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- Vernor's Ginger Ale Bottle Label, circa 1928-1940 - Vernor's Ginger Ale, one of the oldest surviving soft drinks in the United States, was created in 1866 in Detroit and remains a favorite beverage of Michiganders. Creator James Vernor's mixture included ingredients such as ginger, vanilla, spices, and sugar, but his process of aging the concoction in oak barrels is credited for the beverage's "deliciously different" taste, as this label declares.

- circa 1928-circa 1940
- Collections - Artifact
Vernor's Ginger Ale Bottle Label, circa 1928-1940
Vernor's Ginger Ale, one of the oldest surviving soft drinks in the United States, was created in 1866 in Detroit and remains a favorite beverage of Michiganders. Creator James Vernor's mixture included ingredients such as ginger, vanilla, spices, and sugar, but his process of aging the concoction in oak barrels is credited for the beverage's "deliciously different" taste, as this label declares.
- Scrapbook of Heinz Product Labels, 1900-1930 - While "57 Varieties" became the well-known slogan for the H.J. Heinz Company, it actually produced more than 60 different products. This scrapbook provides a glimpse of some labels for the products produced by Heinz in the early twentieth century.

- 1900-1930
- Collections - Artifact
Scrapbook of Heinz Product Labels, 1900-1930
While "57 Varieties" became the well-known slogan for the H.J. Heinz Company, it actually produced more than 60 different products. This scrapbook provides a glimpse of some labels for the products produced by Heinz in the early twentieth century.
- Ball Dissolvable Labels Used by the Jackson Family, Selma, Alabama -

- 2012
- Collections - Artifact
Ball Dissolvable Labels Used by the Jackson Family, Selma, Alabama
- Advertising Layout Photograph of a Heinz Employee Using a Bottle Labeling Machine, circa 1910 - Before complete mechanization of the manufacturing process, many tasks at the Heinz factory were done by hand. Photographs of this process were often taken and then modified for advertising and publications. Pictured here is an employee using a bottle labeling machine.

- circa 1910
- Collections - Artifact
Advertising Layout Photograph of a Heinz Employee Using a Bottle Labeling Machine, circa 1910
Before complete mechanization of the manufacturing process, many tasks at the Heinz factory were done by hand. Photographs of this process were often taken and then modified for advertising and publications. Pictured here is an employee using a bottle labeling machine.