carmel pine cone, may 2, 1918 · 2015. 2. 19. · notice of special larrne! pine cone municipal...
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L SfreYear. $1.5o ISSUED EOERY THURSDAY Cbc Copy,Scents = J| D evoted to the interests o f Carm el-by-the-Sea, Pebble Beach, Carmel H igh lands, Carmel V a lley
m a y 2 , 1918
All A m e r i c a n s
Can S e r v e
Every man, woman and child in thjg country, who wants to serve the coun- !'7> cai' serve it and serve it in a very simple and effective way, savs Secre
tary McAdoo. ‘
that service is to lend .vour money to the government. Every 25 cents
,t° the government n, a ”e*P at this time and P actically every man woman and child, by >•;« some trifling sac-
hce, some denial of a Pleasure, or giving up some indulgence, can render the government that support.
C A R M E L -BY-THE-SEA. CAL.
9ine IHeedleaV O L . IV , N U M . 13
Registration for the county and state election has been resumed here at tbe Pine Cone
i and J. W. Hand offices, i Mrs. Helen A. Crocker, who has spent several months here,
j returned to her home at Fresno J last week. She loves Carmel.
The Van Winkle property on San Carlos avenue has been purchased by Mrs. Beatrice Davenport of Monterev. She will make her home here.
Miss Elsa Frieda is occupy-!
The second installment, 20 per cent, on Third Liberty Goan bonds, is payable on the 23th‘of this month.
T h e Carmel city trustees w ill h o ld their monthly meeting at the City Hall next Tuesday evening.
M iss Elizabeth Chandler is here from Sdn Francisco for a month’s stay. She is having a number of trees on her property sawed and chopped.
It is said that this summer
VV“ sel1 U. S. Thrift and ar Savings Stamps
Ik-tnk of M o n t e r e y Monterey S a v . B a n k
Vivisection F u n dIs D is co n t in u e d
̂ I I'h uSf, c r,)ffi funds for
pm ectio i) purpose* is to he dis
7, dinned, accord in g to advices p .’" 1 General M anager H arvey D.
I , u H ow ever, research work Hong these line- w ill con tinue by(liriA 8 *1 c o n t r ib u t io n s f ro l ) ) Hn j n . T li ^ ‘ 'v h o s e name is n o t g iv e n .
| j Cross fund* a lready ex « ! " r t l l i s p u r p o s e w i l l b e p -
(fed by the same parly .act;,18 .,
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fr\u5kal f lo te s
T h e B en deke V io lin School has tw e lv e students, live o f whom are d o in g in tensive work, and the 0U1 ers take lessons a fter school.
A ll the w arring nations o f E tit- ope , d u rin g three vears o f torrents o f fire, steel and hiood, have found that m ilsic was one o f the th in gs that have kept the men at tlit* front and the peop le at home can ab le o f enduring the g rea tes t s' rain that human Iteings have ever been expected to bear. G reat Britain is expend in g large sums to b ring back Iter musicians, speakers and actors to h e lp p reserve tbe pub n- equilih riun i at home.
Am erica is m ak in g ehibotaN p rovisions for the am usem ent o f j the sold iers in cam p and abroad. Second ou lv iu im portance is it that we who stay at hom e depend upon music, read ing, lectures anil the theatre to keep our spirits at the topm ost poiut. to bear any o rdea l that m ay com e to us.
Frederick Jacobi, w k o spent som etim e iu Carm el last year, has en listed in an arm y band. H is ; suite, “ C a liforn ia , ” com pris in g four m ovem ents, one h av in g a liesta at M onterey as m o t i f ; another is said to have been written on a h i!! overlook in g th e va lley of the M ission San Carlos. T h e suite was rendered by tbe 3au Francisco last w inter.
Four o ther m usicians who have from tune to tim e perform ed here, are w ith the colors. R ob ert L ip - p i.t , p ian ist is in G eorg ia , hoping soon to g o across. A llan B ier, w ho has in terp reted D iibussev for its. is also a so ld ier bold . F r e d erick Preston Search, concert c e l list am i com poser, is iirst musician at M are 1-land. A n d the ultra m odern school has as it represuta f iv e H e im C ow ell.
May 2, 3, 4—Three Days t<
Purchase Bonds and Put
Carmel “Over the Top”
D a v-Iigh t H igh and T id e s at Carm el
J. K. 15 I f C K, M . I).Office at Gunnel - by - the - Sea
Pharmacy. Carmel, Cai.
99
What Doe sWar Time MeanTo You
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A h i n t i i s s | B
C arm e l | Development I |j
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Are you complaining because “war time” means coal shortage; less sugar in your coffee; bad business; less money than you think you ought to make?
W hat about the boys who art fighting for you in France?
For you—a little economyand deprivation. For them thetrenches; the pitiless storms of rain and sleet; the ceaseless deafening bombardment of the guns; hunger, cold and fever; wounds and death.
That you may dwell inpeace, plenty, and security, theysacrifice everything, give everything, brave everything, and face a nameless grave with a smile and a song.
What are you doing, or giving, or sacrificing for them?
1 •
•, r
Liberty Loanis your opportunity top rove t h e p a t r i o t i s m t h a t i s in your heart and on y o u r l ip s .
Y our opportunity toshow yourself w o r th y o fthe heroism, the devotion, the self-renunciation of y ou r soldiers and Sailors.
Y ou opportunity toshare, in some small d eg ree , the sufferings o f those w h o Etaou ready to make the su- p r e m - sacrifice for you.
A ll you can do is littleenough. Y o u s im p ly lend ■four m oney. D o it, and be g lad hat you can do so much a n d
«o rry you can do no more.
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Notice o f Spec ia l Larrne! Pine ConeM u n ic ip a l PUBLISHED W E E K L Y
Election
PU R S U A N T to Resolution N o . 15, entitled “ A u e- solution Providing tor a Special Municipal Election to be held in the C ity of Carmel-by- the-Sea on the 28th day of May, A . D. 1918, and Providing fo r G iv in g the Notice I. thereof,’’adopted by the Boardof Trustees o f the City of.) We-„e pUdged to the hm*s* nation v-'«trmel-by*-thC“Ot?3. on the 15th f0 put this through w ithout flintch-
KSTA11USHKI) FEBRUARY, 1915 Knt«*reaoti
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Decks Cleaied For Action
Second R ed Cross D riv eBegins on May 20
T h e Second Red Gross W ar Fund d r ive is on. T h e decks are beiug cleared o f the deb ris from the L ib e r ty Loan ba ttle , which was a glorious v ic to ry , and (lie new action w ill lieg in M on day, M ay 20th, and last until th e27 lh .
In the first R ed Cross W ar I' uud battle there was considerab le con fusion, the natural consequence in a ll first engagem ents. F o r the M ay battle a ll the plans have been ca re fu lly laid. Each ex ecn tive knows what he lias to do and where to d o it. In the first battle there was much wasted en orgv . In this, there w ill he littJej or none, so ca re lu lly has I he cam paign been p lanned by men whose , tim e cou ld not be bought
Such service can not bo th o ig b t o f jlfi terras o f m oney. Men e v e ry where are g iv in g the ir tim e g la d ly | for the sheer love o f serv ice and I the joy tlifcy feel in h e lp in g their i fe llow -m en T h ere w ill be no re wards, no prom otions, no g lo ry , no p u b lic ity— noth ing but tile g lad fee lin g o f sacrifice and the exa lla j tion that com es from s e e in g o n e 's w .n k bear fru it.
A rm -c h a ir P a tr io tsN ow is the tim e for the arm
cha ir sold iers o f the nation to com e to the front. You are needed. You are not asked to g iv e to the R -d Cross, s tand ing up to your knees in h a lf frozen mud, w ith bullet and shell tearing up the ground about von . You r clothes are dry and clean ; you have a com fortab le room and a real lied to sleep in, not a d u g out or a fire step. N o m atter how much you g iv e , the so ld ier and the sa ilor are g iv in g more. Beside the ever present hazard to life and health , he is g iv iu g hip fu ll tim e, his business opportun ities, his association with fam ily and friends, and his chance fo r fu tu re ease and com fort. In a word, lie is sacrific ing his w hole future that you may stav in voiir arm-chair.
T h ere is no such th in g as passive patriotism . I t must be active and earnest. I f , because o f age or in firm ity , you cannot or are not a llow ed to, g iv e yourself, then g iv e to the R ed (b o s s in money and service, that the hurts of others who do g o and su ffer may be bound up and eased physica lly and every other wav. Tn g iv in g to the Red Cross do not th ick o f it in any way as a sacrifice. It is a p r iv ilege .
M e n ’s P a r t in T h is D r iv eIn this d istrict last year women
almost entirely were the co ll •clots T h is year it is asked that the men undertake the greater part o f this work.
A con ference o f Red ( boss cha irmen and aH persons interested, is called for Tuesday, M ay 7, at 10 a.in ., at the Pa lace Hotel. San h raueiseo. Some o f our men should attend, and pick up' som e o f the over flow in g enthusiasm o f 0c * o f these conferences. W e need it here. A fte r the return o f the !cai chairm an from tins m eeting a
OFFICIAL FOOD NEWS
ianied byU . S. F o o d A d m in is tra t io n
fo r C a lifo rn ia R A L P H P. M ER RITT . Com nv..ion«r
Idea. Butter ; ,.3 at J;: a pound. Potatoes at $40 arrack. These are not exceptions. They are only sxam alei. Our hearts break in contemplating all the m isery that we see about us; bat we are pioud, nevertheless, to prove that we can endure it all without hesitating or wavering. W e have too much to die. too little to live. W e are be- ?on> ag skeletons, but hope sustains."
This hope is Am erica and American food— especially wheat.
Ld Playa News-Not*
Save more wheat,— and more, and more!
Necessity tightens its grip. W hat was sufficient fo r yesterday, is not enough fo r today. The long drain on Uncle Sam’s wheat bin this w inter has begun to tell.
Today, the wheat crisis abroad has grown stiil more acute. Thi:, is the fag-end o f the cereal supply,— the last few months before the new harvest. The A llies ' home supply is at its low est. Their need for outside help is at its highest. The A llies cannot hope to meet the m ilitary crisis on the first line trench unless we assure them help in tho food crisis that threatens their rear guard o f brave men, women and children le ft behind to build ships, make munitions and prepare clothing for those at the frcnt.
Th is is t'ue re a s o n th e c a l l h as c o m e th a t w e m u st, save s t i l l m o r e -.vl-eat to g i v e th e Allies. Instead of redurins our wheat consumption one-third as wo have been urged to do, w s must now reduce it one-half.
This means that each person must lim it his or her consumption o f wheat products to one and one-half pounds per week.
Dh oct orders for the fam ily should be formulated by every patriotic house-
. keeper. In place o f bread for dinner, j she should demand o f ho »*•■>' o'rt 1 tiv.t they eat more potatoes, or— tor I variety— rice, as a vegetable, o r hom
iny grits.Breakfast should begin the day not
by the breaking o f bread, but by the serving o f oatmeal, cornmcal mush pr p epared non-wheat products. And the housewife must serve these breakfast cereals, not apart from the eggs or coffee, but w ith them, so that the lack of bread w ill be met quite obviously.
A t luncheon, any bread served should be quite wheatless, and if potatoes are served, bread can be easily omitted.
These are only a few o f the ways that can be found by the housekeeper who wants to elim inate wheat entirely from her menu, and so make a high contribution to cause and country.
Miss Grace Tow ne, w h o has Wsome time with us. m otored b*to Palo A lto last Sunday.
W here to quarter ou r cooi*guests, is now (he question . little we anticipated such an 0
Save IP heat
“ K ow do we live?” writes a womanin r'cistiii’ - "Y o ; can not form any
Wheat saving is America’s most vlt-d food problem.
The United States Food Administration, in view of the critical wheat shortage, asks every Californian to observe the following amended rules:
Make every meal every day a ■ wiieatless" meal. Eat no food of an/ kind containing wheat or wheat products unless absolutely necessary for health.
Substitute fresh and cured meats meats of all kinds, including pork, potatoes, fresh vegetables, fruits, dairy products and other cereals, such as corn and rice.
T re ‘ meatless” and “porkless” da -s ha e been suspended.
R ecen t arrivals:
Palo A lto Mr. and M rs R ef , Evans, Miss M argaret Reesf.’ and Mrs G B Tow ne
Camp F rem cn t— L ie u t D J Lacklan, Lieut G H o w a rd 5
Nw Y o rk — H elo ise rie F Hi. Mrs S M Unancer and son ,R Worrali.
Tacom a— R E R ogers . B erke ley— M r and M rs Cha?
sell, Mrs Morton R ussell. M , M is Edgar Jamieson. R o b ’ t J*1 son. A F Hatch. J R ichard T end, M r and Mrs W in O ln ev
San Francisco— Mr and Mrs Jeffers and son. Mrs Lym an G F H Pierson. G B Groo T L
: E H R ix.| Oakland — J H Stillwell.
Ch icago - Mrs J R H akes W ashington — Mr and M iS J1
W irt,U S A - Lyman Grim e;.
nninhar o f io n men are g o in g to lie culled upon to act as a com m ittee o f solicitors, and sections of Carm el w ilt be g iven out for a thorough house to house canvas d u rin g the d r iv e week.
A W ar Fund R a lly , s im ilar to the one o f last year, w ill be held at the Forest T h ea tre on Sunday afternoon. M m 19
You r su gg stions ami ca ie fu l thought on m am matters arc requ ired.
I nuant the men o f Carmel behind this drive.
G . F. B e a r d s !E T , Chairm an Second W ar Fund D riv e
Schoo l for V io lipFOR TERM S, CONSULT
Miss F r a n c e s c a b e n d e k eBoke House. Santo Lucia Boulevarq
aqd Dolares Sreer, Cange:
I
I S c h w e n in g e rG K 0 C E R V
Z. T . S P E N C E RMonterev. opp Post office
FURNITURE, b e d d i n g . CARPETS. SHADES. Etc.
W e also make over mattresses and repair Furniture
Phone 638
B est Goods
Bresh Goodsprice?