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Fuel oil conservation. Insulation packed snugly between the beams in the attic floor can reduce loss of heat up to forty or even fifty per cent. The householder can do this himself with an unfloored attic and by doing so save fifteen percent on fuel

Fuel conservation. Home insulation conserves fuel. Every homeowner can get behind his government's efforts to conserve fuel whether he heats his home with oil or coal, and both are strategically important. Fuel savings can be effected by keeping temperatures at reasonable levels, closing off unused rooms, and insulating in various ways. Windows can be weather stripped. Conservation of fuel will help release railroad and other transportation facilities for the movement of fighting materials

Fuel conservation. Home insulation conserves fuel. Every homeowner can get behind his government's efforts to conserve fuel whether he heats his home with oil or coal, and both are strategically important. Fuel savings can be effected by keeping temperatures at reasonable levels, closing off unused rooms, and insulating in various ways. Windows can be weather stripped. Conservation of fuel will help release railroad and other transportation facilities for the movement of fighting materials

Fuel oil conservation. The wall of an outside room can chill a house. An ordinary blanket tacked on the wall will serve as insulation, but for some who would make the wall-covering ornamental as well as useful, heavy fabric such as monk's cloth can be hung on the wall and drapes extended to create a decorative effect

Fuel oil conservation. Felt, wood, or metal weather stripping wards off Jack Frost and can save as much as fifteen per cent on fuel. The householder can apply felt or wood stripping himself, metal weather stripping, however, should be installed by an expert

Fuel oil conservation. Felt, wood, or metal weather stripping wards off Jack Frost and can save as much as fifteen per cent on fuel. The householder can apply felt or wood stripping himself, metal weather stripping, however, should be installed by an expert

A black and white photo of a man sitting on the floor. Office of War Information Photograph

Fuel conservation. Home insulation conserves fuel. Every homeowner can get behind his government's efforts to conserve fuel whether he heats his home with oil or coal, and both are strategically important. Fuel savings can be effected by keeping temperatures at reasonable levels, closing off unused rooms, and insulating in various ways. Windows can be weather stripped. Conservation of fuel will help release railroad and other transportation facilities for the movement of fighting materials

Fuel oil conservation. The wall of an outside room can chill a house. An ordinary blanket tacked on the wall will serve as insulation, but for some who would make the wall-covering ornamental as well as useful, heavy fabric such as monk's cloth can be hung on the wall and drapes extended to create a decorative effect

Fuel oil conservation. Insulation packed snugly between the beams in the attic floor can reduce loss of heat up to forty or even fifty per cent. The householder can do this himself with an unfloored attic and by doing so save fifteen percent on fuel

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Summary

Picryl description: Public domain image of a worker, labor, factory, plant, manufacture, industrial facility, 1930s, mid-20th-century industrial photo, free to use, no copyright restrictions.

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safety film negatives fuel oil conservation fuel oil conservation insulation beams attic floor attic floor loss heat forty fifty cent householder percent fifteen percent united states history workers library of congress
date_range

Date

01/01/1942
person

Contributors

Liberman, Howard, photographer
United States. Office of War Information.
place

Location

create

Source

Library of Congress
link

Link

http://www.loc.gov/
copyright

Copyright info

Public Domain

label_outline Explore Householder, Fuel Oil Conservation, Fifty

A black and white photo of a man on a boat. Office of War Information Photograph

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. - A member of the Columbia Reconstruction Project Team cleans a piece of debris from Columbia. The items at KSC number more than 82,000, weigh 84,800 pounds or 38 percent of the total dry weight of Columbia. Of those items, 78,760 have been identified, with 753 placed on the left wing grid in the RLV Hangar. KSC-03pd1547

The cotton pickers on this farm were temporary neighbors to the owner. Four adults and seven children. The latter as follows: one six year old boy picks one hundred pounds a day. His father said "He picks one hundred pounds every day." Two children of seven pick one hundred and fifty pounds a day each. One of nine years picks about two hundred pounds. Several from ten to fifteen pick three to four hundred pounds. The whole group picks a bale a day. (1,600 to 1,800) pounds a day. Location: McKinney [vicinity], Texas.

Flooding ^ Severe Storm - Hanover, N. Y. , October 15, 2009 -- FEMA mitigation survey specialists Andy Pleshko and Victor Quinones survey repetitive loss properties in the town of Hanover, NY. A major disaster declaration was signed on Sept. 1, 2009, after torrential storms and flooding inundated western New York in early August. FEMA/Jacqueline Chandler

A person standing on top of a yellow bar chart. Refugees economic migrants financial equalization, business finance.

A blue background with numbers and an arrow. Stock exchange world economy man.

Two people are standing on top of a bar chart. Refugees economic migrants financial equalization, business finance.

Straight on rear view medium shot as multinational firefighters stationed in Butmir compound, Sarajevo, Bosnia in support of Operation Joint Forge, try to eliminate hazardous conditions by clearing 3 feet of snow on the top of a military building. Sarajevo encountered the deepest amount of snow in fifty years this winter. Roads were closed and some businesses (Roads and businesses not shown) were shut down for the four days of intense snow fall

Depth 10,000 feet, 400 miles southwest of the Azores; view of the bow section of the nuclear-powered attack submarine USS SCORPION (SSN-589) where it rests on the ocean floor. Note the forward messenger buoy cavity and escape trunk access hatches. The SCORPION sank with the loss of its 99 man crew on 22 May 1968 by what is believed to have been the accidental explosion of one of its own torpedoes. The wreckage was located 31 October 1968 by a towed sled with magnetometers, sonar and still cameras

Damage and Loss to Tree Stands - Ohio

Bacon's Castle, James River vic., Surry County, Virginia

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- In the RLV Hangar, the floor grid is marked with a growing number of pieces of Columbia debris. The Columbia Reconstruction Project Team will attempt to reconstruct the orbiter as part of the investigation into the accident that caused the destruction of Columbia and loss of its crew as it returned to Earth on mission STS-107. KSC-03pd0586

Topics

safety film negatives fuel oil conservation fuel oil conservation insulation beams attic floor attic floor loss heat forty fifty cent householder percent fifteen percent united states history workers library of congress