Within five years the company had 400 radio and newspaper clients and 600 stringers and reporters worldwide. In fact, Transradio's success was influential over the other big news services,
Associated Press,
United Press and the
International News Service. They all soon realized that they had missed the boat with radio coverage and began to peddle their own news to radio stations. This put the squeeze on the upstart Transradio. By 1940, Transradio was sending news out to hundreds of stations in the U.S. and Canada, distributing foreign news from France's
Agence Havas, Britain's
Central News Agency, Germany's
Trans-Ocean News Service (part of DNB (Deutsche Nachrichten Buro)),
British Official Wireless, and its own private sources, including the pioneering foreign correspondent
Betty Wason, who started the Czechoslovak bureau in 1938. In 1940, Canadian authorities expressed their ire with commercially sponsored news, which was outlawed in Canada, when Transport Minister
Clarence Howe arose in Ottawa's House of Commons and announced the two sponsored news services in Canada, Transradio and
British United Press, must "show their news sources to be accurate," or risk losing their licenses on July 1. Moore went up to Ottawa and claimed there was a plot by "selfish publishing and monopolistic interests ... to destroy independent news services throughout the Dominion." As the licenses were set to expire the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, whose own unsponsored news came from
Canadian Press, reversed the decision and agreed to let Transradio transmit indefinitely. Herbert Moore left Transradio in 1942 for the publishing business and his brother, Robert Moore, took over as president. == The end of an era ==