'Eoi':ssI6NA1. CARDS unuutuuquu. 111 um u1u:'resL1u1,' lecture Gold Nuggets." This lecture is not only replete with illuminating facts relative to our individual and native interests, but is brlmful of inspiration to higher and better things, It dis- cusses the questions in which every- one is vitally interested and should. prove a. powerful incent-ive for pro- gress in any community. It will make for better citizenship and truer loy- alty to the nation, home, school and church. I-I. Truman Gordon, well-known lecturer, will be heard at the coming Chautauqua. in his interesting lecture nld Nngcrntn " Thic Ioohurn iu nnf CHAUTAUQUA WEEK, BARRIE, August 15 to 19. THURSDAY, JULY 16, 1925 H. TRUMAN GORDON. GOLD NUOGETS with any 37-38c lb. 35C (102. ....... .. 45c lb. 26-28c lb. .. 30-35c box 18-20c box ....... .. 20c box 1 20-50c bask. ....... .. 150 box ....... .. 15c box 1 ....... .. 15c box . 40-45c qt. 90c bask. ..... .. 5c bunch .... .. 2 for 15c 25c lb. ....... .. 50c bag .30-40c bag ...... .. 5c bunch ....... .. 5c bunch 5c `bunch ...... .. 30c bask. $14-$15 ton --_1_ :-y4.-2 uuu each DRS. LITTLE & LITTLE, PHYSIC- iana Qnvo-r.-nnc nfnn nnrl Dani. DR. MORTIMER LYON, 122 BLOOR KI` \Vncf Tnrnnfn mil] hp 21'. 9| DR. H. T. ARNALL. OFFICE AND rnaitlnnno nnrnor nf 'I`nv-nnf-n and DR. VICTOR A. HART, GRADUATE nf 'I"v-Enifv T'. nivoI-eifv and n1<:n Associate Coroner, County of Simcoe Phone 61. Of ce---58 Collier St. Office Hours: 8-9 a.rn., 12.30-2 p.m., 6.30-8 p.m. rum:-u_.u nun, 1.:L1.D., .D1-u1.n.J.n- tor, Solicitor, etc. Masonic Tem- ple Building, Barrie. Money to loan. ` VIC'l`ORI.'-\N ORDER OF NURSES, Romy-En T1:-annk `\'H:= Tv-rxnn Nfnnrn Eyes Examined Glasses Fitted Graduate Canadian Ophthalmic College. Toronto. 43 Elizabeth St., Barrie. Phone 80 EDMUND HARDY, MIUS. BAC., F','T`,(`._T\T, 'I`rsm~hnr nf Pinnn, Or. LHJJILLVIIUIVDL OZ I1.11A\'J.LV1 Barristers, Solicitors, etc. 1st oor Masonic Temple ing. Money to loan at rates. Page Six PROF. D. E. WEIR, TEACHER OF Pinnn and Vinlin_ Piano 'I`unm-. U: W. SYLVESTER, TEACHER OF Diunn Vinlin and '(`.c-lln, 12H SURGERY AND DISEASES OF WOME.\." Successor to Creswicke & Bell I110. 141111413 0! 141111424, 1."1`11D1LI` ians, Surgeons. Office and Resi- dence, 47 Maple Ave. Office hours: 1 to 3 p.m., '7 to 9 p.m., or by appointment. A. T. Little, .M.D., W. C. Little, M.B. Phonel -91:2 .LV1.1J. "213. Iii. lV1UlV.lll\1l`4lV IJIUXV, LZZ DUUUH St. West, Toronto, will be at 91 Owen St., Barrie, 151: Saturday of each month. Diseases-Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Consultation hours, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., and by appointment. um vu..Lu1c A. n.-uu, Lxlu-UJUALIL of Trinity University and also graduate of Edinburgh and Glas- gow. Specialty, stomach diseases. Oice, corner Baycld and Wor- sley Sts. Entrance off Worsley. Office open until 8 p.m. "LDRETH F. LENNOX, A.T.C.M. Graduate of McGill University, Montreal. i)oNALD ROSS, LL.B., BARIQIS fnv .QnHr-ifnv nfn 1\/Tncnnin Tnm. 111. 1'1. '1`. AICIVADL, Uflblh ALVU residence corner of Toronto and Elizabeth streets. (Opposite Elizabeth St. Methodist Church.) Telephone 167. 'lb'1'UlU.`\.V uzcuun Ur nunonm, Barrie Branch. Miss Irene Munro,~ 86 Worsley St. Telephone 751w. 4111 U AVIJ I`l.`\1X1J I , LVLU D. DAD-, F'. I`.C.M. Teacher of Piano, 02'- gan, Vocal and Musical Theory. Organist and Choirmaster of St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church. Gold Medalist of Toronto Conser- vatory of Music and of the Uni- versity of Toronto. 113 Worsles street. Phone 663. 'KUI`. U. E4. VVILIIV, LDAUHDIV U1` Piano and Violin. Piano Tuner. 21 Collier St. Phone 513. I: W. 5XLV1a5`L'xL1<, u:.Aunn Piano, Violin and `Cello. Bayeld St. Phone 974w. 0Fce, Ross Block, Barrie. Barrister, Solicitor, Etc. Money to Loan D. F. McCUAIG, B.A. DR. E. G. TURNBULL 0. R. RUSK, 0PH.D. RADENHURST & HAMMOND. | `Du .u..-lvnun Qn'HnHnu-a nl-n (X3-`Inn 1 GORDON LONGMAN v[;R. W. AT LEWIS MUSIC LESSONS Teacher of Piano 1 "for Toronto Conser- /(ations in Piano LEGAL MEDICAL OPTICAL Phone 387w ` LY]. U LV 1.). ' Ofce, Build- lowest 5. U1.` 120 'S'I`EWART & STEWART, BAR- risters, Solicitors, Notaries Public, arRl Conveyancers. Money to loan in any sums at lowest current rates. Ofce, 13 Owen street, Barrie. D. M. Stewart. There is no way to rehabilitate the spirit and fortify the mind and heart like the reading: of great biog'raphies~. Possibly there has never been so mL1ch reading of biography as in these days when men with an `over- powering sense of their own impot- ence, turn to the world s masters of 58 achievement for courage and en- `f lightenment. W A-mong; the great books of bio- graphy there is one in which Can- adians will take especial pride. T-he Life\of Sir William Osler, by Har- vey Cushing, is -a well of life to which we will wish to return again and again. Simcoe County claims Sir William as one of her native sons and every boy should read his biography. William Osler was the youngest son in a family of nine children, born to Featherstone Lake Osler and his wife, Ellen Free Pickton Osler, who had come to the wilderness of Upper Canada (1837), and settled at Bond Head, Tecumseth township, with all their earthly belongings, includ- ing` a tin box of home-made Cornish gringer bread, for the purpose of bringing the consolations of religion to the polyglot pioneers. The story of those early days, sans fuel, sans food, sans everything but wretchedly poor and widely-scattered parishion- ers, rivals anything in fiction. But here, fteen miles from , Muddy York, fteen miles of quagmire, the dou_eiht_\' rector made his rounds, with his baptismal re_2`ist.er in hs` saddle-bag," while his brave compan- ion ministered to the needs of a rapdly increasing family. Of the children born under these trying` cir- cumstances several achieved eminence in their professions. The Hon. Fea- therston Osler, Justice of the Court of Appeal for Ontario, and upon re- tirement president of the Toronto General Trust Corporation; Britton Bath Osler, Q.C., the thirteenth jur_\'man; Sir Edmund Boyd Osler, later president of the Dominion Bank, Director of the Canadian Paci- Osler, Bart. William was not the name chosen for the _\`0ung-`est son, but when the local Orangemen paid their annual visit to the rectory on July 12, 1849, and were informed that a son had that day been born, they insisted that it be brought out in his father's arm, and thereupon they dubbed him William, and Wil- I e Railway, etc.; and Sir Wa liam it was to be. THE BIOGERAPHY or % SIR WILLIAM OSLER From Bond Head the family sub- sequently moved to Dundas, in the heart of a prosperous farming` cor - munity. Better educational facilities were now available, and the children were sent to the grammar school, where the younger Osler boys were called Tecumseth cabbages, in re- ference to their rural origin. Wil- liam Osler early showed signs of obstreperousness, and led a small group of kindred spirits in all sorts of hilarit_v, most of which was dir- ected against the school master. In 1864, having been expelled from the Dundas school he was sent to a boarding school in Barrie, but the change worked little spiritual change in the boy. for almost immediately he had earned the title along with his Two years later Osler was entered as a student at Weston, Trinity Col- 'leg'e school. His insuppressible spirits, and -his zest for practical jokes soon got him into trouble, for to_e`ether with two of the warden s sons and others he shut the house- keeper in her room and fumigated the room through the chimney ue with a vile concoction of which sulphur predominated. For this the boys spent a ni':h.t in Toronto gaol ! Osler :~: mother wrote him, quietly reprim-andin5_-' him, and enclosing two dollars and the usual postage stamp. colleagues of Barrie s Bad '0): Weston, however, laid the founda- tion for his future career. In studies as "we-11 as athletics he speed- ily took the lead, and was soon made head perfect. He also came under the influence of Rev. W. A. Johnson, Father Johnson, one of his instructors, who inspired him with a passion for science, particular- ly botany. On holidays they roamed the fields looking for specimens, and ... .......r L.\...... `*l\)II .~,...,\,x ,...,`.. Ll.,.:.. nu, u\.n-no Avvunuh sun _w,n,\,uux,u.:, uuu in .~:pare hours they pored over their microscopes together. 'I`he instru- ment Osler used belonged to Dr Janies Bovell, on the staff of both Trinity University and Trinity Col- lege school, under whom he studied when he later came up to Trinity U1ii\'e1'sity, being` as inzlefatigjable as he in collecting fresh-water polyzoa. 0510!` had written home, much to the delight of his mother, that he t.hou;=,'ht of entering the niinistry; this was during his Weston school days, but upon returning` to the university for his second year in arts he suddenly announced his determination to study medicine, a decision. as mo- mentous as it was wise. Bovell, when he learned of it said, That's splendid, come along with me." Bovell and Osler were insepara.ble,il' and when in after life Osler tried al` pen, "`it was the name of James I Bove'l-l- that came first to paper, not, his own. When in 1870 he went to Mc:G;ill, presumably for the better clinical facilities, he came untlef the inuence of R. Palmer Howard, and of Johnson, Bovell and Howard he said in his lecture, The Master \Vord in Medicine, (1903), to * these . . . I owe my success in lifc- if success means getting` what you want and being` satised with it. ` gre es After graduating from McG-ill Os- ler went abroad, being` nanced by his brother Edmund. At King s Col- lege, London, he came under the in- uence of John Burdon Sanderson, whom, thirty-four years later, he was to succeed as Rcgius Professor of Medicine at Oxford. Before leaving` England to study on the continent, he succumbed to the urgtings of friends and took his examinations for the Licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians, which he had stead- fastly ridiculed by calling neither de- nor hon~ors. From London, Osler proceeded to Berlin, then to Vienna, and nally returned to Lon- _ don, having completed his researches on blood platelets, w-hic-h were later , incorporated into a paper and read , before the Royal Society. Having _ - attained his objectives in studying ; abroad Osler returned to Canada, . his first employment being in sup- plying for the physician at Dundas, to which an entry in an account book attests: Speck in cornea . . . fty cents. He next substituted for Dr. O Reill_v, of the City Hospital in Hamilton, for which he received $25 and a pair of elastic-sided boots which Dr. O Reill_\' had outgrown. On July 6th his old friend, Dr. Howard, acting` for McGill, offered him a lectureship at ".\'IcGill and this he gl-a(lly accepted. Osler s worl; at McGill was in- stantaneou.=l_\' successful. Not only did he attract increasing'1_\' lain:-'01` classes of students, but in promoting research, re\'.iving' the Medico-ChirA urgxical Society, oi`_2janizi1ig' clubs and study groups, but at the same time he was Qursuing his own researches in fresh-water polyzoa, protlucing` the first Patliological Report to be pub- lished in Canada, (le\'elopin_ his knowledge of parasites and a be- wildering` array of other interests. In 1880 he went abroad and so in- augurated these quinquennial brin dustings, which he relig,-'iousl_\' ob- served to the end of his life. While studyizig in Leipsiz four years later, g`oin,'_: for the bacteria, as he ex pressed it, he received an offer of the Chair of Clinical Medicine in the University of Pennsylvania, and ac- cepte McGill losing` what Dr. Ho- ` ward called its potent ferment. So spectacular was his success in Penns_vlvania, that in 1889, that is, at the age of thirty-nine, he accept- ed the attering` offer of superinten- dent of the medical department of Johns Hopkins Hospital. To Osler belongs the honor of building up, not only the org'aniza~tion, but also, to a large degree the tradition of the premier institution of its kind in America. In 1891, immediately af- ter another flight to the continent, he commenced work on his magnum opus. The Theory and Practice of Medicine, selling my brains to the devil, as he picturesque puts it. The meres-it outline of his engage- ments and accomplishments during the next few years would alone re- quise more space than we have at our disposal. He was in the front rank as a scientist, as an administra- tor, leading in the foundation 01 facilities for research, of medical li- brary foundations, of preventive medicine, anti-tubercvulo:-`is cam- paigns, deliverinsz papers before medical bodies and many more. The culmination of this rapid rise in his profession came in 1905, when he was appointed by the Premier of Great Britain, upon recommendation of his old teacher, Sir John Burdon Sanderson, to the Chair of Regius Professor of Medicine in the Univer- sity of Oxford. The story of the following four- teen years at Oxford is an almost be- wildering record of great undertak- ings splendidly carried through. In an incredibly short time he had in delibly stamped his personality and scientic method upon Oxford and Great Britain. The study of medicine became synonymous with the name of Osler. A humanitarian, a cos- mopolitan, a princely intellect, pat- riot in the widest and trues-`t sense, Conso1er-General to the world, the man that emerges from these crowd- ed pages bids fair, to if indeed he has not already become a beautiful and challenging tradition. A Nig;ht- ingale, a Cavell, redeems a whole profession; and an Osler lifts a. form of service and science, as Stevenson believed it to be, the hi_2`hest rank of knighthood amonr: men. No medi- cal practitioner and no layman can read these pa::e.- without feeling" that he has knelt for a while in the pres- ence of the all beautiful which, as ESTEN & ESTEN, BARRISTERSl Solicitors in High Court of Jus tice, Notaries Public, Convey- ancers. Office, 1st floor Masonic Temple Building, Barrie. Money to loan at lowest current rates. G. H. Esten and M. H. Esten. The Northern_ Advance Wmi sAYs JUSTICE mown Upholds Decision of Judge Vant-.0 1:30 the Gamble Estate. Execuhors of an estate are liable for any losses that may result from their negligence in not keeping in- surance policies in force. Last week in the Supreme Count of Ontario His Honor Justice Mow-at upheld the de- cision of His Honor Judge Vance, who gave judgment to that effect in March, 1924, in the case of Samuel Gamble, deceased. 1- ,v,II', 7,,u, 17, - ,1 uuuu./u., \u,\.v.uux.u. In uphol(lin_g' Judge Vance's rul- ing` J-ustice Mowat pointed out thatt. : The court is unwilling to make the position of executors any more on- erous tihan necessary so that neigh- bors may be unwilling` to accept such trusts; on the other hand, they know that these positions receive remun- eration, g'enerall_v on a liberal basis, and i-t is important that the_\' should understand that negligenzt conduct in their office will not be permitted. No order was made as to costs, ex- cept that the official g'uardian s costs will be paid out of the estate. This decision was rendered as the result of an appeal by Boys and Boys from the order of J-ud-go Vance in the Surrogate Court last March. VTVL- 4.`..- L..!..l.l.' .-..... A-1-1- fl\1. 1 a small building that was not burned vux, L./uLLv'C.u|.\. \./\/utu nu.:u nALtLvuo The case briey was this. The question arose in connection with the passing of accounts of the estate of Samuel Gamble, a farmer of Adjaila -township, who (lied on November 28, 1917. John l\'Ia_v and Hance A. Lyons were appointed executors of the estate. At the time of `G.amble s death the building's in question were insured for $2,100, but the policies were allowed to lapse, and in Sep- tember, 1922, a re rlestro_Ve(l the barns. New barns were then built at a cost. of $4,000. The le_<.:'al repre- sentzttives of the children of the (le- ceased took exception t.o the pas. of this account, claiining` that there had been gross ne_e'li_:ence on the part of the Qxtrcutors in allowing the insurance policies to lapse. Jude`- ment was given in favor of the chil- dren, the executors being` held liable to the extent of $1,800, the amount of the insurance in force; at the time of Gamble s death, less the value of H11... ._ .,u_, .1 1- , n .. . u........., ...... AIVL UI-|Lll\.l|- This is evidently the first case of its kind in Ontario and Judge Vance had no precedent to go by, but his decision was upheld by Justice Mowat, and executors henceforth will realize that they have responsibilities that cannot be lightly assumed. Exports of gold ore, otc., from Canada have risen from $3,058,- 983 in 1922 to $28,358,449 in 1924. Browning` knew, is the all truthful too. '11 . . . . . . Properly to understand the mo- Atives which compelled the life of Osler, and the ideals which guided him in his breathless pursuit, (`-LC can do no better than to read The Master-Word, which is reprinted as No. XVIII. in Aequanimitas and other Addresses, and is quoted in part in Volume I. of this life. Sup- plementary to this is his L Envoy upon leaving` America for Oxford. When it was later published he pre- xed to it the line from Tenn_\'son s Ul_Vsses; I am a part. of all that I have met. This Rel-igio Med-ico reads thus : urn u . .. . .. ALEXANDER COWAN, SUCCES- sor to Lennox, Cowan & Brown. Barrister, Solicitor for obtaining probate of will, guardianship and administreion, and General Solici- tor, Notary, Conveyancer, etc. Money to loan. Oices: Hinds Block, No. 8 Dunlop street. I have three personal ideals. Ore, to (lo the day s work well and no. to bother about to-morrow. It has been urged that this is not a satis- factory idea]. It is; and there is not one which the student can carry with him into practice with greater effect. To it, more than to an_wthing else, I owe whatever success I have had-7 to this power of settling '1-own to the rlay s work and trying to do it well to the best of one s ability, and let- ting: the future take care of itself. "11 _ . . A . A .,.,l :,l....I l..... L5,... 4... ....L Iv.-.5 |-Any 4mm.`-4`, vvvnbv v|.tA.\. \Il- -y......-.- 'Dhe second ideal has been to act the Golden Rule, as far as in me lay, towards my profcssionzll bret.l11'e`-1 and towarlls the patients commit.t: to any well. 5;. Aml the third has been to culti- vate such a measure of equanimity as would enable me to bear success with humility, the affection of my friends without pride, and to be ready when the day of .=o1:'o'.v and grief came to meet it with the cour- age betting a man. `I71-.-1+ hhn `Fnfnvn 11n:- in cf-rnvn Fnv as: ul:uvuAub u unuu. What the future has in store for me, I cannot te1~1-you cannot tell. Nor do I much care, so long` as I carry with me, as I shall, the mem- ory of the past you -have _<.1'i\'on me. Nothing` can take that away. 11.....- ......I- ....:-.;.`l.,.- 1...L. L`\f\VV 1.....- ;\Llb|uu5 uuu uu.I\\. vuuv u.nu._. I have made mistakes, but they have been mistakes of the hoarl not of the heart. I can truly say, and I take upon myself to witness, that in my sojourn with you- I have loved no larkue:'s, Sophisticated no truth, Nursed no de1usion, Allowed no fear. NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS In the Matter of the Estate of Con- sxtantine McLaug=hlin, late of the Township of Vespra, in the County of Simcoe, Retired Farmer. Notice is hereby given `pursuant to Section 56 of !the Trustee Act rthat, ail creditors and others having` claims agrainst the estate of the said Constantine McLaughlin, who died on or about the 26th day of April, 1925, at the Township of Vespra, are required on or `before the 25th day of July, A.D., 1925, to send or de- liver to the unde.rsig'ned, solicitors for -`the administratrix of the said de- ceased, their names, addresses and ` particulztrs of their claims. A...l &..l-,. A4-,... tl.n+ tug`-nu .~...n\-. Business conditions throughout Canada, as Viewed by the General Commercial Engineer of the Bell Telephone Company, are most on- couray,'i11g'. In the West the pros- pects for a bumper crop are equally as good as at this stage for the famous crop of 1915. The Dominion Bureau of Statistics estimate a yield of 350,000,000 bushels. There is a I'1'lZl1'l(`(l decrease in failures, which is a good sign. There has been an improvement in the amount of con- struction, the total for six months ag'g'reg'a~tnig' $125,544,100. It is on- couraging to note that there is an increase in exports and a decrease in imports. Il"I....... 1.. .. ..l:...1.A. L..L ...___,I__-1 3... nu uuyu; van There is a slight but gradual im-l provement in the wholesale trade. Merchants having` been allowing their stocks to run low, are now buying more freely in nearly all lines. The _9:o!d mines of No1~.thern Ontario af.','Lli!`1 broke all records for the month of May, when they turned out an ag- _9:reg'ate of $2,600,000. [u.u.n.-u.uuuL.: v4. v-u.u vu.-nu... And take notice that ater such last mentioned (late the said admin- ist1'a.t1'ix will disvtribute the assets of the said deceased, having` 1'eg'zu'(l only to the claims of which she shall then have had notice. 1-\.u in, .1-nuu,_,p Dated at Banrie, this 3rd (lay of` July, A.D., 1925. l'I,,I_,,l,,.,,_. 0 LI,,,,,,_, I BOYS & BOYS, BARRISTERS, Solicitors, Notaries Public, Con~ veyanccrs, etc. Money to loan at lowest rates of interest. Offices 13 Owen Street, in the premises formerly occupied by the Bank of Toronto. Branch Office, Elmvale, Ontario. W. A. Boys, K.C., M.P., J. R. Boys. nave me QUICKCSI`. relic: known. Nothing has such concentrated. pene- trating heat as red peppers. Instant re- lief. Just as soon as you apply Red 1 Pepper Rub you feel the tingling heat. In three minutes it warms the sore spot through and through. Frees the blood circulation, breaks up the conges- I tion-and the old rheumatism torture 15 zone. When you are suffering with rheu- matism so you can hardly get around just try Red Pepper Rub and you will have the quickest relief known. Nothina has sm-h rnnrnnfrntnrl .-....., I5 0116. owles Red Pepper Rub. made from red peppers, coats little at any drug store. Get 24. jar at once. Use it for lumba~o, neuritis, backache, stiff neck. ' sore muscles, colds in chest. Almost instant relief awaits you. Be sure to get the genuine, with the name Rowles on each package. PRINTING Of All Kinds! Our ofce is equipped `to supply you Prin`ri11g you may need. Letter Heads Catalogues Bill Heads Programs Posters Folders Invitations Cards, Etc. Eh Nnrthern Ahnanre HEIJ PEPPEH5 END HHEUMATIB PAINS ._v, Radenhllxrst & Hammond, N Solicitors for the Administratrix. 19-3. CONDITIONS IN CANADA Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc.` Money to Loan Ross Block, Barrie, Ont. Counter Check Books Ring Us Up---Phone 53 next time you need t11em. Let us quote you on Raspberries made their initial ap- pearance of the season at the market on Saturtlay, selling at 30c and 350 21 box. Strawberries zulvaiiced little, bringing` 18c and 20c a box 3 l ......\., -.u.uk._.-.-: 4.12;. auu Auk; kl. UU.\. `, jumped 5c a dozen m'e:' last week s r, 35: -Vlozen being` asked. Butter showed a s1ig n t in- crease, selling at 37c and 33c a pound, as compared with a gmieml quotation of 37c last week. 1r..-1.Au-,u ..--.. L.,-.r-m nn xluvyuvlvll u; u|\, ADL' \\L:l:x\. Unshellod peas brought 90 21 40c and 45c :1 quart. Tomatoes basket, while shelled peas sold at sold at 25c 21 pound. ' Butter ..................................... .. Eggs ............................................. .. Spring Chickens Fowl ............................................ . Raspberries ......................... Stru.wbe1'1=ies box Salvia ................................... Apples ........................ .. . Tomato Plants .. Cabbage Plants Cauliower Plants ...... Peas, shelled ......................... .. Peas, unshelled `I ,\LL.._- ......,, .....- Lettuce Head Lettuce Tomatoes Potatoes .......................... .. "Potatoes (wholesale) Carrots ............. .. Beets .. Green Onions ............... .. Onions ............................... .. Hay .. ....... .. Young Pigs SATURDAY S Subject of Notable Lecture at Coming Chautauqua Oice and Residence-Corncr Eliza- beth and Bradford Sts., Barrie. Phone 105. :"O{`ce Hours--9-10 a.m., 1-3 pm., 7-9 mm.