These pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by any other persons or organizations. They are for individual research ONLY. They will remain the property of the OHVINTON list serve and may NOT be FORWARDED on to any second party or group. Persons or organizations desiring to forward or use this material must obtain written consent from me or my legal representative and contact the archivist of the OHVINTON list serve with proof of consent. I have given permission for these files to be stored permanently for free access in the archives of the OHVINTON list serve. [This article was transcribed without making changes to spelling or grammar.] Athens Messenger May 20, 1880 VINTON There are a number of new brick buildings going up at Zaleski. Chas. Shanon, aged nineteen, of Allensville, lately died of consumption. The McArthur Enquirer says: Wheat is selling at $1 in this market, with a downward tendency. There are now but forty-eight men at work in the Zaleski car shops and they are on eight hours time. John W. Scothbone, of Zaleski, was recently admitted to the bar and will practice law at that place. Mrs. John Newman, of Hamden Furnace, while white-washing, fell from her support to the floor breaking her right arm. The body of Samuel Wilson, who fell in Raccoon Creek, in Wilksville township, last November and was drowned, was but recently recovered. There is a startling eruption of headlines in the McArthur papers of last week consequent upon the completion of West Va. Road to that place. A McArthur correspondent under date of 12th inst., says: The track on the Ohio and West Virginia Railroad having been laid across Main street this afternoon, the McArthur Brass Band, with the town artillery force, marched out to the camp cars on the switch, and amid the booming of cannon the buzzals (sic) of the people of the track-laying force were serenaded in gallant style. Thurman Tweed, who several weeks since shot and killed Mat. Slosser, the McArthur Station saloonist, surrendered himself to the authorities last week and was recognized for his appearance in the sum of $1,000. The McArthur Journal says: The general feeling in this community is that Tweed did what he was compelled to do to save his own life, and that he ought to be acquitted. James Hood, aged about thirty, a resident of Zaleski, while returning from Athen on the fast line on Friday, attempted to jump off the train one- quarter mile east of the depot, and opposite his home. In doing so he was thrown about twenty feet against a post, and his neck broken. He has been in the habit of jumping off trains at this point in order to save, walking back from the depot. He leaves a wife and three children. Transcribed by Joyce Robinson