Halton Hills This Week (Georgetown, ON), 22 July 1992, p. 8

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

T.H. BRIGGS UPHOLSTERY * Specializing in Antiques Recovered and Repaired | + Replacement Foam * Kitchen & Dining Chairs + Rec. Vehicle Seats 877-9312 — geaucst || (The le minine Wa ‘CANADA Passive Reducing Salon JULY SPECIAL 12 leg wax + bikini wax 873-4907 116 Guelph St. Georgetown (Rear Entrance) eet Steak EXPRESS 877-0721 BOXED MEAT FROZEN FOOD f po Ai Bee Burgers Sone, gut D098 = Por, One welcoming committee. Page 8 Halton HillsThis Week, Wednesday, July 22, 1992 z : Gordon Mylett (center) Rotary Club District Govenor for District 7080 is welcomed to Acton by Acton Rotary President Bill Beaton (right) during a visit to Acton last week. Rotarian Guenter Heasler formed the Rec. Department report Daily recreational swimming Free, free! this sum BB'Q HEADQUARTERS 877-0721 u , : The Prospect Park Wading Pool Delrex & Guelph Sts. ‘There will be recreational swim- _in Acton is open Monday to Friday Georgetown ming at all pools this summer from _from 1:30 to 4 p.m. and Saturday 2to4p.m. and Sunday from 12 noon to 5 p.m. | Lifeguards on duty. Boat rentals Come rent a boat at Prospect Park, Acton. Canoes and paddle boats are available on Saturdays and Sundays from 12 to 5 p.m. Summer water show Join us at the Dick Licata Outdoor Pool on Friday, July 24 from 7 to 8 p.m. for an evening of aquatic entertainment. Everyone is welcome. Acton theatre camp Hey, Acton! There’s lots to do this summer! Come join Acton Little Theatre! A special treat in Acton. You’ll learn script writing, i IS WEEN WE WELCOME ALL OUR CARRIERS and invite applications for routes as they become available from anyone wishing to deliver “HALTON HILLS THIS WEEK”’ in Acton and Georgetown. Ve) CALL TODAY: AND REGISTER , 873-2254 vey between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. "ly y ih , i D i> acting skills, and you'll create and perform your own play before a paying audience. Call the Halton Hills Recreation and Parks Department at 873-2600, ext. 270 for more information. See you at the theatre! Studio art camp The Halton Hills Recreation and Parks Department has an exciting two weeks of workshops lined up for our Studio Cart Camp. Led by professional artists, there will be sessions on puppets, Indian face masks, toll painting and more. Games, sports and swimming are also scheduled. The Georgetown program is already full and Acton is filling up quickly, so register now. Acton High School from August 10. to 21. For more information call 873-2600, ext. 270. The Canadian Red Cross Society One of the happiest moments of my life was turn- ing to tragedy. My baby was fine, but I was hemorrhaging "4 on the delivery table. \ I thought I'd never hold Becky. You don't know what that felt like. But there was blood there to save my life, Your blood. 1 just want to thank you. When Rebecca is old enough to know, she'll thank you, too. DON'T MISS THE NEXT CLINIC - Monday August 10th 1# pm - 8 pm At The Holy Cross Church, Maple Ave., Georgetown This Week Secrets are safe with Proshred Your deposit slip at the bank will eventually become a paper towel. Or it may end up as bedding for horses. This is the end result of a new shredding at-your-door service which converts confidential paper documents into new uses. Since January 1, 1992, a mobile shredder has been at work in the Halton Hills area converting thou- sands of pounds of confidential paper into environmentally friendly ulch. “Confidential information at hos- pitals, social agencies, schools and private companies will never get out i to embarrass anyone while Proshred is around,” says John Moore, who operates the Proshred mobile shred- ding service in the Halton Hills area. “Most of our customers already have their own shredders, but they prefer to use Proshred because it is more economical, more convenient and many times faster.” Many area businesses are now using Proshred on a regular basis. For these customers, Proshred pro- vides special sealed containers into which customers drop any unwanted confidential material, then on a pre- determined schedule, Proshred shows up and shreds the contents of the container. The shredding is done right in the truck at the customer’s location, so the customer can wit- ress the destruction. A certificate of destruction is issued right there, and the shredded material is taken away. Moore, who, for security reasons, doesn’t name his customers, spoke of a local service company that ran a test of their shredder against Proshred’s service. “It took them 4 1/2 hours to shred what Proshred could shred in 15 minutes,” says Moore. “They are now a regular customer.” Not all businesses require shred- ding on a schedule. These are busi- nesses that just do a file purge once a year, and are faced with how to dispose of a quantity of confidential, and quasi-confidential material. Proshred’s fleet of mobile shredding trucks which is equipped to handle these jobs too, can shred any amount, whether it is 2 boxes or 2,000 boxes of your old documents. The five ton, $180,000 units, mounted on Mack chassis, use “ super-strong steel blades to pulver- ize the paper and render it environ- mentally friendly. The end result can be recycled in a variety of ways to avoid ending up in landfill sites or in an incinerator. SINCE 9898: . * CANVAS AWNINGS * CANOPIES * RETRACTABLES * FREE ESTIMATES 301 PINE AVE. OAKVILLE, ONT. 844-3572 HIRE A STUDENT

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy