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Show Milkof Magnesia is tSe laxative -- doctors recommend wiMifamnu rrnrJ residence has for more than 100 of its 300 years been a government-owne- yafsaiwi public museum d, See Front Cover Versailles Art Treasures 1 Visit Tlie UrS. Lots of people think the tangy mint flavor in Phillips Milk of Magnesia is the best thing thats happened to laxatives in a long time.'-l- t makes the worlds best laxative the best tasting, too. Even more important, doctors recommend milk of magnesia. We asked thousands of doctors, "Do you ever recommend milk of magnesia? The overwhelming majority said, "Yes!" Like regular Phillips', Mint-Flavor- Phillips' is both a laxative and an antacid. It relieves both irregularity and add indiges- tion, so gently its ideal for all ages. So get Mint-Flavore- d Phillips Milk of Magnesia and prove to your- self, foe worlds best .laxative is best tasting, tool ttiui it By EMILY GENAUER Author of Best of Art" This weekend 200 French masterpieces will be shown here for the first time The Palace of Versailles, 12 miles outside of Paris, is, with the exception of the Eiffel Tower in the heart of the jje mog popular 0f tourist attractions for Americans in France. This weekend, for the first time in history, about 200 of the treasures that fill the great palace go on exhibition at - the Art Institute of Chicago. Later they will be seen in the Toledo Museum of Art, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and the California Palace of the Legion of Honor in San Francisco. At Versailles itself, what Americans most marvel at are its incredible richness of architecture and its exquisite setting in endless parks and gardens jewelled with fountains and sculpture. With all the splendor, visitors some times overlook that the palace, home of the kingB of France from 1682 to the Revolution in 1789, is also a museum, hung with masterpieces relating to kings, queens, and others who either lived there or figured in the history of our own. their country, and Ben Franklin slept here Franklin stayed there when he was ambassador. Lafayette is another link with U.S. history. Marble busts of Lafayette and Washington by Houdon are in the exhibit, along with paintings of the battle pf Yorktown, in which Lafayette fought1 But Americans will be even more fascinated with Marie Antoinette, portrayed by the woman with feathered painter Vigee-Lebru- n, hat bouncing atop a head she was soon to lose. And portraits of Louis XIV, XV and XVI especially Louis XV, seen by Rigaud as a boy of five smothered in ermine and by Francois Drouaia monarch whose genas a tle features hardly hint at his entanglements with Pompadour and du Barry. Sculpture, paintings, tapestries, furniture will be seen at Chicago as the opening exhibition of the new Morton wing of the museum, under ideal conditions of lighting and display, in a way not possible on their home grounds. They will give Americans some notion of the grandeur of Versailles paid for, it is said, by six francs out of every ten collected from seventeenth-centurFrench taxpayers. ld y PERIODIC PAIN Cvtry month Bonnie Mt Wu" becMSt ol luftctiOAjI menstrual distress. Now she ust takes Mutoi and . loes her wap m comfort because Midol An nchiswe tablets contain- Me(h-- f that Stops Caaumno catty approved mpedients that Relieve Huoncia o Bacmci . . . Cmw lower . A special, mood brttMenmf Neim medical ion that Chase "Buns". or At usmt)fTS They are durum in four of the visiting paintings . Lotus XIV (L) built the palace , moved in in 1682, followed by his great-grandso- n, Louis XV. Marie Antoinette and Louis XVI, last residents, were driven out in 1789 by the Revolution 1VIID0L 2 THIS WEEK MaeailM Ottobw 7. 1M |