4. The following officers of the army will, with a like number of officers of the navy selected for the purpose, compose the guard of honor, and accompany the remains of their late Commander-in-Chief from the National Capital to Canton, Ohio, and continue with them until they are consigned to their final resting place:
The Lieutenant-General of the Army.
Maj.-Gen. John R. Brooke.
Maj.-Gen. Elwell S. Otis.
Maj.-Gen. Arthur MacArthur.
Brig.-Gen. George L. Gillespie.
By command of Lieut.-Gen. Miles.
THOMAS WARD,
Acting Adjutant-General.
The following order then issued:
WAR DEPARTMENT, Washington, Sept. 14.
The Secretary of War announces to the
army that upon the death of
William McKinley, President of the United
States, Theodore Roosevelt,
Vice-President, has succeeded to the office
of President of the United
States, by virtue of the Constitution.
ELIHU ROOT,
Secretary of War.
Secretary Root also gave directions to the officers of the department to make the necessary arrangements and issue orders for the participation of the army in the funeral ceremonies, following the Garfield precedent.
The following order was issued by the Secretary of the Treasury to the Revenue Cutter Service:
The department announces to the service
the sad tidings of the death of
the President. The flags of all vessels
of the Revenue Cutter Service
will be carried at half-mast until otherwise
ordered.
MR. GAGE ANNOUNCES DEATH.
HEAD OF TREASURY PAYS TRIBUTE TO THE LATE PRESIDENT MCKINLEY.
Secretary Gage issued the following announcement of the death of President McKinley:
It has been thought proper to make sad but official announcement in this issue of Treasury Decisions of the tragic death of William McKinley, twenty-fifth President of the United States, and to give some expression of that tribute which his character and deeds compel.
It needed not the shadows of death to
make the figure of the late
President loom large in the estimate of
mankind.
The republic he loved he lived to broaden
and unify as no previous
President had done. Under his prudent
and far-seeing statesmanship it
took exalted place in the community of
nations.
From his place as private citizen, on
through many and increasing
honors to his final post as ruler of his
people, he remained true to
the highest ideals.
By the people of the nation at large and by the world he was known and will live in grateful annals as a gentleman of noble heart, an affectionate husband, a sturdy friend, and a faithful and illustrious President.
In a long public life, ever open to his
fellows, nothing was ever found,
even by intemperate partisan zeal, that
would cast a shade upon his
character.