International Arcade Museum Library

***** DEVELOPMENT & TESTING SITE (development) *****

C.O.C.A. Times

Issue: 2011-November - Vol 10 Num 3 - Page 28

PDF File Only

~tlampian S~eectl ifesteri
13y 13ill Howard
The only l~nown example of the Champion Speed Tester is
featured on page 145 of Every Picture Tells a Story and shown
below. It is one of my favorite baseball machines because of its
extraordinary graphics and hand-eye coordination sl~ill ploy. The
deposit of one cent releases a colored boll from the top that the
player tries to maneuver into the matching colored poel~et as
the boll falls. This is not easy, but neither is hitting a baseball or
avoiding a left hool~. The beautifully cost marquee of two box-
ers and the extraordinarily detailed picture of the [3obe mol~e
the graphics simply wonderful . I hove never seen a better picto-
rial view of the face of [3obe Ruth. The identity of the figure on
the left upper corner of the paper is a mystery to me, although
I suspect it represents on accomplished pugilistic contemporary
of Ruth . I would appreciate hearing from anyone with on idea
of who he may be.
The manufacturer of this 1930 counter top machine is un-
l~nown , although [3 _Modorsl~y of [3rool~lyn , New Yori~ , is a lil~ely
suspect according to historian Diel~ [3ueschel , who featured my
machine on page 171 of this Guide to Vintage Trade Stimulo-
tors & Counter Gomes. where he describes it as a "l~iller. "
The machine cabinet is stained with a dorl~ wood finish with
more terrific aluminum costing on the bottom in the form of two
hands on the lower corners firmly holding a stiel~. This example
is all original except for a reconstructed troy on the inside that
holds the gumboils in place. Entry to the machine comes from the boel~ , which is bro-
l~en and warped . I found no evidence that the machine come with a cash box, as was
also true of the Modorsl~i Drop Coin Football , shown on page 124 of my bool~. In any
event, I suspect the operator offered some prize if the hand-eye sl~ill of the player was
able to match a hanging gumboil with the corresponding colored poel~et.
I acquired this machine from dealer Mil~e Murphy of Aurora , Illinois, at a Chicago-
land show early on in my collecting , and this led to a friendship resulting in my being
able to buy other great machines form Mil~e and enjoy his company when I see him
at Chicogolond .
The significance of the Gome of [3oseboll , and of [3obe Ruth in particular, cannot be
overstated when it come to trade stimulotors in the 1920's and 1930's. Ruth not only
built that house called Yonl~ee Stadium , but he almost single handedly pulled baseball
up out of the stinl~ing rubble that the [3Ioel~ Sox scandal of 1919 left it in . Ruth then did
for coin-op marl~eting what he hod done for the Gome of [3aseboll. An advertisement
appearing in the April 19, 1930, issue of [3illboord Magazine said it oil. "[3obe Ruth signed for $80,000.00 .
What about you?" was stated in bold writing to motivate entrepreneurs to buy coin operated machines and
mol~e money too . [3oseboll's inference went on to become so pervasive in the coin machine industry that I
started to go nuts collecting coin-ops with a baseball theme until I realized I hod to restrict my baseball col-
lection to really extraordinary examples or face the possibility that I would soon run out of money as I filled up
warehouses. Champion Speed Tester is among the best of those extraordinary examples.
Thank you, Mike Murphy.
28

Future scanning projects are planned by the International Arcade Museum Library (IAML).