ALILA


ALILA
Our Little Philippine Cousin

By
Mary Hazelton Wade
Illustrated, by
L. J. Bridgman


Boston
L. C. Page & Company
Publishers


Copyright, 1902
By L. C. Page & Company
(INCORPORATED)
All rights reserved
THE LITTLE COUSIN SERIES
(Trade Mark)
Tenth Impression, July, 1909
Eleventh Impression, August, 1910


Preface

On the farther side of the great Pacific Ocean are the Philippine Islands. These form one of the many island groups that hang like a fringe or festoon on the skirt of the continent of Asia. Like most of the islands in the Pacific, the Philippines are inhabited by people belonging to the brown race, one of the great divisions of the family of mankind.

The Philippines are shared by many tribes, all belonging to the same brown race. People of one tribe may be found on one of these islands; those of a different tribe are living on another; or one tribe may live in a valley and its neighbour in the hills; and so on to the number of eighty tribes. Each tribe has its own customs and ways. And yet we shall call these various peoples of the brown race our cousins; for not only are they our kindred by the ties which unite all the races of men in this world; they have been adopted into the family of our own nation, the United States of America.