Bontoc children engage in athletics in the Philippines. Filipino schoolgirls play volleyball. Mrs. Evans, the American head of a public school in Bontoc (the historical capital of the Cordillera region), accompany Bontoc girls in the school grounds. Filipino women teachers accompany Mrs. Evans and the girls. Girls parade on school grounds. Exteriors of an American-style school building, constructed of brick by an ingenious schoolteacher visitor from Minnesota. Native Bontoc children participate in athletic events like racing and jumping.
Natives of the Philippines. Bontoc troops being inspected by an officer on a field. Soldiers march on the field. Barracks for Bontoc troops. The soldiers outside their barracks. A group of American officers, visitors, and their wives and families stroll toward the camera. Next scene shows Filipino prisoners lined up at a modern prison. A very large number of prisoners is seen. Film slate states "determination to stop headhunters makes many prisoners".
Natives of the Philippines. Exteriors of a newly built government hospital in Bontoc, Philippines. Filipino patients lying in beds at the hospital. Nurses and doctors in background Nurses look after the patients who receive free medical care.
Natives perform dances in the Philippine Islands in 1927-1928. Bontoc and Ifugao troops present war dances. The Bontoc War Dance performed by Bontoc Philippine Scout Soldiers. The soldiers beat drums and dance around a human head kept on the ground. The Ifugao War Dance by Ifugao Philippine Scout Soldiers. The soldiers dance around a human head kept on the ground.
View of Argao Church (San Miguel Arcangel Parish Church, Poblacion, Argao, Cebu 6021 Philippines) in Argao, Cebu, Philippines. Exteriors and stone tower of Argao Church, erroneously identified as the location of the first church service in Cebu.
Natives of the Philippines. Datu people ride horses near Lake Lanao in Lanao del Sur, Philippines.