[The Philippines: Past and Present (vol. 1 of 2) by Dean C. Worcester]@TWC D-Link book
The Philippines: Past and Present (vol. 1 of 2)

CHAPTER VI
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They never obeyed any one else, and left a trail of murder and rapine behind them.

Aguinaldo never punished them, and from the time when one of them tried to murder their commander until a guard composed of them murdered General Antonio Luna in June, 1899, they are mentioned only with fear and execration.
Blount describes with enthusiasm the establishment of civil government in Cagayan.
Perhaps Americans will be interested in knowing who was its head and how it worked.

The "elections" were held on December 9, 1898, and Dimas Guzman was chosen head of the province.

He was the man subsequently sentenced to life-imprisonment by Blount, for complicity in the murder of Lieutenant Piera.

In describing his method of conducting his government he says that the people doubted the legality of attempts to collect taxes; that the abuses of heads of towns caused rioting in the towns, in which only Ilocanos took part; and that he not only did not report these things but contrived to conceal them from foreigners in the province.


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