LOYE AND ITS HIDDEN HISTORY. tenderness are the most wonderful solvents known. Have yon shown him true wifeliness ? or have you fallen into the popular error that all a wife’s duty consists in keeping house, and tacitly doing from habit all he demands of you? squarely around and sail on the other tack. from the arms and charms of all rivals. If so, turn You’ll soon win him Study his weak points, and attack him there. He and she now sa}7: “But love depends to a great extent upon the congenialities of personal magnetisms. how is it possible for us to assimilate?” that question in another form. We repel each other; I have already answered The will can effect wonders. Will therefore to love each other and the good thought and act will be an alterative, utterly changing the entire mind, spirit, soul, thought, and body. Not ..-in a day or week, but in a very little time. Not one tenth of our marital difficulties are real; or if real, but that can be outgrown by persistent trying. While a man and wife are socially, maritally, or magnetically hostile, seduction is not difficult to those who are loose in that respect and adepts in the art; for whoever then approaches magnetically or sympathetically nearer than the mate, pushes that mate further off, and in nine cases in ten the attraction toward an “ outsider ” is merely physical or magnetic, but is too frequently mistaken for love and genuine affection. Gratify the passion thus engendered, and the results are appalling, for just so soon as the passional and magnetic storm is over, a worse chaos looms up again. He comes too near who comes to be denied! who purposely tempts a man. She is unwomanly They are barbarous who seek to destroy a bond which, though iron, can be changed to one of silver or gold, wreathed and rose-entwined. Divorce ought ever be the last resort. But our laws on that point ought to be so modified as to afford relief without either forcing one or other of the parties to crime or public litigation and indecent exposure of domestic secrets. u Nothing comes of nothing” is not true, since an empty-headed fool often causes uncounted trouble. In these days of Spiritualism there exist countless pretenders to the strange science, who counterfeit the mental phenomena and use the sacred thing as a cloak under which to hoodwink, impose