Ti I ... "f r r" '.rtji4r .-'.' tfjasn-v t'V' r x. ,- !? ,0 ' r , - ,'i, ' I i "S3 V ' v-; ,M KM.U'1 it '. '-i-t i '' .,'" . 4 t I. i' I fM 1 ' KB-v1toN&J WEDNESDAY, JilA.ROH 17, 1920 .' , $35,000,000 The Texas Company Three-Year 7 Sinking Fund Gold Notes . i - v Dated March 1, 1920 Due March 1, 1923 SL !??,? a hol'sOfW lot in amount of not less than 58.000,000, at 101 nd Interest nt any ""'A' ??.?V! ""i11?' Coupon Not of f 1000 with prorHton for registration of principal. Interest ?.?. . ? nK.hilld BPtemer 1. The Chase National Bank, New 1'orlc, Trustee. Total authorized issue $outUUUUU0 v The Texas Company is one of the largest corporations in the world engaged in the pro duction, refining and distribution of petroleum and its products. Security These Notes will be the direct obligation of The Texas Company and, except for . sundry obligations aggregating approximately $4,200,000, will comprise its only funded . . debt upon the redemption of $ 1 4,798,000 6 Debentures which the company has agreed to call for payment on July 1, 1920. Funds for this purpose will be deposited with the Trustee of these Notes simultaneously with their issue. Market Equity $250,000,00011x0 Texas Company's fully paid capital stock outstanding amounts to $85,000,000, in addition to which the company is issuing $45,000,000 stock, subscribed for by stockhplders and employees in January, 1 920, and which will be fully paid in July, 1920. At present quotations, this aggregate of $130,000,000 stock will represent a market equity of approximately $250;000,000. Dividends have been paid without interruption since incorporation in 1902, the present rate of 10 per annum having been paid since 1913. The Trust Agreement under which these Notes are to be issued will provide that : Semi-Annual Sinking Fund Beginning September 1, 1920, the company shall provide a semi-annual sinking fund of $2,500,000, to be applied by the Trustee on each interest date, on 30 days' notice, to the purchase of Notes tendered at not to exceed 1 00 and interest. On any semi-annual date when sufficient Notes are not tendered, the unex pended balance of the $2,500,000 then available will revert to the company. No Mortgage on Present Property No mortgage shall be placed on any of the property of the company now owned or hereafter acquired, other than purchase money mortgages specifically secured upon properties hereafter acquired. Quick Assets Always 150 of all Liabilities The company shall at all times maintain quick assets, as defined in the Trust Agreement, to an amount equal to at least 150 of total liabilities, including these Notes and all other indebtedness. Earnings Hflz Times Interest For the fiscal year ended December 31, 1919, the com pany reported net income, after all interest charges and provision for Federal Taxes, equivalent to over 1 0J2 times annual interest on this issue of Notes, and for the past Ayz years average net income equal to nearly 9J2 times such interest. Purposes of Issue These Notes are issued in connection with the acquisition and develop ment of . additional producing properties, extensions to refineries, construction and' purchase of steamships, laying of new pipe lines and installation of additional marketing facilities. We offer the above Notes for delivery when, as, and if issued and received by us, subject to the approval of legal matters by our counsel. Price 99 and Interest. To" Net over 7 Wm. A. Read & Co. PHILADELPHIA Bankers Trust Company NEW YORK Illinois Trust & Savings Bank CHICAGO Tb" Information contained In tbls advertisement has been obtained from sources which we consider reliable. Whllo not Guaranteed, It Is uccepled by us as accurate. FOREIGN INTERNAL BONDS Wo hovo established Direct Cable Communication with Belgium, France, Great Britain and Italy and through our agents in theso countries can offer subject to change in price , Tuesday' Closing- Trie nt Tar Closlne Friers Exchauge Ji'ormul Belgian Goyt. Restoration 5 $77 per 1000 frt. $193 French Govt. Victory 5s 683i per 1000 frs. 193 French Govt. 4s of 1917 56 per 1000 frs. 193 British Govt. War Loan 5s 344 per 100 486 Italian Govt.ConsoIidated War Loan 5s 53 per 1000 lire 193 Wo aro prepared to give information concerning theso and other Foreign Securities and invito correspondence on this subject, 1 EDWARD B. SMITH & CO. E.LKINS, MORRIS & CO. Bankers Bankers 1411 Chetnut St., PhiW Land Title Bldg., Phila. BROOKE, STOKES & CO. Members of Philadelphia Stock Exchange Fifteenth and Walnut Streets Philadelphia, Pa. 102 St. Paul Street Baltimore A Safe 1st Preferred Cumulative Stock Investment Offered By ULUUtAJkt MMJpgferaiij.jr,i-IS GENERAL OFFICE AND FACTORY READING, PENNA. ?nra vV2Am)l?UYVlH I22S2X3Hfjw This sto.ck will participate with the common stock up to 5 Jhis should net investors 11 V Write Treasury Department for prospectus. Mercantile Stores Corp. 5 Bonds due 1933 and Stock riucB on Ai'i'LiavriuN Mills & Corbierre At HBOAnWAY NEW XOKK CITY GUARANTEED Railroad Bonds GEO. WILLIAM WALLACE Hn.4,5L,n3nd Bui,din Ji I. V illfeS li No Fare Rise Hint in Report of P. R. T. ' Continued rom Pare One morn than $2,500,000 nnrt absorbed 31.00 per cent of tho enmities. Net cnruiriBS from ooerntlon were .$11,045,000.02. Tho fixed charges of $0.020,813.Ki deducted from that mim, left n surplus of $1,715,870.80, com pared with the surplus In 1018 ax 1, 634,810.08. Carmen In this city, the report states, receiving a maximum rato oMlfty-clght cents on nour, now uvciubu .pu.ui. u. uuj , i contrasted with $5 a day In Cleveland and $5.10 a day in JJctrolt. DiscuMlng improved scrvlco to tho public, tho report says: ".Salesmanship i hero demonstrated by the efforts of motormen to pick up nil tho fares and by tho alertness and conrtcsv of conductors who endeavor to make the car ride a more ngrccaoio ex perience." , Reference was mado to the company s plan prior to 1014 to extend tho Market street subway directly to Camden. That and other projects, It Is stated, were mado lmposslblo through tho company s lots of credit, due, It was said, to tho city transit department's attitude tow ard company revenues. Tollcy Is Outlined Outlining tho company's policy, the report states: , "The policy of this management has been set ngainsc pcrmming mo property to be used for prlvato gain. The great est good to tho greatest number deter mines cVery decision in the matter of scrvlco to tho public. It matters uot what particular person or Interest bene fits from the imposition of an unfair burden. Tho point is that the cost should not bp made an added burden to tho car-ridlng public." Tho company estimates that one bil lion passengers jvill bo carried this year. Bight humircu una novemy-iwu umiuu ridors wcro carried Inst year. To give relief from tunic congestion the follow in ciinrpxtlnnH wcro made: 'Rearrangement of streets and traf fic with enforcement of trnfllo regula tions to avoid unnecessary delay to, street cars. .... "Uncorking tho bottlo neck of Mar ket street traflic at Pcnn Square by resetting tho tracks around City Ilnll plazn or operating cars directly through MarkPt street passageway at City Ilnll. "Completing construction and equip ment of Frankford Tj, so that it niuy bo operated as pnrt of the Market street sjstcm during tho winter of 1020." Transit Program Continued Turning to tho city's transit program tho report declared : "Originally estimated to cost ?03, 500,000, tho city's trnnsit program as now authorized is estimated to cost more than doublo that amount. These plans, If now carried out, would place Phila delphia in Hko position with Boston, where up to this time orr 5,000,000 has been charged to general taxation to mako up thi loss in street railway operation. Ten-cent fares uro there exacted. "The city lias been educated irto tEe belief that Its interest would be best t-crved by such an arrangement as would contemplate n commitment on the part of tho compauy to operate all of the city lines hereafter to bo constructed. The making of such an agreement on the part of tho company, upon fair terms, should serve to slabilUc the sltuutlou nnd removn tho transit question from constant? discussion a ml iiuduc critl-cipiu. "If operated, however, as u nait of the- existing iittem uud of a necessity largely supported by P. R. T.'a picscnt and prospective earnings, such new lines nnd extensions as are undertaken should bu planned, so as to supplement, extend and iucreaso tho carrylug capacity of tno present system, it mis bo done wisely nnd well, not much inoro than half, of the amount cow estimated as re quired to complcto the city's authorized system will bo required to provide udo quato accommodations." VON TAGEN SAYS p. r. t. is Unfair Councilraanic authorization of the Boulevard extension to the Philadelphia Rapid Transit should be withheld until the transit company "gives some nsbur nuco that it will keep pnen with the growth 'of tho city and tho needs of tho people nt large." Churles II. von Tagen, rouucilmuu from the Sixth Germiuitown di-tiiet iiiudc this btatcment this mouiing, ex plaining why he hud opposed reporting the bill looking to tho extension out of committee nt Couucil'H meeting ii torduj . tie fllld he could nnt mm- Hip iiihKn. Lbility of granting authority for tho tx- iPUMon on tiio Koiilpvuril to tin new plant of Scorn, Roebuck A. Co., uhen petitions of his rom.tlttiPnc fur exten sions "have been iguored for at least fifteen years." No favdrable action should be taken on tho proposed extension, he believes, until residents of Ciermnutrnwi, Oak Laco and other northern sections of tin city nro given opportunity to voice their gricvanco at n public hearing. "I believe the Boulevard extension is nil right if It Is uecesnry for the ac commodation of the largo plant now being erected," Mr. on Tngcu Mild. "Hut I rather think wo hod better pay attention to extensions of transit lines which citizens have been lequcst ing for u number of years." NEW YORK COFFEE MARKET New York. March 17 Tho coffee muiket openod strons ami trading wis brlbk. Call prices weio 1 to :i points ubon Inst night's closing (Ikuics. A broker oporutlng tor n. largo cotton commission liouso. and who wns u licuw buyer of contracts Hto jestnrduj, likh i'uuhmI a 8lirp advance, continued III buying this morning, mostly in Jul uiul gepUnvner. nnd promptly absorbed all oltorlngH of scattered long liiteiehts. Cull pi lead wero 1 to .1 points uuuto lust night's closing figures. LONDON 8T0CK MARKET Oil Group Hesitates Gilt-Edged la sues Weaker-Industrials Mixed London, March 17. Kxpcctatlons of an advanco in tho minimum rnto of dla count of tlie Banlc of Kngtand, which lias been maintained at 6 per cent since November C last, causod tho stock cx- chango marltots to droop today. Komo rails sagged ana Canadians were dull. Tho shares of Argentina roads tlon wafl noted In the oil group. Hhell xranspori mw v "u .-. Eagleu at 10 7-l. Qllt-odged Investment Issues wcro weaker. Tho foreign group was slow. Industrials wero mixed. Generally, the undcrtono of securities lacked steadiness. Crucible Stock Dividend riHsbtirch, March 17. Tho first Im portant stock dlvldond declaration slnco tho decision of the United States km premo Court that stock dividends nro not taxable ao incomo took place yester-, day In Pittsburgh when directors! of Uio Cruclblo Steel Co. declared a common stock dividend of B0 per cent, equal to MZ. GOO, 000. At the sumo time tho board declared the regular quarterly cosh dividend of 13 a shnr. Both distribu tions aro payable April 30 to sharouold. era of recotd April 13. Liverpool Cotton XJre rnoof, March 17. Ticro waUr: Inquiry for spot cotton today, with ntr nn tlin busts of a decline points for middling, at 38.17aV;i sales wore 4000 bales. Tno re wern 36.000 bales, including 13,808 American, lMturcs wcro quiet 1 early deoiings. mpoi prii-cH worer. . .in.,. fin 17,1 ftillv mlddl nir. 2 middling, 2S.17d: low middling, 2LI rood ordinary, 21.67d, and ordfn 20.07d. 75 jUs' .?'. Wt' I Beauty in Brick 1 .ID you ever stop to admire the Colonial architecture of old Carpenters' Hall, tucked away out of sight near Third and Chestnut? If so, you must have been struck by tho beauty of common brick work as done in the old days. Handsomer buildings were never built than those of plain Philadel phia brick. But modern architects have learned how to produce new and varied effects in brick not dreamed of by our grand fathers. Get an architect who really knows how to handle common red brick. He will give you a house that is a dream of beauty and style, a family home for future generations, yet built of the least expen sive of all enduring ma terials. Before you build, ask such an architect to point out fine specimens of buildings in Philadelphia brick. . . ,1" SEITTEIl'S aONfl Nlcetown J.ane and O Ht. II. M k C. B RIMER, - Churcli and Tacony JC T BTHNE EST. L'Olli and Clmrnelil JOHN If. EAIU.KY Nlcctown Lani nnd E St. rilANKFORD BRICK WORKS Torresdalo Avcnuo KEYSTONE BRICK CO. Godfrey near Second St. Plko NORTH PIIIbA. URJCK WORKS Rlalnc Sun and Lutemo TOi23JJ Sin, i s .rgjg jmnL Jffjn Broadway and Fifth Avenue at Madison Square New York THE FIFTH AVENUE BUILDING The most strategic location, commer cially speaking, of any office building in America is but one of the many ad- vantages this build ing offers. A BANK ACCOUNT IN CANADA JJhe Advantages of a Canadian Banking , ,' Va Account have never been more clearly demotv . t ntrated than at oresent. Manv American firms and ; r.-: Crr -Vio nnanmn rf cu-ft "' accounts for the deposit of their Canadian cheques' and the disbursement of payments which they J . t require to make in Canada. ', Companies intending to establish in Canada will find thm information at their disposal in our files of special value. Bank of Montreal HEAD OFFICE MONTREAL ESTABLISHED OVER 100 YEARS NEW YORK AGENCY: 64 WALL STREET R. Y. HBBDEN. W. A. BOO. W. T. OLIVER. Acuta CHICAGO SPOKANE SAN FRANCISCO LONDON. Ene. PARIS, France MEXICO Branch Offices in all important cities and town Ihroaghoat Canada and Newfoundland Total Assets over Five Hundred Million Dollar! Ki BUILD WITH BRICK-FOHKVEIl." Investment Bonds Welsh Brothers 328 CuKSTNUTSmrtrr I'lilludelphU Lombard 15-13 6 i Profits in I French Bonds m 250 c'o ii LI, II m1 1! I'll I'll IT LASTS p IBIII'IIIIHIIIKIIiM'li I II At current prices and exchange rates llie following profits are possible from investments in the three principal in tcrnal loans of the French Government. on an investment of $55.50, in the 4s of 1917. V 80 ci on an investment of $68 in the Victory 5s. 300 on an investment of $74.91 in the 5s of 1920. These figures are subject to change. Further information on request. rj f ij Bonbright & Company MORRIS WISTAR STROUD, Jr., Manager 437 Chestnut St., Philadelphia New York Boston Chicago Detroit Ycat I lOHH May U T'l July II Oil Heptcmber ........ 14. TJ Dcccmb-r 14U8 Hid, Todnj'K open 14 7r. 13 02 H 73 14 7'J 11 00 n in 14 78 15 IIJ II T Financial Briefs II StocMI, Wilson & Linvi! Certified Public Accountant. UW TW).iWf PfcfladelpWii Tho Now YoiUc Subtrcnatlry K.ilnul $CU2,000 from tlin bnnkH yeptei iluy inuUlnR a ciihIi net Bain Hlnc Krldnv of J2.709.000. Tho commltteo on aociiiltlon of tin Now lork Btoc-k cxcliunBe ruloH tht trannactlonH on common stock o i lyorlllard & Co. shall ho ox-rltr' ' April 1 ntelllH will bo dralt In r i after March 17. TrunHactloiiH In Ih must brt wttlcd on April 15, after whlth elate rtealliies shall bo In Keiurltl ulght to uuliHcrlbo expires May J, 11120 LIVE8TOCK QUOTATIONS Chimin. Mnrch J7 HOOH RocolntH, 111 -000 httd Hlihor A Hulk, tM.31Uttun top. Jlfli hfavv, $I4fi,tn 10, moilluni 11175 wini'liirt't. JIB nuoio; uiiit MU, sit nnt, 15 7B heavy racking- anH, amootli, SIS 75M llswiJYn B0W"' Toni'' i-(8'i--io. pk CATTI.K nclpt. T0OO hiai Firm Deef atenr medium unit hay, choice and ?I'.mi."-,,,,.8J!J,8'u,-,,0! ne.lium' and (rood; 111 50013 50! common. Sio&tt 00. fiiiit Bood and irholcn. 113,13015 common iiii medium tO.lOOlS t5l h-Ttrhrr S." l,e?fl era. TOt3i5 cowa. f712 55: cam rra Hn,l cutiera. inofi yi caU.i. Sill 50f IT B0 lyrnCTM6""''' 'P'TaOU T5i atorlter aUeri J WIIIIKP npcelpU. 7nno head rirm 1 !!iJi5Ql Iwe"- nwluim. Rood nnd cholcB 111 ro c "' to"imo" 3.75iy IIUkbiirKh. Til., March 17 HOa.S n "Ipta. BOO had, Jlltfhcr lleuvlea. tis 1B.B0I heavy jorkara. 110 800m OOj llSM yorkara. ltf.TBlBi pbta, SIS.SBOIB 50 8HBI5I AND bAVrir? nece pta. BO head. "Foreign Trade Through Foreign Investments" A Comparison J of French Government Loans 4 Loan of 1917 5 Victory Loan 5 Loan of 1920 TN view of the interest in French Government Internal Loans it has become necessary for bankers as well as investors to have at their disposal a comparison of the principal issues. We have therefore prepared a chart which gives for each issue the present income in irancs and m dollars, with ale. change in the value of the franc from c. to 19c, the increase in income as the franc recovers its exchange value, and the comparative profits and income at current rates for each loan. im Als,0Pa Sophie chart which shows the fluctuations in the French 5 and 5 Rentes since 1798. This chart should be in the hands of every banker, manufac turer, exporter and investor for present and future reference. Com plimentary copy sent on request for pamphlet No. P.T.-80. A. B. Leach & Co., Inc. Investment Securities 115 So. Fourth Street, Philadelphia New Yoik Minneapolis Chicago Baltimore BoHton rittsbiu-gh Buffulo , . Cleveland nil - 4 i'4 I 'ul M - 4' t V .u A' At J ', f , . , t v , - 'f , ": ' SSa, -M