[ [25]] William, fifth Lord Cranstoun, married, 1703, Lady Jean Kerr, and died in January 7, 1726-7.—ED.
[ [26]] Née Lady Jean Kerr, died March, 1768.—ED.
[ [27]] The Hon. Anne Cranstoun married Gabriel Selby of Paston, Northumberland, died 1769.—ED.
[ [28]] Mr. C.J.S. Thompson, in his Mystery and Romance of Alchemy and Pharmacy, remarks, "About the sixteenth century philtres came to be compounded and sold by the apothecaries, who doubtless derived from them a lucrative profit. Favourite ingredients with these later practitioners were mandragora, cantharides, and vervain, which were supposed to have Satanic properties. They were mixed with other herbs said to have an aphrodisiac effect; also man's gall, the eyes of a black cat, and the blood of a lapwing, bat, or goat." The same authority states that in the seventeenth century "Hoffman's Water of Magnanimity," compounded of winged ants, was a popular specific.—ED.
[ [29]] Appendix III.
[ [30]] Frederick, Prince of Wales, died 20th March, 1751.—ED.
[ [31]] Ross.
[ [32]] Plaistow.
[ [33]] This denial is the more odd as the Murrays of Stanhope and the Kerrs of Lothian (Captain Cranstoun's maternal relatives) had already a marriage tie. Lord Charles Kerr of Cramond (died 1735), had married Janet, eldest daughter of Sir David Murray of Stanhope, and her daughter Jean Janet, born 1712, was the second wife of William, third Marquess of Lothian, Captain Cranstoun's uncle.—ED.
[ [34]] Later, Lord Corehouse, one of the Senators of the College of Justice.—ED.