Kaukauna Times
By Lyle Hansen
May 3,
1895
Dr. H. B. Tanner was reelected as mayor
of Kaukauna on Tuesday, narrowly defeating the challenger and former mayor
Luther Lindauer. Tanner's margin of victory was 54 votes.
The new bids for the
construction of Hotel Brothers were open Monday, and the contract awarded to an
Appleton contractor whose bid was $18,050.
Some of the young ladies’
fashions should not lose sight of the fact that it is impossible for young men
to “whisper love in their ear” in these days of balloon sleeves.
William S. Curtis, a switchman employed in the Northwestern yards at Appleton; while uncoupling moving cars last Tuesday evening caught his foot and fell. Both his legs were cut off by the knees. He died Wednesday morning. He leaves, a wife and two children, one seven weeks old.
The publishers of the
KAUKAUNA TIMES have always promised whenever the field was ripe here to put in
a daily paper and with this end in view the city is now being thoroughly
canvassed for subscribers to assert if the venture can safely be made at
present. Many of the businessmen have of late urged the starting of a daily and
we wish to meet their demands if within our power.
Appleton, Wis. - Wenzel Schillibel who was arrested recently convicted of voting twice in the spring election and let off with a fine and cost of $17, on account of his ignorance and stupidity. He was arrested again today and found guilty of obtaining goods under false pretenses and assessed a fine and cost of $22. He had goods belonging to Andrew Hampel, a saloon keeper. Schillibel’s only defense was that Hempel was rich while he was poor.
May 10, 1895
F. G. Passino &
Co's elegant new soda fountain was opened to the public, one of Chicago's
expert soda water dispensers being here to serve the various beverages
obtainable here.
Oscar Thilmany,
proprietor of the Thilmany Paper Mill is contemplating the addition of another
tissue mill to meet the fast-increasing demands for this grade of paper.
Hortonville having been
incorporated as a village; an election was held on Tuesday last to choose
village officers. For president L. Jacquot received 99 votes and D. Hodgins 96.
May 17,
1895
Since last Saturday, not
a wheel has turned in Kaukauna or any other city along the Fox from Neenah to
Green Bay. Over 4,000 men are thus thrown out of employment, while the mills
are losing thousands of dollars daily. Stopped as they were without a few days
grace in which to make preparations, the mills are full of raw stock, molding
and rotting; felts and wires are left upon the machines, with no power to turn
the machinery to remove them, vats are full of pulp, and rotaries full of rags,
chemicals going to waste, and damage visible on all sides, with no remedy at
hand only an order from the government revoking their last order. The water was
shut off to the mills by the government through an injunction from the Green
Bay and Mississippi Canal Company to keep the river levels high enough for
navigation.
For the first time in the history of the Fox here the water is low enough to display the bottom of the river near the dam, as much water as possible was drawn off this morning to lower the river so that repairs could be made to the leak in the dam.
The High School
graduating class of ’95 has decided on June 13th as the date of
their commencement exercises. The class this year is larger than any of the
previous ones, numbering thirteen.
Baraboo,
Wis., -
Mrs. Fry was about to be buried when it was discovered she was alive. She has
since explained that she was conscious of what was going on about her but was
unable to make her condition known and it was only by the greatest efforts that
she moved her arm a trifle the day appointed for the funeral.
May 24,
1895
The city jail has been
torn down and the material transferred to the new site near the new bridge,
where it will be rebuilt by Contractor Solar according to revised plans. The
new jail will be a two-story structure with police headquarters on the second
floor opening from the bridge. A box car has been backed in on the sidetrack on
the Island and will be used as a lockup until the new one is completed. It is
now a case of being lodged in a refrigerator instead of the cooler.
Wednesday afternoon, the
TIMES reporter took a stroll through the new factory of the Kaukauna Furniture Company
and found everything to be in good running order and in top condition. Work at
the new plant commenced last Monday.
Mayor Tanner headed the
police force last Friday evening after 11 o’clock and started out to make a
round of the city’s saloons to see if the 11 o’clock closing ordinance was
being conformed to. The wet goods houses were all closed.
Washington
D.C., May 21
- The income tax, which has received so large a share of the public attention
since the beginning of the session, is a thing of the past. The Supreme Court
declared the entire act invalid and unconstitutional.
The Kaukauna ladies
“set the pace” and now the bloomer costume is being adapted in other cities
along the Valley. The Advocate speaks
about Miss Sweet who was the first to appear at Green Bay last week, adding
that “the bloomer costume presents a vision of loveliness that is simply
irresistible.”
May 31,
1895
The new hook and ladder
truck for the fire department has arrived. It is a "bute."
Although the new
telephone poles on the bank of the canal raised the wires 120 feet above the
water, they were not high enough to allow a sailing vessel to pass through last
Friday. The tips of the mask touched the wires, and they had to be lowered. An
additional splice is now being added to the poles.
Julius Martins has
resigned his position as traveling salesman for the Anson Bros. of Milwaukee
and intends to start a grocery store on the south side.
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