Lynne Overman is always entertaining and pair him with a very young Donald O'Connor and even a small B picture has to be a winner. And because of those two, it is. It also helps that the screenplay was written by Stuart Palmer, the author of the wonderful Hildegard Withers novels. Oliver Quade (Overman) – the Human Encyclopedia- travels around the country with "Small Fry" (O'Connor). The come-on for the sales pitch is Oliver's photographic memory. As Small Fry puts it Oliver "knows everything, remembers everything and forgets nothing." Oliver says that he will make a pitch anywhere "
clam-bake, county fair, dog show-what's the difference? If there's a quartet, I'll be there." Sadly, a beautiful Harlequin Great Dane named Prince Dansker is poisoned at the dog show. His owner Guy Lanyard (Harry Davenport) offers a $1,000.00 reward for the identification of Prince Dansker's killer. A dog show judge, AJ Deacon is murdered – his mumbled dying words sound like "Harold blue too." Small Fry, an enthusiastic aficionado of detective stories decides to investigate. While searching for clues he comes upon another body that later disappears. There follows yet another murder but in the end, Oliver and Small Fry sort it out. And along the way, Oliver falls for Lanyard's daughter, Lois (Susan Paley). Oliver's photographic memory provides a number of key plot elements. At one point Oliver tells Small Fry that he is tired of the life on the road, "eating in hash houses" and later refers to "one-armed lunchrooms." I had never heard of the expression "one-armed lunchrooms," and the term intrigued me. Evidently, the one-armed chair was a feature of eating places that served fast-food type lunches and were popular from the very late 19th century through the mid-30s. Who knew? The slang and interesting dialog in the movie add to the enjoyment. This movie is a winner – I just wish I had a better print of it.