1866 May 8 Letter to Lorenzo D. Young

Title

1866 May 8 Letter to Lorenzo D. Young

Description

Amos Musser and Thomas Moss question the loose and unauthorized manner in which Lorenzo Young sold off his stock.

Type

Correspondence

Sender

Amos Milton Musser

Recipient

Lorenzo D. Young

Date

1866 May 8

Location

Great Salt Lake City

Number of Pages

2

Subject

Financial Matters
Legal Matters
Livestock

Item sets

 

Brother Lorenzo D. Young

Dr. Sir:-

The Conversation that passed between Bro. Thos Moss of E. T. City and myself respecting the sale of certain Estrays, I cannot give you in full or succintly, but will refer to items talked about & the feeling his Conversation seemed to express to me.

That you had sold some Half dozen head of horned stock as strays for something near 30$ per head, that you bid them off yourself -- that your charges were high for keeping them & that there were but few bidders present that you said that you had advertised them at Tooele, Grantsville & Richville but that your advertisement did not describe a cow sold belonging to Bro. Meecham & who did not pay you the charge you made for keeping her as you said some 3 months, but allowed you only the debt you owed him which was some few dollars I think some 3$. that the Meecham Cow was not at your place, save but about 3 weeks & that all the stock you sold and claimed to have fed were fed outside your corral where they got but little -- That you took up 2 poor horses one of which soon died & the other he understood has since been taken away from the range-- That Bro. G. W. Bryan did the selling of them for you. His statement seemed to express a feeling of disatisfaction amongst the people respecting, as it seemed to them the loose & unauthorized way the whole thing was done. Bro Moss said that there had been so much stock stolen & taken from the Tooele Co. range that many had contemplated moving away & he for one felt so, too, at times. He did not accuse you of stealing, Bro Lorenzo, nor anything of the kind, but thought that if you had taken a little different course in the management of this affair, greater satisfaction would have been given & felt by the people The above is not the conversation in full but substantially what passed --Sister Moss, the while-- adding words of explanation

Respectfully &c.

A. Milton Musser
Hurredly

G S L City
May 8/66