6. Now take the vouchers and enter them in the Cash Book on the right or credit side. In the “net cash” and “creditors” columns should be entered the exact amounts actually paid, in the Discount column should be entered the amount of discount allowed. Discount is always shown in the cash book and on the vouchers in red ink, to avoid confusion with credits, which should be shown in black.
7. After the cash book has been posted, the proper checks are made out, ready for the signature of the Exchange Officer. They and the vouchers are then mailed to the various creditors.
8. The paid invoices are then placed in a Shannon file drawer by themselves where they can be consulted easily. They form a complete file of sub-vouchers to the cash account for the month. They should never be mailed to our creditors for the purpose of having them receipted; it takes too much energy and time to get them back. In case our creditor fails to return our voucher, we can still prove payment, beyond a reasonable doubt, by producing the canceled check (which he must release sooner or later) and the original invoice exactly corresponding to it in value. One authority goes so far as to say,—“If a check bears no evidence as to its purpose but can readily be identified with a particular bill or invoice, it still is a better voucher than a receipted bill, ... a mere receipt for so much money, which can readily be forged, is poor evidence of a legitimate payment, but a paid check, properly endorsed and otherwise identified as representing a definite liability, is pretty fair proof that the money has reached the creditors.” (P. 49, Vol. 6, Enc. Commerce and Accounting.)
As a matter of fact, we sometimes experience considerable difficulty in getting even the vouchers back from our creditors. Lieut. Schudt, at the Fort Levett Exchange, hit upon a scheme which tends to lessen this difficulty. This is, simply to have the vouchers printed on a card of suitable weight; the reverse of each card being printed in the form of a self-addressed penalty post card. Our creditor, after dating and receipting the voucher, simply drops it into the mail box without the additional trouble of mailing it in an envelope.
The Voucher Check System.
A much more efficient system than that just described, one which we hope will some day be prescribed by regulations, is the “voucher check” system. This system is rapidly forcing its way to the front through the merits of its sheer efficiency, and is now in force in the business administration of many large concerns, the Pennsylvania Railroad, for example. The system is founded on the indisputable proof of payment that is afforded by an endorsed and paid check. As one eminent authority on auditing, has said,—“If a check bears on its face or back any indication of its purpose, it is the best receipt for money paid that can be secured”.
The voucher check system does away with separate “vouchers”, as we in the Army are accustomed to think of them; the checks themselves are our vouchers. The checks are somewhat different from the usual type, as they bear on their face a statement of the invoices they pay. In fact, they contain substantially the same matter as is shown on our regular voucher. Form 30, Fig. 28, shows a voucher check that would be entirely suited to our use. It may be unnecessary to explain, the dates, numbers and amounts of the invoices are entered at the right in the proper spaces, the amounts are totaled, rebates, allowances, etc., are deducted, the discount applied to the remainder and the check proper (left hand part) made out accordingly. Form 30a, shown in the same figure, is the carbon copy, the original being made out in indelible pencil. The right hand or coupon part of this duplicate is torn off, pinned to and mailed with the original check. It gives our creditor a memo of the payment, rendering it unnecessary for him to hold the check until he can make a special note of the payment, thus helping him out and at the same time expediting the process of cashing in our check. The left hand part of Form 30a remains in the check book and performs the same function as the regulation check stub. It will be noted that we thus save the labor usually expended in filling out our stubs and in addition, we are not liable to accidentally forget to fill out the stubs altogether, as sometimes happens with the regular style of check book.
The form and size of these voucher checks lend themselves very readily to manufacture in the same “make-up” as certain kinds of sales books, but the ordinary style of duplicating book is probably just as good as the more elaborate kinds. The checks should be printed three to the page and care should be taken that the duplicate forms are “in register” with the originals, otherwise, the carbon copy data will not appear opposite the proper notations.