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CURE FOR CANCER?

NEW ZEALANDER’S CLAIM SUCCESSFUL TESTS IN GERMANY MAN WILLING TO RISK HIS LIFE SO assured is one Aucklander that he knows a method of curing cancer that he is willing to contract this disease, confident that he will be able to cure himself. He is Mr. Bernard Spencer, an accountant, who has made science his hobby for many years.

The accidental discovery two years ago of an oil which can cure leprosy, for centuries regardeU as an incurable disease, gave point to experiments on which Mr. Spencer had been working since his return from Germany after the war. The recent report regarding a number of men released from Makogai Island, completely cured of leprosy, has convinced this experimenter that he is on the right track. The method of attacking cancer came to Mr. Spencer in a most remarkable manner. After the war, in 1918, he met a Professor Otto Schmidt in Germany, and, having an interest in science generally, followed his researches with great interest. The professor admitted him to his confidence, and Mr. Spencer assisted during an experiment in connection with a guinea-pig in which such success was achieved that he is confident the key to a cure is within his grasp. The professor inoculated the animal with cancer. After three days, during which the usual signs of the disease became apparent, another injection was prepared, this time from the leaves of a certain plant which grows in Germany. The spread of the cancerous growth was checked within a few hours. Under the surgeon’s knife it was found that the oily fluid extracted from the plant had formed a thin film around the growth, and one through which the disease could not penetrate. In time the natural replacement of bodily tissues would have brought the growth away from the body.

PROFESSOR’S DEATH Unfortunately, Mr. Spencer recounts, further experiments were in

terrupted through the death of Professor Schmidt in the Dusseldorf riots of 1919. Mr. Spencer returned to the Dominion shortly afterward, having attempted in vain to have the work continued by the Berlin and th© Paris Universities. He had been advised to try in New York but, discouraged by the reception given on the Continent, decided to return to New Zealand and continue investigations for himself. In this aim he i 3 inspired largely by a hope to associate the name of the Dominion with the world-wide sensation, the announcement of a certain cure for cancer would cause.

The plant used in Germany was on© attacked by a cancerous growth, not unknown among many other species throughout the world. Northern Queensland, for instance, has a similar plant, and there have been several found in the Dominion which hav© been attacked in the same way. Mr. Spencer is not a botanist and has himself been unable to find the specimen he needs, although he is certain there are many close to Auckland. He is at present seeking the co-operation of an analysing botanist to help in finding the necessary plant. He has been offered tbe use of a laboratory in Auckland for further experiments. "It is quite logical to suppose that herbs will yet prove the cure for th© worst of diseases," said Mr. Spencer. "Nearly every medicine has a herb as a base and the good health of past generations was kept by the use of simple herbal remedies alone. If an oily plant extraction can cur© leprosy, then it may well prove the specific for this other wasting dis* ease.”

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SUNAK19300908.2.24

Bibliographic details

Sun (Auckland), Volume IV, Issue 1071, 8 September 1930, Page 1

Word Count
585

CURE FOR CANCER? Sun (Auckland), Volume IV, Issue 1071, 8 September 1930, Page 1

CURE FOR CANCER? Sun (Auckland), Volume IV, Issue 1071, 8 September 1930, Page 1

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