Monday, Nov. 22, 1926

In Mexico

Two men in Mexico--Tomas Zafiro and Leonicio San Miguel, Tarahumara Indians--ran 62 1/2 miles (100 kilometres) in 9 hrs. 37 min. Mexican sportsmen asked to have the record accepted as official, petitioned for a 100-kilometre race in the next Olympic games. Newspapermen sought out Zafiro and San Miguel. "We are strong," they replied, "because we live in the open air. We wear, in daylight, cloths around our privities; at night we cover ourselves with the skins of beasts. We eat, four times a day, frijoles1 and chili with tortillas.2 Also we like deer meat, chickens, turtles, lizards and rabbits. We chew peyote,3 and on feasts we drink pinole.4 No one of our tribe would eat the meat of any creature that fed upon another creature. Reverence lends wings to the legs. Only thus can a man be happy."

1 Beans.

2 Pancakes made of ground maize.

3 A kind of chicle.

4 A liquor distilled from ground corn.