All current US bills feature the signatures of the Secretary of the Treasury and US Treasurer
The signatures on the current US $1 bill belong to Steven Mnuchin and Jovita Carranza. Mnuchin was the Secretary of the Treasury at the time the bill was printed, and Carranza was the Treasurer of the United States.
There are no signatures on a US 1 dollar bill. The dollar bill features the signatures of the Secretary of the Treasury and the Treasurer of the United States on the bottom right side. However, these signatures are printed rather than physically signed.
All US bills carry the signatures of the Secretary of the Treasury and US Treasurer who were in office when the bill's series was first printed. As of 02/2012, the Secretary of the Treasury is Timothy Geithner and the Treasurer is Rosie Rios.
All current US bills feature the signatures of the Secretary of the Treasury and US Treasurer in office at the time the bill's "series" was started. The "series" is identified by the bill's date and what letter if any is next to the date. A new date is used when a new Secretary of the Treasury takes office. A new letter is used when a new US Treasurer takes office. It can be confusing. You have to know what series bill you have to determine whose signatures it will carry, but all bills within a specific series for a specific denomination will have the same signatures. However, different denominations may have different series so you need all three - date, letter, and denomination - to know whose signatures will be shown.
Benjamin Franklin is on the US $50 bill.
They're identified right on the bill - the signatures are those of the Secretary of the Treasury and the Treasurer of the United States.
The US didn't print any $100 bills dated 1935. Please check again and post a new, separate question. Include the letter, if any, that's next to the bill's series date because that will help to determine whose signatures it would carry.
Alexander Hamilton is on the 10 dollar bill because he was the first Secretary of Treasury.
President Thomas Jefferson
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Salmon P Chase
The first US president, George Washington.
It is not George Washington. He is on the US 1-dollar cotton bill.