Northwest History. Alaska 7. Alcoholic Liquor, United States

Shipload Of Liquor And Beer Cheerless; Exhausted Stores Feel Pinch. Shipload of Liquor and Beer Cheerless; Exhausted Stores Feel Pinch JUNEAU, Alaska.— —Food shortages took a tighter grip on strike-bound Alaska today as the relief ship General W. C. Gorgas arrived in port loaded with liquor and beer...

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Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 1937
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Online Access:http://content.libraries.wsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/clipping/id/88456
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Summary:Shipload Of Liquor And Beer Cheerless; Exhausted Stores Feel Pinch. Shipload of Liquor and Beer Cheerless; Exhausted Stores Feel Pinch JUNEAU, Alaska.— —Food shortages took a tighter grip on strike-bound Alaska today as the relief ship General W. C. Gorgas arrived in port loaded with liquor and beer but with no meat or fresh vegetables aboard. The General Gorgas, chartered by the federal government for emergency service during the Pacific maritime tieup, unloaded over one thousand cases of liquor for Juneau, already feeling the pinch of near-exhausted food stores. A checkup on the docks showed the Gorgas unloaded only a few cases of eggs and no butter. Passengers said most of the eggs prepared for shipment to Alaska were left behind on Seattle docks when the ship sailed a week ago. The ship carried a quantity of sacks for use at the Kennecott mine. Advices here reported that the ship left 25 tons of tombstones at Ketchikan when it docked here a few days ago on the way to Juneau. Ketchikan residents voiced complaints at that time because the Gorgas did not -carry badly needed meat supplies as ordered for shipment from Seattle.