} COQUALEETZA RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL ( ( Duncan Campbell Scott, Litt. D. F.R.S.C. DEPUTY SUPERINTENDENT GENERAL OF INDIAN AFFAIRS FOR CANADA This scholarly gentleman whose life is inseparably connected with the history of the Indian races of Canada for the last fifty years, and who has recently resigned from the Department of Indian Affairs is the subject of this impression. His long training, his wide knowledge, exact and deltailed, his sympathetic insight into the needs of the Indian people, his progressive policies and the faithful administration of his effective and efficient depart- ’ ment, fitted him, perhaps, as no other man in Canada, to be the “Power behind the Throne’ Four