California Proposition 1 (1916)
From Ballotpedia
Proposition 1 appeared on the ballot in California in 1916 as an initiated constitutional amendment. Its goal was to prohibit the manufacture, sale, gift or transportation of intoxicating liquors, except for "medicinal, sacramental, scientific and mechanical" purposes.
It was defeated at the polls.
The Prohibition Amendment had appeared on the California ballot, and been defeated, just two short years earlier. It was broader in scope than the 1916 version, which provided for some exceptions.
Two other alcohol-related measures appeared on the 1914 California ballot--California Proposition 39 (1914) and California Proposition 47 (1914)--both of which were geared toward mitigating the impact of the drive to prohibit alcohol in the state.
California Proposition 2 (1916) also appeared on the 1916 ballot--it also lost--which attempted to prohibit alcohol by prohibiting its use.

