Joseph Filz

Joseph Filz (June 18, 1848 February 6, 1920) was an American carpenter, merchant, and politician.

Born in Germany, Filz emigrated to the United States in 1873 and settled in Luxemburg, Wisconsin. Filz was a carpenter, farmer, merchant, and the owner of a hotel. Filz served as postmaster of Luxemburg and as county treasurer of Kewaunee County, Wisconsin. He also served on the school board and was the school board treasurer. In 1891 and 1893, Filz served in the Wisconsin State Assembly and was a Democrat. Filz died in St. Nazianz, Wisconsin where he had been living.[1][2]

Notes

  1. 'Wisconsin Blue Book 1893,' Biographical Sketch of Joseph Filz, pg. 644
  2. 'Joseph Filz Passes Away At St. Nazianz,' Manitowoc Herald News, February 7, 1920, pg. 1
gollark: Do NOT range extenders, for various reasons.
gollark: OpenWRT is quite pleasant to use, in my experience.
gollark: You probably want to either have something which is explicitly an access point, or run custom firmware, because some "router" products might try and be too smart and operate a NAT.
gollark: What I would do is install routers in room 1 and 3 with Ethernet links to each other, install OpenWRT, operate them as access points with the same SSID, and use 802.11r stuff to make them work together nicelyish.
gollark: If you have a wire to room 3, then just install another AP there.
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