You Can Control Air in a House
as You Do Water
Suppose every water faucet in your house leaked. You’d immediately call a plumber.
Every door and window does leak air and dust and germs. There are cracks about them, only about one-eighth of an inch wide, it is true, but open enough for the heat to escape and the cold air, often laden with impurities, to rush in.
Doors and windows are not built sufficiently tight to close these cracks. The remedy is to call a weather strip man.
When a house is properly weather-stripped, you regulate the air as successfully as you control the water with good plumbing. When you close the doors and windows in inclement weather, your house is weather-proof; all the heat is kept inside and a uniform temperature is easily and quickly attained. When you close up in summer, your place is dust and dirt proof.
Weather-stripping is just as effective in office buildings, factories and schools as it is in homes. The one point of danger is in the quality of the weather strip. Identify the manufacturer. Secure weather strip from a member of the Weather Strip Manufacturers’ Association, an organization of responsible manufacturers who represent more than $2, 000, 000 of invested capital.
Communicate with one of the following factories and you Will be promptly supplied with full information on its product
Weather Strip Manufacturers’ Association:
American Metal Weather Strip Co., Grand Rapids, Mich.
Athey Company, Chicago, Ill.
Diamond Metal Weather Strip Co., Columbus, Ohio
Higgin Manufacturing Co., Newport, Ky.
Kane Manufacturing Co., Kane, Pa.
Monarch Metal Products Co., St. Louis, Mo.
Niagara Metal Weather Strip Co.,
Buffalo, N. Y.
“Weather strips are 100% fuel conservation. ”
— U. S. Fuel
Administration.
WEATHER STRIP
MʼFʼRS ASSʼN