Prices on Cabo Uno Tequila, Little Penguin Pinot Noir and one-liter bottles of Bushmills Irish Whiskey will be slashed in Pennsylvania.

Get them while you can. Before long, these and about 400 other products, will disappear from the state's liquor and wine store shelves.

The Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board has pared down its inventory and starting March 1 will sell more than 160 spirits and about 240 wines at clearance prices.

Many say the LCB is acting more like a private enterprise. Gov. Tom Corbett has said several times he would like to explore the idea of selling the state owned liquor stores.

Does the LCB’s latest move offer yet another argument the state’s liquor system should be privately run?

The wine and spirits being yanked from shelves would remain available for shoppers to purchase in a private market, said State Rep. Scott Perry, R Dillsburg.

“Now you won’t even be able to get them ... I personally think this is just an indication the state liquor system’s time has come and gone,” he said.

In some cases, he said, the state is forcing residents to breech the law and cross the Pennsylvania line into neighboring states such as Maryland, Delaware and New Jersey to purchase the axed wines and spirits.

It’s nothing new for the LCB to do periodic inventory reviews. In fact it conducts large reviews of its products every two years, said Stacey Witalec, LCB spokeswoman.