On September 15, Oakton Company sold merchandise in the amou…

On September 15, Oakton Company sold merchandise in the amount of $7,800 to Dempster Company, with credit terms of 2/10, n/30. The cost of the items sold is $4,500. Oakton uses the perpetual inventory system. The journal entry or entries Oakton will make on September 15 is:

On September 15, Oakton Company sold merchandise in the amou…

On September 15, Oakton Company sold merchandise in the amount of $7,800 to Dempster Company, with credit terms of 2/10, n/30. The cost of the items sold is $4,500. Oakton uses the perpetual inventory system. The journal entry or entries Oakton will make on September 15 is:

Ben Kailin’s Law Firm had the following transactions during…

Ben Kailin’s Law Firm had the following transactions during June: Ben invested $13,800 cash in the business in exchange for common stock. Ben contributed $23,000 of furniture and equipment to the business. The company paid $2,400 cash for an insurance policy covering the next 24 months. The company received $6,000 cash for services provided during June. The company purchased $6,500 of office equipment on credit. The company provided $3,050 of services to customers on account. The company paid cash of $1,800 for monthly rent. The company paid $3,400 on the office equipment purchased in transaction #5 above. Paid $305 cash for June utilities. Based on this information, the balance in the cash account at the end of June would be:

In the process of reconciling its bank statement for January…

In the process of reconciling its bank statement for January, Haley’s Clothing’s accountant complies the following information: Cash balance per company books on January 30    $4,725 Deposits in transit at month-end $1,800 Outstanding checks at month-end $520 Bank service charges $25 EFT automatically paid monthly, not yet recorded by Haley $380 An NSF check returned on a customer account $265   The adjusted cash balance per the books on January 31 is: