[17] P.I.R., 944.
[18] “I have the honour to inform you that I have been in this town since yesterday afternoon issuing, in a proclamation, conciliatory orders to the populace that the people comprised in the uprising must present themselves and express aversion and repudiation of it, promising them consideration and pardon as long as they lay aside arms. In compliance with and following the earlier published proclamation, they presented two guns and innumerable bolos. I hope soon for tranquillity among the people there through these efforts. I ask dispense with assembly of the Junta. Camilin, November 30, 1898.”—P.I.R., 849.
[19] P.I.R., 849.
[20] Ibid.
[21] P.I.R. 849.
[22] Ibid.
[23] Ibid.
[24] Gregorio Aglipay, an Ilocano Catholic priest who became an active Insurgent leader. Later he abandoned the Catholic faith and set up a new church which gained many adherents in the Philippines.
[25] P.I.R., 849.
[26] Ibid.