALANCES DUE ARE TO BE PAID WITHIN 30 DAYS OF EACH INDIVIDUAL SALE. OTHER TERMS, IF ANY, TO BE ANNOUNCED AT EACH SALE. CALL OUR AUCTION SCHEDULE LINE AT (617) 964-1282 FOR A LIST OF THE CURRENT DAY’S AUCTIONS AND VISIT OUR WEBSITE www.commonwealth auction.com FOR CONTINUOUSLY UPDATED SCHEDULING INFORMATION AND ADDITIONAL SCHEDULING INFORMATION COMMONWEALTH AUCTION ASSOCIATES, INC. (617) 964-0005 MA LIC 2235
F12 | SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2023
THE REPUBLICAN | MASSLIVE.COM
Feature Your
GRANBY
OPEN SUN. 11:00 -1:00PM 17 Smith Ave - $329,000
Located on a friendly, quiet side-street, this cute ranch style house on half an acre with 3 beds /1 bath has undergone a number of thoughtful improvements in the past few years. Eat-in kitchen with new slider to a 12X16 composite deck/vinyl railings overlooking HUGE fenced backyard, with play structures, raised beds and lots of perennials. Woodstove in the living room, new oak hardwood flooring throughout, full bath remodeled in 2019, full walk out basement with workshop, built-in storage shelving and potential for expansion, newer Buderus boiler, newer roof. Full insulation by MassSave in 2019. Upgraded 200 Amp breaker panel. New Speed Queen washer and dryer, new refrigerator. The sellers are offering a $10,000 credit at closing.
Open House Here Call Lisa 788-1271
TRAILSIDE TEAM KRISTIN VEVON • 413.210.3423 CRAIG DELLA PENNA • 413.575.2277 THE MURPHYS REALTORS
Step 1: Go to masslive.com/realestate
Step 2: Enter the city you want to find a home in
Step 3: Select the home you want to visit and build your driving tour
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