I don't recall seeing that particular label, but sure Keith has. Because it has "James Vernor Company" on it I suspect its later. Keith will likely know the exact date, but the earliest use of "James Vernor Company" I'm aware of is 1915-1916.
I'm kind of thinking the imagery on this 1897 invoice might have been used on other "stuff" as well. Possibly a variation of it was used on early paper labels. Because it has 33 Woodward Avenue on it, the earliest it can date is 1896. Which is right in the ballpark of the bottles we're looking for ...
I just noticed something! The 1897 looks like it was printed on the invoice and not hand written. The month part looks hand written, but not the 1897. Am I seeing things, or what? What say the rest of you "eagle eyes" ?
I have a Question. I knew the answer before but forgot. in 1896 he moved to 33 Woodward. When was the last time or year he used that 33 Address & when did they change the 33 to a new Address? LEON.
Anything, including bottles, labels, literature, etc; that has "Detroit's Drink" / "Deliciously Different" associated with it were used later than 1896-97 and don't factor into our search for Vernor's first/earliest soda bottles. Without remembering this it would be really easy to get even more confused than I/We already are. There may be other, later slogans, but those two are the only ones I can think of at the moment.
The earliest paper label bottle in the diamond shape does not have any mention of "registered" on it. The other bottle I have has a slightly different label which lists the number of ounces in the bottle. I believe this was a requirement of the Food and Drug Act of 1906. However, neither of the diamond labels say registered or Reg US Pat Off. Once you get to the delivery boy labels, they say Reg US Pat Off.
I also checked a bunch of my embossed bottles and most do not say registered.