So far as it is material for our present purpose this Court held (1) that under entry 31 of List II of the Seventh Schedule to the Government of India Act, 1935, the Provincial Legislatures had the power to make laws with respect to "intoxicating liquors, that is to say, the 'production, manufacture, possession, transport, purchase and sale of intoxicating liquors" and there was, therefore, no legislative incompetency in the Bombay Legislature to enact the Bombay Prohibition Act, 1949; (2) that the word "liquor" as understood in India at the time of the Government of India Act, 1935, covered not only those alcoholic liquids which are generally used as beverages and produce intoxication, but also liquids containing alcohol and, therefore, the definition of "liquor" contained in section 2(24) of the Act was not ultra vires, and (3) that the restrictions imposed by sections 12 and 13 of the Act on the possession, sale, use and consumption of liquor were not reasonable restrictions on the fundamental right guaranteed by article 19(1)(f), so far as medicinal and toilet preparations containing 660 alcohol were concerned and that the said sections were invalid so far as they prohibited the possession, sale, use.