Show EFFECTS OF THE ALTITUDE Almost everybody WiN lias has traveled b by tram from this to Denver anti and vies vice ICI versa tins hue heard of ot delicate person peron t ladle ladies particularly becoming faint taint on reaching a U very veo altitude This U Is I il to li Iii caused anu ocl by a I touch af of heart in nv nt inC abnormal blood The rhe trouble Is usually of ot hut a temporary existence und mind soon 1 I u tay h tl tho tim I reaches i iII II a i lower As s to the conditions in indicated n b by ih Ha effects upon a 1 few fuw In Individual out of th great grent muss mas of or who tho travel traci niro across thu time conti we Ve notice the time In III lie tho foi rOI or March Marcim 10 to boil They lh w will viii ill prove provo Inter Interesting esting lo Le L swine lottie If Ie not to every everybody budy body who r retails flails it II Charles Fox Gardiner Hem y W V tIle re results obtain obtained ed Ihl In conducting u a e number of blond pressure url det at nl Col I 01 ado Springs lull and nit lit t J likes the former having nn an altitude of ot f feet flet Iud and the th hitter lutor of tot fret It was ns discovered that the average blood loOt pressure I t ure of nf Inhabitant Inhabitants of or It Colo 1010 ala macho age hall had been titers there for or over ovir n a year or moro was slightly lower titan than that of ot dwellers at ot the sea pea level while the pulse did not show the tho In Increased increased creased rapidity said Mid to he bo present In altitude dwellers 1 Tests on health students taken front from Colorado Springs to the tho top of lit Peak In a 1 railway car without any muscular mu cular ef of fort tort showed howell that nt at the end of 0 three and hours hour the blond pressure had tutu fallen tallen from mm to lit itS mm and the t ht pulse rate had hail gone from SO tO to V per minute Tho Them authors found a n rough ratio between pulse rate ami blood pressure the more rapid the tho pul pulse e tho the lower the blood pressure It 11 was rims US also nho noted that when a n pulse rato rate was but little affected by an on attitude altitude of ot o feet teet the time blood pressure was lIIS more mOr constant that cases of ot mountain sickness were accompanied by n II tall fall In blood pressure and a n rapid 0 rite rate The conclusion Is that cases calle of or high torsion tension lire are likely to 10 be ho bee bene b e by hy being sent to high altitudes while tho the chang chu If would hI ho hit h an undesirable one for tor patients pAtient In whom the blood Is abnormally lI low at lit sect pen level |