Montana radio stations

Harmon’s Histories: UM physicist, students built Missoula’s 1st radio transmitter
Harmon’s Histories: UM physicist, students built Missoula’s 1st radio transmitter
Harmon’s Histories: UM physicist, students built Missoula’s 1st radio transmitter
Root Electric Company at 127 East Cedar (now Broadway) was displaying the Grebe Synchophase radio receiver. The Dickinson Piano Company featured the Zenith Long Distance radio, capable of picking up broadcasts from “as far as 1,500 miles away.” Even the H. O. Bell auto dealership on South Higgins offered the Radiola, priced from “$35 to $425 with convenient terms, if desired.”