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The house was built in 1886 for Frederick Lazarus Sr., president of the F&R Lazarus & Company and son of company founder Simon Lazarus. [3] The Lazarus family moved in about 1906 to a new and larger house at Bryden Road and S. Ohio Avenue; that house was demolished in 1924.
The building was offered for sale in 1967. [4] William C. Rea purchased it that year for $48,000; he expressed plans to house an electronics store, drive-in Christian film office, and possibly a museum of the history of Franklinton. [5] The building was home to Jimmy Rea Electronics from 1975 to 2014. [2]
The agents in distant cities reassembled the knocked-down cars before sale. To better serve the network of sales dealerships. Ford took direct control of agencies in New York and Philadelphia in 1905 and the following year established company-owned branches in Boston, Buffalo, Cleveland, Chicago, St. Louis, and Kansas City, initially in leased ...
The discount chain said it agreed to a sale transaction with an investment firm which would allow hundreds of stores to stay open by transferring its property to other retailers and companies.
An artist, Nicole Tschampel, attempted to purchase the building in a June 2000 sheriff's sale, to create an art studio with apartments above. Despite Tschampel's winning bid of $25,500 ($3,000 of which was owed back taxes ), local realtor Carl H. Woodford found the owner, paid the taxes, and put the building on sale for $80,000 before the deed ...
Competition soon arrived in the market, as WIMA-FM (102.1) signed on in June 1948, with WIMA following suit on December 5. [19] Fort Industry sold WLOK-AM-FM to a group headed by Lloyd Pixley for $137,500, in order to purchase WSAI and WSAI-FM in Cincinnati; both deals were approved on March 31, 1951. [20]