I believe it has to do with the style of the stopper. It seems "Hutchinson" stopper is where it derives its name and is also used to describe the entire bottle.
Applied seals I don't see many of those out my way. That is a real solid find and highly desired - hold on to it, don't sell or trade it. Is it a pontil kick up base?
Got me by the short hairs. The bottle 'appears' to be a flared, rolled lip... hard to tell. It is definitely wonky though. I have two guesses... not American or it's a poorly blown chemical bottle.
Found this on a bank of a creek. The area it was discovered dates back to late 1600's Dutch Settlers. Of course I know it's not from that time frame, most likely Civil War Era. Not rare, but a sweet example.
Found this exploring a bottle dump. It was a glass block coin bank with the back broken off... obviously to get the coins. The embossing is amazing and regardless of its current state, it is certainly a keeper.
I could certainly be a master ink. Not all master inks had pour spouts on the lip. So I'm leaning toward a master ink. As you can see below, no pour spouts.
Really nice bottles, LEON! Other than MOM's, I have not found an intact cobalt med in 20 years. Since I only dig for my bottles that is. There are some for sale but I guess my ego won't surrender and let me buy one. I guess I just live for the excitement of uncovering one some day.
I can't be exact, but screw tops, I believe, go back to colonial times. In Europe, I'm thinking it was even before that. However, they did become more popular in the 20s and you'll find tons of bottles with screw tops from the 20s to this day. The color of your bottle is amazing though.
To some collectors that "sickness" is a character builder. However, to some bottle purchasers, it a drawback because they don't want to deal it themselves. If you clean it, demand a higher premium.
I've used warm water and it worked just fine. Glues on older labels were usually sparsely applied... especially on return bottles. They stripped the label off of the old bottles, refilled them and applied a new label. It was much cheaper to do it that way than to produce a new bottle each time...
That "O So Good" soda bottle is mint! The ACL looks it just came out of the warehouse. That's a real keeper and don't let it go. Condition a big chunk of its value, regardless of the city. You did really well with that one.