The station had got permission from the federal government announcing that Warren G. Harding had won the position of president of the united states over James Cox. The message was heard from New Hampshire all the way to Louisiana. This aroused competition quickly resulting in many new stations, by the end of 1922, there were over five hundred stations across the United States ("Radio In The 1920S"). No regulation over the radio enterprise resulted in chaos when stations would fight over call letters and frequencies, each was trying to out broadcast other stations ("Radio In The 1920S"). This was put to an end in 1927, congress had created the federal radio commission restoring order to the
The station had got permission from the federal government announcing that Warren G. Harding had won the position of president of the united states over James Cox. The message was heard from New Hampshire all the way to Louisiana. This aroused competition quickly resulting in many new stations, by the end of 1922, there were over five hundred stations across the United States ("Radio In The 1920S"). No regulation over the radio enterprise resulted in chaos when stations would fight over call letters and frequencies, each was trying to out broadcast other stations ("Radio In The 1920S"). This was put to an end in 1927, congress had created the federal radio commission restoring order to the