The postmark only states when the letter was processed in the Post Office Sorting Office.
Postmark gives three things: date, time, and place mailed.
The date on Stamps.com postage label is a postmark. An unscrupulous person could print out a label from an internet postage provider and then mail it at a later date. This would be against postal regulations, however, since the item should be re-dated if it is not mailed on the date on the label. If there is Delivery Confirmation information, you can check to see if the item was scanned along the way, and get an idea whether it was mailed on the date on the label.
They can only state whether you worked there and what dates.
If you finalized the transfer prior to receiving payment, you're boned (and really bloody stupid). You will need to go to court. If you haven't finalized the transfer, tell the purchaser you need payment or you will report the vehicle stolen.
No, you can't tell the date that a letter was delivered by the date of a presorted stamp or even by a dated postmark. A presorted imprint is put on an envelope when the envelope is printed at a printer, before it is even delivered to the party who will be mailing it. When a letter is sent from Oregon to Florida, the postmark date is the date it was in a post office in Oregon, not the date it was delivered in Florida. The only way to tell when a letter was delivered is when someone is there to receive it.
Get the latest Writer's Market and it will tell you payment rates and which publishers to use.
Call your bank. They can tell you if the check has been submitted for payment.
Ask her.
There should be red marking on the front of the envelope called a postmark, it should name the city & state of the mail processing center the letter was sent from. This is not necessarily where it was mailed from, just where it was processed.
You can write a letter, regarding taking an advance payment from a customer, simply by telling them why. Also tell them the amount, what day of the month the payment is expected, and the time period the payment covers.
How can one tell whether the salutation or complimentary close is formal and impersonal?
just search it at google