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CONSTITUTION AND GOVERNMENT
377

Vice-Presidents of the United States.cont.

Name From State Term of Service Born Died
John C. Breckinridge Kentucky 1857-1861 1821 1875
Hannibal Hamlin Maine 1861-1865 1809 1891
Andrew Johnson Tennessee March-Apl. 1865 1808 1875
Schuyler Colfax Indiana 1869-1873 1823 1885
Henry Wilson Massachusetts 1873-1875 1812 1875
William A. Wheeler New York 1877-1881 1819 1887
Chester A. Arthur New York March-Sept. 1881 1830 1886
Thomas A. Hendricks Indiana Mar.-Nov.25, 1885 1819 1885
Levi P. Morton New York 1889-1893 1824 ——
Adlai E. Stevenson Illinois 1893-1897 1835 ——
GarretA. Hobart New Jersey 1897-1899 1844 1899
Theodore Roosevelt New York March-Sept., 1901 1858 ——
Charles W. Fairbanks Indiana 1905-1909 1855 ——
James S. Sherman New York 1909-1912 1855 1912
Thomas R. Marshall Indiana 1913-1917 1854 ——

By a law which came into force Jan. 19, 1886, in case of removal, death, resignation, or inability of both the President and Vice-President, the Secretary of State, and after him, in the order of the establishment of their departments, other members of the Cabinet, shall act as President until the disability of the President is removed or a President shall be elected. On the death of a Vice-President the duties of the office shall fall to the President pro tempore of the Senate, who receives the salary of the Vice-President.

The administrative business of the nation is conducted by nine chief officers, or heads of departments, who form what is called the 'Cabinet,' They are chosen by the President, but must be confirmed by the Senate. Each of them presides over a separate department, and acts under the immediate authority of the President. The heads of departments are (March, 1913):—

1. Secretary of State.—William Jennings Bryan, of Nebraska, born in Illinois, 1860; educated at Illinois College; admitted to the bar, 1883; Member of Congress, 1891-95; Candidate for President of the United States, 1896, 1900, 1908. Present appointment, March 5, 1913.

2. Secretary of the Treasury.—William Gibbs McAdoo, of New York, born in Georgia, 1863; admitted to the bar, 1884; Organizer and builder of railway tunnels under the Hudson river. Present appointment, March 5, 1913.

3. Secretary of War.—Lindley M. Garrison, of New Jersey, born in New Jersey, 1864; admitted to the bar, 1886; Vice-Chancellor of New Jersey, 1904-13. Present appointment, March 5, 1913.

4. Secretary of the Navy.—Josephus Daniels, of North Carolina, born in North Carolina, 1862; State Treasurer of North Carolina, 1887-93; Chief Clerk Department of the Interior of the United States, 1893-95. Present appointment, March 5, 1913.

5. Secretary of the Interior.—Franklin Knight Lane, of California, born in Prince Edward Island, 1864; Corporation Counsel of San Francisco, 1897-1902; Democratic candidate for Governor of California, 1902; Member (and since 1912 Chairman) of the Interstate Commerce Commission, 1905-13. Present appointment, March 5, 1913.

6. Postmaster-General.—Albert Sidney Burleson, of Texas, born in Texas, 1863; admitted to the bar, 1884; Member of Congress, 1899-1913. Present appointment, March 5, 1913.