4A THE OTHAWA TIMES, Seturday, August 26, 1966 VINTAGE VEHICLES TO START. HERE PERIOD COSTUMES FOR TRIP ° Antique Cars On Golden Horseshoe J aunt On September 10, National Trust Company Ltd. will spon- sor the Golden Horseshoe Cara- van -- a parade of 40 antique "and classic cars _ travelling _ from Oshawa through Toronto to St. Catharines. This spec- tacle of rare excitement is be- ing sponsored by National Trust to celebrate their second anni- versary in Oshawa and the opening of National's first office in St. Catharines. * The Golden Horseshoe Cara- van will feature vintage ve- * hicles such as Packards, Jagu- - ars, Lagondas and Auburns dating back as far as 1898. The occupants of each car will be dressed in period costumes compatible with the year of the car's manufacture. ' {he procession will be led by a vintage 1922 Bickel fire en- gine from which the six-piece Dixieland Rhythm Kings Jazz Band will pace the parade. The caravan. will start at 9.00. a.m., Saturday, September 10 from the National Trust office in Oshawa at 18 Simcoe St. South. The procession will tour downtown Oshawa making _its way along Park Rd. South to Highway 401 proceeding west to Toronto. In traveling through Toronto the caravan will proceed along Highway 401 west, turn- ing down Kingston Road. At 10.15. a.m. the procession will turn north off Kingston Road along Eglinton Ave. and will ' make its first stop at 10.30 a.m. at the National Trust office in the Eastown Shopping Centre. At 10.45 a.m. the procession "will proceed west along Eglin- ton Ave. arriving at the Nation- al Trust office in the Golden Mile Plaza at 11.15 a.m. The caravan will leave the Golden Mile Plaza at 11.30 a.m. pro- ceeding west along Eglinton and will arrive at the National Trust office at 350 Eglinton Ave. W. at 12 noon. At 12:15 p.m..the procession will drive west along Eglinton Ave. turning south at Bathurst St. The Caravan will proceed south on Bathurst turning west at St. Clair Ave. and coming to a stop at 12.45 p.m. in front of the National Trust office at 938 St. Clair Ave. W. BURLINGTON SKYWAY At 1.00 p.m. the Carayan will proceed west on St. Clair Ave., Doce cer rn ee ner ee ALL POLISHED AND READY TO GO along Dundas St. W. stopping at the National Trust office at Cloverdale Mall at 1.30 p.m. The Golden Horseshoe Caravan will proceed south on Highway 27 at 2.00 p.m. and by 2.15 p.m. reach the junction of the Queen Elizabeth Way. The procession will drive west along the Queen Eliza beth Way over the Burlington Skyway reaching the junction of Ontario St.-and the Queen Elizabeth Way in St. Catharines at 3.30 p.m. The procession will then drive down Ontario St. to St. Paul St. touring downtown St. Catharines and coming to a halt- in front of the National. Trust office at 24-26 Queen St. in St. Catharines at 4.00 p.m. National Youth Orchestra Trains For Overseas Tour By HEATHER MITCHELL TORONTO (CP)--The piano soloist of the National Youth Orchestra alternates on the triangle and the harp player doubles on the bass drum. "It's not difficult for any- ene with musical training," says the stand-in drummer, Rhonda Baker, 18, of Toronto. Picked from 400 students across Canada, the 53 young men and 50 girls of the or- chestra are expected to be versatile. They must also be excellent musicians. "There is no room for mis- takes," conductor Eugene Kash told them at rehearsal. 'Tf you aren't sure, don't play. We won't miss you." The = six-year-old orchestra was in Toronto to train inten- sively "with top ~ musician. teachers for three weeks be- fore going on a six-city over- seas tour late in August. The group rehearses from 8:30 a.m. to £:30 p.m. with only lunch and dinner breaks. After that, says the orches- tra's nurse, Barbara Barrow, "it's not. uncommon-to see a quartet and a trio in the lounge practising until mid- night, each ignoring the other completely; they are so ded- icated." "Everywhere. else you are such a misfit because you love music,"? says Phyllis Wedding' 22, of 'Winnipeg. 'Here everyone. does. It's great." The -girls have an 11 p.m. curfew at their University of Toronto, residence but 'we are so sleepy we don't mind," says 19-year-old. Marie -La- montagne of Montreal. . Marcelle Gagne.of Montreal is the girls' chaperone and Larry Bond, head of the mu- sic department at a Toronto high school, keeps an eye on the boys. The residence was five beds short when the girls arrived July 30 but "'the girls were very complacment; they just slept on the sofas in the lounge for two days,' says Mrs. Gagne. Any minor complaints about such conditions are oversha- dowed by extravagant praise for the teachers. "We learn so@ much," says Laverne Ste- ward, 19, of Winnipeg. The musician-teachers in- clude cellist Walter Joarhim of Montreal, Fredrick Grinke, violin professor at the Royal Academy of Musi¢ in London, and Mr. Kash, who conducted rehearsals until the return of Walter Susskind from abroad. The orchestra was formed in 1960 when Mr. Susskind, then conductor of the Toronto Symphony, got a group of private individuals interested in establishing a non-profit or- ganization to provide profes- sional training for young mu- sicians. Since then the orchestra has held annual training sessions and concert tours, drawing its membership from every province after rigorous audi- tions. This. year's concert tour opens at the Stratford: Shakes- pearean Festival Sunday, Aug. 21. After a further week of rehearsals in Toroto the orchestra goes to Montreal for an Aug. 28 concert and flies to -London the following day. SHOW TIMES AT MOVIES THE NEW ODEON -- Held over. for another week 'Born Free', the story of a lioness from the time it was a cub until it grew into maturity. The trials and tribulations of raising, taming and_ teaching the lioness to hunt. Starring a man and wife team, Virginia McKenna and Bill. Travers. In color. Showtime, weekdays at 7.30, and 9.40 p.m. Saturday continous from 1.00 p.m. Sunday continuous from 2.00 p.m. Starting next Thursday for one week, 'Boy Did I Get a Wrong Number', starring Bob Hope, Elke Sommer and the latest comedy sensation, Phyl- lis Diller. A_ real hilarious comedy in color. Showtime, weekdays at 7.00 and 9:10 p.m. Saturday continuous from 1.00 p.m. i Sunday continuous from 2.00 PLAZA--Now -playing '"'Blind- fold", a cover up for spies, a mask for terror, a disguise for intrigue. Any way you look at it -- the peril is ever present when you're enveloped in its dark suspense. Which is deadlier -- the bullets? . . . the brunette? . .. or the blindfold? Rock Hudson and Claudia Cardinale take you down a blind alley 1500 miles wide, 2000 miles long, 20 miles high -- to break the great- est security trap ever devised. In Technicolor. Shown daily at 1.30, 3.30, 5.30, 7.35. and 9.40 p.m. The next attraction will be "The Group' which was made in its entirety in and around New York City. The eight girls of the group -- Lakey, played by Candice Bergen; the cool shy -- priss, strength, portrayed by Elizabeth Hartman; the brave and fe- signed Polly played by Shirley Knight; the intense and high- 'strung Kay, played by Joanna Petter. 10 ACRES TROUT STREAM RETREAT Scenic KENDALL HILLS Area Half a mile Wooded lots stream. Less from Oshowa. Only $5,000 -- $1,500 Down W. FRANK - REAL ESTATE 21. 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