Miller & Miller's will Hold an Online-Only Petroliana & Advertising Auction on September 10th

Top Quote The 407-lot auction also features petroliana (gas station items), advertising signs, general store, steam, railroad, music machines and bicycles. Start time is 9 am Eastern. End Quote
  • (1888PressRelease) August 28, 2022 - New Hamburg, ON, Canada - Three extremely rare, turn-of-the-century motor vehicles – a 1907 REO Model A 5-passenger touring car, an 1899 Stanley Stanhope No. 1 “Locomobile” and a prototype of the 1911 Model H REO pickup truck – are the headliners in Miller & Miller Auctions’ online-only Petroliana & Advertising auction planned for Saturday, September 10th.

    The 407-lot auction, beginning at 9 am Eastern time, will feature much more than just motor vehicles. Other categories include petroliana (gas station items), advertising signs, general store, steam, railroad, music machines and bicycles. “I’m excited about the variety in this sale,” said Justin Miller of Miller & Miller Auctions, Ltd. “It’s what makes our auctions so entertaining.”

    Miller added, “Often we see buyers come to our auctions with the idea that they will purchase a certain type of collectible, but they end up with something else completely different that just happened to catch their eye. Without the variety that we strive to provide, buyers don’t have the opportunity to branch out into different areas of collecting. And this auction does have variety.”

    With a pre-sale estimate of $40,000-$60,000, the 1907 REO Model A 5-passenger touring car is the sale’s expected top lot. This early and unusual vehicle was the brainchild of Ransom E. Olds (creator of the curved dash Oldsmobile). For years the car was on proud display at the Horseless Carriage Museum in Fenelon Falls, Ontario (likewise the following two). It was restored in 2006.

    All estimates quoted in this report are in Canadian dollars.

    The 1899 Stanley Stanhope Model No. 1 “Locomobile”, made by the Locomobile Company of America, was very popular and quickly became known as the “Stanley Steamer” due to its quiet but powerful two-cylinder steam engine. The literature boasted it “weighs less than 400 pounds and is odorless and noiseless when in use.” The boiler has been rebuilt (est. $40,000-$45,000).

    The eye-catching variant and potential prototype of the 1911 Model H REO pickup truck, made by the REO Motor Truck Company in Lansing, Michigan, has been fully restored and features the merchant “Ballantine & Taby”. Ads for the truck (also designed by R. E. Olds) claimed it could “do the work of three horse-drawn trucks at less than half the cost” (est. $20,000-$25,000).

    A 1940s Canadian White Rose Gasoline double-sided porcelain sign with “Slate Boy” graphic, 4 feet in diameter and marked “The W. F. Vilas Co. Ltd. Cowansville P.Q.” on the lower edge, has a pre-sale estimate of $15,000-$20,000; while a White Rose Service Station three-piece sign from 1947, each piece single-sided porcelain, 36 inches in diameter with the banners measuring 15 ½ inches by 94 ½ inches, marked “P&M 47” lower left, is expected to bring $9,000-$12,000.

    A Canadian Ford V8 dealer double-sided porcelain die-cut sign from the 1930s, 35 ¼ inches by 28 inches, a must-have for any serious petroliana collection, boasting Henry Ford’s V8 engine, should finish at $12,000-$15,000. Also, an American Packard Motor Car “Radiator” double-sided porcelain sign, 1930s, 41 ½ inches by 27 inches and marked, “Property of Packard Motor Co.” lower edge, from the Jean-Marie Paradis collection, should command $9,000-$12,000.

    A rare Canadian Red Indian Marathon Gasoline pump globe, 16 ½ inches by 16 ½ inches, with the graphics fired to the exterior surface of the globe, is expected to bring $10,000-$13,000; while a Canadian Red Indian Cyclo Gasoline pump globe, same dimensions, should command $6,000-$8,000. Both of these 1920s-era, one-piece baked glass (OPB) gas pump globes were originally discovered in Waterloo, Ontario, and were purportedly never installed on pumps.

    Internet bidding will be thru the Miller & Miller website (www.MillerandMillerAuctions.com), as well as LiveAuctioneers.com. Telephone and absentee bids will also be accepted.

    While this is an Internet-only auction, with no in-person event to attend, bidders can tune in to the live webcast on Saturday, September 10th, to watch lots close in real time. Here is a link to the sale: https://live.millerandmillerauctions.com/auctions/4-6ECHFQ/petroliana-advertising.

    To learn more about Miller & Miller Auctions, Ltd. and the September 10th auction, please visit www.millerandmillerauctions.com.

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