Dr Mont Follick: To corpses?
Dr Mont Follick: Was that mostly in Canada?
Dr Mont Follick: The gold sovereign came back.
Dr Mont Follick: In 1922, gold sovereigns were in circulation.
Dr Mont Follick: Unable or unwilling?
Dr Mont Follick: Is it overlooked that at the time there was a threat to use the atom bomb in Korea, the Leader of the Opposition, who was then Prime Minister, went to Washington himself? Surely, he refused to give consent then to the atom bomb being dropped.
Dr Mont Follick: As the Gilbert and Ellice Islands are in the area, have precautions been taken to protect those islands from any misadventure which might come to them on account of hydrogen bomb tests?
Dr Mont Follick: On a point of order. There is a mistake in the Question. It should be "Bahamian waters "and not" Bahaman waters."
Dr Mont Follick: How old will he be then?
Dr Mont Follick: But what about quality?
Dr Mont Follick: Abolish them, they said.
Dr Mont Follick: We have the Guillotine upstairs.
Dr Mont Follick: One experimental train.
Dr Mont Follick: Could it not be solved very easily by having coaches running from Olympia directly to the Exhibition at Castle Bromwich?
Dr Mont Follick: Yes.
Dr Mont Follick: Not very well.
Dr Mont Follick: They are still badly equipped.
Dr Mont Follick: Of course he does.
Dr Mont Follick: Is the Joint Undersecretary aware that this very large and important South American Republic is a great friend of Britain's and always has been, and before taking any steps will he get the fullest report from our Ambassador in Bogota?
Dr Mont Follick: Does not the hon. Gentleman think it wise to review the whole question of honorary attachés in the main embassies in this country?