Dainty Japanese maidens glance 
demurely at you in Honolulu 
Here is the end of 
a perfect afternoon 
on leeward Oahu, 
near Honolulu, 
with its rice fields, 
cocoanut palm 
trees and sugar 
plantations. Such 
landscapes as this, 
bathed in won¬ 
drous sunset col¬ 
orings, await you 
in Hawaii. 
You can swim in either the 
ocean or fresh-water pools 
like this in Hawaii. Sea-water 
temperature at Waikiki in 
winter averages 74 degrees. 
A native squid. The coral gar¬ 
dens of Haleiwa and Kaneohe 
are viewed from glass-bottom 
boats, and reveal the rainbow 
fishes of Hawaii. 
Miles of pineapple fields are 
to be seen in Hawaii. This 
fruit is the second industry 
of the Islands in importance. 
Duke P. Ka- 
hanamo ku, 
former cham¬ 
pion sprint 
swimmer of 
the world. 
The old Hawaiians believed that 
Pele, their Goddess of Fire, lived 
in Kilauea Volcano. 
White surf breaking on a tropic beach, with palms waving in 
the trade wind. This is Onomea Bay, near Hilo. 
No other beach in all the world so delights the senses as Waikiki, possessing the only waves ideal for surf-riding 
1 he surf is created by coral reefs. On the shore are seen the Moana Hotel and the famous Diamond Head. 
