Not really. Some postcard pictures were generically used in several situations and locations. Postmarked 1935. There aren’t many winding roads around Tavistock and not many white fences. The publisher is the Miller Art Company of Brooklyn New York. Miller did make postcards of Montreal and Niagara but most Miller postcards are scenes from the north-eastern United States.
Though this postcard is not of Tavistock Ontario, it is a good example of a postcard produced in the White Border Period of postcard production, 1915-1930.
With the onset of World War I, access to the German printers who had been making the high quality postcards until then was cut off. Even after the war, access to German printers was limited. As a result, publishers of postcards used American printers. In order to save money on the cost of ink, the images on the face of the card were not printed to the edge of the card. Thus this period is known as White Border Period (1915-1930) because of the border around the picture area. Scenic postcards were popular in this era and the descriptions printed on the back of the postcard got a little longer. Because of the poorer quality of these cards, they are not as prized by collectors.