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.

Part of 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.

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.”, Judaica Americana II, accessed September 19, 2024, https://judaicadhpenn.org/legacyprojects/s/singerman/item/55882