demand draught - meaning and definition. What is demand draught
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What (who) is demand draught - definition

BRITISH BREWERY, FOUNDED 1761
Worthington Draught bitter; Worthington draught bitter
  • Daimler]] beer bottle lorries used for promotional purposes during the 1920s
  • The White Shield Brewery
  • ''Worthington's White Shield''
  • 300px
  • The Worthington Cup logo in 2001

Labor demand         
CONCEPT IN ECONOMICS DESCRIBING THE NUMBER OF LABOR-HOURS AN EMPLOYER IS WILLING TO HIRE
Labour demand; Labor demand function; Labour demand function; Demand for labor; Labor Demand
In economics, the labor demand of an employer is the number of labor-hours that the employer is willing to hire based on the various exogenous (externally determined) variables it is faced with, such as the wage rate, the unit cost of capital, the market-determined selling price of its output, etc. The function specifying the quantity of labor that would be demanded at any of various possible values of these exogenous variables is called the labor demand function.
in demand         
  • Former iN DEMAND ident used until 2014. This was the latest variant.
  • A version of the Viewer's Choice logo used from 1985 to 1999.
AMERICAN CABLE TELEVISION SERVICE
IN Demand; IN DEMAND; Too Much for TV; Vutopia; Vutopia on demand; InDemand; Too Much For TV
In request.
in demand         
  • Former iN DEMAND ident used until 2014. This was the latest variant.
  • A version of the Viewer's Choice logo used from 1985 to 1999.
AMERICAN CABLE TELEVISION SERVICE
IN Demand; IN DEMAND; Too Much for TV; Vutopia; Vutopia on demand; InDemand; Too Much For TV
sought after.

Wikipedia

Worthington Brewery

Worthington Brewery, also known as Worthington & Co. and Worthington's, was founded by William Worthington in Burton upon Trent in 1761. It is the second oldest continuously brewed British beer brand, after Whitbread. The best known Worthington beers are its Creamflow nitrokeg bitter and White Shield India Pale Ale.

When William Worthington died in 1800, his brewery was one of the largest outside London. Horace Tabberer Brown, a chemist employed by Worthington, pioneered brewing science in the separation and cultivation of pure yeast strains from 1866, and the brewery was the first in the world to systematically use a laboratory in the brewing process from 1872. Worthington & Co merged with its major Burton rival Bass in 1927. Until the 1960s the Worthington brand, in bottled form, ranked alongside Bass and Guinness as one of only three beers with nationwide distribution. However, bottled beer sales declined as keg beer grew in popularity throughout the 1960s, and the Worthington brewery closed in 1965. The beers continued to be brewed elsewhere, and the Worthington brand has remained prominent up to the present day.

The Worthington brand was purchased from Bass by the American brewing company Coors in 2002, which following a merger became Molson Coors in 2005. Creamflow is the third highest selling ale in the United Kingdom, as well as the highest selling ale in Wales, and is brewed in Burton. Worthington's White Shield IPA has continued to be brewed since 1829, and has been the recipient of a number of awards. In 2010, Molson Coors opened the William Worthington microbrewery, which brews historical and seasonal beers.

The Worthington brand has had an association with rugby union sponsorship since the latter half of the twentieth century. The brand also sponsored the Football League Cup from 1998 until 2003.