
The Daily California - August 11,
1971

Scientific Genius Dies
Saw Work Discredited
LA JOLLA
—The scientific genius who built one of the world’s
most powerful microscopes and invented a machine to
treat cancer and other diseases was buried today in
Mt. Hope Cemetery.
Royal Raymond Rife, 83,
whose Frequency Instrument – a method of electrocuting
disease-causing organisms in the body – was the
subject of intense debate during the 1950’s, died
Thursday at Grossmont Hospital of a heart attack.
Alone and virtually
penniless, he had been living in an El Cajon rest home
since last year.
Acclaimed by the scientific
world in the 1930’s for his invention of the Universal
Microscope, a mechanical marvel containing 5,280 parts
and a magnifying power 20 times as great as any then
in existence, Rife lived to see some of what he
considered his most important work discredited by the
medical profession.
The Frequency Instruments,
used by some doctors across the United States in
treating a variety of diseases, were confiscated.
Reputations were ruined and one of Rife’s associates
served three years in prison before winning a reversal
of his conviction on grand theft charges.
Though Rife himself was not
prosecuted, his reputation was sullied and he clung to
the suspicion that organized medicine had conspired
against him in his efforts to rid mankind of the
scourge of disease.
“Having spent every dime I
earned in my research for the benefit of mankind, I
have ended up as a pauper, but I achieved the
impossible and would do it again,” Rife said in an
affidavit filed at the time his friend and associate,
John Crane, was appealing his conviction.
He accused the American
Medical Assn. of rejecting his electronic therapy
discoveries and implied the organization had
“brainwashed and intimidated” his colleagues as well
as “feloniously censored” the publication of his work.
“I certify that the AMA and
the Department of Public Health have declared war on
Rife’s Virus Microscope Institute,” said the affidavit
signed Feb. 7, 1967.
Rife built his microscope,
one of five he invented, so he could actually see
disease viruses and observe their activity, a triumph
which astounded scientists at the time.
From his observations, Rife
developed the theory that every micro-organism has a
“mortal oscillatory rate” – a point at which it will
shatter or break apart when bombarded by sound waves.
He had conceived the idea
of electronic therapy as early as 1922, but it was not
until 1934 in the Ellen Scripps home near La Jolla
that he was ready to demonstrate “Rife’s Ray.”
Sixteen patients with
incurable diseases were treated by physicians with
Rife’s Ray in a clinical test of the machine
supervised by Dr. Milbank Johnson of Los Angeles
The claim was made that 14
of the 16 patients were pronounced “clinically cured”
by the medical staff within 70 days and the remaining
two patients were discharged after three months of
treatment.
In the next 20 years, Rife
perfected his machine – later to be called the
Frequency Instrument – and about 100 of them were in
use by physicians in various parts of the world.
Affidavits are on file in
the courts from patients who claim they were cured of
cancer, butterfly lupus – a skin ailment – and other
diseases after treatment with the Frequency
Instrument.
Scientists and physicians
also claimed success with Rife’s invention. One of his
closest collaborators was Dr. Arthur Kendall,
professor of bacteriology at Northwestern University
Medical School, who wrote that he had observed
successful treatment of a tumor on a man’s cheek.
E.L. Walker of the George
Williams Hooper Foundation, an early-day cancer
research organization, hailed the device for its
effectiveness against typhoid organisms.
Editor’s Note:
This is the newspaper obituary for Royal R. Rife that
appeared in The Daily California on August 11,