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San
Diego, California, Friday, May 6, 1938
Cancer
Blow Seen After 18-year Toil by Rife
By
Newell Jones
Copyright
1938, by The Evening Tribune
Discovery that
disease organisms, including one occurring in dread cancer, can
be killed by bombarding them with radio waves tuned to a
particular length for each kind of organism was claimed today by
a San Diego Scientist Royal Raymond Rife, Pt. Loma. He added
that he had isolated this cancer organism but is not positive
yet that it is the direct cause of the disease. The discovery
promised fulfillment of man's age-old hope for a specific
destroyer of all his infections diseases, although rife avoided
any claim that he had established this yet. He announced his
work in the conservative manner of scientists, but his reports
indicated the great promise in the telling of successful
bombardment of thousands of cultures of organisms. Organisms
from tuberculosis, cancer, sarcoma, the tumor resembling cancer
but not so mortal as it; deadly streptococcus infection, typhoid
fever, staphylococcus infection and two forms of leprosy were
among many which the scientist reported are killed by the waves.
He said that his laboratory experiments indicated that the
method could be used successfully and safely on organisms at
work in living tissues. "We do not wish at this time,"
Rife commented, " to claim that we cured cancer, or any
other disease, for that matter. But we can say that these waves
or the 'ray' has the power of devitalizing disease organisms, of
'killing ' them, when tuned to an exact particular wave length,
or frequency, for each different organism. This applies to the
organisms both in their free state and, with certain exceptions,
when they are living tissues."
Exceptions
Rare
The exceptions
Rife explained occur when some unsolved quirk of chemical action
within the living body apparently arises to provide protection
to the organisms. They are encountered only occasionally, he
said, and may be overcome in future studies. The waves are
generated in a new kind of frequency device developed by Rife
and one his associates, Philip Hoyland, Pasadena engineer. They
are turned upon the organisms through a special directional
antenna devised by the two. "We are not ready," the
Pt. Loma man said, " to reveal the exact nature of the
waves nor the lengths, or frequencies. It can be said, how ever,
that they cover a wide band." Just what this Rife ray does
to the organisms to devitalize them is not yet known. Because
each organism requires a different wave length, it may be that
whatever, befalls these tiny slayers of man is something similar
to the phenomenon occurring when one musical tuning fork is set
in a vibration by sound waves emanating from another fork struck
nearby. Another example is the vibration which almost everyone
has noticed a pipe organ note causes in windows or furniture of
the room where the instrument is being played. Again, a similar
thing happens when a radio cabinet rattles from sounds issuing
from its speaker.
Second
in Harmony
It is commonly
known that the sound from the first object causes the second to
vibrate in harmony, so to speak. The thing where the original
sound-producing vibration occurs has the same pitch, wavelength,
frequency-whichever one chooses to call it-as the one giving the
sympathetic response. Or the one may be just a harmonic of the
other, may have a frequency which only is a part of a complex
frequency possessed by the other, that is, one may be a simple
tone which is one element in a complex tone characterizing the
other. Most persons known, too, that if the original vibration
is forceful enough, such objects as a nearby vase or water glass
which chance to be thus "in tune" may be shattered by
the sympathetic vibration resulting within their structures.
Rife thinks that the lethal frequencies for the various disease
organisms are as in the sound waves coordinates of frequencies
existing in the organisms themselves. If this is the
explanation, it means that the Rife ray probably causes the
disease organisms to disintegrate or partially disintegrate,
just as the vase and glass. Several bits of evidence indicate
that his is exactly what happens. The San Diego man explained
that he found that different disease organisms have particular
individual chemical constituents and this led him to suspect
that the organisms were electrical in character and might
coordinate with variable electrical frequencies. His
observations have been confirmed by certain Brittish medical
researchers, who say that they found that each kind of disease
organism has a distinct radio wave length. So theoretically the
Pt. Loma scientist's ray might make the tiny foes of mankind
behave just as the vase and glass.
Organisms
Writhe
And, watched
under the microscope, the organisms seem to do just that. When
the ray is directed upon them, they are seen to behave very
curiously, some kinds do literally disintegrate, and others
writhe as if in agony and finally gather together in deathly
unmoving clusters. Brief exposure to the tuned frequencies, Rife
commented, brings the fatal reactions. In some organisms, it
happens in seconds. After the organisms have been bombarded, the
laboratory reports show the are dead. They have become
devitalized and no longer exhibit life, do not propagate their
kind and produce no disease when introduced into the bodies of
experimental animals.
Hailed
as Genius
The discovery
of the ray's power traces back, Rife recounted, to a day 18
years ago in his Pt. Loma laboratory. It was then his idea came
to him. He has been tirelessly pursuing it to its conclusion
down through all of those years. The San Diego man, who is
hailed by many as veritable genius, has experimented and is
credited with important studies, inventions and discoveries in
an unbelievably wide and varied array of subjects. These fields
of pursuit range from ballistics and racing auto construction to
optics and many equally profound sciences. And in 1920 he was
investigating the possibilities of electrical treatment of
diseases. It was then that he noticed those individualistic
differences in the chemical constituents of disease organisms
and saw the indication of electrical characteristics, observed
electrical polarities in the organisms. Random speculation on
the observation suddenly stirred in his mind a startling
astonishing thought. "What would happen if I subjected
these organisms to different electrical frequencies?" he
wondered.
Grows
Cultures
Rife built a
simple frequency generating apparatus of about 8 or 10 watts
output. He grew some cultures of bacteria. Then he began the
studies whose reported results now promise to revolutionize the
entire theory and the whole treatment of the human diseases,
other than those of a functional or accidental nature. Machine
and cultures ready, the San Diegan anxiously, feverishly began
testing his idea. Would those minute killers of men die under
the frequency bombardment?
It would be a
patience-wracking task, for there was no way to measure what
wave length or frequencies the organism might have. In the quite
loneliness of the laboratory, rife simply had to turn and turn
and turn the tuning dials of his machine and check after each
bombardment the conditions of the disease organisms in his
cultures to see if anything had happened to them. He just had to
hunt by trial and error a frequency, which might do something to
a certain organism. Then, if he found one for that disease, he
would have to start all over again on the next kind.
Prepares
Slides
The scientist
took first a culture of B. Coli; the organisms, which always
seem to accompany the agency of typhoid fever yet apparently,
are harmless themselves. He prepared microscope slides from the
culture and saw that his little subjects were alive. Then he
turned the ray on them, tuned it to a certain frequency, then
took the slide back to the microscope to see if anything had
happened. He did this time after time and the b. coli still
remained discouragingly healthy. Then one day, Rife recounted, a
culture of the organisms which had been bombarded with a certain
frequency appeared different under the microscope. They seemed
lifeless! He tried to get them to grow, to reproduce in their
laboratory media. He tried that same frequency on culture after
culture of b. coli and always the results were the same. The
organisms were dead. "It did kill them!" Rife told
himself. And probably, cool, conservative scientists though he
is, he allowed himself to hope that he, Royal Raymond Rife, had
found that 'bullet" which scientist have ought for years,
that "magic bullet' which would surely, certainly slay
mankind's diseases.
Gets
Expert Advice
But one batch
of dead germs meant little to medical science or to Rife. He
repeated the trial and error search on other kinds of organisms.
He put an assistant, Henry Siner, a San Diego laboratory
technician to work. He asked eminent medical men over the
country to advise with him on such problems as his diagnoses of
cancer in his laboratory hunts and tests and they did. Dr.
Milbank Johnson a prominent Los Angeles physician and surgeon,
he related, went even further, joined him in some of the work
and "aided greatly, with untiring efforts and
cooperation." Dr. Arthur I. Kendall, head of
bacteriological research in Northwestern University's medical
school at Chicago, worked with him in another phase of the study
and experimentation.
Rife and these
associates and aids, he recounted, cultivated, cultivated,
cultivated and cultivated organisms; shot, shot and shot with
the ray; inoculated, inoculated and inoculated experimental
animals to test effects upon disease organisms thus introduced
into living bodies and made active there. Hoyland joined in the
work and he and Rife built better, better and better machines
for generating the frequencies and directing them upon the tiny
enemies of the human race. Now, he reported, the mortal
oscillatory rates for many, many organisms has been found and
recorded and the ray can be tuned to a germ's recorded frequency
and turned upon that organism with assurance that the organism
will be killed.
Virus
Hunt Succeeds
Inseparably
linked with the ray development, Rife added, were two others
almost equal in importance to the other discovery. These were a
search for filter-passing viruses, those minute disease causing
substances which sneak through the finest filters which
scientists can make and so are extremely difficult to capture
and study, and the designing and building of a microscope suited
to the search, a microscope which would reveal to his eye
viruses never seen before. Both undertakings were successful,
Rife commented. Eight years ago he began hunting the viruses
with the microscope, and the satisfactory results, he said, made
possible extension of the ray's use beyond the known disease
organisms to others unseen and unknown before he ferreted the
out. One of these previously undiscovered organisms, the
scientist said, was that which he found in human carcinoma, or
cancer.
Using a special
media or germ food, made from materials suggested by Kendall, he
prepared a culture from a human cancer. He gave the culture
special treatment and incubation, he related. Finally it was
ready and he slipped a slide of it under his microscope,
adjusted the instrument and anxiously fitted his gaze to the
eyepiece. He saw on the slide a number of moving red-purple
granules, the tiniest bits of microscopic life ever seen, only
one-twentieth of a micron in length, so tiny that 500,00 of them
placed end to end would span only the length of an inch on a
ruler, he reported.
Produces
Cancer
And with those
little red-purple granules, Rife said, he produced typical,
human cancer in rats! The scientist frankly declared that he
cannot be positive yet that the tiny organisms are the direct
cause of cancer. They have to be carried through three test of
experimental animals before they produce the cancerous tumors,
he explained. And they seem to have five forms, each requiring a
different mortal oscillatory rate, he added. "There still
is much work to be done," Rife said, " in the study of
this organism, the search for others and the finding of other
lethal frequencies. But I think, "he added, smiling,
"that we can justly say that the results so far are very
encouraging"
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