advertising
Lincoln Daily News
(217) 732-7443
ldn@lincolndailynews.com
appliances
McEntire's Home
Appliance and TV
403 Broadway St.
(217) 732-4874
mcentires@abelink.com
attorneys
John R. Gehlbach
Law Office
529 Pulaski St.
(217) 735-4311
jrglaw@ccaonline.com
Thomas L. Van Hook
Lincoln
(217) 735-2187
Tvanhook@CCAonline.com
auto repair/service
DuVall's Automotive
Complete Auto Repair
720 N. Sherman St., rear
(217) 735-5545
duvallautomotive
@hotmail.com
Thompson Auto Body
919 S. Kickapoo
(217) 735-2915
automobiles
Interstate Chevrolet
105-115 Lincoln Ave.
P.O. Box 170
Emden, IL
62635-0170
(888) OK-CHEVY
(652-4389)
www.interstatechevy.com
J&S Auto Center
103 S. Logan
(217) 732-8994
www.jandsautocentre.com/
Row Motors
222 S. McLean
(217) 732-3232
rowmotors@msn.com
banks
Logan County Bank
303 Pulaski
(217) 732-3151
books/educa.
Prairie Years
121 N. Kickapoo
(217) 732-9216
bottled water
Culligan
318 N. Chicago
(217) 735-4450
www.culligan.com
Gold Springs
1165 - 2200th St.
Hartsburg, IL
(888) 478-9283
www.goldsprings.com
Puritan Springs
1709 N. Kickapoo St.
(217) 732-3292
(800) 292-2992
Puritan Springs at LDN
carpet cleaners
Advanced Carpet Cleaning
708 Pulaski St.
P.O. Box 306
(217) 732-3571
cellular phones
Team Express
411 Pulaski St.
(217) 732-8962
www.teamelectronics.org
colleges
Heartland Com. College
620 Broadway St.
(217) 735-1731
www.hcc.cc.il.us
computer service
CCA
601 Keokuk St.
(217) 735-2677
cca@ccaonline.com
consignment
Closet Classics
129 S. Sangamon St.
(217) 735-9151
(888) 739-0042
contractors
Koller Construction
2025 2100th St.
Atlanta, IL 61723
(217) 648-2672
(217) 737-2672 cell
stevekoller@aol.com
Roger Webster Construction
303 N. Sangamon St.
(217) 732-8722
www2.ccaonline.com/rwcinc/
convenience
APOLLOmart
725 Broadway
(217) 732-4193
credit unions
CEFCU
341 Fifth St.
(217) 735-5541
(800) 633-7077
www.cefcu.com
employment
Illinois Employment
and Training Center
120 S. McLean St.
(217) 735-5441
ietc@abelink.com
fin. consultant
K. Bridget Schneider
A.G. Edwards & Sons,
Inc.
628 Broadway, Suite 1
(217) 732-3877
(800) 596-0014
www.agedwards.com/fc/
kbridget.schneider
florists
All Things Blooming
125 S. Lafayette St.
Mount Pulaski, IL
62548
(217) 792-5532
www.allthingsblooming.com
food & ice cream
Gleason's Dairy Bar
110 Clinton St.
(217) 732-3187
funeral directors
Fricke-Calvert-Schrader
127 S. Logan
(217) 732-4155
F-C-S at LDN
garden
Clark's Greenhouse
& Herbal Country
2580 100th Ave.
San Jose, IL
(309) 247-3679
www.herbalcountry.net
gifts
The Mustard Moon
1314 Fifth St.
(217) 735-1093
www.themustardmoon.com
health &
fitness
Health & Fitness Balance
113 S. Sangamon
(217) 735-4463
home
improvements
Kenshalo-Rousey
214 N. Chicago
(217) 732-8682
Windows, doors, siding,
awnings, sunrooms.
hospitals
ALMH
315 Eighth St
(217) 732-2161
www.almh.org
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Features
|
Sangamon Street is the
coming place
[SEPT.
13, 2002]
Sangamon Street was a busy place in the 1850s, bustling
with hotels and other businesses to serve the travelers who came in
on the train. Almost 150 years later, the historic street is once
again bringing folks to downtown Lincoln, not just for an overnight
stay but as a place to live.
[Click here for more
photos]
|
Above the businesses
on South Sangamon there are now 21 apartments. According to Larry
Steffens, who has developed 14 of them, there could be a lot more if
everybody who owned property on the street decided to turn the upper
stories of their businesses into living units. He estimates there
could be 46 housing units on the block between Pulaski and Broadway
alone.
[Photos by Jan Youngquist]
The newest apartment,
already rented, was remodeled by Steve and Susie Fuhrer. It’s
located above Health and Fitness Balance, also remodeled by the
Fuhrers, which is next door to Susie’s Blue Dog Inn.
The new apartment,
like many others on the block, preserves as much historic appeal as
possible. Windows the size of the originals were installed in the
foot-thick brick wall in front, providing a view of the courthouse
dome and the mural across the street. The brick has been cleaned,
tuck-pointed and sealed.
It wasn’t possible to
save the original wood floor, so the new apartment is carpeted
except for tile floors in the kitchen and bath. The apartment is a
gracious blend of old and new — the old brick wall and a brand-new
all-electric kitchen.
Above her Blue Dog
Inn, Susie said, the floors are in good condition, but the Fuhrers
have no plans to develop that space right now. Originally the
Illinois Hotel, the upper floors are divided into 34 small rooms and
a suite. If times get better, the Fuhrers might think about building
more apartments.
Dwight Smothers, who
owns Flounders, thinks he could fit eight apartments in the space
above his nightclub, but he’s not ready to do that right now,
either. He did remodel the front of his building about four years
ago and put in new floors.
"If things pick up,
we might think about making apartments upstairs," he said.
Across Pulaski
Street, Dale Bassi and partner Dr. Larry Crisafulli are completing
the last of six apartments in the building at 201-205 Sangamon. They
have also created new street-level space, which now houses a group
of new and old businesses.
Again, the developers
have kept many of the historic features, including brick walls and
hardwood floors. Two of the front apartments have lofts. All are
rented.
"We’ve developed
4,000 square feet up and another 4,000 square feet down," Bassi
said. Bassi has no concrete plans to do anything more on Sangamon
Street now, but he’s open to ideas for further development there.
In the corner
building at street level are Franz Express, with shipping and
copying services, Coffee With Einstein, and Lan Café, which offers
Internet access and gaming. To bring even more people to Sangamon
Street, Coffee with Einstein holds open mic night on Thursdays and
has live entertainment most weekends.
The newest business,
AMP Studio, is a digital photography studio owned by Adam May, whose
motto is "pictures about people."
[to top of second column in this
article]
|
The Steffens family
owns several businesses on the ground floor below their apartments
and rents space to two others, Closet Classics resale shop and A.
Lincoln General Store, which sells both new and consignment items.
The family operates
Grapes and Grounds, which sells wines and specialty coffees,
Capone’s restaurant, and Eckert’s, Inc. decorating studio. Grapes
and Grounds has recently been incorporated with Capone’s.
Capone’s is giving
folks another reason to visit Sangamon Street, with a full lunch
menu Monday through Saturday and a dinner menu for the evening. It
also features live jazz or blues Wednesday, Friday and Saturday
evenings.
Steffens bought the
property on the south half of the block and began developing it five
years ago. His 14 apartments include efficiencies, one-bedroom and
two-bedroom units; the largest has 1,300 square feet of space.
His own home, a
former warehouse above Closet Classics, includes 4,500 square feet
of living space on the second floor, a 500-square-foot library on
the ground floor and another 4,500 square feet in the basement.
Historic features
preserved in the Steffens buildings include the oak woodwork and the
pressed tin ceiling in Eckert’s.
The Steffens family
also maintains the park between Sangamon Street and the railroad
track, and Larry painted the mural on the back of the Neal Tire
building. The mural gives tenants and visitors an idea of the
bustling place Sangamon Street was in the early history of Lincoln,
during the decade when Abe Lincoln himself christened the new town.
Many of the buildings
depicted in the mural were hotels — the Spitly Hotel, C & A House,
the Illinois Hotel, the Western Hotel and the Monroe House. Other
businesses include Dutz Paints, Boots and Shoes, and the Lincoln
Volksblatt, an early German-language newspaper.
Bassi says "living
above the store" has been a tradition in downtowns since the turn of
the last century.
"It is the best use
of downtown space in towns like Lincoln. If you bring people
downtown, you bring life downtown. There is no replacement for
bringing people here."
[Photo provided by Adam May]
[Click to enlarge]
Bassi is a member of
the Economic Restructuring Committee of Main Street Lincoln, which
has a $20,000 grant from the state to find ways to bring more
businesses downtown.
"We still need more
shops downtown. We need to point to smaller niche market stores,
specialty stores like Merle Norman. We’d like to see a shoe store or
a women’s clothing store. We won’t see another J.C. Penney store
here.
"We need more stores like Abe’s, Beans
and Such, and Prairie Years. We are trying to find other little
businesses that can make it downtown."
[Joan Crabb]
|
|
New
distributor finds community friendly
[SEPT. 5, 2002]
Johnson Brothers Liquor
Company, new wholesale wine and liquor distributor on North Kickapoo,
expects to employ 35 or 36 people in Lincoln.
|
Most are already in place. These
include one temporary and three permanent office workers, five
drivers and 12 sales representatives. Another driver has been hired
but is not yet on the job. General manager Tim Anderson’s
administrative staff includes sales manager Bryan Fox, office
manager Crystel Huff and warehouse manager Alan Roach. The
organizational chart also lists two district managers, a chain
manager who will deal with corporate chains, and an assistant
warehouse manager.
Anderson said Johnson Brothers
employees are what set the company apart from other wine and liquor
distributors. "We try to hire the best and keep upgrading them," he
explained.
[Photos by Lynn Shearer Spellman]
The Lincoln facility supplies wine and
spirits to grocery and convenience stores, package stores, bars, and
restaurants in an 80-mile-wide belt across central Illinois. The
area ranges from Danville on the east to Quincy on the west and from
Peoria on the north to Springfield on the south.
The local facility opened its doors on
July 29. At present most of the stock is wine. By Oct. 1 other
spirits, including vodka, whiskey and rum, will also be offered.
Headquartered in St. Paul, Minn.,
Johnson Brothers has 40 distributors across the country who supply
to areas ranging from the Dakotas to Florida, from Rhode Island to
Las Vegas and on all the islands of Hawaii. The company boasts
annual sales of approximately $700 million. Ninety percent of the
distributors, including Lincoln, sell primarily Gallo products.
[Logo provided by Johnson Brothers]
Lynn Johnson founded the company in
1953. At first he sold mostly whiskey. After a few years of
operation, as Anderson tells the story, Johnson took a trip to
California. There he heard commercials for Gallo wine, located the
corporate headquarters, described his business and announced, "I
want to sell your product." That was the beginning of a long-term
relationship between the two companies. "Gallo was what made Johnson
Brothers big," Anderson affirmed. "As Gallo grew, Lynn grew." For a
time, Lynn Johnson’s brother was a co-owner, and now his sons
Michael and Todd have entered the family business.
So far all the stock at the Lincoln
facility is made by Gallo, which offers over 40 brands of wines,
brandy, vermouth and other alcoholic products. However, most of the
labels in the warehouse do not say Gallo. For example, Boone, Peter
Vella, and Bartles and Jaymes are among the brand names. The variety
is intentional, Anderson explained. Different labels target
different market segments.
[to top
of second column in this article] |
Gallo competes in every price range of
wine and in several forms, including box wines. Currently, Anderson
said, Gallo is first or second in every dollar segment in the United
States. In sales it is first in the local distribution area, the
country and the world. Nationwide one-quarter of wine products sold
are Gallo products.
Anderson worked for Gallo for 15 years.
Heading the Lincoln operation is his first assignment for Johnson
Brothers. He, his wife, Nancy, and their three children plan to move
from Wisconsin to the local area.
He said Johnson Brothers chose Lincoln
for the distributorship because of its central location in the
region to be served, its easy access to Interstate 55 and the
availability of the former PPG plant on North Kickapoo. The company
has a three-year lease there on 27,000 square feet of warehouse and
garage space as well as several thousand square feet in offices.
"It’s a nice building," Anderson affirmed, and it required little
renovation. He also praised townspeople with whom he has dealt for
being friendly and supportive.
Anderson said Gallo products were
formerly supplied by Mueller Distributing Co. of Springfield. When
Southern Wine and Spirits recently purchased Mueller, Gallo was
without an area home. Then began the search which ended in leasing
the Lincoln plant.
Plans are to keep about 15 days’
inventory on hand. The distribution center receives Gallo orders the
day after placing them and delivers to customers within one to two
days. Although deliveries began Aug. 1, Johnson Brothers is still in
the process of making arrangements with customers. Stores have
receiving times, Anderson explained, and bigger companies must enter
a new supplier into their computer systems. Sales representatives
will not contact most bars until September or October, when more
types of spirits will be in stock.
When distribution routines are firmly
in place, other products besides Gallo will be added. Johnson
Brothers itself imports and manufactures, or rectifies, some wine
and liquor products. These may eventually be distributed locally.
Anderson’s card lists beers and waters
among the Johnson Brothers products, but neither is currently in the
product mix. They could be added if there were a business reason to
do so, he explained.
Though
shipments have begun, many details still need to be ironed out at
the Johnson Brothers distribution center on North Kickapoo. For
example, except for a small sign in the receiving area, the business
is not marked by exterior signs. However, an American flag waves
proudly over the entrance. "The first thing we got was the flag,"
Anderson explained. "Everything else came after that."
[Lynn
Shearer Spellman]
|
|
Announcements
|
|
The
Chamber Report
|
The
chamber of commerce is a catalyst for community progress, bringing
business and professional people together to work for the common
good of Lincoln and Logan County. |
Bobbi
Abbott, Executive Director
Lincoln/Logan
County Chamber of Commerce
303
S. Kickapoo St.
Lincoln,
IL 62656
(217)
735-2385
chamber@lincolnillinois.com
www.lincolnillinois.com
|
|
Honors
& Awards
|
|
Main
Street Corner News
|
Main
Street Lincoln
Cindy McLaughlin, program manager
303
S. Kickapoo
Lincoln,
IL 62656
|
Phone:
(217) 732-2929
Fax:
(217) 735-9205
E-mail:
manager@mainstreetlincoln.com |
|
Job Hunt
Lincolndailynews.com makes it easy to look for a job in the
Logan County area. |
Employers, you can list available jobs by e-mailing
ads@lincolndailynews.com.
Each job listing costs $10 the first week, $20 for eight days to one
month. There is a limit of 75 words per announcement.
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Classifieds |
To place a classified ad, e-mail
ads@lincolndailynews.com
or call (217) 732-7443.
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insurance
Aid Association
for Lutherans/
Lutheran Brotherhood
604 Broadway St., Suite 4
(217) 735-2253
linda_aper@aal.org
www.aal.org
Behne & Co. Inc.
Richard I Ray & Assoc
1350 Richland Ave.
(217) 732-9333
May Enterprise
106 S. Chicago
P.O. Box 129
(217) 732-9626
Moriearty Insurance
Agency, Inc.
218 Eighth St.
(217) 732-7341
miai@ccaonline.com
State Farm-
Deron Powell
114 E. Cooke St.
P.O. Box 78
Mount Pulaski, IL 62548
(217) 732-7341
www.statefarm.com
interior decorators
Gossett's
Decorator Studio
311 Broadway St.
(217) 732-3111
bgossett@abelink.com
internet services
CCAonline
601 Keokuk St.
(217) 735-2677
webmaster@ccaonline.com
investments
Aid Association
for Lutherans/
Lutheran Brotherhood
604 Broadway St., Suite 4
(217) 735-2253
linda_aper@aal.org
www.aal.org
janitor/cleaning
Donna Jones
Commercial Cleaning
Floor waxing,
polishing & cleaning
(217) 735-2705
massage
All About You
408 Pulaski St.
(217) 735-4700
Serenity Now
716 N. Logan
(217) 735-9921
meat market
Benner's Too
511 Woodlawn Road
(217) 735-9815
motels
Holiday Inn Express
130 Olson Drive
(217) 735-5800
www.cdmhotel.com
nursing homes
Maple Ridge
2202 N. Kickapoo
(217) 735-1538
Maple Ridge at LDN
office supply
Glenn Brunk
Stationers
2222 S. Sixth
Springfield, IL 62703
(217) 522-3363
www.glennbrunk.com
optometrists
Advanced Eye Care
623 Pulaski St.
(217) 732-9606
www.advanced
eyecenters.com
Nobbe Eye Care
Center, LLC
1400 Woodlawn Road
(217) 735-2020
pest control
Good Ole Pest Control
Daron Whittaker, owner
380 Limit St.
(217) 735-3206
pizza
Stuffed-Aria Pizza
102 Fifth St.(217) 732-3100
printer/printing
Key Printing
Tom Seggelke
(217) 732-9879
key@keyprinting.net
www.keyprinting.net
real estate
Alexander & Co.
Real Estate
410 Pulaski St.
(217) 732-8353
sonnie@ccaonline.com
Diane Schriber
Realty
610 N. Logan
(217) 735-2550
schriber@ccaonline.com
ME Realty
222 N. McLean
(217) 735-5424
www.merealty.com
Werth & Associates
1203 Woodlawn Road
(217) 735-3411
werthrealty@abelink.com
restaurants
Blue Dog Inn
111 S. Sangamon St.
(217) 735-1743
www.bluedoginn.com
service station
Greyhound Lube
1101 Woodlawn Road
(217) 735-2761
sewing
The Sewing Place
503 Woodlawn Road
(217) 732-7930
thrift stores
Lincoln Mission Mart
819 Woodlawn Road
(217) 732-8806
Clinton Mission Mart
104 E. Side Square
Clinton, IL 61727
(217) 935-1376
tires
Neal Tire & Auto
451 Broadway
(217) 735-5471
www.bentire.com
title companies
Logan County
Title Co.
507 Pulaski St.
LCtitle@ccaonline.com
tourism
Abraham Lincoln Tourism
Bureau of Logan County
303 S. Kickapoo
(217) 732-8687
www.logancounty
tourism.org
towing
AA Towing
& Repair
945 Broadwell Drive
(217) 732-7400
upholstery
L.C. Upholstery
529 Woodlawn Road
(217) 735-4224
weddings
The Classic Touch
129 S. Sangamon St.
(217) 735-9151
(888) 739-0042
Weddings by Crystal
121 S. Sheridan St.
(217) 735-9696
www.weddings
bycrystal.net
youth programs
YMCA
319 W. Kickapoo St.
(217) 735-3915
(800) 282-3520
http://www.ymca.net/
index.jsp?assn=1802
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