SCOTT 



5264 



SCOTT 



CITIES AND TOWNS 



Aberdeen Edinburgh 



Ayr Glasgow 



Bannockburn Gretna Green 



Dundee Leith 



Dunfermline Paisley 



Ben Nevis 

 Cheviot 



HILLS 



Grampian 



HISTORY 



Baliol, John De James I (England) 



Bannockburn Knox, John 



Bruce, Robert Macbeth 



Caledonia Mary Stuart 



Edward I, II and III Picts 



(England) Presbyterians 



England, subtitle Wallace, William 



History of England 

 Great Britain, subtitle 



History of Great 



Britain 



ISLANDS 



Hebrides Shetland 



Orkney 



LAKES 



Katrine Lomond 



LEADING PRODUCTS 



Cattle . Oats 



Coal Shale 



Cod Sheep 



Fish Ship 



Iron Steel 



RIVERS 



Clyde Solway Firth 



Forth Tay 



SCOTT, DUNCAN CAMPBELL (1862- ), a 

 Canadian poet and historical writer, one of the 

 best known of contemporary Canadian men of 

 letters. Scott was born at Ottawa, where he 

 attended the public schools. Later he went to 

 Stanstead Wesleyan College. In 1879 he en- 

 tered the Dominion civil service as a clerk in 

 the department of Indians, in which he was 

 steadily promoted until, in 1914, he became 

 deputy superintendent-general of the depart- 

 ment. Scott's first volume of verses, The 

 Magic House, appeared in 1893, and was fol- 

 lowed at irregular intervals by Labour and the 

 Angel, New World Lyrics and Ballads, Lundy's 

 Lane and Other Poems and Via Borealis. The 

 Village of Viger is a collection of ten short 

 stories. Scott was one of the editors of The 

 Makers of Canada, a series of historical biog- 

 raphies, and himself wrote the life of John 

 Graves Simcoe in that series. Many of his 

 poems and prose writings have appeared in 

 Canadian and American periodicals. 



SCOTT, FREDERICK GEORGE (1861- ), a 

 Canadian churchman and poet, best known for 

 the volumes of 'verses called The Hymn of 



Empire and My Lattice and Other Poems.' 

 One of his latest works is a collection of poems, 

 entitled The Crown of Empire, which were 

 written at the front in the War of the Nations. 

 Scott was at the front as senior chaplain of the 

 first Canadian division, British Expeditionary 

 Force (B.E.F.). 



Scott was born at Montreal, attended the 

 local high school, and later -was graduated from 

 Bishop's College, Lennoxville, and King's Col- 

 lege, London. He was ordained deacon in 1884 

 and priest in 1886, in the latter year becoming 

 curate of a small parish in Essex, England. In 

 1887 he was chosen rector at Drummondville, 

 Quebec. After three years as curate of Saint 

 Matthew's, at Quebec, he became rector in 

 1899. Scott's first published volume of verses 

 was entitled The Soul's Quest and Other Poems 

 (1888). Among his other works, in addition to 

 the volumes already mentioned, are Elton 

 Hazlewood, a story; The Unnamed Lake, The 

 Key of Life, Poems, and various short stories. 



SCOTT, HUGH LENOX (1853- ),an Ameri- 

 can military officer who succeeded to the po- 

 sition of chief-of-staff of the United States 

 army in 1914. He was bom at Danville, Ky., 

 and was educated at West Point, from which 

 he was graduated 

 in 1876. For sev- 

 eral years there- 

 after he served in 

 e x p e ditions 

 against the In- 

 dians. From the 

 close of the Span- 

 ish- American War 

 until 1903 Scott 

 acted as adjutant- 

 general of Cuba, 

 and for the next 

 three years was HUGH L. SCOTT 



governor of the Sulu Islands (in the Philip- 

 pines). From 1906 to 1910, having attained 

 the rank of colonel, he acted as superintendent 

 and commandant at West Point. In 1913 he 

 was made brigadier-general and placed in com- 

 mand of a brigade of cavalry stationed along 

 the Mexican border. He has a special talent 

 for straightening out difficulties by means of 

 diplomacy; in 1915 was successful in pacifying 

 a lawless band of Piutes in Utah, and in 1916 

 was influential in dealing with the Villa faction 

 in Mexico. In the latter year he was pro- 

 moted to the rank of major-general. In 1917 

 he was appointed a member of the American 

 commission to Russia, of which Elihu Root was 



