Chapter
1 1| of a new system for the Civil Service of government. Knowing~
2 1| from~the very heart of the Civil Service, may also serve
3 1| and dishonest leaders,~the Civil Service officials hastened
4 1| the rehabilitation of the Civil~Service while the liberal
5 1| which reduced the entire civil service force throughout
6 1| this admirable~machine of civil service very little understood
7 3| Special~careers, such as civil and military engineering,
8 3| competition; whereas in the civil service the~revolving wheel
9 4| probably much the same in the civil service of~all European
10 4| the newspapers and talked civil service politics from~their
11 4| francs~pension from the civil list, and eight hundred
12 4| if God ever thinks of the civil~service. And what do they
13 4| spent thirty years in the Civil Service. Nature~herself
14 5| monstrous coop labelled 'Civil Service executions'; make
15 5| whichever section of the Civil Service you please at the
16 5| for progress, an unhappy civil~service clerk, like Chazelle
17 5| wife, wishing to~say the civil thing to the head of a bureau.~ ~
18 7| to~govern France with a civil service of six thousand
19 8| that season more unctuously civil. They all came punctually,
20 8| might be employed by the civil list, at the Opera, or the
21 8| political, administrative, civil, and military~giants. Fear
22 8| the country with the best civil service in Europe, is managed~
23 8| on~the confines between civil and military service; neither
24 8| officer stands between the civil and the military. Let us
25 8| to the exigencies of the civil service."~ ~De la Briere. "
26 8| fault-finding old housekeeper~of a civil service on God's earth.
|