Bill No. 45. A resolution accepting the report of John Harris, collector for second district. Passed Senate October 27, 1898. Passed House and approved October 28, 1898.
Bill No. 48. An act repealing and employing and also appointing S. Guerrier, Special Agent and Attorney for the Choctaw Nation. Passed and approved October 28, 1898.
Bill No. 59. An act to have the body of S.H. Williams, a member of this Council taken home and appoint persons to attend the same. Passed and approved October 29, 1898.
Bill No. 6. An act to abolish Choctaw's Academy Precinct in Towson County. Passed Senate October 14, 1898. Passed House and approved October 17, 1898.
Bill No. 63. An act to authorize the Principal Chief to appoint a commission to negotiate with the Dawes Commission. Passed and approved October 29, 1898.
Bill No. 65. A proposed act appropriating money for the fiscal year ending September 30, 1898. Passed House November 9, 1897. Passed Senate and approved November 11, 1897.
Bill No. 65. A resolution accepting the report of J.P. Thompson, trustee of first district. Passed House and Senate October 28, 1898. Approved October 29, 1898.
Bill No. 67. An act appropriating $50.00 for the relief of N.J. Holson for services in building the Circuit Court House. Passed House and Senate October 28, 1898. Approved October 29, 1898.
Bill No. 9. Amending an act creating a commission to make the final roll of the citizens of the Choctaw Nation. Passed House and Senate October 18, 1898. Approved October 19, 1898.
Editor. Typescripts of articles (1870-1899), by or about W. P. Boudinot, from various Cherokee Indian newspapers and relating to the Indian policy of the federal government, the Cherokee Orphan Asylum, land transfers, and railroads in Indian...
Editorial on John F. Brown, who went to Washington to seek justice in the case of two Seminole Indians having been burned at the stake by a white mob in Oklahoma Territory, Feb. 17, 1898.
Farmer. A letter (1898), with typescript copies, by James M. Latty of Muskogee, Indian Territory, to his brother in Idaho, describing his intention to move west so that his children would receive a better education. Latty lived in the Creek Nation.
Indian chief. Typescripts of a speech to the Comanche and Wichita nations (1835), and the Creek Nation (1898); of McIntosh's message to the Creek Nation (1898); of newspaper articles (1871-1907) regarding McIntosh; and a biographical sketch (1928)...