Front:
CITY OF HILO AND SNOW CAPPED MAUNA KEA, HAWAII.
118775
C
Back:
PUBLISHED BY K. MAEHARA, CAMERA CRAFT SHOP, HILO, HAWAII, T. H.
MAUNA KEA AND HUALALAI.
While not in the Hawaii National Park, both
Mauna Kea and Hualalai offer interesting trips for
those who have no scruples about "roughing it."
Mauna Kea, towering 13,825 feet above the
sea, is one of the highest mountain peaks in the
Pacific. Near the top there is an interesting old
quarry; here the
here the stone implements
stone implements and weapons
used by the ancient Hawaiians were made. Snow
is always found on the summit of the mountain.
Hualalai, the third peak in elevation on the
Island of Hawaii, is 8,270 feet high and is acces-
sible, being reached over trails well supplied with
water. Several dormant craters are passed on the
way, also a blow-hole known as the Bottomless Pit.
C. T. AMERICAN ART COLORED.
CHICAGO
HERE