Chapter
1 1| drive Rabourdin out of the~service; but how could he give up
2 1| ambassadress, were of little service to a household compelled
3 1| new system for the Civil Service of government. Knowing~the
4 1| very heart of the Civil Service, may also serve to show
5 1| curtain hung between the service to be done and the man who~
6 1| dishonest leaders,~the Civil Service officials hastened to make
7 1| the oldest veteran in~the service. A wealthy supernumerary
8 1| rehabilitation of the Civil~Service while the liberal cries
9 1| reduced the entire civil service force throughout France
10 1| admirable~machine of civil service very little understood at
11 2| better than some immense service to render or some delicate
12 3| accumulating a~whole silver service; silk petticoats for Madame
13 3| places in the government service? I am glad I am an~iron-master;
14 3| competition; whereas in the civil service the~revolving wheel which
15 3| he~himself took the whole service seriously, he felt a lively
16 3| applicants for government service,--three~indispensable qualities
17 3| head made much talk in the service, and that my~husband has
18 3| who could be of immense service to~you in such a career;
19 4| much the same in the civil service of~all European governments.~ ~
20 4| must be employed in the~service of their ministers. A public
21 4| bureaus, another for the service of the two~chiefs, and a
22 4| newspapers and talked civil service politics from~their point
23 4| ever thinks of the civil~service. And what do they give you,
24 4| he sneered at~the public service; this was usually after
25 4| thirty years in the Civil Service. Nature~herself is not so
26 4| a few months his term of service would~be up, when he would
27 4| whom retirement from active service had proved a~fatal blow,
28 4| continued to be employed in the service, all the while predicting
29 4| whether they entered the service because they were~natural
30 4| which the clerks owe to the service,~--hours wasted, as we shall
31 5| children, but the~government service adds hypocrisy to boot.~ ~
32 5| you want~to do me a signal service you will take a cab and
33 5| monstrous coop labelled 'Civil Service executions'; make him cutting~
34 5| everybody forgets to-morrow the service of~yesterday. Now each one
35 5| whichever section of the Civil Service you please at the age of~
36 5| is exempt from military service,~and possesses all his faculties (
37 5| progress, an unhappy civil~service clerk, like Chazelle for
38 5| place; I swear I'd leave the service. Did you find~that anagram,
39 5| show him how the public service could be better managed.
40 6| case, long and faithful service, honor, and talent~would
41 6| disgust a man with~the public service. I must purchase the right
42 7| the ministries, the whole service is treated in the same way,"~
43 7| man who has been in the service ever since~he came to manhood,
44 7| govern France with a civil service of six thousand men instead
45 7| you can render a great service to our~gracious queen by
46 8| retired. After~thirty years' service that's no misfortune. Monsieur
47 8| the government~such signal service that they will have to make
48 8| you. You don't know what a service you'll be rendering~to powerful
49 8| plan for the reform of~the service?"~ ~Rabourdin bowed.~ ~"
50 8| certain that a reform of this~service is needed; for on my word
51 8| country with the best civil service in Europe, is managed~thus,
52 8| between civil and military service; neither altogether~soldier
53 8| exigencies of the civil service."~ ~De la Briere. "According
54 8| old housekeeper~of a civil service on God's earth. Not a copper
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