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Beer.
...NEWMAN: 8. asked the President of the Board of Trade whether he is aware of the danger to health caused by the inability of the public to obtain whisky other than in very small quantities over the bar of licensed premises; how much whisky is at present in bond and available for immediate consumption; and will he state whether the Central Control Board (Liquor Traffic) are responsible for...
Mr Horatio Bottomley: ...is a brilliant man who has done magnificent war work, but this is a matter in which the Labour party are more concerned than I am, and if they are content to have an eminent member of the Scottish Bar chosen to decide questions which are not industrial, commercial or trade questions, but specifically and exclusively questions of labour, on their behalf then one cannot complain. With regard...
Major-General John Seely: ...probably that negligence would have to be proved in the case of air accidents as in the case of land accidents. But that is merely my own obiter dictum. It is a long time since I was called to the Bar and I cannot claim that it is a sound opinion. I do not think this Bill will alter the position in that respect, but I will make a note of the point. It is a subject which must be included in...
Sir Charles Edwards: Is the fact of a man being a writer in the Navy a complete bar to his demobilisation or can he still be released on compassionate grounds?
Mr George Renwick: ...rely on asking questions. I do not think that is right. I would rather have more speeches and fewer questions. I hope that the right hon. Gentleman will not turn a deaf ear to the appeals which have beer made to him and that he and the Government will take care that they do not pass any more stringent rules for the purpose of passing what I may call pannicky legislation. The less of such...
Oral Answers to Questions — Egypt (Tribunals and the Bar).
...has been made by United States Government for compensating brewers for any loss which they may incur in consequence of action taken by the Government in prohibiting the manufacture of wine, beer, and spirits.
Beer.
Sir Gerald Hurst: ...sequel the general who interfered was superseded, and the young officer, whose sentence of cashiering was quashed by the General Officer Commanding in Egypt, has since gained the Military Cross and bar. If we had allowed ourselves to be overawed by the General Officer Commanding, he would have been cashiered for a first offence on that occasion. I remember another case of a man who refused...
...Royal Red Cross Bars 17 D.C.M. 22,800 D.C.M. Bars— 1st 392 2nd 6 Military Medal 91,721 Military Medal Bars— 1st 3,773 2nd 98 Meritorious Service Medal 13,789 Meritorious Service Medal Bar 3 Honours conferred for Services in connection with the War. V.C. 1† G.C.B. 7 K.C.B. 31 C.B. 182 G.C.M.G. 2 K.C.M.G. 43 C.M.G. 465 Order of the British Empire* (Military...
Mr George Tryon: ...people, the tax is not properly distributed, and I hope that the Committee will see their way to go further into the matter and not take up the attitude that the Royal Commission is in any way a bar to the consideration of it now. I hope that they will be prepared to deal with it in a satisfactory way in the coming Budget.
...of hops for the crop of 1919. Until that crop has been disposed of the importations of foreign hops will be restricted to the amount that is shown to be necessary to provide for the quantity of beer for the brewing of which authorisation is given from time to time. I am unable to give the hon. Member at this stage any further information on the future policy of the Government with regard...
Mr Alfred Bigland: ...are prohibited to the 1st September. I take it, however, that all goods coming from our Colonies, even if manufactured goods, will be free. I hope I am right in that particular, namely, that the bar on manufactured goods will not extend to our Empire, and that if something is finished in India, say, that finished article can come into this country without the prohibition which would fall...
Beer (Area Committees).
Mr William Brace: ...atmosphere in which officers and men will be best able to act together. I am putting this forward as a democrat. My proposal is simply that, given brains and capacity, social rank ought not to be a bar or to afford an added opportunity, and if we are a democratic race, as I believe we are, then in that way we shall be doing the most popular thing if we clear all obstacles out of the way,...
...question. The list of all dutiable goods, the importation of which was prohibited, but is now free in respect of those which are produced in and exported from any part of the Empire is as follows: Beer, playing cards, cinematograph films, clocks, raw cocoa and preparations of cocoa, coffee, fruit, whether canned, bottled, dried, or preserved, mechanical lighters, matches, musical...
Major-General John Seely: ...discretion to remove anyone at any time, and especially at a time of war, to supersede anyone, we cannot have inquired into. The true answer to that is to bring the Secretary of State to the Bar of justice in this House, or, if there be malice or corruption shown, to bring him to the Bar of an appropriate tribunal; but to inquire into his right to supersede anyone would be fatal to good...
Sir Donald Macmaster: 77. asked the Chairman of the Kitchen Committee if the restrictions on the sale of spirits, beer, and wines applicable to clubs and licensed houses are applied and enforced in the House of Commons?
Mr T.P. O'Connor: ...captains of industry in this country. In that address he described how in the memory of living man you could ford the Tyne, that the Tees was a poor little purling river, that the river Mersey had a bar, which regulated and embarrassed the traffic of the country. All these great rivers, he said, have been now brought to a position that they can accommodate the largest ships of the world....