Pee-Wee Harris Adrift 
 
The Project Gutenberg eBook, Pee-Wee Harris Adrift, by Percy Keese 
Fitzhugh, Illustrated by H. S. Barbour 
This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with 
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Title: Pee-Wee Harris Adrift 
Author: Percy Keese Fitzhugh 
 
Release Date: February 14, 2006 [eBook #17767] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PEE-WEE 
HARRIS ADRIFT*** 
E-text prepared by Al Haines 
 
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PEE-WEE HARRIS ADRIFT 
by 
PERCY KEESE FITZHUGH 
Author of 
The Tom Slade Books The Roy Blakeley Books The Pee-Wee Harris 
Books 
Illustrated by H. S. Barbour 
 
[Frontispiece: Pee-wee rowed his customers to Alligator Island.] 
 
Published with the approval of The Boy Scouts of America Grosset & 
Dunlap Publishers : : New York Made in the United States of America 
Copyright, 1922, by Grosset & Dunlap 
 
CONTENTS 
CHAPTER 
I 
ALONE II SATURDAY MORNING III CASTLES IN THE AIR IV 
KEEKIE JOE V A QUESTION OF DUTY VI THE MISSIONARY 
VII APPLE BLOSSOM TIME VIII PEE-WEE EXPLORES THE 
ISLAND IX THE LOOKOUT SEES A SAIL X THE OTHERS 
ARRIVE XI PLANS XII THE DISCOVERER RETURNS XIII 
"STOP" XIV "GO" XV LIFE ON THE UNKNOWN SHORE XVI
BEFORE THE PARTY XVII THE SCENE IS SET XVIII EVERY 
WHICH WAY XIX THE EARTHLY PARADISE XX GONE XXI 
FOILED XXII IN THE GLARE OF THE SEARCH-LIGHT XXIII 
THE DREAM OF KEEKIE JOE XXIV THE MISSIONARY LANDS 
ON FOREIGN SHORES XXV RETURN OF THE HERO XXVI 
SHORT AND TO THE POINT XXVII SETTLED AT LAST XXVIII 
IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE XXIX THE RACE XXX ABSENCE 
MAKES THE ISLAND QUIET XXXI A PROMISE XXXII 
VENGEANCE XXXIII KEEKIE JOE, SCOUT XXXIV THE STORY 
CLOSES AND SCHOOL OPENS 
 
ILLUSTRATIONS 
Pee-wee rowed his customers to Alligator Island. 
Keekie Joe interview Pee-wee. 
The boys hold the island in spite of old Trimmer's protest. 
Pee-wee becomes a sandwich man. 
 
PEE-WEE HARRIS ADRIFT 
CHAPTER I 
ALONE 
When Pee-wee Harris returned from Temple Camp in the fall, he found 
himself a scout without a patrol. He had indulged in a colossal 
speculation and lost out. 
Forsaking the Raving Ravens, he had set forth to mobilize all the small, 
unattached boys at camp into the Pollywog Patrol, but the Pollywog 
Patrol had proved about as substantial as the shifting sand.
Like the beloved Black Lake it had both an inlet and an outlet. As fast 
as one boy entered it another had to go home, so that conducting the 
Pollywog Patrol was like pouring water into a leaky pail. Pee-wee, with 
all his flaunted efficiency, could not be at both ends of this patrol at the 
same time. 
As soon as some miniature scout from New York had been duly 
initiated, some previously initiated scout from Chicago found that his 
time was up, and Pee-wee's time was chiefly occupied in rushing 
frantically about trying to keep pace with this epidemic of resignations. 
At last the epidemic reached an acute stage and the Pollywog Patrol, 
after a glorious career of nine days, was struck a mortal blow, never to 
be heard of again except in the pages of history. Its three remaining 
members were summoned to their several homes simultaneously; one 
new scout was hastily secured but on learning that he could not be 
patrol leader he tendered his resignation and was soon called home to 
attend his sister's wedding. Scout Harris faced a cruel world alone. 
Meanwhile, Billy Simpson had been called to Temple Camp from 
Bridgeboro to fill (if anyone could fill) the enormous space left vacant 
in the Raven Patrol by the withdrawal of its enterprising genius. 
"Never mind," said Mr. Ellsworth, the troop's scoutmaster, "there are 
plenty of fish in the sea--to say nothing of Pollywogs. Bridgeboro is 
full of permanent material. You have all this winter to round up a new 
patrol." 
"Only don't round up any snow men because they melt," said Roy 
Blakeley, leader of the Silver Foxes; "and don't bother with shadows 
because you can't depend on them. And when you get a scout put a 
paper weight on him so he won't blow away." 
"If you'll give me some of the biscuits you make, I'll use them for 
weights," Pee-wee shouted. 
"You mean you'll eat them," Roy said. "What are you going to name 
the new patrol? Why don't you name it the Canned Salmon? Then they
can't get away from you." 
"Sure, you can have a can-opener for your emblem," said Dorry 
Benton. 
"Maybe we'll call ourselves the Airedales    
    
		
	
	
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