LAWS III 



tingent expenses of the Indian Department and for 

 fulfilling treaty stipulations with various Indian 

 tribes for the fiscal year ending June thirtieth, nine- 

 teen hundred and five, and for other purposes. 



Authorization to Secretary of the Interior to add to the original 

 Piatt reservation Act of July i, 1902, some two hundred acres lying 

 adjacent thereto; and to place a representative on the land to enforce 

 rules and regulations for the control and use thereof and of the waters 

 of the springs and creeks. 



1906— Act of June 16, 1906 (34 Stat. L., 267)— An Act To 

 enable the people of Oklahoma and of the Indian 

 Territory to form a Constitution and State gov- 

 ernment, etc. 



Retains (Sects. 3, 7 and 13), national jurisdiction over the Sulphur 

 Springs Reservation reserving to the state thereafter to be created 

 the right of process. 



1906 — ^Joint Resolution of June 29, 1906 (34 Stat. L., 837) — 

 Joint Resolution directing that the Sulphur Springs 

 Reservation be named and hereafter called the "Piatt 

 National Park." 



Secretary of the Interior authorized to make the change in name 

 in honor of Orville Hitchcock Piatt, for many years a member of 

 the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs. 



Sullys Hill 



1904 — Act of April 27, 1904 (33 Stat. L., 323) — An Act To 

 modify and amend an agreement with the Indians 

 of the Devil's Lake Reservation, in North Dakota, 

 to accept and ratify the same as amended, and mak- 

 ing appropriation and provision to carry the same 

 into efifect. 



The President is also authorized to reserve a tract embracing 

 Sullys Hill, in the northeastern portion of the abandoned military 

 reservation, about nine hundred and sixty acres, as a public 

 park. 



