TOMAHAWK WOODENWARE COMPANY. This plant is another one of Tomahawk's substantial and prosperous industries. It was organized in January, 1905, with the following officers: President, W. T. Bradley; Secretary, O. M. Smith, with A. E. Sutliff Vice President. The plant has a capacity of about 2,000 pails per day and employs from 30 to 40 men. The material used is basswood, pine, birch and other local woods, mostly in the form of bolts from 4 to 8 feet long. The product has a steady sale and is in good demand by candy makers, who ship most of their output in wooden pails such as are manufactured by this company. Much of this material is brought to the factory during the winter months by farmers living near the city and is of that class considered as worthless until very recently. This material now adds another item to the original timber wealth of the northland, and as a source of revenue is taken into consideration by prospective settlers and land buyers, it making possible the clearing of land at a profit instead of loss. The soil is splendidly adapted for stock raising and dairying, while hay, oats, and all the staple vegetables are grown in abundance. Thousands of cords of bolts are purchased each year from lands which have been stripped of the sawmill timber, thus paying out money which makes directly for the actual development of the farms so rapidly becoming a factor in the growing wealth of this section of the state.