Early U.S. patents cover railway hardware and measurement instruments, establishing Lakhovsky as a practical inventor before the medical-device period.
Radio News publishes "Curing Cancer with Ultra Radio Frequencies," presenting Lakhovsky’s Radio-Cellulo-Oscillator theory to a radio audience.
French and translated publications expand the theory of cellular oscillation, cosmic rays, and therapeutic waves.
The U.S. MWO patent application is filed, claiming French priority from May 2, 1931.
French patent metadata for "Oscillateur a ondes multiples" records publication on September 15, 1932.
US1962565A is granted for an apparatus with circuits oscillating under multiple wavelengths.
Nature reviews the English Secret of Life, providing contemporaneous reception context.
U.S. newspapers report Lakhovsky’s death in New York after a heart attack.
US2351055A is patented for a tube producing multiple wavelengths, with Anne-Marie Louise Lakhovsky named as administratrix.
Reading the sequence
The sequence matters because the later legend tends to compress everything into a single device. The archive shows a longer pattern: mechanical inventions, sound apparatus, wave-and-life theory, plant and medical claims, MWO patents, wartime displacement, and posthumous tube patenting.
The timeline should remain provisional where source access is incomplete. Gallica, INPI, Espacenet, and other European records may fill gaps once manual access bypasses anti-bot challenges.
For filtering by evidence type, use the MWO evidence timeline.