{"@context":{"@language":"en","AIPUUID":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AIPUUID":[{"@value":"be414e38-6655-423a-8264-cfe96c9f3b4b","@language":"en"}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2017-01-30","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1902-04-09","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/xgrandforks\/items\/1.0341177\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" THE EVENING SUN\ni4\nVOL. 1\nGRAND FORKS AND COLUMBIA, B.C. THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 1902.\nNO. 132\nfl\nWestern Provinces Could\nSupport Seventy-five\nMillion People.\nThe New York Tribune says  editorially:\n\"The Boston Transcript prints a dispatch from Minneapolis declaring that\nat the present rate of emigration irom\nthe northwest to central and western\n\"Canada two million Americans will be\nin the Domion at the end of twenty\nyears. While this would seem to be\nan overstatement, there is no doubt\nthat a large number of Americans are\ncrossing the line, attracted partly by\nthe abounding richness of western\nCanada and partly by the liberal inducements offered to immigrants by\nthe Canadian government. The prov.\nvinces and tearitories of Manitoba,\nAssiuiboia, Albertaand British Columbia, not to speak of Saskatchewan,\nAthabasca and Yukon, could easily'\nsupport a population of seventy-five\nmillion ueople. The wheat fields of\nManitoba and Assiuiboia are already\nfamous, and they have as yet hardly\nbegun to be cultivated. There is uo\nfiner cattle ranges in the world than\nin Alberta, while there is an apparently inexhaustible supply of minerals\nand coal in British Columbia and Yu\nkOD. Saskatchewan and Athabasca\nare as yet unorganized, bat in spite of\ntheir latitude their agricultural possibilities are known to be very great.\n\"Including the great districts of\nKeewatiu and Mackenzie, the chief\nindustries oi which are hunting and\ntJapping, this great empire of western\nCanada has an area of 2,144,796 square\nmiles, with a population, according to\nthe census of 1901, of only 656,464,\noi whom 436,464 are in Manitoba aud\nBritish Columbia. For years the Canadian government has been making\nevery possible effort to induce immigration to western Canada, but thus\nwith little success, as these figures\nshow. But the tide appears to be\nturning at last. The well authenticated reports of the country's fertility\nand mineral richness are bringing\nmany desirable settlers from Europe,\nand,   what    at    first    seems'    most i\nalready crossed the line this spring.\nPreviously many Am ricans weHt to\nthe region about Edmonton, in Alberta, and they are all prosperous. It\nis uot at all impossible that in a lew\nyears, therefore, this portion of Canada will be largely settled by Americans. As to whether they will remain\nAmericans there is a difference of\nopinion. The thick-aud-thin American 'patriot' maintains on a priori\nground that they will. But those who\nhave talked with Americans who have\nbeen settled for some time in western\nCanada eeclare that, us a rule, they\nthink it belter to identify themselves\nwith the country of their adoption.\nAna as Americans like to see immigrants to this country do that, they\ncannot blame Americans in Canada\nfor doing it. But iu any case, the influx ot a large number of Americans\nin Canada is a most important and interesting fact.\"\nPUBLIC OWNERSHIP\nThe People of Chicago Decide to Give It a\nTrial.\nThe result of the municipal election\nrecently held iu the city of Chicago is\na remarkable indication of the direction the wind is blowing in the department ot political science. Muni-\ncipal ownership won a great victory.\nIu the face of desperate opposition\nfrom the traction companies aud gas\nand electric lighting concerns, despite\nthe veiled hostility of the trust newspapers and party machines to the referendum movement, the \"little ballot\"\npolled nearly two thirds of all the\nvotes cast by wards. Chicago's streets\n\u2022re save lo the people by a five-to-oue\nmajority, and Chicago has blazed the\nway to municipal ownership for every\ncity in America.\nFinal returns from the precincts\ngave a total vote on the question of\nmunicipal ownership of approximately 150,000, a greater vote than any\never before polled in a special election\nin Chicago; 124,594 citizens voted to\ntake over the street railways as against\n25,987, who were iu favor of leaving\ntbem in the coutrol of the companies;\n1124,190 ballots were cast for the muni-\ncurious, Americans have begun to I ciPal ownership of the gas and elec-\npour in, ten thousand s-ittleH   having Continued on Fourth Page.\n1.1\nMERCHANT\nT A I  L,[0  R\nw\n-THE   NEW\nINN MPEG\nHOTEL\nRIVERSIDE AVE.\nGRAND FORKS\nNew Spring Goods\nLatest Patterns Euglishland\nScotch Manufacture.\nHave Your Clothes Cleaned, Pressed and\nRepaired by a Practical Tailor.\nWE CAN DO YOUR JOB PRINTINU\nThe Job Department of The Evening' Suu is uow prepared to turn out\nprinting in style and quality equal te\nthe best. Give us a trial as we aro\nsure we can suit you.\nSee Prizes\nTo be given away to\nparties catching the\nLargest Trout\nFish must be weighed\nat the store, as fishermen's affidavits will\nnot be good.\nCome and swap fish\nstories with us,\nJ. H. MUHRAY,;PHOP.\nWINNIPEG AVfENUE\nGRAND FORKS, B. C.\nRATES\nJ2.5II M DAT\nSPECIAL  RATE BY WEEK\nBAThS, ELECTRIC\nLIGHTS AND BELLS\nSPECIAL  ATTENTION  PAID   TO\nCOMMERCIAL MEN.\nHotels.\nPACIFIC HOTEL, onp. C.P.R. \u00bbtotion,Co-\nlumbia, J. Mcintosh.   'Phone 59.\nI\nClothes Cleaned and Pressed.\nIP you want your clothes cleaned or\nrenovated and pressed go to Mrs. L. W\nJohnson, cor. Riverside uve. and Main st\nReal Estate and Mining Brokers.\nT. ALFRED KENNION,  mining and real\nestate, cor. Bridge and First, 'phone 65.'\n\u2022Miscellaneous.\nBbidgb Stbbet\nPhone 115\nEmployment and information bureau, 0\n{(.messenger service.Bridge&lst. 'phone 65\nGillett's\nPURE\nPOWDERED\nLye\nFRANK   MILLER\nGENERAL TRANSFER AND DRAYAGE\nGood Dry Wood delivered to any part of the city\nPhone 64 Grand Forks and Columbia, B. C.\nYour Prescription\nDruggists\nand any other wants in the Drug Line\nwill be carefully attended to by J J-\nChemists.\nH.E. Woodland & Co. THE EVENING SUN\nN\nTUBNEK & EVANS.\nSUBSOBIFIION BATES:\nOne year, by mail $3.00\nOne Month, by mall 25\nADVEBTISING BATES:\nLegal advertisements, in Nonpareil (this)\ntype, 10c per line for first insertion, and\n5c per line for each subsequent insertion.\nDisplay advertisements, running space,\none to three inches, per month, $3.00 per\nInch; three to six inches, $2.50 per inch\nper month; over six inches, $2.00 per inch\nper month.\nReading notices, 10c per line for first\ninsertion, and 5c per line for each Insertion thereafter.\nAddress all communications to\nThe Evening Sun, Columbia,B. C\nPHONE. 55.\nlabel)\nTHURSDAY, APRIL io, 1902\nGreenwood is going to celebrate the\nthe 24th ol May this \\ear. It claims\nthat it has not only stood aside for its\nsister towns for a number of years,\nbut that it has liberally patronized\ntheir displays. Hence it deserves lo\nbe given the rij;ht of way this year.\nA new use lias been found for the\nhouse of lords, says the Toronto Globe.\nThe British opposition now use it, as\nit were, as a training ground. Before\nraising a debate in the commons on\nsome controversial point about the\nwar, a motion on the subject is made\nin the lords, the government's position\nis disclosed, and tl.e attack in the\ncommons is guided accordingly. Iu\nthis way the subject is also more constantly kept before the public. Sir\nMackenzie Bowell and his followers\nmight, by adopting similar methods,\nconsole themselves lor their loss of\npower in the Dominion senate.\nJoseph Genelle Accused of\nBurning Two Steamboats in Dawson.\nJoseph Genelle, a well known sawmill man, is under arrest on a charge\nof having burned two steamboats at\nDawson in order to collect the insurance on them. He fled from Dawson,\nand was arrested in Rossland Saturday and turned over to Constable\nYoung of Nelfon, from whose custody\nhe was taken by an officer from Victoria, from which poiut he will probably he taken back to Dawson toptancl\ntrial.\nMr. Genelle was generally known\nin the Boundary in his connection j\nwith the Yale-Columbia Lumber company, being associated with a brother,\nthe firm having mills at Rossland,\nRobson, Cascade and other points.\npointed, as follows: E. Jacobs, Greeu-\nwood; H. B. Cannon, Grand Porks;\nW. B. Townsend, Rossland, and Constable I. A. Dinsmore, of Columbia,\nas chief inspector.\nThe Grand Forks Knights of Pythias\naud Odd Fellows are ortparir.g for a\ngrand joint excursion (o Curlew lake\non the 24th of May.\nBICYCLES.\nThe \"Columbia,\" \"Perfect\" and\nCleveland bicycles, all top-notchers.\nWheel supplies of all kinds Repairing. Wheels to rent.\u2014GEO. Chappuj.\nopposite Post Office.\nREDISTRIBUTION PASSED\n' Victoria, April 9.\u2014There was another story session of the royal commission yesterday; Dunsmuir being on\nthe stand all the morning.\nThe redistribution bill finally passed\nthrough the house in the afternoon.\nGreen's resolution, urging the government to seriously consider the es-\ntablishment ot a refinery lor silver-\nlead passed, Taylor and Green being\nthe princpal speakers. Prior said it\nwould cost $300,000, and the biggest\ndifficulty lay in securing a market.\nMartin secured the passage in committee of the hospital bill, an amendment providing lor aid to all hospitals\nwhich treated patieutd free and did\nnot make the denomination of a patient the test of entrance. The opposition voted with him, the government being in a minority. It was\nPrentice's bill.\nH.   F.   N EW ETT\nEXPRESS AND LIVERY\nAll Kiuds of Teaming Done. Rigs of all Kinds for Hire\nt _\u201e.,\u201e n-j\u201e_\u201e \u201e* I Fraser's Drug Store, Grand Forks,\nLeave Orders at j Hodso\u201e.s Sto*e) Columbia, or\nRING UP STABLE, PHONE B 93\nIt is a safe prediction that the Boers\nwill soon be whipped\u2014the little Boers,\nat least. Forty Canadian teachers are\non their way to South Africa.\n\\< John Manly succeeds in selling\nhis ranch for $50,000, it will prove for\nall time to come that advertising pays.\nMrs. Gravelle, wife of Frank Gra-\nvelle, wine clerk at the Windsor hotel,\naccompanied by their young daughter, arrived this afternoon from Nelson, B. C.\nCosgrove's Orchestra came  in tbis\nafternoon a nil will tntertain  to-night\nut Biden's opera   house.   Tne  trouoe j\nis quartered at the Hotel Winnipeg.\nUnder the superintemlency of Mar- 1\ntin Burrell, the nurseryman, Norway;\nmaple   fees   are   being  planted   on\neither side of  Columbia street.   One I\nhundred and eighty  trees are to be\nthus set in Columbia this year. I\nCITY SUNBEAMS\nThe report came irom Greenwood\nyesterday to the effect that a crew of\n20 Dagos, working ou the Mother\nLode smelter railway spur, had gone\nout ou a strike for higher wages.\nIt is stated that Wm. Graham of the\nGrand Forks brewery is about to undertake the enterprise of establishing\na bottling plant on ground near his\npresent location.\nPublic opinion insists today tbat the\nManly ranch which constitutes the\nterritory the V., V. & E- is prohibited\nfrom passing through, has passed into\nthe  possession  of that company.\nThe physician attending Peter Pollock who suffered a biokeu leg last\nThursday while loading carwheels\nat Eholt, found it necessary to amputate the injured limb.\nDuncan Ross, who has been on the\ncoast during the past winter, expects\nto return toGreei.wuod shortly, where\nhe formeily conducted the Boundary\nCreek Times.\nIt is understood that ,C.'P. R. auditors are experting the books of the\nHot Air railway novices. Their presence and action is a matter' of much\nconjecture. It is asserted that there\nhave been some very handsome rake-\noffs in the purchasing and freght-\npaylug depatments, and that some of\ndeparted employes drew down large\nstakes, but why C. P. It. officials are\nsent out as tracers, is a troublesome\nmystery lo the inquisitive,\nThe members of the Boundary\nlicense commission have   been   reap-\nP. BURNS & CO.\nWholesale and Retail\nDealers in...\nFresh and Cured Meats\nFish an d Oysters\nUveand.Dressed Poultry\nMail Orders Receive Prompt Attention.\nSpecial  Rates to Mines.\nJ-  HAMMER, Grand Pork1eBranoh\nShops\u2014Grand Forks,   Greenwood and Midway\nBox 25\nGrand Forks\nPox 22\nColumbia\nThe... *\nIngram=riuir Company\nThe\nBoundary\nW h 01 e s:a 1 e    Grocers\nRiverside Nurseries\nGRAND PORKS, H. C.\nMartin Burrell. Prop.\nMaples, Elms, Linden, Mountain\nAsh, Catalpas, Cut-leaf Birch.\nA fine selection of flowering shrubs, including PreHch  and\nPersian   Lilacs, Hydrangeas, Snowballs, Spireas,  Roses, etc.\nSpecially selected strain of Lawn Grass Seed. Fruit\nTrees.'Berry Rushes, Strawberry Plants, Asparagus Roots.\nVegetable Hnd Flower Seeds at my Store, next to Biden's\nopera house.\nCAREFUL ATTENTION GIVEN TO ALL ORDERS\nV. & N. RHONE as | 10\n, B. C.\nSituation,   Environments   and    General\nRe^oi trees.\nThe City of Columbia is 'situated\nnear the junction of the North Forks\nof the Kettle river with the main Kettle river, and is distant about 300\nmiles east of Vancouver.\nThe natural situation of the oity for\nbeauty In not excelled in Ameriea. A\nverdure-clad and flower-bespangled\nrolliug prairie, traversed by a river of\nbright, sparkling waier, fringed with\nforest trees and surrounded by mountains, forffling a charming combination of picturesquesness and grandeur\nThe Columbia A Western railway,\nwhich was constructed by the Canadian Pacific Railway company, has its\nstation, freight warehouse and yards\nin the center   of  ' oiumbiu,  and the\nVancouver, Victora A Eastern Railway company, has located its depot,\nfreight sheds and yards along the east\nline of the corporation, thus giving\nthe oity connections with two transcontinental lines.\nThe Canadian Pacifle railway com-\nEany has large interests in the city,\naving selected the site on account of\nthe superior natural alvantares as a\nrailway centre.\nThe climate, taken all the year\naround.'is the best in Canadn\u2014part of\nthe summer is rather hot and dry, but\nthe rest of the year is enjoyable.\nThroughout the Kettle River valley\nthere is an extent *f fertile agricultural land, part of which is now being cultivated.!\nApples, plums, pears, prunes, cherries and all the small fruits grow\nabundantly. The valley surrounding\nColumbia, divided into small frnlt and\nvegetable farms, will sustain a large,\npopulation.\nBuilding material is plentiful in the\ndistrict. Lumber can be procured at\nfair prices, and briok lime and stone\nof good quality oan always be obtained when required.\nThe mining Interests are of the first\nimporranoo to this country, and will\ndo much to build up Columbia. Large\nmineral lodes have been discovered\nthrough the mountains adjacent to\nthe oity, and what were mere prospects a short time since are now large\npaying mines.\nWater is supplied the oity by pumping from a beautiful spring of excep\ntional purity, oapable of supplying a\noity of 90,000 inhabitants.\nThe Granby smelter and converter\n\u2014the most modern and perfeot plaut\nof the kind in America\u2014employing\nhundreds of men, is contiguous to the\noity,\nOwing to the fine climate, the central situation, the beautible environments, the bright prospects for future\ngrowth and prosperity, Columbia will\nbe an educational oentre, a - city of\nhomes, as well as a wholesale distributing point; and when finally allied\nand wedded to her sister sister, will be\nthe best and largest oity in the interior.\nEpps9 Cocoa\nThe Most Nutritious.\nGrateful-Comforting. - Breakfast\u2014Supper\ns\nA ONAP\nFOR  SALE\nA business paying a profit of #350\nper month for sale.\nOther interests of\nthe proprietor demand his attention. Apply this\noffice, or\nBox 414,\nGrand Forks\nAdvertise iu the Evening Sun.   It\npays.\nFor a nice hair-cut or shave go to\nthe City Barber shop on Riverside avenue.   Baths 25c. .\nGEO, W. FLOYD\nMilk and Cream\nDelivered to all parts of\nGrand Foiks and Columbia.\nPHONE ORDERS\nPromptly\nAttended to.\nPHONE   CI06\nHay, McCallum & Wright\nMining and\nReal Estate Dealers\nFinancial and Insurance Asrents\nLots for sale in all parts of the city.\nChoice garden lands at low prices.\nMoney to Loan      Columbia, B.C.\nWAKE UP!\nAlarm Clocks,     -    $1-50\n8-Day Walnut or Oak Clocks\nLadles' and Gent's\nSolid Oold or Qold\nFilled Watehel with\nhighest (trade move'\nnetit.\nJ. R. WRIGHT\nColumbia Ave.       Columbia, B. C i\nDOES YOUR WATCH\nKEEP TIME\nIf not, we'll cure it, and when we (ret\nthrough with it you'll wonder why you\ndidn't think of us long before.\nAll our work guaranteed. No hasty,\nslipshod job leaves my shop. My workmanship is skilled and conscientious.\nYou'll not grumble at the prices,\neither.\nA.D. MORRISON'S WATCH INFIRMARY\nBRIDGE STREET, QKAND FORKS\nMODEL\nBAKERY\nBRIDGE STREET\nGRAND  PORKS\nContinued from First Page.\nNow is the time\nto order your ;\nFRUIT CAKES MINCE PIES\ni'RESH CANDIES       CAKES\nDOUGHNUTS ETC.\nAt the\nModel Bakery.\nW. F. Stuart\nPHONE 60\nPROPRIETOR.\nThe only place in tow\nwhere you can buy\nGanong's Noted\nG.B. CHOCOLATES\nAND...\nMcCormick's Famous\nMaracaibo Chocolates\nPipes, Tobaccos, Etc.\nAll Leading Brands of Cigars\nDONALDSON'S\nRhone 64\nJACK COX\nCABBIES ONLY THE  BEST\nWINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS.\nThe Windsor\nGRAND FORKS.\nCONTRACTORS\nBUILDERS AND\nUNDERTAKERS\nGRAND   FORKS, B. C.\ntrie lighting plants, while only 19,447\nwere lor dollar gas aud the continuance o( the company tenure. The\nvote on the street railway control was\napproximately hve-to-one in favor of\nmunicipal ownership, while the victims of the gas and electric light\n\u2022punished their masters by an adverse\nvote of nearly seven-to-one. The\ntotal vote by wards for aldermen was\n190,500, while the affimative vote for\nmunicipal ownership was 124,594,\nThe third question submitted to the\nvote of the people by the little ballot\n\u2014the direct nomination of candidates\nfor municipal offices\u2014received even a\ngreater majority, 125,082 for and 15,-\n861 against. The vote cast for the\nlittle ballot .despite tLe unceasing fight\n.vhich the corporations waged upon it,\nfrom the filing of the roferendum petition, was more than double that cast\nou tbe question of the ablition of the\ntownship governments \u2014 57,698 for;\n9483 against\u2014which the trust newspapers have been advocating for a\ndozen years.\nColumbia Mails\nDae\n110 p. m.\ni p. m.\n1 45 p. m.\n8 IS p. m.\nSatdy only\n1 a. m.\nRossland\nSpokane\nCascade\nNelson\nPtB.Crow's Nest RR\nEastern Canada\nGreenwood\nPhoenix\nMidway\nEholt, eto\nBrand Forks\nRspublic\nNelson, Wash.\nCurlew, etc.\nWhite's Camp\nClose\n3 SO p, m,\n1 30 p. m.\n3 45!p. m.\n7 45 a. m,\nSatdy only\n8 p. m.\n' Money orders from 8 a. m. to 7 p. in\nPETER WRIGHT,\n'\"'.. Post Master.\nCITY OF COLUMBIA COURT OF REVISION\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the1\nCourt of Revision for the purpose of\nhearing complaints against the assessment for the year 1902, as made by the\nAssessor of the City of Columbia, B, C.\u201e\nwill be held at the City Clerk's office, Columbia, on Tuesday, the 15th of April, Ai\nD. 1902, at 7:30 p.m.\nColumbia, H. C, March 12th, 1902.\n3. A. ..loCALLUM, City Clerk,\nDON'T  FAIL\n-  -  TO TRY OUR  -\nPure Drugs\nPrescriptions Carefully\nCompounded\nFraser Drug Co., Druggists\nP-\nAC1FIC HOTEL\nJOHN HAVERTV, Proprietor\nFirst-Class Board and Rooms.   Rates per Week\n$8 and $10, According to Room\nOpposite C.P.R. Station\nColumbia, B. C.\nTartan Brand\nCANNED GOODS\nA Full and Complete Line lust Opened.\nThis is the Choicest Fruit on the Market.\nTry Them and be Convinced.\nJ. H. HODSON\nPHONE 30. COLUMBIA, B.C.\nTO FARHERS\nWe have just received a\nBig Shipment of all kinds of\nClover and-Timothy Seed\nWe also have in supply SEED GRAIN of all kinds.' Remember and\ninvestigate our stock and prices- before going elsewhere.\nN.   McLellan   & Co.\nPATTISON & ANDERSON\nPlumbing and all kinds\nof  Sheet   Metal   Work\nQUEEN STOVES\nStove Setting and\nQeneral Jobbing\nHot \" Air   Furnace\nWork a Specialty\nGRAND   PORKS\nS\nXN YOUR PRINTING you don't want\nto reflect old Ideas: you want It up-\nto-date. There Is a certain desire\nfor tbe antique, but It should be up-tow\nnow In execution.\nOur printing reflects the\npresent times, with the\nbest ideas of the past.\nTHE EVENING SUN\nJOB DEPARTMENT\n1\n'Phone88        Cor. Riverside and Winnipeg Aves. ^ooooooodoooooooooocoooo^ooocKioooooooov^vo*","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Grand Forks (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Evening_Sun_1902-04-09","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0341177","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.031111","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-118.439167","@language":"en"}],"Notes":[{"@value":"Titled The Evening Sun from 1902-01-02 to 1912-09-13<br><br>Titled The Evening Sun and Kettle Valley Orchardist from 1912-04-05 to 1912-09-13<br><br>Titled The Grand Forks Sun and Kettle Valley Orchardist from 1912-09-20 to 1929-05-10","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Grand Forks, B.C. : Turner and Evans","@language":"en"}],"Rights":[{"@value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http:\/\/digitize.library.ubc.ca\/","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1902-04-09 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1902-04-09 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Evening Sun","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0341177"}