The Rife Handbook - Nenah Sylver · Arthur Isaac Kendall, PhD; Milbank Johnson, MD; and Royal Raymond Rife. Banquet held by Dr. Johnson, 1931, in honor of Kendall and Rife. Dr. Kendall
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Transcript
Photo Essay from Chapter 2
excerpted from: The Rife Handbook of Frequency Therapy, with a Holistic Health Primer
This is a partial preview of the photos that will appear in the 2009 edition of The Rife Handbook. All photos that appear with credits are copyrighted by their owners, and may not be reproduced under any circumstances.
Rife is an expert in more lines than the average man has time to dabble in. He is an able bacteriologist, embryologist, electrical and scientific engineer, metallurgist, chemist, photo-micrographer, and he plays with scientific crime detection. As recreation he takes to target shooting in terms of half-inch bullseyes. His chief enthusiasm, however, is the inquiry into the causes, agencies and forms of diseases, and it is this enthusiasm that has caused him to develop his various pieces of apparatus, and to refine them to an efficiency beyond all precedent.
Arthur Isaac Kendall, PhD; Milbank Johnson, MD; and Royal Raymond Rife.
Banquet held by Dr. Johnson, 1931, in honor of Kendall and Rife. Dr. Kendall created the K-medium on which microbes fed, and were then seen as transformed through Rife’s microscope.
Kendall and Rife are among the five men standing in front of the rear window.
Another news article, Los Angeles Times, December 27, 1931, with the famous photo of Rife and Kendall. Rife was often called “Dr.” as a sign of respect.
A collection of Kennedy and other brand radio receivers that Rife used to build his ray devices. Note the gas-filled transparent tube in front, used to convey the frequencies.
Courtesy of Rife Research Group of Canada
Rife Ray No. 1.
Courtesy of Rife Research Group of Canada
Rife Ray No. 3, 1934, used in a clinical trial the same year.
Royal Raymond Rife relaxing with a guitar and cigarette. He was a very good musician and played several instruments.
One of his microscopes is in the background.
Courtesy of Jeff Garff
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.