Daily British Whig (1850), 25 Apr 1914, p. 12

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IF BILIOUS, {they ir | undigested and fermenting food and! gist Keeps ¥ j' from the liver and carry off the con-|in fine condition for months. __THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, APRIL 25, 1914 TANGO ARR AAMAS AAR - SECRET OF THF. : | vec and Popularity of the Dance ; ip England, The tango craze may be exaggerat- ied by report--at some of the largest {balls the allowance of tangoes has been » smallest--but it has clearly jinade- a stir in the dancing world comparatively only to those caused {on their introduction by thé potka He land the waltz, M. Richepin has , back to Mapia, [recently warned us not to despise O'Ke ré | and then appoi a woman, w ho | the tango for its lowly origin. Magst resting {happened to be xtremely fine- dances, he reminds us, start among {looking half-cacte, fe r in his the folk before they reach the ball- *r, whose name | room, It may be added that by 'trusted with [now reputable teachers of dancing suitable wives {have eliminated from the tango any hen It was thought trace of vulgarity which it once pos up as married [sessed, and have thus done much to jlegitimatize its success. This . has have been good, or | been partly due, no doubt, to novelty, life on (Mapia [#3 was the success of the waltzsand trongly to the the polka. Youth, too, may not 'be there were averse from a dance which gives an the mean- excuse for keeping to a single part If with his ner for a whole evening. It should be possible, however, to discern more pecial reasons for the popularity o ango. oA These reasons will hardly be dis concluded t covered by stud) the history of 1 wife, and [the Experts, in fact, -con- t and as the tinue to differ as to its true source sire | years passed children arrived, There|lf M. Richepin was correctly report- far | were three or four when the captain !ed as implying in his famous lecture that it should bé traced back to the rrhica saltatio and the dances of 1ssical Greece, he must have heen civing less derivation than a rather fantastic analogy A mere scien theory connects it" with the {Chica, an ancient and unpleasant Kong convent. | South American danc e, said to have marmed a your come itself from the negroes The husband is at the |safest opinion, however, .is' probably manager of affair in {ihe one which is supported by the nr" { trong authority of Charles d'Albert, ive the author of the newest «children, | pedia of dancing. On this view the attracted | "Argentine" tango variznt of part of the|the old Spanish tango, anu was first the place | danced, rudely enough, by the eow- doubt as|boys of Cuba and other states of Lat was the in America. Thence it was brought med to }to Paris, where it found its first wel In quarters sufficiently Bohem- own the place, ian not to be afraid of it in its na- decided that [tive shape In Paris finally was in- The widow [vented the tango of our ballrooms, a sea eaptain, (dance, suggested by the South Amer- island was formally claim- {ican tango, but thoroughly recon- bargain with the [structed to suit the polite uthorities, and, While her [society So much for the pq a have. de of the tango It 3 seneral fortunes were im- fe nough to suggest that its true his the pi fifteen or|tory lies still the future We she has take great- [must séek elsewhere than in the folk- if the marr of he | stoms of South America if we are and the correspondent who [10 explain its attractivenes in mod- ree vouches [ern Englahd fate that no such fine-| I'he dance which re and hardy body of men and |epoch almost always reflects are to be foundanywhere else |vharacteristie of that epoch second genera-{thusiasm for the waltz, historians 1g tell us, reached its climax in » third is about the | I ranve about the year 1830. This y be reasona was the period of romanticism, and ropean eugen- [nothing could better have gratified tion has 'heen called |the sentiment of the time than the accidentally begun |langorous and dreamy measures, in NOeCessy ry | ported from the fatherland of Werth- expect from (er, though Werther himself was ome data th » likely to be | shocked by it The . polka, on the Standard among tho whose contrary, did come into favor the physical improvement of | till the forties, and then only after a truggle with the Parisian artstoc who frowned upon its middle 3 associations It was, however, these. middle-class assoc { which helped it, under the le citizen King, to carry the i Lou Philippe himself practised {and his mishaps en dansant la polka avec la reine Victoria made him once {more the butt of a flight of satirical q Thus if the waltz expressed the big- romanticism, the polka was the tri [umph of the bourgeoise We fairly ask, then, to what sentiment of our own time the tango responds It i certain, thing, that it has only popular as it is because dancing in eneral has become popular his may be laid to the credit of the dancers It'is P lova, who has succeeded in conv {ing the general public that dancing is poetry, and Mordkin and others who have persuaded them that male dancer does not arily as Southey thought--deserve to be a conference daily to ham-strung for effeminacy. This eir plans, and when these in- [revived interest in stage dancing i ' organized attempt to defeat fone of the reasons why people are on particular - [anxious to perform in the baltroom a Teatest secrecy is obser | dance like the modern tango, which lis really lapted to the theatre, A whip of any party |more general reason, however, can 0 beloved hy the |he adduced to explain this vogue that they will do any-|an elaborate figure dance. for the good of the The old dances were, we venture Two qualities are indispens- {to Say, more pleasing to the perform- than to the onlookers. The must be a gentteman, | pleasure to be found in watching a have stock of [pair of exquisite waltzérs is strictly limited in duration. This is recog- nized on the stage, where waltzes tare always diversified by steps un- | known at balls. Tango dancers, on Kent, few years ago were dis- [the other hand, come upon the floor red the catacombs of the anci |intending, in no unworthy spirit, to ent Dy which are now much { "show off." And they are welcome isfted ightseers and are ligh-|at a moment when fancy dress balls t part at least by electric [have become at once more frequent ifty miles of. chambers [and more ornate. The rage for the {tango is, in fact, part of our new sense of pageantry. The latter da by lof the waltz in London were days 'heir northern enemies, and here [which saw few pomps except the they huried many of their dead. lord mayor's ow, Much has The stone on whith the hnman sace- changed since then. The last two were made f= still to De seen, reigns have given us a revival of y the well, from which water royal ceremonial, The long series t this day.-- Chicago |of shistorical pageants in provincial towns has left its influence behind it. At present moment feminine ~ |apparel has a note of exotic fantasy, {While the staid yellow and brown {brick of our streets is being daily re- {placed by Babylonian palaces with majestic columns. The dances of a spectacular age must likewise catch the eye. That is the secret of the tango.--London Times. a, Eugenics as Proved :: .: mn the South Seas TYYYYYYeYY vewvew Tee TUw vee nn requirements. Pa Pat Students of eugenics have heard the name of but the fact is that i began {f the ost experiments eungeni been attempted in modern time selected certain men, noted for tre h, and they women | the t fam for their beaut i for the and daughters, lesirable pondent of the Brooklyn men, out the contention that in Her taste of in one generation se the advantages , if proper care was taken, there and appealed Sve ry ee never rounding natives, for X 1 1y application ied hims and road to fortune and his fame | man of war, but as a man of wealth | spread One day he to provide | his overseer should be h Nat 1- | he Mi lerry, o ne ver | that fulfilled hi fe, brought his company one o H has He their in nage SK of selecting Her Sons oldiers w | according corres- | to set them |s zle, hear 1 couple ust generations, el of produced a r: ualled for all those nd univers; 5 | time O'Keefe bus copra conces the hig} an owner, beauty and ar Hy estee ston: soon or no student, In the cou tHe becay to pick net only as aii Natur n sr he found it neces body of fighting men selected r he it became necessary with wive married y he e looking In vita were appearance. | took his last voyage 1 1 1 and he never ly children tl for Storms arose that soldier 1 and above 1e@ average the chile returned, nor did will aver ay ren | observer O'Keefe' to trag- car . and to be edn- ashore the however, any wreck come nature wife, the daughter Hong of Pat lier look general | indicate of I than ar oth munity { edy world business, tile ried O'Keef xX ent the dest man, witi cated in irl her or ater o he the d heart and eye He nd engineer | pre Mapia not exactly and had the like tiers id their nean- | encyelo- ey t produced many nd not 'physique is a 1gly the ited was ited accordir on hi Pacific voyage O'Kebfe one of al Ie island Hie shore For which or some time. ther to European country It sec for granted that some Fur owner of the island be taken |come ope and event t belonged of the in power nust ally it was to Holland Irish-American { when ed, Dutch nade a good 5 of prestige as queen nay | tory clined her in proved For twenty est vears a interest age ul { ubject sited i land ently for ment igns at look wonier iipon the earth. The tion shows an improvement upen the |dangi O'Keefe bh \ ' I collect the isl d tos tatisties, ang An cted the big the mer He offered hev were m ome not hobby i by eans o human family care 11 selection racy, A ti iation rul ct - - liust | | of INFLUENCE GRE day one WHIPS! \1 tppor in British Party System--Has No P'o- litical Conscience ieti erses wh on imdoubtedly na Py SInes onal i best consulted | without them | 3 v el] government in power borrowed om the % ' | I duous, perhaps a thank nent whips en i official =a co may for one t or 3 Govern become | politic | | more The tructions the program 5 for each sitting communication | of other parties what i chief | 14, in from ; Russian minister ol ascertain »y true to ha the wi ip ind of op ion each item is like- {a necess io or Ar The opposition | hold I ent a Oc al chief who fi1 file vdvice i Ol | {says cience ¥ er, nor | hold the {is ha piece of | then he i elf-evident {that black the jlae doe pat valu ¢ d hé, must L whip, whether chief or sub- {ers of his he very chani nd large a nt, Hmon sense whip such party Y told he propositions, he must a ------------ Catacombs of Ancient Druids 8 white, does so Ww Eleven miles southeast of London, ty neaning "political conscience point of view the the pz when it has Sauntering out in the Hobby one eve Disraeli was prc | usely thanked by a member for the peech he had just delivered "I am very glad to hear that what i said is in accordance with your views," re plied the great man, "and [dat you will support but 1 | hould be more pleased to have your the jacecasion whips when upport most i jsome hole lis er f need ri the chalf eliffs have already Aplored. 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