G. B. CUTLER SEED CO. 
wanted to be sure of his money. He went to 
the bank to borrow $200.00. The banker ask¬ 
ed how long he’d need the money. He re¬ 
plied, “Maybe two weeks, maybe two months.” 
The banker asked what he could give for se¬ 
curity. The Indian said, “I got 200 horses.” 
He was given the money and in two weeks 
he returned to the bank with $2200. He paid 
back his loan, then the banker asked if he 
couldn’t take care of the rest of the money 
for him but the Indian had heard about banks 
closing so he asked, “How many horses you 
got?” Our seed is the same way, for every 
carrot seed you buy you’ll get one carrot in 
return. 
Last year I told you about our trip out 
west the summer before. We enjoyed that 
trip so much that last summer we decided to 
go again. We took our pedigreed Egyptian 
cheesehound with us to sorta make th^se 
westerners think we were somebody. It took 
us three days to get to Pocatello, Idaho, where 
my daughter and her husband live. 
My son-in-law is a window decorator, so 
to pass the time away we all went with him 
on his out-of-town trips. While we were in 
Idaho Falls we drove out to the park which 
has one of the most complete zoos I’ve ever 
seen. We were watching the deer in their 
pen and my daughter asked a little boy stand¬ 
ing near the fence what those animals were 
called and he said he didn’t know. She ask¬ 
ed, “Well, what does your mamma call your 
daddy?” He replied, “Don’t tell me that’s a 
louse!” 
While we were resting on some park bench¬ 
es I said to a nearby policeman, “I could have 
sworn I saw those statues over there move” 
to which he replied, “Them’s not statues, 
they’re city workers.” Well, such is life in 
the west. 
We enjoyed several good picnics around 
Pocatello. One day my daughter’s neighbor 
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