The defendant, Ernst Rottman, was tried and convicted on an information charging three distinct violations of the law (chapter 50, Compiled Statutes, 1901) regulating the license and sale of malt, spirituous and vinous liquors.» Two specifications of error are discussed in the briefs. The objection to conviction upon the first count is based on the assumption that the offense therein alleged is an unauthorized sale of whisky, beer and alcohol to an unnamed person. If the assumption were warranted, the objection would doubtless be valid; but it is, we think, quite evident that the pleader did not intend to charge a sale contrary to the provisions of section 11 of the act. The information alleges, it is true, that some of the liquors unlawfully kept for sale were in fact sold, but this does not change or affect in any way the character of the pleading.' The gravamen of the charge, as was said in Hornberger v. State, 47 Nebr., 40, was not the selling of the proscribed intoxicants, but the keeping of them for sale without a license or permit. The averment relating to sales made by the defendant was neither more nor less than a needless statement of an evidential fact. It is not a sufficient reason for a reversal of the sentence that some of the evidence used by the state to prove a criminal intent was set out in the information. The first count, it may be conceded , lacks artistic finish; it is somewhat crude in structure, but it charges, nevertheless, with adequate precision, the crime defined in section 20, and does not charge the essential elements of any other crime.
The other assignment of error discussed by counsel is grounded on the refusal of the court to sustain a challenge to a juror who entertained an opinion touching the question in issue. It appears from the voir-dire examination that the juror challenged had read an account of the transactions in which the prosecution had its origin, and had formed an opinion on the assumption that what he read was true, The opinion was not, however, a fixed or stub* *650born one. Tbe juror said he could disregard it altogether, and base bis verdict exclusively upon tbe evidence given at the trial. In our judgment, tbe court did not err in overruling tbe challenge. Section -168 of tbe Criminal Code provides that, if a juror has an opinion as to tbe guilt or .innocence of tbe accused, based entirely upon rumor or newspaper reports, that fact alone will not disqualify him; and if be shall say on oath that be feels able, notwithstanding such opinion, to render an impartial verdict upon tbe law and tbe evidence, tbe court may, if satisfied that be is impartial, and will render such verdict, permit or require him to serve. This statute is constitutional, it means precisely what it says, and it answers completely defendant’s objection to tbe juror Marple. Basye v. State, 45 Nebr., 261, 272; Ward v. State, 58 Nebr., 719.
The judgment is
Affirmed.