The girls crash into a truck whose driver we never meet, and that's the biggest shame of the thing. Ambulance chaser Eddie Foy wastes no time in trying to get these dames to squeeze every last dollar out of the insurance people. Foy tips a hat that topples onto Patsy's top, he hands them his card, and is now representing them. Easy money, huh? We'll see about that, providing the girls play ball, recite their lines properly, and play their cards right.
When the adjustors (one of them is Fred Kelsey who plays the smarter cop in "Hot Money") come to see what's up, it's up to Foy and the girls to keep the charade up. Everyone's okay, obviously, and there's even a sweet little part involving a mouse what's crawling up Patsy's leg. Va va va voom. Some mice have all the fun! Lots of moaning going on here. Love the moaning.
"It was a lovely morning in spring."
Dimples all over. Charley Rogers tickles a rib as the telephone repair man.
There's really not much to it, and I'm kinda sad these reviews are almost as long as the length of the shorts themselves... sometimes the shorts are shorter, sometimes vice versa...
One will argue it isn't up to par with the other shorts; that Foy's song-and-dance man approach gets a little grating after a while, but I find this one of his finest moments. Catch him in "Roamin' Vandals" as the snake oil man, if ya can and have a mind to.