The defendant was indicted, tried and convicted for selling intoxicating liquors in-violation of the local option law, now found in Revised Statutes, 1889, sections 4598-4606.
It is urged here that such law was never legally adopted in Bates county, from whence this case comes. The first ground of objection covers two points. First. That the ■ petition to the county court asking that an election be ordered was not one paper, but consisted of several papers or petitions which, after being signed by petitioners residing in different parts of the county, were tacked together and presented to the county court as the petition for an order of election. Second. That the petition asks for an order of “ election to take the sense of the voters upon what is known as the ‘ Wood’s local option law ’ as provided for under said law.”
The first point we rule against defendant under the authority of the case of State ex rel. Church *621v. Meeks et al., ante, p. 566, where it was held that the petition being upon more than one paper did not invalidate-it.
The contention as to the second point is, that the petition should have been in the language of the statute, viz., for an order of election “to determine whether or not spirituous and intoxicating liquors, including wine and beer, shall'be sold,” etc. While it would have been better to have at least substantially followed the words of the statute, if it nevertheless appears from the face of the petition that it could mean and have for its object but the one thing of voting on the question “whether or not spirituous or intoxicating liquors, including wine and beer, shall be sold within the limits of” the county in which the petitioners reside, we think it should be regarded as sufficient, if valid in other particulars, and upon which the county court could properly make the order. At the time of the petition the “Wood’s local option law” was everywhere known in this state to mean the law under which this petition was granted and the election thereunder held. The original act itself, Laws, 1887, is headed “Dramshops : Local Option — Manufacture and Sale of Intoxicants.” And the preamble is, “An act to provide for the preventing of the evils of intemperance by local option,” and for “submitting the question of prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquors to the qualified voters,” etc. We think the petition carried upon its face an absolute certainty as to what was being petitioned for, and we shall rule this point also against the defendant.
The second ground of objection is, that as the county court is a court of limited jurisdiction, there were jurisdictional facts which should have appeared upon the “face of the petition before the court could acquire power to make an order.” Such as that the petitioners composed one-tenth of the qualified voters of the county outside of the limits of cities of more than *622twenty-five hundred inhabitants. This point, while not embracing the same facts as were shown in the case of State ex rel. Church v. Meeks, supra, finds its condemnation in that case; for it was there held that in the matter of the petition the strictness required in the proceeding for taking private property for public use, such as a public road, was not requisite in cases of this nature. If the fact be that the petition does contain the requisite petitioners and that fact is ascertained by the body petitioned, as shown by its proceedings, which was done and was shown by the proceedings of the county court in this case, it is sufficient.
II. The indictment charges that defendant “unlawfully and wilfully did sell intoxicating liquors, to-wit: one half-pint of whiskey, one half-pint of brandy, one half-pint of rum and one half-pint of gin.” The court gave the following instruction for the state.
“2. The indictment charges an unlawful sale of intoxicating liquor, to-wit: One half-pint of whiskey, one half-pint of brandy, one half-pint of rum, one half-pint of gin; now, if you find from the evidence that the defendant sold Cook intoxicating liquor, and said liquor had the appearance of whiskey and contained alcohol as its intoxicating ingredient, and that whiskey contains alcohol as its intoxicating principle, then you are warranted in finding that such sale was a sale of whiskey, whether such liquor was in fact what is commonly or properly called alcohol or what is commonly or properly called whiskey.”
The court refused the following offered by defendant:
‘ ‘ 8. The court instructs the jury that if you believe from the evidence that the liquor sold to witness Cook was alcohol, and not whiskey, brandy, rum or gin, you will acquit the defendant.”
Defendant was not charged with having ’ sold alcohol. The charge was specific of a sale of whiskey, brandy, rum and gin. The proof of the sale of either of *623these would have sustained the indictment. But if defendant, in the language of his instruction refused, sold alcohol, and not whiskey, brandy, rum or gin, he certainly is not guilty as charged.
For the error relating to the foregoing instructions, the judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded.
All concur.