I found the immigration record of Lily Clarence the Bride to be of Frank Burrrard Creasy. I transcribed it in a readable form as - Ship Cedric, New York, 1913. Lily Clarence 35, Widow, previously living in Hanley, Staffordshire, England, accompanied by her daughters Dorothy (13) and Phyllis (7) heading to Ramah, New Mexico.
In the Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, area Lily Gough had married James Clarence in 1899. He died in 1906 in that same area.
(From the Internet) In the early 1900's, Bob and Giles Master came from England to start the first permanent store, the Ramah Trading Post. It was originally located west of the town of Ramah, later being moved to the stone building that is still seen just off Hwy. 53 in the center of Ramah. Other turn-of-the-century buildings include: the Ashcroft-Merrill home (on the National Historic Register), the Marius Bond home near the Post Office, the two-story Bloomfield home, and the Ramah Museum, built in 1905, also on the National Historic Register. The Masters brought in black locust trees for their home for its hard wood for wagon and farming parts (reaches, tool handles, and double-trees). These trees still line the streets of Ramah as do Chinese Elm introduced in the 1930's by the Soil Conservation Service for shade, windbreaks and erosion control.
Robert (Bob) and Giles are the Cousins of Frank Burrard Creasy. Frank was a Deputy Sherriff in New Mexico. If he was one in 1913 he may have been based in Gibson where he married Lily.