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Show WATOTJT ' By BEN MUSS Tell Mo COLUMBUS.Tn M tone mors day - . V - . T-r- T:r - 1 WE'LL. GIVE YOU . - I X W - V- Britannica Wii the Junior Encyclopedia for school and home. Send your questions, jame, ge, address to "Tell Me Why!" care of this paper. In case of duplicate questions, the author will decide the win-- n r. Today's winner Is: Cheryl English, 11, Bronx, N.Y. I APPRECIATE HEBE WE V By DICK BROOKS C FOR THE tCW BM?Tf ) ASKING OLD THREE VECRS 4 up A set op poall UNBREAISABUS PEAR CH)NAV.E CHAOSED r HOPE I CAN GET GO THROUGH NOU CAN GO OVER UN PER I "OUR OWN POWER JILL f TWOS' IVE GOT RffrTEKY ALICHABSEP UP FOR SPRING UP ENOUGH TO WTTH THIS -- B 'rXXJVS IN PMO'OJjPCUSUif 1 I L 1 BETTER THAN s . r gJ r ertCH VOU HAVE TO GET UP EARLIER THAN THAT TO v4-- N T Ksrwnsnsw 4. (a X - ' 7 r I jj History Today Is Thursday, April 1, the 91st day of 1965 with 274 to Mow. It's also known as April Fools' Day. . ., J The moon is new. The morning star is Mars, The evening stars are Mars, Jupiter and Mercury. Otto von Bismarck, the found er ot tne uerman state was born on this day in 1815. On this day in L'istory: in 1507, -- tireat Britain sep arated Burma from India and set it up as a Crown Colony with its own legislature and British governor. By KARL GURBERT In 1939, Generalissimo Fran cisco Franco announced that the Spanish Civil War had end ed. The U.S. extended recogni tion to the Franco regime. 7 lu 1945, American armed forc es began the invasion of Okina THE BERRYS II 1 1 -- TEE: - " " Today In THE JACKSON TWiNS 10 ) WHOEVER HEARD A OFWAXIAIfrA O TOLNE, w Y1 BUT1WISI CAN DO 1 A MEAT PLACE ! If you had never seen an before and looked at its skin, Tould you have any idea of what is inside? Man faces somewhat the same kind of situation when he tries to learn about the center of the earth. Do you know how far man has actually gone below the surface of the earth? Only about part of the distance to the center of the earth! So scientists have Bx DICK CAVALLI orange MOFJTY MEEKlE wa. had to find: other, ways of ex- nique. First, you. put your left ploring the earth besides dig- arm around her waist. Then ging and drilling. By the way, you gently take her left hand ; one of the biggest helps has and been the study-o- f earthquakes. Bill: She's my sister. By studying the vibrations and Phil: Oh! Then you just push how the shocks travel through ner off the dock! the earth they can learn a great deal about what it is WORD PUZZLE made of. But the first thing they learn I ed came from drilling and dig F ging mines and, tunnels. And that is, the deeper the hole you make, the higher the tempera A ture becomes. In fact, for about every 60 feet mat you go down into the earth, the temperature grows one degree higher. When you get two miles be low the surface of the earth, the temperature is high enough to boil water! If, it were posLITTLE sible to dig 30 miles, the temperature would be about 2,200 degrees Fahrenheit. Since that hot enough to melt rocks, why --doesn't the rock melt? It's because the crust bears down with so much pressure that it holds it rigid. But scientists now believe that it doesn't keep on getting hotter and hotter - without a limit They believe that at the core of the center of the earth the temperature may not be more than 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit And hte pressure here is unbelievable. It is about 45 million pounds a square inch! What is this core or center made of? Scientists think It Is a great molten ball of iron and nickel, with a diameter of about 4,000 miles. The reason they think these metals are at 2ACR08SI the center of the earth is that that meteorites of the many strike the earth from outer! space are made of these metals. And the earth Is prob ably made up of much the same materials as these met eorites. ALLEY v A I ONCf KNOW NOT THE TOWN. M IJEHNIFER! mJKX WONDERFUL FAMIL- YAND YOU !.THtRrt A POEM BY RICHARD .Irt YOU, PETE- !-' IMMUNE THt CHANGE TWO DAV5 HERE HAVE MADE IN YOU! 6000 FOR CAN'T HOVEY-TH- If OHO KNOW DARLING ! LOOK! world! and I WANT TO IT SHALL K HIGH. tt SHALL U GKEAl! i can I'M WHAT I tZtW do anything) HAVrrr UrR winner Is: Susan Kolinowskt, BUILD Auburn, J Mass. 'Some 5,000 ; stars can be seen by the naked eye on a clear night, although the heavens con tain an estimated 200 billion. " nn a i 's3danD uwn i i-- k7 Mp Nir ISACR0SS I8 i I I . p-- 8 'siooa 'mis 9 dwvai 6 'uwi3H 'ooa 3iivad c 'onr 'i 'ana i 'i-- Moa -- t 'vhsnw 'iokw v 'lwaMSNY By HAMBLLN WHi,I ATOMIC-AS- C VKCMXCKWCLRr KOULPtfTMkNT) EVEN I TO TACKLE ONE OP T A USABLE STONE THOSE CRITTERS WITH SaEMTISTS-.OVX- WANT Win the Britannlca World Atlas or Yearbook of . Events. Send your riddles, Jokes to: Riddles, Jokes, "Ten Me Why!" Today's OOP A COUPLE 7 DO m KNOH BUitM MWJKY woKOMum seas shall u m mt-- , yL Can l; change the first': word "Swim" to the last word "Flap" in four moves? Change one letter in the word with each move. See tomorrow's paper for . the answer. PEOPLE'S PUZZLE ' By KEN ALLEN " SI A thought for the day Brit ain's wartime prime minister, Sir Winston Churchill said of the FUN TIME The Chuckle Box Royal Air Force in 1940: "Nev Bill: What is the best way to er in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so teach a girl to swim? Phil: That requires tech- many to so few", MARY WORTH APRIC T, 1965 HowMotlsJIenterofthelarfh?, i S THURSDAY, Why J J CC v A JUST OUR BARB HAND8I WTTH lj WHAT MAKES OU THINK BE EASIER XfCWTWBrt ABOUTA COME D BYTHAN A OHL X BUNNO4 K COME I AT NEED TO CHANGE ONLY ONE UTTUMKD I- N- r By STEVE ROPEK WceK Ml WOUIWTT OOKI&f PLACES WTTH ME. DOLLY AU USAR4.IPS LET E6BERT TAKE 1 QJjpj -- U SMMA AVE THAT AN ME WOULDNT BE SMART AT ALL. NOT SMART V PULL THE ? A UNDER kW) OVERGARDtj'l ABNEP , ST 7 M 7 COCD, I DOLLy A EGBERT By KERRY DhAKi. 1 -- TKl " ' THE HAVE LEARNCP NAMES OF THE WHOLE MV9HT WBi,S6T. PRAXE.. YOU'RE Abank scbbery mob MAOAM A&AM HAD LIVED tAKiHd THIS BACK WITH JCU WATT A MJHUTE, VOU HAVE TO LEAVE IYIH J f PC EYE ADAM CALLS FROM THE HOTEL DUR1N& HER STAY HEREf MADAM MAW ANY ' Jk -- two; sir f. BOTn ION- MiSTMf BOTH TO SAME NUMBER AND EXTENSION HERE ARK THt RECORD YES WHY.'. A1FRED ANDRIOU - SOME MISTAKT jrf t ?YAT PRBCILLA'S mi SOCIAL WDRK WAS NEVER LIKE THIS AT J SARAH LAWRENCE J --U POP AA IS M MfCtTf IMB- ET FOR POLICE CJUARTERS j THIS . SLIPS-'i-e- Haea-itT-i-f- exquisiteJ VOU NCB Bj AL VERMEEH I K AND I'D i V FEEL EVEN BfcTTfclK MAKES AC5IRL - 1 R WILLIAMS , I SELOD2J l I'M NOT eOlNO TO FALL TOR ANY APRIL POOLS' GA9S HAW HAW) FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS'-- -- UM U LJ : t rv thatb A(rxSr,riow) STRAMGE X. Hill qrj-j- f . By BLOSSERIOTT OUR WAV CN By 1 THH AAATTER T NO JUST HARP-HEAP6RAMP " (WITH THOSE TWO ? I OvCKHAUUWG THE LA1AN MOAER, BUT KJOW THAT HE'S TAKEKI ITAWJCT KJCTTHER OMB HAS HE CAKrT PI6URE OLfT HOVJ TD PUT IT SfDKEWAWORP FOR THE LAST HALF I EiAOCTDflETHER AfiUklW HESTDO HOUR' ARE THSY J( PROUP TO ASK JIMMY FOR. A LIFT, AMP MAP AT EACH fT3l JIMMYS TOO STUBBOKKI TO OFFEKTO OTHER? Vlr V HELP LWLESS HE'S ASKjiP IDHATETD J f. iABSTOKJ IICH ONE'LL. CRACK FIRST 1 EH RUNNY ' L rlGOTTIPBO OF ff "3 TWELP ME TAKSV0U I' WAMO TO 7 HmqM H2f"' ( lllXt2?) WHERE VVBSOISJ') 7 btdhj? 1. WHAT ! Biv ; r Bz ERNIE BUSHMULER NANCY 1 By AL CAP! Jir . ) THH STXLEMATS |