Absentee bids let you place your maximum bid on an item before the live auction begins. During the live show, we’ll continue bidding on your behalf up to your max bid — just like leaving a bid with a traditional auctioneer.
When you place an absentee bid, you’ll choose a bid strategy. Your chosen strategy determines how the current bid will be set at the time your bid is placed. Your maximum bid always remains confidential.
The available strategies are:
🐢 Slow & Steady — starts your bid low and lets others chase you.
⚡💥 Power Bid — starts at about half your max to show intent without revealing your top number.
♥️♠️ All In ♦️♣️ — sets the current bid to your full bid amount right away.
The current bid shown on each lot reflects all confirmed absentee bids and updates automatically as new bids come in.
When the live auction starts, bidding will begin at the current bid. The auctioneer will continue bidding on behalf of absentee bidders up to their max bids.
Because absentee bids can arrive seconds apart, the current bid you see may not always include bids still being processed. Refresh the page for the most up-to-date information.
For our full absentee bid policy, please click here.
Bidding Quick Facts
How bidding works
All items have a minimum bid of $1.00.
When "No Bids" is displayed, it means no absentee bids have been placed on this item yet.
Once bids are placed, the current bid will be displayed instead.
For more information on the bidding process, please click here.
Bid Successfully Submitted!
Your absentee bid for Lot 068 - Pair Of Antique Nursing Bottle Ephemera Pieces Depicting Early Nursing Bottles, So-Called “Murder Bottles,” 1902 Valentine By Walter Wirths And 1887 N.Y. Condensed Milk Co. Trade Card was successfully submitted—thank you for bidding with us!
The current bid displayed will not update immediately. You will receive a confirmation email shortly.
You may continue to place additional bids.
For our full absentee bid policy, please review the Auction Rules.
Confirm Bid
Lot 068 - Pair Of Antique Nursing Bottle Ephemera Pieces Depicting Early Nursing Bottles, So-Called “Murder Bottles,” 1902 Valentine By Walter Wirths And 1887 N.Y. Condensed Milk Co. Trade Card
Lot 068 - Pair Of Antique Nursing Bottle Ephemera Pieces Depicting Early Nursing Bottles, So-Called “Murder Bottles,” 1902 Valentine By Walter Wirths And 1887 N.Y. Condensed Milk Co. Trade Card
Two pieces of antique ephemera depicting early nursing bottles, commonly referred to in the modern oddities community as “murder bottles,” a nickname tied to historical reports of infant illness and death caused by hard-to-clean rubber hoses and nipples. Includes a 1902 valentine written from the perspective of a nursing bottle, copyright 1902 by Walter Wirths, and an 1887 trade card from the N.Y. Condensed Milk Co. showing a baby drinking from a nursing bottle. Both pieces exhibit wear, handling marks, and age-related toning consistent with age. Offered as found. Item dimensions of advertising valentine.