Just put his name.
Ex:
Joe,
I'm sorry to hear about...
My Sympathies,
Sally Sue
Yes, you should always put a return address on any envelope. The person you are sending the sympathy card may not know your last name or address and also the Postal Service needs to have a return address in case you put the wrong address down of the recipient.
There is no special way to address a sympathy card: Mr. and Mrs. John Doe is what I would write.
Not usually. Sympathy cards are usually sent to people you know. Simply signing your name inside should let them know who it's from.
im asking you, not me.
I sent a card to the address in Lubbock, TX and got it back saying refused. I'mtrying again with the address in Santa Monica, CA. I found this site for an e card http://www.theeternalportal.com/tributes/farrah-fawcett/sympathy-card/
In a Sympathy Card let the verse do the talking and you can just sign it or add that you are there for them if they should need anything and then sign it.
My condolences, my sympathies...
If not directing the card specifically to the daughter in this case, usually you would address to "The Family of [deceased]".
Choose a Sympathy card with a verse that basically expresses how you feel. When you sign the bottom of the card tell them that you are there should they ever need to talk.
Logically, a sympathy card is addressed to the survivors of the immediate family, collectively. e.g. The Smith Family 1234 Main St. Anywhere, USA In a situation where there is only the surviving spouse, a sympathy card should be addressed as follows : Mr. John Smith 1234 Main St. or Mrs. John Smith 1234 Main St. NB. When the wife is the sole survivor, you do not use her first name in the address, but rather, her husband's first name
Imagine your friend is standin in fornt of you, what would you say to him/her then? - put that on the card.
It is etiquette to put the wife's name first and inside the card put her name first and then the husbands (the deceased was his mother-in-law) so he should be included.