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  • Vartan auction has deals, nostalgia

    Patriot-News, PA
    May 1 2005

    Vartan auction has deals, nostalgia
    Supply company's remnants liquidated

    BY LES POWELL
    Of The Patriot-News
    Like everything else about John Vartan, this was big.

    A liquidation auction took place yesterday at the Vartan Supply Co.
    facility on Linglestown Road in Susquehanna Twp., where countless
    items were up for bid from the business empire of the entrepreneur
    and philanthropist, who died in December at 59.

    Four auctioneers fielded bids on an inventory including lumber,
    woodworking machinery, hardware, tools, paint, trucks, cars,
    forklifts, a crane, shelving, office furnishings and restaurant
    items.

    The latter included 500 pieces of china, glassware, stainless steel
    pans, chairs and tables from Vartan's Parev restaurant in the former
    Tuesday Club in Harrisburg.

    Hundreds of prospective buyers' vehicles were parked behind the
    lumber warehouse, while others lined both sides of Linglestown Road
    for several blocks.

    "This is some auction," said Dick Finley of Duncannon, who bought
    clear wood preservative.

    "An unbelievable amount of items," said Joel Gavalett of Pottsville,
    who was looking at trucks and garage equipment. "The prices are very
    strong today."

    The Vartan Group started selling noncore properties and getting out
    of some businesses after Vartan died.

    In March, a Gettysburg construction company bought the 11-employee
    Vartan Studios woodworking mill in Susquehanna Twp.

    Ten other properties, including the one on Seventh and Maclay streets
    with bushes that spell "Vartan," are being sold.

    The company decided to sell the mill and the supply company because
    they are ancillary to its main interests, which include a
    construction company, a property-management company and Vartan
    National Bank. A plant that makes concrete products continues to
    operate.

    Vartan's building projects included Forum Place in Harrisburg and an
    office building at Third and Walnut streets. Projects he touted but
    never built included, most famously, Vartan Village, a planned
    housing development in uptown Harrisburg.

    One of his most recent novelties stands in front of the site of
    yesterday's auction -- a clock that runs backward.

    The clock symbolized Vartan's move from a refugee camp to democracy,
    a company spokeswoman said. Vartan emigrated to this country from
    Lebanon, where he had grown up in a camp for Armenian refugees.

    But the clock and Vartan's rags-to-riches life weren't yesterday's
    draw. The attraction was finding a good deal.

    Kim Schlissel, who owns a Schuylkill Haven home-decor business, said
    she was looking for "office furniture -- a couple desks, shelving
    units."

    Others came to buy lumber, paint, electrical fixtures and other home
    products.

    Jerry Miller of Harrisburg was looking at a power nailer. "It's for
    nailing hardwood floors," he said. "I install, sand and finish them."


    For Scott Knamm of Lebanon, the auction offered nostalgia. "I'm just
    here to relive some memories," he said.
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