B Tuesday, June 8, 2021 The Observer & Baker City Herald BETWEEN THE ROWS WENDY SCHMIDT Make your garden a place to relax and refresh After doing all the work of growing your potted plants, it would be nice to create a peaceful area to de-stress and relax. Being satisfactorily warm weather this time of year, consider moving your houseplants to a shady porch, leaving enough space for a comfortable chair and perhaps a small table for books or a beverage to help you relax. The green coolness is refreshing. You deserve a place to retreat to collect your thoughts. Making this space to help your mental well-being makes your gardening well worth the effort. Garden Chores • Sow seeds of sunfl owers and zin- nias. • Set out any pepper, eggplant, and tomato plants you have left. • Prune unwanted shoots as they appear on fruit trees. • Trellis peas and stake or cage your tomatoes. • Pile mulch over the root zone of your potatoes. • Early detection is essential for good control of vegetable pests. Learn to identify and distinguish between pests and benefi cial predators. • Repeat plantings of corn and beans to extend harvest season. • Summer fruiting raspberries are ripening now. • Trees and shrubs may still be fertilized before July 4. • Pruning of spring-fl owering trees and shrubs should be completed before month’s end. • Water turf as needed to prevent drought stress. • Mow lawns frequently enough to remove no more than 1/3 the total height per mowing. If you have garden questions or com- ments, please write to green garden column@yahoo.com. Thanks for read- ing! Steve Mellon/Pittsburgh Post-Gazette-TNS Margherita pizza that Mike Murphy of Edgeworth prepared and cooked in his outdoor pizza oven on May 17, 2021. Home pizza ovens proved to be extremely popular during the pandemic because cooks had more time on their hands. O UTDOOR P IZZA ■ Outdoor cooking, including backyard pizza ovens, is a pandemic trend that could continue ances, is among local retailers that saw a rise in outdoor kitchens last year. PITTSBURGH — If there was a small “The barbecue business in general was silver lining to this pandemic year, perhaps crazy,” he said, with many manufacturers it’s this: We got back in our kitchens. struggling to keep up with demand. With restaurants temporarily shuttered, Specialty items like smokers and pizza most of us did (and are still doing) a lot ovens were particularly popular, and Hil- more cooking. More than a few have used lebrand said they also sold a lot of outdoor their time cooped at home to experiment refrigeration units and burners. “People with unfamiliar ingredients and/or try dif- wanted true outdoor kitchens, where in the ferent cooking methods. (Remember those past they just bought a grill.” fl our and yeast shortages caused by the He expects a repeat performance in 2021, sourdough bread frenzy?) and not just among carnivores. Eating As a masked-up spring stretched into a Well magazine saw a 51% year-over-year socially distanced summer and fall, we also increase in views for articles and recipes for got back to our grills. grilling vegetables. Over 14 million grills and smokers were “Americans are coming back home, which sold between April 2020 and February 2021, is a good thing because it allows us to slow according to The NPD Group. That was a down,” said Kimberly Stuteville, national 39% increase over the same period a year sales director for grill manufacturer Napo- before and boy, did we pony up: We spent leon, which saw a double-digit sales increase nearly $5 billion on grills, smokers, camping over last year. stoves and accessories in 2020. A grill, she added, “brings you to your Tim Hillebrand, co-owner of Don’s Appli- core, your center, whether it’s with neigh- Gretchen McKay Pittsburgh Post-Gazette bors or your nuclear family.” Grills with infrared cooking technology are really big, she noted, and smoke contin- ues to trend in all forms, including pellet grills. Accessories like pancha skillets, rotis- serie baskets and charcoal trays — which allow you to cook with charcoal or wood chips on a gas grill — are also increasingly popular. Doug Satterfi eld, owner of Rollier’s Hard- ware in Mt. Lebanon, agreed 2021 is shaping up to be a hot year for grill sales, especially now through July 4. The most popular price range is $500-$800. “People are still spending money to stay at home instead of vacationing,” he said. “They want to spend more time in their backyards.” So far Rollier’s has been able to keep ahead of the pace. “But some companies are running short, and inventory is not quick,” he noted. So if you’re in the market, you might want to buy sooner rather than later. See Pizza/Page 3B INVESTIGATING THE HISTORY OF THE BUILDING AT 1117 ADAMS AVE. IN LA GRANDE From tobacco shop to chop house to optometrist By Ginny Mammen I heard a saying the other day, “History will fi nd you.” Well, with this next building, at 1117 Adams Ave. in La Grande, currently the home of Edward Jones Invest- ments, I was hoping that was true. However, with a little help from a friend and much patience I was able to gather more than I ever expected. The National Register of Historic Places has this build- ing constructed in 1892, but I believe it to have been built sometime between 1903 and 1910 because that is when it appeared on the Sanborn maps. I was not able to fi nd who constructed the building, but a photograph from my friend and fellow historian, Bob Bull, gave me enough in- formation to start my search for its occupants. As with many of the older businesses, this building sometimes had only one occupant, but for the most part had two. The earliest businesses I could locate were a tobacco shop and a res- taurant, side by side, which were shown on the 1910 Bob Bull Collection A La Grande fi re engine passes the building at 1117 Ad- ams Ave., around 1914-15. Sanborn Map. The tobacco shop was the Union Cigar store, which was purchased by Claude Thatcher in 1912 from V. E. Kirk. According to The Observer in February 1912, Thatcher promised “it to be run as an up-to-date cigar store with high class shining parlor, suitable for ladies and gentlemen, strictly American.” Some women in the early 1900s were looking for equal rights and although this might have been edgy for some, others were ready to have new experiences and opportunities. Thatcher was ready to provide this. The sign on the store front read in part “Ladies and Gents Parlor.” A later newspaper advertisement indicated there were “private areas for the ladies.” The restaurant in 1912 was the La Grande restaurant. I was unable to locate any other information about this business. However, we know that it was no longer in opera- tion in late 1916 or very early 1917 because that is when the “Oyster House” came into being. In my research I found that a man by the name of George J. Carres had the La Grande Chop and Oyster House at 1117 Adams (actu- ally 1117 1/2) in 1917 and he and his family lived over the restaurant. Advertisements appeared in the paper for din- ners of fresh crawfi sh, crabs and lobster. These ads lasted only until September of 1917 when the restaurant came under new ownership and management of R. A Craw- ford and was renamed The Empire Cafe. So who was George Carres and what happened to him? George John Athanssopou- los was born in Greece in 1885 and arrived in New York in 1902. Shortly after, he changed his last name to Carres. In the early 1900s he moved to Oregon and was living in Portland where he had married Hazel Dell Glandon. They had two children, John and Annie. George was working as a cook and restaurateur in Portland, when the new fron- tier of prosperous growing La Grande appears to have called to him. George soon became the proprietor of the La Grande Chop and Oyster House. It was a rough year for the business and for George. Shortly after the restaurant opened in 1917 there was a fi re. The Observer reported that it “was caused by an attempt of a waiter at 3:40 a.m. to fi ll a burning coffee urn with gasoline.” I imagine that George was soon looking for a new waiter. Then on July 5 a group of young boys were playing with fi recrack- ers in the alley behind the Foley Hotel. An 11-year-old had a “giant fi recracker, over two inches long” explode in his face, according to The Observer, and it was George that took him in and helped care for him until his mother could arrive. Further research found that in August of that year Hazel became quite ill and her mother, Annie Glandon, came to La Grande to care for her. As we now know by Sep- tember, George was no longer in business at the restaurant. The family returned to Port- land and it was there in 1922 they added another son, Paul, to their family. George Carres died in Portland in 1956 at the age of 71. Various businesses came and went over the years. Some of these were La Grande Electric (1945) which became Vaughan’s Electric (1947) selling household ap- pliances. In 1949 The Craft Shop was located at 1117 1/2 Adams. The business located in this building for the longest period of time was that of optome- trist Curtis Clifford Votaw. Dr. Votaw was born in Tacoma, Washington, in 1925. He married Mary Alice Durbin and served in the Navy before coming to La Grande in 1957 to practice. Nearly 40 years later he was still listed as an occupant of 1117 Adams in the City Directory. Some of his neighbors in the building over the years were Bertha’s Alterations and Corset Shop in the 1950s and ’60s, Bennett’s Studio of Photography in the 1970s, Wise Owl Boutique in the 1980s and Sandy’s Fashions in the 1990s. Keep looking up! Enjoy!