. . "Illustrated works" . . . . . "Periodicals" . . . . . "A drawing that appears in Happychapter III of the book with the caption, \"They paused while the waiting-maids powdered their wings!\", and an ink inscription on the verso, \"Hair Dressing.\" It depicts a female insect Skiddoodle having flour applied to her wings by two female Happychaps, while a male insect Skiddoodle uses a haircurling iron to curl her antennae and holds a mirror and hairbrush and another female insect Skiddoodle brushes her dress with a clothes brush. A sign on the wall reads, \"Hair Dressing, Antennae Curled, Shells Blackened, Wings Powdered.\"" . . . "A drawing that appears in Happychapter VII of the book as an illustrated text depicting the initial letter \"H\" represented by three lighted firecrackers, with a male frog Skiddoodle, Hiram Hoppergrass holding a lighted firecracker while an exploding firecracker propels him and a male insect Skiddoodle." . "A drawing that appears in Happychapter IV of the book as an illustrated text depicting the initial letter \"T\" with a male frog Skiddoodle, probably Hiram Hoppergrass leapfrogging over a male Happychap." . "Comic books, strips, etc" . "Drawings" . . . . . "A drawing with a pencil inscription title on the recto, \"The General on a Toadstool\", appears in Happychapter I of the book with the caption, \"General Happychap is measured for a suit of clothes.\" It depicts a male Happychap wearing a suit coat and tricorn hat and standing upon a toadstool, while a male insect Skiddoodle measures his arm, and another male insect Skiddoodle takes notes and holds a t-square. A light preliminary pencil sketch on the verso appears to depict an unused depiction of Woodchopper Chip chopping the tree in which the Happychaps had slept." . . "An image with a pencil inscription title on the recto, \"Tête-à-tête\", appears in Happychapter VII of the book with the caption, \"A pleasant conversation.\" It depicts a Happychap man wearing a suit coat and top hat sitting upon a toadstool holding a flintlock rifle upon which a dragon fly has alit with a powder horn on its tail; he talks with a Happychap woman wearing a dress and bonnet and holding a fan, while a young male insect Skidoodle lights a firecracker below the toadstool." . . "Illustrations for Happychaps" . . "Drawings created by Harrison Cady to illustrate \"The Happychaps\", by Carolyn Wells, that appeared in a serial form in St. Nicholas, December 1908-January 1909, and in book form in October 1908. The Happychaps are fairy people who fell asleep during the American Revolution and wake up more than a century later to build a town called Jollipopolis assisted by anthropomorphic insects and animals, referred to as \"Skiddoodles.\" Instead of chapters, the resultant book possessed divisions of \"happychapters.\"" . "The Happychaps, by Carolyn Wells with illustrations by Harrison Cady. New York : The Century Co., 1908." . . . . "A drawing that appears in Happychapter III of the book with the caption, \"Sir Horace Hoptoad and Young Dandy Happychap,\" depicts a male toad Skiddoodle with his arm held by a male Happychap, and both dressed wearing tailcoats, tophats, and holding canes. A small male insect Skiddoddle stands in the foreground." . . . "St. Nicholas (New York, N.Y.)" . . "New York (N.Y.)" . .