Concept explainers
Posting a purchases journal
The purchases journal for Newmark Exterior Cleaners Inc. follows. The accounts payable account has a March 1, 20Y2, balance of $580 for an amount owed to Nicely Co. No payments were made on creditor invoices during March.
a. Prepare a T account for the accounts payable creditor accounts.
b. Post the transactions from the purchases journal to the creditor accounts and determine their ending balances.
c. Prepare T accounts for the accounts payable control and cleaning supplies accounts. Post control totals to the two accounts, and determine their ending balances. Cleaning Supplies had a zero balance at the beginning of the month.
d. Prepare a schedule of the creditor account balances to verify the equality of the sum of the accounts payable creditor balances and the accounts payable controlling account balance.
c. How might a computerized accounting system differ from the use of a purchases journal in recording purchase transactions?
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Chapter 5 Solutions
Accounting
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- The revenue journal for Sapling Consulting Inc. follows. The accounts receivable controlling account has a July 1, 20Y2, balance of 625 consisting of an amount due from Aladdin Co. There were no collections during July. a. Prepare a T account for the accounts receivable customer accounts. b. Post the transactions from the revenue journal to the customer accounts and determine their ending balances. c. Prepare T accounts for the accounts receivable and fees earned accounts. Post control totals to the two accounts and determine the ending balances. d. Prepare a schedule of the customer account balances to verify the equality of the sum of the customer account balances and the accounts receivable controlling account balance. e. How might a computerized system differ from a revenue journal in recording revenue transactions?arrow_forwardReview the following transactions and prepare any necessary journal entries for Tolbert Enterprises. A. On April 7, Tolbert Enterprises contracts with a supplier to purchase 300 water bottles for their merchandise inventory, on credit, for $10 each. Credit terms are 2/10, n/60 from the invoice date of April 7. B. On April 15, Tolbert pays the amount due in cash to the supplier.arrow_forwardTransactions related to revenue and cash receipts completed by Sycamore Inc. during the month of March 20Y8 are as follows: Prepare a single-column revenue journal and a cash receipts journal to record these transactions. Use the following column headings for the cash receipts journal: Fees Earned Cr., Accounts Receivable Cr., and Cash Dr. Place a check mark () in the Post. Ref. column to indicate when the accounts receivable subsidiary ledger should be posted.arrow_forward
- Journalize the following transactions in the sales journal or general journal for Moss Company. Record in the accounts receivable subsidiary ledger and to post to general ledger accounts as appropriate. Use the same journal headings that we used for Art's Clothing Company. (All sales carry credit terms of 2/10, n/30.) DO NOT RECORD DISCOUNT. RECORD THE FULL ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE BALANCE. 2021 May 18 Issued credit memo No. 1 to Jane Company for $200 for defective merchandise returned. The cost of the inventory was $150.arrow_forwardA credit sale is made on July 10 for $800, terms 4/10, n/30. On July 12, $150 of goods are returned for credit. Give the journal entry on July 19 to record the receipt of the balance due within the discount period. (List all debit entries before credit entries. Credit account titles are automatically indented when the amount is entered. Do not indent manually. If no entry is required, select "No Entry" for the account titles and enter O for the amounts.) Date Account Titles and Explanation July 19 Debit Creditarrow_forwardUse the journals and ledgers that follow. Total the journals. Post the transactions to the subsidiary ledger and (using T-accounts) to the general ledger accounts. Then prepare a schedule of accounts receivable. Round your answers to two decimal places. If an amount box does not require an entry, leave it blank. SALES JOURNAL Page: 79 Date Account InvoiceNo. Ref. DR Accts.ReceivableCR Sales DR COGSCR MerchandiseInventory 2019 Feb. 4 Evert Company 17433 E123 2,000.00 Feb. 8 King Inc. 17434 K331 775.30 Feb. 14 Martina Inc. 17435 M132 2,301.99 Feb. 16 Shriver Company 17436 S101 700.00 Total fill in the blank 1 CASH RECEIPTS JOURNAL Page: 102 Date Account InvoiceNo. Ref. CashDR SalesDiscountsDR AccountsReceivable,Sales, or OtherAccounts CR 2019 Feb. 1 Cash Sales 475.00 475.00 Feb. 5 Payment from Evert Co. 17433 1,960.00 40.00 2,000.00 Feb. 15 Bank loan 230 1,500.00 1,500.00 Feb. 21 Payment from…arrow_forward
- Kitchen Equipment Company uses the allowance method to account for uncollectibles. On October 31, It wrote off a $1,200 account of a customer, Gwen Rowe. On December 9, It recelved an $800 payment from Rowe. a. Make the appropriate entry for October 31. View transaction list Journal entry worksheet 1 Record the entry to write off $1,200-due from Gwen Rowe. Note: Enter debits before credits. Date General Journal Debit Credit October 31 Record entry Clear entry View general journalarrow_forwardKingbird Company sells one product. Presented below is information for January for Kingbird Company. Jan. 1 4 11 13 20 27 Inventory 121 units at $4 each 100 units at $8 each 159 units at $6 each 126 units at $9 each 175 units at $7 each 114 units at $11 each Sale Purchase Sale Purchase Salearrow_forwardJournalize the entries to record the following selected transactions. Refer to the chart of accounts for the exact wording of the account titles. CNOW journals do not use lines for journal explanations. Every line on a journal page is used for debit or credit entries. CNOW journals will automatically indent a credit entry when a credit amount is entered. Mar. 1 Sold $63,300 of merchandise on account, subject to a sales tax of 6%. The cost of the merchandise sold was $37,540. 23 Paid $38,530 to the state sales tax department for taxes collected.arrow_forward
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