Short Summation of Royal Raymond Rife's life and cancer research based on Barry Lynes' Book
'The Cancer Cure That Worked"

Dr. Millbank Johnson had set-up the Special Medical Research Committee to witness what transpired at the clinic. He rented the Scripps ranch in La Jolla outside San Diego. In the summer of 1934, 16 terminally ill cancer patients were given 3 minutes of the radio frequency every day. �They soon learned that this was too much because the human body needed more time to dispose of the dead toxins. They were given 3 minutes every third day. 14 of the terminally ill patients were clear of cancer and healthy when the clinic closed after 3months.

As Rife wrote in�1953;

"16 cases were treated at the clinic for many types of malignancy. After 3 months, 14 of these so-called hopeless cases were signed off as clinically cured by the staff of five medical doctors and Dr. Alvin G. Foord, M.D. Pathologist for the group."

The other two were pronounced cured one month after the clinic closed. There were very minimal if any, short term side-effects experienced.�
Well, what kind of documentation exists to prove that this happened? Although Rife's records were lost when he foolishly loaned them to Dr. Arthur Yale a few years later there is enough documentation available today, according to author Barry Lynes proving that Rife's frequency cancer cure existed.

Barry Lynes says;

"Documents show the clinic existed and succeeded in curing cancer. And doctors who continued treating seriously ill people with success because of what thefrequency instrument accomplished in 1934 tell the real story, as do the signed reports from cured cancer patients in later years."

For example, Dr. James Couche was present at the clinic and used a machine with great success for 22 years, even after the AMA banned it. There is a declaration of Couche's written in 1956 in the book about the truth of the clinic. There is also correspondence from Dr. Millbank Johnson reprinted in the book. As Johnson says in a letter, the clinic was set-up to satisfy him personally about the efficacy of the frequency machine. It was a first tentative step. What they didn't realize was the fiercely entrenched scientific opposition they're discovery's would provoke.

They established a company in 1937 called Beam Ray and manufactured 14 frequency machines. The electrical engineer who helped build the machines was a man named Phil Hoyland. He also invested in the company. Everything was about to come apart very soon.

The most powerful man in medicine at this time and would be for many years was Dr.Morris Fishbein. He was chief editor of the American Medical Associations Journal. The Journal was the most important fund raising tool of the AMA because of the advertising revenue raised from� drug manufacturers. It is exactly the same today. Morris Fishbein was a totally ruthless�character whose sole motivation was money and power. He failed anatomy in medical school and never treated a patient in his life. In those days, there were no drug testing agencies. Fishbein decided which drugs were okay for the public as long as the drug manufacture paid the advertising rates that he set. Simply put, extortion.

Fishbein heard about Rife's frequency machineand wanted to buy in. The offer was refused. He then� offered legal assistance to Phil Hoyland in order to enable Hoyland to steal the company from Rife and the other investors.The trial of 1939 really put an end to any proper scientific investigation of the frequency machine. The trial was the undoing of Rife. Not used to being savagely attacked in open court he crumbled under the pressure. Although he won the case, he turned to alcohol as a result and became an alcoholic. A tragic event, all brought about by one despicable man, Morris Fishbein.

Although Fishbein lost, he still used his pervasive power within the AMA to thwart further investigation of Rife's work. Dr. Kendell went to Mexico and slipped into anonymity. Dr. Millbank Johnson died in 1944.

In 1950,� Rife joined up with John Crane, the man who told Barry Lynes the Rife story. Crane was an electrical engineer. They worked together for 10 years, building more advanced frequency machines, but then again the AMA closed them down and Crane was sent to prison for 3 years even though 14� patients testified as to the efficacy of the machine. The trial was rigged. The forewoman of the jury was an AMA doctor. Rife died in 1971.�

See photographs of Roy Rife's incredible microscopes and the man himself.

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