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7TH ANNUAL LYLE ANDERSON COMPETITION This past Saturday at The corner of Highway #6 and Argyle street near Caledonia was the 7th annual Lyle Anderson Memorial Smoke Dance Competition. Haudensaunee people came from different sovereign territories to participate and view this community event. See centre for more. PHOTO BY DAVE LAFORCE PM42686517

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Six Nations Police launch Back to School Traffic Initiative STAFF REPORT

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OHSWEKEN — Students in the local area are back to school this week and with that comes extra efforts by motorists and police alike to make sure students are safe on the roads of the community. Police say they will be conducting a “Back to School” traffic initiative for the month of September. Traffic units will be patrolling Six Nations roadways enforcing traffic safety and focusing attention on school zones, bus routes and areas of high pedestrian and student traffic. Police are alerting all motorists to drive safe, obey posted speed limit signs in school zones, never attempt to pass a school bus and do not operate mobile devices while driving. In 2019, Ontario rolled out new penalties for dis-

tracted driving. Drivers distracted by talking, texting, dealing or emailing on a mobile device while sitting behind the wheel of a car will be fined up to $1000 and could include a threeday license suspension and three demerit points. If you are convicted twice within five years the fine rises to $2000 plus 6 demerit points and a 7 day license suspension. If you are convicted a third time, you could be fined $3000, receive 6 demerit points and a 30 day drivers license suspension. These convictions would also raise a person’s car insurance rates considerably. If you hold a graduated license the new penalties are even harsher. With first time convictions receiving a 30 day license suspension, 2nd offence will get you suspended for 90 days and your license will be cancelled if you are convicted three times of distracted driving.

Police say that distracted drivers are now the leading cause of fatal collisions in the province. BACK TO SCHOOL ROAD SAFETY

• Give yourself extra time. You could run into a bit of traffic congestion and rushing in a school zone is a no-no. • Watch for pedestrians. Children running late and in a hurry might forget to look for oncoming cars. • Slow down. The speed limit in school zones and near playgrounds is 40 km/hr • Stop for school buses. If a school bus is displaying flashing red lights and an extended stop arm, traffic in both directions you must stop. You may only continue when the lights stop flashing. • Keep your distance. School buses stop frequently - keep your distance and leave extra room

for sudden stops. • Obey signage: no stopping zones. Don’t stop driving or let kids out of the car in a no stopping zone. • Obey signage: no parking zones. Don’t park in a no parking zone. School buses or other school vehicles may need access to these areas to safely unload their student passengers. • Drive safely. Never overtake other vehicles and avoid U-turns and threepoint turns in school zones or near crosswalks. • Obey crossing guards. Listen and watch crossing guards - and ensure you allow pedestrians and crossing guards to reach the sidewalk before proceeding. It’s the law. • Avoid distractions and focus on driving. If you're on the phone, eating or sipping your coffee, your reaction time will be slower if a child darts out into your path.

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Family member rescues father, two kids after car flips into pond near Nanticoke STAFF REPORT

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NANTICOKE — Provincial police say a man is in life-threatening condition after he and his two young children were pulled from their vehicle by a family member after it flipped over into a pond on Haldimand Road 3, west of Highway 6 between Nanticoke and Port Dover OPP say witnesses reported seeing a car

drive off a roadway and flip onto its roof Saturday evening. Police say a family member driving behind the vehicle pulled over and managed to rescue a five-year-old girl and an eight-year-boy, along with their father. The father was rushed to hospital with life-threatening injuries, but police say the two kids were not injured. Police didn't immediately release the cause of the collision.

This past Saturday at The corner of Highway #6 and Argyle street Caledonia was the 7th annual Lyle Anderson Memorial Smoke Dance Competition. Haudensaunee people came from different sovereign territories to participate and view this community event. See centre for more. PHOTO BY DAVE LAFORCE

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Mohawk grand chief and Oka mayor shake hands after weeks of tension in land dispute QUEBEC — Following weeks of tension over a land dispute, a Mohawk grand chief and the mayor of Oka, Que., shook hands Friday and agreed to put their differences behind them. Since July, Kanesatake Grand Chief Serge Simon had been demanding an apology from Mayor Pascal Quevillon of neighbouring Oka for derogatory comments he made about the First Nations territory west of Montreal. Quevillon had raised concerns about declining property values and becoming encircled by the Indigenous community after a local developer offered to donate disputed land to the Mohawks. The federal government stepped in and held separate meetings with both sides in late July. But following the meetings Quevillon wouldn't budge

on an apology, causing Simon to say he had cut off all communication with the mayor. On Friday the two men were side-by-side at a summit between First Nations leaders and mayors taking place on the territory of the Huron-Wendat nation, north of Quebec City. ``Mr. Quevillon showed a lot of courage today in taking the first step that he took,'' Simon told reporters, suggesting the mayor had apologized during private talks. The grand chief said other First Nations leaders at the summit, including Wendake Grand Chief Konrad Sioui, played a role in bringing the two sides together. An emotional Quevillon said simply, ``It's time to turn the page and look ahead ... for the good of our communities.'' When asked

by reporters what had made him change his mind, Quevillon declined to respond, saying only, ``thank you.'' Sioui quickly jumped in and said ``reconciliation,'' to which Quevillon added, ``We are here for reconciliation, and that's what we did today.'' The Mohawks of Kanesatake have land claims on territory in and around the town of Oka going back hundreds of years. As a gesture of reconciliation, a local developer recently offered to donate 60 hectares he owned known as The Pines to the Mohawk community, through the federal government's Ecological Gifts Program. Developer Gregoire Gollin told The Canadian Press in July he was also willing to make another 150 hectares of undeveloped land available to the Mohawk community.

The news frustrated Quevillon and his town councillors, who believed they deserved to have a say in any future transfer of disputed land. The mayor told Montreal La Presse in mid-July that Gollin owned 95 per cent of the available land for development in Oka. If the territory goes to the Mohawks, Quevillon said, his town would be ``surrounded'' by the First Nations community. ``In Kanesatake territory,'' Quevillon told the news organization, ``it's cigarette shacks, pot houses, (illegal) landfills. There is not a stream that is not contaminated .... Our homes will lose value, (the Mohawks) will buy them at a discount.'' Simon had called Quevillon's comments ``racist'' and said he wouldn't speak to the mayor again without an apology.

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SIX NATIONS – Hundreds of people came to Sit-n-Bull Gas and Variety Monday to celebrate the businesses annual customer appreciation day. Every year they give away a truck and many other prizes, winners will be announced this week. The Trailer Park Boys were there and Bubbles band even performed. The free BBQ had people lined up around the building and bouncey castles added to the fun.

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Family calls for Blind School inquest BRANTFORD — The family of a disabled teenager who died at a provincially run school for the blind is calling for an inquest into what they describe as his unexplained death on school grounds. Samuel Brown had attended the W. Ross Macdonald School for the Blind in Brantford, Ont., from the age of four until his death in February 2018, weeks shy of his 19th birthday. His mother, Andrea Brown, says the school

called her on Feb. 8 to advise that her son, who was deaf, blind and non-verbal, was acting fussy and reluctant to get up for dinner. He died some time overnight, and Brown says preliminary coroner's reports and the results of an autopsy offer conflicting causes of death. She says she wants a formal inquest to get to the bottom of her son's death and to prevent similar events at schools serving vulnerable children.

W. Ross Macdonald, which answers to the Ontario Ministry of Education rather than a local school board, was the subject of a class-action lawsuit that was settled in 2017. The suit alleged decades worth of physical, emotional and sexual abuse involving students who had attended the school from the early 1950s to the late 2000s. It was settled a day before it was to go to trial.

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OPINION editor@tworowtimes.com

An educated response to Tom Brodbeck's anti-Indigenous opinion

By Chezney Martin

I always wince following the announcement of any kind of opinion, poll or article written by the Winnipeg Sun. This is because that outlet is well known to be inherently biased and prejudiced against indigenous people. This includes one of their writers, Tom Brodbeck, who has “raising hell” under his byline. “Whether it’s dissecting budgets, exposing wasteful spending or doing deep dives into complex government policies, Tom approaches his job as a journalist with the rank-and-file reader in mind, always interested in how decisions made by politicians affect the average person on the street,” wrote the outlet to their website in regards to Brodbeck. But on Monday, August

25, the Winnipeg Sun published a piece by Brodbeck that explored an area which he has no expertise. The piece was titled “Case Closed: We don’t need an inquiry to know who’s killing aboriginal women — it’s their spouses, relatives and acquaintances,” and was available to read online on Sunday, for only 11 minutes. Brodbeck opens the article with “before we rush out and spend tens of millions of dollars on a national inquiry to figure out why so many aboriginal women have been murdered over the past few decades, maybe we should start looking at who’s doing the killing.” He then cites a biased (and incomplete) RCMP report that was released in May. He continuously uses the term “we” throughout the piece, as though to iden-

tify with readers that the decision to fund an inquiry is “theirs.” But the claim that Indigenous men killed 70 per cent of murdered Indigenous women found within the RCMP report of May is false, and relies on inaccurate data and assumptions. The assumptions even become racial because they perpetuate the idea that indigenous people are violently impulsive. Cindy Blackstock, executive director of the First Nations Child and Family Caring Society of Canada and member of the Gitksan First Nations, released an educated response to the RCMP report. "What we have is people cherrypicking evidence and choosing evidence that supports their point of view without sharing with the public the limitations of what they're relying on, or putting that information in

context," said Blackstock. "It's really disturbing to me, because how are we to engender an understanding in Canadians about the experiences and the contributions of First Nations, Métis and Inuit people when there's this kind of fabricated evidence being shared around?” The federal government began the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in late 2015, under five commissioners appointed the following August. For three years, the inquiry studied systemic violence against Indigenous women and girls, delivering its final report and recommendations in June. Let’s not forget that the RCMP never divulged how it arrived at the 70 per cent number, which was never included in any official reports. Thus the inquiry that

set out in 2015 reported that, up until very recently, the RCMP didn't even record whether victims or offenders were Indigenous — such data that does exist was reported inconsistently. "The RCMP have not proven to Canada that they are capable of holding themselves to account — and, in fact, many of the truths shared here speak to ongoing issues of systemic and individual racism, sexism and other forms of discrimination that prevent honest oversight from taking place," the report said. The 70 per cent figure also fails to account for the numerous missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls whose deaths weren't recorded as homicides, and leaves out unsolved cases of those that have been murdered or gone missing the inquiry found. After reviewing cases, the inquiry "believes

that there were repeated instances... of police mischaracterizing disappearances and deaths as 'not suspicious," the report said. This isn’t exactly something new either, given that the Starlight tours performed by the Saskatoon Police force was covered for years under the same mischaracterization until a victim survived to tell the tale. In other words, the RCMP report cannot be used to justify that an inquiry is not needed. In fact, given what the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls has already found, the inquiry is deserved. Brodbeck, if you’re so concerned about where money is being spent, go find a job that co-aligns with your economics degree and stay out of the newsroom.

kwahy,hčr

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editor@tworowtimes.com

kwahy - be cute, handsome kwanihst - be handsome, be pretty TUSCARORA LANGUAGE

SOURCE:Tuscarora-English English-Tuscarora Dictionary, Blair A. Rudes

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Opinion: How to get kids talking about their school day By Jessica Cooke and Sheri Madigan ``How was your day at school?'' ``Fine.'' Does this sound familiar? This is the dreaded response to a well-intentioned question that parents might ask. The robot-sounding response is what parents hear when their child limits the information they share with parents, or has stopped sharing information, about their school day. When parents hear ``fine,'' they may react in different ways. Some parents may seek out information by asking more questions. However, research has shown that asking too many questions can feel invasive, especially to developing teenagers. Other parents may stop asking altogether because they are tired of hearing the same response. However, research has shown that children who perceive low communication from their parents report more mental and behavioural health difficulties. As a result, parents may feel discouraged. How can they get their kids to talk

about their school day, without irritating them or having them shut down? Communication at different ages Across all ages, studies have found that parental communication can protect against low self-esteem and poor academic achievement. High parental involvement can also positively influence children's school engagement, educational goals and academic outcomes. And notably, positive communication can strengthen feelings of connectedness between parents and children. But like all aspects of development, communication skills unfold over time. Kindergarten to Grade 1 School day conversations with young children typically revolve around school subjects, new friendships or concrete experiences. For example, a young child might share: ``I played on the monkey bars at recess!'' You can further support your young child's development by organizing and labelling their experiences. For example, ``I saw that Joey took your toy today. How did that make you

feel?'' It can also be helpful to label emotions for children, by verbalizing what you notice, such as: ``It sounds like you were feeling angry because Joey took your toy.'' Grades 2 - 3 Friendships become increasingly important to your child. They may be more interested in talking about their new peer relationships than schoolwork. Try showing interest by asking about their friends, such as: ``Tell me about your friend. What do they like to do at recess?'' Grades 4 - 5 Kids might start to view your questions as demands, leading to less information sharing. It may be easier to approach questions by asking about your child's peers to start a conversation. You might try asking: ``What do your friends think about the new science teacher?'' Grades 6 - 12 The establishment of personal identity and independence is an essential part of adolescence. As a result, your teen may seek out more privacy and share less information with you. You can sup-

port these developmental milestones by demonstrating your interest in their opinions allowing your teen some privacy when needed, and allowing them to take part in family decision making. Regardless of your child's age, keep in mind that the quality of frequent but small positive conversations you have with your child over time outweigh the importance of lengthy, drawn-out conversations. Tips for getting kids to open up Communication is a two-way street. How can parents communicate with children when they don't seem responsive? 1. Ask open-ended questions The question ``How was your day?'' is considered a closed-ended question because it can be answered with one word. Certainly, for some kids, this question could prompt a lengthy chat. But for others, these questions result in the conversation stoppers discussed above. If that's the case, try to get the discussion going with an open-ended question like ``Tell me what you liked most about your day.'' Or you could reflect

on something you noticed as a lead-in: ``I see you are in a mixed grade with older kids now. What did you notice about the Grade 4s?'' 2. Avoid many questions right after school Kids are often quite tired at the end of the school day. If they are not up to talking right away, try to hold back on your questions until they have had time to relax and have a snack. Once refuelled, they may be up for sharing about their school day. 3. For specific information, vary your angle You might want to know something specific about your child's day, like whether they were bullied or if someone caused them to feel upset. However, asking direct questions like ``Why are you so mad?'' can feel like an invasion of privacy. If you're concerned about your child, start with a different angle to the question. You could take an indirect route, like ``You seemed upset after school, what happened?'' Or, begin a conversation with a broader question first, such as: ``Do you think any kids in your class are being

bullied?'' 4. Listen before your talk Parents who listen communicate that they are interested in and understanding of their child. But becoming a good listener can take practice. When your child tells you about their day, put away devices, try to maintain eye contact and provide your undivided attention. 5. Promote problem solving If your child mentions they are struggling in some way at school, such as with a peer or teacher, or in understanding their math homework, avoid trying to fix it for them. Rather, use it as an opportunity to foster problem solving by encouraging your child to come up with a few possible solutions to their problem. Then help them pick what seems like the best solution, and then evaluate with them whether the solution was effective or not. If not, go back to the drawing board together and try again! This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.

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September 4th, 2019

Poet Belcourt allies with 'resistance' The cultural cognoscenti rains down plaudits and praise on Billy-Ray Belcourt, but it's not their approval he's after. The 24-year-old Cree scholar — the youngest-ever winner of Canada's richest poetry prize — says this hailing can feel ``skewered'' coming from the largely white arts-scene elite who have been so quick to laud his efforts. His ambitions lie with Canada's flourishing Indigenous creative community, he says, even as he operates within the institutions that have so often reduced their stories to reinforce white-centric narratives. In his new poetry collection, Belcourt turns this colonial gaze on itself to reframe the past, as he works in tandem with other Indigenous writers to envision a new future. ``It's a disservice to try to understand us in a way that's sort of easy or simple,'' Belcourt said by phone from Edmonton. ``Sometimes, that means ... you have to refuse legibility. You have to opt for a writing or an art practice

that is sometimes obscure or difficult in the hopes that it also reflects both the difficulties or complicatedness of our lives.'' Belcourt, who is from the Driftpile Cree Nation in northern Alberta, won the $65,000 Griffin Poetry Prize last year with his debut collection ``This Wound is a World.'' In his followup, ``NDN Coping Mechanisms,'' the 2016 Rhodes scholar blends verse, photos and redacted texts to put forward a ``counter-history'' of Canada from an Indigenous, queer perspective. ``NDN'' is an internet shorthand that Indigenous people use to refer to themselves, but it can also be an acronym for ``Not Dead Native,'' revealing that part of the work of being Indigenous today is to ``refuse to die,'' Belcourt said. ``I think that part of the work of the poet in the 21st century in the West is to not just bear witness, but to trouble and denormalize the way in which cruelty actually is a part of the fabric of life in Canada,'' he said. ``(I) try to show that, as I

Belcourt, is from the Driftpile Cree Nation in northern AlberPHOTO SUBMITTED ta.

say in one of the poems, an entire citizenry is implicated in ongoing colonial violence against Native people.'' Belcourt said a key historical marker for the book was the trial of Saskatchewan farmer Gerald Stanley, who was acquitted of second-degree murder last year in the shooting death of Colten Boushie, a 22-year-old member of the Red Pheasant First Nation. He was struck by how the highly publicized case aligned with a long tradition of disregard for Indigenous life, particularly

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Our group gets together every otherother Thursday at Tourism building. We Our group gets together every Thursday at Tourism building. start with a potluck supper at 6:30. Attendees include survivors, We start with a potluck supper at 6:30. Attendees include survivors, caregivers, spouses, extended family, children and friends. For more caregivers, extended children and or friends. information on spouses, next meeting contact family, Terry (519)445-2470 Eva (905)768-3891.

For more information on next meeting contact Terry (519)445-2470 or Eva (905)768-3891. Helping Others to HelpThemselves Helping Others to HelpThemselves

Notice of Public Information Centre #2 GTA West Transportation Corridor Route Planning and Environmental Assessment Study, Stage 2 THE STUDY In June 2019, the Minister of Transportation announced that the government is resuming Stage 2 of the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) West Transportation Corridor Route Planning and Environmental Assessment (EA) Study. Building on the recommendations from Stage 1, the EA Study will identify the route, determine interchange locations and complete the preliminary design for a new transportation corridor within the Route Planning Study Area. The new multimodal transportation corridor will include a 400-series highway, transitway and potential goods movement priority features. The GTA West Transportation Corridor is vital transportation infrastructure that will help meet the projected growth in both population and employment identified in the Growth Plan for the Greater Golden Horseshoe (2019), and will deliver multiple benefits, including: • Greater connectivity between urban growth centres; • Enhanced people and goods movement; • Improved commuting; and • Greater economic vitality. The GTA West Study is being undertaken as an Individual EA in accordance with the Ontario EA Act and the GTA West Corridor EA Terms of Reference, which was approved by the Ontario Minister of the Environment on March 4, 2008. PUBLIC INFORMATION CENTRE #2 (PIC #2) PIC #2 will present the study process, the Technically Preferred Route, the 2019 Focused Analysis Area, and will introduce the opportunity to participate in developing Community Value Plans for the GTA West Study. PIC #2 will be an informal drop-in centre with Project Team representatives available to answer questions. The same information will be presented at each venue. Location and dates: Thursday, September 19, 2019 4:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Venetian Salon Château Le Jardin Conference Centre 8440 Highway 27 Woodbridge, ON L4L 1A5

Thursday, September 26, 2019 4:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Kinsmen Hall Gellert Community Centre 10241 Eighth Line Georgetown, ON L7G 4S5

Thursday, October 3, 2019 4:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Peel Junior Farmers Hall Brampton Fairgrounds 12942 Heart Lake Road Caledon, ON L7C 2J3

COMMENTS Comments and input regarding the study are encouraged and will be collected to assist the GTA West Project Team. This material will be maintained on file for use during the project and may be included in project documentation to meet the requirements of the Ontario EA Act. Information collected will be used in accordance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act and the Access to Information Act. With the exception of personal information, all comments will become part of the public record. If you have any accessibility requirements in order to participate in this project, please contact the Project Team. To contact the Project Team directly or to be added to the mailing list, please call the toll-free telephone line at 1-877-522-6916, send an email to project_team@gta-west.com, or write to the Project Team at the addresses provided below. Study information is available on the project website: www.gta-west.com. Jim Dowell, P.Eng., Consultant Project Manager WSP 610 Chartwell Road, Suite 300 Oakville, ON L6J 4A5

Lukasz Grobel, P.Eng., MTO Project Manager Ontario Ministry of Transportation, Central Region 159 Sir William Hearst Avenue, 4th Floor Toronto, ON M3M 0B7

Des renseignements sont disponibles en français en composant 289 835-2484 (Yannick Garnier).

September 4th, 2019

Poet ally

continued in the Prairies. The threats can be as menacing as they are mundane, he said. Jogging through the streets of Edmonton, Belcourt said he's been followed by suspicious stares, and some passersby will even cross the street to avoid him. This makes for an ``unlivable life,'' and now a few years older than Boushie was when he died, Belcourt confronts the possibility he could be next in the poem ``Canadian Horror Story.'' ``It feels unethical to age,'' he writes. ``If I die prematurely, forget burial/ just drop my body/ on the steps/ of the Supreme Court/ of Canada,'' the poem continues, cascading down the page like a staircase. Belcourt said he is keenly aware that non-Indigenous readers are drawn to stories of Indigenous suffering, while failing to reckon with their role in perpetrating it. ``I think it's actually a part of the process of white personhood, to be confronted with all of this trauma and state-sanctioned violence, and continue to go about living normally,'' said Belcourt. ``It actually reminds them again and again of their privilege.'' Belcourt, who is set to join the University of British Columbia's creative writing faculty next year, said he's trying to find a balance between recognizing the pain Indigenous people shoulder while emphasizing the ways they care for one another in striving towards freedom and joy. He's joined in this effort by a diverse cohort of Indigenous artists who are rebelling against imposed narratives to write their own. ``I like the idea of a critical mass of us sort of furtively building something that we don't necessarily know precisely what will come of it, but that always is about resistance,'' Belcourt said. ``The task will be on generations to come, I think, to figure out what precisely to do with that. Whether to refuse Canadian literature altogether, to refuse to participate in sort of more capitalist aspects of book publishing, whether to do something that sort of breaches the border of Canada.'' ``NDN Coping Mechanisms,'' published by House of Anansi Press, hits shelves Tuesday.


September 4th, 2019

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September 4th, 2019

'Art that's coming home:' Totem pole carved by inmates returning to First Nation PRINCE ALBERT, SK — Darlene Stonechild is preparing to bring a piece of her family's history home to her southeastern Saskatchewan First Nation. Her brother, Dale Stonechild, a prolific artist known primarily for his paintings, is one of the carvers behind a totem pole that has stood for almost 45 years on a bank of the North Saskatchewan River in Prince Albert. The pole was created and gifted to the city by a group of inmates from Saskatchewan Penitentiary in 1975, but has to be removed because the base is rotting and it's no longer safe. Judy MacLeod Campbell, the city's arts and cultural director, told paNOW that cultural protocols were followed to decide what to do with the damaged pole. Having been told that the lead carver, James Sutherland, had likely died, and without contact information for his family, the city next consulted with elders and knowledge keepers from

the Indigenous community. It was ultimately decided the pole would be laid to rest near the penitentiary. When Darlene Stonechild learned of that plan, she reached out to McLeod Campbell and told her she'd like to bring the artifact back to the Okanese First Nation on behalf of her brother. ``So we worked together and we worked it out,'' Stonechild said. ``We can display it in Okanese where his home is. This is his homeland, where his relatives are, and his grandchildren can be proud of something.'' Stonechild talks to her brother, who is in prison in Abbotsford, B.C., regularly over the phone and said he approved the plan. His sister learned about the history of the landmark from him. During the 1970s, when her brother and Sutherland were incarcerated at Saskatchewan Penitentiary, there was no recreational programming. ``So what the people of (Prince Albert) would do,

they would come into the penitentiary and they'd have picnics and barbecues and play football, and soccer and play cards with the inmates,'' she said. The activities were hugely important to the prisoners, she said. ``I think they kept them sane at a time when nobody was there. Their families weren't there.'' As a symbol of their appreciation, some of the inmates — led by Sutherland with Stonechild as his main assistant — carved the totem pole as a gift to the city. Stonechild is responsible for much of the painting, including the wings of the thunderbird that crowns the pole. Darlene Stonechild said her brother was always interested in art, but wasn't able to use his gifts to their full potential early in life. He and his siblings spent much of their childhood and adolescence attending the Gordon Indian Residential School in Punnichy, Sask.


September 4th, 2019

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www.sixnationsfoodbank.com

NEW BUILDING FUNDRAISING CAMPAIGN

13

Six Nations Community Food Bank strives to meet the short-term need for food, and find long-term solutions to hunger within our community.

Gold Sponsor: $5,000 Plus

• Advertising: written acknowledgement on sponsor level board • Speaking opportunity at Euchre Tournament • Set up of organization information at new food bank building SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITIES • Recognition on food bank website and other OHSWEKEN, ONTARIO social media – Facebook, local newspapers AUGUST 12, 2019 – SEPTEMBER 30, 2019 • Free admission for 4 to Food Bank Community The food bank is reaching out Events for 1 year – Euchre Tournament October 2019, Golf Tournament in June 2020 • Certificate of Appreciation and name on to community organizations, plaque to be displayed at the entrance to new associations, Six Nations Elected food bank

Council, Six Nations of the Grand Silver Sponsor: Up to $2,500 Plus River Economic Development Trust and surrounding businesses for your support in reaching our deficit of $75,000 by September 30, 2019. The new location will continue to offer food service every Thursday from 9:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

• Recognition as Silver Sponsor on the food bank social media – website, Facebook, local newspapers • Set up of organization information at new food bank building • Speaking opportunity at Euchre Tournament • Free admission for 2 to Food Bank Community Events for 1 year – Euchre Tournament October, 2019, Golf Tournament in June 2020 • Certificate of Appreciation and name on plaque to be displayed at the entrance to the new food bank

A GoFundMe page has been set up or donations may be made directly to the food bank. For information on becoming a Sponsor for the Food Bank Building Fund, please contact Ellen Rose Jamieson for more details: Ellen Rose Jamieson Food Bank Coordinator 519-771-0025 ellenrose@sixnationsfoodbank.com

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September 4th, 2019

'Molly of Denali' brings rare Alaska representation and education to kids TORONTO — Early in production for the new Alaska-set children's animated series ``Molly of Denali,'' creative producer Princess Daazhraii Johnson's young son got a sneak peek — and his reaction moved her to tears. The scene saw the mother of the Indigenous protagonist, 10-year-old Molly (Shahnyaa) Mabray, cutting a traditional dish of whale skin and blubber known as muktuk with a customary knife called an ulu. ``My son goes, 'Ah! That's my favourite! And she has that knife you have!''' said Johnson, who lives in Fairbanks, Alaska and is Neets'aii Gwich'in, with family from Arctic Village, Alaska. ``He was so shocked and elated to see a representation of our lives on the screen. I got really emotional and was like, 'Oh my gosh, this is why we're doing this — so that they can see themselves.'''

``Molly of Denali'' is produced by Vancouver's Atomic Cartoons and is making waves for being a rare children's series featuring an PHOTO FILE Alaska Native lead character.

Debuting Monday on CBC after recently premiering on PBS, ``Molly of Denali'' is produced by Vancouver's Atomic Cartoons and is making waves for being a rare children's series fea-

turing an Alaska Native lead character. Washington-based Sovereign Bill voices the adventurous and curious lead heroine, who helps her parents run the Denali

Trading Post in the fictional Alaska village of Qyah. Molly has cultural heritage from three Athabascan groups and helps educate viewers on her background through daily adventures, internet searches and chats with relatives. Veteran Indigenous actor Lorne Cardinal of Squamish, B.C., voices her Grandpa Nat. In the first episode, Molly's quest to find out why Grandpa Nat doesn't sing or play the drum anymore leads to a lesson about the history of residential schools. ``We don't go in-depth into it, because it is a show for kids, but we do let them know that it had an impact and that ... he can get his voice back ... (that) it's happened to a lot of Indigenous people, across both sides of the border, and to not dwell on the negative but the positive,'' Cardinal, who is Cree from Alberta, said in an interview in Toronto. ``I was lucky in that episode specifically to speak for my mother and father, who were both residential school survivors who had those things happen, had their being taken away from them and their self-worth, their

identity, their language, their beliefs. They were being constantly told that they were not worth anything.'' That particular Grandpa Nat story was inspired by one of several elders who are on the show's Alaska Native advisory wgroup, said Johnson. The show's creators also visited Alaska and partnered with the Alaska Native community to ensure the show was authentic, accurate and respectful, she added. The series is targeted at a four-to-eight-year-old audience, and most of the voice actors are First Nations. Sovereign Bill is a member of both the Muckleshoot Indian Tribe and is T'ak Dein Taan clan of the Tlingit Tribe. The script is peppered with Alaska native language words, and each episode includes an educational, two-minute live-action piece filmed with Alaskan kids across the state of Alaska. ``It means so much to finally have this sort of representation,'' said Johnson. ``I didn't grow up seeing myself represented in film and television and I definitely didn't see positive depictions of Native people.''

For Cardinal, growing up watching television he remembers ``a fellow on 'The Forest Rangers''' who ``was talking to bears and stuff,'' he recalled. ``I was like, 'Oh, man, that's awesome!' and then I'd find out later that he was a Ukrainian fellow with shoe polish in his hair,'' said Cardinal. ``Somebody asked him what he was saying in those language parts and he'd go, 'I don't know, I was just making sounds.' So I went, 'Oh, OK.' I was deceived as a child.'' ``Molly of Denali'' season 1 is still in production and also has a podcast, online interactive elements, and tie-in books due out this fall. The theme song is by members of the Alaska Native group Pamyua, with fiddle work from Brennan Firth, who is Gwich'in from Fort McPherson in the Northwest Territories. Audiences in the U.S. say the show is pushing them to think critically and ``giving them the opportunity to have a dialogue with their children about these histories and also the fun things that happen in the show, like learning how to tap birch trees to make syrup,'' Johnson said. ``I'm also just grateful to have a series that humanizes us and makes us a modern-day people,'' she added, noting it's a contemporary story featuring an Indigenous character who's computer-savvy. ``It's really important to show that we are modern, thriving, everyday people. We've been relegated to the past in the history of film and television and to show us as modern, everyday people is really important.'' ``Molly of Denali'' will have back-to-back episodes on CBC on the morning of Sept. 2, before moving to its regular time slot on Saturday mornings beginning Sept. 7. Kool Kidz Ice & Water hosted a Youth Program for Six Nations kids over the Summer Holidays. Kool Kidz Youth Program taught kids aged 8-12 how to clock in and out of work, customer service, handling money and preparing for the next work day. The program had 6 total applicants and they predict more next year. "Let's help our kids make good decisions and teach them them about the working life at a young age," they said in a press release.


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September 4th, 2019

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Brazil leader criticizes reserves

JACUNDA NATIONAL FOREST — Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro is criticizing his country's indigenous protection policies, which he says are used by outside forces to limit Brazil's economy and give excessive amounts of land to tribes. Bolsonaro met Tuesday

s u l p r u s rp

with governors of states in the Amazon region to discuss the fires in the region and listened to them complaining about indigenous reserves, saying they impede development. Bolsonaro said that ``many reserves are located strategically'' and said ``someone arranged this.''

He didn't specify what outside forces might be involved. The president said that indigenous peoples ``don't speak our language, but they have managed to get 14% of our national territory'' and he added, ``One of the intentions of this is to impair us.''

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September 4th, 2019

Ontario rips up Ring of Fire deal with First Nations TORONTO — Ontario is ripping up an agreement with First Nations on building road access to the Ring of Fire region in favour of pursuing individual deals with the nine communities, saying the move will speed up development of the mining project. Greg Rickford, the minister in charge of the file, announced Tuesday that the new approach will mean the government can address specific community needs and opportunities with First Nation communities. The previous Liberal government had signed a regional framework agreement in 2014 with nine First Nations in the region. In 2017, then-premier Kathleen Wynne warned that she would move to bilateral talks if there was no progress on an overall deal and signed agreements with three of the nine communities.

Ohsweken - 1721 Chiefswood Road Call (519)445-0000 Open Mondays and Wednesdays 9:30-4:30pm

The Progressive Conservatives said they were hitting the reset button on the negotiations entirely. ``Despite over a decade of talk and more than $20 million invested, real progress on the Ring of Fire has been met with delay after delay,'' Rickford said in a statement. ``That's why Ontario is taking a new, pragmatic approach to unlocking the Ring of Fire's potential, one that includes working directly with willing First Nation partners.'' The region, about 500 kilometres northeast of Thunder Bay, Ont., holds one of the world's richest deposits of chromite _ used to make stainless steel _ as well as nickel, copper and platinum, valued at anywhere from $30 billion to $60 billion. A key part of the project is the construction of roads between the Matawa First Nations, the provincial highway network

and the Ring of Fire. An east-west road connecting the Webequie and Nibinamik communities to the highway network and the mining development is planned. A road connecting Marten Falls First Nation to the existing provincial highway network is also planned. Noront Resources, the major claim holder in the Ring of Fire region, has its own exploration and project advancement agreement with Marten Falls First Nation. Marten Falls Chief Bruce Achneepineskum and Noront Resources President Alan Coutts praised the new approach by the Tory government in a joint statement on Tuesday. Both said they will continue to engage the additional First Nations communities that ``are committed to developing'' the project.

Six Nations Fall Fair

Brantford - 268 Brant Ave Call (519) 752-0121 Open evening and Saturday hours

Rain or Shine

Saturday September 7, 2019 DID YOU KNOW? If you are diabetic and have uncontrolled blood sugars, you may start to develop Diabetic Retinopathy. Diabetic Retinopathy affects the blood vessels in the light sensitive tissue called the retina that lines the back of the eye. It is the most common cause of vision loss among people with diabetes and the leading cause of visual impairment and blindness among working age adults. DID YOU KNOW? Diabetics are covered by OHIP annually for eye exams. Call our office to book your OHIP covered eye exam now!

Ohsweken Fairgrounds, Inside the Blue Track Categories: Traditional, Recurve and Compound Bow

Gate Entry: $5.00 10-12yrs can borrow a bow

Archers Check-in: 8 am – 9 am

Competition: 9 am – 3 pm

Male & Female Archers

Ages: 10-12yrs, 13-17yrs, 18-45yrs, 46-60yrs and +60yrs

Bring: own bow, equipment, chair (optional canopy) Dress code: no flip flops, no jewellery and long hair must be tied back. Waiver must be signed by parents for youth 10-17yrs old to compete.

Please call 519-445-4779 to register


September 4th, 2019

TWO ROW TIMES

$10 admission on Saturday Sept 7th from 5pm - 9pm. (Concert Night with David Wilcox)

SCHEDULE All Weekend All Weekend All Weekend All Weekend All Weekend

Midway Food Vendors Six Nations Farmers Display .... Outside Antique Tractor Display ............ Outside Warrior Park Obstacle .............. Outside

FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 6th See Schedule 3 Pitch Baseball Tournament ...............Ball Diamond 10AM – 7PM Tradeshow/Exhibit Hall .......................Community Hall 11AM – 1PM Kids Day Events...................................Blue Track 11AM – 3PM Redbarn Craft Workshops ...................Dajoh Building 5:30PM Greasy Pig Registration .......................Horse Track 6PM Greasy Pig ...........................................Horse Track 7PM – 9PM Miss Six Nations (MSN) Ambassador ...Dajoh Gym Program – Traditional Presentations

SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 8th See Schedule 3 Pitch Baseball Tournament ...........Ball Diamond 11AM – NOON Pet Show ........................................Main Stage SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 7th 11AM – 2PM Smoke Dance Registration ...............Arena Lobby See Schedule 3 Pitch Baseball Tournament ....................Ball Diamond 11AM – 3PM Car and Bike Show ..........................Outside 8AM – 9AM Six Nations Archery Tournament ..............Blue Track 11AM – 4PM Tradeshow/Exhibit Hall ....................Community Hall 10AM – 1PM Baby Show ...............................................Gym NOON – 1PM Bits of Bluegrass .............................Main Stage 10AM – 2PM Red Barn Workshops ................................Dajoh Building NOON-5PM Cultural Showcase ...........................Arena 10AM – 7PM Tradeshow/Exhibit Hall ............................Community Hall 2PM Smoke Dance Competition ..............Arena NOON – 12:30PM MSN Ambassador Program ......................Main Stage 1PM – 2PM Sugar & Old Spice ............................Main Stage – Impromptu Questions 2PM – 3PM Old Chicago .....................................Main Stage 1PM – 4PM Horse Races .............................................Horse Track 2PM End of Season Six Nations Minor .....Track 4PM – 5PM MSN Ambassador Program – Crowning ....Dajoh Gym Lacrosse Parade 7PM – 7:45PM The Healers ..............................................Main Stage 2PM – 4PM Bingo ..............................................Dajoh Gym 8PM-9:30PM David Wilcox ...........................................Main Stage 3PM – 5PM Demolition Derby ............................In front of grandstands 9:45PM Fireworks 4PM – 6PM Exhibit Pick Up ................................Community Hall 9PM Fireworks (Rain date only) ...............Ball Diamond

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Sunday September 8, 2019 Chiefswood Park Lower Level Team Check-in: 10:30am Races Begin: 11:30am Canoe Teams: Male, Female, Co-ed Individual: Kayak and Stand-up Paddle.

Team Age Categories: 10-12 yrs old, 13-17 yrs old, 18-45 yrs old, 46-60 yrs old, +60 yrs old

Canoe, Kayak and Stand-up Paddle equipment will be provided

Free BBQ will be on site Rain Date: Only if thunder and lightning it will be rescheduled for Saturday, September 21, 2019

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September 4th, 2019


TWO ROW TIMES

September 4th, 2019

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TWO ROW TIMES

September 4th, 2019

CONNECT SHARE BE HEARD HEAL I believe Redpath is an essential first step in the healing of troubled and vulnerable Indigenous populations. – Crown Attorney in Northern Ontario

• 15 years of proven success • Uses culture as a foundation • Believes that community should control services • Builds on community priorities • Integrates into community wellness plans • Develops and builds capacity • Provides quality mental wellness programs and services

• Responsive, flexible and reliable • Proactive crisis supports and services • Is trauma informed • Supports worker wellness • Assists leadership • Creates partnerships and networking • Provides advocacy • Reduces stigma

Friday September 6, 2019

Gathering Place from 11:30-3pm

Redpath helps participants to think differently about themselves and to make positive changes in their lives. – Judge, Ontario Court of Justice

Helps people get off Suboxone and Methadone PREVENTION

INTERVENTION

TREATMENT

AFTERCARE

Redpath helps clients deal with emotions they have been avoiding all their life. – Social Worker

Get Redpath Services in YOUR Community NOW! Contact Us! Len@redpath.io This program addresses issues in a culturally relevant manner. – Probation & Parole officer

This is a free lunch for our community elders to welcome Elders from Walpole Island Transportation will be provided but limited time frame

Craft Vendors are welcome to set up table for free. Games, Karoake, Crafts will be offered Call to register and for transportation call 519-445-4779

Thank you so much for teaching us to help our community. – Addiction Worker 208-311 George St N, Peterborough, ON K9J 3H3 705-740-2003 | 888-887-7981 toll free | 705-740-2055 fax

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September 4th, 2019

For more information contact Jessica Miller Williams jmillerwilliams@sixnations.ca 226.227.2192 ext 3288

TWO ROW TIMES

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ACE

TWO ROW TIMES

September 4th, 2019

arts. culture. entertainment.

Northern Cradleboard Triplets receive praise online STAFF REPORT

editor@tworowtimes.com

TWO ROW TIMES

Michelle Kakegamic, 34, is an Ojibwe and Cree mother of three who has been the recipient of international attention over a family photo. The registered nurse from Muskrat Dam First Nation, Ont., a small reserve where less than 300 people live, received dozens of messages and thousands of comments over the image showing her triplets swaddled in cradleboards. Kakegamic shared a photo of her triplets with the Facebook page Native Breastfeeding Week, to mark the milestone of breastfeeding them for six months. Many congratulated the mother on her milestone, along with another detail: the handcrafted baby carriers cradling her three daughters. A tikinagan, also called a dikinaagan in Anishanaabe, is a facet of the cradleboard that many Indigenous peoples have used to carry their babies. Traditionally, children are swaddled and laced up in a moss bag (the moss’ disinfectant properties served as a diaper).

Cradleboards are a widespread traditional indigenous method used to carry infants in a way that allowed the mothers to freely use their PHOTO FILE hands. .

But cradleboards are a widespread traditional indigenous method used to carry infants in a way that allowed the mothers to freely use their hands.

A variety of Southwestern, Eastern Woodlands, and Northern Plains Tribes have traditionally used cradleboards such as the Apache, Hopi, Lakota,

Blood Quantum to headline at TIFF STAFF REPORT

editor@tworowtimes.com

TWO ROW TIMES

Jeff Barnaby, a Mi’gmaq filmmaker, has worked hard for 12 years to make the film Blood Quantum a reality. The film was captured in rural Quebec and Kahnawake Mohawk Territory with indigenous actors including Michael Greyeyes (Fear The Walking Dead), Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers (On the Farm) and Forrest Goodluck (The Revenant) telling the horror story about a zombie outbreak, where the only people immune to the outbreak

On September 5th the world premiere of Blood Quantum will be at the Toronto International Film Festival. PHOTO FILE

are the indigenous population. Through the story; amid the chaos of the zombie plague, a tribal sheriff must protect his son’s pregnant girlfriend,

apocalyptic refugees, and reserve residents from the hordes of walking white corpses. In June of this year, Shudder, AMC Networks’ genre streaming service, has picked up U.S., UK/ Ireland, and Australia/NZ rights to zombie thriller Blood Quantum from XYZ Films. But that isn’t the only accomplishment. On September 5th the world premiere of Blood Quantum will be at the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) as the opening night film of the Midnight Madness section. TIFF individual tickets were put up on sale on Tuesday, September 2.

Crow, Iroquois, and Penobscot among many others. Each nation has its own unique version. For instance, the Navajo constructed cradleboards

from lashed wooden rods while Oneida cradleboards were constructed using wood boards and leather strips. Other types were woven moss bags attached

to wooden frames or baskets. Within any one nation, the cradleboards were unique. The family would make the cradleboard around the time of the new infant’s birth. They were made with the care of the infant in mind, often with protective measures to ensure that the infant would remain safe if the board were to fall, but also with attached designs and toys. The end result was a unique product that brought the whole family together, both old and new, in its construction. Forced assimilation policies enforced by colonial government rule tore apart Indigenous family structures and undermined child-rearing practices like the tikinagan. So, Indigenous mothers have taken it upon themselves to use the cradle board as a form of connecting to culture and passing it on to their little ones. When it comes to the online response, Kakegamic is happy that others are curious about a child-rearing item that’s part of everyday life in her community. Support from those around the mother has been essential to raising her family.

Horror stories from the Arctic come in Taaqtumi STAFF REPORT

editor@tworowtimes.com

TWO ROW TIMES

“Taaqtumi” is an Inuktitut word that means “in the dark” and is the name for the bindings of the book that holds a selection of horror stories from the borders of the coldest

climates in Canada. Taaqtumi: An Anthology of Arctic Horror Stories is set to be released on paperback on September 10 of this year, and the “spine-tingling horror stories” written and composed by Northern writers show just how dangerous darkness can be. The stories includes the tales of a family clinging to survival out on the tundra after a vicious zombie virus, a door that beckons, waiting to unleash the terror behind it and even a post-apocalyptic community in the far North where things aren’t quite what they seem. The stories come from

award-winning authors Richard Van Camp, Rachel and Sean Qitsualik-Tinsley, Aviaq Johnston, and others which are hoped to thrill and entertain even the most seasoned horror fan. The anthology on Goodreads has reached three 4 out of 5 star ratings. Janet Martin wrote “A wonderful collection of stories told by the native people who know the Arctic best. While the story telling mechanics vary, all of the stories convey a sense of life in cold and darkness; most draw on the mythology and folklore of the region.”


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TWO ROW TIMES

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TAX. OFFER INCLUDES HST. COST OF BORROWING ISor$0. Vehicle(s) mayavailable be shown with optional equipment. Dealer may for less. Limited time valid at participating Retail offersor may be cancelled or changed at any time without notice. See your Ford Dealer for complete details or call the Ford Customer Relationship Centre at incentives/offers at the time of vehicle factory order or time of vehicle delivery, but sell not both orlease combinations thereof. Retail offers not offers. combinableOffers with anyonly CPA/GPC or Daily Rental incentives, thedealers. Commercial Upfit Program the Commercial Fleet Incentive Program (CFIP). 1-800-565-3673. For factory orders, afinancing customer either take oftotime eligible raincheckable Ford retail customer promotional incentives/offers available at the time of vehicle factory order or complete time of dealers. vehicle butFord not both orforcombinations thereof. Retail offers notorders, combinable with any CPA/GPC Vehicle(s) may be shown with optional equipment. Dealer may sell or lease foroffers. less. Limited time offers. Offers only valid atless. participating dealers. offers may be cancelled orvalid changed at any time without notice. See Dealer complete details oror call the Ford Customer Relationship at * Until January 2, 2018, receive 0% APR purchase on newmay 2018 F-150 models foradvantage upless. to 72Limited months qualified retail customers, on approved credit from Ford Credit Canada Not all buyers will qualify for lowest interest rate. Example: 2018 F-150 XLT SuperCrew 4x4 300A/2018 F-150 Lariat SuperCrew 4x4 2.7Lmay 501A for $40,744/$58,514 (after $3,875/$5,665 down payment or equivalent trade-in, and Vehicle(s) may be shown with optional equipment. Dealer may sell or(OAC) lease for Limited time offers. Offers only at participating Retail offers be cancelled changed at any without Vehicle(s) may be shown with optional equipment. Dealer may sell or lease for Offers only valid at participating dealers. Retail offersCompany. may be cancelled orRetail changed atthe any time without notice. See your Ford Dealer for details ordelivery, call theyour Ford Customer Relationship Centre at 1-800-565-3673. For factory atime customer mayCentre either take Manufacturer Rebates of $2,000/$2,000 deducted andaincluding and aireither tax of $1,900/$1,900) purchase financed atof 0%/0% APR for 72/72 months, monthly payment is $647.83/$929.50 (theor sum of twelve (12) monthly divided by periods gives with payee anor every two weeks payment of $299/$429), interest costpurchase of ist$0/$0 orthereof. APR ofthe 0%Commercial /0% andEcoSport, total Fleet to benot repaid is $46,644/$66,924. Taxes payable on full 1-800-565-3673. For factory orders, customer may take advantage of eligible raincheckable Ford retail customer promotional available at payments the time of vehicle factory order time of vehicle delivery, but not both orborrowing combinations Retail offers combinable with any*Driver-assist CPA/GPC oradvantage Daily Rental incentives, the Commercial Upfifreight t Program orcharges the Commercial Fleet Incentive Program (CFIP). *Ford Employee Pricing (“Employee Pricing”) is available from July 3 26 tocombinable September 30, 2019 (the “Program Period”), on the lease ofornew 2018 most new 2019/2020 Ford vehicles of eligible raincheckable Ford retail customer promotional incentives/offers available at the time vehicle factory order or time of vehicle delivery, butincentives/offers not both combinations thereof. Retail offers not any CPA/GPC or Daily Rental incentives, the Commercial Upfior Program Incentive Program (CFIP). notice. See your Ford Dealer for complete details or call the Ford Customer Relationship Centre at 1-800-565-3673. For factory orders, a customer may either take advantage of eligible raincheckable Ford retail customer promotional incentives/ amount of purchase financing price after Manufacturer Rebates have been deducted. Down payment may be required based on approved † credit from Ford Credit Canada Company. All purchase finance offers include freight, air tax, HST, and PPSA charges, but exclude administration and registration fees of up to $799 and fuel fill charge of up to $120. All prices are based on Manufacturer’s Suggested Retail Price. or Daily Rental incentives, Commercial Upfi t Program or the Commercial Fleet Incentive Program (CFIP). *Ford0% Employee Pricing (“Employee Pricing”) isMustang available from July to Lariat September 30,2.7L 2019 (the “Program Period”), the purchase orretail lease of new on 2018 EcoSport, most new 2019/2020 Ford vehicles features areall supplemental and dothe not replace thecab driver’s attention, judgment and need to control the vehicle. Until July 2, 2019, receive APR purchase financing on newMustang, 2019 Ford F-150 SuperCab or SuperCrew gas engine models for up toRanger 60 on months toSuper qualified customers, approved creditto (OAC) frompricing Ford Credit Canada Company. (excluding 2019/2020 cutaway/chassis models, E-Series stripped chassis, F-150 Raptor, F-550, F-650/F-750, ShelbyTM GT350/GT350R Bullitt, Ford3 GT, and 502A 2020with Escape, Explorer, Expedition, and Duty). Employee Pricing refers A-Plan ordinarily available to offers available atthe the time of302A vehicle factory order or time vehicle delivery, not both combinations thereof. Retail offers not combinable with any or Rental incentives, the Commercial Upfit Program or Commercial Not allCanada buyers will qualify lowest interest rate. 2019Total F-150 SuperCrew Lariat 502A $59,049 purchase fibut nanced at 0% APR for 60 months, monthly payment is $984.15, cost of from borrowing isparticipating $0and (RDPRM registration andCPA/GPC related up toDaily $52ofin and towith repaid $59,049 (up totaxes. $59,101 in Quebec). down payment required subject **Purchase a new 2017 F-150 for XLT SuperCrew 4x4 2.7L forExample: $46,199 (after Manufacturer Rebate ofof $9,000 deducted). Taxes payable onbe fullF-650/F-750, amount of purchase price after totalGT350/GT350R manufacturer rebate has been deducted. Offers include freight air tax, but exclude and fees registration fees toRanger $799, fuel filltotal charge ofbeup to $120isEmployee and allCFIP, applicable All prices areA-Plan based No on pricing Manufacturer’s Suggested Retail Price. (excluding all 2019/2020 cutaway/chassis cab models, E-Series stripped chassis, F-150vehicle Raptor, F-550, ShelbyTM Mustang, Mustang Bullitt, Ford GT, and 2020 Escape, Explorer, Expedition, and Super Duty). Pricing refers to ordinarily available toto Ford of employees (excluding any Unifor-/CAW-negotiated programs). The new must delivered oror factory-ordered during the Program Period your Ford administration Dealer. Employee Pricing isupQuebec) not combinable CPA, GPC, Daily Rental Allowance andthe A/X/Z/D/F-Plan programs. *onRebates” the approval of credit by2019, Ford Credit. Taxes payable full amount ofAllowances) purchase price. All purchase finance offers include freight and airRegular tax charges but exclude options, Green LevyFord (ifF-150 applicable, and except incontrol Quebec), license, fuel fill charge, insurance, dealer PDI in Quebec), PPSA (not applicable in2019, Quebec), RDPRM registration and related fees adjustments upprograms. to $52 (only are UntilFord January 2018, receive $2,000/$9,000 in(CFIP). “Manufacturer (Delivery with the purchase or lease ofnew a new 2018/2017 F-150 Cab XL 4x2 Value Leader -- all stripped chassis, Raptor, F-650/F-750, Shelby® GT350/GT350R Mustang excluded. Delivery allowances are(except not combinable with any fleet consumer incentives. of2,Incentive Canada employees (excluding any Unifor-/CAW-negotiated programs). The vehicle must be(excluding delivered or factory-ordered during the Program Period from your participating Ford Dealer. Employee Pricing is not combinable with CPA, GPC, CFIP, Daily Rental Allowance and A/X/Z/D/F-Plan Fleet Program features are supplemental and do not replace the driver’s attention, judgment and need to the vehicle. ^Until May 17, 2019 and between May 28 and 31, receive $5,500 in “Manufacturer ^Until September 30, receive $15,088 inDriver-assist Total Ford Employee Price adjustments with the purchase or lease of a new 2019 F-150 Limited. Total Employee Price adjustments are a combination of Employee Price adjustment $10,588 and delivery allowance of $4,500. Employee Price in Quebec), administration fees (except in Quebec), and taxes. All prices are based on Manufacturer’s Suggested Retail Price. ‡Until July 2, 2019, receive $3,750 / $4,750 / $5,750 / $6,250 in “Manufacturer Rebates” (Delivery Allowances) with the purchase or lease of a new 2019: F-150 Regular Cab 4x2 XL Value Leader / F-150 SuperCrew Platinum or Limited with gas ^Until September 30, 2019, receive $15,088 inorAllowance Total Ford Employee the purchase oroflease ofRegular aand new 2019 F-150 Limited. Ford Employee Priceand adjustments are aor combination Employee Price adjustment $10,588 and deliveryallowances allowance of are $4,500. Price adjustments Ourcombinable advertised prices (Delivery includeCPA, Freight, Air Tax, and PPSA (if financed leased). Add dealer administration andadjustments registration fees ofwith up toDelivery $799, fuel fill charge up toare $120 applicable taxes, then drive away. not GPC, CFIP, Daily Rental A/X/Z/D/F-Plan allowances not combinable with any flTotal eet consumer ©2019 Fordwith Motor of of Canada, Limited. All rights reserved. Rebates” Allowances) with theengine purchase orofPrice lease of aprograms. new F-150 (excluding Cab 4X2 XL Value Leader, Raptor, SuperCab SuperCrew XL/XLT withXL, diesel engines). Delivery notEmployee any2.7Lare engine, SuperCabwith or SuperCrew Platinum or Limited with diesel /and F-150 (excluding Regular Cab 4x22019 XL Value Leader, Raptor, SuperCrew Platinum or Limited with gas engine, SuperCabincentives. or SuperCrew Lariat 502A 2.7L Company gas engine, SuperCab or SuperCrew Platinum or Limited with diesel engine) / 2019 F-150 SuperCab orcombinable SuperCrew Lariatwith 502A with gas ‡ Offer from Decemberwith 1, 2017 to February 28, 2018 to Canadian customers. Receive a total CAD$1,500 towardsprograms. the monthly orDelivery bi-weekly payments for lease or purchase financing (on approved credit (OAC)consumer from Ford Credit Canada Company), CAD$1,500 bonus for cash purchase, towards Limited. a new 2017/2018 Ford model, excluding all chassis cab, stripped chassis, and cutaway body models, Focus, Fiesta, C-MAX, F-150 Raptor, notvalid combinable CPA, CFIP, Daily and A/X/Z/D/F-Plan allowances are not combinable with any fleet incentives. ©2019or Ford Motor Company of Canada, All rights reserved. engine. Delivery allowances are notGPC, combinable with Rental any fleetAllowance consumer incentives. ©2019 Ford Motor Company of Canada, Limited. All rights reserved.

fleet consumer incentives. † Offer valid from April 2, 2019 to May 31, 2019 (the “Offer Period”) to Canadian residents. Receive a $750 Technology Bonus towards the purchase or lease of a new 2019 Ford Edge. Only one (1) Technology Bonus offer may be applied towards the purchase or lease of an eligible vehicle during the Offer Period. Offer is not raincheckable. ©2019 Ford Motor Company of Canada, Limited. All rights reserved.

Shelby® GT350/GT350R Mustang, Ford GT, F-250 to F-550, F-650 and F-750. Combinable with all retail offers excluding CFIP and Commercial Upfit Program (not combinable with CFIP, CPA, GPC, Daily Rental incentives. †Offer only valid from December 1, 2017 to February 28, 2018 (the "Offer Period") to resident Canadians with an eligible Costco membership on or before November 30, 2017. Receive $1,000 towards the purchase or lease of a new 2017/2018 Ford model (excluding Focus, Fiesta, C-MAX, F-150 Raptor, Shelby® GT350/GT350R Mustang, Ford GT, EcoSport, Cutaway/Chassis Cab and F-650/F-750) (each an “Eligible Vehicle”). Limit one (1) offer per each Eligible Vehicle purchase or lease, up to a maximum of two (2) separate Eligible Vehicle sales per Costco Membership Number. Offer is transferable to persons domiciled with an eligible Costco member. Applicable taxes calculated before the offer amount is deducted. 92645_T2_R2_SeptEPTruck_10x11.indd 1 2019-08-20 4:26 ®Registered trademark of Price Costco International, Inc. used under license.1 92645_T2_R2_SeptEPTruck_10x11.indd 2019-08-20 4:26 PM ©2017 Ford Motor Company of Canada, Limited. All rights reserved.

DOCKET # #FPE RET DOCKET FPE RETA92645 A92645 REGION NA REGION NA

LIVE: LIVE:

None None

TRIM: TRIM:

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NA NA

START DATE: 08/12/19 START DATE: 08/12/19 MOD. DATE: 8-20-2019 4:26 PMPM MOD. DATE: 8-20-2019 4:26

140 Argyle Street South, 140 Argyle Street South, Caledonia Caledonia COLOURS: 4C COLOURS: 4C

PRODUCTION: PRODUCTION: Mario Pariselli Mario Pariselli CREATIVE: CREATIVE: Kevin Morris Kevin Morris ACCOUNT EXEC: ACCOUNT EXEC: Scott Breckles Scott Breckles PROJECT MANAGER: PROJECT MANAGER: NA NA

DATE DATE

888-932-7479 888-932-7479 905-765-4444 www.winegardford.com

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STUDIO STUDIO

PRODUCTION PRODUCTION

www.winegardford.com STUDIO: STUDIO: Mathur,Anant Anant Mathur,

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PM


26

TWO ROW TIMES

SPORTS

know the score.

September 4th, 2019

Just a Little Bit

Rivermen bring the Presidents Cup back to Grand River Rivermen take gold as three Haudenosaunee teams place in Kahnawake

STAFF REPORT

editor@tworowtimes.com

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TWO ROW TIMES

KAHNAWAKE — After bringing the Presidents Cup to Six Nations back in 2015, the Six Nations Rivermen were given another shot at the cup after beating out the Oakville Titans to later the provincial title. This year the tournament was hosted in Kahnawake by the Kahnawake Mohawks, and the newer Akwesasne Bucks joined this season to be the third Haudenosaunee run team. It was unprecedented that the three teams would take all of the medal recognition this past weekend, but knowing that the Rivermen were

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KAHAWAKE — After nearly a full week of lacrosse, the Six Nations Rivermen once again hoisted the Presidents Cup as National Senior ‘B’ Mens Box Lacrosse Champions on Sunday after claiming victory against the Akwesasne Bucks 9-5 in the gold medal game. PHOTO BY HAYLEY VYSE

returning to the national Senior-level box lacrosse

For the final games of the week, Kahnawake met with St. Albert and the Rivermen were paired with the Bucks for a rematch. But with the previous score, it was going to be a tough one. This time, the first period began with a goal from Johnny Powless which was followed by one from the Bucks, and another two from Gates Abrams. In between the Bucks scored one more for the rest of the period while the Rivermen racked up three more from Johnny Powless, Adam Bomberry and Marshall Powless. The second allowed for two more goals for the Rivermen, from Leleand Powless and Johnny Powless while the Bucks put up one. This brought the game to an uneasy score for the Bucks as the scoreboard rested at 8-3 for the Rivermen. They mustered two more goals in the third, but Greg Longboat Jr., closed the period with a final bury. This closed the championship game 9-5, and hoisted the Rivermen once again at the top of Senior ‘B’. The Bucks took silver medals and Kahnawake beat out St. Albert 12-6 for the bronze medal spot, keeping all three medals in Haudenosaunee territory.

championship, it was only expected that they would

After winning 9-5 Wayne VanEvery hoisted trophy, the Rivermen once again at the top of Senior ‘B’. The Bucks took silver medals and Kahnawake beat out St. Albert 12-6 for the bronze medal spot, PHOTO SUBMITTED keeping all three medals in Haudenosaunee territory. .

battle for gold. First they took Ladner last Monday 14-11, then St. Albert 12-8 on Tuesday and Kahnawake on Wednesday 15-6. But following those games came their match with Snake Island which ended in a tie 12-12 after an overtime period with no scoring for other side. But the following night the Rivermen redeemed their overtime tie with a win over Capital Region 11-3, bringing them to another tough opponent the following day. With nearly an undefeated score, the Rivermen faced off with the Akwesasne Bucks, who also had performed a single tie after a series of wins. And the Bucks came out hard as in the first period the Bucks put away three

straight goals and one more at the end. Marshall Powless found the back of the net as the only answer made for the period, giving the Bucks an early lead 1-4. In the second, the Bucks performed a three goal start again, but Zach Williams and Brooker Muir returned two. However the Bucks buried four more while Brooker Muir went for on unassisted goal and Greg Longboat Jr., earned another, bringing the score to 5-11 for the Bucks. The Bucks repeated another three consecutive goals to start off the third period, with a one goal answer by Jonathan Jimmerson at the end. This made the score 6-14 for the Bucks.

Just a Little Bit 1721 Chiefswood Rd Ohsweken Ontario

1721 Chiefswood Rd Ohsweken Ontario 445-4466 STORE(519) HOURS: MON - FRI 9-5Rd PM SA 1721 Chiefswood

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Stationary Gift Supplies


September 4th, 2019

Rivermen win Cup continued

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27

SN Chiefs break hearts after final loss to Lakers STAFF REPORT

editor@tworowtimes.com

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CLA President Joey Harris with Rivermen MVP of the tourney PHOTO BY HAYLEY VYSE Warren Hill.

SIX NATIONS — After moving into the final with the Peterborough Lakers, the SN Chiefs were hoped to deliver and for game one on Sunday, August 18, they did. They closed the game on top 12-10, and that following Tuesday they did it again with a final of 12-10. Things were looking good as their lead in the series was then 2-0. But the Lakers picked up the ante and burst through on Thursday, August 22 with a score of 8-9 over the Chiefs. This loss was the start of a trend for the rest of the series. On Friday, the Lakers won again 15-9 and while

SIX NATIONS — Although battling hard throughout the series, the Six Nations Chiefs gave up the PHOTO FROM TWITTER shot at the Mann Cup to the Peterborough Lakers after a full 6-game series.

fans flocked to see the game played within the GREAT Theatre on Six Nations, on Tuesday, August 27 the Lakers pulled another win 13-12. By Thursday, August 29 the Chiefs weren’t able to

keep up with the Lakers and the game closed 14-6, closing the final and giving the chance at the Mann Cup to the Lakers. That evening, the Chiefs Twitter took to posting a congratulatory message to

their opponents: “We would like to congratulate the [Peterborough Lakers] on a great season. Good luck out west. We know you'll do a great job representing [Major Series Lacrosse].”

Jordin Tootoo to visit Six Nations

STAFF REPORT

editor@tworowtimes.com

TWO ROW TIMES

Canadian Lacrosse Association President Joey Harris presents the cup to Rivermen Rayce Vyse, Holden Vyse and Greg Longboat Jr. PHOTO BY HAYLEY VYSE

Announcements for LNHL 2020 By TRT Staff MISSISSAUGA — The 49th Anniversary of the LNHL will be in Mississauga on March 16 to 19, 2020 and next years tournament will hold some new notices. On September 1, the LNHL Facebook page revealed that next years tournament will not be hosting coaching clinics as hosting the tournament and clinics together “has become increasingly difficult.” They also notified the public that the LNHL Executive has reintroduced Performance Bonds for the LNHL 2020 for the Bantam and Midget Recreation and Competitive Divisions. As for registration, the

LNHL registration fee per team increased to $800 and this was done to be effective immediately. The LNHL Facebook Page wrote: “Due to the rising cost of organizing and hosting the LNHL Tournament, the LNHL Executive have had to increase the Registration fee per team from $600 to $800.” The host community for 2020 will also be the Nipissing First Nation.

SIX NATIONS — On Friday, September 20 an evening with Jordin Tootoo will be at the Gathering Place by the Grand, for a special presentation of “Aiming For Wellness Together: Mental Health & Resilient Communities”. Tootoo will be the Keynote Speaker and will be speaking on mental health and First Nations communities, followed by a question and answer session. The first Inuk to play in the National Hockey League retired last year saying he wanted to work with communities on mental health awareness and to support suicide prevention

Tootoo will be the Keynote Speaker September 20th at the Gathering Place by the Grand, for a special presentation. PHOTO FILE

initiatives. He made the made the announcement of his retirement from the NHL in Brandon, Man., last year where he began his hockey career playing for

the Brandon Wheat Kings of the Western Hockey League in 1999. After the Wheat Kings, he went on play in the NHL's Nashville Predators, Detroit Red Wings, New Jersey Devils

and, most recently, played right-wing for the Chicago Blackhawks during the 2016-17 season. He also played for the American Hockey League with the Grand Rapids Griffins and Milwaukee Admirals. Guests to the evening will also have a chance to meet and greet with Tootoo following the formal presentation. This event is free, and open to the public. However, pre-registration is required due to limited seating capacity. This event is presented by the Six Nations Health Services Mental Health & Addictions team, in partnership with Six Nations of the Grand River Ontario Works. Refreshments will be provided. ALBERTA — Century Downs Racetrack and Casino presented the 2019 Canadian Indian Relay Races from Saturday, August 31 - Sunday, September 1. The two day event showcased bareback horse racing with participants jumping from one horse to the other, each round. During the event, the Canadian Lady Warrior Season Champion with the most points in the regular season: Jessica Night Traveler from Team Stick Racing of Poundmaker Saskatchewan. Night Traveler recently graduated from High School and hails from Little Pine. A former Barrel Racer and works as a store clerk and gas jockey. Photo from Facebook.


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September 4th, 2019

Indigenous teen selected as potential olympian By TRT Staff NOVA SCOTIA — A Cape Breton teen is one of 100 Canadian athletes chosen to compete at the RBC Training Ground, a program meant to identify and support future Olympians. The program is described as “the RBC Training Ground is an innovative, nationwide program that identifies and tests young Canadian amateur athletes through high-performance combines. Those

identified as having high potential receive funding and other forms of support they need to one day reach an Olympic podium.” The program is open to youth in Canada that are 14 to 25 years old as this age range helps participating National Sports Organizations (NSOs) identify athletes who can develop into Olympic hopefuls based on longterm athlete development and the Canadian Sport for Life program. The indigenous athlete

chosen for the program is Dante Isadore, a track and field athlete from Wagmatcook First Nation, N.S., who competes in long jump and triple jump. With a population base of close to seven hundred people living in the small village of Wagmatcook First Nation, the community straddles the Bras D’or Lakes and is one of five (5) Mi’kmaw First Nation communities of Unama’ki (Cape Breton Island, N.S.). Isadore was first introduced to track and field

by his physical education teacher at Wagmatcookewey School. Five years ago, he travelled to Saskatchewan to compete in track and field and since he has competed in track events across Canada. One of his larger accomplishments to date was competing at the 2018 Legion National track and field championships in Brandon. He competed against athletes from across Canada and placed ninth overall in the men's under-18 triple jump.

Big Soul Productions making race doc

Friday Night Thunder TV, a documentary being produced by Laura Milliken, stars Six Nations racers who took part in Summer Nationals at Ohsweken Speedway. Aaron Turkey #68, Matthew James Hill, Joshua Hill, Alex Hill, Derek Miller and Glenn Styres PHOTO FILE Racing.

SIX NATIONS

SIX NATIONS

Enjoy the Six Nations Fall Fair

REMINDER: Kids are back in school. Please drive carefully. This message brought to you by Six Nations Police


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September 4th, 2019

29 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 29, 2014

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26

Announcement

J O B POSITION Social Education Counsellor Director of Clinical Services Finance Officer Electoral Officer – Purchase of Service Contract Maintenance Worker Director of Education Fuel Terminal Operator

Six in a Row for Ohsweken Sr. Braves Over the weekend of August 23-25 the Sr. Braves travelled to Chippewa - Oneida First Nations for the All Ont. Native Fastball Championships. After winning our first game, losing our second, we had to meet Parry Island again in the finals and beat them twice. Our players came through once again winning the first game 13-11 and the second 5-4. It was a total team effort with timely hits, steady pitching and superb defence to end the final game. So congrats to all our players for bringing home the masters championship for six years in a row. Also congrats to Six Nations Juniors for winning the Open Womens title. This years Sr. Braves team are: Dude B. Stu J.; Dwayne (Disco) Di,; Arnold J.; Allen G.; Geoff B.; Ryan D.; Kevin S.; Barry M.; Bob H,; Dwane G.; Marty S.; and Darren Z. Coaches Tony V.; and Terry V.; manager Cecil D.; and treasurer Bonnie D. Thanks to all out fans who made the trip to cheer all our teams on. Maybe see you next year at Garden River First Nation.

Yard Sale

Multiple Family Yard sale Saturday September 7th only At 1912 4th Line in Ohsweken. 8:30 am to 2:00 pm Clothes for all ages, furniture, household items etc. Corn soup, 3 sisters soup, ham & scones, scrumptious baked goodies, coffee, & cold drinks. Proceeds go to kanyen’kehaka kononhses (Mohawk Longhouse)

Mental Health & Addictions Counsellor Mental Health & Addictions Adult Counsellor Elder Helper Supply Teacher STEAM Academy Secondary School Teacher – English and Geography STEAM Academy Indigenous Student Success Leader Housing Coordinator

B O A R D

EMPLOYER/LOCATION Standing Stone School, Oneida Nation of the Thames, Southwold, On Family Counselling Ctre of Brant, Brantford, On GRETI/ Grand River Employment and Training Inc., Six Nations, On The Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation

TERM Full Time

Brantford Native Housing, Brantford, On Chiefs of Ontario, Toronto, On OTE Original Traders Energy, Caledonia, On

Full Time Full Time Full Time

SALARY CLOSING DATE TBD Sept 4 2019

Full Time Full Time

TBD Sept 5 2019 $45,347 Sept 6 2019 - $64,999 Yr Contract TBD Sept 6 2019

TBD TBD $20.00 $25.00 hr Full Time $55,000 Yr Full Time $55,000 Yr

Aboriginal Health Centre, Brantford, On Aboriginal Health Ctre, Hamilton, On

Indigenous Diabetes Health Circle, Thorold, On Day Wk Six Nations Polytechnic, Six Nations Term Six Nations Polytechnic, Six Nations Contract

TBD TBD TBD

Indigenous Education Centre, Niagara College Term Oneida Nation of the Thames, Southwold On Full Time

$28.71 hr $21.40 $22.50 hr Oneida Nation of the Thames, Southwold On P/T Permanent $17.00 hr The Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation F/T Permanent $16.90 hr Six Nations Polytechnic, Six Nations Full Time TBD Ogwehoweh Skil s & Trades Training Ctre Full Time TBD MJ’s Diner, New Credit Full & Part Time TBD

Medical Transportation Assistant Community Wellness Assistant Human Resources Manager Full Time Registrar Kitchen Cook & P/T Cook & Kitchen Help Administrative Assistant (2 Positions) Indspire, Six Nations & Toronto, On

POSITION Community Energy Champion Physiotherapist Early Childhood Development Worker Healthy Lifestyle Coordinator School Caretaker Registered Early Childhood Educator/ Cultural and Language Instructor (2 positions) Coordinator for Elected Chief and SAO Director of Policy, Communications and Records Education Finance Analyst Receptionist/ Filing Clerk Child and Youth Health Case Manager Registered Early Childhood Educator Registered Early Childhood Educator (3 positions) Urban Support Team Member (4 positions) Job descriptions are available at GREAT Weekdays... Monday through Friday from 8:30 - 4:30 pm 16 Sunrise Court, Ohsweken

Full Time

TBD

Sept 6 2019 Sept 6 2019 Sept 6 2019 Sept 6 2019 Sept 6 2019 Sept 6 2019 Sept 11 2019 Sept 11 2019 Sept 11 2019 Sept 12 2019 Sept 12 2019 Sept 12 2019 Sept 13 2019 Sept 13 2019 Open Until P/T Fil ed Sept 17 2019

EMPLOYER/LOCATION TERM SALARY CLOSING DATE Public Works, Six Nations Contract $45,000 Yr Sept 11 2019 Therapy Services, Health Services Contract $39.56 hr Sept 11 2019 Early Childhood Development, Health Serv. Full Time TBD Sept 11 2019 Health Promotions, Health Serv. Full Time $20 - Sept 11 2019 $24 hr School Maintenance, Public Works Part Time $18 hr Sept 11 2019 Family Gatherings, Social Services Full Time $22 Hr Sept 18 2019 Central Administration Administration Policy & Communications Central Administration Ogwadeni:deo Social Services Child and Youth Health, Health Services Child Care Services, Social Services Child Care Services, Social Services

Full Time TBD Full Time TBD Contract $65K Yr Full Time $36,275 Yr Contract TBD Part Time $20 Hr Full Time TBD

Sept 18 2019 Sept 18 2019 Sept 18 2019 Sept 18 2019 Sept 18 2019 Sept 18 2019 Sept 18 2019

Ogwadeni:deo, Social Services

Full Time Up to $56,650 Sept 18 2019 With BSW Phone: 519.445.2222 • Fax: 519-445-4777 Toll Free: 1.888.218.8230 www.greatsn.com


30 37

TWO TWO ROW ROW TIMES TIMES

In Memoriam I thought of you today, But that’s nothing new. I thought about you yesterday, And the days before that too. I think of you in silence, And often speak your name. All I have now are memories, And your pictures in a frame. Your life was a blessing, Your memory a treasure. You are loved beyond words, And missed beyond measure.

In loving memory of Heather Lyndsay White (August 30, 2017). Love always; Daughters Riley (Brody), Serena & Georgia. Mom Ginger. Sisters Amanda, and Toni (Artie). Nieces & nephew; Kali, Montana, Kawi, and Kai. Grandchildren Chase and Xzyla.

September 4th,2018 2019 NOVEMBER 28TH,

Card of Thanks

Card of Thanks

It is with much sadness and dismay that our Family, friends, and community had to say goodbye to Loretta “Lori” Clause. The Clause Family would like to take this opportunity to thank; Lori’s sisters (Ro, Arlis, & Sue), Andy Sackney for performing the funeral service & committal, the singers (Mary, Pat, Lyle & Andy), the Six Nations Pentecostal Church for the use of the church and youth centre, Gerald Tyrrell for speaking at the Sunday public visitation, the pallbearers (Jim, Joe, Terry, Ben, Wayne, Dale, Bailey), Art Porter, the caterers (Toni & Pete), all those that donated food, those who helped organize the food & services, Lori’s service workers, the West Haldimand General Hospital (Nurses, Doctors, & staff), Six Nations Paramedics & Firefighters Stan Johnathan. We would also like to thank the following people who made monetary donations; Shirley, Kelly & Sandi, Sharanne, Tammy, Raymond & Arlis. Colton Clause for getting the tents & picnic tables. We truly appreciate and thank everyone for their heartfelt condolences, warm words and support during our difficult time.

Thank you from the bottom of our hearts—for all that everyone did during our time of celebrating our brother ‘Big Daves’ life. Special thanks to MC Delby Powless and his many stories of the Legend. The Sault Brothers for their music and stories. Big Joe for fulfilling Daves wish that he sing at his funeral. To Ken Sault for officiating the funeral service and Sonya Sault and Joan Elliott for their songs. Thanks to the many councillors and council departments for paying tribute to Dave for his 23 years serving Six Nations community Thanks to all the pall bearers, the cooks, to all those that donated food and to those that were there to comfort our family during this time. Thanks to each and everyone too numerous to mention. Jack, Larry, Sharon and family

Coming Events SOUR SPRINGS LONGHOUSE BREAKFAST

Floyd Clause & daughters Lori (Margie) Anderson, Cathy Clause & Shelly Anderson.

Workers Wanted

Yard Sales

Factory Workers wanted. Drop resume at 196 Chiefswood.

The SALE you been waiting for.......

When you’re in the Village, we have you covered

Saturday September Seventh 8AM - NOON Earth Healing Herb Garden and Retreat Ct. 329 Seneca Rd. Six Nations of the Grand River

Antique Hoosier cupboard, Round table, Chairs, Books, Native Art, Designer clothes, and much, much more.

Please recycle this newspaper

COME AND JOIN US FOR AN ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT BREAKFAST (IN) WHEN: SUNDAY SEPT. 8, 2019 TIME: 8:00-11:30 a.m. PRICES: $10.00 SENIORS: $8.00 5-12 YEARS OLD: $5.00 UNDER 5: FREE TAKE-OUT AVAILABLE 50-50 DRAW & TOONIE TABLE TAKE-OUT AVAILABLE New Life Clothing Back To School Saturday, September 7 10 - 12 Lunch Provided By The Golden Spoon Lunch 12-1pm Everyone Welcome! Ohsweken Baptist Church, 4th Line

Show Your Appreciation

Dine in, Takeout & Delivery Available • 1766 Fourth Line, Ohsweken, ON • 519-445-0396

Please come to the Six Nations Elected Band Council Office to show your appreciation & gratitude to the original builders of the Six Nations Arena in 1972. We need your support on Tuesday, September 10, 2019 at 6 pm. We proudly recognize the following Six Nations community members for building our Six Nations Arena: Joe Montour, Annette Montour, Vera Styres, Welby Johnson, John Burnham, Sydney Henhawk, William Montour, Don Monture, Ron Monture, Seymore Thomas, Albert Smoke, Minnie Henhawk, Willie Henhawk, Hughie Smith, Albert "Bun" Montour, Rollie Smith, Freddie General, Jack Hill, Bill Squires, Boss Squires, Mike Miller, Edward Poodry, Victor Porter, Hubert Skye, Arnold Thomas, Alton VanEvery, William H. White, Gloria Williams, Arnold Jacobs, Ambrose Johnson, Annita Hill, Melba Thomas, Charlie Thomas, Winnie Thomas, Larry Curley, Russell Moses, Walter "Wuddy" Green, Richard Isaacs, Norma Davis, Russell Davis We apologize if any names have been missed. Thanks to the original builders, we remember you!


TWO ROW ROW TIMES TIMES TWO

September19TH, 4th,2018 2019 DECEMBER

CLUES ACROSS 1. Adventure stories 6. Amphetamines 12. Extend the limits 16. Article 17. Socially disoriented 18. Gold 19. Part of the mind 20. “Rubber Band Man” rapper 21. Take by force 22. Football position 23. American cola 24. Risk management plans (abbr.) 26. Narrow channel on the moon 28. Semitic alphabet letter 30. Dorm employee 31. Dessert dish 32. A street where nightmares happen 34. For each 35. Fat from a pig 37. Easily altered 39. Salvador __, Spanish artist 40. The last CEO of Sears 41. One who lades 43. Russian pop duo 44. Fictional free city of Essos 45. Cool! 47. Strong liquor 48. Rural delivery 50. Brews 52. Compound found in hops 54. Where golfers begin holes 56. Third note of a major scale 57. City of Angels 59. Snag 60. Exclamation of surprise 61. Controversial retired wide receiver 62. For example 63. Free to use 66. Carson’s sidekick 67. Pirate saying 70. Convulses 71. Semitic gods CLUES DOWN 1. Split apart 2. Equally 3. Mountain passes 4. Another name for Thor 5. Chinese chess piece

31 27

ARIES – Mar 21/Apr 20 Aries, be careful with your words so they are not taken the wrong way in the coming days. If you practice what you plan to say, others will see your words for the kind gesture they are.

TAURUS – Apr 21/May 21 Taurus, there’s no need to apologize if you want to stay close to home this week. Invite some friends over to join in the fun. GEMINI – May 22/Jun 21 Expect to work in a group setting this week, Gemini. Doing so will require you to carefully manage your time so everything can be done efficiently. Embrace others’ input and the collaborative effort. CANCER – Jun 22/Jul 22 Start this week with high energy, Cancer. You can ride that momentum through the weekend when you may need an extra boost. Find friends who can help you along.

6. Helpless 7. US army designation (abbr.) 8. Micturated 9. One to respect 10. Small Greek island 11. In a thinly dispersed way 12. Put two together 13. Of the supernatural 14. Type of structure in organic chemistry 15. Card game 25. Feeling of discomfort 26. Get free of 27. Unit of measurement 29. A person who enjoys good food and drink 31. Violin maker 33. Noted psychotherapist 36. Complete

Answers for September 4th, 2019 Crossword Puzzle

38. Ballplayers’ tool 39. Afternoon illumination 41. Points a finger at 42. Moved quickly 43. ‘__ death do us part 46. Blue jeans 47. French Jesuit theologian 49. Dissuades 51. Eastern European peoples 53. Abnormal rattling sound 54. Air-breathing land snail genus 55. Turfs 58. Farewells 60. __ mater: one’s school 64. They __ 65. Baby’s eating accessory 68. Priestess of Hera 69. Type of railroad

SUDOKU

LEO – Jul 23/Aug 23 Leo, don’t be so modest that you won’t share your recent accomplishments with those you love the most. It is okay to brag about yourself once in a while. VIRGO – Aug 24/Sept 22 Virgo, many people are willing to lend you a helping hand, so take them up on their offers. You will be able to repay them in time if you feel the need to reciprocate.

LIBRA – Sept 23/Oct 23 Join a group of people who share the same goals as you, Libra. It can be a work group or a social movement if you so desire. Either way, socialize along the way. SCORPIO – Oct 24/Nov 22 Being outdoors has much appeal for you this week, Scorpio. Be sure to get outside and enjoy it as much as possible over the next several days. SAGITTARIUS – Nov 23/Dec 21 There is a fine line between being flexible and standing firm when you believe in your point of view, Sagittarius. Speak up if you feel strongly about your position. CAPRICORN – Dec 22/Jan 20 Make a concerted effort to ensure a certain situation is not blown out of proportion, Capricorn. Carefully examine things before offering your input.

AQUARIUS – Jan 21/Feb 18 Try to add more exercise to your routine, Aquarius. Not only will it make you feel better physically, it can clear your head and allow for alone time to do some thinking.

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The Bear’s Inn

PISCES – Feb 19/Mar 20 Pisces, your life may be a little hectic over the next few days as a deadline draws near. Eventually things will return to normal.

More than a place to stay...

1979 4th Line Road, Ohsweken, Ontario N0A 1M0 P.O. Box 187, Six Nations of the Grand River Tel: (519) 445-4133 • E-Mail: innkeeper@thebearsinn.com www.thebearsinn.com

3304 Sixth Line Rd. Ohsweken, Ontario N0A 1M0 Phone: (905) 765-7884 Fax: (905) 765-3154 construction@sitnbull.ca


32

TWO ROW TIMES

September 4th, 2019

KANATA FUELS - KANATA KARWASH - KANATA KONVENIENCE - TIM HORTONS

VISIT US FOR ALL YOUR FUEL, KARWASH, FOOD, AND COFFEE NEEDS THIS WEEKEND WHILE ENJOYING THIS YEAR’S 152nd ANNUAL SIX NATIONS FALL FAIR! SERVICE WITH A

892 Highway 54, Ohsweken

Like us on Facebook! Find us at “Kanata Fuels” (519) 753-3835

#ItsNotCleanUntilItsKanataClean OPEN DAILY 6AM TO 10PM


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