Past 100 years for Nov. 4, 2009
The New Mexican
Posted: Tuesday, November 03, 2009
- 11/4/09
     
   Print   |   Font Size:    

advertisement
From The Santa Fe New Mexican

November 4, 1909: Hon. A.L. Lawshe, assistant postmaster general, who is being urged by his Indiana and New Mexico friends for governor of New Mexico to succeed Gov. George Curry, is now an avowed candidate.

County School Supt. John V. Conway will leave in the morning for Agua Fria to install teachers at Lower Agua Fria and Cienegas, Districts 5 and 25. Next Sunday he leaves for the north to install teachers on Monday at Upper Nambe, Lower Nambe, Upper Pojoaque and Upper San Ildefonso.



November 4, 1959: Soaring social security payments in New Mexico have apparently brought an extremely significant change in the state's relief program for the aged. While the number of elderly citizens receiving monthly checks from the federal Old Age and Survivors Insurance program is shooting upward, the number of indigent old folks receiving state dole has finally leveled off after an almost constant climb over more than 25 years. If the 25-year climb in the cost of supporting the needy aged has come to an end as it appears, it's the best news in years for taxpayers. The seemingly endless rise in the number of aged on relief had long been a source of worry for state budget planners.


November 4, 1984: Alamogordo — Republican lawyer Sandra Grisham is spending almost twice the amount of her opponent in her bid to break the Democratic hold on the Otero County Courthouse and become the only woman district judge in southern New Mexico. Financial reports filed this week with the secretary of state's office show Grisham spent $15,935.65 through Oct. 20. Her opponent in the Division 1 judge's race, Democrat Norman Bloom, listed expenditures of $8,506.91.





You must register with a valid email address and use your real name to comment on this forum. Previous usernames are no longer valid as of Feb. 5. Once you've logged into the system, you'll be able to contribute comments. If you need help logging in or establishing your new user name and password, please visit this tutorial.

All users are expected to abide by the forum rules and and be courteous to other users. Comments can be accepted up to eight days following publication. After that, comments can be read but no new submissions made. Send questions to webeditor@sfnewmexican.com

IMPORTANT: Comments must be posted under your own full, real name. Anonymous comments and those posted under a pseudonym can be removed. Please consult the forum rules. If you have questions, e-mail webeditor@sfnewmexican.com.
blog comments powered by Disqus


advertisement
advertisement
"));