1 Be nice to have some cool beer.
2 Tell Bert Tybee to save me a glass of beer.
3 Say, uh, better, uh, better not drink too much beer.
4 We're taking some beer, and some of the smoothest rye you ever laid tongue to.
5 There's some lovely beer on the ice, and we can sit and talk and be all cool and lazy.
6 None of them noticed her while she was serving the crackers and cheese and sardines and beer.
7 It doesn't hurt any to drink a glass of beer on a warm day, but anybody who touches wine is headed straight for hell.
8 She was taken to a certified Studio Party, with beer, cigarettes, bobbed hair, and a Russian Jewess who sang the Internationale.
9 Carol had not dared to look into the farther room while she labored over the supper of beer, rye bread, moist cornbeef and cabbage, set on the kitchen table.
10 He was nineteen now, tall, broad, busy, the "town sport," famous for his ability to drink beer, to shake dice, to tell undesirable stories, and, from his post in front of Dyer's drug store, to embarrass the girls by "jollying" them as they passed.
11 He made for her a picture of his work in a large tailor shop in Minneapolis: the steam and heat, and the drudgery; the men in darned vests and crumpled trousers, men who "rushed growlers of beer" and were cynical about women, who laughed at him and played jokes on him.
12 In Gopher Prairie the only ardent new topics were prohibition, the place in Minneapolis where you could get whisky at thirteen dollars a quart, recipes for home-made beer, the "high cost of living," the presidential election, Clark's new car, and not very novel foibles of Cy Bogart.