It is strong among even the most active and progressive of the veterans of '65. They smile a grim smile in their grizzled beards at the fuss which has been made over this "picayune war," as they call it.
"America To-day, Observations and Reflections"
William Archer
The statement which recently appeared in the "picayune," even if reliable, shows that Mr. Clapp had changed his opinion somewhat, but not essentially, as it seems to us.
"Slavery and the Constitution"
William Ingersoll Bowditch
Nay, even what is popularly known in England as "modern American humour" has been claimed as a leaf out of Punch's book, quaint exaggeration forming its staple feature, as in the case where we are told that "a young artist in picayune takes such perfect likenesses that a lady married the portrait of her lover instead of the original."
"The History of "Punch""
M. H. Spielmann