Chapter
1 1| exist.~The clerks, few in number, were under the orders of
2 1| business must go on, a certain~number of indispensable clerks
3 1| salaries and~increase the number of those workers, thinking
4 1| and, in the~restricted number there is less chance for
5 1| classification of a great number of articles.~This did away
6 1| France by~rentals, by the number of servants, horses, carriages,
7 1| see from year to year the number of her well-~to-do tax-payers
8 2| do? will he increase the~number of clerks? will he dismiss
9 3| an appointment, and their~number is winnowed down to either
10 3| order to~eke out a living. A number do as Monsieur Saillard
11 4| work gratis for a certain~number of years), various copying
12 4| man. When we think of the number of letters it is the~private
13 4| chair and copy a~certain number of pages. Poiret's eyes
14 4| alleging that they exceeded the number proposed in the~prospectus.
15 6| He belonged to the small~number of those who.' Simplify,
16 6| misers were surrounded by a number of other old~faces, on which "
17 7| his~greenish overcoat a number of legal papers.~ ~"You
18 8| the various offices. The number~of the clerks to be retired
19 8| Baudoyer, to~the minister. A number of persons were assembled
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