Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 71, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 25, 1959 Page: 45 of 50
fifty pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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A talk with a friend
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" Keep your dog frieky with FT^ISKIES^
Eager to play, energy to burn
He's had his FRISKIES!
fneinkisd
dog food
Easy to tell he’sa Friskies dog!
He’s got that bright-eyed look
of health. That ready-to-romp
personality. No Wonder-with
Friskies’ balanced nourishment
... Friskies’ meaty-rich goodness
to keep him happy! Hearty with
the finest ingredients money
who would agree with him. Nevertheless,
the products of men’s minds, both physical
and philosophical, will continue to pour out;
thus, the world will be a little bit different
every day and we will have to continue
adjusting our goals and ambitions to meet
these changing conditions.
No wonder, when a tired man comes
home to his wife at night and she asks him
how his day was, he’s not quite sure. He
doesn’t know whether he accomplished
anything or not He’s sure of two things
only: his feet'hurt and he's tired all over.
I continue to marvel at the way Holly-
wood portrays the lives of famous men.
They seem to jump from one exciting
adventure right into another. Rarely, in the
90 minutes allotted to the telling of their
stories, do you sense the aggravating, tedi-
ous years which precede the exciting cli-
maxes to their lives. This leads us to. think
of a policeman's life, for instance, as being
glamorous, dangerous and filled with gun-
play. It would be hard to tell this to the
detective who is boringly checking laun-
dry marks in 200 laundries around town.
{
can buy, Friskies supplies
your dog with every vitamin,
mineral and energy food he is
known to need-up to twice the
nourishment of many brands.
Treat your dog today to
Friskies...made to the highest -
standardsof(arnation
BUSY MAN,
YOU’VE V
HAD A 2m
LITTLE DAY
I
‘HERE are some days, it seems, when the
harder we work and the more we plan,
the more we seem to be standing still, mak-
ing no apparent progress at all.
It is true that we can’t see progress
being made with each tick of the dock—
even the calendar often seems inadequate,
for it is a long and tedious time between
the planting of a seed and the reaping.
Henry Ward Beecher realized that prog-
ress was to be made slowly, over a life-
time, rather than in a matter of hours, days
or weeks. He said, “We should so live and
labor in our time that what came to us as
seed may go the next generation as blos-
som, and that what came to us as blossom
may go to them as fruit This is what we
mean by progress.”
RZ&.
DERHAPS you’re familiar with various
I sayings about the daily struggle of men
to get ahead. From Thoreau's reference to
men who lead lives of quiet desperation, to
the wit who said, "Stick-to-itiveness
brings success, especially if you run a glue
factory,” to the fight promoter who grunted,
"We shoulda stood in bed,” men have been
commenting on the almost futile job of
making progress in our daily lives.
Not only do we have a problem in mak-
ing progress, many of us are not able to
distinguish between growth and true prog-
ress. Winston Churchill once said, “I have
always considered that the substitution of
the internal combustion engine for the
horse marked a very gloomy milestone in
the progress of mankind.” There are many
Family Weekiy, October n. 1959 is
• T ■
Fer variety, teed these other Mee Filekle
ywtstciaa cum- entirely new kina.ot dog food, complete
nourtehment In e-ftavor, e-color, bite-eize mareala.
FWtMICS MUAL- meaty taete, meaty aroma, plue every
eeeentleal nutrient. Mixee instantly, extra thrifty.
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Kirkland, Tom. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 71, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 25, 1959, newspaper, October 25, 1959; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1468035/m1/45/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.