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Show ARCHBISHOP CORRIGAN HOME. Archbishop Corrigan received a royal welcome when he arrived in New York on the St. Louis from Europe last Saturday. Sat-urday. Three hundred persons, clergymen clergy-men and lay, left Pier A, North River, at 7 a, m. on the steamer Mohawk and met the liner down the bay. At the same time the steamboat Tol-chester, Tol-chester, chartered by Brooklyn clergymen clergy-men and lay friends, went to meet the Right Rev. C. E. McDonnell, Bishop of Brooklyn, who was returning from a pilgrimage to Rome on the same shi.-. The tug Charles F. Allen transferred Archbishop Corrigan to the Mohawk and Bishop McDonnell to the Tolches-ter. Tolches-ter. The Mohawk followed the big liner as far as the dock and then proceeded up the North River to the foot of Fiftieth Fif-tieth street, where the Archbishop landed at 10:45 a. m., and rove to his residence, on Madison avenue and Fifty-second street, accompanied bv Bishop Farley, Bishop Keeley ancJ Vicar Vi-car General Mooney. On boarding the tug Archbishop Corrigan Cor-rigan was met by the Reception Committee, Com-mittee, headed by Bishop Farley and Viii.r General Mooney, and held an informal in-formal reception. Bishop Keelley of Savannah and State Charity Commissioner Commis-sioner Philman received warm greetings. greet-ings. The Archbishop on his European tour visited the Poe at Rome, and then went to Paris, London. . X)uMf and j)thervcltle "' ":--- |