Bill No. 8. A proposed bill to request the Secretary of the Interior to prohibit the United States Commissioner acting upon citizenship petitions; to request the United States Indian Agent to determine citizenship of petitioners; and to ask the...
A resolution appropriating $287.50 to have lightening rods placed upon the capitol building. Passed Senate February 24, 1888. Passed House February 25, 1888.
A proposed act authorizing the treasurer to call upon the United States Indian Agent for balance of freedman money. Passed Senate November 3, 1888. Passed House and approved November 5, 1888.
A proposed act conferring citizenship upon certain persons descendants of the Choctaw People. Passed Senate October 19, 1874. Repassed Senate Nov. 2, 1874. Repassed House Nov. 2, 1874.
A resolution calling upon the Secretary of the Interior for copies of Charter Bond and plot of the M.K. and Texas Railroad Co. Approved October 14, 1875. Passed House and Senate the same.
An act levying a tax upon railroad and other kinds of property within the limits of the Choctaw Nation. Passed Senate March 6, 1876. Passed House and approved March 9, 1876.
Resolution authorizing the appointment of a Special Committee for a special purpose herein named. Their duty is to examine and report upon the report of the National Agent. Passed House October 23, 1876. Passed Senate October 25, 1876 and was...
An act conferring citizenship in the Choctaw Nation upon James and Walton Patterson, and their families also Babe Thompson. Passed and approved November 6, 1884.
A resolution authorizing the Principal Chief to confer with the Governor of the Chickasaw Nation upon certain matters in which both Nations are interested. Passed House November 6, 1884. Passed Senate and approved November 6, 1884.
Resolution authorizing the selection of a committee to examine and report upon the condition of Spencer Academy. Passed Senate October 29, 1887. Passed House and approved October 31, 1887.
Bill No. 67. A proposed act imposing a tax upon certain enterprises. Passed Senate October 29, 1896. Passed house October 30, 1896. It became a law by limitation.
A resolution authorizing the Principal Chief to appoint a commission to investigate and report upon the condition of affairs in Jones County. Passed and approved October 7, 1899, with amendment.
Bill No. 33. A resolution calling upon the Secretary of the interior to reimburse the Treasury of the Choctaw Nation for moneys deducted from the invested funds. Passed and approved October 26, 1900.
Bill No. 55. A memorial to the Congress of the U.S. urging them to remove the restrictions upon surplus lands of the Choctaw and Chickasaws. Passed Senate February 3, 1906. Passed House February 5, 1906. Approved February 9, 1906.
Bill No. 25. An act appropriating $16,003.97 to be paid to the Chickasaws as agreed upon. Passed and approved February 16, 1905. Approved by T. Roosevelt February 19, 1906.
A resolution of the Choctaw Council protesting against the act of Congress approved April 26, 1906, conferring upon the Choctaw and Chickasaw freedmen a preference right to purchase additional lands at the allotment appraisement values. Passed and...
A memorial of the Choctaw people asking for the sale of the Unallotted lands of the Choctaw and Chickasaws in accordance with the supplementary agreement and petitioning the Congress of the U.S. to provide for the distribution of the funds arising...
Barnaby Rudge is the fifth novel which was begun in 1839 and finished in 1841. It is also the first of Dickens's two historical novels. This novel is based on the anti-Catholic riots - the Gordon Riots - instigated by Lord George Gordon in 1780,...
Barnaby Rudge is the fifth novel which was begun in 1839 and finished in 1841. It is also the first of Dickens's two historical novels. This novel is based on the anti-Catholic riots - the Gordon Riots - instigated by Lord George Gordon in 1780,...
A satire on Utilitarianism set in a provincial industrial town, portraying the dreariness of life for industrial workers, the hopelessness of decent people trapped in a failed marriage, and the fallacy of mechanical theories of human nature
Nicholas Nickleby, Dickens' third novel, is about social injustice in England. Nicholas Nickleby's father dies and the family, Nicholas, sister Kate, and their mother, are forced to move to London to ask for assistance from their Uncle Ralph...