Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 24 Feb 1982, p. 39

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Vinyl Storm Window Saves Heat, Dollars PAGE 11 - PLAINDEALER - WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 24.1MB than these more expensive windows, too. As compared to outdoor storm windows Vinyl In­ sider is easier and safer to install. No ladder is ever needed. Its materials weigh so little even a child can put it up. No tool except a knife or scissors for trimming the plastic is necessary. Vinyl In-Sider Storm Window Kits come in four sizes, with nothing else to buy. Kit A is for window openings 24" x 38", B for 38" x 5<T; C for 5<T x 72" and D for 7T x 80T. Kit D also fits patio doors. They can be bought at local home centers, hard­ ware stores, building ma­ terial retailers and retail chains. For further infor­ mation, write Plaskolite, Inc., 1770 Joyce Avenue, Box 1497, Columbus, Ohio 43216. TMs to tie inexpensive way to keep your house warm by keeping the heat inend the cold out Thie Vinyl In-Sider Storm Window KK ma*ght budgets aa well ae tightly fitting your window at low coefc It to made up of a tough (tour mil.) dear flexible vinyl aheet and plaabc frame fastened to the window caring or wH by lta own adhsatve. Two laartng magannaa for the home, after their own teeta, aay that producta Hfce this save up to hafV of the heat normally loet through windows. The Vinyl In-Sktor la available through many hardware, home centers, buikRng supply dealers and retail chain etoree. For more information, write PtoekoMte, inc., 1770 Joyce Avenue, Box 1407, Columbus, Ohio 43210. -_ A brand new inexpensive storm window kit that saves lots of energy is being hailed by db-it-youreelfers all over the nation. Intro­ duced by Plaskolite, the pi­ oneer in interior storm win­ dows, it's called the Vinyl In-Sider Storm -Window Kit. The Vinyl In-Sider is very simple. It is made up of a tough, clear flexible vinyl sheet held in place by an easy-to-install frame which you fasten to the window casing or wall using adhe­ sive already on the frame. The sheet is held in place on the frame by a top molding, completely sealing the win­ dow against air infiltration, drafts or chifls. This system of saving heat or air cooled air is so effective that two leading magazines for the home, Good Housekeeping and New Shelter, after their own tests, declare that plastic sheets, properly in­ stalled, will save up to SO percent of the heat nor­ mally lost through uninsu­ lated windows. Vinyl In-Sider not only seals off infiltration better than most storm windows, it also conducts less cold than windows made of metal and glass. Plastic is a poorer conductor. Since the dead air space created by the Vinyl In-Sider is greater than double glazing it offers more insulation Brake Parts Company McNeary'tN*. 1 ftapUyr invites you to visit our •eellw, Ne/s 33 A 34 to see who we are ^ and what we do and make at . Plus...Fill out a card For a chance to win a "Brake Parts" Pee 1 register in our MICROWAVE ovn DRAWING! Soe You There! KL-SAT.-MNL KMBAIY 34-27-10 A SUBSIDIARY OF ; .. '3 N0FACI0RIN0 COMPANY 1600N. IndostriaftJrtVe ' McHenry, HI. 'RIAL (815)344-2426 BOOTH EE IN THE LEARNING CENTER t COME SEE US AND { • JOIN OUR FREE DRAWING • AWAY 0 FOR A HOOVER PORTAPOWER e FREE UTTER • VACUUM CLEANER (*70 VALUE)® BAGS! • leeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee V\featherproof In winter. For the past several winters, many parts ol the country have experienced energy shortages. The oil and coal needed to make electricity couldn't be delivered. Rivers were frozen. Stockpiled coal was frozen solid. The machinery to move coal was lrozen. As fuel ran low. electricity had to be rationed. Plants and schools were closed. Iteople were laid off. Shivering became the national pastime. But not in northern Illinois. It wasn't luck that got us through those winters: it was nuclear power. Over 40% ol the electricity we make comes from nuclear fuel. Because no matter how much it snows or how cold it gets, nuclear fuel is available--weatherproof Enough uranium to provide all the electricity a mod* mcxU^mxn abundant coal and uranium That help* to coraanw th» scarce tuefe oil and natural gat we need for an Illinois winter can be stored in a one car garage. In summer. Nuclear power gives us the reliability we need to respond to summer peak demands without brownouts. In the last decade, when growth of air conditioning helped increase demand for electricity more than 35%. Edison's nuclear stations had an unbroken record of summer availability And nuclear power is today's great energy bargain. It costs about a penny and a hall a kilo­ watt hour less than coal and over lour cents less than ofl. If we'd replaced our uranium with low sulphur wertom coal in 1980. it would have cost an extra $460,000,000 in fuel expense Using oil or gas instead of uranium would have driven the cost up to almost. 1.5 billion dollars Instead, the nuclear fuel we used, the equivalent ol 46,000.000 barrels of oil saved over 10% on your electric bill With our strong nuclear capability, we're ready for the weather Let it snow. Let it sizzle See Our IT Electric Heat Exhibit" at Booths No. 20 & 21 " IV #2* V. . W-

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