subject
Business, 09.12.2019 20:31 bloodgif8921

The following transactions occurred during the month of june 2018 for the stridewell corporation. the company owns and operates a retail shoe store.1. issued 145,000 shares of common stock in exchange for $725,000 cash.2. purchased furniture and fixtures at a cost of $117,500. $47,000 was paid in cash and a note payable was signed for the balance owed.3. purchased inventory on account at a cost of $290,000. the company uses the perpetual inventory system.4. (a) credit sales for the month totaled $493,000. (b) the cost of the goods sold was $246,500.5. paid $6,750 in rent on the store building for the month of june.6. paid $3,480 to an insurance company for fire and liability insurance for a one-year period beginning june 1, 2018.7. paid $209,525 on account for the merchandise purchased in 3.8. collected $98,600 from customers on account.9. paid shareholders a cash dividend of $7,250.10. recorded depreciation expense of $2,350 for the month on the furniture and fixtures.11. recorded the amount of prepaid insurance that expired for the month. required: prepare journal entries to record each of the transactions and events listed above. (if no entry is required for a transaction/event, select "no journal entry required" in the first account field.)

ansver
Answers: 2

Another question on Business

question
Business, 22.06.2019 02:00
Precision dyes is analyzing two machines to determine which one it should purchase. the company requires a rate of return of 15 percent and uses straight-line depreciation to a zero book value over the life of its equipment. ignore bonus depreciation. machine a has a cost of $462,000, annual aftertax cash outflows of $46,200, and a four-year life. machine b costs $898,000, has annual aftertax cash outflows of $16,500, and has a seven-year life. whichever machine is purchased will be replaced at the end of its useful life. which machine should the company purchase and how much less is that machine's eac as compared to the other machine's
Answers: 3
question
Business, 22.06.2019 16:10
Regarding the results of a swot analysis, organizational weaknesses are (a) internal factors that the organization may exploit for a competitive advantage (b) internal factors that the organization needs to fix in order to be competitive (c) mbo skills that should be emphasized (d) skills and capabilities that give an industry advantages problems that a specific industry needs to correct
Answers: 1
question
Business, 22.06.2019 19:40
On april 1, santa fe, inc. paid griffith publishing company $2,448 for 36-month subscriptions to several different magazines. santa fe debited the prepayment to a prepaid subscriptions account, and the subscriptions started immediately. what amount should appear in the prepaid subscription account for santa fe, inc. after adjustments on december 31 of the first year assuming the company is using a calendar-year reporting period and no previous adjustment has been made?
Answers: 1
question
Business, 22.06.2019 22:00
"jake’s roof repair has provided the following data concerning its costs: fixed cost per month cost per repair-hour wages and salaries $ 20,900 $ 15.00 parts and supplies $ 7.70 equipment depreciation $ 2,800 $ 0.35 truck operating expenses $ 5,720 $ 1.60 rent $ 4,690 administrative expenses $ 3,850 $ 0.50 for example, wages and salaries should be $20,900 plus $15.00 per repair-hour. the company expected to work 2,600 repair-hours in may, but actually worked 2,500 repair-hours. the company expects its sales to be $47.00 per repair-hour. required: compute the company’s activity variances for may."
Answers: 1
You know the right answer?
The following transactions occurred during the month of june 2018 for the stridewell corporation. th...
Questions
question
Mathematics, 10.02.2021 23:30
question
Mathematics, 10.02.2021 23:30
question
Mathematics, 10.02.2021 23:30
Questions on the website: 13722363