Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 140, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 12 June 1913 — CORRECT FOR WRITING TABLE [ARTICLE]

CORRECT FOR WRITING TABLE

Stationery Is of the Daintiest Order, and Most Attractive in Its Completeness. Sevep by five and onei-half Inch Sheets are fashionable for correspondence stationery which, when doubled once, fit into envelopes with deeply pointed flaps and of extreme size. These receptacles are additionally enique because lined with pebble-sur-laced tlssuo paper sprinkled over with

sprays of fine flowers and leaves. Like the sheets, which at the right upper corner are engraved with the home address, the envelopes are of a sort of parchment paper in old ivory—a tone which, at the moment, is ultra-smart in stationery. Long oblong sheets of glazed-surface paper with a half-inch lap-over at one end and fitting into extremely narrow envelopes with straight flaps, are another stationery novelty of this season. These sheets and enveloped come in French gray, cream and light brown shades and to match them are two by six inch correspondence cards —also with lap-over ends —and exceedingly narrow envelopes. A new Idea in mourning stationery is the envelope In pure wdite save for a fine line of black defining its deeply pointed flap but with a black tissue paper lining. The sheets are merely edged with black and the address engraved in black skeleton lettering.