- View cart You cannot add another "Philippine Islands. Anchorages in Northern Luzon and the Babuyan Islands. Insets: 1) Babuyan Is. - Fuga I. Musa Bay. From the United States Government Chart to 1931. 2) Babuyan Is. - Camiguin I. Port San Pio Quinto. From the United States Government Chart to 1931. 3) Luzon-North-East Coast Port San Vicente. From the United States Government Chart to 1938. 4) Luzon - East Coast Mauban Anchorage. From the Philippine Government Chart of 1957. 5) Luzon - West Coast. Salomague Harbour and Lapog Bay. From the United States Government Chart of 1934. 6) Luzon - West Coast Port Currimao and Gan Bay. From the United States Government Chart of 1934. 7) Luzon - West Coast Solvec Cove. From the United States Government Chart of 1934. 8) Luzon - West Coast Lingayen Gulf. Port Sual with Cabalitian Bay. From the United States Government Chart of 1922. 9) Luzon - West Coast San Fernando Harbour. From the United States Government Chart of 1936." to your cart.
1) Members of the Ifugao Tribe of Luzon, The Largest Island of the Philippines, at Work in a Rice-Field: Natives who employ the Marvellous System of Terrace Culvation Constructed on the Hill-Sides by their Ancestors centuries ago. 2) With a row of baskets slung from a beam beneath the hut to receive the heads of his enemies: The Pyramidal and Eat-proof Home of an Ifugao Head-Hunter. 3) "Dogs, Dogs for Sale! Nice Dogs, Excellent Meat; Come Buy Dogs, Dogs, Dogs!": A Dog-Market Among the Ifugao, Who Love Dog Meat, and consider it better still if the animal has been killed slowly by torture. 4) The Strange Funerary Customs of the Ifugao: A Dead Man arranged in a sitting position before his hut, and exposed for twenty-four days before burial. 5) With an enemy's severed head fixed between a buffalo's horns on the top of an upright rod; An Ifugao Priest in a trance beneath the trophy, and Tribesmen clustered round him. 199