Fig. 24. Cash Journal—Right-Hand Page
TABULAR SALES BOOKS
27. In no department of a business are tabulated records of greater value than in the sales department, for only by studying the records of sales of different classes of goods or of different departments can a manager determine which departments of his business are most profitable. A tabular sales book makes it possible to record sales in detail with very little additional labor, resulting in greater economy of time in collecting valuable data.
Fig. 25 a. Tabular Sales Book
In certain lines of business a record of quantities of different kinds of merchandise sold is of almost equal value to records of values. Examples are—wholesale coal business, in which records are kept of quantities and values of different grades and sizes or the product of different mines; lumber, in which sales are divided as to lumber, lath, shingles, sash, and doors; wholesale paper, in which some of the divisions are book, flats, bonds, cover, etc. A sales book designed for a business of this class is shown in Fig. 25 a. This is arranged for a record of sales in a coal business, segregating sales of the product of each of three mines.
There are businesses in which returns and allowances are so frequent as to constitute an important item in the record of transactions. Such cases demand special columns in either journal or sales book. Another condition occasionally met with is where purchases are frequently made from customers, resulting in accounts in both ledgers. This requires journal entries to adjust the accounts, but instead of making these in the regular journal, special columns can be provided for the purpose in the sales book. Fig. 25 b. illustrates a sales journal with columns for returns and allowances, and columns for purchase adjustments. The total of these adjustment columns are posted to the sales ledger controlling account.
Fig. 25 b. Sales Journal with Adjustment Column