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Fbi History — Part 1
Page 50
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a
*-”" webster asserted that Tex Rickard, the
a nA el Aleit Rei, Silat Ei A ei ple ee
. . ATTHOnrAp Siar utwre
Pusuisniy Wired Can:
—:-: oe...
“4
-Radio Station Offe
To End Suit if Given
Lower Frequency
‘Attorney Suggests Abandon-
tment of Proceeding for
* 22° Injunction.
ay
ection Expressed
Commnission at Hearing Told
:Stations Now on Band Give
oe FF Best Service.
Continued from Poge 1.)
- “yecelved $822,655 in dividends. It was
“"texyplained that ‘this did not include
"Nave been beard. Placing WMSG as low
”_ jm the brosdcast band as 1.270 kilocycles
“"¥n effect amounts to a confiecation of its
shoes
“property, be said.
me. RL Federal Attorneys Attend.
1) B. ML Webster and Porter R. Chandler,
"special assistants to the Attorney Gen-
° eral, assigned by the Department of
Justice as attorneys for the Radio Com-
-.? mission, appeared at the hearing before
~ the Commission. Mr. Webster in a state-
“> ment said that the Commission was
*: within its rights in making the June 15
” gllocation to WMSG without a prelim-
““Jnary bearing and that the Commission
--Let no time exceeded its rights and
authority. 2 | , “nd
‘James Lundy, general manager an
stadio director of WMSG, testified that
“F the staticn’s relegation to a low wave
”. "Nad resulted in depriving it of the re-
-" ports of prize fights at Madison Square
~ Carden; which it formerly broadcast. Mr.
ony
rs
it ‘4 TNteen rae.
te an , { @ cp ae
R resentative Bloom to Intrdtice Bill Mandate
For l nifving Air Service of Government
eet ee aes
rae
THE UNGEEEP Ss
. Favors Creating Department of Air, With Secretary aa
Member of President's Cabinet,
Representative Bloom (Dem), af New thep from Newfoundland 16 hejand asd
j York City, in a written statement on l
June 21, announced that he will introduce
a
a bill, when Congres: convenes, ta create |
a Department of Air urityang: the air
services of the Government, with ite
head a Secretaty of Air with the yank
and pay of ether members of the Cab-
inet.
The statement. in part. fullows:
“The American people are byinotayg
to realize that this counts "s poestipe is
eae ens Renee te
at stake in the delay in recognizing the -
importance of air service as a powerful
factor in unified coutroel in national de-
fense comparable to the Army and the
Navy. America ‘is already superior to
foreign countries in its air mails: it is
lagging far behind Europe in alrports
and air passenger service, ar emphasized
recently by Lindbergh in comparing sir
facilities at home and abroad. Here in
America we are splitting hairs and wast-
ing time and money in overlapping Army,
Navy and other air services, while sev
eral European countries have unified
their air services and, in’ commercial
aviation, have established a network of
passenger planes. :
Coordinated Air Power
Favored by Mr. Bloom
“A department of air at Washington
would coordinate the airpower of
America. It would bring about the use
of air to its great advantage both gov-
ernmentally and commercially. Jt would
eliminate the present duplication of serv-
ices of the existing Federal agencies. Jt
would provide an orderly, coherent, eco-
nomical administration on the part of the
Government, encouraging the develop-
ment of aviation as a whole without jur-
’ promoter, announced publicly that the | isdictional fraction or delays in coopera-
A ° .
“ -th!broadcasts of the prize fights were
a farmed over to Station WEAF and
- others because they furnished better
. #, Satisfaction on the part of local area
"e Mroadcasting stations, with heterodyning
'still evident in long distance reception
but in reduced amount, was reported by
“Commissioner H. A. Bellows in an oral
statement Jone 21. Mr. Bellows said
“> that the results of the June 15 alloca-
“? tions in_general have been gratifying to
= cathe Federal Radio Commission.
+The Commissioner :
is ; from Minneapolis
req that it is the Commission's be-
+, jief that it can clear up ¢ large amount
3 “of the DX (or outside) reception hetero-
&
i>
yning through the hearings to be held
= hearings. will lead to readjustments
"which the Commission hopes ultimately
“will -bring ‘about complete order in the
t he saidscess..° aon Pot we 2
ef Only: One. Bult’ Filed.
SE
@ sheen placed tod far ‘dowiT In the
2S broadcast banJ, but only one suit has
been filed ‘against the Commission, said
Mr, Bellows. {This the Commission’ is
‘Prepared to fontest vigorously, he added.
:Stations which have broadcast appeals
fter July.15 for stations which com-.
» ‘plain that certain other stations are fr-.
238 terfering with their programs. These
“Complaints have been heard on the’
part ef some broadcasters because they”
tion or dupli
activities. :
“You remember that Brigadier Gencral
William Mitchell in his testimony during
the early days of the last Congress
earnestly urged unification. He, like
others who have joined in this demand,
has had the knowledge and experience of
aviation as lawyers know law and doc-
tors know medicine. He commanded the
First Army Corps’ air service in the
American Expeditionary Forces in the
World War and he became Assistant
Chief of the Army Air Service. He told
Congress that the Army and the Navy
and the civil air services are more or
less bound up in the general scheme
of possibilties in this country. He said
that the Navy was not coordinated with
the Army in air service in operations,
tactics, command, communications and
supply. He told how the Army air serv-
ice mission fs conceived to be protection
of coastal sea communications 30 miles
_OF more out to sea, up and dewn along
tion of effort and scope of
~*""4 the coast, and at the came time the Naval
a ‘vice conceives fits mission to be
reWgaissance and patrol of sen areas,
attRck of hostile craft, sea craft and con-
v . 2 e
€'Sation of Air Mail © s- .-
Te-veclared Successful ° ~~,
“And now we are operating air mails
“beross _and cris-cross the continent;
eee re oe a ee tat me
in Vuev by Lindbergh and by Chamber- :
lin;
the
Conopanier Bsid har negotiated
Meth Pote fren the ain; other
faghts are in the offing on both the At-
Jantic and the Pacific.
cHities and commercial transit: by air
te Enope and Asia and South America
ale ho rtranger dieams of today than |
were the airplane to thuse who scoffed at
Trowbridge’s ‘Dariue Green and biz
Fisin Machine’ Urevadec ayo or
the subunarine pictured in imagitiation
in Jules Vernes 20,00) Leagues Under
Perth
the Sea’ that thrilled the imagination '
in vur youthful days. :
“Trhall have a bill formulated in time
for Joesentation when Congress meets.
The Department of Air would take over
and perform all the air duties now as-
signed to the Departments of War.
Navy, Post Office, Commerce and any
other federal agencies, as well ax Fuper-
sede the National Advisory, Commitice
for Acronautics.
“The functions of the Department
would be to promote ‘constructive de-
velopment of acronautics by researches,
fact-gathering and fuct-distributing and
fact-using, to regulate procurement and
maintenance of all necessary aircraft,
sircraft’ parte and aircraft accessories
and equipment. to have administrative
charge of all the Government's air
personnel and to coordinate with other
federal agencies . and cooperate with
civilian and commercial enterprises in
the upbuilling of the industry and the
maintenance of a high grade efficiency.
“Coordinating with all other services
in national defense as may become neces-
sary, it would prepare aerial photo-
graphs, control operations and operators
of the air, by means of licenses, rules
and regulations, would establish such air-
dromes and Sanding facilities as the Fed-
eral Government might properly acquire
and exercise over airports and traffic in
and out of them that is of an interstate
character an authority comparable to the
authority vested by Congress in the In-
terstate Commerce Commission over rail-
roads. It would obtain and = gend
flyers with weather warnings in co-
operation with the Weatser Bureau.’ It
would furnigy personnel and equipment
for acrial activities needed by other Fed-
eval agencies and supply Personnel, in-
strpction, training and equipment as oc-
casion may ‘require in other Kovern-
mental fields of activity. It would advise
Congress, with estimates and other in-
formation, regarding the establishment
of one or more air schools or academics
comparable to the alms and ecope and
potential achievements of the military
schoul at West Point and the naval acad-
emy at Annapolis. Jt would detach some
of its units, by approval of the President,
for any scxvice with the Army and Navy
or for any -€2phal defense operations,
“This o of scope is, of coutse,
tentative pending ‘eonsultationa — with
others on dedgils of the bill, which also
would hav >) embody ‘specific dethils
with respe. Ao personnel, “ equipment,
licenses, aerial routes, rescive air forces
and other subjects, I have sketched
briefiy what I have in mind, for formula.
Sleeping car fa-?
© Governm
. >
| a2
Department P
vised of Te
can bs
a
{
i
‘Cabinet Is,
Chang Tso Lid
; as Generali:
: Appointe
j -- ig
1 Mandates of Jb
tar
| tively, issued byl
Basuming office ait
' mand of all the at
: of the Chinese ®
! Fu as Piemier ma
{ pointments, were @
partment of State
June 21 upon rece
from the Ameticat
John Van A. Mac}
Following is the:
partment’s statemex
Minister MacMurs
Departinent today’4
upon assuming off}
issued a mandate wi
“organizing the mif
Chinese Republie ty
ing ix a summary:
Article I. Genera
and Navy shall cor
naval forces of the,
Article JI. Duris
military adminisir
shall represent the.
carrying out goverm
shall protect all rig
enjoyed by the peo
der the law.
Article HI. Thea
shall establish cabi:
gencralissimo "in ce
mental affairs.
Article IV. Num
cers shall be as fol!
isters for Foreign «
Military Affairs, #
terivr, Minister of .
Education, Minister,
ter of Agriculture
‘Article V. Mands
issimo shall Se-coun:
and those which affc
of ‘the various_ mini
countersigned by ¢&
vided bowever, that
ing or dismissing -¢
not come within thi
Article VI. Orga
sonnel of cabinet and
istries shall be sped
“Article VII. Suc
promulgated prio’
not conflict Svith,
adopted. Pan Fe _
pointed Premier. *
7 Minister MacMur
that on the 20th of
issued and counte
rT, - a ee .
So aE I ee cing | en ny lene ndeengpes em
›
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