Unfortunately atrocious spelling comes with the territory growing up with ADHD (now growing old with it!!).
So we are in agreement that they were in all likelihood made in Bohemia towards the latter part of the 19th or very early 20th Centuries correct?
As it happens, technically we were both wrong about the lion... Despite what the hallmark literature says, it is actually a lion Passant. Passant, Gaurdant, Regardant refers to the position of the lions head (Front, side...as in looking at the viewer and back... looking towards it's tail respectively). That's all without even touching on the position of the lions feet!
This kind of reinforces my point (VERY loosely) ... Even though not immediately apparent, it's the the very minor details like the combination of font, case, punch shape etc that confirms the validity of a mark in the English Hallmarking system. If just one of those things on one of the punches is not correct, it invalidates the mark entirely.
It really is an ingenious system, almost like the 1500's version of 2 factor authentication for Sterling Silver. I guess at the time it was instituted, silver was still regarded as money so they needed a system as watertight and foolproof as minting a coin for authenticating and certifying it's authenticity.
Gone are the days that the word Money & the word Silver are synonymous unfortunately. Most people these days would have no idea that £1- (1 Pound Sterling) actually represented One (troy) Pound of .925 (92.5% Pure) Silver and that each division thereof (6d, Shilling, Florin etc) was a division of the weight of that Pound of silver. (20 Shillings, 40 6d or 10 Florins in fact!).
Anyway, I'm off topic now!!!