Ilo-ilo sugar is shipped under three marks, No. 1, No. 2, No. 3. An assortment or cargo of this sugar should consist of 1–8th No. 1, 2–8ths No. 2, 5–8ths No. 3.
A representative analysis of Ilo-ilo sugar is as follows:
| No. 1. | No. 2. | No. 3. | |
| Per Cent. | Per Cent. | Per Cent. | |
| Crystallizable sugar | 86.60 | 84.50 | 81.20 |
| Glucose | 5.40 | 5.50 | 6.56 |
| Mineral matter (ash) | 1.50 | 2.56 | 3.72 |
| Sand | trace | .24 | 1.28 |
In Cebú the properties are small and are mostly in the hands of Visayas. There are, perhaps, five or six steam-mills, but most of the cane is ground in cattle-mills. They follow the practice of negroes in making sugars direct for export, but the produce is of a lower quality. An analysis of the Cebú sugar is as follows:
| Cebú Superior. | Cebú Current. | |
| Per Cent. | Per Cent. | |
| Crystallizable sugar | 81.10 | 71.00 |
| Glucose | 7.90 | 12.50 |
| Mineral matter (ash) | 2.16 | 2.23 |
The sugar produced in the other Visayas islands is quite insignificant.
Visayas Women at a Loom.
[To face p. 305.
Ilo-ilo and Cebú are the principal ports in the Visayas territory. Besides what they shipped to Manila in 1897, they exported directly to the United States, Great Britain, or other countries, the following: Ilo-ilo, 127,744 tons of sugar; 51,300 piculs of Sapan wood; Cebú, 15,444 tons of sugar; 80,271 bales of hemp; 46,414 piculs of Copra. And it must be remembered that the Visayas cultivate most of the rice, maize, and other food-stuffs which they consume, and also make their own instruments of agriculture. Besides this, Ilo-ilo exported to other parts of the Philippines a million dollars’ worth of textiles of cotton, silk, and other fibres, made by the Visayas women in hand-looms. The women in Antique make the finest piña, a beautiful transparent texture of the utmost delicacy, woven from the fibres of the leaves of a non-fruiting pine (ananas). When doing the finest work they have to keep their doors and windows closed, for the least draught would break or disarrange the delicate filaments. The export from other ports in Visayas of textiles of cotton and silk is considerable, and, in addition to what they sell, the Visayas women weave most of the material for their own clothing and for that of the men.