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1931 Universal Microscope by Royal Raymond Rife...



Item # 724117

November 22, 1931

THE NEW YORK TIMES, Nov. 22, 1931 

* "Universal Microscope" sees living microbes (germs)
* American medical inventor Royal Raymond Rife 

Page 19 has a somewhat discrete but historic report with a one column heading: "Bacilli Revealed By New Microscope" with subhead. (see image)
I suspect this to be an extremely rare item because there was really no reason to save it at the time.
Complete with 32 pages, rag edition in nice condition.

background: On November 21, 1931, Royal Raymond Rife claimed to have observed live microorganisms, including what he called the “BX cancer virus,” using his specially designed Universal Microscope, which he said could achieve magnifications up to 60,000×—far beyond conventional optical microscopes of the time. According to Rife, this microscope used a combination of refined optical lenses and specific wavelengths of light to illuminate and visualize living microbes without the need for staining, allowing him to see their structure and behavior in real time. He reported that these microorganisms could change forms depending on the environment, and he believed he had directly linked certain microbes to diseases such as cancer. While Rife documented his observations in personal notes and presentations, the scientific community never independently verified his findings, and no peer-reviewed studies from that era confirm that his microscope could achieve the extraordinary clarity or diagnostic capability he described. Despite this, the date remains iconic among Rife enthusiasts as a milestone in his claimed discovery of pathogenic microbes and the potential for frequency-based therapies he later promoted.


 

Category: The 20th Century