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NORMAN BAKER EXPOSES RADIO MONOPOLY FIGHT AGAINST KTNT (Continued from page eight) Now read the first paragraph in the Iowa State Medical Society letter shown on page seven. Notice those words "IN OUR JOINT EFFORT." Doesn't that show a joint effort to revoke the license of KTNT. Doesn't that constitute conspiracy. I am suing them for $100,000 conspiracy charge. Now if you want to laugh read page 13 remembering my hospital opened in December 1929 and this statement was given to the press September 8, 1932 by the state health commissioner of Iowa, Dr. Steel-, smith, who said the Iowa, cancer death rate was on the decrease. That made Iowa the only state in the union with a decrease in cancer deaths but please read in the third column as to what he says caused the decrease and when the fact is the decrease was caused by the many many cured cases of cancer was produced from December 1929 up to 1932. How foolish it is when he says in the second paragraph, third column, page 13, "It is hoped that this decrease is a result of the information issued by health authorities." Did you ever know of a cancer decrease by information? All they have yelled for years is "If you have a lump or bump see your doctor first," but what have they to offer for a satisfactory treatment of cancer if you do see your doctor? The September, 1930 hearing at the recommendation of Examiner Yost was decidedly against us-that station KTNT must be closed. He carried the case to the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia. They decided that we should go back to the Court of Appeals as set out by the law and we could appeal to them from the Court of Appeals which was good law as the law says just that. I then appealed to the Court of Appeals the decision. The attorneys for the Federal Radio Commission put through the records of the case before the Court of Appeals this entire stack eight inches high of typewritten copy including two purported copies of speeches I had made over radio, in which both reports stated they were not absolutely correct copy. More Expense The Court of Appeals then sent me a bill for I believe $5,400, cost of printing the record. I believe the case was set for November, 1930. I wrote them that the American Savings Bank at Muscatine had closed and tied up my funds and that the American Commercial and Savings Bank at Davenport had closed and tied up the balance of my funds, that I did not have $5,400 to pay for the printing of the records and asked them for an extension of time on the hearing until the banks opened and I could afford to go ahead with the case. The Clerk of the Court of Appeals advised me that it was perfectly satisfactory to him providing the Federal Radio Commission attorneys and my attorneys would agree to the extension of time. They positively did not agree on the second extension of time but I believe I received the first extension while we were still dealing with the commission's attorneys about the amount of data they were putting into the record. A review of that case will show that they charged me with using the word "Testicle" as obscene language over the radio and out of one stack of typewritting covering one of my speeches of one hours length meaning hundreds of typewritten in pages they introduced in the record before the radio commission on one or two paragraphs only about me using the word testicle but they never introduced a page or two before that paragraph or a page or two after the paragraph to show what the talk was really about which in substance was this. I was talking at the microphone-the A.M.A. was fighting me, the newspapers were carrying stories practically every day. Harry Hoxsey came up to the microphone and said, "Look, Mr. Baker they have yours and my pictures in the paper on the front page and they even have your spectacles." There was our pictures on the front page and I wore glasses and the reporter who took down the copy said he said testicles instead of spectacles and the Federal Radio Commision believed it. Not being able to raise $5,400 I was forced to drop my case before the Court of Appeals which deprived me of justice in the U. S. Courts and on June 12, 1931 I received a telegram about noon from Washington advising me to close my station immediately, which I did. I then flew to Mexico City, secured a permit for a station three times larger than anything the United States and we are now ready to go on the air in late July. Now let me prove the handwriting on the wall. A few months ago while here in Mexico I received a letter from Mr. Francis St. Austell on Mission Hotel stationery at Norfolk, Virginia, which letter I now have in my files. His first letter said this: "You will no doubt recall me as one man that you fought over radio more than any other and it is needless to say I would not write you this letter excepting I am broke." He goes on to say he is announcing for a small radio station in Norfolk part time, with his wife and children and merely getting by and that he has much information that I could use to good advantage and he wanted a job with me at this station XENT at Mexico. To Fight Baker He said that he accepted the position as President of the Iowa Radio Listeners League believing it was organized for the purpose publicly stated-to fight stations that were exercising direct advertising but that after he became president and was in the association a short while he learned that the Iowa Radio Listeners League was not organized to fight direct selling radio stations but to fight Norman Baker and close station KTNT at Muscatine. That the association was organized by the Iowa State Public Utilities Association and his paymaster was the manager of the light and power company at Moline, IIIInois and that after they fought me for a few years through the league that when I started the cancer work and brought upon my shoulders the vicious enemythe A.M.A.-that they painted the picture against me handed it over to the Iowa State Medical Society to complete and they slid out underground while the A.M.A. finished the fight and closed my station with assistance of the republican press with Adler, manager of the Lee Syndicate of newspapers and Gardner Cowles of the Des Moines Register, and who Hoover placed on the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Board as you will know and who later resigned. Then they said Iowa was over-quoted and they refused me authority to sell my station to anyone that it could not be relicensed in Iowa because Iowa was overquoted. Now get this-WOC and WHOin which Adler of the Lee Syndicate holds stock in WOC and WHO which is owned by the Bankers Life Insurance Company applied to the Federal Radio Commission for 50,000 watt station in Iowa. The Commission granted them a 50,000 watt station and they now have it in operation, all of which was done in face of their order that Iowa was over-quoted and that when KTNT went off the air with its 5,000 watts it left Iowa still over-quoted and no more power could be given to stations. The result America's most beautiful radio station KTNT-America's most popular radio station proven by the crowds attracted is closed-a dead loss to memy merchandising business-my magazine and all of my enterprises-many are closed, others about to be closed and I suffered a $750,000 loss. For instance I had to sell out a storehouse full of merchandise because my mouthpiece was taken from me which stood as a monument to the radio industry of America and the only erful station XENT you may rest assured 100 per cent voice the farmer and laborer of my full cooperation. of the midwest ever had or has had to this Read this booklet carefully and if you day. are interested in more details just request Now Mr. Elizey you have my story. them. What can be done to secure justice? What can be done to restore the license of KTNT? If nothing else can be done read this letter or parts of it into the congressional record, it will at least help some. Any assistance I can give you in public matters worthy of public attention from this pow-