-- · -.._ - NEW CRED IT / REPORTER February 26 , 1969 SIX NATIONS NEWS Ontario Plowmen ' s Association 59th J\.nnual J!ieeting Sixty-First Edition Six Nations Indians played a prominent part at the recent Ontario Plowmen's annual convention held on Feb. 17th [,; 18th at the King Edward-Sheraton Hotel in Toronto . Official delegates from the local association were John Capton and Daniel Jamieson. Also attending were George Garl ow, president of the Six Nations plowmen and vice-pres- ident of Brant county ploi-rrnen 1 I-Ir. Elliott Ifoses, past president and member of the Ontario Plowmen's Association f or 40 years and Chief Councillor Richard Isaac. Mr. Moses addressed the convention on Tuesday morning Feb. 18th. He spoke of the many changes that have taken place in the art of plowing and in the association during the past 40 years. Chief Councillor Richard ·Isaac spoke briefly and invited the visit- ors to the International Ploi-ri ng Hatch in Brant County to visit the Six Nations Reserve. I':Ir. Garlow also added brief compliment ary remarks. Each county vying for the Internat ional lfatch is required to stage a parade on the platform before the request is placed before the convention. Although Brant County is the site of the International IIatch this year, the county entered the parade contest with zest. A 90-member parade was led by the Paris Band and Six Nations Indians in colorful costume . The 1969 International Plowing Hatch will be held in Brant County on the Ross Kelly and neighboring farms about 2 mi les west of Paris from Oct. 15th to 18th inclusive. Remedial action urged to avoid t ribal revolt (Hamilton Spec. Feb. 17) Canadian Indians could stage a vi olent uprising to win their place in the Just Society if the federal government does not take positive action within 18 months, the . associate executive director of the Indian Eskimo .Association of Canada warned here over the weekend. Allan Clark said the na tion ' s 250, 000 treaty Indians are becoming increasingly frustrated by outdated government regulations and the "immoral denial of rights grant- ed by treaties." He warned a weekend labor s eminar that these frustrations could soon be expressed "by violent means." I.fr. Clark called for the i milj1ediate creation of a federal task for 9e to tour Canada and interview Indians about t heir plight in the whiteman ' s Just Society. The panelists in a Human Ri ghts seminar provided the only sparks of fire at the two- day educational conference sponsored here by the Ontario Federation of Labor. Nr. Clark charged that Ontario and the federal government are bartering about the mineral wealth of the province' s reserves without even informing the Indians. continued