7 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «BUTTERFAT CHEQUE»
Discover the use of
butterfat cheque in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
butterfat cheque and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
Charges made by the bank, of course, should be obtained as suggested from the
pass book and deductions from the butterfat cheque should be obtained from the
monthly statement. These latter should be treated as follows. The total amount ...
University of Auckland, 1931
2
Agriculture: The Journal of the Ministry of Agriculture
The usual form of contract is a 50 per cent agreement whereby the share milker
provides the herd and farm machinery, and is responsible for all farm operations,
in return for which he receives half the butterfat cheque, plus a proportion of any ...
The butterfat cheque in 1935 w£^s £13,234, and in 1938 £48,004. The value of
production in the Waiariki District last year was £111,750, which showed the
value of the Maori development schemes, particularly as there was no production
...
Australia. Parliament, New Zealand. Parliament. House of Representatives, Australia. Parliament. Senate, 1938
4
Accounting: concepts, systems, applications
... debiting the expense account and crediting the produce account, e.g. herd-
testing expenses deducted by a dairy company from the butterfat cheque. Where
the expense deducted from gross proceeds relates specifically to the produce
sold, ...
A. S. Carrington, George Bernard Battersby, 1967
5
Maori land tenure: studies of a changing institution
From then on the settlers are free to run their own affairs, the fixed charges being
deducted by some form of order on the butterfat cheque. This is the usual pattern
on all Maori farm settlement schemes. Some form of budgetary control for a start ...
6
The provision of credit with special reference to agriculture
The regularity of the monthly butterfat cheque provides a continuous source of
income throughout the greater part of the year, and makes accounting easier and
more certain. The regularity of returns makes it more easy to pay wages for hired
...
Horace Belshaw, Ralph Roscoe Enfield, 1931
If what Mr. Blyde says is correct, and if we take it that the income of the share-
milker represents about one- third of the butterfat cheque, we can assume that
the total gross incomes of those farmers is from £1,5oo to £3,ooo. These figures
do not ...
New Zealand. Parliament, 1940