The plaintiffs in error were charged, by the indictment under which they were convicted, and sentenced, with having, on the 7th day of February, 1919, at a certain designated place within the jurisdiction of the court below, entered into a conspiracy with W. F. Toles, J. P. Symons, Joe Lucas, and J. H. Boomer, and with other persons to the grand jurors unknown, to knowingly and unlawfully ship and cause to be shipped from the state of California into the state of Washington certain packages, the number and more particular description of which were to the jurors unknown, of whisky, “without such packages- being so labeled on the outside covers thereof as to plainly show the name of the consignee thereof, the nature of the contents thereof, or the quantity contained therein,” in pursuance of which conspiracy and to effect the object thereof the said Toles gave and delivered to said Lucas $40, the said Symons $40, the said Richards $250, and the said Oess $400, contrary to the provisions of section 240 of the Criminal Code of the United States *655(Comp. St. § 10410). That section provides, among other things, as follows:
“Whoever shall knowingly ship or cause to be shipped, from one state, territory, or district of the United States, * * * into any other state, territory, or district of the United States, * * * any package of or package containing any spirituous, vinous, maited, fermented, or other intoxicating liquor of any kind, unless such package he so labeled on the outside cover as to' plainly show the name of the consignee, the nature of its contents, and the quantity contained therein,” shall be punished in a prescribed way.
The case shows that Tucas was the one of the alleged conspirators selected to go to California and there purchase and ship into the state of Washington the alleged prohibited whisky, and it was to him that the money for that purpose was delivered by his alleged, cocon-spirators, and that he was the orie who did purchase in and ship from the state of California into the state of Washington the prohibited liquor.
The shipment so prohibited by the federal statute was also prohibited by a statute of the state of Washington providing, among other things, that any person desiring to ship or transport a certain prescribed quantity of any intoxicating liquor into any county of that state should appear before the county auditor and make a sworn statement showing among other things his name, that he is over 21 years oí age, and the name and address of the person, firm, or corporation from whom the shipment is to be made, upon which statement the auditor is authorized to issue a permit to such applicant to ship or transport such limited quantity of liquor. Such permit the state statute requires to be attached to and plainly affixed in á conspicuous place to the package or parcel containing the liquor, and when so affixed—
“shall authorize any railroad company, express company, transportation company, common earlier, or any person, firm or corporation operating any boat, launch or vehicle for the transportation of goods, wares and merchandise within the state of Washington, to transport, ship or carry not to exceed one-half gallon of intoxicating liquor other than beer, or twelve quarts or twenty-four pints of beer.”
And it further declares that—
“Any person so transporting such intoxicating liquor shall, before the delivery of such package or parcel of intoxicating liquor, cancel said permit and so deface the same that it cannot be used again.” Section 62G2 — .15, Kemington’s Code 1915.
Section 6262 — 18 of the same state statute makes it unlawful for any carrier to bring any liquor into the state except such as is expressly permitted by the statute, and section 6262 — 20 prohibits all carriers from making any such transportation within the state unless the package or parcel is plainly marked with the words: ■
“This Package Contains Intoxicating liquor.”
[1] To the objection made for the plaintiffs in error that the indictment “does not allege that the state of Washington was dry territory at the time of the alleged conspiracy, nor at any other time,” it is a sufficient answer to say that the law presumes that all of the *656alleged conspirators had knowledge of the prohibitory statutes referred to.
The contention that there was a variance between the indictment and the proof seems to be based upon the notion that it was necessary for the government to prove that the liquor was shipped from California into the state 'of Washington to a fictitious consignee, or under a false label, which is manifestly not so; the crime denounced by the statute, upon which the indictment is based, being the shipment of such liquor from one state into another—
“unless such package be so labeled on tbe outside cover as to plainly show tbe name of tbe consignee, tbe nature of its contents, and tbe quantity contained therein.”
Evidence was introduced on the trial going to show that Lucas shipped the whisky in question from California into the state of Washington concealed in a certain, pipe organ, and not in any package labeled as required by the statute.
[2] In response to the claim that there was no proof of the alleged conspiracy, it is enough to make a brief excerpt from the testimony of the witness Lucas, as to whom, as well as the defendant Boomer, the indictment was dismissed. Lucas testified, among other things, as follows:
“I live in Centraba; am engaged in theatrical business there, for tbe past 6 years- I know tbe defendants and one J. H. Boomer and Jack Platt. I contemplated, about February 7th last, a trip from Centralía to San Francisco, and about 3 weeks before I left I bad a talk with August Oess, one of tbe defendants, in regard to it. He asked me if I would bring him back some-whisky, and I said, ‘Yes.’ We had several conversations along tbe same line. These conversations with Oess always referred to when I was going to-California. I also bad a conversation on tbe same subject with tbe defendant uruce Richards, about tbe same time. He asked me if I was going ro-Frisco, and would I bring him back some whisky, and I told him, ‘Yes.’ I had several subsequent conversations with him. I went to San Francisco on February 8th this year, and about 2 weeks before X left, Mr. Richards gave me-$200 at one time and $40 at another time, in cash. I asked him what kind of whisky he wanted, and he said he preferred bottled in bond in quart bottles. I also had a conversation with the defendant Toles, and one with Boomer, and one with Mr. Symons, about bringing back whisky for them. Toles gave me-$40, and Symons $50, to pay for whisky to bring back for them. I told Sy-mons that I was going to bring back some whisky to Oess and Richards, and. told Oess that X was going to bring Symons $50 worth of whisky. A few days before I went away I had a talk with Oess and Richards, and we discussed about buying whisky and bringing it into Centralia, and Oess suggested that he drive his truck along the prairie, and unload the booze on the-•prairie into his truck, and Richards says: ‘That’s all right for me.’ Oess paid me the money for the whisky about 12 days before I went to Frisco; he gave me $400 in bills. Before I went I bought 1,000 dry cell batteries, or-covers, and I. shipped them to San Bkanciseo. I bought these a long time ago. At that time, had no intention of ever sending whiskjr in them; that occurred to me afterwards. I shipped them down to San Francisco about 6 or 7 days before I went. They were shipped there to bring back whisky in. There-had to be some work done on them, and Jack Platt and myself did it in Fillmore, street, San Francisco. (Bottle handed witness, who removed the cork and smelled of it, 4nd said it was whisky in the bottle, and that he recognized it as one of the same kind of contraptions that they fixed up in San Francisco. Thereupon said dry cell case and the bottle containing the whisky were introduced and received in evidence and marked as Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1.) I fixed 1,000 of the little dry battery cases the same as this one is fixed. There-*657was wliiskv in each one. I got the whisky in San Francisco. I got the money to buy it from my friends, Bicharás, Oess, Toles, Symons and Boomer. Jack Platt helped me fill these bottles. He did most of it. Alter they were filled, they were filled in regular battery packing cases, and made ready for shipment, and then I left San Francisco.”
We find nothing in any of the points justifying a reversal of the judgment. It is accordingly affirmed.