0 a game in which tickets with different numbers are bought from a spinning container and small prizes are won when the numbers on the tickets are the same as the numbers on the prizes: --
I suppose that someone confined to a wheelchair could take up bingo, housey-housey or tombola, if he or she wanted to compete with able-bodied people.
One would expect that parliamentary debate on such a matter should depend on more than a tombola or lucky draw.
However, there are bring-and-buy stalls and tombolas which are not confined to offering alcoholic refreshment but also such items as a bottle of tomato ketchup.
Cannot those war charity undertakings in which tombolas and lotteries are being organised at present be allowed to be completed?
In just four years, they have raised more than £650,000 through all sorts of ordinary activities, such as raffles, jumble sales and tombolas.
Despite that, in six years, through tombolas and raffles, the hospice has raised over £1 million.
Thirdly and more remarkably, if a bottle of homemade wine is given as a tombola prize at a village fete, a liquor licence is required.
That is all right if one is envisaging the tombola-type draw, if all the tickets are going into a hat or drum.