Monday, Mar. 01, 1937

Paulines

In Detroit, discovered studying at Southwestern High School, were Pauline ("Paulyann") Taylor and Pauline E. ("Neene") Taylor. Born within two hours of each other on Sept. 22, 1920, they are both redheaded, freckled, look alike, dress alike, prefer the same food, swim and play the piano equally well. Inseparable, they are unrelated. Pauline Taylor was born at St. Ignace, Mich., Pauline E. Taylor at St. Catherines, Ont.

Bite

In Oneonta, N. Y., police arrested Clyde Proctor, 27, who confessed to having shaken a 15-month-old boy to death "because it bit me."

Bite

In Kingston, Pa., in Nesbitt Memorial Hospital. Nurse Georgia De Frane was applying a solution to the leg wounds of Miner John Lapore. 45, when he suddenly bit off the tip of her nose.

Protest

In Thurston, Md., Farmer L. I. Gregg's car became deeply mired in a road whose condition the neighbors had long deplored. Unable to extricate his car even with the help of a large and sympathetic crowd, Farmer Gregg dynamited it as a protest.

Protest

In Brooklyn, N. Y., caught dumping mail into an incinerator, Postman Henry M. Briggs, 48, protested: "My feet hurt me and I had a kidney ailment."

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