< 584 ) 
in fome at twenty- fold above that priGe,and very fcarce to be got- 
teiv And ch 5. SeCt, 2./^. 86. he faith ; By this Ingenio h^ve been 
ground, very fine^ fometimes 4, Sometimes s bujhels of Afples in an 
hour, and vpith no harder labour bun that tm ordinary Labourers may 
(the one fading, and the other grinding hold it , bj interchanging all 
the day, And of the larger Ingenio, which lie there alfo defcriberb, 
he faith/>. 8 7. By this Ingenio may two workmen , and one feeder^ 
grind 20 bufheh of Apples in an hour. And 8 r . he faith ; Jhis U a 
remedy againjl the inconveniences^ troubles and expences in the feve- 
ralwAies hitherto ufed : Among which inconveniences,he there na- 
mech an unp/eafant tajle of Cider ^ acquired from the rinds, Jlems and 
kernels of the fruits , vphich in the former Mills were much bruifed. 
Thus the Author ^ and this is remarkable for them that would have 
die beft and purcft Cider. The Cider-mill, or Cider-prefs inven- 
ted by Mr. Hook, is defmbed by worthy Mr. Evelyn in his fecond 
Edition of Pomona ;>.66,67. i gaefs, that the Cider-mill, fo highly 
recommended by Mr. Carew Reynel in the True Englifh Interejl^ch. 
30. and by him there attributed to rhe invention of Mr. John Wcr- 
lidge of Petersjieldy and faid to make ten hog/heads a day, is rhe fame 
with thofe here named by our Author. And,if in thefe any thingbe 
yet wanting, doubtlefs ic will be foon brought to perfeftion,being 
in fuch skilful hands. 
2. The Author faith f 86; that Mr. Riciiets.GdixdineY at Hogf 
don, and Mr. EaU of Brainford, can furnifli any planter with all 
or moftof all thechoiceft or mofi excellent of all the Fruit-trees 
mentioned in his precedentCorollary. And in thatCorollary he men- 
tions the beft Fruits for liquors that I can yet hear of in England, 
ac common fale. For V/alnuts and Filberds,his choice is jndicious: 
For 1 have obferved a very great difference in the kinds ; to which 
if he had been pkrafed to add ( but indeed they were quite out of 
his road and methodj the beft Cheftnuts , and the other excellent 
vegetables for diet and food^mentioned in ih^Erench Gardiner , he 
had made an advance ( as well for food, as he did for liquids, ) to a 
part of the.importance of the Introduftion to your F<?/. 105^.2 5 65 
and of iht Breviat ow^vc Hugh Plat, ibid, 11 3, /^♦304. and elfe- 
v/here by you fervently follicited, in bothrefpeO^/or reftorative 
food and for refrefting liquors of the beft kindsj&bv modern im- 
provements. This I fuggeft afre(h(out of due place)becaufe much of 
{his Garden-food is yet wanting in many places for Noble Tables. 
Gberriesy 
