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Quotation

  Dear Mr Yusuke CONWAY SPOT (GRERN) GILT RIMS Thank you for your enquiry of 15 April for a further supply of our crockery. We are pleased to quote as follows:             Glass VARDAGEN             £55.00 per hundred                         Glass IVRIG                         £45.50 per hundred                         Glass FOKAL                       £25.00 per hundred             Glass STORSINT                £10.00 each These prices include packing and delivery, but a charge is made for crates, with an allowance for their return in good condition. Delivery can be made from stock and we will allow you a 6% discount on items ordered in quantities of 100 or more. There would be an additional cash discount of 3% on total cost of payment within one month from date of invoice. We hope you find these terms satisfactory. Please give me a call on 461318 if you have any question. Yours sincerely

Customer explains late payment

 Dear  I am sorry for the late payment of your invoice number W650, and am now enclosing our cheque for $850,0000 in full settlement. The delay was due to my absence from the office through illness, and I did not leave introductions for your account to be paid. I only discovered the oversight when I returned to the office yesterday. My apologies once again for this delay. Yours sincerely

Khmer new year

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     I n Cambodia, Khmer New Year is the greatest traditional festival, and also the greatest national holiday.  It is three days of festival and sometimes can be four days. Khmer New Year begins on April 13th or can begin on April 14th, depending on the “MohaSangkran,” which is the ancient horoscope. In fact, Khmer New Year originally began on the first day of the first month in the lunar calendar, which can be in November or the beginning of December. In the Angkor Era, the 13th Century, the Khmer King, either Suriyavaraman II or Jayavaraman VII, changed the New Year to the fifth month of the lunar calendar, in April by the solar calendar. 95% of Khmer population are farmers, and the period from November through March is the busiest season for Khmer farmers to reap or harvest the crops from the rice fields. Khmer people can find free time in April because there is no rain, and it is very hot, so Khmer farmers have the time to take vacation after they have worked very hard to gather t