| [untitled]       Mr. John R. Dos Passos, a member 
              of the New York Bar and author of a well-known work on the law affecting 
              stock-brokers, desires that Congress of the United States should 
              call an international conference to consider the suppression of 
              Anarchism. This idea is not a new one, nor capable of doing much 
              to supply a prompt remedy for the evil. It will be remembered that 
              some three years ago such a conference was convened in Rome, a great 
              deal of interest was evoked by it, much discussion took place and 
              resolutions were adopted for the mutual surrender of criminal anarchists. 
              But since this conference the anarchists have offered the cruellest 
              [sic] sort of testimony to their disregard for its deliberations葉hey 
              have boldly assassinated the King of Italy and President McKinley. 
              Perhaps the most effective way of dealing with this cancerous growth 
              in the body-politic is for each member of the family of nations 
              to make it a legal offence to attempt to promote the aims and interests 
              of anarchism by word or deed within its borders. This done, there 
              would be no need for international concert beyond some provisions 
              for the extradition of this class of offenders. 覧覧覧覧覧      Having done this, the powers should 
              agree upon a suitable island and transport thither all persons convicted 
              of any such offence; provide them plentifully with the usual weapons 
              used by anarchist assassins, appropriate implements for agriculture 
              and fishing, etc., and such supply of food, clothing and household 
              effects as might be necessary to start them in business. After that 
              let them work for their own living, and live or starve as they might 
              elect. As people of this class consider that all governments are 
              objectionable, give them none, but merely provide a gun boat to 
              see that they are not taken away from the island, and leave them 
              to work out their destiny according to their own will and pleasure. 
              They might perhaps in the course of a short time realize something 
              of the desirability of law and order, and probably find out that 
              all men are not born equal. If the result should prove to be the 
              same as happened to the Kilkenny cats, the world would be none the 
              worse for the legacy of their tails, and a wholesome lesson would 
              have been taught to kindred spirits still at large. |