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Show Furnishings with a Euture By RUTH W. LEE aMebitatatime Home-Furnishin- Consultant gs trends in furniture are as changeable as Since one of the nicest things about the 1960 designs is that they won't soon go out of date. Whether you are adding to your furnishings or starting from scratch, their simplicity makes the task delightfully easy. an collections is extensive new walnutr the in Outstanding group, which combines the unadorned Danish Reeling with the classic curves of contemporary Italian stylesIncludetL in this group are storage pieces which have the remarkable room, dining versatility of being equally at home in living " room, or bedroom. There are wonderful area rugs whose bold colors complen mood without overpowering ment the it. (Here, it's important to remember to buy a bright rug first and decorate around it.) Lamps, too, seem to have "more variety than ever before. In fact, the whole accessory picture is the best it's ever been. ' The marvelous point of this spring's line is that its under, stated appearance fits in anywhere and will endure. ' ' straigH-lineTnoder- v- - i ' 1 As r is t 0 ( - - - - ... - yx Curves add warmth to this unusual contemporary sofa and chair. NEW DROWSE ELECTRIC ALARM -- Exclusive ,f Sleep Selector lets you choose 5 or 10 minutes extra sleep. Pinefrost green, pastel pink or doeskin color, luminous Cloud gray, plain dial 5 dial 6. jit' A I - M' DIQ DEN has a new ' golden-spu- n dial! Choose this handsome Other Big Ben models from depend on Prices ic ma Uelmit tax. When this new Westclox gently awakens you . .. . simply push down the exclusive "Sleep Selector,7' and snuggle back under the covers. You can't oversleep, because "Drowse" calls you again, in five 'minutes or ten . . . whichever you selected! What a leisurely way. to wake up! What a clever new Westclox idea! - -- Under What a thoughtful gift for Mother's Day, the massive bronze of the boy David, a woman pensively. She wore blue jeans and helda live monkey in ber arms, but she was quiet and there was a kind of awe in her eyes. ' It was that ;way, too, for the others in the Ringling Brothers Art Museum in Sarasota Fla. The sunburned Missouri farmer stared transfixed at a painting of the Nativity. The woman from Ohio leaned closer to the purity of an Italian madonna. The small boy in wrinkled shirt and shorts blinked solemnly at'a painting of the sleeping Christ Child. It was a place for tourists and ''connoisseurs, a museum founded by a man whose wealth came from the tinsel and tanbark of the greatest show on earth. The tourists and the aesthetes were noisy waiting for admission but, when they 15th-centu- ry "Birthdays and Anniversaries,' too! well-dress- ed .x WORLD'S LARGEST MANUFACTURER OF TIMEPIECES Family Weekly, April 10, I960 -- |