S.N.
|
Book
|
Author
|
1
|
Adventures
of Sherlock homes
|
Sir
Arthur Conan Doyle
|
2
|
Affluent
society
|
J.K.
Galbraith
|
3
|
Agni
Pariksha
|
Acharya
Tulsi
|
4
|
Agni
Veena
|
Kazi
Nazrul Islam
|
5
|
Ain-i-akbari
|
Abul
Fazal
|
6
|
Air
port
|
Arthur
Hailey
|
7
|
Akbarnama
|
Abul
Fazal
|
8
|
Alice
in the Wonderland
|
Lewis
carol
|
9
|
All
the Prime Ministers Men
|
Janardhan
Takur
|
10
|
Ambassador’s Journal
|
J.K.
Galbraith
|
11
|
An
idealistic view of life
|
Dr.
Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan
|
12
|
An
unknown Indian
|
Nirad
C Chowdhury
|
13
|
Anandmath
|
Bakim
Chandra chatterjee
|
14
|
Andorcles
and the Lion
|
George
Bernard Shah
|
15
|
The
Animal farm
|
George
Orwell
|
16
|
Anna
Karenina
|
Leo
Tolstoy
|
17
|
Antony
and Cleopatra
|
William
Shakespeare
|
18
|
Apple
Cart
|
George
Bernard Shah
|
19
|
Arabian
nights
|
Sir
Richard Burton
|
20
|
Area
of darkness
|
V.S.
Naipaul
|
21
|
Artha
sastra
|
Kautilya
/ Chanakya
|
22
|
Arms and the Man
|
George
Bernard Shah
|
23
|
Around
the world in 80 days
|
Jules
Verne
|
24
|
As
you like it
|
William
Shakespeare
|
25
|
Ascent
of Everest
|
Sir
John Hunt
|
26
|
Ashtadhyayi
|
Panini
|
27
|
Asian
drama
|
Gunnar
Myrdal
|
28
|
Ben
Hur
|
Lewis
Wallace
|
29
|
Bermuda
triangle
|
Charles
Berlitz
|
30
|
Between
the lines
|
Kuldip
Nayyar
|
31
|
Bhagwad
Gita
|
Maharshi
Ved Vyas
|
32
|
Bharat
Bharathi
|
Maithili
saran Gupta
|
33
|
Blind
Beauty
|
Boris
Pasternak
|
34
|
Bread,
Beauty & Revolution
|
Kwaja
Mohammed Abbas
|
35
|
Broken
wings
|
Sarojini
Naidu
|
36
|
Brothers
Karamazov
|
Fyodor
Dostoevsky
|
37
|
Buddha
charitham
|
Ashwaghosh
|
38
|
Bunch
of old letters
|
Jawaharlal
Nehru
|
39
|
Caesar
& Cleopatra
|
George
Bernard Shah
|
40
|
Candida
|
George
Bernard Shah
|
41
|
Canterbury
tales
|
Geoffrey
Chaucer
|
42
|
Chikaveera
Rajendra
|
Masti
Venkatesh Iyengar
|
43
|
A
China passage
|
J.K.Galbraith
|
44
|
Comedy
of Errors
|
William
Shakespeare
|
45
|
Communist
Manifesto
|
Karl
Marx
|
46
|
Confessions
|
J.J.
Rousseau
|
47
|
Coolie
|
Mulkraj
Anand
|
48
|
Crime
and Punishment
|
Fyodor
Dostoevsky
|
49
|
The
crisis in India
|
Ronald
Segal
|
50
|
Culture
in the vanity bag
|
Nirad
C Chowdhury
|
51
|
Dark
Room
|
R.K.Narayanan
|
52
|
Das
Capital
|
Karl
Marx
|
53
|
David
Copperfield
|
Charles
Dickens
|
54
|
Decline
and fall of Roman empire
|
Edward
Gibbon
|
55
|
Descent
of Man
|
Charles
Darwin
|
56
|
Devadas
|
Sarat
Chandra chatterjee
|
57
|
Discovery
of India
|
Jawaharlal
Nehru
|
58
|
Dr.Zhivago
|
Boris
Pasternak
|
59
|
Don
Quixote
|
Cervantes
|
60
|
Durgesh
Nandini
|
Bankim
Chandra chatterjee
|
61
|
Earth
|
Emily
Zola
|
62
|
Emma
|
Jane
Austen
|
63
|
Ends
and Means
|
Aldus
Huxley
|
64
|
Eternal
Himalayas
|
Major
H P S Ahluwalia
|
65
|
Fall
of sparrow
|
Dr.salim
Ali (Ornithologist)
|
66
|
Far
from the madding crowd
|
Thomas
Hardy
|
67
|
Farewell
to Arms
|
Earnest
Hemingway
|
68
|
Freedom
at midnight
|
Larry
Collins & Dominique Lapierre
|
69
|
Ganadevata
|
Tarashankar
Bandopadhyaya
|
70
|
Gardener
|
Rabindranadh
Tagore
|
71
|
Gathering
storm
|
Winston
Churchill
|
72
|
Geet
Govinda
|
Jayadev
|
73
|
Gitanjali
|
Rabindranadh
Tagore
|
74
|
Gita
Rahasya
|
Bal
Gangadhar Tilak
|
75
|
Glimpses
of World History
|
Jawaharlal
Nehru
|
76
|
Godan
|
Munshi
Premchand
|
77
|
The
God Father
|
Mario
Puzo
|
78
|
Golden
threshold
|
Sarojini
Nadu
|
79
|
Gone
with the wind
|
Margaret
Mitchel
|
80
|
Good
earth
|
Pearl
S Buck
|
81
|
Gora
|
Rabindranadh
Tagore
|
82
|
Grammar
of politics
|
Harold
Joseph Laski
|
83
|
Great
expectations
|
Charles
Dickens
|
84
|
The
Guide
|
R.K.Narayanan
|
85
|
Gulliver’s
Travels
|
Jonathan
Swift
|
86
|
Hamlet
|
William
Shakespeare
|
87
|
Harsha
Charita
|
Bana
Bhatta
|
88
|
Himalayan
blunders
|
Brigadier
J.P.Dalvi
|
89
|
Hindu
view of life
|
Dr.
Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan
|
90
|
Hunch
back of Notre dam
|
Victor
Hugo
|
91
|
Hungry
stones
|
Rabindranadh
Tagore
|
92
|
Idols
|
Sunil
Gavaskar
|
93
|
If
I am assassinated
|
Zulfikar
Ali Bhutto
|
94
|
Iliad
|
Homer
|
95
|
In
memorium
|
Lord
Tennyson
|
96
|
India
– wounded civilization
|
V.S.Naipaul
|
97
|
India
divided
|
Babu
Rajendra Prasad
|
98
|
India
wins freedom
|
Maulana
Abul kalam Azad
|
99
|
Indian
Home rule
|
Mahatma
Gandhi
|
100
|
Indian
philosophy
|
V.D.Savarkar
|
101
|
Inside
Asia
|
John
Günter
|
102
|
Inside
Europe
|
John
Günter
|
103
|
Inside
Africa
|
John
Günter
|
104
|
Intimacy
|
Jean
paul satre
|
105
|
Invisible man
|
H.G.
Wells
|
106
|
Isabelle
|
John
Keats
|
107
|
Is
Paris burning
|
Larry
Collins & Dominique Lapierre
|
108
|
The
Judgment
|
Kuldip
Nayyar
|
109
|
Jungle
book
|
Rudyard
Kipling
|
110
|
Julies
Ceaser
|
William
Shakespeare
|
111
|
Kadambari
|
Bana
Bhatta
|
112
|
Kagaj
ke kanwas
|
Amrita
Pritam
|
113
|
Kamayani
|
Jai
Shankar Prasad
|
114
|
King
Lear
|
William
Shakespeare
|
115
|
Kora
kagaz
|
Amrita
pritam
|
116
|
Kumara
sambhava
|
Kalidas
|
117
|
Divine
comedy
|
Dante
|
118
|
Lady
Chatterley’s lover
|
D.H.
Lawrence
|
119
|
The
Social contract
|
J.J.
Rousseau
|
120
|
Les
Miserable’s
|
Victor
Hugo
|
121
|
Lipika
|
Rabindranadh
Tagore
|
122
|
Love
story
|
Eric
segal
|
123
|
Mahabharata
|
Ved
Vyas
|
124
|
Malavikagnimitra
|
Kalidas
|
125
|
Man
and superman
|
George
Bernard Shah
|
126
|
Man
eaters Kumaon
|
Jim
Corbett
|
127
|
Marriage
and morale
|
Bertrand
Russell
|
128
|
Meghdhoota
|
Kalidas
|
129
|
Mein
Kamph
|
Adolph
Hitler
|
130
|
Midnight
children
|
Salman
Rushdie
|
131
|
Mother
|
Maxim
Gorky
|
132
|
Mother
India
|
Katherine
Mayo
|
133
|
Mountbatten
and independent India
|
Larry
Collins and Dominique Lapierre
|
134
|
My
early life
|
Mahatma
Gandhi
|
135
|
My
experiments with truth
|
Mahatma
Gandhi
|
136
|
My
music and my love
|
Pandit
Ravi shanker
|
137
|
The
naked face
|
Sydney
Sheldon
|
138
|
Natya
sastra
|
Bharata
Muni
|
139
|
1984
|
George
Orwell
|
140
|
Niti
sataka
|
Bhartrihari
|
141
|
Odyssey
|
Homer
|
142
|
Old
Man and sea
|
Earnest
Hemingway
|
143
|
Oliver
Twist
|
Charles
Dickens
|
144
|
Origin
of species
|
Charles
Darwin
|
145
|
Othello
|
William
Shakespeare
|
146
|
The
other side of midnight
|
Sydney
Sheldon
|
147
|
Painted
veil
|
William
Somerset Maugham
|
148
|
Panchatantra
|
Vishnu
sarma
|
149
|
Paradise
lost
|
John
Milton
|
150
|
Paradise
regained
|
John
Milton
|
151
|
A
passage to England
|
Nirad
C Chowdhury
|
152
|
A
Passage to India
|
E.M.
Foster
|
153
|
Pickwick
papers
|
Charles
Dickens
|
154
|
Pilgrims’
progress
|
John
Bunyan
|
155
|
Post
Office
|
Rabindranadh
Tagore
|
156
|
Pride
and Prejudice
|
Jane
Austen
|
157
|
Prince
|
Machiavelli
|
158
|
Principia
|
Isaac
Newton
|
159
|
Prison
Dairy
|
Jayaprakash
Narayanan
|
160
|
Pygmalion
|
George
Bernard Shah
|
161
|
Raja
tarangini
|
Kalhana
|
162
|
Rama
charita manas
|
Tulasi
das
|
163
|
Ramayana
|
Maharshi
Valmiki
|
164
|
Rangabhumi
|
Munshi
Premchand
|
165
|
Ratnavali
|
Harshavardhana
|
166
|
Razor’s
Edge
|
William
Somerset Maugham
|
167
|
Reprieve
|
Jean
Paul Sartre
|
168
|
Republic
|
Plato
|
169
|
Resurrection
|
Leo
Tolstoy
|
170
|
The
Revenue stamp
|
Amrita
Pritam
|
171
|
Ritu
samhara
|
Kalidas
|
172
|
Robinson
Crusoe
|
Daniel
Dafoe
|
173
|
Romeo
and Juliet
|
William
Shakespeare
|
174
|
Rubbaiyat
|
Omar
Khayyam
|
175
|
Sadar
i riyasat
|
Karan
Singh
|
176
|
Satyardh
Prakash
|
Swami
Dayananda Saraswati
|
177
|
Seven
summers
|
Mulk
raj Anand
|
178
|
Shahnama
|
Firadausi
|
179
|
Abhignana
Shakuntalam
|
Kalidas
|
180
|
Shame
|
Salman
Rushdie
|
181
|
Social
contract
|
J.J.
Rousseau
|
182
|
The
song of India
|
Sarojini
Naidu
|
183
|
Sunny
days
|
Sunil
Gavaskar
|
184
|
Study
of history
|
Arnold
Toynbee
|
185
|
Tale
of two cities
|
Charles
Dickens
|
186
|
Talisman
|
Sir
Walter Scott
|
187
|
Three
musketeers
|
Alexander
Dumas
|
188
|
Time
Machine
|
H.G.
Wells
|
189
|
Treasure
Island
|
Robert
Louise Stevenson
|
190
|
Twelfth
night
|
William
Shakespeare
|
191
|
Ulysses
|
James
Joyce
|
192
|
Unhappy
India
|
Lala
Lajapati Roy
|
193
|
Unto
this last
|
John
Ruskin
|
194
|
Utopia
|
Thomas
Moore
|
195
|
Uttara
Ramacharita
|
Bhavabhooti
|
196
|
The
Vendor of Sweets
|
R.K.Narayana
|
197
|
View
from UNO
|
U.Thant
|
198
|
The
Village
|
Mulkraj
Anand
|
199
|
Vinay
Patrika
|
Tulsi
Das
|
200
|
Wakeup
India
|
Annie
Besant
|
201
|
War
and Peace
|
Leo
Tolstoy
|
202
|
War
of Indian Independence
|
Vinayak
Damodar savarkar
|
203
|
Waste
land
|
T.S.
Elliot
|
204
|
Wealth
of Nations
|
Adam
Smith
|
205
|
The
wonder that was India
|
A.L.
Bhasham
|
206
|
We
Indians
|
Kushwant
singh
|
207
|
The
wreck
|
Rabindranadh
Tagore
|
208
|
Yama
|
Mahadevi
Verma
|
209
|
Dr.
Zhivago
|
Boris
Pasternak
|
210
|
Zulfi,
My friend
|
Piloo
Modi
|
211
|
Area
of Darkness
|
written by shri V.S.Naipaul, West Indian (Trinidad),
who has lived in England since 1950. Awarded Noble Prize for the year 2001.
|
212
|
India,
a wounded civilization
|
|
213
|
A
house for Mr. Biswas
|
|
214
|
Middle
passage
|
|
215
|
Flag
on the Island
|
|
216
|
A
bend in the river
|
|
217
|
A
way in the world
|
|
218
|
Miguel
street
|
Designed to help the candidates appearing the Appendix 3, LDCE, 70% etc of Railway Accounts
Monday, April 30, 2018
Books & Authors (for LDCE exam)
Sunday, April 29, 2018
JOURNAL/ACCOUNTING ENTRIES FOR SCRAP SALES OF RETURNED STORES
JOURNAL/ACCOUNTING ENTRIES FOR SCRAP SALES OF RETURNED STORES
Codal provisions:
Sales (Capital 7140 and 7150).
I.In the case of cash sales, auction sales or sales by tender where the value of material sold by the Railway is received in advance of actual issue of stores, the credit to this account will appear earlier than the debit. The credit will be by debit to 'Cash'.
(So Sales Suspense A/c is always showing credit balance. Because Credit appear first in Sales Suspense A/c by debiting the Remittance Into Bank A/c (RIB) .
Example : Rails released from CTR (Complete Track Renewal) work - Journal Entries
STAGES/STEPS
I. On receipt of released material at Scrap Depot - CJV - Capital Journal Voucher
Date
|
Particulars
|
Ledger folio
|
Debit(Rs)
|
Credit (Rs.)
|
Stores in stock A/c 207161-08 - Dr
|
100
| |||
To Demand No.16 PH 3100 ( 21-3100) Cr
|
100
| |||
Credit to work at Book value for the released material by taking debit in Stores Suspense A/c
|
2. When EMD (Earnest Money Deposit) & BSV (Balance Sale Value) received from the successful bidder - MCR
Date
|
Particulars
|
Ledger folio
|
Debit(Rs)
|
Credit (Rs.)
|
Remittance into Bank A/c 008677-88 Dr
|
90
| |||
To Sales Suspense A/c 207142 Cr
|
90
| |||
On receipt of MCR for EMD/BSV paid by the successful bidder
|
3. At the time of delivery of material to successful bidder and adjust the difference between Book value and realised value of released materials through Stock Adjustment A/c (SA A/c) - CJV - Capital Journal Voucher
Date
|
Particulars
|
Ledger folio
|
Debit(Rs)
|
Credit (Rs.)
|
Sales suspense A/c 207142 Dr
|
90
| |||
Stock Adjustment A/c 20-7185 Dr
|
10
| |||
To Stores in Stock A/c 207161-08 Cr
|
100
| |||
On receipt of Issue note for having delivered the material
|
4. Clearance of Stock Adjustment A/c (SA A/c) by adjusting debit or credit to the Dept/Demand. - CJV -Capital Journal Voucher
Date
|
Particulars
|
Ledger folio
|
Debit(Rs)
|
Credit (Rs.)
|
Demand No.16 –PH 3100 (21-3100) Dr
|
10
| |||
To Stock Adjustment A/c 20-7185 Cr
|
10
| |||
Clearance of SA A/c by adjusting to the Final Head
|
Left over of journal entries, after cancel out/nullify the Stores in stock A/c, Sales Suspense A/c & Stock Adjustment A/cs one to one i.e., by equaling Debits/Credits
Date
|
Particulars
|
Ledger folio
|
Debit(Rs)
|
Credit (Rs.)
|
Remittance into Bank (RIB) A/c Dr
|
90
| |||
Demand No.16 –PH 3100 (21-3100) Dr
|
10
| |||
To Demand No.16 –PH 3100 (21-3100) Cr
|
100
| |||
PS: Candidates are advised to furnish the journal entries wherever required /possible to obtain good scoring in examination.
%%%%
Variety Reduction
VARIETY REDUCTION
· is nothing but standardization of items/materials.
· The basic purpose of standardization is to eliminate diversity among items/materials that serve the same purpose and to attain a high degree of uniformity in the manufacture.
· is a rationalization of the number of items to be stocked. It achieves by elimination of non-standard and non-rationalized sizes/designs whose demand is very small.
· enables few items will be purchased in large quantities.
· It is an essential requirement to any modern mass production economy such as Indian Railways.
ADVANTAGES:
1. Reducing the Unit cost, because few items will be purchased in large quantities.
2. Reducing the inventory carrying cost.
3. Will root out the unneeded and duplicate items.
*****
Repeat Orders
Repeat Orders
·
When
materials are required during a contract period in excess of the quantities
contracted for,
·
And
such excess is not sufficiently large to justify the invitation of fresh
tenders,
·
Then,
increasing the quantities suitably under the existing contract is called Repeat
Order.
·
However,
before placing repeat order, negotiations should be conducted with the supplier
for securing the favourable terms.
·
No
such Repeat orders to be placed on previously accepted rates obtained on
limited or single tenders. That means,
Repeat orders to be placed only in case of open tenders.
&&&
Saturday, April 28, 2018
Duties of I.S.A - Inspector of Stores Accounts
Duties of I.S.A - Inspector of Stores Accounts
1.
To
supervise the work of ASV’s working under his control.
2.
To
distribute the work evenly among the ASV’s under his control in such a way, to
complete the stock verification of stores , T & P in due time.
3.
To
make surprise visits to ensure that the ASV’s are actually employed on the
duties on which they have been deputed.
4.
To
test check the works done by ASV’s wherever considered necessary and furnish
Test check report to the Stores Accounts Officer.
5.
To
submit Weekly Periodical report to the Stores Accounts Officer of progress made
by each ASV.
6.
To
attend Auctions where necessary.
7.
Disposal
of stock sheets at the earliest and report on the action taken to Stores
Accounts Officer.
8.
To
overhaul the depot numerical ledgers and accounts of the after completion of
Stock verification to see that:
A.
They
are maintained in proper order.
B.
They
are no unattested corrections or over-written figures in the ledgers and
accounts.
C.
Find
out any non moving stocks (if any) and bring to the notice of Executives for
their disposal.
D.
Investigate
the reasons for huge differences between the ground balance and ledger balance
of stock items found out during actual stock verification.
####
Engineering Plant Reserve
Engineering Plant Reserve
ü Created for items of Plant which
rendered surplus on completion of special works/schemes.
ü On completion of special works or
construction, all useful plants for which there is no demand on the OPEN LINE
should be returned to this Reserve by Engineering dept to the nearest Stores
depot accompanied by advice note.
ü So that the items of plant in that
reserve will be required for future special works.
ü Created on each Railway with the
previous sanction of the Railway Board.
ü Maximum financial limit of such
reserve is fixed by the Railway Board only.
ü Engineering Dept. responsible for
deciding what materials are to be maintained in that reserve. Also responsible for arranging inspection of
items plant on return from any work, such plant should be attended to and kept
in readiness, for issue again, if need be.
ü Stores Dept. responsible for maintain the records i.e., receipts, issues
and balances of the items in that reserve.
ü Separate Priced Ledgers are
maintained for such Plan represented by the No. painted on the items.
ü Hired such plants to other Govt.
Depts, Private parties:
ü Resorted to that option, when it is
used in the interest of public service.
ü Hire charges and 12.5 % supervision
of all handling , packing, loading and unloading etc also be levied on the
parties.
ü COS is responsible for recovery of
such charges.
&&&
Risk Purchase
Risk Purchase
·
is
fresh purchase made by the Railways ordered at the risk and cost of the
defaulting firm , by cancelling the original purchase order under the
conditions of the Contract.
·
It
happens, when a firm has failed to make supply against P.O/agreement wholly or
in part within the Delivery period including extension granted if any., or
·
When
supply made has been rejected and the firm has failed to replace the same in
spite of additional time having been given.
·
Under
the above circumstances, the contractor/supplier shall be liable for any loss
which the railway may sustain provided:
·
Such
a risk purchase is covered by the Agreement.,
·
Risk
purchase is made within 6 months from the date of failure or cancellation of
the contract owing to repudiation of the contract before the expiry of delivery
period incl: extension period if any.
·
Important
points to be observed, while making risk purchase are:
·
Risk
purchase should be ordered in the same manner as for the original purchase.
That is description, inspection method,
system of tender should be similar to the original purchase.
·
No
offer with any unusual condition at variance with the original purchase should
be accepted.
·
The
defaulting firm should also be invited to tender against the Risk tender even
though not obligatory.
·
If
acceptable, the defaulting firm’s offer, ensure that the same may be accepted
only after paying the security deposit, irrespective of the fact, that the said
firm is exempted from depositing security money otherwise.
·
The
original contractor becomes liable for to the difference between the higher
price incurred and the contracted price.
·
For
this purpose, MAR account to be operated for watching the realization of the
above said difference amount.
&&&
SMS - Stores Monthly Summary
S M S - Stores Monthly
Summary
·
SMS
is the summary of all store transactions about Stores issued from
Stores Depots to the Consumers /consignees (various executives) during the
month.
·
Contains
particulars like Depot, Ward, Voucher No., Date of issue, P L (Price List)
No, consignee code, Quantity drawn, Rate and Total value debited.
·
Also
gives Allocation code and totals for Department and Division.
OBJECTIVE:
·
To
Bring into account, all the Stores Transactions (issues and receipts)
about the Zone ( say S C Rly) for stock items, which are booked to
Capital P (20-7100) – Stores Suspense Under Demand No.16.
·
Through
SMS JV, the above transactions clubbed into FMIS, so the JV is
incorporated in the Account Current wherever required.
·
Once
the final processing is complete at EDP/SC, the reports generated and sent to WAO’s
Offices are as follows.
1.
Transaction
Ledger
2.
Stores
Monthly Summary
3.
S
A A/c (Stock Adjustment )
4.
SINT A/c ( Stores in Transit)
5.
Sales
A/c
6.
Class
Ledger
7.
OB
(quarterly)
8.
Multi
depot print out ( for COS office use)
9.
Exception
Report 1 – below the danger level ( for COS office use)
10.
Exception
Report 2 – above danger level ( for COS office use)
11.
Exception
Report 3 – Out of stock (for COS office use)
·
After the generation of the above reports, SMS JV is generated.
&&&
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