Champion Blower & Forge Co. of Lancaster, PA. Combination machines incorporating a vise.
Many companies made models with similar capability - vise, anvil, drill, etc. CB & F Co. may have been the only one to sell units with integrated stand and switchable power source.
1926 catalog at the Internet Archive does not have the 3 models of "CB & F Co." utility vises posted above, but has 3 models of combination "repair outfit". Same combo models are in Catalog 44, 1922. These designs covered by Patent Number 1,328.250 granted January 13, 1920. Later related Patent 1,377,202.
144 p., illus., 27.9 cm, trade catalog
archive.org
The attached cut describes and illustrates the switchable power source - the crank can be moved from the blower to the drill mechanism.
This type of 5, or 6, or 7-in-one device was popular from roughly 1900 to 1930, judging from how many types appear in catalogs from that period. I was wondering yesterday why they declined in popularity (likely the issue of "jack of all trades, master of none").
Fortuitously, ran across this transitional machine today - the Champion Forge Shop.
Popular Mechanics ad from 1953 and catalog page from 1955 attached.
It offers separate devices (vise, drill, press, etc.) but integrated into a stand, and again with a switchable power source, this time an electric motor. I wonder how well it sold?
The included vise was not from the earlier "CB & F Co." utility vise line posted above. It has a hardy hole, which appears the "Champion" line that I'll get to next.