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Show RTf NO CHANGE IN SENTIMENT. I 'hi organ of the reactionaries, in offering an explanation why Taft though admittedly unpopular in 1910. can now be hopeful m success, says there has been a great change in sentiment. Wk That claptrap is a reminder of how cities that are being boost' KPfxplain away the disappointing census figures. The boomers will Kvf BBfc'Yes, the census gave us only 92,000. but not half our popula-HiVss popula-HiVss counted. I am certain we now have 130,000 inhabitants." WT-In both cases, the actual -results of only a few months prior Bkignofed and the political and real estate boosters indulge their Bbcy and enter the realms of distorted facts in order to find com WL "What made Taft unpopular a year ago? Why did the country ponounce against him? "Was the decision reached through delirium Mr was it the deliberate judgment of the voters of the United Hates? K Taft's first unforgivable weakness was his dismissal of Gif-KrdPinchot; Gif-KrdPinchot; his second egregious blunder was his trickery in at-yjprtnio-defend Ballinger by signing a letter purporting to be Srju3gmeut of the Ballinger case when the letter was written IjTtV ther-and 'dealt with Retails of which he had no direct kno'wl- k Xtefli1!"8 was tho is5uin of a orih? to the Progress-fc?fiedpiUpotTn5e; Progress-fc?fiedpiUpotTn5e; his fourth act Of incompetency WIegTanithSenator AUdrich, the representative of "the fcfcresfs," All we weaknesses became evident to the American opleHast year A brought ;bout an overwhelming defeat of the yEtft. frees. .' P 1 JP anything occtTi si-ice last fall to cause the citizens of i'yfry to reverse tlieinSJ.yes on these indictments? |