Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 77, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 31 March 1913 — PRINTS FOR THE NURSERY [ARTICLE]

PRINTS FOR THE NURSERY

Attractive Ornamentation That the . Average Household Is Well Able • to Afford. 1 Fascinating prints for the walla of the day nursery come in attractive frames and are not too expensive for the average mother to avoid. Nafture prints, as the colored photographs from nature are called, represent open air scenes at all seasons of the year. They are In . dainty frames of black 6r Circassian walnut and suspended by gold tinsel cords. 7 ■ . Prints on papier-mache from pictures by the old masters, make attractive decorations for the nursery and interest little folks because of the blbilical subjects which they represent. Most of them are framed in passepartout and are really inexpensive. Framed in brass and covered with isinglass are hosts of charming little prints by various famous modern artists, whose theme is child life. Of glass and hammered copper are passepartout frames for impressionist color scenes, chiefly of the Orient, and of a character likely to interest juveniles.