This text was obtained via automated optical character recognition.
It has not been edited and may therefore contain several errors.
— - ^ BILOXI A SKA PTDE RESORT 00201 2,000 or 3,000 in VINTER yf*'°P •+,000 or 6,000 IN SUM'ER ' BATHE, SAIL, FISH, DRIVE 190^ "Facts About the Gulf Coast - the Book of Harrison County, Kiss. -GULFPORT, BILOXI, PASS CHRISTIAN and Other of the Thriving Cities V. A. Cox & E. F. Martin, Publishers, Gulfoort, Miss. - 1905 Mississint)! Archives P. 72 Biloxi has long teen a favorite sea side resort. Tvo or three thousand visitors spend the vinters and as many more the summers here. To the visitor varied sport is offered; he can bathe, sail or drive; he can cross the bay and shoot quail; but best of all is the fishing. ^ere the gamest of all fish, the kingly "Tarpon" is to be found, often measuring seven feet in length. Biloxi has many miles of smooth shelled streets and the enterprising city council has paved the main street for a distance of six blocks, vhich adds greatly to the appearance as veil as traffic of the tovn. Biloxi has the city conveniences of the larger cities: among them the Electric Railvay, a modern Opera House, large and palatial hotels, churches of many denominations and a splendid system of city schools. The beach drivevay is a great attraction, and sight vorth seeing. In the summer months large taroon can frequently be seen in the channel in front of Eiloxi leaping from the vater and shoving their slender bodies and the curving dorsal fin shining in the sunlight like bars of silver. The strength of the tarpon is prodigious; coast fishermen tell of seeing them leap from the vater, eI'kz clear the deck of a sloop or schooner, passing in the leap clear through the mainsail, and leaving a clean cut round hole in the canvas.
Biloxi Document-(032)