HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1993-04-07, Page 2Page 2 - Lucknow Sentinel, Wednesday, April 7, 1993
BDO
WARDMALLETTE
1,1h1:11)1•: 1{1:11:11 111:,
1ILIRON TWP..- 49 acres, 3 bed-
room 1 , implement shed, barn.
18 Mile River through property.
$79,000.
HURON TWP. - 100 were rash erop
and livestock barn. $89,000.
HURON TWP. - two storey 4 bed-
room brick home on 5.86. ueres.
$95,000.
11l'RON 'rWP. - spacious converted �
sel (house. Large workshop. Lot
165' x 132'. $123,900.
ASHFIELD TAT:- - Iwo storey 3
bedr heave with many upgrades.
Lot 82.5' x 330'. $89,900.
RIPLEY - 5 bedroom side split
brick home, many extras. Lot. 66' x
132'. $129,900.
RIP1 FY ide al rt lin n" ut l ; 3
bed brit k bungalow. Lot 66' x
• 165'. $82,900
Other prop` rtie s & t reittl
available .
Fern Vibert
395-3478
Sales Representative
Lucknow listings needed.
CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS
Offering a full range of services: auditing, accounting, business planning, income
tax p anning,personal financial planning, computer and management services.
HANOVER .WALKERTON MOUNT FOREST PORT ELGIN .
W.J. Aldersiey, FCA B.F. Thompson, FCA K.L. Drier, CA M.S. Bolton, CA
L.H. Vollett, CA R.J, Millen,CA H.E. Kibler, GA
J.J. Hunt, CA ' . G.H. Munro, CA
P. Thor, CA
364-3790 881-12 11 323-2351 832-2049
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. Wilc(» ones
1 );it leile Kikkert c'k Jan Alton
IO its staff Of Hair Stylists
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Lucknow
Villag✓larket
LUCKNOW - 528-3001
We Reserve The Right To. Limit Quantities To Normal Family RequIrements'
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OLD .SOUTH
Frozen Asst. Varieties
.355 ml Tin
`••••:,:.4.'?::... Vic.': ^A"�.a'�v>:n.:;.�
FOLGER'S
Custom Roast
975 g:
PRIMO
3 Litre Plastic Jug
KNECHTEL
Assorted Varieties
3 x250 ml
Bathroom
Tissue
BEATRICE •
or Comparable Brand
Ass't. Flavours 2 Litre Tub
33°i° SALT REDUCED `''•">.'#:'^:
Whole, Half or Mini Boneless
•6.15 Kg.
Knechtel Black Young
Forest Ham *Turkeys
CUT PRAM CANADA "A" GRADES KNECHTEL
•Boneless Outside Round Beef Hip (Eye Removed) "Great Shaved On A Kaiser"
6.59 Kg. Deli Sliced or Shaved 1.10/100 g.
Steak Black 4 9„
Roast299 Forest Ham Ib.
GRADE "A"
Frozen All Available Sizes 2.62 Kg.
PRODUCT OF CHILE NO. 1 GRADE
Black, Red or Green
Mix and Match 2.18 kg. "
Seedless
Grapes "
`»s PRODUCT OF U.S.A.
...........................:.......... #;i`•':� resh, Sweet
1.52 Kg. •
PRODUCT OF ONTARIO
Snowy, White
8 oz. Tray
PRODUCT OF U.S A. NO. 1 GRADE
Florida Grown Fresh Red
"Extra Large"
2.18 Kg. '
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The future of hospitals -
• from page 1
hospitals in maintaining a vision of
the future, to examine what is im-
portant, to assess the current
situation and to identify factors
which are strategically important.
Part of the research included
interviews during 25 hospital visits,
with 45 outside representatives and
an extensive literature review, he
said.
He said key factors affecting
small hospitals are:
• geography;
• human resources - trying to keep '
staff;
• emergency services ' - small
hospitals under 99 beds receive one
million visits annually;
• technology and education;
• expectation, of quality;
• reform of long term care - of the
2,600 chronic care beds in the
province, 1,300 are located in small
hospitals; and •
• financial constraints and policy
directions.
Mr. VanCamp said when chronic.
care was first studied, small
hospitals had not been included in
the study.Now theYar . He not
ed
both Wingham and Listowel have
significant sized chronic care units
and the "chronic care is a reality for
small hospitals."
Hospital profile
He said the current prdfrle of
small hospitals is that of an impor-
tant provider of primary and secon-
dary care, ambulance services,
therapeutic and diagnostic services,
emergency services, community
outreach and health promotion
programs and participation in
regional. programs. . .
Small hospitals are major.
employers in small communities
,and one of the best paymasters, Mr.
VanCamp said.
Another strength of . small
hospitals is that they provide com-
passionate care close to home.
Because of their size, Mr. Van-
Camp . said small hospitals are
flexible and able to adapt quickly
god react faster than large hospitals
in areas such as computerization,
meeting new standards and adapting
to new trends.
Although it is difficult to recruit.
and retain human resources, Mr.
VanCamp said "small hospitals are
the backbone of medical health in
small communities." But, he said,
maintaining the "status quo" is no
longer good enough.
Some of the forces affecting the
direction of small hospitals accor-
ding to Mr. VanCamp will be: More
cross membership of hospital
boards with other agencies, greater
regionalism, needs -based planning,
better program evaluation and in-
tegration, clearly differentiated roles
of community and large hospitals.
He predicted there will be more
formalized agreements between
hospitals and likely a discon-
tinuance of expensive, low volume
programs although there will be
more co-ordination with .hospitals
and community service agencies.
He also believes hospitals will
take a - more pro -active role in
health promotion and disease
prevention.
Mr. VanCamp said the study
came up with a number of alter-
native roles and models but stressed
it is up to individual boards to see
which direction they wish to
proceed. -
"There is no .one method 'cookie
cutter' approach." The document is
a guideline to determine "what is
best for your hospital."
Hospital board chair Doris Inglis
asked Mr. V..
VanCamp
if � en-
P
he
visioned an integration of hospital
boards with health and community
services.
He responded that anything will
be slow to develop in order to
maintain a grassroots initiative. Mr.
VanCamp . predicted that cross
membership will happen, but said
the key "is that the membership is
both ways."
Reallocate
library hours
Six libraries within the county
have had their hours adjusted;
not in numbers but in allocation.
Underthe previous allocation,
no Saturday hours were allowed
for at the local library.
According to a recent news
release, the 18 open hours at the
Lucknow Library are now..desig-
nated as follows: Wednesday 1
to 5 p.m.; Thursday 7 to 9 p.m.;
Friday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and
Saturday,'9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
The reduction in hours was a
result of the county library sys-
tem ending the. 1992 fiscal year
with a $100,000 deficit.
Blue Wiens received the Glaude Guay Masonry trophy for
goaltender with the best goals against average. Mr. Guay's son.
In-law, Ron Elliott, made the presentation at the winter sports
banquet Friday evening.
(Pat Livingston hot
o