The two hickory backed osage bows can be similar in stack becasue the core is not going to affect the draw weight very much, the maple will come out a lighter weight at the same stack because maple is less stiff than osage.
.420 will not yield the draw weight you want in a 1 1/3" wide bow .... I assume you're going to go 2" wide with the maple bow only.
TBB vol. 4 has a section on laminated wood bows, Mike Westvang described using a bamboo backing, a tapered osage core and a parallel osage belly. The specs for the bamboo taper are not specified but I would guess based on the description of the processing method of the bamboo that it is probably around 1/8" thick tapering to about 1/16" thick. That gives a taper of roughly .002"/inch.
Here are the specs for the lams:
Bamboo Back - .125" thick .002"/" taper
Osage core - .190" thick .002"/" taper
Osage belly - .180" thick parallel
Total stack ~.500" thick. That was for a 64" bow with an 18" powerlam (riser) between the bamboo mack and the osage core, and having 12" tip wedges (.070" thick tapering to paper thin). Lastly his bow was a r/d design. I think it was around your target weight.
I'd recommend going like this:
Hickory back: .125" thick, .001"/" taper
Core #1: .125" thick, .001"/" taper
Core #2: .125" thick, .001"/" taper
Osage Belly: .125" thick, .001"/" taper
This will definately get you in the ballpark, but with such thin belly lam, you will not have alot of material to work with for tillering ... you'll be at only .093" thick at the limb tips. The other downside is you have to taper 4 pairs of laminations.
You could also do something like this:
Hickory back: .125" thick, parallel
Core #1: .125" thick, .002"/" taper
Core #2: .125" thick, .002"/" taper
Osage Belly: .125" thick, parallel
Theres a million variations.
For the hickory backed maple I'd probably taper the core lam at .002"/" and taper the backing and belly lam each .001"/".
.125" backing, .190 core, and maybe a .200 belly. I'm just guessing to be honest.
Build one and see how it turns out, then it'll be easier to make a decision on how to make the next one to hone in on what you really want.