Box 4
Container
Contains 817 Collections and/or Records:
Stimson, Henry L., Secretary of War, 1943
Item — Box: 4, Folder: 12
Identifier: CAC_CC_041_1_4_12_0013
Scope and Contents
Typewritten letter concerning copies of requested letters.
Stobaugh, John J., 1942
Item — Box: 4, Folder: 12
Identifier: CAC_CC_041_1_4_12_0014
Scope and Contents
Typewritten letter requesting a list of the Ministers of the Church of Christ for mailing out copies of the booklet, "Essay on Forms of Government from Theocracy to Foolocracy."
Stocksen, Adolph, 1936
Item — Box: 4, Folder: 12
Identifier: CAC_CC_041_1_4_12_0015
Scope and Contents
Typewritten letter concerning information about land prices and rainfall.
Stokes, Frank, 1936
Item — Box: 4, Folder: 12
Identifier: CAC_CC_041_1_4_12_0016
Scope and Contents
Typewritten letter concerning unsigned slanderous letters.
Stoneking, Tom, 1936
Item — Box: 4, Folder: 12
Identifier: CAC_CC_041_1_4_12_0018
Scope and Contents
Typewritten letter declining a request for legal advice.
Stout, W.M., Secretary of Commerce, Gate, 1934
Item — Box: 4, Folder: 12
Identifier: CAC_CC_041_1_4_12_0019
Scope and Contents
Typewritten telegram concerning a necessity for increased quota for Beaver County projects because of a blizzard and a sand storm.
Stephens, C.C. (Clyde), 1942
Item — Box: 4, Folder: 12
Identifier: CAC_CC_041_1_4_12_0006
Scope and Contents
Typewritten letter thanking for the previous letter with an enclosed editorial from the Oklahoma Daily, the University of Oklahoma's newspaper.
Sterling, L.F., 1936
Item — Box: 4, Folder: 12
Identifier: CAC_CC_041_1_4_12_0009
Scope and Contents
Handwritten postcard requesting a copy of William H. Murray's October 29th, 1936 radio address.
Stimpson, George W. - Letter inquiring about the origin of the Sobriquet "Alfalfa Bill" , August 06, 1942
Item — Box: 4, Folder: 12
Identifier: CAC_CC_041_1_4_12_0012
Scope and Contents
In a letter dated August 6, 1942, Wm. H. Murray explains the origin of his nickname "Alfalfa Bill." The nickname was given to him in 1903 after he gave a speech on growing alfalfa at a meeting in Tishomingo, Oklahoma. The name stuck and he adopted it as his own. While the nickname helped him gain popularity among farmers, it also gave the impression that he was too rustic to be a scholar.
Stokes, Frank, 1936
Item — Box: 4, Folder: 12
Identifier: CAC_CC_041_1_4_12_0017
Scope and Contents
Handwritten letter concerning someone making a wooden image of William H. Murray and a coffin for the image.