76 NATURE OF CAPITAL AND INCOME [Cuar. V first statement is made only $60,000 of this stock has been subscribed. It would be possible for the bookkeeper to enter the capital at that moment as $60,000; but, follow- ing his rule of keeping the capital item the same in all sue- cessive accounts, he will place the whole $100,000 on the liabilities side, and, to offset it, will insert on the other side assets of $40,000 in the form of treasury stock, the idea being that the company holds, in its treasury, stock cer- tificates for $40,000, which are to be regarded as an asset. Of course this mode of entering treasury stock is a book- keeping fiction, for this sum of $40,000 represents what is neither owned by nor owing to the company, except in the sense that the company owes itself; yet promoters will often impose upon the credulous investor the statement that to keep a certain amount of the stock of the company in its own treasury increases by that much the property of the stockholders. After the capital stock has been fully paid in, it is often necessary to enlarge it. Let us suppose that before the increase in capital the account stands as follows: — Assets Liabilities Miscellaneous . . . $300,000 Debts cde ww 3100000 Capital... . . 100,000 Surplus and undivided profits oi Selbiniin 1 5100,000 $300,000 $300,000 Next let new capital to the extent of $100,000 be issued and sold to old stockholders at par, in lots proportionate to their original holdings. The new stock certificates of face value of $100,000 are thus sold for $100,000. The accounts will then stand as follows: — Assets Liabilities Miscellaneous . . . $400,000 Debts . . . . . $100,000 Capital. -o +. '. 200000 Surplus and undivided profits ena as -1OD000 $400,000