Show I q 1 I H PAY PEARY RECEIVES AN OVATION AS THE T L ROOSEVELT r ASSES T I E W IU e you yap j 1 Arctic Explorer the Center of Attention fur Dur DurI son I illg Celebration on the fie l gave ve no a River Toot a Greeting how 11 J Ir rho how w I Xe Now York OcL hero return 1 Ing from victorious battle ever oer re 10 received a finer welcome than I that I which came from the war fleet drawn up In the tho to today day rIllY when Commander Robert E EPeary EPeary Peary steamed past In his Arctic ship J the Roosevelt S a f The or of eight nations I i f honored the tho American naval officer thes hes i I as he stood on the deck of the tho staunch i little steamer that had borno him to toward ward the polo S The Roosevelt brought up the rear t or of the naval parade parado that up t the he river today toda to join In the Hi Fulton celebration at Newburgh At As l i she passed the tho sailors leaped to the tho j rails and cheered All the way wa up Iho s ho was the tho main blew and thousands of spectators fin cheered to W test Point N Y OcL mandol mando Pears Parys ship tit tho o Roosevelt olt Is 4 sr stranded In the Hudson river near J 1 Pw Morgans prIvate landing be ber r j low HIghland Falls OKANE f 1 New York Oct Command f 29 er r Robert F a Peary and every eory mom mem 1 i her bel of the cre crew that accompanied him ua D too I on his quest or of the forth orth Polo aboard t ty of t 1 the tho steamer Roos Roosevelt just hack back from lo the region of eternal ice was a gall a II i ent feature of the tho naval parade toda today andU and Li up HP the tho lower loer Hudson to met meet the tho thor ther r Side ar are 1 Half HaIr Moon and Clermont at Newburgh 1 I Commander Peal Peary accompanied b br l tae th r his wife arrived here this morning 1 I from Portland Maine lerch iti r The pro progress tess from froma a h Quarantine to her berth at the foot of oC and b dam f 1 West Fort street tas was ma marked orce b by a continuous blast of whistles and land 0 r F when she came oft off Riverside drive l here H e the tho crowd was gathered and n 1 start started d on her wn way up UI he river ll lie e I f salute was up by br thousands or of orand and la I e d cheering voices The nucleus of the tho Lower Hudson Id the fleet that started this mornin morning to meet meets meeta the thc Half Moon and Clermont and the theother s a other craft coming down the tho ate was a squadron of oC one small United I States cruiser twelve torpedo boats j and four submarines The Castine i 1 the parent boat of the submarine j ij squadron and four other submarines i I are arc acting as escort to the tho Half Moon Moona t I J a an and the Clermont making 32 22 Amen AmenI I can warships In demonstration tion i The other othor members of the American Ameri can war fleet and the visiting k remained at their anchorages anchor anchorages ages in the Hudson where the they Imo have rp rested tf tI since tho they assembled last Sat Saturday The Tho Half Moon boon and the Clermont spent the night at Ossining and had hada t I a 11 comparatively short run this V morning to reach Their first stop was waB at where they the wore the central figures In a lo 10 local cal eal celebration n a quaint little elt city that i dal dales If from early Dutch colonial Ume had harl prepared for tho celebration o of its history I Their arrangements with the bration committee gives bives Wright and Curtiss until 4 t Saturday to tomake i make maliC a successful night flight As Curtiss Curtissr r Is expected to leave on Saturday night to keep an engagement at St SL Louis it Il Is believed ho will male make another effort toda today or tomorrow Both ala avia l tors said his morning that prospeCts of an exhibition were far from prom t he whistles of a hundred harbor craft shrieked a continuous salute to the steamer Roose Roosevelt elt as she ahe ploughed F up the harbor this morning at the mo me moment ment when Commander Robert F Pear Peary stepped from a train In the Grand Central station returning to toJ J New C York from his trip to the North orth Pole to participate hr the Hudson Fulton Fullon naval parade parado up the Hudson on r The Roosevelt was well on her way from the Quarantine station on Staten I Island to the tho pier at the foot of West Vest street where the explorer e I er 1 was a to hoard her when Command or r Pear Peary arrived at 7 15 a m lIo Ile was accompanied by Mrs Irs Peary Tire The hour of their arrival was so soI I oj I earl early that few persons were at the 1 station to greet them Thor They were f warmly greeted however hr by Herbert lit 1 L secretary of th the Peary club A group of newspaper newspapermen men also was gathered on the tho plat pInt platform form and dyer crowded around the i commander and questioned him a about j i hl trip to the far north With the I laughing remark that he was wa too hun turned d to talk Commander Peary ash Ji the questioners and J 1 across the street for breakfast I I After a hurried breakfast flan tho com comander nander ander and Peary left the hotel for fol the tho pier at the root foot of W st I street where tIte they were to hoard the Roosevelt Members of thu Peary Arctic club and close I friends of the explorer will discuss with him during his stay to In the n ci f the tho various phases of the North orth Pole rs bat Commander Pear Peary said ho w would uld not talk about the sub stub for publication until his formal Cormal statement was prepared When Commander Peary Mrs frs Penny Pend and Herbert Horbert I 1 Bridgman board bourd boarded ed the for Cor the trip up the Hudson It had not been decided how far fal up the river he would go I after reachinG the pier Mr Peary walked up and down for several ruin min minI I Con Continued lIn nc on Page oge PI Five vo I I I PEARY RECEIVES AN OVATION AS THE ROOSE ROOSEVELT ROOSEVELT VELT PASSES W WARSHIP Continued 7 from Page Pago One utes without being recognized by some somo pOIsons persons gathered there for fol fola fora a glimpse of th the Roosevelt The lIttle steamer was anchored out In Inthe inthe the stream with the North Polo Pole hag hagat at her mizzen mast with the tho flag which In time the International sIgnal co code e ere re react ld Thank You flying beneath It How does It le feel l to he back asked some one onen n It does docs not feel so the words of Fadden Pear Peary Then his ores eyes turned hack back fond fondly to LImo tho Roosevelt Site She does not look Wee u a ver ery ship does docs she sho shelie lie he said But Bitt up In the thc Ice she looks I I like and there were times when whon she looked ed mighty good to me You notIce the wn way buill The round remind of her hel bow prevents time tho ico from keeping hold of hel whop sho Rho is squeezed an and she bobs up lip when the Ice crushes together The Thc North Pole flag which the tho steamer bears Is the tho usual American ensign with a stripe of white bearing the words North Polo Pole In black lot lotters lOtters running diagonally from time up upper upper per corner or of the horizontal stripes to a 11 corner cornor under the tho stars Corn Com explained Its origin as R follows 1 wanted n a piece or of the tho silk fia r I flow at tho thio polo pole to bury burr at that point with may records so I cut a trip strip o out t of it Then to the flag I sewed a strip of white silk Into the cut I d to time tho The he design seemed su so ap lint we this strIp rand and adopted It as the North Pole en cn ensign sign Mr Ir and Mrs Peary hail had stopped on the tug and were on their wa way I to the tho Roosevelt before the tho crowd at atthe th the dock realized who they wore Then there was a l burst of cheering and the whistles r their blast Captain Bartlett and the cro crow or of nineteen men still wore on the tho Roose yell veil the tho garments the they had chosen for their rough trip to tho ho Arctic flannel shirts fur hoots boots and pictures quo sea togs The Roosevelt lay ny at anchor answering the salutes or of the passing steamers She then dropped into line and brought up the tho rear or of orthe the procession Commander Pear s reception In New York was comparatively a quiet Olle because lie ho slipped into the city so early that few knew the tho hour or of his arrival It was plain that Peary wanted to avoid n a demonstration |