Part, Chapter
1 I,II | desk Cesar slipped three~bills of a thousand francs each
2 I,III| eternity, even if she had bills to pay. Du Tillet, delighted
3 I,IV | speaking. He wrote out~his bills for rent himself, and sent
4 I,IV | Oh, I will~accept small bills for the value of the rent
5 I,V | for several outstanding bills chanced to be paid.~ ~The
6 I,VI | and gave, without receipt, bills for twenty thousand francs~
7 I,VII| greater surprise of the bills when they~came in.~ ~Cesar
8 I,I | messengers; who all left the bills and~went away.~ ~"Monsieur
9 I,I | guessed that the contractor's~bills, out of which he was to
10 I,I | By the end of December bills to the amount of sixty thousand
11 I,I | Celestin~to send round the bills of his customers and ask
12 I,I | on the payment of his own bills. "And you too, Monsieur,"
13 I,I | money for your share, I give bills for mine; I offer~them to
14 I,I | sixty-~five thousand in bills for the cost of the ball,
15 I,II | who had carried round the bills~informed him that the customers
16 I,II | other creditors with unpaid bills~passed through the chameleon
17 I,II | name seemed printed on the~bills; and as he worked with his
18 I,III| disapproved of sending round the bills; she had scolded the clerks
19 I,V | the~addresses of all the bills; we have till four o'clock
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