A new method of teaching book-keeping : by the use of 1. Necessary definitions and universal rules; 2. Interrogatory exercises, or oral journalizing; 3. Practical exercises, accompanied by blank books, and directions for using them; 4. Instructions for the adjustment and closure of the leger, the reopening of the accounts in the old books, and the transfer of them to new ones. Accompanied by a key, by the assistance of which instructors are enabled to teach this art with facility and success to youth of proper age and capacity ; and adult persons to acquire a knowledge of it without the help of a teacher : the whole comprised in fifteen lessons, and the rules and instructions exemplified in two sets of books kept by double entry. : To which are added (in the key) specimens, showing the forms of the most important auxiliary books, connected, as such, with the preceding sets. /
Main Author: | |
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Other Authors: | |
Format: | Book |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Baltimore :
Published by the author. And sold, wholesale and retail, by John Grigg, Philadelphia ... [and 25 others] : Stereotyped by L. Johnson.,
1832
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Edition: | Seventh Edition |
Subjects: |
Internet
This item is not available through BorrowDirect. Please contact your institution’s interlibrary loan office for further assistance.Harvard University
Call Number: |
EducT 6438.32.451 |
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