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TRANSMITTED BY RADIO SAN FRANCISCO TO SCHENECTADY NEW YORK, 3rd April. A message from Schenectady states that tho General Electric Company has announced that a complete page of a newspaper was transmitted from San Francisco here by radio for the first timo threo hours after the journal was printed, a distance of 2500 miles, i A recording machine was developed by Mr. Charles Young, son of Mr. Owen D. Young. It can be. attched to any radio receiver, in much the same way as a loud, speaker. Engineers forecast "that some day radio may deliver a large part of the business mail and bring the daily newspaper into the home, quite irrespective of distance. Television has m-.de such rapid strides recently that engineers expect that before this year is ended radio listeners may also see a game proceeding as they hear tho players called off. Mr. Owen D. Young is a prominent New York lawyer, and was a member of tho first Commission of Experts appointed by the Reparation Commission in 1924. The Young Plan is named after him. •

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19300405.2.43

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CIX, Issue 81, 5 April 1930, Page 9

Word Count
182

PAGE OF NEWSPAPER Evening Post, Volume CIX, Issue 81, 5 April 1930, Page 9

PAGE OF NEWSPAPER Evening Post, Volume CIX, Issue 81, 5 April 1930, Page 9