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DON'T MISS VISITING "THE OLD PLACE"
French Settler's Home overlooking Historic Singing River . . . Between Biloxi and Pascagoula. Admission $1.00 plus Tax . • . Children under 15 accompanied by Parents Free.
HWY. 90 AT THE BRIDGE, GAUTIER, MISS.
Pascagoula
Home of the Singing River
SHIP BUILDING MANUFACTURING RECREATION
The Fishing Paradise of the South
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PASCAGOULA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE PASCAGOULA. MISSISSIPPI
MOSS POINT
"The Industrial City with a Future"
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CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
Moss Point, Mississippi
POWER
for
HOME
FARM
BUSINESS and
INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT
Mississippi
POWER COMPANY
GUARANTEED 20,000
There have been 21,000 copies of this issue of DOWN SOUTH printed which will be read and enjoyed by better than 63,000 people interested in Mississippi and the Beautiful Mississippi Gulf Coast from New Orleans to Mobile.
their summers are now spending their lives facing the Gulf that no one can leave and forget.
WHAT DOES HANCOCK COUNTY DO FOR A LIVING?
As we told you, Hancock’s rapidly replenishing timber pours $2,000,000 a year into the county. Which is easy to understand—as every traveler is aware of Hancock’s panorama of pine thickets that parallels Highway 90 after it leaves the Pearl River until it gets to Bay St. Louis.
But there is nothing along the Coast highway to indicate that Hancock is the largest milk producing county on the Coast, for the majority of its 82 Grade A dairies are concentrated in the Central and Northern part of the county. Some of the finest Jersey herds in the state of Mississippi are the proud possession of Hancock County—supplying the Gulf Coast and the Louisiana-Mis-sissippi Milk Producers plant in Picayune—an industry representing nearly a million dollars income annually to the county—a comparatively new industry a little over ten years old which gained its great stimulus around 1949 when rural electrification achieved full county coverage.
Nor does the U.S. 90 route tell the story that Hancock is the only county in the state of Mississippi outside of the Delta that produces flood rice commercially—that the first carload of rice in Hancock’s agricultural history was shipped in 1956 from the 133 acre plantation of L. L. Fletcher of Texas Flat Road just a few miles north of Bay St. Louis—and that he produced 20 barrels to the acre, which is 6 barrels an acre better than the Louisiana average, a state famous for flooded rice. This represents a new agricultural product in Hancock—although J. L. Crump of Holly Bluff has been producing highland rice now for about 15 years.
Hancock’s cattle also now represent a county income of around $300,000 a year—with its herds of native cattle bred with Brahma bulls on cut over land constantly improving in quality. In the county there are several registered herds of Aberdeen Angus, that of E. M. Brig-nac, Jr., on the Poplarville road about ten miles above Kiln, being one of the finest on one of the prettiest farms in the state. With no winter worries, plenty of rainfall and plenty of grazing grass this county is as yet a practically untouched cattle kingdom.
INDUSTRIES
If this article had been written a year ago we would have had to acknowledge that Hancock County possessed no manufacturing plants. But suddenly for the same basic reasons that new residents are gravitating to Hancock to live, small industrial plants are coming to locate.
In March of 1957 the Markel Manufacturing Plant, makers of aluminum framed screens and doors, moved from New Orleans to Coleman Avenue in Waveland. This company had been operating in New Orleans since 1952, but when Mr. Markel moved his home to the Coast in 1954 for his baby’s health, he
SEE THE GULF COAST'S MAJOR YEAR ROUND TOURIST ATTRACTION
AND THE BELLINGRATH HOME
Priceless antiques, china and silver THEODORE, ALA.
(Near Mobile)
DON'T MISS SEEING "OLD SPANISH FORT"
Oldest Building in the Mississippi Valley. Built in 1718 by French . . . later renamed by Spanish. Museum and Fort Open Daily from 9 to 5.
JUST NORTH OF HIGHWAY 90 IN PASCAGOULA, MISSISSIPPI
SUPPLIES FOR THE ARTIST
oj|
ON THE BEACH WEST OF BILOXI
HANDMADE SOUVENIRS
Created by Gulf Coast Artists and Craftsmen
TAKE BACK HOME THE NEW SOUVENIR OF THE SOUTH
The story of "BEAUVOIR" beautifully illustrated in color which dramatically portrays the life of lefferson Davis from his birthplace to this Mississippi Gulf Coast Mansion that is now The Shrine of the Confederacy. Postpaid anywhere in the U. S. 75 cents.
GOING TO NEW ORLEANS?
You'll want a copy of NEW ORLEANS FROM A TO Z . . . the handbook alphabetically arranged to answer all the questions you'll ask about New Orleans. Postpaid anywhere in the U. S.....................J_.$1.10
Phone IDlewood 2-8818 3311 W. BEACH	BILOXI, MISS.
November—December 1957
Tell them you saw it in DOWN SOUTH. Thanks I
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BSL 1950 To 1969 Hancock-County-Western-Gateway-(10)
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