Check Your Tires Once "Two of the most impor tant rules in tire safety and mileage are maintaining the proper air pressure and regu larly examining for excessive or irregular tread wear,” says Ross R. Ormsby, Chair TOP DRESS WHEAT FIELDS NOW WITH AMMONIUM NITRATE 33 Vi NITROGEN AVAILABLE IN BULK- BAGS and BULK SPREADER SERVICE OR PORTABLE BULK BINS. liimimMii Smoketown, Pa. * Ph. 397-3539 < J/*> * Y A ■X*. , /’ ‘ ti.” ■I MM' ■CARBADOX Mecadox MM ■ CARBADOX Mecadox The Super Starter GIHMAN FEED MILL, INC. Denver, Penna. 17517 Phone 215-267-5585 man of the Tire Industry Safety Council. Checking a tire’s air pres sure is an easy task that any motorist can handle. The Council recommends the pres sure be checked at least once ****** < jC ): / v 1> } Get faster starts, faster growth. Now in GERMAN'S PIG STARTER-MX Available at: , A *• „ Vs <* > « >v * s a Month a month with a personal hand gauge. Government surveys have found that air tower gauges are often inaccurate. Check the pressure when the tires are cool, before starting out on the road. Your car owner’s manual will tell what the correct pressure should be, and then if necessary add the needed amount. Then take a Lincoln penny and insert it upside down into the tread groove. If the top of Lincoln’s head is visible in two or more adjacent grooves, the tire needs replacement. Safety experts consider a tire as “bald” when the tread depth is worn to l/16th of an inch or less. After this point, the tires are 44 times more likely to disablement than new tires. Removing nails, small stones or bits of glass em bodied in the tread will help prevent costly tire damage which can lead to failure. This preventive maintenance is normally done at the serv ice station when the tires are rotated (every 5,000 miles), the oil changed or the car lub ricated. But there is no sub stitute for periodic personal inspection for greater assur ance. \.>s> Lancaster Farming. Saturday. April 14.197 LET’S GO METRIC In August of last year, the Senate passed legis moving for U.S. adoption of the international metri tem as our primary system and comparable acti anticipated in the House. From a number of view) this is a most responsible decision. j In the first place, we are now the only industrial r | on earth not on or moving to the metric system. | estimated that with metric-sized products we’ll op< l as much as $lO-billion additional foreign trade and en knows with our trade imbalance we can use it., tinuing to use our customary system places us in a I nological trap of our own making and this is iiian j world where all are moving to a single technolug' though the move will be expensive, evidence is suc’i failure to change will be more costly in the long rid Domestically a shift to metrics will create somJ fusion for both the public and business, but in thej run we’ll probably learn it better than our preserl tem. After all, how much sense is there to a system asks you to relate 12 inches to a fool, three feet to a 1 36 inches to a yard, 1,760 yards to the mile or 5,28; to the mile? With metrics we measure simply—for I? the meter is divided into decimeters (l/10th),cenlin| (l/100th), millimeters (l/1000lh) —all you do is ■ a decimal point! The system is so much more logica j our own. The changeover will also encourage us to updal standards and specifications for products, offering unprecedented opportunity to improve them and ci the unnecessary variety which increases cost. Quick action on this vital legislation would be a si to America’s economic future. j I\EW If you're looking for alow-cost 14" x 18" ■ baler with the durability and capacity of more expensive models, come in and see the i > \ New Holland Model 273 Hayliner Baler. Jfl We'll show you why the "273" is the most > durable and trouble-free baler ever built in the low-price field. Roy A. Brubaker TOO Woodcrest Ave. Lititz, Pa. Tel. 626-7766 C. E. Wiey t Son, Inc. 101 S. lime St., Quarryville 786-2895 A.B.C. Groff, li r 110 S. Railroad , New Holland 354-4191 I. H. Brutal 350Str*sburgPik 3