The New American Stenology 1890. A System of Universal Rules by which any Stenographer Writing a Phonography having a Pitman Basis can Reduce His Style to an Average of Less than One Hundred Strokes to One Hundred Words, and Increase Its Legibility. Adapted to French, German, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, Greek, Roumanian, Bohemian, Polish, Hungarian, Russian, Hebrew and Arabic.

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Metadata

Singerman ID: supp0809
Year: 1891
Entry: Edmunds, James. The New American Stenology 1890. A System of Universal Rules by which any Stenographer Writing a Phonography having a Pitman Basis can Reduce His Style to an Average of Less than One Hundred Strokes to One Hundred Words, and Increase Its Legibility. Adapted to French, German, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, Greek, Roumanian, Bohemian, Polish, Hungarian, Russian, Hebrew and Arabic. New Orleans: L. Graham & Sons, 1891. 16 p.
Author/Editor: Edmunds, James
Location: New Orleans, LA
Holdings: N
Title: The New American Stenology 1890. A System of Universal Rules by which any Stenographer Writing a Phonography having a Pitman Basis can Reduce His Style to an Average of Less than One Hundred Strokes to One Hundred Words, and Increase Its Legibility. Adapted to French, German, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, Greek, Roumanian, Bohemian, Polish, Hungarian, Russian, Hebrew and Arabic.
Printer/Publisher: L. Graham & Sons
Language: English