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Show handwriting and on a leaf torn from T n uotebook. The contenta ot the nolo were an follows: r "Here In my Imby; give It a home nnd may Goi bless yon nml punish me a he se es fit." After satisfying herself that tho baby bad not suffered from exposure, Mrs". Cohen Informed the police f her strange 'discovery and Detectives Burke 'and Ward low called at' th? Cohen home and conveyed tho grip nnd Its contents to the police station,' after .Vhkh 'the child . was placed in Mrs. Chandler's care. Tho matron claims that the baby i not more than four or dx dnyn old. Jn honor of the two doled Ives, Robert Rob-ert Durke and George Wardlow, who were detailed on the mysterious cane, the baby boy has been christened Robert George The baby Is strong and healthy and .seems to have suffered suf-fered not at all by Its unusual experience. TiW BABE LEFT on i mm? Snugly wrajiped in warm flannels and nulling In a telescope grp. a baby boy, which is beli-ved to be less than cllit days old. was found on the doiit( at the homo of Iienjamin Cohen. Doo Tweiity-teventh street, lat.t night. Pinned to the baby's clothing was a note, apparently from the nuiituT, ashing Mr. and Mrs. Cohvn t' give the child a homo. The police toidt tharge f the Infant In-fant and it was placed In tho care of Mrs. Ella B. Chandler, matron at the Crlttenton home for foundlings. A cnruful Investigation by the police failed to reveal any mark on the grip or aUjul th,, child's clothing which would reveal tin identity of the baby's ba-by's inuther or who had left the human hu-man bundln on tho doorstep Mrs. oheu had been uptown during dur-ing the evening, and upon her return home about 10 o'clock th, discovered the tclffc-ipe on the porch. Carrying the grip into the house, her first "discovery "dis-covery was that or a hole several Inches square lu the top .f the case. lWor she hud born able to open the grip s1k hecame aware of its 'human contents by a faint wall emitting from the layers of flannel. in the grip beside the baby was a 'Ix.ttle or milk, which had become cold. Plnne, to the child's clothing was the note, written lu a woman's |