The defendant was subject to the punishment authorized by law or as provided by ordinance, upon his conviction on appeal from the recorder’s court in a trial de novo in the law and equity court.— Code, § 1217. Punishment by fine or imprisonment, or hard labor on the streets of the city, is authorized to be imposed upon conviction on the trial de novo by the section of the Code cited (Cooper v. Gadsden, 10 Ala. App. 609, 65 South. 715; Clark v. Uniontown, 4 Ala. App. 264, 58 South. 725), and there is no merit in the contention that fixing a fine on the defendant was a necessary prerequisite to a valid judgment imposing a sentence of hard labor in conformity with the verdict of the jury.
The ordinance was properly allowed in evidence. It is not necessary to the validity of the ordinance that the mayor should vote on it.—Clark v. City of Uniontown, 4 Ala. App. 264, 58 South. 725.
There was no error in permitting the state’s witness to testify that he smelled and tasted the beverage and that is was alcohol. It is a matter commonly known as a physical fact that by the use of the senses of smell and taste one can acquire the knowledge that the limpid, mobile, colorless liquid with a hot and pungent taste *613and a slight, though distinctive, spirituous scent, is the liquid known as alcohol. Chemical analysis, or a knowledge of the science of chemistry, is not necessary to enable one to distinguish alcohol by the senses of smell and taste.
The contention of the defendant’s counsel that it is not shown that the sale of the prohibited beverage took place within 12 months before the affidavit charging the defendant with having committed the offense is not well founded. The affidavit bears date of April 21, 1918, on which date there wus a trial and conviction in the recorder’s court, and, on the trial de novo had in the year 1914, the state’s witness testified that the sale took place “during last year” (the year of 1913).
The defendant, was charged with the violation of an ordinance of the city of Andalusia prohibiting the sale, giving away, etc., of certain named intoxicating liquors, including alcohol. A state’s witness testified to a sale by the defendant of a liquor that he knew to be alcohol from its smell and taste. The ordinance provided that alcohol should be included and embraced under the terms of the ordinance as one of the intoxicating liquors prohibited. It is therefore “immaterial, in a satutory sense,' what effect alcohol may have on the human system ; it is an intoxicating liquor. However much it may be diluted, it must remain an intoxicant when and however it may be diluted or disguised, it so remains, simply because the statute [ordinance] so declares.” — 1 Woollen & Thornton on Intoxicating Liquors, § 4.
The evidence was without conflict and there were no circumstances affording an inference upon which the jury could have arrived at any other conclusion than that of the guilt of.the defendant of the offense charged, and the court was not in error in giving the general charge, with hypothesis, for the city.
Affirmed.