THE LICENSING LAW.
MEALS IN HOTELS. [By Electric Telegraph—Copyright [United Press Association.] (Received 8.30 a.m.) Melbourne, December 30. Under a clause in the Licensing Act compelling hotelkeepers to furnish meals if required, a country licenser was lined for failing to do this. A strike existed, and the customer hat incurred the hostility of the strikers, and the hotel servants declined: t. cook and wait upon him. The hotelkeeper told the customer lie must dim elsewhere. The case' has drawn attention to the fact' that many Melbourne hotels an purely drinking' shops, the only pretence of providing meals being the counter lunches.
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Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 1, 31 December 1913, Page 8
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101THE LICENSING LAW. Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 1, 31 December 1913, Page 8
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