A MAN WHO DOES THINGS. R. C. Thielman is one of the most loyal and patriotic citizens of Tomahawk. In these qualities he is second to none. On no occasion is this spirit allowed to slumber, for at the least opportunity it makes itself manifest. Mr. Thielman came to Tomahawk in 1897 and has been in the meat business for twenty years. In 1890 he engaged in the lumbering business, and is the owner of a large tract of standing timber. He is logging for the Bradley Company, and will cut eight million feet for this company the coming year. He is now running three logging camps, employing over two hundred men, and is badly in need of and anxious to employ another hundred. The timber is principally hemlock and hardwood, and is brought in principally by the railroad. There is still within fifteen or twenty miles of Tomahawk a solid township of timber. It is estimated that for twenty years the logging and lumbering industry will be prominent in and around Tomahawk. The cut-over land is selling at from five to ten dollars an acre, and no better soil for dairy purposes can be found in the state. Mr. Thielman owns several hundred acres inside the city limits and has platted two additions to the city. He has been mayor of Tomahawk for five terms, and the city has prospered under his leadership. In each of his official positions he has given earnest and intelligent service, and upon his official record there is not a blot. He is of that class of citizens who build up cities and then make them known on the map, and his fellow citizens realize his value as a permanent, prominent, progressive citizen. If the reader wants a few days of recreation that recreates he can find some of the best fishing in the state in close connection with Mr. Thielman's camp, and a few meals at one of his several logging camps will make one wish he was a lumber jack.