NATIONAL PROPANE PARTNERS LP
S-1, 1997-01-10
RETAIL STORES, NEC
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<PAGE>

<PAGE>

    AS FILED WITH THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION ON JANUARY 10, 1997
 
                                                     REGISTRATION NO. 333-
________________________________________________________________________________
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
                            ------------------------
 
                                    FORM S-1
                             REGISTRATION STATEMENT
                                     UNDER
                           THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
                            ------------------------
 
                        NATIONAL PROPANE PARTNERS, L.P.
             (EXACT NAME OF REGISTRANT AS SPECIFIED IN ITS CHARTER)
                            ------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                       <C>                                       <C>
                DELAWARE                                    5984                                   42-1453040
    (STATE OR OTHER JURISDICTION OF             (PRIMARY STANDARD INDUSTRIAL           (IRS EMPLOYER IDENTIFICATION NO.)
     INCORPORATION OR ORGANIZATION)             CLASSIFICATION CODE NUMBER)
</TABLE>
 
                            ------------------------
 
                             SUITE 1700, IES TOWER
                              200 1ST STREET, S.E.
                         CEDAR RAPIDS, IOWA 52401-1409
                                 (319) 365-1550
         (ADDRESS, INCLUDING ZIP CODE, AND TELEPHONE NUMBER, INCLUDING
            AREA CODE, OF REGISTRANT'S PRINCIPAL EXECUTIVE OFFICES)
                            ------------------------
 
                              RONALD R. ROMINIECKI
               SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT AND CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER
                          NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION
                             SUITE 1700, IES TOWER
                              200 1ST STREET, S.E.
                         CEDAR RAPIDS, IOWA 52401-1409
                                 (319) 365-1550
      (NAME, ADDRESS, INCLUDING ZIP CODE, AND TELEPHONE NUMBER, INCLUDING
                        AREA CODE, OF AGENT FOR SERVICE)
                            ------------------------
 
     APPROXIMATE DATE OF COMMENCEMENT OF PROPOSED SALE TO THE PUBLIC: As soon as
practicable after this Registration Statement becomes effective.
 
     If any of the securities being registered on this Form are to be offered on
a  delayed or continuous basis pursuant to  Rule 415 under the Securities Act of
1933, check the following box: [x]
 
     If this Form  is filed to  register additional securities  for an  offering
pursuant to Rule 462(b) under the Securities Act, please check the following box
and  list  the  Securities  Act registration  statement  number  of  the earlier
effective registration statement for the same offering. [ ]
 
     If this Form is  a post-effective amendment filed  pursuant to Rule  462(c)
under  the Securities Act, check  the following box and  list the Securities Act
registration statement number  of the earlier  effective registration  statement
for the same offering. [ ]
 
     If  delivery of the prospectus is expected to be made pursuant to Rule 434,
please check the following box. [ ]
                            ------------------------
 
                        CALCULATION OF REGISTRATION FEE
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                              PROPOSED
                                                                          PROPOSED            MAXIMUM
                                                                          MAXIMUM            AGGREGATE           AMOUNT OF
    TITLE OF EACH CLASS OF SECURITIES TO BE            AMOUNT TO       OFFERING PRICE         OFFERING          REGISTRATION
                   REGISTERED                        BE REGISTERED      PER UNIT(1)           PRICE(1)              FEE
<S>                                                    <C>                <C>                <C>                 <C>
Common Units representing limited partner
  interests.....................................        400,000           $ 20.375           $8,150,000          $2,470
</TABLE>
 
(1) Estimated solely  for  the  purpose  of  calculating  the  registration  fee
    pursuant  to Rule  457(c), based on  the average  of the high  and low sales
    prices of the Common Units on January  7, 1997, as reported on the New  York
    Stock Exchange.
 
                            ---------------------------
 
     THE  REGISTRANT HEREBY AMENDS  THIS REGISTRATION STATEMENT  ON SUCH DATE OR
DATES AS MAY BE NECESSARY TO DELAY ITS EFFECTIVE DATE UNTIL THE REGISTRANT SHALL
FILE A  FURTHER  AMENDMENT  WHICH  SPECIFICALLY  STATES  THAT  THE  REGISTRATION
STATEMENT  SHALL THEREAFTER BECOME EFFECTIVE IN  ACCORDANCE WITH SECTION 8(a) OF
THE SECURITIES ACT  OF 1933  OR UNTIL  THE REGISTRATION  STATEMENT SHALL  BECOME
EFFECTIVE  ON SUCH DATE AS THE COMMISSION, ACTING PURSUANT TO SAID SECTION 8(a),
MAY DETERMINE.
 
________________________________________________________________________________




<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                             SUBJECT TO COMPLETION

                PRELIMINARY PROSPECTUS DATED JANUARY 10, 1997

PROSPECTUS
 
                              400,000 COMMON UNITS
                        NATIONAL PROPANE PARTNERS, L.P.
                     REPRESENTING LIMITED PARTNER INTERESTS
                            ------------------------
 
     The  Common  Units (the  'Common  Units') offered  hereby  (the 'Offering')
represent limited  partner  interests  in  National  Propane  Partners,  L.P.  a
Delaware  limited partnership (the 'Partnership'), and  are being offered by the
selling unitholder named herein (the 'Selling Unitholder'). The Partnership  was
formed  in March 1996  to acquire, own  and operate the  propane business of its
managing general partner, National  Propane Corporation, a Delaware  corporation
('National  Propane' or the 'Managing General  Partner'). National Propane is an
indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of Triarc Companies, Inc. ('Triarc').
 
     The Partnership will distribute to its partners, on a quarterly basis,  all
of  its Available  Cash, which is  generally all  cash on hand  at the  end of a
quarter, as  adjusted  for reserves.  The  Managing General  Partner  has  broad
discretion   in  making  cash  disbursements   and  establishing  reserves.  The
Partnership intends,  to  the extent  there  is sufficient  Available  Cash,  to
distribute  to each holder of  Common Units at least  $0.525 per Common Unit per
quarter (the 'Minimum Quarterly  Distribution') or $2.10 per  Common Unit on  an
annualized basis.
                            ------------------------
 
     LIMITED  PARTNER INTERESTS ARE INHERENTLY DIFFERENT FROM CAPITAL STOCK OF A
CORPORATION. PURCHASERS  OF COMMON  UNITS SHOULD  CONSIDER EACH  OF THE  FACTORS
DESCRIBED UNDER 'RISK FACTORS,' STARTING ON PAGE 33, IN EVALUATING AN INVESTMENT
IN THE PARTNERSHIP, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE FOLLOWING:
 
 CASH  DISTRIBUTIONS  ARE  NOT  GUARANTEED, WILL  DEPEND  ON  FUTURE PARTNERSHIP
 OPERATING PERFORMANCE  AND  WILL  BE  AFFECTED  BY  THE  FUNDING  OF  RESERVES,
 OPERATING  AND CAPITAL EXPENDITURES AND OTHER  MATTERS WITHIN THE DISCRETION OF
 THE MANAGING  GENERAL  PARTNER, AS  WELL  AS REQUIRED  INTEREST  AND  PRINCIPAL
 PAYMENTS  ON THE  PARTNERSHIP'S DEBT. PRO  FORMA AVAILABLE  CASH FROM OPERATING
 SURPLUS (AS DEFINED IN THE GLOSSARY) GENERATED DURING 1994 AND 1995 WOULD  HAVE
 BEEN  SUFFICIENT  TO COVER  THE MINIMUM  QUARTERLY DISTRIBUTION  ON ALL  OF THE
 OUTSTANDING COMMON UNITS (INCLUDING  THE COMMON UNITS  OFFERED HEREBY) AND  THE
 RELATED  DISTRIBUTION  ON  THE GENERAL  PARTNER  INTERESTS (AS  DEFINED  IN THE
 GLOSSARY), BUT WOULD HAVE BEEN  INSUFFICIENT BY APPROXIMATELY $1.9 MILLION  AND
 $7.0  MILLION TO COVER  THE MINIMUM QUARTERLY  DISTRIBUTION ON THE SUBORDINATED
 UNITS (AS DEFINED IN THE GLOSSARY) AND THE RELATED DISTRIBUTION ON THE  GENERAL
 PARTNER INTERESTS IN 1994 AND 1995, RESPECTIVELY.
 
                                                     (cover continued on page 2)
                            ------------------------
 
     The  Common Units are listed on the  New York Stock Exchange, Inc. ('NYSE')
under the symbol 'NPL.' The Common  Units offered hereby have been approved  for
listing on the NYSE. The last reported sale price of Common Units on the NYSE on
January 9, 1997 was $20.875 per Common Unit.
 
                            ------------------------
 
THESE  SECURITIES  HAVE  NOT  BEEN APPROVED  OR  DISAPPROVED  BY  THE SECURITIES
  AND  EXCHANGE  COMMISSION  OR  ANY  STATE  SECURITIES  COMMISSION,  NOR  HAS
     THE  SECURITIES  AND  EXCHANGE  COMMISSION  OR  ANY  STATE  SECURITIES
     COMMISSION PASSED UPON THE ACCURACY  OR ADEQUACY OF THIS  PROSPECTUS.
          ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL OFFENSE.
 
                            ------------------------
 
     The  Common  Units  may  be  offered  by  the  Selling  Unitholder  or  any
transferees affiliated with the Selling Unitholder in transactions in which they
and any broker-dealer through whom such Common  Units are sold may be deemed  to
be  underwriters within the  meaning of the  Securities Act of  1933, as amended
(the 'Securities Act'), as more  fully described herein. The Selling  Unitholder
or  such transferees may sell the Common  Units offered hereby from time to time
or at  one time  in transactions  on  the NYSE,  in negotiated  transactions  or
through  a combination of  such methods of  sale, at fixed  prices, which may be
changed, at market prices prevailing at the  time of sale, at prices related  to
such  prevailing market  prices or  at negotiated  prices. The  Partnership will
receive none  of the  proceeds from  any  such sales.  Any commissions  paid  or
concessions  allowed to any  broker-dealer, and, if  any broker-dealer purchases
such Common Units  as principal, any  profits received from  the resale of  such
Common  Units, may be deemed to  be underwriting discounts and commissions under
the Securities  Act.  Printing,  certain legal,  accounting,  filing  and  other
similar  expenses of the Offering  will be paid by  the Partnership. The Selling
Unitholder will generally bear  all other expenses  of this Offering,  including
brokerage fees and any underwriting discounts or commissions.
                            ------------------------
 
                 The date of this Prospectus is         , 1997.
 
INFORMATION   CONTAINED  HEREIN  IS  SUBJECT   TO  COMPLETION  OR  AMENDMENT.  A
REGISTRATION STATEMENT  RELATING TO  THESE SECURITIES  HAS BEEN  FILED WITH  THE
SECURITIES  AND EXCHANGE  COMMISSION. THESE SECURITIES  MAY NOT BE  SOLD NOR MAY
OFFERS TO BUY BE ACCEPTED PRIOR  TO THE TIME THE REGISTRATION STATEMENT  BECOMES
EFFECTIVE.  THIS  PROSPECTUS  SHALL  NOT  CONSTITUTE AN  OFFER  TO  SELL  OR THE
SOLICITATION OF AN OFFER TO BUY NOR SHALL THERE BE ANY SALE OF THESE  SECURITIES
IN  ANY STATE IN WHICH SUCH OFFER,  SOLICITATION OR SALE WOULD BE UNLAWFUL PRIOR
TO REGISTRATION OR QUALIFICATION UNDER THE SECURITIES LAWS OF ANY SUCH STATE.
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
(cover continued from page 1)
 
 APPROXIMATELY $5.5  MILLION  OF  THE PARTNERSHIP'S  ANNUAL  CASH  RECEIPTS  ARE
 INTEREST  PAYMENTS  FROM  TRIARC UNDER  A  $40.7  MILLION LOAN  TO  TRIARC (THE
 'PARTNERSHIP LOAN'). ON A PRO FORMA BASIS, SUCH AMOUNT REPRESENTS APPROXIMATELY
 31% OF  THE  PARTNERSHIP'S  AVAILABLE  CASH FROM  OPERATING  SURPLUS  IN  1995.
 CONSEQUENTLY,  TRIARC'S FAILURE TO  MAKE INTEREST OR  PRINCIPAL PAYMENTS ON THE
 PARTNERSHIP LOAN WOULD ADVERSELY AFFECT THE ABILITY OF THE PARTNERSHIP TO  MAKE
 THE  MINIMUM QUARTERLY DISTRIBUTION TO ALL UNITHOLDERS. THE PARTNERSHIP LOAN IS
 RECOURSE TO TRIARC AND IS SECURED BY A PLEDGE BY TRIARC OF ALL OF THE SHARES OF
 CAPITAL STOCK OF THE  MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER  OWNED BY TRIARC  (APPROXIMATELY
 75.7%  OF THE  MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER'S  OUTSTANDING CAPITAL STOCK  AS OF THE
 DATE OF THIS PROSPECTUS).  SEE 'CASH DISTRIBUTION  POLICY -- PARTNERSHIP  LOAN'
 AND 'CERTAIN INFORMATION REGARDING TRIARC.'
 
 THE  PARTNERSHIP  HAS  INDEBTEDNESS  THAT IS  SUBSTANTIAL  IN  RELATION  TO ITS
 PARTNERS' CAPITAL. ON A PRO  FORMA BASIS, THE PARTNERSHIP'S TOTAL  INDEBTEDNESS
 AS A PERCENTAGE OF ITS TOTAL CAPITALIZATION WOULD HAVE BEEN APPROXIMATELY 79.0%
 AT  SEPTEMBER 30, 1996. FURTHERMORE, THE MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER MAY CAUSE THE
 PARTNERSHIP TO INCUR  ADDITIONAL INDEBTEDNESS, INCLUDING  BORROWINGS THAT  HAVE
 THE  PURPOSE  OR EFFECT  OF ENABLING  THE MANAGING  GENERAL PARTNER  TO RECEIVE
 DISTRIBUTIONS OR HASTENING  THE CONVERSION  OF SUBORDINATED  UNITS INTO  COMMON
 UNITS.
 
 THE  $125 MILLION FIRST MORTGAGE  NOTES (AS DEFINED BELOW)  AND THE $55 MILLION
 BANK CREDIT FACILITY (AS DEFINED BELOW) ARE SECURED BY A LIEN ON  SUBSTANTIALLY
 ALL  OF THE ASSETS OF THE OPERATING PARTNERSHIP (AS DEFINED BELOW). IN THE CASE
 OF A CONTINUING DEFAULT  BY THE OPERATING  PARTNERSHIP THEREUNDER, THE  LENDERS
 WOULD  HAVE THE RIGHT TO FORECLOSE ON THE OPERATING PARTNERSHIP'S ASSETS, WHICH
 WOULD HAVE A MATERIAL ADVERSE EFFECT ON THE PARTNERSHIP.
 
 FUTURE PARTNERSHIP PERFORMANCE WILL DEPEND UPON THE SUCCESS OF THE  PARTNERSHIP
 IN  MAXIMIZING PROFITS FROM PROPANE SALES. PROPANE SALES ARE AFFECTED BY, AMONG
 OTHER THINGS,  WEATHER  PATTERNS,  PRODUCT PRICES  AND  COMPETITION,  INCLUDING
 COMPETITION FROM OTHER ENERGY SOURCES.
 
 HOLDERS  OF  COMMON UNITS  HAVE  ONLY LIMITED  VOTING  RIGHTS AND  THE MANAGING
 GENERAL PARTNER  MANAGES  AND  CONTROLS THE  PARTNERSHIP.  SUBJECT  TO  CERTAIN
 CONDITIONS,  THE MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER MAY BE REMOVED ONLY UPON THE APPROVAL
 OF THE HOLDERS OF  AT LEAST 66-2/3% OF  THE OUTSTANDING UNITS (INCLUDING  THOSE
 UNITS HELD BY THE MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER AND ITS AFFILIATES). IF THE MANAGING
 GENERAL  PARTNER IS REMOVED OTHER THAN  FOR CAUSE, THE SUBORDINATION PERIOD (AS
 DEFINED IN THE  GLOSSARY) WILL  END, ALL ARREARAGES  ON THE  COMMON UNITS  WILL
 TERMINATE AND ANY OUTSTANDING SUBORDINATED UNITS WILL CONVERT INTO COMMON UNITS
 AND  THE GENERAL PARTNERS (AS  DEFINED IN THE GLOSSARY)  WILL HAVE THE RIGHT TO
 CONVERT THE  GENERAL PARTNER  INTERESTS  INTO COMMON  UNITS  OR TO  RECEIVE  IN
 EXCHANGE  FOR SUCH INTERESTS, A CASH PAYMENT  EQUAL TO THE FAIR MARKET VALUE OF
 SUCH INTERESTS.
 
 THE TAX CONSEQUENCES  OF AN INVESTMENT  IN THE PARTNERSHIP  ARE COMPLEX. IT  IS
 ANTICIPATED   THAT  THROUGH   2000,  A  UNITHOLDER   WILL  RECEIVE  SUBSTANTIAL
 DISTRIBUTIONS THAT WILL REDUCE  SUCH HOLDER'S TAX BASIS,  WITH THE RESULT  THAT
 SUCH  HOLDER MAY RECOGNIZE SUBSTANTIAL GAIN  AND A RELATED INCOME TAX LIABILITY
 UPON A SUBSEQUENT SALE OF SUCH HOLDER'S UNITS.
 
 CONFLICTS OF INTEREST MAY  ARISE BETWEEN THE MANAGING  GENERAL PARTNER AND  ITS
 AFFILIATES,  ON THE  ONE HAND,  AND THE PARTNERSHIP  AND THE  HOLDERS OF COMMON
 UNITS, ON THE OTHER. THE  PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT CONTAINS PROVISIONS THAT  ALLOW
 THE  MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER TO TAKE INTO  ACCOUNT THE INTERESTS OF PARTIES IN
 ADDITION TO  THE  PARTNERSHIP  IN  RESOLVING  CONFLICTS  OF  INTEREST,  THEREBY
 LIMITING  THE MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER'S FIDUCIARY  DUTY TO THE UNITHOLDERS, AS
 WELL AS PROVISIONS THAT MAY RESTRICT THE REMEDIES AVAILABLE TO UNITHOLDERS  FOR
 ACTIONS  THAT MIGHT, WITHOUT SUCH LIMITATIONS, CONSTITUTE BREACHES OF FIDUCIARY
 DUTY. HOLDERS OF COMMON UNITS ARE  DEEMED TO HAVE CONSENTED TO CERTAIN  ACTIONS
 AND  CONFLICTS OF INTEREST THAT MIGHT OTHERWISE BE DEEMED A BREACH OF FIDUCIARY
 OR OTHER DUTIES UNDER APPLICABLE STATE LAW. THE VALIDITY AND ENFORCEABILITY  OF
 THESE TYPES OF PROVISIONS UNDER DELAWARE LAW ARE UNCERTAIN.
 
 PRIOR  TO MAKING  ANY DISTRIBUTION  ON THE  COMMON UNITS,  THE PARTNERSHIP WILL
 REIMBURSE THE MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER AND ITS AFFILIATES (INCLUDING TRIARC) AT
 COST FOR ALL EXPENSES  INCURRED ON BEHALF  OF THE PARTNERSHIP.  ON A PRO  FORMA
 BASIS,  APPROXIMATELY $56.8 MILLION  OF EXPENSES WOULD  HAVE BEEN REIMBURSED BY
 THE PARTNERSHIP TO  THE MANAGING  GENERAL PARTNER  IN 1995.  AFFILIATES OF  THE
 MANAGING  GENERAL PARTNER (INCLUDING TRIARC) MAY PROVIDE CERTAIN ADMINISTRATIVE
 SERVICES FOR THE MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER ON BEHALF OF THE PARTNERSHIP AND WILL
 BE REIMBURSED FOR ALL EXPENSES  INCURRED IN CONNECTION THEREWITH. IN  ADDITION,
 THE MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER AND ITS AFFILIATES MAY PROVIDE ADDITIONAL SERVICES
 TO  THE PARTNERSHIP, FOR WHICH THE  PARTNERSHIP WILL BE CHARGED REASONABLE FEES
 AS DETERMINED BY THE MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER.
 
                                                     (cover continued on page 3)
 
                                       2
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
(cover continued from page 2)
 
     Outstanding Common  Units (including  those  offered hereby)  represent  an
aggregate  57.3%  limited  partner  interest  in  the  Partnership  and National
Propane,  L.P.,  the   Partnership's  subsidiary   operating  partnership   (the
'Operating  Partnership'), on a combined basis. The General Partners own General
Partner Interests representing  an aggregate 4%  unsubordinated general  partner
interest  in the Partnership and the  Operating Partnership on a combined basis.
In addition,  the Managing  General Partner  owns 4,533,638  Subordinated  Units
representing  an aggregate  38.7% subordinated  general partner  interest in the
Partnership and the Operating Partnership on a combined basis. All references in
this Prospectus to the  General Partner Interests or  to distributions of 4%  of
Available  Cash constitute  references to  the amount  of the  General Partners'
combined percentage interest  in the Partnership  and the Operating  Partnership
exclusive  of any  rights as  holder of  Common Units  or Subordinated  Units or
rights to receive  Incentive Distributions  (as defined in  the Glossary).  Upon
expiration   of  the  Subordination  Period,  Subordinated  Units  will  convert
automatically into  Common Units  on a  one-for-one basis,  and will  thereafter
participate  pro rata with the other  Common Units in distributions of Available
Cash, thereby  increasing the  amount of  Available Cash  required to  make  the
Minimum Quarterly Distribution on the Common Units. Under certain circumstances,
up  to 50% of the Subordinated Units may  convert into Common Units prior to the
expiration of the Subordination Period. All 4,533,638 Subordinated Units held by
the Managing General Partner and its Affiliates (as defined in the Glossary) are
general partner  interests in  the Partnership  (although the  Managing  General
Partner  and its  Affiliates may, at  their election,  convert such Subordinated
Units into limited partner interests at any  time) and all Common Units sold  in
the Partnership's initial public offering and in the Offering or issued upon the
conversion  of the  Subordinated Units  will be  limited partner  interests. The
Common Units and the Subordinated Units  are collectively referred to herein  as
the  'Units.'  Holders  of  the  Common Units  and  the  Subordinated  Units are
collectively referred to herein as 'Unitholders.'
 
     To enhance  the  ability  of  the Partnership  to  distribute  the  Minimum
Quarterly  Distribution  on the  Common Units  during the  Subordination Period,
which will  generally extend  at least  through June  30, 2001,  each holder  of
Common Units will be entitled to receive the Minimum Quarterly Distribution plus
any  arrearages thereon ('Common Unit  Arrearages') before any distributions are
made on the outstanding Subordinated Units.
 
     Immediately prior to the closing of  the initial public offering of  Common
Units by the Partnership in July, 1996, the Managing General Partner completed a
private  placement of  $125 million  aggregate principal  amount of  8.54% First
Mortgage Notes due  June 30, 2010  (the 'First Mortgage  Notes'). The  Operating
Partnership  assumed the Managing General  Partner's obligations under the First
Mortgage Notes in  connection with  the conveyance  by the  General Partners  of
substantially  all of  their assets  (which assets  did not  include an existing
intercompany note from Triarc, approximately  $59.3 million of the net  proceeds
from  the issuance of the  First Mortgage Notes and  certain other assets of the
General Partners) to  the Operating  Partnership. The First  Mortgage Notes  and
indebtedness under the Bank Credit Facility (as defined herein) are secured by a
mortgage  on substantially all  of the assets of  the Operating Partnership. See
'The IPO and Additional Transactions' and 'Management's Discussion and  Analysis
of   Financial   Condition  and   Results  of   Operations  --   Description  of
Indebtedness.'
 
     The Partnership will furnish or make available to record holders of  Common
Units  (i)  within  120  days  after  the  close  of  each  fiscal  year  of the
Partnership, an  annual report  containing audited  financial statements  and  a
report  thereon by its  independent public accountants, and  (ii) within 90 days
after the  close of  each fiscal  quarter  (other than  the fourth  quarter),  a
quarterly   report  containing  unaudited  summary  financial  information.  The
Partnership will also  furnish each  Unitholder with tax  information within  90
days after the close of each calendar year.
 
                                       3
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
               SPECIAL NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
 
     Certain  statements in the Prospectus Summary  and under the captions 'Risk
Factors,' 'Cash Distribution  Policy,' 'Certain  Information Regarding  Triarc,'
'Management's  Discussion  and Analysis  of Financial  Condition and  Results of
Operations,' 'Business and  Properties,' 'Tax Considerations'  and elsewhere  in
this  Prospectus constitute  'forward-looking statements' within  the meaning of
the Private Securities Litigation  Reform Act of 1995  (the 'Reform Act').  Such
forward-looking  statements involve  known and unknown  risks, uncertainties and
other factors which may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of
the Partnership or Triarc or industry  results, to be materially different  from
any  future results,  performance or achievements  expressed or  implied by such
forward-looking  statements.  Such  factors  with  respect  to  the  Partnership
include,  among others, weather conditions, which affect the demand for propane;
changes in wholesale propane  prices, which may  affect the Partnership's  gross
profits;  competition from others in the  propane distribution industry and from
alternative energy  sources,  which  may affect  the  Partnership's  ability  to
generate  revenues; the  mature nature  of the  retail propane  industry and the
national trend toward increased  conservation and technological advances,  which
may  affect demand for the Partnership's products; the Partnership being subject
to the  operating  hazards  and  risks associated  with  handling,  storing  and
delivering   combustible  liquids  such  as   propane,  which  may  subject  the
Partnership to claims for  which the Partnership is  not insured; the amount  of
the  Partnership's Available Cash  being dependent on a  number of factors which
may be beyond  the control  of the Partnership,  including, without  limitation,
that  a  portion  of the  Partnership's  annual  cash receipts  is  derived from
interest payments from Triarc, which may affect the amount of the  Partnership's
cash  distributions; the  Partnership being  significantly leveraged,  which may
limit the Partnership's ability  to make cash distributions  and may affect  the
Partnership's  results of  operations; the  Partnership's assumptions concerning
future operations and weather conditions may  not be realized, which may  affect
the  amount of the  Partnership's cash distributions  and results of operations;
the Partnership's reimbursements and funds  due to the Managing General  Partner
may be substantial, which may adversely affect the Partnership's ability to make
cash distributions; changes in business strategy, which may, among other things,
prolong  the time it  takes to achieve the  performance results included herein;
changes in, or  the failure to  comply with, government  regulations; and  other
factors  referenced in this Prospectus; and  such factors with respect to Triarc
include, among others,  acceptance of  new product  offerings; brand  awareness;
changing trends in customer tastes; the success of multi-branding; availability,
locations  and terms  of sites for  restaurant development;  changes in business
strategy or development  plans; quality of  management; availability, terms  and
deployment   of  capital;   business  abilities   and  judgment   of  personnel;
availability of  qualified personnel;  Triarc not  receiving from  the  Internal
Revenue  Service a  favorable ruling that  the Spinoff  Transactions referred to
herein will be tax-free to Triarc and its stockholders or the failure to satisfy
other customary conditions to closing for  transactions of such type; labor  and
employee  benefit costs;  availability and cost  of raw  materials and supplies;
changes in, or failure to comply with, government regulations; regional  weather
conditions;  construction  schedules;  trends  in and  strength  of  the textile
industry; the costs and other  effects of legal and administrative  proceedings;
and   other  risks  and   uncertainties  detailed  in   Triarc's  and  RC/Arby's
Corporation's current  and periodic  filings with  the Securities  and  Exchange
Commission. See 'Risk Factors.'
 
                                       4



<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                               TABLE OF CONTENTS
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                          <C>
PROSPECTUS SUMMARY........................................     6
    National Propane Partners, L.P........................     6
    Summary Historical and Pro Forma Consolidated
      Financial and Operating Data........................    22
    The Offering..........................................    25
    Summary of Tax Considerations.........................    30
RISK FACTORS..............................................    33
    Risks Inherent in the Partnership's Business..........    33
    Risks Inherent in an Investment in the Partnership....    36
    Conflicts of Interest and Fiduciary Responsibility....    42
    Tax Risks.............................................    44
THE IPO AND ADDITIONAL TRANSACTIONS.......................    47
CAPITALIZATION............................................    48
PRICE RANGE OF COMMON UNITS AND DISTRIBUTIONS.............    48
CASH DISTRIBUTION POLICY..................................    49
    General...............................................    49
    Quarterly Distributions of Available Cash.............    50
    Distributions from Operating Surplus during
      Subordination Period................................    50
    Distributions from Operating Surplus after
      Subordination Period................................    52
    Incentive Distributions -- Hypothetical Annualized
      Yield...............................................    52
    Distributions from Capital Surplus....................    53
    Adjustment of Minimum Quarterly Distribution and
      Target Distribution Levels..........................    54
    Distributions of Cash Upon Liquidation................    54
    Cash Available for Distribution.......................    56
    Partnership Loan......................................    58
CERTAIN INFORMATION REGARDING TRIARC......................    61
SELECTED HISTORICAL AND PRO FORMA CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL
  AND OPERATING DATA......................................    67
MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL
  CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS.....................    70
    General...............................................    70
    Results of Operations.................................    71
    Liquidity and Capital Resources.......................    75
    Initial Public Offering of Common Units and Other
      Transactions........................................    77
    Contingencies.........................................    77
    Description of Indebtedness...........................    78
    Effects of Inflation..................................    82
    Recently Issued Accounting Pronouncements.............    82
BUSINESS AND PROPERTIES...................................    83
    General...............................................    83
    Operating Strategy....................................    84
    Strategies for Growth.................................    85
    Industry Background...................................    86
    Products, Services and Marketing......................    87
    Propane Supply and Storage............................    88
    Pricing Policy........................................    90
    Competition...........................................    91
    Properties............................................    91
    Trademarks and Tradenames.............................    93
    Government Regulation.................................    93
    Employees.............................................    94
    Litigation and Contingent Liabilities.................    94
MANAGEMENT................................................    96
    Partnership Management................................    96
    Directors and Executive Officers of the Managing
      General Partner.....................................    97
    Reimbursement of Expenses of the Managing General
      Partner.............................................    98
    Executive Compensation................................    99
    Cash Incentive Plans..................................   100
    Triarc's 1993 Equity Participation Plan...............   100
    Unit Option Plan......................................   101
    Compensation of Directors.............................   103
    Employment Arrangements with Executive Officers.......   103


SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND
  MANAGEMENT..............................................   105
    Ownership of Partnership Units by the Directors and
      Executive Officers of the Managing General Partner
      and the Selling Unitholders.........................   105
    Ownership of Triarc Common Stock by the Directors and
      Executive Officers of the Managing General Partner
      and Certain Beneficial Owners.......................   106
CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS............   108
    Rights of the General Partners........................   108
    Transactions Involving Triarc and its Affiliates......   108
    Partnership Note......................................   109
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST AND FIDUCIARY RESPONSIBILITY........   109
    Conflicts of Interest.................................   109
    Fiduciary Duties of the General Partners..............   113
DESCRIPTION OF THE COMMON UNITS...........................   114
    The Units.............................................   115
    Transfer Agent and Registrar..........................   115
    Transfer of Common Units..............................   115
THE PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT.................................   117
    Organization..........................................   117
    Special General Partner...............................   117
    Purpose...............................................   118
    Capital Contributions.................................   118
    Power of Attorney.....................................   118
    Limited Liability.....................................   118
    Issuance of Additional Securities.....................   119
    Amendment of Partnership Agreement....................   120
    Merger, Sale or Other Disposition of Assets...........   122
    Termination and Dissolution...........................   122
    Liquidation and Distribution of Proceeds..............   122
    Withdrawal or Removal of the General Partners.........   122
    Transfer of General Partners' Interests and Right to
      Receive Incentive Distributions and Conversion of
      Units held by the Managing General Partner into
      Limited Partner Interests...........................   124
    Limited Call Right....................................   124
    Meetings; Voting......................................   125
    Status as Limited Partner or Assignee.................   126
    Non-citizen Assignees; Redemption.....................   126
    Indemnification.......................................   126
    Books and Reports.....................................   127
    Right to Inspect Partnership Books and Records........   127
    Reimbursement for Services............................   127
    Change of Management Provisions.......................   128
    Registration Rights...................................   128
UNITS ELIGIBLE FOR FUTURE SALE............................   128
TAX CONSIDERATIONS........................................   130
    Legal Opinions and Advice.............................   130
    Tax Rates and Changes in Federal Income Tax Laws......   131
    Partnership Status....................................   131
    Limited Partner Status................................   133
    Tax Consequences of Unit Ownership....................   133
    Allocation of Partnership Income, Gain, Loss, and
      Deduction...........................................   135
    Tax Treatment of Operations...........................   136
    Disposition of Common Units...........................   139
    Uniformity of Units...................................   141
    Administrative Matters................................   142
    State, Local and Other Tax Considerations.............   145
INVESTMENT IN THE PARTNERSHIP BY EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS...   146
THE SELLING UNITHOLDER....................................   147
PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION......................................   147
LEGAL MATTERS.............................................   148
EXPERTS...................................................   148
AVAILABLE INFORMATION.....................................   149
INDEX TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS................   F-1
Appendix A -- Form of Application for Transfer of Common
  Units...................................................   A-1
Appendix B -- Glossary of Certain Terms...................   B-1
</TABLE>
 
                                       5



<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                               PROSPECTUS SUMMARY
 
     The  following summary  is qualified in  its entirety by  the more detailed
information and historical and pro  forma financial data appearing elsewhere  in
this  Prospectus  and  should  be  read  only  in  conjunction  with  the entire
Prospectus.  Except  as  the  context  otherwise  requires,  references  to   or
descriptions  of operations  of the  Partnership include  the operations  of the
Operating  Partnership  and  any  other  subsidiary  operating  partnership   or
corporation  and  the  operations  of  the  Partnership's  predecessor, National
Propane. For  ease  of reference,  a  glossary of  certain  terms used  in  this
Prospectus  is included as Appendix B  to this Prospectus. Capitalized terms not
otherwise defined herein have the meanings given in the glossary. Special  Note:
Certain  statements  set forth  below  under this  caption  constitute 'forward-
looking statements' within  the meaning  of the  Reform Act.  See 'Special  Note
Regarding  Forward-Looking Statements' on page 4 for additional factors relating
to such statements.
 
                        NATIONAL PROPANE PARTNERS, L.P.
 
     The Partnership, a  Delaware limited  partnership formed in  March 1996  to
acquire, own and operate the business and assets of National Propane, is engaged
primarily  in (i) the retail marketing of propane to residential, commercial and
industrial, and agricultural customers and to dealers (located primarily in  the
Northeast)  that resell propane to residential and commercial customers and (ii)
the retail marketing of propane-related  supplies and equipment, including  home
and  commercial appliances.  The Partnership  believes it  is the  sixth largest
retail marketer of propane  in terms of volume  in the United States,  supplying
approximately 250,000 active retail and wholesale customers in 25 states through
its  166 service centers located in  24 states. The Partnership's operations are
concentrated in the Midwest, Northeast,  Southeast and Southwest regions of  the
United   States.  The  retail  propane  sales  volume  of  the  Partnership  was
approximately 150 million gallons in 1995.  In 1995, approximately 48.6% of  the
Partnership's  retail sales  volume was to  residential customers,  34.2% was to
commercial and industrial  customers, 6.3%  was to  agricultural customers,  and
10.9%  was  to dealers.  Sales to  residential customers  in 1995  accounted for
approximately 64% of the Partnership's gross profit on propane sales, reflecting
the higher margin nature of this segment of the market. Approximately 90% of the
tanks used by the Partnership's retail customers are owned by the Partnership.
 
     National Propane was incorporated in  1953 under the name Conservative  Gas
Corporation.  In April 1993, there was a change  of control of the parent of the
Partnership (the 'Acquisition').  Since the Acquisition,  the Partnership's  new
management  team, headed by  Ronald D. Paliughi, who  became President and Chief
Executive Officer  of  National  Propane  in  April  1993,  has  implemented  an
operating  plan designed to make the  Partnership more efficient, profitable and
competitive.
 
     Since the Acquisition, the  Partnership's management has: (i)  consolidated
nine  separately branded businesses  into a single company  with a new, national
brand and  logo; (ii)  consolidated  eight regional  offices into  one  national
headquarters;   (iii)  installed   the  Partnership's   first  system-wide  data
processing  system;  (iv)   implemented  system-wide   pricing,  marketing   and
purchasing  strategies, thereby reducing the cost duplication and purchasing and
pricing inefficiencies associated with the Partnership's formerly  decentralized
structure;  and (v) centralized and  standardized accounting, administrative and
other corporate services. As a result of these initiatives, the Partnership  has
become  more efficient  and competitive,  and believes  it is  now positioned to
capitalize on opportunities  for business  growth, both  internally and  through
acquisitions.
 
     Although management has focused primarily on implementing the new operating
plan, the Partnership has acquired seven propane businesses since November 1993,
resulting  in an increase in volume  sales of approximately 14.2 million gallons
annually. Four of these acquired businesses operate in the Midwest, two  operate
in the Southwest and one operates in the Southeast.
 
     The  Partnership believes that its competitive strengths include: (i) gross
profit and operating margins  that it believes  to be among  the highest of  the
major   retail  propane  companies  whose   financial  statements  are  publicly
available; (ii) the concentration of its  operations in colder regions (such  as
the upper Midwest and Northeast), high margin regions (such as the Northeast and
Florida),  and regions experiencing  population growth (such  as Florida and the
Southwest); (iii)  an  experienced  management team;  (iv)  a  well-trained  and
motivated   work  force;  and  (v)   an  effective  pricing  management  system.
 
                                       6


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
However, the propane  industry is highly  competitive and includes  a number  of
large national firms that may have greater financial or other resources or lower
operating costs than the Partnership.
 
     On July 2, 1996, the Partnership consummated its initial public offering of
Common  Units (the 'IPO'). In connection  with the IPO, the Partnership acquired
the propane business and assets of the Managing General Partner.
 
BUSINESS STRATEGY
 
     The Partnership's  business strategy  is to  (i) increase  its  efficiency,
profitability  and competitiveness  by building  on the  efforts it  has already
undertaken to  improve  pricing  management, marketing  and  purchasing  and  to
further  consolidate its operations  and (ii) increase  its market share through
strategic acquisitions and internal growth.
 
     Key  elements   of  this   strategy  include   (i)  continuing   with   the
implementation  of centralized price monitoring, (ii) strengthening its image as
a reliable, full service, nationwide  propane supplier, (iii) further  improving
its  propane purchasing  and storage, thereby  making more efficient  use of its
system-wide storage  capacity and  (iv)  further consolidating  its  operations,
where  appropriate. In addition,  because the retail  propane industry is mature
and overall demand  for propane  is expected to  involve little  growth for  the
foreseeable  future, acquisitions are expected to be an important element of the
Partnership's business strategy. The Partnership intends to take two  approaches
to  acquisitions:  (i)  primarily  to  build on  its  broad  geographic  base by
acquiring smaller, independent competitors that operate within the Partnership's
existing  geographic  areas  and  incorporating  them  into  the   Partnership's
distribution  network and  (ii) to  acquire propane  businesses in  areas in the
United States outside of its current geographic base where it believes there  is
growth  potential  and  where an  attractive  return  on its  investment  can be
achieved. The Partnership recently entered into a letter of intent to acquire  a
propane  business for approximately $1.0  million; however, consummation of this
transaction is  subject  to  customary  closing  conditions  and  completion  of
definitive  documentation, and no  assurance can be  given that this acquisition
will be completed. Although  the Partnership continues to  evaluate a number  of
propane  distribution companies, including regional  and national firms, as part
of its  ongoing  acquisition  program,  except as  described  in  the  preceding
sentence,  the Partnership does  not have any  present agreements or commitments
with respect to any acquisition. There can be no assurance that the  Partnership
will  identify attractive acquisition candidates in  the future, will be able to
acquire such candidates  on acceptable terms,  or will be  able to finance  such
acquisitions.  If the Partnership is able to  make acquisitions, there can be no
assurance that such acquisitions will  not dilute earnings and distributions  or
that  any  additional  debt  incurred  to  finance  such  acquisitions  will not
adversely affect  the  ability  of  the Partnership  to  make  distributions  to
Unitholders.  In addition, to the extent that warm weather adversely affects the
Partnership's operating  and  financial  results, the  Partnership's  access  to
capital  and its  acquisition activities  may be  limited. The  Managing General
Partner has broad discretion in making acquisitions and it is expected that  the
Managing  General  Partner  generally  will  not  seek  Unitholder  approval  of
acquisitions.
 
     In order to facilitate the Partnership's acquisition strategy, concurrently
with the  closing of  the IPO,  the  Operating Partnership  entered into  a  $55
million  bank  credit facility  (the 'Bank  Credit  Facility'), including  a $40
million facility to be used for acquisitions and improvements (the  'Acquisition
Facility'). See 'Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and
Results  of Operations  -- Description of  Indebtedness.' At  December 31, 1996,
$7.9 million was  outstanding under  the Bank Credit  Facility. The  Partnership
also  has the  ability to fund  acquisitions through the  issuance of additional
partnership interests. See 'The Partnership Agreement -- Issuance of  Additional
Securities.'
 
     In  addition to  pursuing expansion  through acquisitions,  the Partnership
intends to pursue internal growth at its existing service centers and to  expand
its  business by opening  new service centers. The  Partnership believes that it
can attract  new customers  and expand  its market  base by  providing  superior
service,  introducing innovative  marketing programs and  focusing on population
growth areas.
 
                                       7
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
GENERAL
 
     The Partnership is engaged  primarily in the  domestic retail marketing  of
propane   and  propane-related  supplies  and   equipment,  including  home  and
commercial appliances.
 
     Propane, a by-product of natural gas processing and petroleum refining is a
clean-burning energy source recognized for its transportability and ease of  use
relative  to alternative forms  of stand-alone energy.  The Partnership's retail
customers fall into four broad categories: residential customers, commercial and
industrial customers, agricultural customers  and dealers (located primarily  in
the  Northeast)  that resell  propane to  residential and  commercial customers.
Residential customers use  propane primarily for  space heating, water  heating,
cooking  and clothes drying. Commercial and industrial customers use propane for
commercial applications such as cooking  and clothes drying and industrial  uses
such as fueling over-the-road vehicles, forklifts and stationary engines, firing
furnaces,  as  a cutting  gas and  in  other process  applications. Agricultural
customers use propane for tobacco curing, crop drying, poultry brooding and weed
control.
 
     Propane competes primarily with natural gas, electricity and fuel oil as an
energy source, principally on the basis of price, availability and  portability.
Propane  serves as  an alternative  to natural gas  in rural  and suburban areas
where natural gas is unavailable or portability of product is required.  Propane
is  generally more  expensive than  natural gas  on an  equivalent BTU  basis in
locations served by natural  gas, although propane  is sold in  such areas as  a
standby  fuel for  use during  peak demand  periods and  during interruptions in
natural gas service. Propane is generally less expensive to use than electricity
for space heating, water heating,  clothes drying and cooking. Although  propane
is  similar to fuel oil  in certain applications and  market demand, propane and
fuel oil compete to a lesser extent primarily because of the cost of  converting
from one to the other.
 
     The  Partnership  distributes  propane  through  a  nationwide distribution
network  integrating  166  service  centers  in  24  states.  The  Partnership's
operations  are  located  primarily  in the  Midwest,  Northeast,  Southeast and
Southwest regions of the United States. No single customer accounted for 10%  or
more  of the Partnership's revenues in  1995. Historically, approximately 66% of
the Partnership's  retail propane  volume  has been  sold during  the  six-month
period  from October through  March, as many customers  use propane for heating.
Consequently,  sales,  gross  profits  and   cash  flows  from  operations   are
concentrated  in the Partnership's first and fourth fiscal quarters. In 1995, on
a pro forma basis,  the Partnership would have  had net income of  approximately
$10.7  million, and on an historical basis, had a net loss of approximately $0.6
million. For information  regarding pro forma  adjustments to the  Partnership's
historical  operating data, see 'Selected  Historical and Pro Forma Consolidated
Financial  and  Operating  Data'  and  the  pro  forma  consolidated   financial
statements and notes thereto included elsewhere in this Prospectus.
 
     The  Partnership also sells,  leases and services  equipment related to its
propane distribution business. In the residential market, the Partnership  sells
household  appliances  such as  cooking  ranges, water  heaters,  space heaters,
central furnaces and clothes dryers, as  well as less traditional products  such
as barbecue equipment and gas logs.
 
     In  addition to its  166 service centers,  the Partnership owns underground
storage facilities  in Hutchinson,  Kansas and  Loco Hills,  New Mexico,  leases
above  ground storage facilities in Crandon,  Wisconsin and Orlando, Florida and
owns or  leases smaller  storage facilities  in other  locations throughout  the
United States. As of December 31, 1996, the Partnership's total storage capacity
was  approximately  33.1 million  gallons  (including approximately  one million
gallons of storage capacity currently leased  to third parties). As of  December
31,  1996,  the  Partnership had  a  fleet  of 7  transport  truck  tractors and
approximately 400 bulk  delivery trucks, 400  service and light  trucks and  150
cylinder delivery vehicles.
 
     The principal executive office of the Partnership is located at Suite 1700,
IES Tower, 200 1st Street, S.E., Cedar Rapids, Iowa 52401-1409 and its telephone
number is (319) 365-1550.
 
RISK FACTORS
 
     Limited  partner interests are inherently  different from the capital stock
of a corporation, although many of  the business risks to which the  Partnership
is    subject   are   similar   to   those    that   would   be   faced   by   a
 
                                       8
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
corporation engaged in a similar business. Prospective purchasers of the  Common
Units  should consider the following risk factors in evaluating an investment in
the Common Units:
 
RISKS INHERENT IN THE PARTNERSHIP'S BUSINESS
 
      Weather conditions, which can vary substantially from year to year, have a
      significant impact  on  the  demand  for  propane  for  both  heating  and
      agricultural  purposes. Many customers of  the Partnership rely heavily on
      propane as a heating fuel. Accordingly,  the volume of propane sold is  at
      its  highest during the  six-month peak heating  season of October through
      March and is  directly affected  by the  severity of  the winter  weather.
      Historically, approximately 66% of the Partnership's retail propane volume
      has  been sold during this peak heating season. Actual weather conditions,
      therefore,  may   significantly   affect   the   Partnership's   financial
      performance. Furthermore, despite the fact that overall weather conditions
      may  be normal, variations in weather in  one or more regions in which the
      Partnership operates can significantly affect the total volume of  propane
      sold  by the Partnership  and, consequently, the  Partnership's results of
      operations.
 
      Propane is a  commodity, the  market price of  which is  often subject  to
      volatile  changes  in  response  to  changes  in  supply  or  other market
      conditions. Because rapid increases in  the wholesale cost of propane  may
      not  be immediately  passed on to  customers, such  increases could reduce
      gross profits. In  the fourth quarter  of 1996, the  price of propane  was
      significantly  higher than historical levels. Between November 1, 1996 and
      December 31,  1996,  the price  of  propane in  the  spot market  at  Mont
      Belvieu,  Texas,  the  largest  storage  facility  in  the  United States,
      averaged $0.5953 per gallon, with a high of $0.7050 per gallon on December
      16, 1996 and a low of $0.4875 per gallon on December 31, 1996. During  the
      1995-96  winter season, from November 1, 1995 to March 31, 1996, the price
      of propane at  Mont Belvieu averaged  $0.3672 per gallon,  with a high  of
      $0.5250  on February  15, 1996 and a low of $0.3037  on November 15, 1995.
      Between November 1, 1996  and December 31, 1996,  the price of propane  in
      the spot market at Conway, Kansas averaged $0.7494 per gallon, with a high
      of $1.0400 per gallon on December 16, 1996 and a low of $0.5100 per gallon
      on  November 7, 1996.  During the 1995-96 winter  season, from November 1,
      1995 to March 31,  1996, the price of  propane at Conway averaged  $0.3713
      per  gallon, with a high of $0.4363 on February 15, 1996 and a low $0.3237
      on November 15, 1995. The Partnership has to date purchased a  significant
      amount  of its  propane in  the Conway,  Kansas spot  market. Although the
      increased wholesale  price  of  propane has  increased  the  Partnership's
      revenues  for  the  fourth  quarter of 1996, the Partnership was unable to
      fully pass on the increased  product cost  to its customers resulting in a
      lower per gallon profit margin. As a result, the Partnership  expects that
      it  will  have  slightly  lower operating income for the fourth quarter of
      1996 compared  to   the   corresponding   period  of   1995.   Except  for
      occasional opportunistic buying and storage  of  propane during periods of
      low  demand, the Partnership has not  engaged  in  any significant hedging
      activities with  respect  to its propane supply requirements, although  it
      may do so in the future.
 
      The domestic retail propane  business is highly  competitive, and some  of
      the  Partnership's competitors may be larger or have greater financial and
      other  resources  or  lower  operating  costs  than  the  Partnership.  In
      addition,  propane is  sold in competition  with other  sources of energy,
      some of which are less costly for equivalent energy values.
 
      The domestic  retail  propane  industry is  mature,  and  the  Partnership
      foresees  only  limited  growth  in  total  demand  for  the  product. The
      Partnership expects the  overall demand for  propane to remain  relatively
      constant  over the next several  years, with year-to-year industry volumes
      being affected primarily by weather patterns. Therefore, the growth of the
      Partnership's propane business  depends in  large part on  its ability  to
      acquire  other retail  distributors. There  can be  no assurance  that the
      Partnership will identify attractive acquisition candidates in the future,
      will be able  to acquire such  candidates on acceptable  terms or will  be
      able  to finance  such acquisitions.  If the  Partnership is  able to make
      acquisitions, there can be  no assurance that  such acquisitions will  not
      dilute  earnings and distributions or that any additional debt incurred to
      finance such acquisitions  will not  adversely affect the  ability of  the
      Partnership to make distributions to Unitholders.
 
                                       9
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
      The  Partnership's  operations are  subject to  the operating  hazards and
      risks  normally   associated  with   handling,  storing   and   delivering
      combustible  liquids such  as propane.  As a  result, the  Partnership has
      been, and  will  likely continue  to  be,  a defendant  in  various  legal
      proceedings  and litigation arising in the ordinary course of business. In
      addition, in  connection  with the  IPO  the Partnership  assumed  certain
      contingent  liabilities of  National Propane,  including certain potential
      environmental remediation costs at  properties owned by National  Propane.
      Although  the  Partnership  self  insures  and  maintains  such  insurance
      policies as  the  Managing General  Partner  believes are  reasonable  and
      prudent,  future  claims  or  environmental  liabilities  not  covered  by
      insurance or indemnification, or a large number of claims incurred by  the
      Partnership  in the future that are  within the Partnership's self insured
      retention, may have a material adverse effect on the business, results  of
      operations  or  financial  position  of  the  Partnership,  including  the
      Partnership's ability to make the Minimum Quarterly Distribution.
 
RISKS INHERENT IN AN INVESTMENT IN THE PARTNERSHIP
 
      Cash distributions to  Unitholders are  not guaranteed  and may  fluctuate
      based upon the Partnership's performance. Cash distributions are dependent
      primarily  on cash  flow and  not on  profitability, which  is affected by
      non-cash items. Therefore, cash distributions  may be made during  periods
      when  the Partnership  records losses and  may not be  made during periods
      when the Partnership  records profits. In  addition, the Managing  General
      Partner  may establish reserves that reduce  the amount of Available Cash.
      Due to the  seasonal nature  of the Partnership's  business, the  Managing
      General  Partner anticipates that it may make additions to reserves during
      certain of the Partnership's  fiscal quarters in  order to fund  operating
      expenses,  interest  payments  and  cash  distributions  to  partners with
      respect to future fiscal quarters. As a result of these and other factors,
      there  can  be  no   assurance  regarding  the   actual  levels  of   cash
      distributions by the Partnership.
 
      The  amount of Available Cash from  Operating Surplus needed to distribute
      the Minimum Quarterly Distribution for  four quarters on the Common  Units
      (including  the  Common  Units  offered  hereby)  and  Subordinated  Units
      outstanding as of the date of this Prospectus and the related distribution
      on  the  General   Partner  Interests  is   approximately  $24.6   million
      (approximately  $14.1 million for  the Common Units,  $9.5 million for the
      Subordinated Units and  $1.0 million for  the General Partner  Interests).
      The  amount of pro  forma Available Cash  from Operating Surplus generated
      during 1995 was approximately $17.6  million. Such amount would have  been
      sufficient  to  cover  the  Minimum Quarterly  Distribution  for  the four
      quarters in such year  on all of the  outstanding Common Units  (including
      the  Common  Units offered  hereby) and  the  related distribution  on the
      General  Partner   Interests,  but   would  have   been  insufficient   by
      approximately  $7.0 million to cover the Minimum Quarterly Distribution on
      the Subordinated Units and the related distribution on the General Partner
      Interests.
 
      Approximately $5.5 million of the  Partnership's annual cash receipts  are
      interest  payments  from Triarc  under the  Partnership Loan,  which bears
      interest at an annual  rate of 13.5%.  On a pro  forma basis, such  amount
      represents  approximately  31% of  the  Partnership's Available  Cash from
      Operating Surplus  in  1995. Because  Triarc  is a  holding  company,  its
      ability  to meet  its cash  requirements (including  required interest and
      principal payments on  the Partnership  Loan) is  primarily dependent  (in
      addition  to  its cash  on hand)  upon cash  flows from  its subsidiaries,
      including loans and  cash dividends and  reimbursement by subsidiaries  to
      Triarc  in connection with  its providing certain  management services and
      payments by subsidiaries under certain  tax sharing agreements. Under  the
      terms  of various  indentures and credit  arrangements, Triarc's principal
      subsidiaries are currently unable to pay  any dividends or make any  loans
      or advances to Triarc. In addition, the Partnership Loan does not restrict
      Triarc's ability to sell, convey, transfer or encumber the stock or assets
      of any of its subsidiaries (other than certain limitations with respect to
      the  Managing  General  Partner and  Southeastern  Public  Service Company
      ('SEPSCO')) or its ability to dispose of its cash on hand or other assets.
      On October 29, 1996, Triarc announced that its Board of Directors approved
      a plan to undertake  the Spinoff Transactions (as  defined herein) and  in
      connection  therewith it is expected that the Managing General Partner may
      be merged  with  and  into  Triarc,  see  'Certain  Information  Regarding
      Triarc.' Triarc's cash
 
                                       10
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
      on   hand  and  marketable   securities  as  of   November  30,  1996  was
      approximately $177.0 million. The Partnership believes that such amount of
      cash and  marketable  securities,  plus  payments  or  distributions  from
      certain of Triarc's subsidiaries, will enable Triarc to have adequate cash
      resources  to meet  its short  term cash  requirements, including required
      interest  payments  on  the  Partnership  Loan.  See  'Cash   Distribution
      Policy  -- Partnership  Loan' and 'Certain  Information Regarding Triarc.'
      However, there can be no assurance that Triarc will continue to have  cash
      on  hand or  that it  will in  the future  receive sufficient  payments or
      distributions from its subsidiaries in order  to enable it to satisfy  its
      obligations  under the Partnership Loan. Triarc's failure to make interest
      or principal payments  under the Partnership  Loan would adversely  affect
      the  ability of the Partnership to make the Minimum Quarterly Distribution
      to all  Unitholders.  In  addition,  Triarc is  permitted  to  prepay  the
      Partnership  Loan under certain circumstances. The prepayment by Triarc of
      all or  a  portion  of  the  Partnership  Loan  and  the  failure  by  the
      Partnership  to  reinvest  such  funds  in  a  manner  that  generates  an
      equivalent amount of annual cash flow could have an adverse effect on  the
      Partnership's   ability   to  make   distributions  to   Unitholders.  The
      Partnership Loan  is recourse  to Triarc  and is  secured by  a pledge  by
      Triarc  of all  of the  shares of  capital stock  of the  Managing General
      Partner owned  by  Triarc (approximately  75.7%  of the  Managing  General
      Partner's  outstanding capital stock  as of the  date of this Prospectus).
      See  'Cash  Distribution   Policy  --  Partnership   Loan'  and   'Certain
      Information Regarding Triarc.'
 
      The  Partnership is significantly  leveraged and has  indebtedness that is
      substantial in relation to its partners' capital. On a pro forma basis  as
      of   September  30,  1996,  the  Partnership's  total  indebtedness  as  a
      percentage of  its  total  capitalization would  have  been  approximately
      79.0%.  The  principal  and  interest  payable  on  such  indebtedness and
      compliance with the requirements of such indebtedness with respect to  the
      maintenance   of  reserves  will   reduce  the  cash   available  to  make
      distributions on the Units. As of  December 31, 1996, the Partnership  had
      $7.9  million outstanding  under the  Bank Credit  Facility and additional
      borrowings could result  in a  significant increase  in the  Partnership's
      leverage.   Furthermore,  the  Managing  General  Partner  may  cause  the
      Partnership to incur  additional indebtedness,  including borrowings  that
      have  the purpose  or effect of  enabling the Managing  General Partner to
      receive distributions or  hastening the conversion  of Subordinated  Units
      into Common Units.
 
      The  First Mortgage Notes  and the Bank  Credit Facility are  secured by a
      lien on substantially all of the  assets of the Operating Partnership.  In
      the  case of a continuing default  by the Operating Partnership under such
      indebtedness, the  lenders  would  have  the right  to  foreclose  on  the
      Operating Partnership's assets, which would have a material adverse effect
      on  the Partnership.  In addition, the  First Mortgage Notes  and the Bank
      Credit Facility contain provisions relating to change of control. If  such
      provisions   are  triggered,  such  outstanding  indebtedness  may  become
      immediately due. In such event, there is no assurance that the Partnership
      would be able  to pay the  indebtedness, in which  case the lenders  would
      have  the right to foreclose on  the Operating Partnership's assets, which
      would have a material adverse effect on the Partnership.
 
      The Partnership's  assumptions  concerning  future  operations,  including
      assumptions   that  normal   weather  conditions   will  prevail   in  the
      Partnership's  operating  areas,  may   not  be  realized.  Although   the
      Partnership   believes  its  assumptions   are  reasonable,  whether  such
      assumptions are realized is not, in many cases, within the control of  the
      Partnership.  Significant variances between  the Partnership's assumptions
      and actual conditions,  particularly with respect  to weather  conditions,
      could have a significant impact on the business of the Partnership.
 
      The  Managing General  Partner manages  and operates  the Partnership, and
      holders of Common Units  have no right to  participate in such  management
      and operation. Holders of Common Units have no right to elect the Managing
      General  Partner on  an annual  or other  continuing basis,  and have only
      limited voting rights on matters affecting the Partnership's business.
 
      Prior to making any distribution on the Common Units, the Partnership will
      reimburse the  Managing  General  Partner and  its  Affiliates  (including
      Triarc) at cost for all expenses incurred on behalf of the Partnership. On
      a pro forma basis, approximately $56.8 million of expenses would have been
      reimbursed  by the  Partnership to the  Managing General  Partner in 1995.
      Affiliates of the Managing General Partner (including Triarc) may  provide
      certain administrative services for
 
                                       11
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
      the  Managing General  Partner on  behalf of  the Partnership  and will be
      reimbursed for all expenses incurred in connection therewith. In addition,
      the Managing General  Partner and  its Affiliates  may provide  additional
      services  to the  Partnership, for which  the Partnership  will be charged
      reasonable fees as determined by the Managing General Partner.
 
      Subject to certain limitations, the Partnership may issue additional Units
      or other  interests in  the Partnership,  the effect  of which  may be  to
      dilute  the interests of  holders of Common Units  in distributions by the
      Partnership and to make it more difficult for a person or group to  remove
      the  Managing General Partner  as general partner  or otherwise change the
      management of the Partnership.
 
      The Managing General Partner  has the right to  acquire all, but not  less
      than  all, of the outstanding  Common Units at a  price generally equal to
      the then current market price  of the Common Units  in the event that  not
      more  than 20% of the  outstanding Common Units are  held by persons other
      than the  Managing General  Partner and  its Affiliates.  Consequently,  a
      Unitholder  may have its Common Units  purchased from him even though such
      holder does not desire to sell them,  and the price paid may be less  than
      the amount such Unitholder would desire to receive upon such sale.
 
      The  Partnership Agreement contains certain provisions that may discourage
      a person or group from attempting  to remove the Managing General  Partner
      as  general partner or otherwise change the management of the Partnership.
      The Partnership Agreement provides that if the Managing General Partner is
      removed other than for  Cause (as defined in  the Glossary) and the  Units
      held  by the General Partners and their  Affiliates are not voted in favor
      of such removal, the Subordination Period will end, all arrearages on  the
      Common  Units will terminate  and all outstanding  Subordinated Units will
      convert into Common Units and the General Partners will have the right  to
      convert  the General Partner Interests into Common Units or to receive, in
      exchange for such interests, cash payment  equal to the fair market  value
      of  such  interests.  The  Managing  General  Partner's  current ownership
      interest in  the Partnership  precludes any  vote to  remove the  Managing
      General  Partner without  its consent. Further,  the Partnership Agreement
      provides that  if any  person or  group other  than the  Managing  General
      Partner and its Affiliates acquires beneficial ownership of 20% or more of
      the  outstanding Units of any class, such person or group will lose voting
      rights with respect to  all of its Units.  The effect of these  provisions
      may  be to diminish the  price at which the  Common Units will trade under
      certain circumstances.
 
      Under certain  circumstances, holders  of Common  Units could  lose  their
      limited   liability  and  could  become   liable  for  amounts  improperly
      distributed  to   them   by   the  Partnership.   See   'The   Partnership
      Agreement -- Limited Liability.'
 
      The  holders of the Common  Units have not been  represented by counsel in
      connection with the preparation of the Partnership Agreement or the  other
      agreements referred to herein.
 
      The  propane  industry  consists  of a  small  number  of  national retail
      marketers and a larger  number of regional companies.  From time to  time,
      these  national and regional retail  marketers, including the Partnership,
      have in the  past engaged  and may in  the future  engage, in  discussions
      concerning  acquisitions,  dispositions  and  combinations  of operations.
      While the Partnership is  not currently engaged  in negotiations with  any
      national or regional marketer concerning any such acquisition, disposition
      or  combination,  there  can  be  no  assurance  that  in  the  future the
      Partnership  will  not   engage  in  any   such  negotiations  or   pursue
      opportunities to engage in any such transaction. In addition, although any
      merger,  consolidation or  combination involving the  Partnership, and any
      sale, exchange or disposition of all  or substantially all of its  assets,
      would  require the  approval of  a Unit  Majority under  the terms  of the
      Partnership Agreement, the  Partnership and the  General Partners are  not
      restricted   under  the  Partnership  Agreement  from  engaging  in  other
      transactions that  may  not require  the  prior  consent or  vote  of  the
      Unitholders  and  that  could  result  in  a  change  of  control  of  the
      Partnership. If any  of such transactions  were deemed to  be a change  of
      control  under the First  Mortgage Notes or the  Bank Credit Facility, the
      Partnership would be required  to offer to redeem  all of the  outstanding
      First  Mortgage Notes at a premium and to repay all indebtedness under the
      Bank Credit Facility. As a result, the
 
                                       12
 

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<PAGE>
      occurrence of a change of control could have a material adverse effect  on
      the  Partnership and its ability to pay the Minimum Quarterly Distribution
      to the Unitholders.
 
      The Partnership believes that its success has been and will continue to be
      dependent to a significant  extent upon the efforts  and abilities of  its
      senior  management team.  The failure by  the Managing  General Partner to
      retain members of its  senior management team  could adversely affect  the
      Partnership's  ability to build  on the efforts  undertaken by its current
      management  to   increase  the   efficiency  and   profitability  of   the
      Partnership.
 
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST AND FIDUCIARY RESPONSIBILITY
 
      The  Managing General  Partner and  its Affiliates  may have  conflicts of
      interest with  the  Partnership  and  the holders  of  Common  Units.  The
      Partnership Agreement permits the Managing General Partner to consider, in
      resolving  conflicts of interest, the  interests of parties (including the
      General Partner and  its Affiliates) other  than the Unitholders,  thereby
      limiting   the  Managing   General  Partner's  fiduciary   duties  to  the
      Partnership and the Unitholders. The  discretion given in the  Partnership
      Agreement  to  the  Managing  General Partner  in  resolving  conflicts of
      interest may significantly limit the ability of a Unitholder to  challenge
      what  might otherwise be a breach of fiduciary duty under Delaware law. In
      addition, holders of Common Units are deemed to have consented to  certain
      actions  that might otherwise be deemed  conflicts of interest or a breach
      of fiduciary  duty. The  validity  and enforceability  of these  types  of
      provisions under Delaware law are uncertain.
 
      The  Partnership Agreement provides that any borrowings by the Partnership
      shall not constitute  a breach of  any duty owed  by the Managing  General
      Partner,  including borrowings that have the purpose or effect of enabling
      the  Managing  General  Partner  to  receive  Incentive  Distributions  or
      hastening the conversion of the Subordinated Units into Common Units.
 
      The  Partnership Agreement permits  the Managing General  Partner to merge
      with and into Triarc (the 'Triarc  Merger') without the prior approval  of
      any  Unitholder.  It  is expected  that  the  Triarc Merger  may  occur in
      connection with the Spinoff Transactions. The Partnership Note contains  a
      covenant  of Triarc  that, in  the event of  a Triarc  Merger, Triarc will
      concurrently therewith pledge as security for the Partnership Loan certain
      assets  of   the  Managing   General  Partner.   See  'Cash   Distribution
      Policy -- Partnership Loan' and 'Certain Information Regarding Triarc.'
 
      The  Partnership Agreement does not prohibit the Partnership from engaging
      in roll-up  transactions. Although  the Managing  General Partner  has  no
      present  intention  of  causing  the Partnership  to  engage  in  any such
      transaction, it is possible it will do  so in the future. There can be  no
      assurance  that a  roll-up transaction would  not have  a material adverse
      effect on a Unitholder's investment in the Partnership.
 
      The Managing General Partner (unless merged with and into Triarc) and  the
      Special  General Partner (as defined in  the Glossary) are prohibited from
      conducting  any  business  or  having  any  operations  other  than  those
      incidental  to  serving as  general partners  of  the Partnership  and the
      Operating Partnership  so  long  as  they  are  general  partners  of  the
      Partnership.  The Partnership Agreement  does not restrict  the ability of
      Affiliates of the Managing General Partner (other than the Special General
      Partner) to  engage in  any  activities, except  for  the retail  sale  of
      propane  to  end  users in  the  continental United  States.  The Managing
      General Partner's Affiliates (other than the Special General Partner)  may
      compete  with the Partnership in other propane related activities, such as
      trading, transportation, storage  and wholesale  distribution of  propane.
      Further,  in the event  of the Triarc  Merger the ability  of the Managing
      General Partner to  engage in  activities other than  those incidental  to
      serving  as  a  general  partner  of  the  Operating  Partnership  and the
      Partnership and to compete  in other propane  related activities, such  as
      trading,  transportation, storage and wholesale  distribution, will not be
      restricted. Furthermore,  the  Partnership  Agreement  provides  that  the
      Managing  General Partner and its Affiliates have no obligation to present
      business opportunities to the Partnership.
 
TAX RISKS
 
      The availability to a Common Unitholder of federal income tax benefits  of
      an   investment  in  the  Partnership  depends,  in  large  part,  on  the
      classification   of    the    Partnership    as    a    partnership    for
 
                                       13
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
      federal  income  tax purposes.  Based  on certain  representations  by the
      General Partners, Andrews & Kurth  L.L.P., special counsel to the  General
      Partners  and the Partnership  ('Counsel'), is of  the opinion that, under
      current law,  the Partnership  will  be classified  as a  partnership  for
      federal income tax purposes.
 
      No ruling has been requested from the Internal Revenue Service (the 'IRS')
      with  respect to  classification of the  Partnership as  a partnership for
      federal income tax purposes or any other matter affecting the Partnership.
 
      A Unitholder will be required to  pay income taxes on his allocable  share
      of the Partnership's income, whether or not he receives cash distributions
      from the Partnership.
 
      Investment  in Units by certain  tax-exempt entities, regulated investment
      companies and foreign persons  raises issues unique  to such persons.  For
      example, virtually all of the taxable income derived by most organizations
      exempt  from federal income tax  (including individual retirement accounts
      and other retirement plans) from the ownership of a Unit will be unrelated
      business taxable income and thus will be taxable to such a Unitholder.
 
      In the case  of taxpayers  subject to  the passive  loss rules  (generally
      individuals  and  closely  held  corporations),  losses  generated  by the
      Partnership, if  any,  will only  be  available to  offset  future  income
      generated  by the  Partnership and  cannot be  used to  offset income from
      other activities,  including passive  activities or  investments.  Passive
      losses  which  are not  deductible  because they  exceed  the Unitholder's
      income generated  by the  Partnership may  be deducted  in full  when  the
      Unitholder disposes of his entire investment in the Partnership in a fully
      taxable transaction to an unrelated party.
 
      A  Unitholder will be  required to file  state income tax  returns and pay
      state income taxes in  some or all of  the various jurisdictions in  which
      the Partnership does business or owns property.
 
      The  Partnership has been registered  with the IRS as  a 'tax shelter.' No
      assurance can be given that the Partnership will not be audited by the IRS
      or that  tax  adjustments  will  not  be  made.  Any  adjustments  in  the
      Partnership's tax returns will lead to adjustments in the Unitholders' tax
      returns  and  may  lead to  audits  of  the Unitholders'  tax  returns and
      adjustments of items unrelated to the Partnership.
 
     See 'Risk Factors,' 'Cash Distribution Policy,' 'Conflicts of Interest  and
Fiduciary  Responsibility,' 'Description of the  Common Units,' 'The Partnership
Agreement' and 'Tax Considerations' for a more detailed description of these and
other risk  factors and  conflicts  of interest  that  should be  considered  in
evaluating an investment in the Common Units.
 
THE IPO AND ADDITIONAL TRANSACTIONS
 
     On July 2, 1996, the Partnership consummated the IPO and received therefrom
net  proceeds aggregating  approximately $115.7 million.  On July  22, 1996, the
over-allotment option granted by the Partnership to the underwriters in the  IPO
(the  'IPO Over-Allotment Option') was exercised  with respect to 111,074 Common
Units,  and  the  Partnership   received  net  proceeds  therefrom   aggregating
approximately  $2.2 million, which the  Partnership used for general partnership
purposes.
 
     Concurrently with the closing of the IPO, both the Managing General Partner
and the Special General  Partner contributed substantially  all of their  assets
(which  assets  did  not  include an  existing  intercompany  note  from Triarc,
approximately $59.3 million of the net  proceeds from the issuance of the  First
Mortgage  Notes and certain other assets of the Managing General Partner) to the
Operating Partnership  (the  'Conveyance') as  a  capital contribution  and  the
Operating  Partnership  assumed  substantially  all of  the  liabilities  of the
Managing General Partner  and the  Special General Partner  (other than  certain
income tax liabilities), including the First Mortgage Notes and all indebtedness
of the Managing General Partner outstanding under the Former Credit Facility (as
defined  below). Immediately  thereafter, the  Managing General  Partner and the
Special  General  Partner  conveyed  their  limited  partner  interests  in  the
Operating  Partnership to  the Partnership. As  a result  of such contributions,
each of the Managing General Partner and the Special General Partner have a 1.0%
general partner  interest  in the  Partnership  and a  1.0101%  general  partner
interest in the Operating Partnership. In addition, the Managing General Partner
received   in  exchange  for  its  contribution  to  the  Partnership  4,533,638
Subordinated Units and the right to receive the Incentive Distributions.
 
                                       14
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
     Also immediately prior  to the  closing of  the IPO,  the Managing  General
Partner  issued $125 million aggregate principal  amount of First Mortgage Notes
to certain institutional investors in  a private placement. Approximately  $59.3
million  of the  net proceeds  from the  sale of  the First  Mortgage Notes (the
entire net proceeds of which were approximately $118.4 million) were used by the
Managing General Partner to pay a dividend  to Triarc. The remainder of the  net
proceeds from the sale of the First Mortgage Notes (approximately $59.1 million)
were contributed by the Managing General Partner to the Operating Partnership in
connection  with the  Conveyance and were  used by the  Operating Partnership to
repay (in  the  manner  described  below) a  portion  of  the  Managing  General
Partner's  indebtedness  outstanding under  the Revolving  Credit and  Term Loan
Agreement, dated as of October 7,  1994, as amended, among the Managing  General
Partner,  the Bank of  New York, as Administrative  Agent, certain Co-Agents and
the several lending  institutions party thereto  (the 'Former Credit  Facility')
and  to repay other indebtedness of the  Managing General Partner and certain of
its subsidiaries outstanding under equipment  notes, notes issued in  connection
with acquisitions ('Acquisition Notes') and capital leases (collectively, 'Other
Former  Indebtedness'). First, approximately $30.1  million of such net proceeds
were used by  the Operating  Partnership to repay  the indebtedness  outstanding
under  the Former Credit Facility which was evidenced by the Refunding Notes (as
defined in  the Former  Credit Facility),  and then  the remainder  of such  net
proceeds  (approximately $29.1 million)  together with cash on  hand was used to
repay other indebtedness outstanding under the Former Credit Facility and  Other
Former Indebtedness.
 
     After  the repayment of the Refunding  Notes and such other indebtedness as
described above, the net proceeds of the IPO (approximately $115.7 million) were
contributed to the Operating Partnership which  used such proceeds to repay  all
remaining indebtedness under the Former Credit Facility, to make the Partnership
Loan  and to pay certain accrued management fees and tax sharing payments due to
Triarc from the Managing General Partner.
 
     Concurrently with the closing  of the IPO,  the Operating Partnership  also
entered  into the Bank  Credit Facility, which includes  a $15 million revolving
credit facility to  be used for  working capital and  other general  partnership
purposes  (the  'Working  Capital  Facility') and  the  $40  million Acquisition
Facility. These facilities were undrawn at  the time of the consummation of  the
IPO  and the transactions referred  to above (collectively, the 'Transactions').
For additional information regarding the terms  of the First Mortgage Notes  and
the Bank Credit Facility, see 'Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial
Condition  and  Results  of  Operations  --  Description  of  Indebtedness.' For
additional information regarding the  terms of the  Partnership Loan, see  'Cash
Distribution Policy -- Partnership Loan.'
 
     On  November 7,  1996, the Partnership  issued and sold  the 400,000 Common
Units offered hereby to Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated  (the
'Selling  Unitholder') pursuant to a Purchase  Agreement, dated as of such date,
between the Partnership, certain  of its Affiliates  and the Selling  Unitholder
(the  'Purchase  Agreement').  Such  transaction,  which  was  exempt  from  the
registration requirements of the  Securities Act, is referred  to herein as  the
'Private  Placement.' The  estimated net  proceeds to  the Partnership  from the
Private Placement were approximately $7.4  million. Such net proceeds were  used
by   the  Partnership  for  general   partnership  purposes.  See  'The  Selling
Unitholder.'
 
DISTRIBUTIONS AND PAYMENTS TO THE MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER AND ITS AFFILIATES
 
     The following table summarizes the  distributions and payments made and  to
be made by the Partnership to the Managing General Partner and its Affiliates in
connection  with the Transactions and the ongoing operations of the Partnership.
Such distributions and payments were determined by and among affiliated entities
and, consequently,  were  not  the  result of  arm's  length  negotiations.  See
'Conflicts of Interest and Fiduciary Responsibility.'
 
                                       15
 

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<TABLE>
<S>                                         <C>
                                                 FORMATION STAGE
The consideration paid to the Managing
  General Partner, the Special General
  Partner, Triarc and their Affiliates for
  the transfer of the propane business and
  related liabilities of National Propane
  to the Partnership......................  4,533,638  Subordinated Units, an aggregate 4% unsubordinated general
                                              partner interest in the  Partnership and the Operating  Partnership
                                              on   a  combined  basis   (and  the  right   to  receive  Incentive
                                              Distributions), and the assumption by the Operating Partnership  of
                                              substantially  all  of  the  liabilities  of  the  Managing General
                                              Partner and the Special General Partner, (other than certain income
                                              tax liabilities),  including  the  First  Mortgage  Notes  and  all
                                              indebtedness  of the Managing General Partner outstanding under the
                                              Former Credit Facility. The net proceeds of the IPO  (approximately
                                              $115.7  million) were contributed to  the Operating Partnership and
                                              used by the  Operating Partnership  together with cash  on hand  to
                                              make  the  $40.7  million  Partnership  Loan  to  Triarc,  to repay
                                              approximately $12.8  million in  accrued  management fees  and  tax
                                              sharing  payments  due to  Triarc  and to  repay  a portion  of the
                                              indebtedness  of  the  Managing  General  Partner  assumed  by  the
                                              Operating  Partnership  in  connection  with  the  Transactions. In
                                              addition, the Managing General Partner made a dividend to Triarc  a
                                              portion  (approximately $51.4 million)  of an existing intercompany
                                              note and made  a dividend  of approximately $59.3  million in  cash
                                              from  the net proceeds of  the sale of the  First Mortgage Notes to
                                              Triarc. The remainder  of the  net proceeds  from the  sale of  the
                                              First  Mortgage  Notes  were  used  to  repay  indebtedness  of the
                                              Managing  General  Partner   and  its  subsidiaries.   Accordingly,
                                              substantially  all of the net proceeds of  the IPO were paid to, or
                                              otherwise benefited,  the  Managing General  Partner,  the  Special
                                              General  Partner,  Triarc and  their Affiliates.  See 'The  IPO and
                                              Additional Transactions.'
 
                                                OPERATIONAL STAGE
Distributions of Available Cash to the
  General Partners........................  Available Cash will generally be  distributed 96% to the  Unitholders
                                              (including  to  the  Managing  General  Partner  as  holder  of the
                                              Subordinated Units) and 4% to the General Partners, except that  if
                                              distributions  of Available Cash from  Operating Surplus exceed the
                                              Target Distribution Levels (as defined below), the General Partners
                                              will receive a  percentage of such  excess distributions that  will
                                              increase  to up  to approximately  50% of  the excess distributions
                                              above the highest Target Distribution Level. On November 14,  1996,
                                              in   connection  with   the  payment   of  the   Minimum  Quarterly
                                              Distribution to the holders of Common Units in the amount of $0.525
                                              per Common  Unit,  the  Partnership  paid  a  distribution  to  the
                                              Managing   General   Partner  of   $0.525  per   Subordinated  Unit
                                              (approximately $2.4 million in  the aggregate) and a  corresponding
                                              distribution  to the  General Partners  in the  aggregate amount of
                                              approximately $235,800. See 'Cash Distribution Policy.'
</TABLE>
 
                                       16
 

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<TABLE>
<S>                                         <C>
Payments to the Managing General Partner
  and its Affiliates......................  In general,  the management  and employees  of National  Propane  who
                                              managed  and operated the propane business  and assets prior to the
                                              IPO that are now  owned by the Partnership  continue to manage  and
                                              operate the Partnership's business as officers and employees of the
                                              Managing  General Partner and its  Affiliates. The Managing General
                                              Partner does not receive any  management fee or other  compensation
                                              in  connection  with  its  management of  the  Partnership,  but is
                                              reimbursed at cost for all direct and indirect expenses incurred on
                                              behalf of the Partnership, including the costs of compensation  and
                                              employee  benefit plans described herein  properly allocable to the
                                              Partnership, and all other expenses necessary or appropriate to the
                                              conduct of business of, and allocable to, the Partnership. On a pro
                                              forma  basis,  an  aggregate  of  approximately  $56.8  million  of
                                              expenses  would  have been  reimbursed  by the  Partnership  to the
                                              Managing General Partner  in 1995  (comprising approximately  $33.0
                                              million  in  salary, payroll  tax  and other  compensation  paid to
                                              employees of the Managing  General Partner and approximately  $23.8
                                              million for all other operating expenses).
                                            Affiliates  of the  Managing General  Partner (including  Triarc) may
                                              provide certain administrative  services for  the Managing  General
                                              Partner on behalf of the Partnership and will be reimbursed for all
                                              direct  and indirect expenses incurred  in connection therewith. In
                                              addition, the  Managing  General  Partner and  its  Affiliates  may
                                              provide  additional  services  to the  Partnership,  for  which the
                                              Partnership will be  charged reasonable fees  as determined by  the
                                              Managing General Partner.
                                            See   'Certain   Relationships  and   Related  Transactions'   for  a
                                              description of  other  ongoing arrangements  between  the  Managing
                                              General Partner and its Affiliates and the Partnership.
Withdrawal or removal of the General
  Partners................................  If  the  General Partners  withdraw in  violation of  the Partnership
                                              Agreement or are removed by  the Unitholders for Cause (as  defined
                                              in  the  Glossary), the  successor  general partner  will  have the
                                              option to purchase the General Partner Interests (and the right  to
                                              receive  Incentive Distributions) for  a cash payment  equal to the
                                              fair  market  value  thereof;  if  the  Managing  General   Partner
                                              withdraws  or is removed  without Cause it will  have the option to
                                              require the  successor  general  partner to  purchase  the  General
                                              Partner   Interests   (and   the   right   to   receive   Incentive
                                              Distributions) from the departing General Partners for such  price.
                                              If  the  General  Partner  Interests  (and  the  right  to  receive
                                              Incentive Distributions)  are not  so  purchased by  the  successor
                                              general  partner, the  General Partners  have the  right to convert
                                              such partner interests into a number of Common Units equal in value
                                              to the fair market  value thereof as  determined by an  independent
                                              investment  banking firm or other independent experts or to receive
                                              cash in exchange for such interests.
                                                LIQUIDATION STAGE
Liquidation...............................  In the event  of any  liquidation of the  Partnership, the  partners,
                                              including  the  General  Partners,  will  be  entitled  to  receive
                                              liquidating  distributions  in  accordance  with  their  respective
                                              capital   account  balances.  See   'Cash  Distribution  Policy  --
                                              Distributions of Cash Upon Liquidation.'
</TABLE>
 
                                       17
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>

CASH AVAILABLE FOR DISTRIBUTION
 
     Available Cash  will  generally  be  distributed  96%  to  the  Unitholders
(including the Managing General Partner as the holder of Subordinated Units) and
4%  to the General Partners, pro rata, except that if distributions of Available
Cash exceed Target Distribution  Levels (as defined in  the Glossary) above  the
Minimum  Quarterly Distribution, the General Partners will receive an additional
percentage of such excess distributions that will  increase to up to 50% of  the
distributions   above  the   highest  Target   Distribution  Level.   See  'Cash
Distribution  Policy  --  Incentive  Distributions  --  Hypothetical  Annualized
Yield.'
 
     The  amount of Available  Cash from Operating  Surplus needed to distribute
the Minimum  Quarterly  Distribution  for  four quarters  on  the  Common  Units
(including  the Common Units offered  hereby) and Subordinated Units outstanding
at the  date  of  this  Prospectus  and on  the  General  Partner  Interests  is
approximately  $24.6 million (approximately $14.1  million for the Common Units,
$9.5 million for the Subordinated Units and $1.0 million for the General Partner
Interests). Pro forma  Available Cash  from Operating  Surplus generated  during
1994  and  1995 (approximately  $22.7 million  and $17.6  million, respectively)
would have been sufficient  to cover the Minimum  Quarterly Distribution on  the
Common  Units and the related distribution on the General Partner Interests, but
would have been insufficient by approximately  $1.9 million and $7.0 million  to
cover  the  Minimum Quarterly  Distribution on  the  Subordinated Units  and the
related distribution  on  the  General  Partner  Interests  in  1994  and  1995,
respectively.  The decline  in pro forma  Available Cash  from Operating Surplus
generated during 1995 was primarily due to the fact that temperatures during the
winter  of  1994-95  across   the  markets  served   by  the  Partnership   were
substantially  warmer  than  the  prior  year.  Pro  forma  Available  Cash from
Operating Surplus generated during  the twelve months  ended September 30,  1996
(approximately  $21.5 million) would  have been sufficient  to cover the Minimum
Quarterly Distribution on the Common Units  and the related distribution on  the
General  Partner Interests,  but would  have been  insufficient by approximately
$3.1 million to  cover the  Minimum Quarterly Distribution  on the  Subordinated
Units and the related distribution on the General Partner Interests.
 
     Pro  forma Available Cash from Operating  Surplus generated during the nine
months ended September  30, 1996  would have been  approximately $11.6  million;
however,  because of the  highly seasonal nature  of the Partnership's business,
such amount is not necessarily indicative  of the results that will be  obtained
over  twelve months. The Partnership's revenues and cash flows have historically
been highest in the first and fourth quarters, which are the heating season, and
the lowest in the second and  third quarters, which are the non-heating  season.
Although such $11.6 million generated during the nine months ended September 30,
1996  would have been  deficient by approximately $6.8  million to cover Minimum
Quarterly Distributions on the Common Units, the Subordinated Units and  related
distributions  on the  General Partners Interests  during such  nine months, the
Partnership would have had sufficient cash on  hand or available to it from  its
credit  line for the  payment of the Minimum  Quarterly Distributions during the
seasonally low  cash  flow  second  and  third  quarters  of  1996.  During  the
Partnership's  normal business cycles it  will establish reserves during heating
season quarters  for,  among other  things,  payment of  the  Minimum  Quarterly
Distribution  on  the  Common  Units  in  subsequent  quarters  and  future debt
payments, decreasing the Amount  of Available Cash  from Operating Surplus  that
would   have  been  distributed  for  such  heating  season  quarters.  For  the
calculation  of   Pro   Forma   Operating  Surplus,   see   'Cash   Distribution
Policy -- Cash Available for Distribution.'
 
     Based  on the  Partnership's actual  results of  operations for  the eleven
months ended November  30, 1996 and  limited data about  operations in  December
1996,  the Partnership believes that it will generate during 1996 Available Cash
from Operating Surplus of approximately $18.7 million, although there can be  no
assurance it will generate such amount.
 
     The amounts of pro forma Available Cash from Operating Surplus for 1994 and
1995  and for  the twelve months  and nine  months ended September  30, 1996 set
forth above were derived in part from the pro forma financial statements of  the
Partnership  in the manner set forth in  the table entitled 'Pro Forma Operating
Surplus'  set  forth  in  'Cash  Distribution  Policy  --  Cash  Available   for
Distribution.'
 
                                       18
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
The  pro forma  adjustments are based  upon currently  available information and
certain estimates and  assumptions. The  pro forma financial  statements do  not
purport  to  present  the  results  of operations  of  the  Partnership  had the
Partnership actually commenced operations as of the date indicated. Furthermore,
the pro  forma financial  statements are  based on  accrual accounting  concepts
while  Available  Cash  and Operating  Surplus  are defined  in  the Partnership
Agreement on a cash accounting basis. As a consequence, the amounts of pro forma
Available Cash from  Operating Surplus shown  above should only  be viewed as  a
general  indication of the amounts of Available Cash from Operating Surplus that
may in fact have been generated by the Partnership had it been formed in earlier
periods. Available Cash  is defined in  the Glossary and  generally means,  with
respect to any fiscal quarter of the Partnership, all cash on hand at the end of
such  quarter less the amount of cash  reserves that is necessary or appropriate
in the discretion of the Managing General Partner to (i) provide for the  proper
conduct  of the Partnership's  business, (ii) comply with  applicable law or any
Partnership debt  instrument or  other  agreement, or  (iii) provide  funds  for
distributions  to Unitholders and the General Partners  in respect of any one or
more of the next four quarters. Operating Surplus is defined in the Glossary and
refers generally to  (i) the cash  balance of  the Partnership on  the date  the
Partnership  commenced operations, plus $15.4 million, plus all cash receipts of
the Partnership  from  its  operations,  less  (ii)  all  Partnership  operating
expenses,  debt service payments (including  reserves therefor but not including
payments required in connection with the sale of assets or any refinancing  with
the  proceeds of new  indebtedness or any  equity offering), maintenance capital
expenditures and reserves established for  future Partnership operations. For  a
more  complete  definition  of Available  Cash  and Operating  Surplus,  see the
Glossary.
 
     In addition, certain provisions  in the First Mortgage  Notes and the  Bank
Credit Facility, under certain circumstances, restrict the Partnership's ability
to make distributions to its partners. See 'Management's Discussion and Analysis
of   Financial   Condition  and   Results  of   Operations  --   Description  of
Indebtedness.'
 
     Approximately $5.5 million  of the Partnership's  annual cash receipts  are
derived  from interest payments from Triarc under the Partnership Loan. On a pro
forma basis,  such  amount represents  approximately  31% of  the  Partnership's
Available  Cash from Operating Surplus  in 1995. Consequently, the Partnership's
ability to  make the  Minimum  Quarterly Distribution  to all  Unitholders  will
depend  in  part  on  Triarc's  ability  to  make  interest  payments  under the
Partnership Loan.  For  a  description  of  the  Partnership  Loan  and  certain
information regarding Triarc, see 'Cash Distribution Policy -- Partnership Loan'
and 'Certain Information Regarding Triarc,' respectively.
 
PARTNERSHIP STRUCTURE AND MANAGEMENT
 
     The   Partnership's   activities  are   conducted  through   the  Operating
Partnership and its corporate and partnership subsidiaries. The Managing General
Partner serves as the managing general  partner, and National Propane SGP,  Inc.
(the  'Special  General Partner'),  a wholly  owned  subsidiary of  the Managing
General Partner, serves as the non-managing general partner, of the  Partnership
and  the Operating  Partnership. The  Managing General  Partner and  the Special
General Partner are together referred to herein as the 'General Partners.'  Each
of the General Partners owns a 1.0% and 1.0101% general partner interest in each
of  the Partnership and the Operating Partnership, respectively. The Partnership
owns a 97.9798% limited partner interest  in the Operating Partnership. Each  of
the  Managing General Partner and the Special  General Partner owns a 2% General
Partner Interest in the Partnership and the Operating Partnership on a  combined
basis.  Provided that the Managing General Partner  has not merged with and into
Triarc, the Special General Partner may convert all or a portion of its  General
Partner  Interest  into a  number  of Units  having  rights to  distributions of
Available Cash  from Operating  Surplus equal  to the  distribution rights  with
respect to Available Cash from Operating Surplus of the General Partner Interest
so  converted.  References  herein  to  the  General  Partner  Interests  or  to
distributions to the General Partners of 4% of Available Cash are references  to
the amount of the General Partners' aggregate unsubordinated percentage interest
in the Partnership and the Operating Partnership on a combined basis.
 
                                       19
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
     In  general, the management  and employees of  National Propane who managed
and operated the propane business and assets prior to the IPO that are now owned
by the Partnership continue to manage and operate the Partnership's business  as
officers  and employees of the Managing  General Partner and its Affiliates. The
Partnership does not  have any officers  or employees of  its own. The  Managing
General  Partner does  not receive any  management fee or  other compensation in
connection with its  management of  the Partnership,  but is  reimbursed by  the
Partnership  at cost for all direct and  indirect expenses incurred on behalf of
the Partnership, including the costs of compensation and employee benefit  plans
described  herein properly allocable to the  Partnership, and all other expenses
necessary or appropriate to  the conduct of the  business of, and allocable  to,
the  Partnership. The Partnership  Agreement provides that  the Managing General
Partner will determine the expenses that are allocable to the Partnership in any
reasonable manner  determined  by  the  Managing General  Partner  in  its  sole
discretion.  Affiliates of the General  Partners' (including Triarc) may provide
administrative services for the  General Partners on  behalf of the  Partnership
and  will be  reimbursed for all  expenses incurred in  connection therewith. In
addition, the  General  Partners and  their  Affiliates (including  Triarc)  may
provide  additional services to the Partnership,  for which the Partnership will
be charged reasonable fees as determined by the Managing General Partner.
 
UNIT OPTION PLAN
 
     Effective upon the closing of the IPO, the Managing General Partner adopted
the National  Propane Corporation  1996 Unit  Option Plan  (the 'Option  Plan'),
which  permits the issuance of options to purchase Common Units and Subordinated
Units and  the grant  of Unit  appreciation rights  ('UARs') covering  up to  an
aggregate   of  1,250,000  Common  Units  and  Subordinated  Units  (subject  to
adjustment in certain circumstances) plus an additional number of Units equal to
1% of the  number of  Units outstanding  as of  each December  31 following  the
Option  Plan's effective date which  will be added to  the total number of Units
that may be issued thereafter. The  number of Units available for issuance  will
also  be  increased by  the number  of  Units received  by the  Managing General
Partner as payment of the exercise price  of options and by the number of  Units
purchased  by the  Managing General  Partner from  an amount  equal to  the cash
proceeds received by the Managing General Partner on the exercise of options. As
of December 31, 1996, no options or UARs had been granted under the Option Plan.
See 'Management -- Unit Option Plan.'
 
                                       20
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
     The  following  chart  depicts  the  organization  and  ownership  of   the
Partnership, the Operating Partnership and the Operating Partnership's corporate
subsidiary.  The  percentages reflected  in  the following  chart  represent the
approximate ownership  interest in  each of  the Partnership  and the  Operating
Partnership,  individually,  and  not  on  an  aggregate  basis.  Except  in the
following chart,  the  ownership  percentages referred  to  in  this  Prospectus
(including  those given below in the box entitled 'Effective Aggregate Ownership
of the  Partnership  and  the  Operating  Partnership')  reflect  the  aggregate
ownership of the Partnership and the Operating Partnership on a combined basis.

[GRAPHICAL   REPRESENTATION of  the  ownership  structure  of  the  Partnership,
the Operating Partnership, the General Partners and relevant Affiliates.  Triarc
owns  the  General  Partner  75.7% directly  and  24.3% through its wholly-owned
subsidiary SEPSCO. Each of the General Partner  and the Special General Partner,
its wholly-owned subsidiary,  own  a  1.0% and  1.0101%  unsubordinated  general
partner   interest   in    the  Partnership  and   the   Operating  Partnership,
respectively. The General Partner owns 4,533,638 Subordinated Units representing
a 41.4% general partner  interest  in the Partnership and the Public Unitholders
own 6,190,476 Common Units  representing a 56.6% limited partner interest in the
Partnership. The Partnership  owns  a  97.9798%  limited partner interest in the
Operating Partnership. National Sales  is  a  wholly-owned   subsidiary  of  the
Operating Partnership.]
 
                                       21



<PAGE>

<PAGE>
SUMMARY  HISTORICAL  AND PRO  FORMA  CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL  AND  OPERATING DATA
     In connection with the Conveyance, the Partnership became the successor  to
the  businesses of  National Propane. Because  the Conveyance was  a transfer of
assets and liabilities in exchange for partnership interests among a  controlled
group  of companies, it has been accounted for  in a manner similar to a pooling
of interests, resulting in the presentation of the Partnership as the  successor
to  the continuing businesses of National Propane.  For purposes only of (i) the
following table and the footnotes thereto, (ii) the 'Selected Historical and Pro
Forma Consolidated  Financial and  Operating Data'  and the  footnotes  thereto,
(iii)  'Management's Discussion and Analysis  of Financial Condition and Results
of Operations'  and (iv)  the condensed  consolidated financial  statements  and
notes  thereto, the entity representative of both the operations of (1) National
Propane prior to  the Conveyance and  the Transactions and  (2) the  Partnership
subsequent to the Conveyance and the Transactions, is referred to as 'National.'
     The  following  table  sets forth  for  the  periods and  as  of  the dates
indicated summary  historical  consolidated  financial and  operating  data  for
National  and consolidated pro  forma financial and  operating data for National
after giving effect to the Transactions  and the Private Placement. The  summary
historical  consolidated financial data of  National presented below are derived
from the financial statements of National and should be read in conjunction with
'Selected Historical and Pro Forma  Consolidated Financial and Operating  Data,'
'Management's  Discussion  and Analysis  of Financial  Condition and  Results of
Operations' and  the  consolidated  financial statements  of  National  included
elsewhere  herein. National's summary consolidated  pro forma financial data are
derived from the unaudited pro forma condensed consolidated financial statements
of  National  included  elsewhere  herein  and  should  be  read in  conjunction
therewith. The data for all of the periods presented below have been restated to
reflect the effects of the June 1995 merger (the 'Merger') of Public Gas Company
('Public  Gas') with and into  National as if the Merger  had occurred on May 4,
1991. This  transaction is  described  further in  Note  3 to  the  accompanying
consolidated financial statements.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                      HISTORICAL                            PRO FORMA (B)
                            --------------------------------------------------------------  -------------
                              FISCAL YEAR ENDED      TEN MONTHS
                                  APRIL 30,             ENDED              YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                            ----------------------   DECEMBER 31,   -------------------------------------
                              1992          1993       1993 (A)       1994                 1995
                            --------      --------   ------------   --------      -----------------------
                                                (IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER UNIT DATA)
<S>                         <C>           <C>        <C>            <C>           <C>       <C>
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
  DATA:
    Operating revenues..... $144,667      $151,931     $119,249     $151,651      $148,983    $ 148,983
    Gross profit...........   35,338        34,565       26,948       41,968        39,924       39,924
    Selling, general and
      administrative
      expenses (other than
      management fees
      charged by
      parents).............   16,776        19,578       16,501       18,657        22,423       23,923
    Management fees charged
      by parents(c)........    3,271         2,328        3,485        4,561         3,000      --
    Facilities relocation
      and corporate
      restructuring........    --            7,647(d)     8,429(d)     --            --         --
    Operating profit

      (loss)...............   15,291         5,012(d)    (1,467)(d)   18,750       14,501       16,001
    Interest expense.......  (17,696)      (16,770)      (9,949)      (9,726)      (11,719)     (11,550)
    Interest income from
      Triarc(e)............   16,334        17,127       10,360        9,751         --           5,500
    Provision for (benefit
      from) income taxes...    5,833         2,624        1,018        7,923         4,291          200
    Income (loss) before
      extraordinary charge
      and cumulative effect
      of change in
      accounting
      principles...........    9,795         2,876         (347)      12,021          (605)      10,655
    Extraordinary charge...    --            --          --           (2,116)(f)     --         --
    Cumulative effect of
      change in accounting
      principles...........    --            6,259(g)     --           --            --         --
    Net income (loss)......    9,795         9,135         (347)       9,905          (605)      10,655
    Income before
      extraordinary charge
      per Unit(h)..........                                                                        0.91
BALANCE SHEET DATA (AT
  PERIOD END):
    Working capital
      (deficit)............ $(24,469)(i)  $ 13,163     $  5,479     $   (631)     $ (4,357)
    Due from Triarc(e).....   92,804        65,999       71,172        --            --
    Total assets...........  234,699       218,095      191,955      137,581       139,112
    Long-term debt.........   78,556        67,511       51,851       98,711       124,266
    Stockholders' equity
      (deficit)(e).........   81,666        88,063       88,971      (19,502)      (48,600)
    Partners' capital......    --            --          --            --            --
OPERATING DATA:
    EBITDA(j).............. $ 23,670      $ 13,087     $  5,483     $ 28,774      $ 25,146    $  26,646
    Capital
      expenditures(k)......    7,039         8,290       11,260       12,593        11,013       11,013
    Retail propane gallons
      sold(l)..............  145,708       154,839      117,415      152,335       150,141      150,141
    Operating Surplus
      generated during the
      period(m)............                                                                      17,578
    Reserves(n)............
    Available Cash(m)......
 
<CAPTION>
                                                PRO FORMA (B)
                                                -------------
 
                                       NINE MONTHS
                                   ENDED SEPTEMBER 30,
                            ---------------------------------
                              1995             1996
                            -------- ------------------------
 
<S>                         <C>      <C>        <C>
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
  DATA:
    Operating revenues..... $102,461 $116,018     $ 116,018
    Gross profit...........   24,920   26,921        26,921
    Selling, general and
      administrative
      expenses (other than
      management fees
      charged by
      parents).............  15,506    17,009        17,759
    Management fees charged
      by parents(c)........   2,250     1,500       --
    Facilities relocation
      and corporate
      restructuring........   --        --          --
    Operating profit
      (loss)...............   7,164     8,412         9,162
    Interest expense.......  (8,731)   (9,067)       (8,494)
    Interest income from
      Triarc(e)............   --        1,370         4,120
    Provision for (benefit
      from) income taxes...    (264)    1,922           150
    Income (loss) before
      extraordinary charge
      and cumulative effect
      of change in
      accounting
      principles...........    (605)     (545)        5,300
    Extraordinary charge...   --       (2,631  (f)
    Cumulative effect of
      change in accounting
      principles...........   --        --
    Net income (loss)......    (605)   (3,176)
    Income before
      extraordinary charge
      per Unit(h)..........                            0.45
BALANCE SHEET DATA (AT
  PERIOD END):
    Working capital
      (deficit)............          $ 11,883     $  19,250
    Due from Triarc(e).....            40,700        40,700
    Total assets...........           175,675       183,042
    Long-term debt.........           126,968       126,968
    Stockholders' equity
      (deficit)(e).........             --          --
    Partners' capital......            26,542        33,909
OPERATING DATA:
    EBITDA(j).............. $13,852  $ 16,711     $  17,461
    Capital
      expenditures(k)......   6,933     5,553         5,553
    Retail propane gallons
      sold(l).............. 101,809   110,616       110,616
    Operating Surplus
      generated during the
      period(m)............                          11,631
    Reserves(n)............                           7,445
    Available Cash(m)......                           4,186
</TABLE>
 
                                                        (footnotes on next page)
 
                                       22
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
(footnotes from previous page)
 
 (a) In  October  1993 National's  fiscal year  ended April  30 and  Public Gas'
     fiscal year  ended  February 28  were  changed  to a  calendar  year  ended
     December  31. In  order to  conform the  reporting periods  of the combined
     entities and to select a period deemed to meet the Securities and  Exchange
     Commission  requirement for filing financial statements for a period of one
     year, the ten-month period ended December 31, 1993 ('Transition 1993')  has
     been  presented  above  and  in  the  accompanying  consolidated  financial
     statements. The selected  consolidated financial and  operating data as  of
     and  for the fiscal  years ended April  30, 1992 and  1993 ('Fiscal 1993'),
     however, reflect  the former  year-ends of  both National  and Public  Gas.
     Accordingly,  Fiscal 1993 and  Transition 1993 each  include the results of
     National for  the  two-month  period  ended  April  30,  1993  as  follows:
     Operating   revenues   --  $28,266;   Operating   loss  --   $(5,190);  Net
     loss -- $(3,375) (see Note (d) below).
 
 (b) For a description of the adjustments and assumptions used in preparing  the
     Unaudited  Pro Forma  Condensed Consolidated Financial  and Operating Data,
     see Notes to the Unaudited  Pro Forma Condensed Consolidated Balance  Sheet
     and Statement of Operations included elsewhere herein.
 
 (c) Management  fees charged  by parents include  costs charged  to National by
     Triarc and to Public Gas  by SEPSCO, its parent  prior to the Merger.  (See
     Note 19 to the accompanying consolidated financial statements).
 
 (d) Includes   certain  significant  pretax  charges  recorded  in  April  1993
     affecting Fiscal 1993  and Transition 1993  operating profit consisting  of
     (i)  $8.4  million  of facilities  relocation  and  corporate restructuring
     charges ($7.6 million  of which  affected both Fiscal  1993 and  Transition
     1993  due to National's April 1993 being  included in both periods and $0.8
     million of which affected  only Transition 1993) and  (ii) $0.5 million  of
     allocated  costs of a payment to the Special Committee of Triarc's Board of
     Directors ($0.4 million of which  affected both Fiscal 1993 and  Transition
     1993). (See Note 20 to the accompanying consolidated financial statements).
 
 (e) In  November 1994,  National reclassified its  receivable from  Triarc as a
     reduction of stockholders' equity and began reserving all interest  accrued
     subsequent  thereto. Receivables from SEPSCO  are classified as a component
     of stockholders' equity for all of the  above periods. (See Note 13 to  the
     accompanying  consolidated financial  statements).
 
 (f) The  extraordinary charges primarily represent the write-off of unamortized
     deferred financing costs and original issue discount (in the 1994  period),
     net of income taxes, associated with the early extinguishment of debt.
 
 (g) The  cumulative  effect of  change in  accounting principles  resulted from
     National's adoption of Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No.  109
     ('SFAS No. 109'), 'Accounting for Income Taxes' effective May 1, 1992.
 
 (h) See  Note  (f)  of  Notes to  Unaudited  Pro  Forma  Condensed Consolidated
     Statement of Operations included elsewhere  herein for details relating  to
     the calculation of net income per Unit.
 
 (i) Reflects  the classification of $35.0 million  of long-term debt, which was
     repaid in Fiscal 1993, as a current liability.
 
 (j) EBITDA  is  defined  as  operating  profit  (loss)  plus  depreciation  and
     amortization  (excluding amortization of  deferred financing costs). EBITDA
     should not be considered as an  alternative to net income (as an  indicator
     of  operating performance) or as an alternative  to cash flow (as a measure
     of liquidity or ability to service  debt obligations) and is not a  measure
     of  performance or financial condition  under generally accepted accounting
     principles, but provides additional  information for evaluating  National's
     ability  to distribute  the Minimum  Quarterly Distribution.  Cash flows in
     accordance with generally  accepted accounting principles  consist of  cash
     flows  from (i) operating,  (ii) investing and  (iii) financing activities.
     Cash flows from operating activities  reflect net income (loss)  (including
     charges  for interest and  income taxes not  reflected in EBITDA), adjusted
     for (i) all  non-cash charges  or income  (including, but  not limited  to,
     depreciation  and amortization)  and (ii)  changes in  operating assets and
     liabilities (not reflected in EBITDA).  Further, cash flows from  investing
     and  financing activities are  not included in EBITDA.  For a discussion of
     National's operating  performance  and cash  flows  provided by  (used  in)
     operating, investing and financing activities, see 'Management's Discussion
     and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations.'
 
                                              (footnotes continued on next page)
 
                                       23
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
(footnotes continued from previous page)
 
 (k) National's  capital expenditures, including  capital leases, fall generally
     into three categories: (i) maintenance capital expenditures, which  include
     expenditures  for replacement of property, plant and equipment, (ii) growth
     capital expenditures for  the expansion  of existing  operations and  (iii)
     acquisition capital expenditures, which include expenditures related to the
     acquisition of retail propane operations.
 
    An  analysis by category for the years  ended December 31, 1994 and 1995 and
    the nine months ended September 30, 1995 and 1996 is as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                               NINE MONTHS
                                                                        YEAR ENDED           ENDED SEPTEMBER
                                                                       DECEMBER 31,                30,
                                                                    -------------------     -----------------
                                                                     1994        1995        1995       1996
                                                                    -------     -------     ------     ------
                                                                                 (IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                                                 <C>         <C>         <C>        <C>
Maintenance(1)...................................................   $ 4,228     $ 4,030     $3,670     $2,275
Growth...........................................................     3,672       4,936      3,104      2,722
Acquisition......................................................     4,693       2,047(2)     159        556
                                                                    -------     -------     ------     ------
          Total..................................................   $12,593     $11,013     $6,933     $5,553
                                                                    -------     -------     ------     ------
                                                                    -------     -------     ------     ------
</TABLE>
 
        --------------------
        (1) Includes expenditures not expected  to occur on  an annual basis  as
            follows:  1994 --  $1,790 (primarily  computer hardware  and systems
            installation); 1995 -- $590 (primarily the purchase of an airplane).
        (2) Includes $1,864 of assets purchased  and contributed by Triarc  (see
            Note 19 to the accompanying consolidated financial statements).
 (l) Retail  propane gallons sold  includes sales to  (i) residential customers,
     (ii) commercial and industrial customers, (iii) agricultural customers, and
     (iv) dealers (located primarily  in the Northeast)  that resell propane  to
     residential and commercial customers.
 
(m) For  a more  complete discussion of  pro forma Available  Cash and Operating
    Surplus, see 'Cash Distribution Policy -- Cash Available for Distribution.'
 
 (n) National will  utilize reserves  from  time to  time to  facilitate  future
     funding of, among other things, maintenance capital expenditures, operating
     expenditures, interest payments and distributions to partners. For example,
     during  the  first and  fourth fiscal  quarters,  National may  reserve for
     operating and  capital expenditures  to be  made in  the second  and  third
     fiscal  quarters. These reserves for operating and capital expenditures may
     be at  their highest  at the  end  of the  first quarter,  assuming  normal
     weather   and  operating   conditions,  as  well   as  National's  existing
     operations. By  the  end  of  the  fourth  quarter,  these  reserves  would
     typically  be reduced. In addition, National  generally must reserve at the
     end of the first and third  fiscal quarters 50% of the semiannual  interest
     on  the First Mortgage Notes due at the end of the second and fourth fiscal
     quarters. The approximate amount required  to be reserved for this  purpose
     in  such quarters is $2.7 million. National may, however, choose to reserve
     a full interest  payment or $5.4  million, at its  discretion. National  is
     also  required to  make reserves  for the  future payment  of principal and
     interest on  the Bank  Credit Facility.  See 'Management's  Discussion  and
     Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations -- Description of
     Indebtedness.'  Furthermore, the Partnership  Agreement allows the Managing
     General Partner, in its discretion, to  reserve for up to four quarters  of
     future  distributions of the Minimum Quarterly Distribution to Unitholders.
     Except as required by the terms of the National's indebtedness, the  extent
     and  timing  of these  reserves,  if any,  are  determinable solely  by the
     Managing General Partner and will largely  depend on the actual results  of
     operations  of the Partnership and other  factors beyond the control of the
     Managing General Partner. As a result, the amount of such reserves may vary
     substantially from those described above and  no assurance can be given  as
     to  the actual level of  reserves that will be  established with respect to
     any quarter.
 
                                       24



<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                                  THE OFFERING
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                         <C>
Securities Offered........................  Up  to  400,000  Common  Units  are  being  offered  by  the  Selling
                                              Unitholder. The Partnership  will not receive  any of the  proceeds
                                              from  the sale of the Common Units offered hereby. See 'The Selling
                                              Unitholder.'
Units to be Outstanding After
  the Offering............................  6,701,550 Common Units representing a 57.3% limited partner  interest
                                              in  the Partnership and 4,533,638 Subordinated Units representing a
                                              38.7% subordinated general partner interest in the Partnership. All
                                              4,533,638 Subordinated Units held  by the Managing General  Partner
                                              and  its  Affiliates  are  general  partner  interests  (unless the
                                              Managing General Partner or its Affiliates elect otherwise) and all
                                              Common Units sold in  the IPO or offered  for sale in the  Offering
                                              are   limited  partner  interests.   The  Subordinated  Units  will
                                              automatically convert  into limited  partner interests  upon  being
                                              converted  into  Common Units,  and may  be converted  into limited
                                              partner interests earlier upon the election of the Managing General
                                              Partner and its Affiliates or upon a transfer to a non-Affiliate.
Distributions of Available Cash...........  The Partnership  will distribute  all of  its Available  Cash  within
                                              approximately  45  days  after  the  end  of  each  quarter  to the
                                              Unitholders (including the Managing General Partner as a holder  of
                                              Subordinated  Units) of record on the applicable record date and to
                                              the General Partners. 'Available Cash' for any quarter will consist
                                              generally of  all cash  on hand  at  the end  of such  quarter,  as
                                              adjusted for reserves. The complete definition of Available Cash is
                                              set  forth in the Glossary. The  Managing General Partner has broad
                                              discretion in making cash disbursements and establishing  reserves,
                                              thereby  affecting  the  amount  of  Available  Cash  that  will be
                                              distributed with respect to any quarter. In addition, the terms  of
                                              the  agreements  governing the  Partnership's  indebtedness require
                                              that certain reserves  be maintained for  the payment of  principal
                                              and  interest. See 'Risk Factors -- Risks Inherent in an Investment
                                              in the Partnership' for a description of the reserves on payment of
                                              principal and interest  that the  Partnership will  be required  to
                                              maintain.  Available  Cash  will generally  be  distributed  96% to
                                              Unitholders and 4% to the  General Partners, pro rata, except  that
                                              if  distributions of Available Cash from Operating Surplus within a
                                              quarter exceed specified  target levels  in excess  of the  Minimum
                                              Quarterly  Distribution  the General  Partners  (as holders  of the
                                              General Partner  Interests  and  the  right  to  receive  Incentive
                                              Distributions),   will   receive  a   percentage  of   such  excess
                                              distributions that  will  increase  to  up to  50%  of  the  excess
                                              distributions above the highest Target Distribution Level. On a pro
                                              forma  basis, quarterly  distributions of Available  Cash would not
                                              have exceeded such target levels and the Partnership would not have
                                              distributed any such  excess payments  to the  General Partners  in
                                              fiscal  1994 and 1995.  See 'Cash Distribution  Policy -- Incentive
                                              Distributions -- Hypothetical Annualized Yield.'
Distributions to Common and
  Subordinated Unitholders................  The Partnership intends, to the extent there is sufficient  Available
                                              Cash from Operating Surplus, to distribute to each holder of Common
                                              Units  at least  the Minimum  Quarterly Distribution  of $0.525 per
                                              Common Unit per quarter. The Minimum Quarterly Distribution is  not
                                              guaranteed  and is subject  to adjustment as  described under 'Cash
                                              Distribution Policy -- Adjustment of Minimum Quarterly Distribution
</TABLE>
 
                                       25
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                         <C>
                                              and  Target  Distribution  Levels.'  The  Partnership  declared   a
                                              distribution  on  October 21,  1996, in  the  amount of  $0.525 per
                                              Common Unit,  which  was  paid  on  November  14,  1996  to  Common
                                              Unitholders  of record at the close of business on November 1, 1996
                                              and paid  a distribution  of $0.525  per Subordinated  Unit to  the
                                              Managing   General  Partner  (approximately  $2.4  million  in  the
                                              aggregate) and a corresponding distribution to the General Partners
                                              in the aggregate amount of approximately $235,800.
                                            With respect to each quarter  during the Subordination Period,  which
                                              will  generally  not  end  prior  to  June  30,  2001,  the  Common
                                              Unitholders will generally  have the right  to receive the  Minimum
                                              Quarterly  Distribution,  plus Common  Unit Arrearages,  before any
                                              distribution of Available  Cash from Operating  Surplus is made  to
                                              the  Subordinated  Unitholders.  This  subordination  feature  will
                                              enhance  the  Partnership's  ability  to  distribute  the   Minimum
                                              Quarterly Distribution on the Common Units during the Subordination
                                              Period. Subordinated Units will not accrue distribution arrearages.
                                              Upon  expiration of the Subordination  Period, Common Units will no
                                              longer  accrue  distribution  arrearages.  See  'Cash  Distribution
                                              Policy.'
Subordination Period......................  The Subordination Period will generally extend until the first day of
                                              any  quarter beginning after June 30,  2001 in respect of which (i)
                                              distributions of  Available  Cash  from Operating  Surplus  on  the
                                              Common Units and the Subordinated Units with respect to each of the
                                              three  consecutive four-quarter periods  immediately preceding such
                                              date  equaled  or  exceeded  the  sum  of  the  Minimum   Quarterly
                                              Distribution   on  all   of  the   outstanding  Common   Units  and
                                              Subordinated Units during such periods, (ii) the Adjusted Operating
                                              Surplus (as defined in the  Glossary) generated during each of  the
                                              three  consecutive four-quarter periods  immediately preceding such
                                              date  equaled  or  exceeded  the  sum  of  the  Minimum   Quarterly
                                              Distribution   on  all   of  the   outstanding  Common   Units  and
                                              Subordinated Units  and the  related  distribution on  the  General
                                              Partner  Interests  during such  periods,  and (iii)  there  are no
                                              outstanding  Common  Unit  Arrearages.   Upon  expiration  of   the
                                              Subordination Period, all remaining Subordinated Units will convert
                                              into  Common  Units  on  a one-for-one  basis  and  will thereafter
                                              participate pro rata with the  other Common Units in  distributions
                                              of  Available Cash. The Partnership Agreement also provides that if
                                              the Managing General Partner  is removed other  than for Cause  (as
                                              defined in the Glossary), the Subordination Period will end and all
                                              outstanding  Subordinated Units will convert into Common Units. See
                                              'Cash Distribution Policy' and 'The Partnership Agreement.'
Early Conversion of Subordinated Units....  A portion of the Subordinated Units will convert into Common Units on
                                              the  first  day   after  the  record   date  established  for   the
                                              distribution  in respect of any quarter ending on or after (a) June
                                              30, 1999  (with respect  to 1,133,410  of the  Subordinated  Units,
                                              subject  to  adjustment) and  (b) June  30,  2000 (with  respect to
                                              1,133,410 Subordinated Units, subject to adjustment), in respect of
                                              which (i) distributions of Available Cash from Operating Surplus on
                                              the Common Units and the Subordinated Units with respect to each of
                                              the three  consecutive four-quarter  periods immediately  preceding
                                              such  date equaled  or exceeded  the sum  of the  Minimum Quarterly
                                              Distribution  on   all  of   the  outstanding   Common  Units   and
                                              Subordinated Units during such periods, (ii) the Adjusted Operating
</TABLE>
 
                                       26
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                         <C>
                                              Surplus  generated during each of  the two consecutive four-quarter
                                              periods immediately preceding such date equaled or exceeded the sum
                                              of the Minimum  Quarterly Distribution  on all  of the  outstanding
                                              Common Units and Subordinated Units and the related distribution on
                                              the  General Partner Interest during  such periods, and (iii) there
                                              are no outstanding Common Unit Arrearages; provided, however,  that
                                              the  early conversion of  the second tranche  of Subordinated Units
                                              may  not  occur  until  at  least  one  year  following  the  early
                                              conversion  of the first  tranche of Subordinated  Units. See 'Cash
                                              Distribution  Policy  --  Quarterly  Distributions  from  Operating
                                              Surplus during Subordination Period.'
 
Incentive Distributions...................  If  quarterly  distributions  of  Available  Cash  exceed  the Target
                                              Distribution Levels,  the  General  Partners  (as  holders  of  the
                                              General  Partner  Interests  and  the  right  to  receive Incentive
                                              Distributions and  not  as  holders  of  Subordinated  Units)  will
                                              receive additional distributions of Available Cash that exceed such
                                              Target Distribution Levels as follows:
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         MARGINAL
                                                        PERCENTAGE
                                                       INTEREST IN
                                        QUARTERLY     DISTRIBUTIONS
                                       DISTRIBUTION  ----------------
                                          TARGET      UNIT-   GENERAL
                                          AMOUNT     HOLDERS  PARTNERS
                                       ------------  -------  -------
 
<S>                                    <C>           <C>      <C>
Minimum Quarterly Distribution........       $0.525      96%       4%
First Target Distribution.............       $0.577      96%       4%
Second Target Distribution............       $0.665      85%      15%
Third Target Distribution.............       $0.863      75%      25%
Thereafter............................ above $0.863      50%      50%
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                         <C>
                                            The  Target Distribution Levels are based on the amounts of Available
                                              Cash from Operating Surplus  distributed that exceed  distributions
                                              made  with respect to the Minimum Quarterly Distribution and Common
                                              Unit Arrearages, if any. See 'Cash Distribution Policy -- Incentive
                                              Distributions -- Hypothetical Annualized Yield.' The  distributions
                                              to  the General Partners described above  that are in excess of the
                                              4% General Partner Interests (and  not as a holder of  Subordinated
                                              Units)  are  referred to  herein  as the  'Incentive Distributions'
                                              which are payable  to the  Managing General  Partner. The  Managing
                                              General  Partner  may  transfer  its  right  to  receive  Incentive
                                              Distributions to one or more Persons (as defined in the  Glossary).
                                              On  a pro  forma basis,  quarterly distributions  of Available Cash
                                              would not  have exceeded  such target  levels and  the  Partnership
                                              would not have distributed any such excess payments to the Managing
                                              General Partner in 1994 and 1995.
Adjustment of Minimum Quarterly
  Distribution and Target Distribution
  Levels..................................  The Minimum Quarterly Distribution and the Target Distribution Levels
                                              are   subject  to  downward  adjustments  in  the  event  that  the
                                              Unitholders receive distributions  of Available  Cash from  Capital
                                              Surplus  (as defined in the Glossary)  or legislation is enacted or
                                              existing  law   is  modified   or  interpreted   by  the   relevant
                                              governmental  authority in a manner  that causes the Partnership to
                                              be treated as an association taxable as a corporation or  otherwise
                                              taxable  as  an  entity  for federal,  state  or  local  income tax
                                              purposes. If, as a result  of distributions of Available Cash  from
                                              Capital  Surplus,  the Unitholders  receive  a full  return  of the
                                              initial
</TABLE>
 
                                       27
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                         <C>
                                              public offering price  of the  Common Units and  any unpaid  Common
                                              Unit  Arrearages,  the additional  distributions of  Available Cash
                                              payable to the General Partners will increase to 50% of all amounts
                                              distributed thereafter. See 'Cash  Distribution Policy --  General'
                                              and ' -- Distributions from Capital Surplus.'
Partnership's Ability to Issue Additional
  Units...................................  The  Partnership  Agreement generally  authorizes the  Partnership to
                                              issue an unlimited number  of additional limited partner  interests
                                              and   other  equity   securities  of   the  Partnership   for  such
                                              consideration  and  on  such  terms  and  conditions  as  shall  be
                                              established  by the Managing General Partner in its sole discretion
                                              without the approval of  the Unitholders. During the  Subordination
                                              Period,  however, the  Partnership may not  issue equity securities
                                              ranking prior or senior to the Common Units or an aggregate of more
                                              than 3,095,238  Common Units  (including the  400,000 Common  Units
                                              issued  to  the  Selling  Unitholder  and  offered  hereby)  or  an
                                              equivalent number of securities ranking  on parity with the  Common
                                              Units  (excluding the 111,074 Common  Units issued upon exercise of
                                              the  IPO  Over-Allotment  Option,  and  Common  Units  issued  upon
                                              conversion  of Subordinated  Units, upon conversion  of the Special
                                              General Partner's combined unsubordinated general partner  interest
                                              or in connection with certain acquisitions or capital additions and
                                              improvements, the repayment of certain indebtedness, or pursuant to
                                              employee  benefit plans), in either case  without the approval of a
                                              Unit Majority (as  defined in the  Glossary). See 'The  Partnership
                                              Agreement -- Issuance of Additional Securities.'
Limited Call Right........................  If  at any time  less than 20%  of the issued  and outstanding Common
                                              Units are held by persons other than the General Partners and their
                                              Affiliates, the General Partners (or an Affiliate designated by the
                                              General Partners) may purchase all of the remaining Common Units at
                                              a price generally  equal to the  then current market  price of  the
                                              Common  Units.  See  'The  Partnership  Agreement  --  Limited Call
                                              Right.'
Limited Voting Rights.....................  Unitholders have only limited voting rights on matters affecting  the
                                              Partnership's  business as specified  in the Partnership Agreement.
                                              The approval of at least a majority (and in certain cases a greater
                                              percentage) of  the  outstanding Units  will  be required  in  such
                                              instances.  The Managing  General Partner manages  and operates the
                                              Partnership. See 'The Partnership Agreement.'
Removal and Withdrawal of the General
  Partners................................  Subject to certain  conditions, the Managing  General Partner may  be
                                              removed upon the approval of the holders of at least 66 2/3% of the
                                              outstanding Units (including Units held by the General Partners and
                                              their Affiliates). A meeting of the holders of the Common Units may
                                              be called only by the Managing General Partner or by the holders of
                                              20%  or more of the outstanding  Common Units. The Managing General
                                              Partner's current ownership interest  in the Partnership  precludes
                                              any  vote to  remove the  Managing General  Partner or  the Special
                                              General Partner  without the  Managing General  Partner's  consent.
                                              Generally, the Special General Partner shall be removed or withdraw
                                              as general partner of the Partnership and the Operating Partnership
                                              upon  the removal  or withdrawal  of the  Managing General Partner.
                                              However, upon certain bankruptcy  related withdrawal events of  the
                                              Managing General Partner, the
</TABLE>
 
                                       28
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                         <C>
                                              Special  General  Partner will  not  withdraw but  will  become the
                                              managing general partner of  the Partnership. The Managing  General
                                              Partner  has agreed not to voluntarily withdraw as managing general
                                              partner of the Partnership and  the Operating Partnership prior  to
                                              June 30, 2006, subject to limited exceptions, without obtaining the
                                              approval  of  a  Unit Majority  (as  defined in  the  Glossary) and
                                              furnishing an Opinion of Counsel (as defined in the Glossary).  See
                                              'The  Partnership Agreement -- Withdrawal or Removal of the General
                                              Partners' and ' -- Meetings; Voting.'
Change of Management Provisions...........  Any person  or  group  (other  than the  General  Partners  or  their
                                              Affiliates)  that acquires beneficial  ownership of 20%  or more of
                                              the outstanding Units of any class will lose its voting rights with
                                              respect to all of its Units.  In addition, if the Managing  General
                                              Partner   is  removed  as  the  managing  general  partner  of  the
                                              Partnership other than for Cause and the Units held by the  General
                                              Partners  and  their  Affiliates are  not  voted in  favor  of such
                                              removal,  the  Subordination  Period  will  end,  all  Common  Unit
                                              Arrearages  will terminate, all outstanding Subordinated Units will
                                              immediately convert into  Common Units on  a one-for-one basis  and
                                              the  General Partners  will have the  right to  convert the General
                                              Partner Interests into Common Units  or to receive in exchange  for
                                              such interests cash payments equal to the fair market value of such
                                              interests.  See 'The Partnership Agreement -- Withdrawal or Removal
                                              of the General Partners,' ' -- Meetings; Voting' and ' -- Change of
                                              Management Provisions.'
Transfer Restrictions.....................  All purchasers  of Common  Units in  the Offering  and purchasers  of
                                              Common  Units in the open market  who wish to become Unitholders of
                                              record must deliver an executed transfer application (the 'Transfer
                                              Application,' the form of which  is included in this Prospectus  as
                                              Appendix  A) before the  issuance or transfer  of such Common Units
                                              will be registered and before cash distributions and federal income
                                              tax allocations will be made to the transferee. See 'Description of
                                              the Common Units -- Transfer of Common Units.'
Distributions Upon Liquidation............  In the  event  of  any  liquidation of  the  Partnership  during  the
                                              Subordination Period, the outstanding Common Units will be entitled
                                              to  receive a distribution out of the net assets of the Partnership
                                              in preference  to  liquidating distributions  on  the  Subordinated
                                              Units to the extent of their Unrecovered Capital (as defined in the
                                              Glossary)  and  any unpaid  Common  Unit Arrearages.  Under certain
                                              circumstances, there may  be insufficient gain  for the holders  of
                                              Common  Units to fully recover all  such amounts, even though there
                                              may be cash available for  distribution to holders of  Subordinated
                                              Units.  Following conversion of the  Subordinated Units into Common
                                              Units, all Units will be treated  the same upon liquidation of  the
                                              Partnership. See 'Cash Distribution Policy -- Distributions of Cash
                                              Upon Liquidation.'
Listing...................................  The  Common Units  are listed on  the NYSE. The  Common Units offered
                                              hereby have  been  approved  for  listing on  the  NYSE.  The  last
                                              reported  price of the Common Units  on January 9, 1997 was $20.875
                                              per Common Unit.
NYSE Symbol...............................  'NPL'
</TABLE>
 
                                       29
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                         SUMMARY OF TAX CONSIDERATIONS
 
     The tax consequences of  an investment in the  Partnership to a  particular
investor  will  depend in  part on  the investor's  own tax  circumstances. Each
prospective investor should consult a tax  advisor about the federal, state  and
local  tax consequences  of an  investment in Common  Units. The  following is a
brief summary of certain  expected tax consequences of  owning and disposing  of
Common  Units. The following discussion, insofar as it relates to federal income
tax laws,  is based  in  part upon  the opinion  of  Counsel described  in  'Tax
Considerations.'   This  summary  is   qualified  by  the   discussion  in  'Tax
Considerations,' particularly  the qualifications  on  the opinions  of  Counsel
described therein.
 
PARTNERSHIP STATUS
 
     In  the opinion of Counsel, the  Partnership will be classified for federal
income tax purposes as a partnership, and the beneficial owners of Common  Units
will  generally  be considered  partners  in the  Partnership.  Accordingly, the
Partnership will  pay no  federal income  taxes, but  the Partnership's  income,
gains,  losses  and deductions  will  be includable  in  the federal  income tax
returns of the Unitholders. In general, cash distributions to a Unitholder  will
be  taxable only if, and to  the extent that, they exceed  the tax basis in such
Unitholder's Common Units.
 
PARTNERSHIP ALLOCATIONS
 
     In general, income  and loss of  the Partnership will  be allocated to  the
General  Partners and the  Unitholders for each taxable  year in accordance with
their respective percentage interests in the Partnership, as determined annually
and prorated on a monthly basis  and subsequently apportioned among the  General
Partners  and the Unitholders of record as  of the opening of the first business
day of the month to  which they relate, even  though Unitholders may dispose  of
their  Units during the  month in question. For  purposes of determining federal
income tax liability, a Unitholder will be required to take into account  income
generated  by the Partnership allocable to such Unitholder for each taxable year
of the Partnership ending within or  with the Unitholder's taxable year even  if
cash  distributions  are  not  made  to such  Unitholder.  As  a  consequence, a
Unitholder's share of taxable income of the Partnership (and possibly the income
tax payable by such Unitholder with respect to such income) may exceed the cash,
if any, actually distributed to such Unitholder.
 
BASIS OF COMMON UNITS
 
     A Unitholder's  initial  tax basis  for  a  Common Unit  purchased  in  the
Offering  will generally be the amount paid for the Common Units. A Unitholder's
basis is generally increased  by such Unitholder's  share of Partnership  income
and   decreased   by  such   Unitholder's  share   of  Partnership   losses  and
distributions.
 
LIMITATIONS ON DEDUCTIBILITY OF PARTNERSHIP LOSSES
 
     In the  case  of taxpayers  subject  to the  passive  loss rules  (such  as
individuals  and  closely held  corporations),  any Partnership  losses  will be
available only to offset future income  generated by the Partnership and  cannot
be  used to offset income from other activities, including passive activities or
investments. Any  losses unused  by virtue  of  the passive  loss rules  may  be
deducted  when the  Unitholder disposes of  all of  his Common Units  in a fully
taxable transaction  with an  unrelated  party. In  addition, a  Unitholder  may
deduct  such Unitholder's  share of  Partnership losses  only to  the extent the
losses do not exceed such Unitholder's  basis in such Unitholder's Common  Units
or,  in  the  case  of  taxpayers  subject  to  the  'at  risk'  rules  (such as
individuals), the  amount  the  Unitholder  is  at  risk  with  respect  to  the
Partnership's activities, if less than such tax basis.
 
SECTION 754 ELECTION
 
     The Partnership intends to make the election provided for by Section 754 of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the 'Code'), which will generally
result in a Unitholder being allocated
 
                                       30
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
income   and  deductions  calculated  by  reference   to  the  portion  of  that
Unitholder's purchase price attributable to each asset of the Partnership.
 
DISPOSITION OF COMMON UNITS
 
     A Unitholder who sells  Common Units will recognize  gain or loss equal  to
the  difference between the amount realized and  the adjusted tax basis in those
Common Units. Thus, distributions of cash  from the Partnership to a  Unitholder
in  excess of the  income allocated to  such Unitholder will,  in effect, become
taxable income  if such  Unitholder sells  the Common  Units at  or above  their
original  cost. A  portion of the  amount realized (whether  or not representing
gain) may be ordinary income.
 
STATE, LOCAL AND OTHER TAX CONSIDERATIONS
 
     In addition to federal income taxes,  Unitholders will be subject to  other
taxes,  such as state and local  income taxes, unincorporated business taxes and
estate, inheritance  or  intangible  taxes  that  are  imposed  by  the  various
jurisdictions  in which  a Unitholder resides  or in which  the Partnership does
business or owns property.  Although an analysis of  those various taxes is  not
presented  here,  each prospective  Unitholder  should consider  their potential
impact on such Unitholder's investment in the Partnership. The Partnership  owns
property  and  conducts business  in New  York, Florida,  Michigan and  22 other
states. A Unitholder will also be required to file state income tax returns  and
to  pay taxes in various  states and may be subject  to penalties for failure to
comply with  such requirements.  Based on  1995 revenues,  the Managing  General
Partner currently anticipates that substantially all of the Partnership's income
will  be generated in  Arkansas, Arizona, Colorado,  Connecticut, Florida, Iowa,
Illinois, Massachusetts,  Michigan,  Minnesota,  Missouri,  New  Hampshire,  New
Mexico,  New York,  and Wisconsin.  Each of the  states, other  than Florida, in
which the  Managing General  Partner currently  anticipates that  a  substantial
portion  of  the  Partnership's income  will  be generated  currently  imposes a
personal income tax. In certain states, tax losses may not produce a tax benefit
in the  year incurred  (if, for  example,  the Partnership  has no  income  from
sources  within that state)  and also may  not be available  to offset income in
subsequent taxable years. Some of the states may require the Partnership, or the
Partnership may elect,  to withhold a  percentage of income  from amounts to  be
distributed  to a Unitholder who  is not a resident  of that state. Withholding,
the amount of which may  be more or less  than a particular Unitholder's  income
tax  liability to the state, may not relieve the nonresident Unitholder from the
obligation to file an income tax return.  Amounts withheld may be treated as  if
distributed  to Unitholders for purposes  of determining the amounts distributed
by the Partnership. Based on current law and its estimate of future  Partnership
operations, the Partnership anticipates that any amounts required to be withheld
will not be material.
 
     It  is the responsibility of each prospective Unitholder to investigate the
legal and tax consequences, under the  laws of pertinent states and  localities,
of   such  Unitholder's   investment  in  the   Partnership.  Accordingly,  each
prospective Unitholder should consult, and  must depend upon, that  Unitholder's
own  tax counsel or other  advisor with regard to  those matters. Further, it is
the responsibility of each Unitholder to  file all federal, state and local  tax
returns  that may be  required of such  Unitholder. Counsel has  not rendered an
opinion on  the  state  or  local  tax consequences  of  an  investment  in  the
Partnership.
 
OWNERSHIP OF COMMON UNITS BY TAX-EXEMPT ORGANIZATIONS AND CERTAIN OTHER
INVESTORS
 
     An  investment  in  Common  Units  by  tax-exempt  organizations (including
individual retirement accounts and other retirement plans), regulated investment
companies and foreign persons  raises issues unique  to such persons.  Virtually
all  of the Partnership income  allocated to a Unitholder  which is a tax-exempt
organization will be unrelated business taxable income, and thus will be taxable
to such Unitholder; no significant amount of the Partnership's gross income will
be qualifying  income for  purposes  of determining  whether a  Unitholder  will
qualify as a regulated investment company; and a Unitholder who is a nonresident
alien,  foreign corporation  or other foreign  person will be  regarded as being
engaged in a trade or business in the United States as a result of ownership  of
a Common Unit
 
                                       31
 

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<PAGE>
and  thus will be required to file federal  income tax returns and to pay tax on
such   Unitholder's   share   of   Partnership   taxable   income.   See    'Tax
Considerations  -- Uniformity of  Units -- Tax-Exempt  Organizations and Certain
Other Investors.'
 
TAX SHELTER REGISTRATION
 
     The Code  generally requires  that 'tax  shelters' be  registered with  the
Secretary  of the  Treasury. It  is arguable  that the  Partnership will  not be
subject to this registration requirement. Nevertheless, the Partnership has been
registered as a tax  shelter with the IRS.  ISSUANCE OF THE REGISTRATION  NUMBER
DOES  NOT INDICATE  THAT AN  INVESTMENT IN  THE PARTNERSHIP  OR THE  CLAIMED TAX
BENEFITS  HAS  BEEN  REVIEWED,  EXAMINED  OR  APPROVED  BY  THE  IRS.  See  'Tax
Considerations -- Administrative Matters -- Registration as a Tax Shelter.'
 
                                       32


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                                  RISK FACTORS
 
     A prospective investor should carefully consider the risk factors set forth
below  as well  as the  other information  set forth  in this  Prospectus before
purchasing the  Common Units  offered  in the  Offering. Special  Note:  Certain
statements  set  forth  below  under  this  caption  constitute 'forward-looking
statements' within the meaning  of the Reform Act.  See 'Special Note  Regarding
Forward-Looking  Statements' on page  4 for additional  factors relating to such
statements.
 
RISKS INHERENT IN THE PARTNERSHIP'S BUSINESS
 
WEATHER CONDITIONS AFFECT THE DEMAND FOR PROPANE
 
     Weather conditions, which can vary substantially from year to year, have  a
significant  impact on the demand for  propane for both heating and agricultural
purposes. Many customers of the Partnership rely heavily on propane as a heating
fuel. Accordingly,  the volume  of propane  sold is  at its  highest during  the
six-month  peak heating season of October through March and is directly affected
by the severity of  the winter weather. Historically,  approximately 66% of  the
Partnership's  retail  propane volume  has been  sold  during this  peak heating
season. Actual  weather  conditions,  therefore, may  significantly  affect  the
Partnership's financial performance. For example, warm weather during the winter
of 1994-95 significantly decreased the overall demand for propane, and adversely
affected  the Partnership's operating income. Furthermore, despite the fact that
overall weather conditions may be normal,  variations in weather in one or  more
regions  in which  the Partnership operates  can significantly  affect the total
volume of propane sold by  the Partnership and, consequently, the  Partnership's
results  of  operations. Variations  in the  weather in  the Midwest,  where the
majority of the Partnership's retail volume is sold, and in the Northeast, where
the Partnership  has  a  greater  concentration  of  higher  margin  residential
accounts,  will generally have a greater  impact on the Partnership's EBITDA and
operating  income  than  variations  in  the  weather  in  other  markets.   See
'Management's  Discussion  and Analysis  of Financial  Condition and  Results of
Operations.'
 
THE PARTNERSHIP WILL BE SUBJECT TO PRICING AND INVENTORY RISK
 
     The retail propane  business is  a 'margin-based' business  in which  gross
profits  depend  on  the  excess  of sales  prices  over  propane  supply costs.
Consequently,  the  Partnership's  profitability  is  sensitive  to  changes  in
wholesale propane prices. Propane is a commodity, and as such, its unit price is
subject  to volatile changes  in response to  changes in supply  or other market
conditions. The  Partnership  has  no  control  over  these  market  conditions.
Consequently, the unit price of propane purchased by the Partnership, as well as
other  propane marketers,  can change  rapidly over a  short period  of time. In
general, product supply contracts permit suppliers to charge posted prices (plus
transportation costs) at the time of delivery or the current prices  established
at  major storage points such  as Mont Belvieu, Texas,  or Conway, Kansas. Since
rapid increases in the wholesale cost  of propane may not be immediately  passed
on to customers, such increases could reduce the Partnership's gross profits and
operating income. See ' -- The Retail Propane Business Is Highly Competitive.'
 
     In  the  fourth quarter  of 1996,  the price  of propane  was significantly
higher than historical levels. Between November  1, 1996 and December 31,  1996,
the  price of  propane in the  spot market  at Mont Belvieu,  Texas, the largest
storage facility in the United States, averaged $0.5953 per gallon, with a  high
of  $0.7050 per gallon on December  16, 1996 and a low  of $0.4875 per gallon on
December 31, 1996. During  the 1995-96 winter season,  from November 1, 1995  to
March  31,  1996, the  price of  propane  at Mont  Belvieu averaged  $0.3672 per
gallon, with a  high of  $0.5250 on  February 15, 1996  and a low of $0.3037  on
November  15, 1995. Between November 1, 1996 and December 31, 1996, the price of
propane in the spot market at Conway, Kansas averaged $0.7494 per gallon, with a
high of $1.04 per gallon on December 16, 1996 and a low of $0.5100 per gallon on
November 7, 1996.  During the 1995-96  winter season, from  November 1, 1995  to
March 31, 1996, the price of propane at Conway averaged $0.3713 per gallon, with
a  high of $0.4363  on February 15,  1996 and a  low of $0.3237  on November 15,
1995. The Partnership has to date purchased a significant amount of its  propane
in  the Conway,  Kansas spot market.  Although the increased  wholesale price of
propane has increased the Partnership's revenues for the fourth quarter of 1996,
the Partnership was unable to fully pass on the increased product cost to its 

                                       33
 

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<PAGE>
customers resulting  in a  lower per  gallon  profit margin.  As a  result,  the
Partnership  expects that it  will have slightly lower  operating income for the
fourth quarter of 1996 compared to the corresponding period of 1995.
 
     Propane  is   available  from   numerous  sources,   including   integrated
international  oil companies, independent  refiners and independent wholesalers.
The Partnership purchases propane from a variety of suppliers pursuant to supply
contracts or  on the  spot market.  In 1995,  approximately 81%  of the  propane
purchased by the Partnership was produced domestically and approximately 19% was
produced  in Canada. To  the extent that the  Partnership purchases propane from
foreign (including Canadian) sources,  its propane business  will be subject  to
risks  of disruption  in foreign supply.  The Partnership  generally attempts to
minimize inventory risk by  purchasing propane on  a short-term basis.  However,
the Partnership has on occasion purchased, and may in the future purchase, large
volumes  of propane during  periods of low demand,  which generally occur during
the summer months, at  the then current  market price, for  storage both at  its
service  centers and  in the Partnership's  major storage  facilities for future
resale. As of December  31, 1996, the Partnership's  total storage capacity  was
approximately  33.1 million gallons (including approximately one million gallons
of storage  capacity  currently leased  to  third parties).  See  'Business  and
Properties  --  Properties.'  Because  of the  potential  volatility  of propane
prices, the market price  for propane could  fall below the  price at which  the
Partnership  purchased propane  held in  inventory, thereby  adversely affecting
gross margins  or sales  or rendering  sales from  such inventory  unprofitable.
Except  for the occasional opportunistic buying described above, the Partnership
has not  engaged in  any  significant hedging  activities  with respect  to  its
propane  supply requirements, although it may do so in the future. See 'Business
and Properties -- Propane Supply and Storage.'
 
THE RETAIL PROPANE BUSINESS IS HIGHLY COMPETITIVE
 
     The Partnership's business  is highly competitive.  Competition within  the
propane  distribution industry stems primarily from three types of participants:
larger multi-state marketers, local independent marketers and farm cooperatives.
Some of the Partnership's  competitors may be larger  or have greater  financial
and  other resources or  lower operating costs  than the Partnership. Generally,
warmer-than-normal  weather  further   intensifies  competition.  In   addition,
competitive  conditions vary  by region. Currently,  competition is particularly
intense in the Midwest, while the Partnership faces relatively less  competition
in the Northeast and Southeast.
 
     Most  of  the  Partnership's  service centers  compete  with  several other
marketers or  distributors and  certain  service centers  compete with  a  large
number   of  marketers  or  distributors.   The  principal  factors  influencing
competition with other retail  marketers are price,  reliability and quality  of
service,  responsiveness  to customer  needs and  safety concerns.  Each service
center operates  in its  own competitive  environment, as  retail marketers  are
typically located in close proximity to customers to lower the cost of providing
service.  Service  centers  located  in the  Midwest  face  particularly intense
competition in the retail  market as retail customers  in that region  generally
use  higher  volumes  of  propane  and are  therefore  more  sensitive  to price
fluctuations than customers located in  other regions. Of the Partnership's  166
service  centers, 73 are located in the Midwest where approximately 47.4% of the
Partnership's total retail propane volume was sold in 1995.
 
THE RETAIL PROPANE BUSINESS IS MATURE AND THE PARTNERSHIP'S ABILITY TO GROW
LARGELY DEPENDS UPON ACQUIRING OTHER RETAIL DISTRIBUTORS
 
     The retail propane industry  is mature, and  the Partnership foresees  only
limited  growth in total retail demand  for propane. The Partnership expects the
overall demand for propane to remain  relatively constant over the next  several
years,  with year-to-year industry  volumes being affected  primarily by weather
patterns. Moreover, as a result of long-standing customer relationships that are
typical in  the retail  home propane  industry, the  inconvenience of  switching
tanks and suppliers and propane's higher cost than certain other energy sources,
such  as natural gas, the Partnership may experience difficulty in acquiring new
retail customers. Therefore, while the Partnership's business strategy  includes
opening  new  locations,  adding  new retail  customers  and  retaining existing
customers, the ability of the Partnership's propane business to grow will depend
in large part on its ability to
 
                                       34
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
acquire other  retail  distributors. The  Partnership  recently entered  into  a
letter  of intent to acquire a  propane business for approximately $1.0 million;
however, consummation  of  this  transaction is  subject  to  customary  closing
conditions  and completion of definitive documentation,  and no assurance can be
given that this acquisition will be completed.
 
     In making acquisitions of other  retail distributors, the Partnership  will
have  to  compete with  other companies,  some of  which may  be larger  or have
greater financial or other  resources than the  Partnership. In addition,  there
can  be no assurance  that the Partnership  will identify attractive acquisition
candidates in the future, will be able to acquire such candidates on  acceptable
terms,  or will be able to finance such acquisitions. If the Partnership is able
to make acquisitions, there can be no assurance that such acquisitions will  not
dilute  earnings and  distributions on  the Units,  or that  any additional debt
incurred to finance acquisitions will not affect the ability of the  Partnership
to  make distributions  on the  Units. Moreover,  the Partnership  is subject to
certain  debt  incurrence   covenants  in  certain   agreements  governing   its
indebtedness that might restrict the Partnership's ability to incur indebtedness
to   finance  acquisitions.  For  additional  information  regarding  such  debt
incurrence covenants  and  the  Partnership's  availability  under  the  Working
Capital  Facility and the Acquisition Facility, see 'Management's Discussion and
Analysis of  Financial Condition  and  Results of  Operations --  Liquidity  and
Capital  Resources' and '  -- Description of Indebtedness.'  Also, to the extent
that warm weather  adversely affects the  Partnership's operating and  financial
results,  the Partnership's access to capital and its acquisition activities may
be limited.
 
THE RETAIL PROPANE BUSINESS FACES COMPETITION FROM ALTERNATIVE ENERGY SOURCES
 
     Propane is sold in competition with other sources of energy, some of  which
are  less  costly  for equivalent  energy  value. The  Partnership  competes for
customers  against  suppliers  of  electricity,   natural  gas  and  fuel   oil.
Electricity  is a  major competitor of  propane, but propane  generally enjoys a
competitive  price  advantage  over   electricity.  Propane  is  generally   not
competitive  with  natural  gas in  those  areas  where natural  gas  is readily
available because natural gas is a significantly less expensive source of energy
than propane. The  gradual expansion  of the nation's  natural gas  distribution
systems has resulted in the availability of natural gas in areas that previously
depended  upon propane.  To a lesser  extent, the Partnership  also competes for
customers against  suppliers  of  fuel  oil. In  addition,  the  development  of
alternative  energy sources may have an adverse  effect on the operations of the
Partnership. See 'Business and Properties -- Competition.'
 
ENERGY EFFICIENCY AND TECHNOLOGY TRENDS MAY AFFECT DEMAND
 
     The  national  trend  toward   increased  conservation  and   technological
advances,  including installation of improved  insulation and the development of
more efficient furnaces and other  heating devices, has adversely affected,  and
may  continue to adversely  affect, demand for propane  by retail customers. The
Partnership cannot predict  the effect  of future conservation  measures or  the
effect   that  any  technological  advances  in  heating,  conservation,  energy
generation or other devices might have on its operations.
 
THE PARTNERSHIP IS SUBJECT TO OPERATING AND LITIGATION RISKS WHICH MAY NOT BE
COVERED BY INSURANCE
 
     The Partnership's operations are subject to the operating hazards and risks
normally associated with  handling, storing and  delivering combustible  liquids
such  as  propane. As  a  result, the  Partnership has  been,  and is  likely to
continue to be, a defendant in various legal proceedings and litigation  arising
in  its ordinary course of business.  The Partnership self-insures and maintains
insurance policies with  insurers in such  amounts and with  such coverages  and
deductibles as the Managing General Partner believes are reasonable and prudent.
However,  there can  be no  assurance that  such insurance  will be  adequate to
protect the Partnership from all  material expenses related to potential  future
claims  or that  such levels  of insurance  will be  available in  the future at
economical prices. Moreover, there can be no assurance that future claims within
the Partnership's  self-insured  retention  will not,  individually  or  in  the
aggregate, have a material adverse effect on the business of the Partnership.
 
                                       35
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
     In  connection with  the IPO,  the Partnership  assumed the  liabilities of
National  Propane  for  certain   potential  environmental  remediation   costs,
primarily  costs  related  to  remediation  of  coal  tar  contamination  at the
Partnership's Marshfield,  Wisconsin  facility.  The  Partnership  believes  the
contamination  of such property  occurred during its use  as a coal gasification
plant by  a previous  owner. To  the  extent that  there are  any  environmental
liabilities  unknown to the Partnership  or that known environmental liabilities
result in material costs in excess of amounts accrued or any environmental  laws
are  made  more stringent,  there  can be  no  assurance that  the Partnership's
results of operations or ability to  make distributions to Unitholders will  not
be   materially  and   adversely  affected.   In  addition,   future  claims  or
environmental liabilities  not covered  by insurance  or indemnification,  or  a
large number of claims incurred by the Partnership in the future that are within
the  Partnership's self-insured retention, could  have a material adverse effect
on the business, results of operations or financial position of the  Partnership
and  the ability of the Partnership  to make the Minimum Quarterly Distribution.
See 'Business and Properties -- Government  Regulation' and ' -- Litigation  and
Contingent Liabilities.'
 
RISKS INHERENT IN AN INVESTMENT IN THE PARTNERSHIP
 
CASH DISTRIBUTIONS ARE NOT GUARANTEED AND MAY FLUCTUATE WITH PARTNERSHIP
PERFORMANCE
 
     Although  the Partnership will distribute all  of its Available Cash, there
can be no assurance regarding the amounts of Available Cash that the Partnership
will generate. The actual  amounts of Available Cash  will depend upon  numerous
factors,  including profitability of operations, required principal and interest
payments on  the  Partnership's  debt,  interest payments  from  Triarc  on  the
Partnership  Loan,  the cost  of  acquisitions (including  related  debt service
payments), restrictions  contained in  the Partnership's  debt instruments,  the
issuance  of  debt and  equity securities  by  the Partnership,  fluctuations in
working capital,  capital  expenditures,  adjustments  in  reserves,  prevailing
economic conditions and financial, business and other factors, a number of which
may  be beyond the control of  the Partnership. Cash distributions are dependent
primarily on cash flow and not  on profitability, which is affected by  non-cash
items.  Therefore,  cash  distributions  may be  made  during  periods  when the
Partnership records  losses  and  may  not  be  made  during  periods  when  the
Partnership records profits. The amount of Available Cash from Operating Surplus
needed to distribute the Minimum Quarterly Distribution for four quarters on the
Common  Units (including the Common Units offered hereby) and Subordinated Units
outstanding as  of  the date  of  this Prospectus  and  on the  General  Partner
Interests  is approximately $24.6  million (approximately $14.1  million for the
Common Units, $9.5 million for the  Subordinated Units and $1.0 million for  the
General  Partner  Interests). Pro  forma Available  Cash from  Operating Surplus
generated during 1994 and 1995  (approximately $22.7 million and $17.6  million,
respectively  )  would  have  been sufficient  to  cover  the  Minimum Quarterly
Distribution for the four quarters in each  such year on all of the  outstanding
Common  Units and the related distribution on the General Partner Interests, but
would have been insufficient by approximately  $1.9 million and $7.0 million  to
cover  the  Minimum Quarterly  Distribution on  the  Subordinated Units  and the
related distribution  on  the  General  Partner  Interests  in  1994  and  1995,
respectively.  In  addition, assuming  that no  interest  payments were  made by
Triarc on the  Partnership Loan,  the amount of  pro forma  Available Cash  from
Operating  Surplus generated during 1994 and  1995 would have been approximately
$17.2 million and $12.1  million, respectively. The  $17.2 million generated  in
1994  would have been sufficient to cover the Minimum Quarterly Distribution for
the four quarters in 1994 on all of the outstanding Common Units and the related
distribution on the General Partner  Interests, but the $12.1 million  generated
during  1995 would have been insufficient by approximately $2.6 million to cover
the Minimum Quarterly Distribution for the four  quarters in 1995 on all of  the
Common  Units and the related distribution on the General Partner Interests. See
' --  A Portion  of the  Partnership's Cash  Receipts is  Derived from  Interest
Payments   from  Triarc  on   the  Partnership  Loan'   and  'Cash  Distribution
Policy -- Partnership Loan.' In 1994 and  1995, on a pro forma basis,  quarterly
distributions  of Available Cash would not have exceeded any Target Distribution
Level and the Partnership would not have made any Incentive Distributions to the
Managing  General  Partner.  Based  on  the  Partnership's  actual  results   of
operations  for the eleven months ended November 30, 1996 and limited data about
operations in  December 1996,  the Partnership  believes that  it will  generate
Available Cash from
 
                                       36
 

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<PAGE>
Operating Surplus of approximately $18.7 million during 1996, although there can
be no assurance it will generate such amount.
 
     The  Partnership Agreement gives the Managing General Partner discretion in
establishing reserves for the proper conduct of the Partnership's business  that
will  affect the  amount of Available  Cash. Due  to the seasonal  nature of the
Partnership's business, the Managing General  Partner expects that it will  make
additions  to  reserves  during  certain quarters  in  order  to  fund operating
expenses and  distributions  to partners  with  respect to  other  quarters.  In
addition, the Partnership is required to make reserves for the future payment of
principal  and interest on the First Mortgage Notes and in certain instances for
the future payment of principal and interest under the Bank Credit Facility. See
'Management's Discussion  and Analysis  of Financial  Condition and  Results  of
Operations  -- Description  of Indebtedness.'  The First  Mortgage Notes require
reserves for interest of $2.7 million at each March and September, although such
reserves are eliminated when  interest payments are made  on the First  Mortgage
Notes  in  June  and  December.  The  $2.7  million  reserved  for  interest  is
approximately 11.0% of  the amount of  Available Cash needed  to distribute  the
Minimum  Quarterly Distribution for four quarters on the Common Units (including
the  Common  Units  offered  hereby)   and  the  Subordinated  Units   currently
outstanding  and on  the General  Partner Interests.  Reserves for  repayment of
principal on the First Mortgage Notes are not required until September 2002  and
then  will equal  25%, 50%  and 75%,  respectively, of  the next  installment of
principal at  each  September, December  and  March  and the  reserves  will  be
eliminated when principal payments are made on the First Mortgage Notes in June.
The   $3.75  million  reserved   quarterly  for  principal   payments  would  be
approximately 15.2% of  the amount of  Available Cash needed  to distribute  the
Minimum  Quarterly Distribution for four quarters on the Common Units (including
the  Common  Units  offered  hereby)   and  the  Subordinated  Units   currently
outstanding  and  on  the  General  Partner  Interests.  Furthermore,  the First
Mortgage Notes and the  Bank Credit Facility  limit the Operating  Partnership's
ability  to distribute cash to the Partnership. Distributions from the Operating
Partnership  will  be  the  Partnership's  primary  source  of  Available  Cash.
Subsequent  refinancing of the First Mortgage Notes or the Bank Credit Facility,
as well as other indebtedness incurred  by the Partnership, may have similar  or
even  more limiting restrictions. As a result  of these and other factors, there
can be no  assurance regarding the  actual levels of  cash distributions by  the
Partnership,  and the  Partnership's ability to  distribute cash  may be limited
during the existence  of any events  of default under  any of the  Partnership's
debt instruments.
 
A PORTION OF THE PARTNERSHIP'S CASH RECEIPTS IS DERIVED FROM INTEREST PAYMENTS
FROM TRIARC ON THE PARTNERSHIP LOAN
 
     Approximately  $5.5 million  of the  Partnership's annual  cash receipts is
derived from interest  payments from  Triarc under the  Partnership Loan,  which
bears  interest at  an annual rate  of 13.5%. On  a pro forma  basis such amount
represents approximately 31% of the Partnership's Available Cash from  Operating
Surplus  in 1995. Consequently, Triarc's failure to make interest payments under
the Partnership Loan would  adversely affect the ability  of the Partnership  to
make  the Minimum  Quarterly Distribution to  all Unitholders.  Assuming that no
interest payments were made by Triarc on the Partnership Loan, the amount of pro
forma Available Cash  from Operating  Surplus generated during  1995 would  have
been  insufficient by approximately $2.6 million  to cover the Minimum Quarterly
Distribution on the Common Units (including the Common Units offered hereby) and
the related distribution on the General Partner Interests.
 
     Because Triarc  is  a  holding  company,  its  ability  to  meet  its  cash
requirements   (including  required  interest  and  principal  payments  on  the
Partnership Loan) is primarily dependent (in addition to its cash on hand)  upon
cash  flows  from  its  subsidiaries, including  loans  and  cash  dividends and
reimbursement by subsidiaries to Triarc in connection with its providing certain
management services  and  payments by  subsidiaries  under certain  tax  sharing
agreements.  Under  the terms  of  various indentures  and  credit arrangements,
Triarc's principal subsidiaries  are currently  unable to pay  any dividends  or
make any loans or advances to Triarc. In addition, the Partnership Loan does not
restrict  Triarc's ability  to sell, convey,  transfer or encumber  the stock or
assets of any of its subsidiaries  (other than the Managing General Partner  and
SEPSCO), or its ability to dispose of its cash on hand or other assets. Triarc's
cash   on  hand  and  marketable  securities   as  of  November  30,  1996,  was
approximately $177.0 million. The
 
                                       37
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
Partnership believes that such  amount of cash  and marketable securities,  plus
distributions  from certain of Triarc's subsidiaries, will enable Triarc to have
adequate cash  resources to  meet its  short term  cash requirements,  including
required  interest  payments on  the  Partnership Loan.  See  'Cash Distribution
Policy -- Partnership Loan' and 'Certain Information Regarding Triarc.' However,
there can be no assurance that Triarc will continue to have cash on hand or that
in the future it will receive sufficient distributions from its subsidiaries  in
order  to enable it  to satisfy its  obligations under the  Partnership Loan. On
October 29, 1996, Triarc announced that  its Board of Directors approved a  plan
to undertake the Spinoff Transactions. It is expected that the Triarc Merger may
occur  in  connection with  the Spinoff  Transactions. See  'Certain Information
Regarding Triarc.'
 
     The Partnership Loan does not limit  Triarc's ability to, and there can  be
no  assurances that Triarc will not in  the future, incur indebtedness and other
obligations that  will  rank pari  passu  with Triarc's  obligations  under  the
Partnership  Loan  or be  secured by  assets of  Triarc that  do not  secure the
Partnership Loan.  The failure  of  Triarc to  make  payments of  principal  and
interest  on the Partnership Loan  when due would have  an adverse effect on the
ability of the Partnership  to make distributions  to Unitholders. In  addition,
Triarc  is permitted to prepay the Partnership Loan under certain circumstances.
The prepayment by Triarc  of all or  a portion of the  Partnership Loan and  the
failure  by the Partnership to reinvest such funds in a manner that generates an
equivalent amount of cash flow could have an adverse effect on the Partnership's
ability to make distributions to  Unitholders. The Partnership Loan is  recourse
to  Triarc and is secured by a pledge by  Triarc of all of the shares of capital
stock of the Managing  General Partner owned by  Triarc (approximately 75.7%  of
the  Managing General Partner's outstanding capital stock as of the date of this
Prospectus). See 'Cash  Distribution Policy  -- Partnership  Loan' and  'Certain
Information Regarding Triarc.'
 
THE PARTNERSHIP'S INDEBTEDNESS MAY LIMIT THE PARTNERSHIP'S ABILITY TO MAKE
DISTRIBUTIONS AND MAY AFFECT ITS OPERATIONS
 
     The  Partnership is  significantly leveraged  and has  indebtedness that is
substantial in relation  to its partners'  capital. On September  30, 1996,  the
Partnership  had approximately $127.3 million in total consolidated indebtedness
and the amount  of such  indebtedness as  a percentage  of the  pro forma  total
capitalization  would have  been approximately 79.0%.  Furthermore, the Managing
General Partner  may cause  the Partnership  to incur  additional  indebtedness,
including  borrowings that have  the purpose or effect  of enabling the Managing
General  Partner  to  receive  distributions  or  hastening  the  conversion  of
Subordinated  Units into  Common Units. The  ability of the  Partnership to make
principal and  interest payments  will depend  on future  performance, which  is
subject  to  many  factors, some  of  which  will be  outside  the Partnership's
control. Certain of the  Partnership's indebtedness contain provisions  relating
to  change  of  control.  If such  provisions  are  triggered,  such outstanding
indebtedness may become immediately  due. In such event,  there is no  assurance
that  the Partnership would be  able to pay such  indebtedness. In addition, the
First Mortgage Notes and the Bank  Credit Facility are secured by  substantially
all of the assets of the Operating Partnership and contain restrictive covenants
that  limit the ability of  the Operating Partnership to  distribute cash and to
incur additional  indebtedness. In  the  case of  a  continuing default  by  the
Operating  Partnership under such indebtedness, the lenders would have the right
to foreclose on the Operating Partnership's assets, which would have a  material
adverse  effect on the Partnership. See 'Management's Discussion and Analysis of
Financial Condition and Results of  Operations -- Description of  Indebtedness.'
Payment  of principal and  interest on such indebtedness,  as well as compliance
with the  requirements  and  covenants  of  such  indebtedness,  may  limit  the
Partnership's  ability to  make distributions to  Unitholders. The Partnership's
leverage may also adversely affect the ability of the Partnership to finance its
future operations  and capital  needs, may  limit its  ability to  pursue  other
business  opportunities and may make its  results of operations more susceptible
to adverse economic  conditions. See  'Management's Discussion  and Analysis  of
Financial Conditions and Results of Operations -- Description of Indebtedness.'
 
PARTNERSHIP ASSUMPTIONS CONCERNING FUTURE OPERATIONS AND WEATHER MAY NOT BE
REALIZED
 
     In  establishing the  terms of  the IPO,  including the  number and initial
offering price of Common Units, the number of Subordinated Units and the  amount
of the Minimum Quarterly Distribution, the
 
                                       38
 

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<PAGE>
Partnership  relied on certain assumptions concerning its operations through the
quarter ending December 31, 1997, including the assumptions that normal  weather
conditions   will  prevail  in  the  Partnership's  operating  areas,  that  the
Partnership's operating margins will remain constant, that all required interest
payments on the Partnership  Loan will be  made by Triarc,  and that market  and
overall   economic  conditions  will  not  change  substantially.  Although  the
Partnership believes its assumptions are reasonable, whether the assumptions are
realized is not, in a number of cases, within the control of the Partnership and
cannot be  predicted  with  any  degree of  certainty.  See  'Cash  Distribution
Policy -- Cash Available for Distribution.'
 
     Because  a substantial portion of the  Partnership's propane is used in the
heating-sensitive residential and commercial markets, weather conditions have  a
particularly significant effect on the financial performance of the Partnership.
See  ' --  Risks Inherent  in the  Partnership's Business  -- Weather Conditions
Affect the Demand for Propane.' In preparing its forecasts of future operations,
management of the Partnership requested each regional and service center manager
to provide a forecast  of propane sales volumes  based upon the assumption  that
normal  weather conditions will prevail in such region or locality. Accordingly,
the Partnership's  assumptions concerning  its future  operations are  based  in
significant  part on an aggregate of  forecasted regional propane volumes which,
in turn, are based on the assumption that normal weather conditions will prevail
in the Partnership's operating areas.
 
     There is a substantial risk  that the Partnership's assumptions  concerning
the  weather will not prove to be correct in any year or series of years. Actual
weather conditions can  vary substantially from  historical averages, and  there
can  be no assurance  that weather conditions  in the future  will not be warmer
than weather conditions in the past. For example, the Partnership believes  that
during  the 10 years and the five  years ended June 30, 1995, nationwide weather
averaged 3.0% and 3.3% warmer than normal, respectively, compared to the  number
of average Degree Days (as defined in the Glossary) on a nationwide basis during
the  30-year period ended June 30, 1991, as determined by the U.S. Department of
Commerce's National Climatic Data Center.  During such 10-year period, eight  of
such  years were warmer than normal (by as much as 10.3% for the year ended June
30, 1991), while two were  colder than normal (by as  much as 3.6% for the  year
ended June 30, 1994).
 
     The  Partnership believes that  the information from  the National Climatic
Data Center shown above regarding nationwide weather is useful in evaluating the
general extent of weather variations  in the Partnership's areas of  operations.
However,  weather conditions  in the Partnership's  areas of  operation may vary
from normal on a year-to-year basis to a greater extent than weather  conditions
on  a nationwide basis. Should weather conditions in the Partnership's operating
areas be warmer than normal, particularly during the October through March  peak
heating  season,  the Partnership's  results  of operations  would  be adversely
affected.
 
THE MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER MANAGES AND OPERATES THE PARTNERSHIP; HOLDERS OF
COMMON UNITS HAVE LIMITED VOTING RIGHTS
 
     The Managing General Partner manages  and operates the Partnership.  Unlike
the  holders of  common stock  in a  corporation, holders  of outstanding Common
Units have only  limited voting  rights on matters  affecting the  Partnership's
business.  Holders of Common Units  have no right to  elect the Managing General
Partner on an annual or other continuing basis, and the Managing General Partner
generally may not be removed except pursuant  to the vote of the holders of  not
less than 66 2/3% of the outstanding Units (including Units owned by the General
Partners and their Affiliates). The Managing General Partner's current ownership
interest  in the Partnership  precludes any vote to  remove the Managing General
Partner without its consent.  In addition, if  at any time  any person or  group
other than the General Partners and their Affiliates beneficially owns more than
20%  of the Units of any class then  outstanding, such person or group will lose
voting rights with respect to all of  its Units. As a result, holders of  Common
Units  have  limited  influence  on  matters  affecting  the  operation  of  the
Partnership, and third parties may find it difficult to attempt to gain  control
or influence the activities of the Partnership. See 'The Partnership Agreement.'
 
                                       39
 

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<PAGE>
COST REIMBURSEMENTS AND FEES DUE TO THE MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER MAY BE
SUBSTANTIAL AND COULD ADVERSELY AFFECT THE PARTNERSHIP'S ABILITY TO MAKE
DISTRIBUTIONS.
 
     Prior  to making any distribution on the Common Units, the Partnership will
reimburse the Managing General Partner and its Affiliates (including Triarc)  at
cost  for all  expenses incurred on  behalf of  the Partnership. On  a pro forma
basis, approximately $56.8 million of expenses would have been reimbursed by the
Partnership to the  Managing General Partner  in 1995 (comprising  approximately
$33.0 million in salary, payroll tax and other compensation paid to employees of
the  Managing  General Partner  and approximately  $23.8  million for  all other
operating expenses).  Affiliates  of  the Managing  General  Partner  (including
Triarc)  may perform  certain administrative  services for  the Managing General
Partner on behalf  of the Partnership  and will be  reimbursed for all  expenses
incurred  in connection therewith. In addition, the Managing General Partner and
its Affiliates may provide additional services to the Partnership, for which the
Partnership will  be  charged reasonable  fees  as determined  by  the  Managing
General  Partner. Such cost reimbursements and fees may be substantial and could
adversely affect  the  ability  of  the Partnership  to  make  distributions  to
Unitholders.
 
THE PARTNERSHIP MAY ISSUE ADDITIONAL UNITS THEREBY DILUTING EXISTING
UNITHOLDERS' INTERESTS
 
     After  the  end  of  the  Subordination  Period,  the  Partnership  has the
authority to  issue an  unlimited number  of additional  Common Units  or  other
equity securities of the Partnership for such consideration and on such terms as
shall  be established  by the  Managing General  Partner in  its sole discretion
without the  approval  of  the Unitholders.  During  the  Subordination  Period,
however,  the Partnership may not issue  equity securities ranking senior to the
Common Units or  an aggregate  of more  than 3,095,238  additional Common  Units
(including  the 400,000 Common Units issued in the Private Placement and offered
hereby) or  an equivalent  number of  securities ranking  on a  parity with  the
Common Units (excluding the 111,074 Common Units issued upon exercise of the IPO
Over-Allotment  Option and Common Units, or in some instances, equity securities
ranking on  parity with  Common Units,  issued upon  conversion of  Subordinated
Units,  upon conversion of the Special General Partner's combined unsubordinated
general partner interest or in connection  with Acquisitions (as defined in  the
Glossary)  or Capital Improvements (as defined in the Glossary) or the repayment
of certain  indebtedness or  pursuant  to employee  benefit plans)  without  the
approval of a Unit Majority. The Partnership Agreement does not give the holders
of  Common Units the right to approve  the issuance by the Partnership of equity
securities ranking junior to the Common Units at any time. See 'The  Partnership
Agreement -- Issuance of Additional Securities.' The effect of any such issuance
may  be to  dilute the interests  of the then  existing holders of  Units in the
Partnership. In addition, the conversion of Subordinated Units into Common Units
during  the  Subordination  Period  will  increase  the  Partnership's   Minimum
Quarterly  Distribution  obligation  with  respect  to  the  Common  Units while
simultaneously reducing the Minimum Quarterly  Distribution with respect to  the
Subordinated Units.
 
THE MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER HAS A LIMITED CALL RIGHT WITH RESPECT TO THE
PARTNER INTERESTS
 
     If  at any  time not more  than 20%  of the issued  and outstanding partner
interests of any class are held by  persons other than the General Partners  and
their  Affiliates,  the Managing  General Partner  has the  right, which  it may
assign to any of its Affiliates or the Partnership, to acquire all, but not less
than all,  of  the  remaining partner  interests  of  such class  held  by  such
unaffiliated Persons at a price generally equal to the then current market price
of  such partner interests.  As a consequence of  the Managing General Partner's
right to purchase outstanding partner  interests, a holder of partner  interests
may have its partner interests purchased from it even though such holder may not
desire  to sell them, and the price paid may be less than the amount such holder
would desire  to receive  upon the  sale  of such  partner interests.  See  'The
Partnership Agreement -- Limited Call Right.'
 
CHANGE OF MANAGEMENT PROVISIONS
 
     The  Managing General Partner  owns approximately 40.4%  of the outstanding
Units, and as a result the Unitholders will not have the required 66 2/3% of the
Units necessary to remove the Managing  General Partner. Even if the  percentage
of    outstanding    Units    held    by    the    Managing    General   Partner
 
                                       40
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
and  its  Affiliates  were  significantly  reduced,  the  Partnership  Agreement
contains certain provisions that may have the effect of discouraging a person or
group  from attempting to  remove the Managing General  Partner. If the Managing
General Partner is removed  as a general partner  of the Partnership other  than
for  Cause and the Units  held by the General  Partners and their Affiliates are
not voted in favor of such removal (i) the Subordination Period will end and all
outstanding Subordinated Units will immediately  convert into Common Units on  a
one-for-one   basis,  (ii)   any  existing   Common  Unit   Arrearages  will  be
extinguished, and (iii)  the General  Partners will  have the  right to  convert
their   General  Partner   Interests  (and   the  right   to  receive  Incentive
Distributions) into Common Units or to receive in exchange for such interests  a
cash payment equal to the fair market value of such interests. Also, the Special
General  Partner will withdraw as  a general partner of  the Partnership and the
Operating Partnership upon the removal of the Managing General Partner. Further,
if any person  or group  other than the  General Partners  and their  Affiliates
acquires  beneficial ownership  of 20% or  more of  the Units of  any class then
outstanding, such person or group will lose voting rights with respect to all of
its Units.  In addition,  the Partnership  has substantial  latitude in  issuing
equity  securities without  Unitholder approval. The  Partnership Agreement also
contains provisions  limiting the  ability of  Unitholders to  call meetings  of
Unitholders  or to acquire information about  the Partnership, the disclosure of
which the Partnership believes is not  in the best interests of the  Partnership
or  which the Partnership is required by law or by agreements with third parties
to keep confidential. Further, the Bank  Credit Facility and the First  Mortgage
Notes  contain provisions that could result  in acceleration of the repayment of
such indebtedness upon  a change in  control of the  Partnership. The effect  of
these  provisions may be  to diminish the  price at which  the Common Units will
trade under certain circumstances. See 'The Partnership Agreement --  Withdrawal
or  Removal of  the General  Partners,' '  -- Meetings;  Voting,' '  -- Right to
Inspect  Partnership  Books  and  Records'   and  '  --  Change  of   Management
Provisions.'
 
UNITHOLDERS MAY NOT HAVE LIMITED LIABILITY IN CERTAIN CIRCUMSTANCES; LIABILITY
FOR THE RETURN OF CERTAIN DISTRIBUTIONS
 
     The  limitations  on  the liability  of  holders  of Common  Units  for the
obligations of a limited partnership have  not been clearly established in  some
states.  If it were determined that the Partnership had been conducting business
in any state without compliance with the applicable limited partnership statute,
or that the right or the exercise of the right by the holders of Common Units as
a group  to remove  or replace  the Managing  General Partner,  to make  certain
amendments  to the Partnership Agreement or to take other action pursuant to the
Partnership  Agreement  constituted  participation  in  the  'control'  of   the
Partnership's business, then a holder of Common Units could be held liable under
certain  circumstances for the Partnership's obligations to the same extent as a
general partner. In addition,  under certain circumstances  a Unitholder may  be
liable to the Partnership for the amount of a distribution for a period of three
years    from   the   date   of   the   distribution.   See   'The   Partnership
Agreement -- Limited Liability' for a discussion of the limitations on liability
and the implications thereof to a holder of Common Units.
 
COMMON UNITHOLDERS HAVE NOT BEEN REPRESENTED BY COUNSEL
 
     The holders  of  the  Common  Units were  not  represented  by  counsel  in
connection  with  the  preparation of  the  Partnership Agreement  or  the other
agreements referred to herein.
 
THE PARTNERSHIP MAY ENGAGE IN ACQUISITIONS, DISPOSITIONS AND COMBINATIONS WITH
OTHER RETAIL MARKETERS
 
     The propane  industry  consists  of  a  small  number  of  national  retail
marketers  and a larger number  of regional companies. From  time to time, these
national and regional  retail marketers,  including the  Partnership, engage  in
discussions   concerning   acquisitions,   dispositions   and   combinations  of
operations. While the Partnership is not currently engaged in negotiations  with
any  national or regional marketer  concerning any such acquisition, disposition
or combination, there  can be no  assurance that in  the future the  Partnership
will  not engage in any  such negotiations or pursue  opportunities to engage in
any such  transaction.  In  addition,  although  any  merger,  consolidation  or
combination involving the Partnership,
 
                                       41
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
and any sale, exchange or disposition of all or substantially all of its assets,
would require the approval of a Unit Majority under the terms of the Partnership
Agreement, the Partnership and the General Partners are not restricted under the
Partnership  Agreement from engaging in other  transactions that may not require
the prior consent or vote of the  Unitholders and that could result in a  change
of  control of the Partnership. If any of  such transactions were deemed to be a
change of control under  the First Mortgage Notes  or the Bank Credit  Facility,
the  Partnership would  be required  to offer to  redeem all  of the outstanding
First Mortgage Notes at a premium and  to repay all indebtedness under the  Bank
Credit Facility. As a result, the occurrence of a change of control could have a
material  adverse effect on the  Partnership and its ability  to pay the Minimum
Quarterly Distribution to the Unitholders.
 
DEPENDENCE ON KEY PERSONNEL
 
     The Partnership believes that its success has been and will continue to  be
dependent  to a significant extent upon the  efforts and abilities of its senior
management team. The failure by the  Managing General Partner to retain  members
of  its senior management team could  adversely affect the Partnership's ability
to build on  the efforts undertaken  by its current  management to increase  the
efficiency and profitability of the Partnership. Mr. Paliughi, the President and
Chief Executive Officer of the Managing General Partner, is employed pursuant to
an    employment   contract   that    expires   on   January    2,   1998.   See
'Management -- Employment Arrangements with Executive Officers.' The loss of Mr.
Paliughi or  other  members of  senior  management could  adversely  affect  the
Partnership.
 
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST AND FIDUCIARY RESPONSIBILITY
 
     Conflicts  of interest could arise as a result of the relationships between
the Partnership,  on the  one hand,  and the  Managing General  Partner and  its
Affiliates,  on the  other. The directors  and officers of  the Managing General
Partner have fiduciary duties to manage the Managing General Partner in a manner
beneficial to its stockholders. At the same time, the Managing General  Partner,
as  general partner, has fiduciary duties to  manage the Partnership in a manner
beneficial to the Partnership  and the Unitholders. The  duties of the  Managing
General  Partner, as  general partner, to  the Partnership  and the Unitholders,
therefore, may come into conflict with the duties of the directors and  officers
of the Managing General Partner to its stockholders.
 
     Such  conflicts of interest might arise  in the following situations, among
others:
 
          (i) Decisions  of the  Managing General  Partner with  respect to  the
     amount and timing of cash expenditures, borrowings, issuances of additional
     Units  and reserves  in any  quarter will affect  whether or  the extent to
     which there is sufficient Available Cash from Operating Surplus to meet the
     Minimum Quarterly Distribution and Target Distribution Levels on all  Units
     in  a given quarter.  In addition, actions by  the Managing General Partner
     may have the  effect of enabling  the Managing General  Partner to  receive
     Incentive Distributions or accelerating the expiration of the Subordination
     Period or the conversion of Subordinated Units into Common Units.
 
          (ii)  The Partnership will not have any employees and will rely solely
     on employees of its  subsidiaries, the Managing  General Partner and  other
     Affiliates.
 
          (iii)  Under the terms  of the Partnership  Agreement, the Partnership
     will reimburse the Managing General  Partner and its Affiliates  (including
     Triarc)  at cost  for all expenses  incurred on behalf  of the Partnership,
     including costs incurred in rendering corporate staff and support  services
     to  the Partnership. On  a pro forma basis,  approximately $56.8 million of
     expenses would  have been  reimbursed by  the Partnership  to the  Managing
     General  Partner in 1995 (comprising approximately $33.0 million in salary,
     payroll tax  and  other compensation  paid  to employees  of  the  Managing
     General  Partner and  approximately $23.8  million for  all other operating
     expenses).  In  addition,  Affiliates  of  the  Managing  General   Partner
     (including  Triarc)  may provide  certain  administrative services  for the
     Managing  General  Partner  on  behalf  of  the  Partnership  and  will  be
     reimbursed  for all expenses incurred in connection therewith. Furthermore,
     the Managing  General Partner  and its  Affiliates may  provide  additional
     services  to  the Partnership  for which  the  Partnership will  be charged
     reasonable fees as determined by the Managing General Partner.
 
                                       42
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
          (iv) Whenever possible, the Managing General Partner intends to  limit
     the  Partnership's  liability  under  contractual  arrangements  to  all or
     particular assets of the Partnership, with the other party thereto to  have
     no  recourse  against the  Managing  General Partner,  the  Special General
     Partner, or their respective assets.
 
          (v) Any agreements  between the Partnership  and the Managing  General
     Partner  and its Affiliates will not grant  to the holders of Common Units,
     separate  and  apart  from  the  Partnership,  the  right  to  enforce  the
     obligations of the Managing General Partner and such Affiliates in favor of
     the  Partnership. Therefore, the Managing  General Partner, in its capacity
     as a general partner of the Partnership, will be primarily responsible  for
     enforcing such obligations.
 
          (vi)  Under  the  terms  of the  Partnership  Agreement,  the Managing
     General Partner  is not  restricted  from causing  the Partnership  to  pay
     itself  or its Affiliates for any services  rendered on terms that are fair
     and reasonable to the Partnership  or entering into additional  contractual
     arrangements  with  any  of such  entities  on behalf  of  the Partnership.
     Neither  the  Partnership  Agreement  nor  any  of  the  other  agreements,
     contracts  and arrangements between  the Partnership, on  the one hand, and
     the Managing General Partner and its Affiliates, on the other, are or  will
     be the result of arms'-length negotiations.
 
          (vii)  The Managing General Partner may exercise its right to call for
     and purchase Units as provided in the Partnership Agreement or assign  such
     right to one of its Affiliates or to the Partnership.
 
          (viii)  The Partnership  Agreement does  not prohibit  the Partnership
     from engaging  in  roll-up  transactions.  Although  the  Managing  General
     Partner  has no present  intention of causing the  Partnership to engage in
     any such transaction, it is possible it will do so in the future. There can
     be no  assurance that  a  roll-up transaction  would  not have  a  material
     adverse effect on a Unitholder's investment in the Partnership.
 
          (ix)  The Managing General  Partner (unless the  Triarc Merger occurs)
     and the Special General Partner are prohibited from conducting any business
     or having any operations other than those incidental to serving as  general
     partners  of the Partnership and the  Operating Partnership so long as they
     are general partners of the Partnership. The Partnership Agreement provides
     that it will  not constitute  a breach  of the  Managing General  Partner's
     fiduciary  duties to the  Partnership or the  Unitholders for Affiliates of
     the General Partners (other than the Special General Partner) to engage  in
     certain  activities of  the type conducted  by the  Partnership, other than
     retail propane sales to end users in the continental United States, even if
     in direct competition with  the Partnership. However, in  the event of  the
     Triarc  Merger, the  ability of the  Managing General Partner  to engage in
     activities other than those incidental to  serving as a general partner  of
     the  Operating  Partnership and  the Partnership  and  to compete  with the
     Partnership  in  certain  propane  related  activities,  such  as  trading,
     transportation, storage and wholesale distribution, will not be restricted.
     Furthermore,  the General Partners and  their Affiliates have no obligation
     to present business opportunities to the Partnership.
 
     Unless provided for  otherwise in the  partnership agreement, Delaware  law
generally requires a general partner of a Delaware limited partnership to adhere
to  fiduciary duty standards under which it  owes its limited partners duties of
good faith,  fairness and  loyalty  and which  generally prohibit  such  general
partner from taking any action or engaging in any transaction as to which it has
a conflict of interest. The Partnership Agreement expressly permits the Managing
General  Partner  to  resolve  conflicts  of  interest  between  itself  or  its
Affiliates, on the  one hand,  and the Partnership  or the  Unitholders, on  the
other,  and to consider, in resolving  such conflicts of interest, the interests
of other parties in addition to  the interests of the Unitholders. In  addition,
the Partnership Agreement provides that a purchaser of Common Units is deemed to
have  consented  to certain  conflicts of  interest and  actions of  the General
Partners and  their Affiliates  that might  otherwise be  prohibited,  including
those  described  in paragraphs  (i)-(ix) above,  and to  have agreed  that such
conflicts of interest  and actions  do not constitute  a breach  by the  General
Partners  of any duty stated  or implied by law  or equity. The General Partners
will not be in  breach of their obligations  under the Partnership Agreement  or
their  duties to the  Partnership or the  Unitholders if the  resolution of such
conflict is fair and  reasonable to the Partnership.  The latitude given in  the
Partnership Agreement to the Managing General Partner in
 
                                       43
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
resolving  conflicts  of  interest  may significantly  limit  the  ability  of a
Unitholder to challenge what might otherwise be a breach of fiduciary duty.  The
Managing  General Partner believes however, that  such latitude is necessary and
appropriate to enable  it and the  Special General Partner  to serve as  general
partners of the Partnership without undue risk of liability.
 
     The  Partnership Agreement  expressly limits  the liability  of the General
Partners by  providing that  the General  Partners, their  Affiliates and  their
respective officers and directors will not be liable for monetary damages to the
Partnership, the limited partners or assignees for errors of judgment or for any
actual  omissions if such General Partner and other persons acted in good faith.
In addition,  the Partnership  is required  to indemnify  the General  Partners,
their  Affiliates and their respective officers, directors, employees and agents
to the fullest extent permitted by law, against liabilities, costs and  expenses
incurred  by such General Partner or such other persons, if the General Partners
or such persons acted in good faith and in a manner they reasonably believed  to
be  in,  or not  opposed to,  the best  interests of  the Partnership  and, with
respect to any  criminal proceedings,  had no  reasonable cause  to believe  the
conduct was unlawful.
 
     The  provisions of Delaware law that  allow the common law fiduciary duties
of a general partner to  be waived or modified  by a partnership agreement  have
not  been resolved in a  court of law, and the  Managing General Partner has not
obtained an  opinion  of  counsel  covering the  provisions  set  forth  in  the
Partnership  Agreement that purport to waive or restrict the fiduciary duties of
the General Partners that would  be in effect under common  law were it not  for
the   Partnership   Agreement.  See   'Conflicts   of  Interest   and  Fiduciary
Responsibility -- Fiduciary Duties of the General Partners.'
 
TAX RISKS
 
     For a general discussion of the expected federal income tax consequences of
owning and disposing of Common Units, see 'Tax Considerations.'
 
TAX TREATMENT IS DEPENDENT ON PARTNERSHIP STATUS
 
     The availability to  a holder  of Common Units  of the  federal income  tax
benefits  of an  investment in  the Partnership depends,  in large  part, on the
classification of  the  Partnership as  a  partnership for  federal  income  tax
purposes. Moreover, in order for the Partnership to continue to be classified as
a partnership for federal income tax purposes, at least 90% of the Partnership's
gross income for each taxable year must consist of 'qualifying income.' Based on
certain  representations  made  by  the General  Partners  and  the Partnership,
Counsel is  of the  opinion that,  under current  law, the  Partnership will  be
classified  as a partnership for federal income tax purposes. However, no ruling
from the IRS as to such issues has been or will be requested, and the opinion of
Counsel is  not binding  on  the IRS.  See  'Tax Considerations  --  Partnership
Status.'
 
     If  the  Partnership  were  classified  as  an  association  taxable  as  a
corporation for federal or state income tax purposes, the Partnership would  pay
tax  on  its  income at  corporate  rates  (currently at  a  35%  federal rate),
distributions would generally  be taxed  again to the  Unitholders as  corporate
distributions,  and no income, gains, losses or deductions would flow through to
the Unitholders.  Because a  tax would  be imposed  upon the  Partnership as  an
entity, the cash available for distribution to the holders of Common Units would
be substantially reduced. Treatment of the Partnership as an association taxable
as  a corporation or  otherwise as a  taxable entity would  result in a material
reduction in the anticipated  cash flow and after-tax  return to the holders  of
Common  Units and, thus, would  likely result in a  substantial reduction in the
value of the Common Units. See 'Tax Considerations -- Partnership Status.'
 
     There can be no assurance that the law  will not be changed so as to  cause
the  Partnership to be  treated as an  association taxable as  a corporation for
federal income tax purposes or otherwise to be subject to entity-level taxation.
The Partnership Agreement provides that, if a law is enacted or existing law  is
modified or interpreted in a manner that subjects the Partnership to taxation as
a corporation or otherwise subjects the Partnership to entity level taxation for
federal,  state  or  local  income  tax  purposes,  certain  provisions  of  the
Partnership  Agreement  relating  to  the  subordination  of  distributions   on
Subordinated  Units  will be  subject  to change,  including  a decrease  in the
Minimum Quarterly Distribution and the Target Distribution Levels to reflect the
impact of such law on the Partnership. See
 
                                       44
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
'Cash Distribution Policy  -- Adjustment of  Minimum Quarterly Distribution  and
Target Distribution Levels.'
 
NO IRS RULING WITH RESPECT TO TAX CONSEQUENCES
 
     No ruling has been requested from the IRS with respect to classification of
the  Partnership as a  partnership for federal income  tax purposes, whether the
Partnership's propane operations  generate 'qualifying income'  under SS7704  of
the Code or any other matter affecting the Partnership. Accordingly, the IRS may
adopt  positions that differ from Counsel's conclusions expressed herein. It may
be necessary to resort  to administrative or court  proceedings in an effort  to
sustain  some  or  all  of  Counsel's  conclusions,  and  some  or  all  of such
conclusions ultimately may not be sustained.  Any such contest with the IRS  may
materially  and adversely impact the market for  the Common Units and the prices
at which Common Units trade. In addition, the costs of any contest with the  IRS
will  be borne directly or indirectly by some  or all of the Unitholders and the
General Partners.
 
TAX LIABILITY EXCEEDING CASH DISTRIBUTIONS
 
     A holder of Common Units will be required to pay federal income taxes  and,
in  certain cases, state  and local income  taxes on his  allocable share of the
Partnership's income, even if  he does not receive  cash distributions from  the
Partnership.  There  is  no  assurance  that  a  Unitholder  will  receive  cash
distributions  equal  to  his  allocable  share  of  taxable  income  from   the
Partnership  or  even  the tax  liability  to  him resulting  from  that income.
Further, a holder of Common  Units may incur a tax  liability, in excess of  the
amount  of  cash  received,  upon  the  sale  of  his  Common  Units.  See  'Tax
Considerations -- State, Local and Other Tax Considerations' for a discussion of
certain state and local tax considerations  that may be relevant to  prospective
Unitholders.
 
OWNERSHIP OF COMMON UNITS BY TAX-EXEMPT ORGANIZATIONS AND CERTAIN OTHER
  INVESTORS
 
     Investment  in  Common  Units  by  certain  tax-exempt  entities, regulated
investment companies and foreign persons  raises issues unique to such  persons.
For  example, virtually all of the  taxable income derived by most organizations
exempt from federal  income tax  (including individual  retirement accounts  and
other  retirement plans) from the ownership of a Unit will be unrelated business
taxable income  and  thus  will  be  taxable to  such  a  Unitholder.  See  'Tax
Considerations  -- Uniformity of  Units -- Tax-Exempt  Organizations and Certain
Other Investors.'
 
DEDUCTIBILITY OF LOSSES
 
     In the  case of  taxpayers subject  to the  passive loss  rules  (generally
individuals  and  closely  held  corporations),  any  losses  generated  by  the
Partnership will only  be available  to offset  future income  generated by  the
Partnership and cannot be used to offset income from other activities, including
passive  activities or investments.  Unused passive losses  may be deducted when
the Unitholder disposes of all of his Units in a fully taxable transaction  with
an  unrelated party. Net  passive income from  the Partnership may  be offset by
unused Partnership losses carried over from prior years, but not by losses  from
other   passive  activities,   including  losses  from   other  publicly  traded
partnerships.  See   'Tax   Considerations   --   Tax   Consequences   of   Unit
Ownership -- Limitations on Deductibility of Partnership Losses.'
 
TAX SHELTER REGISTRATION; POTENTIAL IRS AUDIT
 
     The Partnership has registered with the IRS as a 'tax shelter.' There is no
assurance  that  the Partnership  will not  be audited  by the  IRS or  that tax
adjustments will not be made. The rights  of a Unitholder owning less than a  1%
profits  interest  in the  Partnership to  participate in  the income  tax audit
process are very limited. Further, any adjustments in the Partnership's  returns
will  lead to adjustments in the Unitholders'  returns and may lead to audits of
Unitholders' returns and adjustments of items unrelated to the Partnership. Each
Unitholder would bear the  cost of any expenses  incurred in connection with  an
examination of such Unitholder's personal tax return.
 
                                       45
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
PROPOSED CHANGES IN FEDERAL INCOME TAX LAWS
 
     Legislation  passed  by  Congress  in  November  1995  (the  '1995 Proposed
Legislation') would  alter  the  tax reporting  procedures  and  the  deficiency
collection  procedures applicable to large  partnerships such as the Partnership
(generally defined as  electing partnerships  with more than  100 partners)  and
would  make certain additional  changes to the  treatment of large partnerships.
That legislation was generally  intended to simplify  the administration of  the
tax reporting and deficiency collection rules governing large partnerships.
 
     On  March 19, 1996, President Clinton  introduced tax legislation, known as
the Revenue  Reconciliation Act  of  1996, that  would  impact the  taxation  of
certain  financial products, including partnership interests. One proposal would
treat a taxpayer as  having sold an 'appreciated'  partnership interest (one  in
which  gain would be recognized  if such interest were  sold) if the taxpayer or
related persons enters into one  or more positions with  respect to the same  or
substantially   identical  property   which,  for   some  period,  substantially
eliminates both the  risk of loss  and opportunity for  gain on the  appreciated
financial position (including selling 'short against the box' transactions).
 
     The  1995 Proposed Legislation was vetoed  by President Clinton on December
6, 1995.  As of  the date  of this  Prospectus, it  is not  possible to  predict
whether  any  of  the  changes  which  were  set  forth  in  the  1995  Proposed
Legislation, the Revenue Reconciliation Act of 1996 or any other changes in  the
federal  income tax laws  that would impact  the Partnership and  the holders of
Common Units will  ultimately be  enacted or, if  enacted, what  form they  will
take,  what the effective dates will be  and what, if any, transition rules will
be provided.
 
UNIFORMITY OF COMMON UNITS AND NONCONFORMING DEPRECIATION CONVENTIONS
 
     Because the Partnership cannot match transferors and transferees of  Common
Units, uniformity of the economic and tax characteristics of the Common Units to
a  purchaser of Common Units must be  maintained. To maintain uniformity and for
other reasons, the Partnership will adopt certain depreciation and  amortization
conventions  that do not conform with all  aspects of certain proposed and final
Treasury Regulations which may, or may not, be applicable. The IRS may challenge
those conventions and,  if such a  challenge were sustained,  the uniformity  of
Common Units could be affected. Non-uniformity could adversely affect the amount
of  tax depreciation available to  a purchaser of Common  Units and could have a
negative   impact   on   the   value    of   the   Common   Units.   See    'Tax
Considerations -- Uniformity of Units.'
 
STATE, LOCAL AND OTHER TAX CONSIDERATIONS
 
     In  addition to federal income taxes,  Unitholders will be subject to other
taxes, such as state and local taxes, unincorporated business taxes, and estate,
inheritance or intangible taxes that may be imposed by the various jurisdictions
in which the Partnership  does business or owns  property. A Unitholder will  be
required  to file state income tax returns and to pay state income taxes in some
or perhaps all of  such states and  may be subject to  penalties for failure  to
comply  with those requirements. It is  the responsibility of each Unitholder to
file all state and local, as well  as federal, tax returns that may be  required
of  such Unitholder. Counsel has  not rendered an opinion  on the state or local
tax   consequences   of   an   investment   in   the   Partnership.   See   'Tax
Considerations -- State, Local and Other Tax Considerations.'
 
PARTNERSHIP TAX INFORMATION AND AUDITS
 
     The  Partnership will furnish  each holder of Common  Units with a Schedule
K-1 that sets forth such holder's  allocable share of income, gains, losses  and
deductions.  In  preparing these  schedules,  the Partnership  will  use various
accounting  and  reporting  conventions  and  adopt  various  depreciation   and
amortization  methods. There is  no assurance that these  schedules will yield a
result  that   conforms  to   statutory  or   regulatory  requirements   or   to
administrative  pronouncements of the IRS. Further, the Partnership's tax return
may be audited,  and any  such audit  could result in  an audit  of a  partner's
individual  tax return  as well  as increased  liabilities for  taxes because of
adjustments resulting from the audit.
 
                                       46
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                      THE IPO AND ADDITIONAL TRANSACTIONS
 
     On July 2, 1996, the Partnership consummated the IPO and received therefrom
net proceeds aggregating approximately $115.7 million. On July 22, 1996, the IPO
Over-Allotment Option  was exercised  in  part with  respect to  111,074  Common
Units,   and  the  Partnership  received   net  proceeds  therefrom  aggregating
approximately $2.2 million, which the  Partnership used for general  partnership
purposes.
 
     Concurrently  with the closing of the IPO, the Managing General Partner and
the Special General Partner contributed substantially all of their assets (which
assets did not include an existing intercompany note from Triarc,  approximately
$59.3  million of the net proceeds from the issuance of the First Mortgage Notes
and certain  other assets  of the  Managing General  Partner) to  the  Operating
Partnership  as  a capital  contribution and  the Operating  Partnership assumed
substantially all of  the liabilities of  the Managing General  Partner and  the
Special  General Partner (other than  certain income tax liabilities), including
the First Mortgage Notes  and all indebtedness of  the Managing General  Partner
outstanding  under the Former Credit Facility and the Other Former Indebtedness.
Immediately thereafter, the  Managing General  Partner and  the Special  General
Partner conveyed their limited partner interests in the Operating Partnership to
the Partnership. As a result of such contributions, each of the Managing General
Partner  and the Special General Partner have a 1.0% general partner interest in
the Partnership  and  a  1.0101%  general  partner  interest  in  the  Operating
Partnership.  In addition, the Managing General Partner received in exchange for
its contribution to the Partnership  4,533,638 Subordinated Units and the  right
to receive the Incentive Distributions.
 
     Also,  immediately prior  to the closing  of the IPO,  the Managing General
Partner issued $125 million aggregate  principal amount of First Mortgage  Notes
to  certain institutional investors in  a private placement. Approximately $59.3
million of the  net proceeds  from the  sale of  the First  Mortgage Notes  (the
entire net proceeds of which were approximately $118.4 million) were used by the
Managing  General Partner to pay a dividend  to Triarc. The remainder of the net
proceeds from the sale of the First Mortgage Notes (approximately $59.1 million)
were contributed by the Managing General Partner to the Operating Partnership in
connection with the  Conveyance and were  used by the  Operating Partnership  to
repay  (in  the  manner  described  below) a  portion  of  the  Managing General
Partner's indebtedness  outstanding under  the Former  Credit Facility  and  the
Other  Former  Indebtedness,  all  of  which  indebtedness  was  assumed  by the
Operating Partnership in  connection with the  Conveyance. First,  approximately
$30.0  million of  such net  proceeds was used  by the  Operating Partnership to
repay indebtedness evidenced by the Refunding  Notes, and then the remainder  of
such  net proceeds (approximately $29.1 million)  together with cash on hand was
used to repay other  indebtedness outstanding under  the Former Credit  Facility
and Other Former Indebtedness.
 
     After  the repayment of the Refunding  Notes and such other indebtedness as
described above, the net proceeds of the sale of the Common Units issued in  the
IPO (approximately $115.7 million) were contributed to the Operating Partnership
which  used such proceeds  to repay all remaining  indebtedness under the Former
Credit Facility,  to make  the Partnership  Loan to  Triarc and  to pay  certain
accrued management fees and tax sharing payments due to Triarc from the Managing
General Partner.
 
     Concurrently  with the closing  of the IPO,  the Operating Partnership also
entered into the Bank Credit Facility, which consists of the $15 million Working
Capital Facility and the $40 million Acquisition Facility. At December 31, 1996,
$7.9 million was outstanding under the Bank Credit Facility.
 
     In addition,  the  Managing  General  Partner made  a  dividend  to  Triarc
consisting of a portion (approximately $51.4 million aggregate principal amount)
of an existing intercompany note of Triarc.
 
     For  additional information regarding the terms of the First Mortgage Notes
and the  Bank Credit  Facility,  see 'Management's  Discussion and  Analysis  of
Financial  Condition and Results of  Operations -- Description of Indebtedness.'
For additional  information regarding  the terms  of the  Partnership Loan,  see
'Cash Distribution Policy -- Partnership Loan.'
 
     On  November 7,  1996, the Partnership  issued and sold  the 400,000 Common
Units offered  hereby  to  the  Selling  Unitholder  pursuant  to  the  Purchase
Agreement  at a price of  $21.00 per Unit, and  the Partnership paid the Selling
Unitholder a  fee  of  $588,000  in  connection  therewith.  The  estimated  net
 
                                       47
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
proceeds  to the Partnership from the  Private Placement were approximately $7.4
million. Such net proceeds were used by the Partnership for general  partnership
purposes. See 'The Selling Unitholder.'
 
                                 CAPITALIZATION
 
     The  following  table  sets  forth (i)  the  actual  capitalization  of the
Partnership as of September  30 1996 and, (ii)  the pro forma capitalization  of
the Partnership as of September 30, 1996, as adjusted to give effect to the sale
in  the Private Placement of the Common Units offered hereby and the application
of  the  net  proceeds  therefrom  as  described  in  'The  IPO  and  Additional
Transactions'.  This table  should be  read in  conjunction with  the historical
consolidated financial statements and related notes and the unaudited pro  forma
condensed   consolidated  financial  statements   and  related  notes  appearing
elsewhere herein.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                            SEPTEMBER 30, 1996
                                                                                       ----------------------------
                                                                                       HISTORICAL    AS ADJUSTED(A)
                                                                                       ----------    --------------
                                                                                              (IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                                                                    <C>           <C>
Total current maturities of Other Existing Indebtedness.............................    $     315       $    315
                                                                                       ----------    --------------
Long-term debt:
     Bank Credit Facility...........................................................          800            800
     First Mortgage Notes...........................................................      125,000        125,000
     Other Existing Indebtedness....................................................        1,168          1,168
                                                                                       ----------    --------------
          Total long-term debt......................................................      126,968        126,968
                                                                                       ----------    --------------
Total partners' capital.............................................................       26,542         33,909
                                                                                       ----------    --------------
Total capitalization................................................................    $ 153,825       $161,192
                                                                                       ----------    --------------
                                                                                       ----------    --------------
</TABLE>
 
- ------------
 
 (a) Reflects the sale of Common Units in the Private Placement as described  in
     'The IPO and Additional Transactions'.
 
                 PRICE RANGE OF COMMON UNITS AND DISTRIBUTIONS
 
     The  Common Units  began trading  on the  NYSE on  June 27,  1996 under the
trading symbol 'NPL.'  Closing trading price  data as reported  by the NYSE  for
each of the quarters indicated are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                            HIGH        LOW
                                                                           -------    -------
<S>                                                                        <C>        <C>
1996
     Third Quarter (from June 27, 1996).................................   $21.000    $18.625
     Fourth Quarter.....................................................   $20.000    $19.250
1997
     First Quarter (through January 9, 1996)............................   $20.875    $20.125
</TABLE>
 
     For  a recent sale  price of the Common  Units, see the  cover page of this
Prospectus. The Common Units were held by approximately 10,000 holders of record
as of January 9, 1997.
 
     The Partnership made  an initial  distribution of  $0.525 Per  Unit on  all
Common  Units and Subordinated  Units and a related  distribution on the General
Partner Interests on November 14, 1996 to the holders of record at the close  of
business  on November  1, 1996.  The distribution  related to  the Partnership's
third fiscal quarter.
 
                                       48



<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                            CASH DISTRIBUTION POLICY
 
     SPECIAL  NOTE:  CERTAIN  STATEMENTS  SET  FORTH  BELOW  UNDER  THIS CAPTION
CONSTITUTE 'FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS'  WITHIN THE MEANING  OF THE REFORM  ACT.
SEE 'SPECIAL NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS' ON PAGE 4 FOR ADDITIONAL
FACTORS RELATING TO SUCH STATEMENTS.
 
GENERAL
 
     The  Partnership will distribute to its partners, on a quarterly basis, all
of its Available Cash in the manner described herein. Available Cash is  defined
in  the Glossary and generally means, with  respect to any fiscal quarter of the
Partnership, all cash on hand at the end of such quarter less the amount of cash
reserves that is  necessary or  appropriate in  the discretion  of the  Managing
General  Partner  to (i)  provide for  the proper  conduct of  the Partnership's
business, (ii) comply with applicable law or any Partnership debt instrument  or
other agreement, or (iii) provide funds for distributions to Unitholders and the
General Partners in respect of any one or more of the next four quarters.
 
     Cash  distributions  will  be characterized  as  distributions  from either
Operating Surplus  or  Capital Surplus.  This  distinction affects  the  amounts
distributed  to Unitholders relative to the  General Partners, and under certain
circumstances it determines  whether holders of  Subordinated Units receive  any
distributions. See ' -- Quarterly Distributions of Available Cash.'
 
     Operating  Surplus is defined  in the Glossary and  refers generally to (i)
the cash  balance of  the  Partnership on  the  date the  Partnership  commenced
operations  (approximately  $4.6 million),  plus  $15.4 million,  plus  all cash
receipts of  the Partnership  from  its operations,  less (ii)  all  Partnership
operating  expenses, debt service payments  (including reserves therefor but not
including payments  required  in connection  with  the  sale of  assets  or  any
refinancing  with  the proceeds  of new  indebtedness  or any  equity offering),
maintenance capital expenditures and reserves established for future Partnership
operations.
 
     Capital Surplus  is also  defined in  the Glossary  and generally  will  be
generated only by borrowings (other than for working capital purposes), sales of
debt  and equity securities and  sales or other dispositions  of assets for cash
(other than inventory, accounts receivable  and other current assets and  assets
disposed of in the ordinary course of business).
 
     To  avoid  the difficulty  of trying  to  determine whether  Available Cash
distributed by  the  Partnership  is  from Operating  Surplus  or  from  Capital
Surplus,  all Available Cash distributed by the Partnership from any source will
be treated as distributed from Operating Surplus until the sum of all  Available
Cash  distributed since the commencement of the Partnership equals the Operating
Surplus as of the end of the  quarter prior to such distribution. Any  Available
Cash  in excess of such amount (irrespective of its source) will be deemed to be
from Capital Surplus and distributed accordingly.
 
     If Available Cash from  Capital Surplus is distributed  in respect of  each
Common  Unit in an aggregate amount per  Common Unit equal to the initial public
offering price of the Common Units of $21.00 per Common Unit (the 'Initial  Unit
Price'),  plus  any Common  Unit Arrearages,  the distinction  between Operating
Surplus and Capital Surplus will cease, and all distributions of Available  Cash
will be treated as if they were from Operating Surplus. The Partnership does not
anticipate that there will be significant distributions from Capital Surplus.
 
     The   Subordinated  Units  are  a  separate   class  of  interests  in  the
Partnership, and  the rights  of holders  of such  interests to  participate  in
distributions to partners differ from the rights of the holders of Common Units.
For  any given quarter,  any Available Cash  will be distributed  to the General
Partners (as holders  of the General  Partner Interests) and  to the holders  of
Common  Units, and may also be distributed  to the holders of Subordinated Units
depending upon  the amount  of Available  Cash for  the quarter,  the amount  of
Common  Unit Arrearages, if any, whether  the Subordination Period has ended and
other factors discussed below.
 
     The Incentive  Distributions  are a  separate  class of  interests  in  the
Partnership  that represent  the right  to receive  an increasing  percentage of
quarterly  distributions  of  Available  Cash  from  Operating  Surplus  and  of
liquidating  distributions  after  the  Target  Distribution  Levels  have  been
achieved. The Target Distribution Levels are  based on the amounts of  Available
Cash from Operating Surplus or
 
                                       49
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
liquidating distributions distributed in excess of payments made with respect to
the Minimum Quarterly Distributions and Common Unit Arrearages.
 
     Subject    to   the   limitations    described   under   'The   Partnership
Agreement --  Issuance  of  Additional  Securities,'  the  Partnership  has  the
authority  to issue  additional Common Units  or other equity  securities of the
Partnership for  such consideration  and on  such terms  and conditions  as  are
established  by  the Managing  General Partner,  in  its discretion  without the
approval of  the Unitholders.  It is  possible that  the Partnership  will  fund
acquisitions  of  other propane  businesses through  the issuance  of additional
Common Units  or other  equity securities  of the  Partnership. Holders  of  any
additional  Common Units  issued by  the Partnership  will be  entitled to share
equally with  the then-existing  holders  of Common  Units in  distributions  of
Available  Cash  by the  Partnership. In  addition,  the issuance  of additional
partnership interests may dilute the value of the interests of the then-existing
holders of Common Units in the net assets of the Partnership.
 
     The discussion  below  indicates  the  percentages  of  cash  distributions
required  to be made to the General Partners and the holders of Common Units and
the circumstances under which holders of Subordinated Units are entitled to cash
distributions and the amounts thereof. For  a discussion of Available Cash  from
Operating  Surplus available for distributions with  respect to the Common Units
on a pro forma basis, see ' -- Cash Available for Distribution.'
 
QUARTERLY DISTRIBUTIONS OF AVAILABLE CASH
 
     The Partnership will  make distributions  to its partners  with respect  to
each  quarter of the Partnership prior to  its liquidation in an amount equal to
100% of its  Available Cash for  such quarter. The  Partnership expects to  make
distributions  of all Available Cash within  approximately 45 days after the end
of each fiscal quarter to holders of  record on the applicable record date.  The
Minimum Quarterly Distribution and the Target Distribution Levels are subject to
certain  adjustments as  described below under  ' --  Distributions from Capital
Surplus' and  '  -- Adjustment  of  Minimum Quarterly  Distribution  and  Target
Distribution Levels.'
 
     With respect to each quarter during the Subordination Period, to the extent
there  is sufficient Available Cash,  the holders of Common  Units will have the
right to  receive  the Minimum  Quarterly  Distribution, plus  any  Common  Unit
Arrearages,  prior  to any  distribution  of Available  Cash  to the  holders of
Subordinated Units. This  subordination feature will  enhance the  Partnership's
ability  to distribute  the Minimum Quarterly  Distribution on  the Common Units
during the  Subordination  Period. There  is  no guarantee,  however,  that  the
Minimum Quarterly Distribution will be made on the Common Units. Upon expiration
of   the  Subordination  Period,  all  Subordinated  Units  will  convert  on  a
one-for-one basis into Common Units and will participate pro rata with all other
Common  Units  in  future  distributions   of  Available  Cash.  Under   certain
circumstances,  up to 2,266,820 of the Subordinated Units issued to the Managing
General Partner may  convert into Common  Units prior to  the expiration of  the
Subordination  Period.  Such number  of  Subordinated Units  eligible  for early
conversion may be increased by any Subordinated Units issued upon conversion  of
all  or a portion of the Special  General Partner's 2% General Partner Interest.
Further, additional capital  contributions by the  Special General Partner  upon
other issuances of additional Partnership securities will increase the number of
Units  into which such combined interest may be exchanged. Common Units will not
accrue arrearages  with  respect to  distributions  for any  quarter  after  the
Subordination  Period and Subordinated Units will not accrue any arrearages with
respect to distributions for any quarter.
 
     The Partnership declared a distribution on October 21, 1996, in the  amount
of  $0.525  per Common  Unit,  which was  paid on  November  14, 1996  to Common
Unitholders of record at the  close of business on November  1, 1996 and paid  a
distribution  to the  Managing General Partner  of $0.525  per Subordinated Unit
(approximately $2.4 million in the  aggregate) and a corresponding  distribution
to the General Partners in the aggregate of approximately $235,800.
 
DISTRIBUTIONS FROM OPERATING SURPLUS DURING SUBORDINATION PERIOD
 
     The  Subordination Period will generally extend  until the first day of any
quarter beginning after June 30, 2001  in respect of which (i) distributions  of
Available Cash from Operating Surplus on the
 
                                       50
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
Common  Units  and the  Subordinated Units  with  respect to  each of  the three
consecutive four-quarter  periods immediately  preceding  such date  equaled  or
exceeded the sum of the Minimum Quarterly Distribution on all of the outstanding
Common  Units  and Subordinated  Units during  such  periods, (ii)  the Adjusted
Operating Surplus generated  during each of  the three consecutive  four-quarter
periods  immediately  preceding such  date equaled  or exceeded  the sum  of the
Minimum Quarterly  Distribution  on all  of  the outstanding  Common  Units  and
Subordinated Units and the related distribution on the General Partner Interests
during such periods and (iii) there are no outstanding Common Unit Arrearages.
 
     Prior to the end of the Subordination Period, a portion of the Subordinated
Units  will convert into  Common Units on  a one-for-one basis  on the first day
after the record date established for the distribution in respect of any quarter
ending on or  after (a) June  30, 1999 (with  respect to 1,133,410  Subordinated
Units,  subject to adjustment  as discussed below)  and (b) June  30, 2000 (with
respect to  1,133,410 Subordinated  Units, subject  to adjustment  as  discussed
below)  in respect of  which (i) distributions of  Available Cash from Operating
Surplus on the Common Units and the  Subordinated Units with respect to each  of
the  three  consecutive  four-quarter periods  immediately  preceding  such date
equaled or exceeded the sum of the Minimum Quarterly Distribution on all of  the
outstanding  Common Units and  Subordinated Units during  such periods, (ii) the
Adjusted  Operating  Surplus  generated  during  each  of  the  two  consecutive
four-quarter periods immediately preceding such date equaled or exceeded the sum
of the Minimum Quarterly Distribution on all of the outstanding Common Units and
Subordinated Units and the related distribution on the General Partner Interests
during  such periods, and (iii) there are no outstanding Common Unit Arrearages;
provided,  however,  that  the  early  conversion  of  the  second  tranche   of
Subordinated  Units may not  occur until at  least one year  following the early
conversion of the  first tranche  of Subordinated  Units. Such  number of  units
eligible  for  early conversion  on June  30, 1999  and June  30, 2000  shall be
subject to increase in each case by a number of Subordinated Units equal to  25%
of  the total Units issued  upon conversion of the  Special General Partner's 2%
General Partner Interest.
 
     Upon expiration  of the  Subordination Period,  all remaining  Subordinated
Units  will convert into Common Units on a one-for-one basis and will thereafter
participate, pro rata, with the other Common Units in distributions of Available
Cash. In  addition, if  the Managing  General Partner  is removed  as a  general
partner  of the  Partnership other than  for Cause (i)  the Subordination Period
will end and all  outstanding Subordinated Units  will immediately convert  into
Common  Units on a  one-for-one basis, (ii) any  existing Common Unit Arrearages
will be  extinguished and  (iii) the  General Partners  will have  the right  to
convert  their remaining  General Partner  Interests (and  the right  to receive
Incentive Distributions) into Common  Units or to receive  cash in exchange  for
such interests.
 
     'Adjusted  Operating  Surplus'  is defined  in  the Glossary  and,  for any
period, generally means Operating Surplus generated during such period, less (a)
any net increase in  working capital borrowings during  such period and (b)  any
net  reduction  in  cash  reserves  for  Operating  Expenditures  that otherwise
increased the Operating Surplus generated during  such period, plus (x) any  net
decrease  in  working capital  borrowings  during such  period  and (y)  any net
increase in cash reserves for Operating Expenditures during such period required
by any debt instrument for the repayment of principal, interest or premium.
 
     Distributions by the Partnership of  Available Cash from Operating  Surplus
with  respect to any quarter during the Subordination Period will be made in the
following manner:
 
          first, 96% to the Common Unitholders, pro rata, and 4% to the  General
     Partners,  pro rata,  until there has  been distributed in  respect of each
     outstanding  Common  Unit  an  amount   equal  to  the  Minimum   Quarterly
     Distribution for such quarter;
 
          second, 96% to the Common Unitholders, pro rata, and 4% to the General
     Partners,  pro rata,  until there has  been distributed in  respect of each
     outstanding Common  Unit an  amount  equal to  any Common  Unit  Arrearages
     accrued   and  unpaid  with  respect  to  any  prior  quarters  during  the
     Subordination Period;
 
                                       51
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
          third, 96% to the  Subordinated Unitholders, pro rata,  and 4% to  the
     General  Partners, pro rata, until there has been distributed in respect of
     each outstanding Subordinated Unit an amount equal to the Minimum Quarterly
     Distribution for such quarter;
 
          thereafter,   in   the   manner   described   in   '   --    Incentive
     Distributions -- Hypothetical Annualized Yield' below.
 
     The  above references  to the 4%  of Available Cash  from Operating Surplus
distributed to the General Partners constitute  references to the amount of  the
Managing  General Partner's  and Special General  Partner's aggregate percentage
interest in distributions from the Partnership and the Operating Partnership  on
a  combined basis,  exclusive of their  rights as holder  of Subordinated Units,
Common Units or rights to receive Incentive Distributions. Each of the  Managing
General  Partner  and  the Special  General  Partner own  a  1.0% unsubordinated
general partner interest in the Partnership and a 1.0101% unsubordinated general
partner  interest  in  the  Operating  Partnership.  Other  references  in  this
Prospectus  to  the  General Partner  Interests  or  to distributions  of  4% of
Available Cash also constitute references to the amount of the General Partners'
aggregate percentage interest in the  Partnership and the Operating  Partnership
on  a combined  basis exclusive  of their rights  as holder  of the Subordinated
Units, Common Units or rights to  receive Incentive Distributions. In the  event
all or a portion of the Special General Partner's 2% General Partner Interest is
converted into Units, the Managing General Partner will be required to amend the
Partnership  Agreement and the  Operating Partnership Agreement  to decrease the
percentage of  profits, losses  and distributions  previously allocated  to  the
Special  General Partner in  respect of its General  Partner Interest to reflect
such conversion and increase the percentage of profits, losses and distributions
that are allocated to the  Unitholders by the same  amount. With respect to  any
Common Unit, the term 'Common Unit Arrearages' refers to the amount by which the
Minimum  Quarterly Distribution in  any quarter during  the Subordination Period
exceeds the distribution of Available Cash from Operating Surplus actually  made
for  such quarter  on a Common  Unit cumulative  for such quarter  and all prior
quarters during the Subordination Period. Common Unit Arrearages will not accrue
interest.
 
DISTRIBUTIONS FROM OPERATING SURPLUS AFTER SUBORDINATION PERIOD
 
     Distributions by the Partnership of  Available Cash from Operating  Surplus
with  respect to any quarter after the  Subordination Period will be made in the
following manner:
 
          first, 96%  to  all Unitholders,  pro  rata,  and 4%  to  the  General
     Partners, pro rata until there has been distributed in respect of each Unit
     an amount equal to the Minimum Quarterly Distribution for such quarter;
 
          thereafter,    in   the   manner   described   in   '   --   Incentive
     Distributions -- Hypothetical Annualized Yield' below.
 
INCENTIVE DISTRIBUTIONS -- HYPOTHETICAL ANNUALIZED YIELD
 
     For any  quarter  for  which  Available  Cash  from  Operating  Surplus  is
distributed to the Common and Subordinated Unitholders in an amount equal to the
Minimum  Quarterly Distribution on all Units and to the Common Unitholders in an
amount equal to any unpaid Common Unit Arrearages, then any additional Available
Cash from Operating Surplus in respect of such quarter will be distributed among
the Unitholders and the General Partners in the following manner:
 
          first, 96%  to  all Unitholders,  pro  rata,  and 4%  to  the  General
     Partners, pro rata, until the Unitholders have received (in addition to any
     distributions  to Common Unitholders to eliminate Common Unit Arrearages) a
     total of $0.577 for such quarter  in respect of each outstanding Unit  (the
     'First Target Distribution');
 
          second,  85%  to all  Unitholders, pro  rata, and  15% to  the General
     Partners,  until  the  Unitholders  have  received  (in  addition  to   any
     distributions  to Common Unitholders to eliminate Common Unit Arrearages) a
     total of $0.665 for such quarter  in respect of each outstanding Unit  (the
     'Second Target Distribution');
 
                                       52
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
          third,  75%  to all  Unitholders,  pro rata,  and  25% to  the General
     Partners,  until  the  Unitholders  have  received  (in  addition  to   any
     distributions  to Common Unitholders to eliminate Common Unit Arrearages) a
     total of $0.863 for such quarter  in respect of each outstanding Unit  (the
     'Third Target Distribution'); and
 
          thereafter,  50% to all Unitholders, pro  rata, and 50% to the General
     Partners.
 
     The distributions to the  General Partners set forth  above (other than  in
the  Managing General Partner's capacity as a holder of Subordinated Units) that
are  in  excess  of  the  General  Partner  Interests  represent  the  Incentive
Distributions  which  are paid  to the  Managing  General Partner.  The Managing
General Partner may transfer its right to receive Incentive Distributions to one
or more Persons.
 
     The following table illustrates the percentage allocation of the additional
Available Cash from Operating  Surplus between the  Unitholders and the  General
Partners  up  to  the  various Target  Distribution  Levels  and  a hypothetical
annualized percentage yield  to be realized  by a Unitholder  at each  different
level of allocation among the Unitholders and the General Partners. For purposes
of  the  following table,  the annualized  percentage yield  is calculated  on a
pretax basis assuming that (i) the Common Unit was purchased at an amount  equal
to  the initial  public offering price  of $21.00  per Common Unit  and (ii) the
Partnership distributed  each  quarter  during  the  first  year  following  the
investment  the amount set forth under the column 'Quarterly Distribution Target
Amount.' The calculations are  also based on the  assumption that the  quarterly
distribution  amounts  shown  do not  include  any Common  Unit  Arrearages. The
amounts set forth under 'Marginal Percentage Interest in Distributions' are  the
percentage  interests  of  the  General  Partners  and  the  Unitholders  in any
Available Cash  from  Operating Surplus  distributed  up to  and  including  the
corresponding amount in the column 'Quarterly Distribution Target Amount,' until
Available  Cash distributed reaches the next  Target Distribution Level, if any.
The percentage interests shown for the Unitholders and the General Partners  for
the Minimum Quarterly Distribution are also applicable to quarterly distribution
amounts  that are  less than  the Minimum  Quarterly Distribution.  The table is
presented for illustrative  purposes only; there  can be no  assurance that  the
Partnership  will have  Available Cash from  Operating Surplus in  order to make
such distributions.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                   MARGINAL PERCENTAGE
                                                                                                       INTEREST IN
                                                           QUARTERLY                                  DISTRIBUTIONS
                                                          DISTRIBUTION           HYPOTHETICAL    -----------------------
                                                             TARGET               ANNUALIZED                    GENERAL
                                                             AMOUNT                 YIELD        UNITHOLDERS    PARTNERS
                                                          ------------           ------------    -----------    --------
<S>                                                <C>    <C>             <C>    <C>             <C>            <C>
Minimum Quarterly Distribution..................             $0.525                 10.000%           96%           4%
First Target Distribution.......................             $0.577                 10.990%           96%           4%
Second Target Distribution......................             $0.665                 12.667%           85%          15%
Third Target Distribution.......................             $0.863                 16.438%           75%          25%
Thereafter......................................    above    $0.863        above    16.438%           50%          50%
</TABLE>
 
DISTRIBUTIONS FROM CAPITAL SURPLUS
 
     Distributions by the  Partnership of  Available Cash  from Capital  Surplus
will be made in the following manner:
 
          first,  96%  to  all Unitholders,  pro  rata,  and 4%  to  the General
     Partners, pro rata, until  the Partnership has  distributed, in respect  of
     each  outstanding  Unit  issued in  the  IPO, Available  Cash  from Capital
     Surplus in an aggregate amount per Unit equal to the Initial Unit Price;
 
          second, 96% to the Common Unitholders, pro rata, and 4% to the General
     Partners, pro rata, until  the Partnership has  distributed, in respect  of
     each  outstanding Common  Unit, Available Cash  from Capital  Surplus in an
     aggregate amount equal to any unpaid Common Unit Arrearages with respect to
     such Common Unit; and
 
          thereafter, all distributions of  Available Cash from Capital  Surplus
     will be distributed as if they were from Operating Surplus.
 
     As  a distribution of  Available Cash from  Capital Surplus is  made, it is
treated as if it  were a repayment  of the Initial Unit  Price. To reflect  such
repayment, the Minimum Quarterly Distribution and the Target Distribution Levels
will   be   adjusted   downward   by  multiplying   each   such   amount   by  a
 
                                       53
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
fraction, the numerator of which is the Unrecovered Capital of the Common  Units
(as  defined in the Glossary) immediately  after giving effect to such repayment
and the denominator  of which  is the Unrecovered  Capital of  the Common  Units
immediately  prior to such  repayment. This adjustment  to the Minimum Quarterly
Distribution may accelerate the termination of the Subordination Period, thereby
increasing the likelihood of  the conversion of  Subordinated Units into  Common
Units.
 
     When  'payback'  of the  Initial Unit  Price has  occurred, i.e.,  when the
Unrecovered Capital of  the Common Units  is zero (and  any accrued Common  Unit
Arrearages  have been paid),  then in effect  the Minimum Quarterly Distribution
and each of the Target  Distribution Levels will have  been reduced to zero  for
subsequent  quarters. Thereafter, all  distributions of Available  Cash from all
sources will be  treated as  if they were  from Operating  Surplus. Because  the
Minimum Quarterly Distribution and the Target Distribution Levels will have been
reduced to zero, the General Partners will be entitled thereafter to receive 50%
of all distributions of Available Cash.
 
     Distributions  of Available Cash  from Capital Surplus  will not reduce the
Minimum Quarterly Distribution  or Target  Distribution Levels  for the  quarter
with respect to which they are distributed.
 
ADJUSTMENT OF MINIMUM QUARTERLY DISTRIBUTION AND TARGET DISTRIBUTION LEVELS
 
     In  addition to reductions of the Minimum Quarterly Distribution and Target
Distribution Levels  made upon  a distribution  of Available  Cash from  Capital
Surplus, the Minimum Quarterly Distribution, the Target Distribution Levels, the
Unrecovered  Capital, the number of additional  Common Units issuable during the
Subordination Period  without a  Unitholder  vote, the  number of  Common  Units
issuable  upon conversion of the Subordinated Units and other amounts calculated
on a per  Unit basis  will be proportionately  adjusted upward  or downward,  as
appropriate,  in the  event of  any combination  or subdivision  of Common Units
(whether effected by a distribution payable  in Common Units or otherwise),  but
not  by reason of the issuance of  additional Common Units for cash or property.
For example, in the event of a  two-for-one split of the Common Units  (assuming
no  prior adjustments), the  Minimum Quarterly Distribution,  each of the Target
Distribution Levels and the Unrecovered Capital  of the Common Units would  each
be reduced to 50% of its initial level.
 
     The  Minimum Quarterly Distribution and  the Target Distribution Levels may
also be adjusted if  legislation is enacted  or if existing  law is modified  or
interpreted  by the relevant governmental authority  in a manner that causes the
Partnership to  become  taxable  as  a corporation  or  otherwise  subjects  the
Partnership  to taxation  as an  entity for federal,  state or  local income tax
purposes. In  such event,  the  Minimum Quarterly  Distribution and  the  Target
Distribution  Levels would be reduced  to an amount equal  to the product of (i)
the Minimum Quarterly Distribution and  each of the Target Distribution  Levels,
respectively,  multiplied by (ii) one minus the sum of (x) the maximum effective
federal income tax rate to  which the Partnership is  then subject as an  entity
plus  (y)  any increase  that  results from  such  legislation in  the effective
overall state and local income tax rate  to which the Partnership is subject  as
an  entity for the  taxable year in  which such event  occurs (after taking into
account the benefit of any deduction  allowable for federal income tax  purposes
with  respect to  the payment  of state  and local  income taxes).  For example,
assuming the Partnership was  not previously subject to  state and local  income
tax,  if the Partnership were to become  taxable as an entity for federal income
tax purposes and the Partnership became  subject to a maximum marginal  federal,
and  effective  state  and local,  income  tax  rate of  38%,  then  the Minimum
Quarterly Distribution and the Target Distribution Levels would each be  reduced
to 62% of the amount thereof immediately prior to such adjustment.
 
DISTRIBUTIONS OF CASH UPON LIQUIDATION
 
     Following  the  commencement  of  the dissolution  and  liquidation  of the
Partnership, assets will be sold or otherwise disposed of from time to time  and
the partners' capital account balances will be adjusted to reflect any resulting
gain  or loss. The proceeds  of such liquidation will,  first, be applied to the
payment of creditors of the Partnership in the order of priority provided in the
Partnership Agreement  and  by  law  and,  thereafter,  be  distributed  to  the
Unitholders and the General Partners in accordance with their respective capital
account   balances  as  so  adjusted.   Partners  are  entitled  to  liquidating
distributions in accordance  with capital account  balances. Although  operating
losses are
 
                                       54
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
allocated  to  all  Unitholders,  the  allocations  of  gains  and  losses  upon
liquidation are intended,  to the  extent possible,  to entitle  the holders  of
outstanding  Common  Units  to  a preference  over  the  holders  of outstanding
Subordinated Units  upon  the liquidation  of  the Partnership,  to  the  extent
required  to permit Common Unitholders to receive their Unrecovered Capital plus
any unpaid Common Unit Arrearages.  Thus net losses recognized upon  liquidation
of  the Partnership will be allocated to the Subordinated Units to the extent of
their capital account balances before any loss is allocated to the Common Units,
and net gains  recognized upon liquidation  will be allocated  first to  restore
negative  balances in  the capital  accounts of  the General  Partners and other
Unitholders and  then to  the  Common Unitholders  until their  capital  account
balances  equal their  Unrecovered Capital  plus unpaid  Common Unit Arrearages.
However, no  assurance can  be given  that there  will be  sufficient gain  upon
liquidation of the Partnership to enable the Common Unitholders to fully recover
all of such amounts, even though there may be cash available for distribution to
the Subordinated Unitholders.
 
     The  manner of such adjustment is as provided in the Partnership Agreement,
which is an exhibit to the Registration  Statement of which this Propectus is  a
part.  If  the liquidation  of  the Partnership  occurs  before the  end  of the
Subordination Period, any net  gain (or unrealized  gain attributable to  assets
distributed in kind) will be allocated to the partners as follows:
 
          first,  to the  General Partners  and the  Unitholders having negative
     balances in their capital  accounts to the extent  of and in proportion  to
     such negative balances;
 
          second, 96% to the Common Unitholders, pro rata, and 4% to the General
     Partners, pro rata, until the capital account for each Common Unit is equal
     to  the sum of (i) the Unrecovered  Capital in respect of such Common Unit,
     (ii) the  amount  of the  Minimum  Quarterly Distribution  for  the  fiscal
     quarter  during which liquidation  of the Partnership  occurs and (iii) any
     unpaid Common Unit Arrearages in respect of such Common Unit;
 
          third, 96% to the  Subordinated Unitholders, pro rata,  and 4% to  the
     General Partners, pro rata, until the capital account for each Subordinated
     Unit  is equal to the sum of (i) the Unrecovered Capital in respect of such
     Subordinated Unit and (ii) the amount of the Minimum Quarterly Distribution
     for the  fiscal quarter  during which  the liquidation  of the  Partnership
     occurs;
 
          fourth,  96%  to all  Unitholders,  pro rata,  and  4% to  the General
     Partners, pro rata, until there has been allocated under this clause fourth
     an amount per Common Unit equal to (a)  the sum of the excess of the  First
     Target  Distribution per Unit  over the Minimum  Quarterly Distribution per
     Unit for  each  quarter  of  the  Partnership's  existence,  less  (b)  the
     cumulative  amount per  Unit of  any distributions  of Available  Cash from
     Operating Surplus in excess of the Minimum Quarterly Distribution per  Unit
     that  were distributed  96% to  the Unitholders,  pro rata,  and 4%  to the
     General Partners, pro rata for each quarter of the Partnership's existence;
 
          fifth, 85%  to all  Unitholders,  pro rata,  and  15% to  the  General
     Partners,  until there has been allocated under this clause fifth an amount
     per Unit  equal  to  (a)  the  sum of  the  excess  of  the  Second  Target
     Distribution  per Unit over the First Target Distribution per Unit for each
     quarter of the Partnership's existence, less (b) the cumulative amount  per
     Unit  of  any distributions  of Available  Cash  from Operating  Surplus in
     excess of the First Target Distribution per Unit that were distributed  85%
     to  the Unitholders,  pro rata,  and 15% to  the General  Partners for each
     quarter of the Partnership's existence;
 
          sixth, 75%  to all  Unitholders,  pro rata,  and  25% to  the  General
     Partners,  until there has been allocated under this clause sixth an amount
     per Common Unit  equal to (a)  the sum of  the excess of  the Third  Target
     Distribution per Unit over the Second Target Distribution per Unit for each
     quarter  of the Partnership's existence, less (b) the cumulative amount per
     Unit of  any distributions  of  Available Cash  from Operating  Surplus  in
     excess of the Second Target Distribution per Unit that were distributed 75%
     to  the Unitholders,  pro rata,  and 25% to  the General  Partners for each
     quarter of the Partnership's existence; and
 
          thereafter, 50% to all Unitholders, pro  rata, and 50% to the  General
     Partners.
 
     If  the liquidation occurs after  the Subordination Period, the distinction
between Common Units and Subordinated Units will disappear, so that clauses (ii)
and (iii) of paragraph  second above and  all of paragraph  third above will  no
longer be applicable.
 
                                       55
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
     Upon  liquidation of the Partnership, any  loss will generally be allocated
to the General Partners and the Unitholders as follows:
 
          first, 96%  to  the  Subordinated Unitholders  in  proportion  to  the
     positive  balances  in  their respective  capital  accounts and  4%  to the
     General Partners, pro rata,  until the capital accounts  of the holders  of
     the Subordinated Units have been reduced to zero;
 
          second,  96% to the Common Unitholders,  in proportion to the positive
     balances in  their  respective  capital  accounts and  4%  to  the  General
     Partners,  pro rata, until  the capital accounts  of the Common Unitholders
     have been reduced to zero; and
 
          thereafter, to the General Partners, pro rata.
 
     If the liquidation occurs after  the Subordination Period, the  distinction
between  Common  Units and  Subordinated Units  will disappear,  so that  all of
paragraph first above will no longer be applicable.
 
     Interim adjustments  to capital  accounts  will be  made  at the  time  the
Partnership   issues   additional  interests   in   the  Partnership   or  makes
distributions of property.  Such adjustments will  be based on  the fair  market
value  of  the  interests or  the  property  distributed and  any  gain  or loss
resulting therefrom  will  be  allocated  to the  Unitholders  and  the  General
Partners  in the same manner  as gain or loss  is allocated upon liquidation. In
the event that positive  interim adjustments are made  to the capital  accounts,
any  subsequent negative adjustments to the  capital accounts resulting from the
issuance of additional interests in  the Partnership, distributions of  property
by the Partnership, or upon liquidation of the Partnership, will be allocated in
a  manner which results, to the extent possible, in the capital account balances
of the General Partners  equaling the amount which  would have been the  General
Partners'  capital  accounts if  no prior  positive  adjustments to  the capital
accounts had been made.
 
CASH AVAILABLE FOR DISTRIBUTION
 
     The amount of Available  Cash from Operating  Surplus needed to  distribute
the  Minimum  Quarterly  Distribution  for four  quarters  on  the  Common Units
(including the Common Units offered  hereby) and Subordinated Units  outstanding
as  of  the date  of this  Prospectus and  on the  General Partner  Interests is
approximately $24.6 million (approximately $14.1  million for the Common  Units,
$9.5 million for the Subordinated Units and $1.0 million for the General Partner
Interests).
 
     Pro  forma Available Cash from Operating  Surplus generated during 1994 and
1995 (approximately $22.7  million and $17.6  million, respectively) would  have
been  sufficient to cover the Minimum Quarterly Distribution on the Common Units
and the related distribution  on the General Partner  Interests, but would  have
been  insufficient by approximately  $1.9 million and $7.0  million to cover the
Minimum Quarterly  Distribution  on  the  Subordinated  Units  and  the  related
distribution  on the General  Partner Interests in  1994 and 1995, respectively.
The decline in pro forma Available Cash from Operating Surplus generated  during
1995  was  primarily due  to the  fact  that temperatures  during the  winter of
1994-95 across the markets served  by the Partnership were substantially  warmer
than  the prior year. Pro forma  Available Cash from Operating Surplus generated
during the twelve months ended September 30, 1996 (approximately $21.5 million),
would have been sufficient  to cover the Minimum  Quarterly Distribution on  the
Common  Units  (including  the  Common Units  offered  hereby)  and  the related
distribution on the General Partner Interests, but would have been  insufficient
by approximately $3.1 million to cover the Minimum Quarterly Distribution on the
Subordinated   Units  and  the  related  distribution  on  the  General  Partner
Interests.
 
     Pro forma Available Cash from  Operating Surplus generated during the  nine
months  ended September  30, 1996 would  have been  approximately $11.6 million;
however, because of the  highly seasonal nature  of the Partnership's  business,
such  amount is not necessarily indicative of  the results that will be obtained
over twelve months. The Partnership's revenues and cash flows have  historically
been highest in the first and fourth quarters, which are the heating season, and
the  lowest in the second and third  quarters, which are the non-heating season.
Although such $11.6 million generated during the nine months ended September 30,
1996 would have been  deficient by approximately $6.8  million to cover  Minimum
Quarterly  Distributions on the Common Units, the Subordinated Units and related
distributions on the  General Partners  Interests during such  nine months,  the
Partnership  would have had sufficient cash on  hand or available to it from its
credit line for the payment of the Minimum
 
                                       56
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
Quarterly Distributions during  the seasonally  low cash flow  second and  third
quarters  of  1996.  During the  Partnership's  normal business  cycles  it will
establish reserves  during  heating season  quarters  for, among  other  things,
payment  of the Minimum Quarterly Distribution on the Common Units in subsequent
quarters and future debt payments, decreasing the Amount of Available Cash  from
Operating  Surplus  that would  have been  distributed  for such  heating season
quarters. For the  calculation of  Pro Forma  Operating Surplus,  see the  table
below.
 
                          PRO FORMA OPERATING SURPLUS
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                    YEAR ENDED        TWELVE MONTHS     NINE MONTHS
                                                                   DECEMBER 31,           ENDED            ENDED
                                                                ------------------    SEPTEMBER 30,    SEPTEMBER 30,
                                                                 1994       1995          1996             1996
                                                                -------    -------    -------------    -------------
                                                                                   (IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                                             <C>        <C>        <C>              <C>
Operating profit as reported.................................   $18,750    $14,501       $15,765          $ 8,412
Add management fees(a).......................................     4,561      3,000         2,250            1,500
Less standalone costs(b).....................................    (1,500)    (1,500)       (1,125)            (750)
                                                                -------    -------    -------------    -------------
Pro forma operating profit...................................    21,811     16,001        16,890            9,162
Add pro forma depreciation and amortization..................    10,024     10,645        12,256            8,299
                                                                -------    -------    -------------    -------------
Pro forma EBITDA(c)..........................................    31,835     26,646        29,146           17,461
Add: Interest on $40.7 million Partnership Loan..............     5,500      5,500         5,500            4,120
      Other income(d)........................................       697        652           705              549
Less: Pro forma interest expense(e)..........................   (10,905)   (10,990)      (10,990)          (8,074)
      Pro forma capital expenditures -- maintenance(f).......    (4,228)    (4,030)       (2,635)          (2,275)
      Pro forma provision for income taxes...................      (200)      (200)         (200)            (150)
                                                                -------    -------    -------------    -------------
Pro forma operating surplus..................................   $22,699    $17,578       $21,526          $11,631
                                                                -------    -------    -------------    -------------
                                                                -------    -------    -------------    -------------
</TABLE>
 
- ------------
 
 (a) To reflect  the elimination  of the  management services  fee allocated  by
     Triarc  for the  period prior  to July  2, 1996,  the date  the Partnership
     commenced operations.
 
 (b) To  reflect  the  estimated stand-alone  general  and  administrative costs
     associated with the Partnership for the  period prior to July 2, 1996,  the
     date  the Partnership commenced operations, as costs incurred after July 2,
     1996 are reflected in the operations of the Partnership.
 
(c) EBITDA is defined  as operating income  plus depreciation and  amortization
     (excluding  amortization of deferred financing costs). EBITDA should not be
     considered as an alternative  to net income (as  an indicator of  operating
     performance)  or as an alternative to cash  flow (as a measure of liquidity
     or ability to service debt obligations) and is not a measure of performance
     or financial condition under generally accepted accounting principles,  but
     provides additional information for evaluating the Partnership's ability to
     distribute  the Minimum  Quarterly Distribution.  Cash flows  in accordance
     with generally accepted  accounting principles consist  of cash flows  from
     (i)  operating, (ii) investing  and (iii) financing  activities. Cash flows
     from operating activities reflect net income (loss) (including charges  for
     interest  and income taxes  not reflected in EBITDA),  adjusted for (i) all
     non-cash charges or income (including, but not limited to, depreciation and
     amortization) and (ii)  changes in  operating assets  and liabilities  (not
     reflected  in  EBITDA). Further,  cash flows  from investing  and financing
     activities  are  not  included   in  EBITDA.  For   a  discussion  of   the
     Partnership's  operating performance and  cash flows provided  by (used in)
     operating, investing and financing activities, see 'Management's Discussion
     and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations.'

 

 (d) Other income consists of finance fees and rental income.

 (e) Excludes non-cash  amortization of  deferred financing  costs of  $560  per
     annum and $420 for the nine months ended September 30, 1996.

 (f) Includes  expenditures not expected to occur on an annual basis as follows:
     1994 --  $1,790 (primarily  computer  hardware and  systems  installation);
     1995 -- $590 (primarily the purchase of an airplane).

                                       57

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
     Based  on the  Partnership's actual  results of  operations for  the eleven
months ended November  30, 1996 and  limited data about  operations in  December
1996,  the  Partnership  believes  that it  will  generate  Available  Cash from
Operating Surplus of approximately $18.7 million during 1996, although there can
be no assurance it will generate such amount.
 
     The amounts of pro forma Available Cash from Operating Surplus for 1994 and
1995 and for  the nine months  and twelve  months ended September  30, 1996  set
forth  above were derived in part from the pro forma financial statements of the
Partnership. The  pro  forma  adjustments are  based  upon  currently  available
information  and  certain estimates  and  assumptions. The  pro  forma financial
statements  do  not  purport  to  present  the  results  of  operations  of  the
Partnership  had the  Partnership actually commenced  operations as  of the date
indicated. Furthermore, the pro forma financial statements are based on  accrual
accounting  concepts while Available  Cash and Operating  Surplus are defined in
the Partnership Agreement  on a  cash accounting  basis. As  a consequence,  the
amounts  of pro forma  Available Cash from Operating  Surplus shown above should
only be viewed as  a general indication  of the amounts  of Available Cash  from
Operating Surplus that may in fact have been generated by the Partnership had it
been  formed in earlier periods.  Available Cash is defined  in the Glossary and
generally means, with respect to any fiscal quarter of the Partnership, all cash
on hand at  the end of  such quarter less  the amount of  cash reserves that  is
necessary  or appropriate in  the discretion of the  Managing General Partner to
(i) provide for the  proper conduct of the  Partnership's business, (ii)  comply
with  applicable law or  any Partnership debt instrument  or other agreement, or
(iii) provide funds for distributions to Unitholders and the General Partners in
respect of any  one or  more of  the next  four quarters.  Operating Surplus  is
defined  in the  Glossary and refers  generally to  (i) the cash  balance of the
Partnership on the date the Partnership commenced operations (approximately $4.6
million), plus $15.4 million, plus all cash receipts of the Partnership from its
operations, less (ii) all Partnership operating expenses, debt service  payments
(including  reserves therefor but not  including payments required in connection
with the sale of assets or any refinancing with the proceeds of new indebtedness
or  any  equity  offering),   maintenance  capital  expenditures  and   reserves
established for future Partnership operations. For a more complete definition of
Available Cash and Operating Surplus, see the Glossary.
 
     In  addition, there are provisions in the First Mortgage Notes and the Bank
Credit Facility which, under  certain circumstances, restrict the  Partnership's
ability  to make distributions to its partners. See 'Management's Discussion and
Analysis of  Financial Condition  and Results  of Operations  -- Description  of
Indebtedness.'
 
PARTNERSHIP LOAN
 
     A  portion  of  the  Partnership's annual  cash  receipts  is  derived from
interest payments from Triarc under the Partnership Loan. On a pro forma  basis,
$5.5  million of the Partnership's Available Cash from Operating Surplus in 1995
of approximately $17.6 million would have been derived from interest payments on
the  Partnership  Loan.   Consequently,  the  Partnership's   ability  to   make
distributions  to Unitholders  will depend in  part on Triarc's  ability to make
interest payments under the Partnership Loan.
 
     The Partnership Loan is a senior  obligation of Triarc evidenced by a  note
issued  by  Triarc to  the Operating  Partnership  (the 'Partnership  Note') and
secured by  a pledge  by Triarc  of  all of  the shares  of capital  stock  (the
'Pledged  Stock')  of the  Managing  General Partner  that  are owned  by Triarc
(approximately 75.7% of the Managing General Partner's outstanding capital stock
as of the date of this Prospectus).  The following is a summary of the  material
terms of the Partnership Note, which is an exhibit to the Registration Statement
of which this Prospectus is a part. This summary is qualified in its entirety by
reference to the Partnership Note.
 
     The  Partnership Note bears interest at a  rate of 13.5% per annum, payable
semi-annually in arrears on each June  30 and December 30. The Partnership  Note
has  a 14-year maturity, with required semi-annual prepayments, without premium,
of one-eighth  the principal  thereof beginning  seven years  from the  date  of
issuance.  The Partnership Note generally may not be prepaid in whole or in part
prior to the  fifth anniversary of  the date of  issuance; provided that  Triarc
shall  have the right,  but not the  obligation, to prepay  the Partnership Note
without penalty or premium (i) by an amount equal to all or a portion of the sum
of (x) the total amount of any indebtedness (including refinancing indebtedness)
incurred by the Operating Partnership or  the Partnership in connection with  an
acquisition consummated by either
 
                                       58
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
that is repaid using the proceeds of such prepayment and (y) the total amount of
other  cash  (not resulting  from proceeds  of the  indebtedness referred  to in
clause (x)) paid by the Operating  Partnership or the Partnership in  connection
with  such acquisition; or (ii) in whole, but  not in part, in connection with a
transaction (x)  that results  in either  (A) the  Managing General  Partner  no
longer  being an  Affiliate of  Triarc or  (B) the  Managing General  Partner no
longer being an Affiliate of the  Operating Partnership and (y) where the  total
consideration  received  in  connection  therewith indicates  a  value  for each
Subordinated Unit (or Common  Unit issued upon conversion  thereof) of not  less
than  the  Initial  Unit  Price,  as  adjusted  for  splits,  reclassifications,
distributions of Capital  Surplus and  the like.  During the  sixth and  seventh
years  after the date of issuance, the  Partnership Note may be prepaid in whole
or in part at redemption prices equal to 103.0% and 101.5%, respectively, of the
principal amount prepaid, together with accrued interest on the portion prepaid.
At any time on and  after the seventh anniversary of  the date of issuance,  the
Partnership  Note may be prepaid in whole or in part without premium or penalty.
The Partnership  Note ranks  pari passu  to Triarc's  obligations to  its  other
senior creditors, if any (whose debt may be secured with other assets of Triarc)
and is structurally subordinated to all creditors of Triarc's subsidiaries.
 
     The  Partnership Note contains various  affirmative covenants applicable to
Triarc, including a requirement that Triarc (i) use its best efforts to  prevent
the Managing General Partner from issuing any additional shares of capital stock
to  any Person other than  Triarc, a permitted assignee  of the Partnership Note
from Triarc  or  any  other  Person  that pledges  such  shares  to  secure  the
Partnership  Note;  (ii) use  its best  efforts to  prevent SEPSCO,  an indirect
wholly owned subsidiary of Triarc and, at the closing of the Offering, the  sole
other  shareholder of the Managing General Partner, from transferring any of its
shares in the Managing General Partner to  any Person other than to Triarc,  any
of  its wholly owned subsidiaries, a  permitted assignee of the Partnership Note
from Triarc, any other Person that pledges such shares to secure the Partnership
Note or in  connection with  a Permitted  Third Party  Sale (as  defined in  the
Partnership  Note)  that results  in the  Pledged  Stock no  longer constituting
security for the  Partnership Note; (iii)  use its best  efforts to prevent  any
shares  of the capital stock  of SEPSCO from being  acquired by any Person other
than Triarc, any of  its wholly owned subsidiaries,  or a permitted assignee  of
the  Partnership Note from  Triarc, at any  time when SEPSCO  owns any shares of
capital stock of the General Partner; (iv) comply in all material respects  with
all applicable laws; (v) pay its material obligations when due; (vi) provide the
Operating  Partnership with certain audited  and unaudited financial statements,
proxy statements and other reports and (vii) notify the Operating Partnership of
any Event of Default (as  defined in the Partnership  Note) or event which  with
notice or lapse of time would become an Event of Default.
 
     In  addition,  Triarc covenanted  in the  Partnership  Note to  prevent the
Managing General Partner from (a) incurring any indebtedness for borrowed  money
at  any time that the Operating Partnership does not have a security interest in
Retained Assets  and/or  cash  or  Cash Equivalents  (each  as  defined  in  the
Partnership  Note) having an  aggregate 'Value' (as defined  below) equal to the
then outstanding  principal  amount on  the  Partnership Note  or  (b)  selling,
assigning,  transferring, hypothecating or  pledging any of  its Retained Assets
unless immediately after giving effect thereto the Managing General Partner will
hold Units and/or cash or Cash Equivalents or Qualified Marketable Securities or
Qualified Public Company Securities  (each as defined  in the Partnership  Note)
received  on the sale thereof plus any other cash or Cash Equivalents designated
as Retained Assets (collectively, the 'Retained  Assets') with a Value equal  to
or  greater than the then outstanding  principal amount of the Partnership Note;
provided that,  the Managing  General Partner  will be  permitted to  (i)  sell,
assign,  transfer,  hypothecate  or  pledge  Retained  Assets  in  one  or  more
transactions in exchange for aggregate net  after tax proceeds of not more  than
$5  million and  (ii) consummate  the Triarc  Merger (as  defined below) without
complying with the  foregoing restriction.  For purposes of  the foregoing,  the
'Value' of the Common Units and the Qualified Public Company Securities shall be
deemed  to be equal to one-half of the  Current Trading Price (as defined in the
Partnership Note)  therefor, the  'Value'  of any  Subordinated Units  shall  be
deemed to be equal to one-half of the value of the consideration received by the
Managing  General Partner in connection with the most recent sale, assignment or
transfer of a Subordinated Unit, or if  the Managing General Partner has not  so
sold,  assigned or transferred  any Subordinated Units,  one-half of the Current
Trading Price of the Common Units, the  'Value' of any cash or Cash  Equivalents
shall  be  100% of  the face  value therefor  and the  'Value' of  any Qualified
 
                                       59
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
Marketable Security  shall be  50% of  the Current  Trading Price  therefor,  as
determined immediately after each transaction or each repayment of the principal
amount  of the Partnership  Note. If at  any time of  determination the Value of
such  Retained  Assets  pledged  or  so  subject  to  restriction  exceeds   the
outstanding  principal  amount of  the  Partnership Note,  such  excess Retained
Assets shall be released  from the foregoing  restriction. The Managing  General
Partner  may select  which of  such assets will  be released.  Assets other than
Retained Assets may be  distributed or sold by  the Managing General Partner  at
any  time. The Pledged Stock may be sold by Triarc at any time in an arms-length
transaction to  an  unrelated independent  third  party provided  that  (i)  the
consideration  received therefor is at  least equal to the  fair market value of
the interest  so transferred,  is in  the form  of Permitted  Consideration  (as
defined  in the Partnership Note) and is  pledged to secure the Partnership Note
(to the  extent  the  Value of  such  consideration  does not  exceed  the  then
principal amount of the Partnership Note), (ii) if such sale is of less than all
of  the  Pledged  Stock, the  remaining  Pledged  Stock constitutes  at  least a
majority of  the  voting common  stock  of  the Managing  General  Partner  then
outstanding  or the  Operating Partnership then  has a security  interest in any
combination of cash or Cash  Equivalents with a Value  equal to or greater  than
the  then outstanding principal amount  of the Partnership Note  and (iii) if an
Event of Default shall  have occurred and  be continuing, the  Value of the  net
after  tax proceeds received upon such sale is at least equal to the outstanding
principal amount  of  the Partnership  Note.  The Partnership  Note  contains  a
covenant  of Triarc  that, in the  event of  the merger or  consolidation of the
Managing General Partner with and into Triarc (the 'Triarc Merger'), Triarc will
concurrently therewith pledge  as security  for the Partnership  Loan a  similar
amount  of Retained  Assets. In connection  with the Spinoff  Transactions it is
expected that the Managing General Partner  may be merged with and into  Triarc.
See 'Certain Information Regarding Triarc.'
 
     If  an Event of  Default exists with  respect to the  Partnership Note, the
Partnership may accelerate  the maturity  of the Partnership  Note and  exercise
other rights and remedies. In the case of an Event of Default referred to in (k)
below,  the  acceleration of  the maturity  of the  Partnership Note  will occur
automatically. Events of  Default include (a)  failure to pay  any principal  or
premium  when due,  or interest within  five business  days of when  due, on the
Partnership Note;  (b)  payment  default  under  (after  giving  effect  to  any
applicable  grace  periods  or  any  extension of  any  maturity  date),  or the
acceleration of the maturity of, any indebtedness of Triarc or any guarantee  by
Triarc  of any indebtedness of  any subsidiary, if the  principal amount of such
indebtedness or guarantee, together with the principal amount of all other  such
indebtedness  and guarantees with respect to  which a payment default (after the
expiration of any applicable grace period or any extension of the maturity date)
has occurred, or  the maturity  of which has  been so  accelerated, exceeds  $20
million  in  the aggregate;  (c) failure  by  Triarc to  comply in  any material
respect with any  of its covenants  or agreements contained  in the  Partnership
Note for a period of 30 days after notice thereof; (d) certain unsatisfied final
judgments  in excess of $5  million; (e) the failure of  the pledge by Triarc of
its shares in the Managing General Partner  to be in full force and effect;  (f)
the  issuance by the Managing General Partner of any shares of its capital stock
except as permitted above; (g)  the transfer by SEPSCO of  any of its shares  in
the  Managing General Partner  except as permitted above;  (h) the incurrence by
the Managing General Partner of any indebtedness for borrowed money at any  time
that the Partnership does not have a security interest in the requisite Retained
Assets;  (i) the sale by the Managing General Partner of any of its Subordinated
Units (or Common Units issued upon conversion thereof) unless immediately  after
giving  effect  thereto the  Managing General  Partner  will hold  the requisite
amount of Retained Assets; (j) the failure of Triarc to pledge concurrently with
the Triarc Merger as security for  the Partnership Note the requisite amount  of
the  Retained Assets, except  as permitted above; and  (k) various bankruptcy or
insolvency events involving Triarc. If an  Event of Default were to occur  under
the  Partnership  Note  and  the Partnership  accelerated  the  maturity  of the
Partnership Note (or such acceleration occurred automatically in the case of  an
Event  of  Default referred  to in  clause (k)  above), all  amounts outstanding
thereunder would become  due. In such  event, there could  be no assurance  that
Triarc  would be able to  satisfy its obligations under  the Partnership Note or
that the Operating  Partnership would  be able to  recover any  amounts owed  by
Triarc  by foreclosing on, or otherwise exercising its remedies with respect to,
the capital stock of the Managing General Partner or any other assets of  Triarc
securing  the  Partnership Loan.  The Operating  Partnership is  prohibited from
foreclosing on and owning the capital  stock of the Managing General Partner  at
any time that the Managing
 
                                       60
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
General  Partner continues to own its General Partner Interest but its permitted
assignee may do so. Triarc shall, if requested by the Operating Partnership, use
its best efforts to cause the  Managing General Partner to transfer its  General
Partner  Interest to a third  party immediately prior to  any foreclosure by the
Operating Partnership. The failure by Triarc to repay the Partnership Loan would
have a material adverse effect on the financial condition of the Partnership and
on the ability the Partnership to make any distributions to Unitholders.
     Triarc's  obligations  under  the  Partnership  Note  may,  under   certain
circumstances,  be  assigned  to and  assumed  by any  Qualified  Transferee (as
defined in the  Partnership Note)  that has a  consolidated net  worth at  least
equal  to the greater  of (i) Triarc's  consolidated net worth  at such time and
(ii) $43 million and that acquires the Managing General Partner, the Partnership
or the Operating Partnership (whether  by merger, consolidation, acquisition  of
stock  or assets or otherwise). The Partnership  Note may not be assigned by the
Operating Partnership without Triarc's consent, except that the Partnership Note
has been assigned by the Operating  Partnership as security for its  obligations
under  the First Mortgage Notes and  the Bank Credit Facility. See 'Management's
Discussion   and   Analysis    of   Financial   Condition    and   Results    of
Operations -- Description of Indebtedness.'
 
                      CERTAIN INFORMATION REGARDING TRIARC
 
     SPECIAL  NOTE:  CERTAIN  STATEMENTS  SET  FORTH  BELOW  UNDER  THIS CAPTION
CONSTITUTE 'FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS'  WITHIN THE MEANING  OF THE REFORM  ACT.
SEE 'SPECIAL NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS' ON PAGE 4 FOR ADDITIONAL
FACTORS RELATING TO SUCH STATEMENTS.
 
     Triarc  is a holding company which, through its subsidiaries, is engaged in
four businesses:  beverages,  restaurants,  specialty  chemicals  and  dyes  and
propane  distribution. The beverage operations are conducted through Royal Crown
Company, Inc. ('Royal Crown') and Mistic Brands, Inc. ('Mistic'); the restaurant
operations  are  conducted  through  Arby's,  Inc.  ('Arby's');  the   specialty
chemicals and dyes business is conducted through C.H. Patrick & Co., Inc. ('C.H.
Patrick');  and  the  propane  distribution  operations  are  conducted  through
National Propane.
 
     On October 29, 1996, Triarc announced that its Board of Directors  approved
a  plan to  offer up  to approximately  20% of  the shares  of its  beverage and
restaurant businesses to the  public through an initial  public offering and  to
spinoff  the remainder of the shares of such businesses to Triarc's stockholders
(collectively, the  'Spinoff  Transactions').  In connection  with  the  Spinoff
Transactions,  it is  expected that the  Managing General Partner  may be merged
with and into Triarc, with Triarc becoming the managing general partner and  the
Special General Partner remaining the special general partner of the Partnership
and  the Operating Partnership. For  additional information regarding certain of
the effects of such merger, see 'Cash Distribution Policy -- Partnership  Loan',
'The  Partnership Agreement  -- Special General  Partner', and '  -- Transfer of
General Partners' Interests  and Right  to Receive  Incentive Distributions  and
Conversion  of Units Held  by the Managing General  Partner into Limited Partner
Interests.' Consummation of the Spinoff  Transactions will be subject to,  among
other  things,  receipt of  a favorable  ruling  from the  IRS that  the Spinoff
Transactions will be tax-free  to Triarc and its  stockholders. The request  for
the  ruling from  the IRS contains  several complex  issues and there  can be no
assurance that Triarc will receive the ruling or that Triarc will consummate the
Spinoff Transactions. The Spinoff Transactions  are not expected to occur  prior
to the end of the second quarter of 1997.
 
     A  registration  statement  has  not been  filed  with  the  Securities and
Exchange Commission with  respect to the  proposed offering of  common stock  of
Triarc's  restaurant and beverage businesses. The  offering of common stock will
be made only by means of a prospectus. The common stock may not be sold, nor may
offers to buy be accepted prior  to the time the registration statement  becomes
effective.  The registration statement  of which this Prospectus  is a part does
not constitute an  offer to sell  or the solicitation  of an offer  to buy  such
common  stock, nor will  there be any sale  of the common stock  in any state in
which  such  an  offer,  solicitation  or  sale  would  be  unlawful  prior   to
registration or qualification under the securities laws of any such state.
 
     The  following  are  the  historical  unaudited  parent  company  only  (i)
condensed balance sheet of  Triarc as of September  30, 1996 and (ii)  condensed
statements  of operations  and cash  flows of Triarc  for the  three years ended
April 30, 1991, 1992  and 1993, the  eight months ended  December 31, 1993,  the
years  ended December 31, 1994 and 1995  and the nine months ended September 30,
1996. Such  statements  reflect only  the  assets and  liabilities,  results  of
operations and cash flows of Triarc and do not reflect the individual assets and
liabilities,  results of operations and cash flows of its subsidiaries which are
shown on the equity method.
 
                                       61
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  TRIARC COMPANIES, INC. (PARENT COMPANY ONLY)
                            CONDENSED BALANCE SHEET
                               SEPTEMBER 30, 1996
                                 (IN THOUSANDS)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                ASSETS
<S>                                                                                                      <C>
Cash and cash equivalents.............................................................................   $140,692
Marketable securities.................................................................................     39,738
Due from subsidiaries.................................................................................     27,098
Prepaid expenses and other current assets.............................................................      8,213
                                                                                                         --------
     Total current assets.............................................................................    215,741
Notes receivable from subsidiaries....................................................................     21,967
Investments and other assets..........................................................................     11,656
                                                                                                         --------
                                                                                                         $249,364
                                                                                                         --------
                                                                                                         --------

                                  LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
Demand promissory note................................................................................   $  3,000
Due to subsidiaries...................................................................................     13,605
Accounts payable and accrued expenses.................................................................     45,561
                                                                                                         --------
     Total current liabilities........................................................................     62,166
Triarc loan payable to the Partnership................................................................     40,700
Triarc note payable to the Managing General Partner...................................................     30,000
Other note payable to subsidiary......................................................................      1,650
Deferred income taxes.................................................................................     19,225
Accumulated reductions in stockholders' equity of subsidiaries in excess of investment(a).............     33,262
Other non-current liabilities.........................................................................        637
Stockholders' equity..................................................................................     61,724
                                                                                                         --------
                                                                                                         $249,364
                                                                                                         --------
                                                                                                         --------
</TABLE>
 
- ------------
 
 (a) The 'Accumulated  reductions in  stockholders'  equity of  subsidiaries  in
     excess  of investment' includes  all of Triarc's  direct and indirect owned
     subsidiaries.  As  such,  it  includes  investments  in  numerous   holding
     companies,  inactive companies and smaller  operating companies, as well as
     its principal operating subsidiaries, Royal Crown, Mistic, Arby's, National
     Propane and C.H. Patrick as detailed above. The investment in  subsidiaries
     has  a  negative  balance  as  a  result  of  aggregate  distributions from
     subsidiaries and forgiveness of  Triarc debt to  subsidiaries in excess  of
     the investment in the subsidiaries.
 
                                       62
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  TRIARC COMPANIES, INC. (PARENT COMPANY ONLY)
                       CONDENSED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   YEAR ENDED APRIL 30,           EIGHT MONTHS
                                                             --------------------------------    ENDED DECEMBER
                                                               1991        1992        1993         31, 1993
                                                             --------    --------    --------    ---------------
                                                                               (IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                                          <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>
Income and (expenses):
    Equity in (losses) income from continuing operations
      of subsidiaries.....................................   $   (129)   $ 12,196    $(15,634)      $     465
    Gain on sale of partnership units in the propane
      business............................................      --          --          --            --
    Interest expense......................................    (22,973)    (22,751)    (24,858)        (18,992)
    Unallocated general and administrative expenses.......     (2,540)     (2,961)     (4,050)         (8,622)
    Facilities relocation and corporate restructuring.....      --          --         (7,200)        --
    Recovery of (provision for) doubtful accounts from
      affiliates and former affiliates....................     (9,554)     (9,221)     (3,311)        --
    Cost of a proposed acquisition not consummated........      --          --          --            --
    Shareholder litigation and other expenses.............      2,165      (2,004)     (7,025)         (6,424)
    Settlements with former affiliates....................      2,871       --          8,900         --
    Other income (expense)................................      1,248         813         517            (650)
                                                             --------    --------    --------    ---------------
        Income (loss) from continuing operations before
          income taxes....................................    (28,912)    (23,928)    (52,661)        (34,223)
Benefit from (provision for) income taxes.................     11,411      13,721       8,112           3,784
                                                             --------    --------    --------    ---------------
        Income (loss) from continuing operations..........    (17,501)    (10,207)    (44,549)        (30,439)
Equity in losses of discontinued operations of
  subsidiaries............................................        (55)      2,705      (2,430)         (8,591)
Extraordinary gain (charge) from:
    Triarc Companies, Inc.................................      --          --          --            --
    Equity in subsidiaries................................        703       --         (6,611)           (448)
                                                             --------    --------    --------    ---------------
                                                                  703       --         (6,611)           (448)
                                                             --------    --------    --------    ---------------
Cumulative effect of changes in accounting principles
  from:
    Triarc Companies, Inc.................................      --          --         (3,488)        --
    Equity in subsidiaries................................      --          --         (2,900)        --
                                                             --------    --------    --------    ---------------
                                                                --          --         (6,338)        --
                                                             --------    --------    --------    ---------------
        Net income (loss).................................    (16,853)     (7,502)    (59,978)        (39,478)
Preferred stock dividend requirements.....................        (11)        (11)       (121)         (3,889)
                                                             --------    --------    --------    ---------------
        Net income (loss) applicable to common
          stockholders....................................   $(16,864)   $ (7,513)   $(60,099)      $ (43,367)
                                                             --------    --------    --------    ---------------
                                                             --------    --------    --------    ---------------
Income (loss) per share:
    Continuing operations.................................   $   (.68)   $   (.39)   $  (1.73)      $   (1.62)
    Discontinued operations...............................      --            .10        (.09)           (.40)
    Extraordinary charges, net............................        .03       --           (.26)           (.02)
    Cumulative effect of changes in accounting
      principles..........................................      --          --           (.25)        --
                                                             --------    --------    --------    ---------------
        Net income (loss).................................   $   (.65)   $   (.29)   $  (2.33)      $   (2.04)
                                                             --------    --------    --------    ---------------
                                                             --------    --------    --------    ---------------
 
<CAPTION>
                                                           YEAR ENDED DECEMBER      NINE MONTHS
                                                                   31,                 ENDED
                                                           --------------------    SEPTEMBER 30,
                                                             1994        1995          1996
                                                           ---------   --------    -------------
<S>                                                          <C>       <C>         <C>
Income and (expenses):
    Equity in (losses) income from continuing operations
      of subsidiaries..................................... $  29,610   $(26,078)     $  (3,301)
    Gain on sale of partnership units in the propane
      business............................................    --          --            83,448
    Interest expense......................................   (28,807)   (15,794)        (6,120)
    Unallocated general and administrative expenses.......    (6,660)    (2,072)          (843)
    Facilities relocation and corporate restructuring.....    (8,800)    (2,700)       --
    Recovery of (provision for) doubtful accounts from
      affiliates and former affiliates....................    --          3,049        --
    Cost of a proposed acquisition not consummated........    (5,480)     --           --
    Shareholder litigation and other expenses.............      (500)       (24)       --
    Settlements with former affiliates....................    --          --           --
    Other income (expense)................................       508      3,102            827
                                                           ---------   --------    -------------
        Income (loss) from continuing operations before
          income taxes....................................   (20,129)   (40,517)        74,011
Benefit from (provision for) income taxes.................    18,036      3,523        (28,477)
                                                           ---------   --------    -------------
        Income (loss) from continuing operations..........    (2,093)   (36,994)        45,534
Equity in losses of discontinued operations of
  subsidiaries............................................    (3,900)     --           --
Extraordinary gain (charge) from:
    Triarc Companies, Inc.................................    --          --             5,752
    Equity in subsidiaries................................    (2,116)     --           (11,168)
                                                           ---------   --------    -------------
                                                              (2,116)     --            (5,416)
                                                           ---------   --------    -------------
Cumulative effect of changes in accounting principles
  from:
    Triarc Companies, Inc.................................    --          --           --
    Equity in subsidiaries................................    --          --           --
                                                           ---------   --------    -------------
                                                              --          --           --
                                                           ---------   --------    -------------
        Net income (loss).................................    (8,109)   (36,994)        40,118
Preferred stock dividend requirements.....................    (5,833)     --           --
                                                           ---------   --------    -------------
        Net income (loss) applicable to common
          stockholders.................................... $ (13,942)  $(36,994)     $  40,118
                                                           ---------   --------    -------------
                                                           ---------   --------    -------------
Income (loss) per share:
    Continuing operations................................. $    (.34)  $  (1.24)     $    1.52
    Discontinued operations...............................      (.17)     --           --
    Extraordinary charges, net............................      (.09)     --              (.18)
    Cumulative effect of changes in accounting
      principles..........................................    --          --           --
                                                           ---------   --------    -------------
        Net income (loss)................................. $    (.60)  $  (1.24)     $    1.34
                                                           ---------   --------    -------------
                                                           ---------   --------    -------------
</TABLE>
 
                                       63


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  TRIARC COMPANIES, INC. (PARENT COMPANY ONLY)
                       CONDENSED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   YEAR ENDED APRIL 30,           EIGHT MONTHS
                                                             --------------------------------    ENDED DECEMBER
                                                               1991        1992        1993         31, 1993
                                                             --------    --------    --------    ---------------
                                                                               (IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                                          <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>
Cash flows from operating activities:
    Net income (loss).....................................   $(16,853)   $ (7,502)   $(59,978)      $ (39,478)
    Adjustments to reconcile net income (loss) to net cash
      provided by (used in) operating activities:
        Equity in net losses (income) of subsidiaries.....       (519)    (14,901)     27,575           8,574
        Gain on sale of partnership units in the propane
          business........................................      --          --          --            --
        Discount from principal on early extinguishment of
          debt............................................      --          --          --            --
        Dividends from subsidiaries.......................      4,763       1,080       3,127         --
        Depreciation and amortization.....................      1,246       1,248       1,248           1,371
        Provision for facilities relocation and corporate
          restructuring...................................      --          --          7,200         --
        Payments of facilities relocation and corporate
          restructuring...................................      --          --           (258)         (2,970)
        Provision for cost of a proposed acquisition not
          consummated in excess of payments...............      --          --          --            --
        Interest capitalized and not paid.................      --          --          --            --
        Reduction in commuted insurance liabilities
          credited against notes payable..................      --          --          --            --
        Change in due from/to subsidiaries and other
          affiliates including capitalized interest
          ($21,017 in 1994 and $9,569 in 1995)............      4,157       3,674     (15,214)         18,121
        Deferred income tax provision (benefit)...........        603      (5,130)     (2,199)          5,591
        Provision for doubtful accounts from former
          affiliates......................................      9,554       9,221       3,311         --
        Cumulative effect of change in accounting
          principle.......................................      --          --          3,488         --
        Other, net........................................        737         424       6,848             449
        Decrease (increase) in receivables(a).............      --          --          --            --
        Decrease (increase) in restricted cash(a).........      --          --          --             (2,422)
        Decrease (increase) in prepaid expenses and other
          current assets..................................     (1,288)      9,197      (1,156)            598
        Increase (decrease) in accounts payable and
          accrued expenses................................     (1,909)      2,182       5,824            (376)
                                                             --------    --------    --------    ---------------
            Net cash provided by (used in) operating
              activities..................................        491        (507)    (20,184)        (10,542)
                                                             --------    --------    --------    ---------------
Cash flows from investing activities:
    Business acquisitions.................................      --          --          --            --
    Loans to subsidiaries.................................      --          --          --            --
    Purchase of marketable securities.....................      --          --          --            --
    Investment in an affiliate............................      --          --          --            --
    Capital contributed to a subsidiary...................      --          --          --            --
    Purchase of minority interests........................      --          --        (21,100)        --
    Other.................................................        (18)         (4)      2,079          (3,047)
                                                             --------    --------    --------    ---------------
            Net cash used in investing activities.........        (18)         (4)    (19,021)         (3,047)
                                                             --------    --------    --------    ---------------
Cash flows from financing activities:
    Issuance (repurchase) of Class A common stock.........      --          --          9,650         --
    Payment of preferred dividends........................        (11)        (11)         (9)         (2,557)
    Repayment of long-term debt...........................      --            (52)    (20,907)        --
    Borrowings from subsidiaries..........................      --          --        141,600         --
    Repayment of notes and loans payable to
      subsidiaries........................................      --          --        (57,115)        --
    Other.................................................      --          --         (4,620)         (1,056)
                                                             --------    --------    --------    ---------------
            Net cash provided by (used in) financing
              activities..................................        (11)        (63)     68,599          (3,613)
                                                             --------    --------    --------    ---------------
Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents......        462        (574)     29,394         (17,202)
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period..........        238         700         126          29,520
                                                             --------    --------    --------    ---------------
Cash and cash equivalents at end of period................   $    700    $    126    $ 29,520       $  12,318
                                                             --------    --------    --------    ---------------
                                                             --------    --------    --------    ---------------
 
<CAPTION>
 
                                                           YEAR ENDED DECEMBER      NINE MONTHS
                                                                   31,                 ENDED
                                                           --------------------    SEPTEMBER 30,
                                                             1994        1995          1996
                                                           ---------   --------    -------------
<S>                                                          <C>       <C>         <C>
Cash flows from operating activities:
    Net income (loss)..................................... $  (8,109)  $(36,994)     $  40,118
    Adjustments to reconcile net income (loss) to net cash
      provided by (used in) operating activities:
        Equity in net losses (income) of subsidiaries.....   (23,594)    26,078         14,469
        Gain on sale of partnership units in the propane
          business........................................    --          --           (83,447)
        Discount from principal on early extinguishment of
          debt............................................    --          --            (9,237)
        Dividends from subsidiaries.......................    40,000     22,721        126,059
        Depreciation and amortization.....................     2,573      3,626        --
        Provision for facilities relocation and corporate
          restructuring...................................     8,800      2,700        --
        Payments of facilities relocation and corporate
          restructuring...................................    (5,136)    (3,278)        (2,502)
        Provision for cost of a proposed acquisition not
          consummated in excess of payments...............     1,475      --           --
        Interest capitalized and not paid.................     3,247      3,271        --
        Reduction in commuted insurance liabilities
          credited against notes payable..................    --         (3,000)        (3,000)
        Change in due from/to subsidiaries and other
          affiliates including capitalized interest
          ($21,017 in 1994 and $9,569 in 1995)............    33,034      1,332          5,317
        Deferred income tax provision (benefit)...........    (2,899)      (382)        32,689
        Provision for doubtful accounts from former,
          affiliates......................................    --          --           --
        Cumulative effect of change in accounting
          principle.......................................    --          --           --
        Other, net........................................    (1,968)       489            726
        Decrease (increase) in receivables(a).............      (649)    (4,715)         4,234
        Decrease (increase) in restricted cash(a).........      (498)   (22,887)        22,926
        Decrease (increase) in prepaid expenses and other
          current assets..................................     2,399       (214)            62
        Increase (decrease) in accounts payable and
          accrued expenses................................   (18,249)     4,522         20,502
                                                           ---------   --------    -------------
            Net cash provided by (used in) operating
              activities..................................    30,426     (6,731)       168,916
                                                           ---------   --------    -------------
Cash flows from investing activities:
    Business acquisitions.................................    --        (29,240)       --
    Loans to subsidiaries.................................    --        (18,375)        (3,590)
    Purchase of marketable securities.....................    --          --           (38,301)
    Investment in an affiliate............................    --         (5,340)        --
    Capital contributed to a subsidiary...................    --         (8,865)       --
    Purchase of minority interests........................    --          --           --
    Other.................................................       (83)       (57)        (1,695)
                                                           ---------   --------    -------------
            Net cash used in investing activities.........       (83)   (61,877)       (43,586)
                                                           ---------   --------    -------------
Cash flows from financing activities:
    Issuance (repurchase) of Class A common stock.........      (344)    (1,170)       --
    Payment of preferred dividends........................    (5,833)     --           --
    Repayment of long-term debt...........................    --          --           (27,250)
    Borrowings from subsidiaries..........................    --         45,900         40,700
    Repayment of notes and loans payable to
      subsidiaries........................................    --          --           (10,100)
    Other.................................................    --            (56)          (538)
                                                           ---------   --------    -------------
            Net cash provided by (used in) financing
              activities..................................    (6,177)    44,674          2,812
                                                           ---------   --------    -------------
Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents......    24,166    (23,934)       128,142
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period..........    12,318     36,484         12,550
                                                           ---------   --------    -------------
Cash and cash equivalents at end of period................ $  36,484   $ 12,550      $ 140,692
                                                           ---------   --------    -------------
                                                           ---------   --------    -------------
</TABLE>
 
- ------------
 
 (a) Included in 'Prepaid expenses and other current assets' on the accompanying
     parent company only condensed balance sheet as of September 30, 1996.
 
                                       64
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
     Because  Triarc  is  a  holding  company,  its  ability  to  meet  its cash
requirements  (including  required  interest  and  principal  payments  on   the
Partnership  Loan) is primarily  dependent upon its cash  on hand and marketable
securities (approximately $177.0 million as of November 30, 1996) and cash flows
from its subsidiaries including  loans and cash  dividends and reimbursement  by
subsidiaries  to  Triarc in  connection  with its  providing  certain management
services and payments by subsidiaries  under certain tax sharing agreements.  In
connection  with the Spinoff Transactions it is expected that Triarc will retain
all or substantially  all of its  cash on hand  and marketable securities.  Upon
completion of the Spinoff Transactions, however, it is expected that Triarc will
no  longer  be  entitled  to  receive cash  dividends  or  tax  sharing payments
(relating to  the  period  subsequent  to the  Spinoff  Transactions)  from  its
restaurant  and beverage businesses.  It is anticipated  that  Triarc  may enter
into a management and administrative services agreement with the businesses that
are spun-off.
 
     Under the terms of various  indentures  and credit  arrangements,  Triarc's
principal  subsidiaries  are  currently  unable to pay any dividends or make any
loans or advances to Triarc.  While there are no restrictions  applicable to the
Managing  General  Partner,  the Managing General Partner is dependent upon cash
flows from the  Partnership  to pay dividends.  Such cash flows are  principally
quarterly  distributions  (approximately  $2.6  million  was paid to the General
Partners on November 14, 1996) from the  Partnership on the  Subordinated  Units
and  the  unsubordinated  General  Partner  Interests.  The  stock  of  Triarc's
principal  subsidiaries and substantially all of the assets of such subsidiaries
are pledged as security for  indebtedness  under the various debt  agreements of
Triarc's subsidiaries. As of September 30, 1996, Triarc had outstanding external
indebtedness  consisting  of a $3.0 million note payable on demand  (which bears
interest at 1%) (the 'Demand Note') and guarantees of external  indebtedness  of
its  subsidiaries in the aggregate  principal  amount of $128.1 million.  Triarc
expects to be  required to repay the $3.0  million  under the Demand Note during
1997. In addition, at September 30, 1996, Triarc owed intercompany  indebtedness
of $72.4 million  consisting of the $40.7 million  Partnership Loan (which bears
interest at 13.5%),  a $30.0 million demand note payable to the Managing General
Partner  (which  bears  interest at 13.5%) and a $1.7  million  demand note to a
subsidiary of RC/Arby's  Corporation ('RCAC') (which bears interest at 11.875%).
Such  intercompany  indebtedness,  absent any  requirements  for  payment on the
aforementioned demand notes, requires no principal payments during the remainder
of 1997. In connection  with the Spinoff  Transactions,  it is expected that the
$1.7  million  note  would be repaid or  forgiven.  In  addition,  of the $128.1
million of guarantees of debt of Triarc's subsidiaries, $92.6 million relates to
businesses to be spun-off. In connection with the Spinoff  Transactions,  Triarc
expects that it would be relieved of its obligations under such guarantees or be
indemnified by such businesses for amounts paid by it thereunder.
 
     As of September  30, 1996  Triarc had notes  receivable from  RCAC and  its
subsidiaries  in the aggregate amount of $22.0 million of which $15.3 million is
due on demand and $6.7 million is due in 1998 and which bear interest at a  rate
of 11 7/8%. It is expected that this indebtedness would be repaid or forgiven in
connection with the Spinoff Transactions.
 
     Triarc's  significant cash requirements for the  fourth quarter of 1996 and
1997, in addition to interest payments on the Partnership Loan, are expected  to
be  limited to (i) general corporate expenses including cash used in operations,
(ii) principal  payments  required  on  the  Demand  Note  and  on  intercompany
indebtedness  (if any) as discussed  above, (iii) capital expenditures estimated
to be  approximately  $3.0 million,  (iv)  up to  $3.8  million of  advances  to
affiliates  under loan agreements and (v) loans  to RCAC as necessary. There can
be no assurances, however, that Triarc will not have significant additional cash
requirements in the  future that  could have a  material adverse  effect on  its
ability  to make required payments of  principal and interest on the Partnership
Loan.
 
     Triarc anticipates meeting  its significant cash  requirements through  its
cash  on  hand and  marketable securities  (approximately  $177.0 million  as of
November 30, 1996), dividends or advances from the Managing General Partner  and
the  Special General Partner (whose ability to  pay is dependent upon cash flows
from  the  Partnership),  reimbursement  of  general  corporate  expenses   from
subsidiaries  in connection  with management  services agreements  to the extent
such subsidiaries are able  to pay and net  payments received under tax  sharing
agreements with certain subsidiaries which Triarc may not have to fully remit to
the  IRS. However, there can be no assurances that Triarc's sources of cash will
be
 
                                       65
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
sufficient to  enable  Triarc  to  meet its  cash  requirements,  including  its
obligations to make payments of principal and interest on the Partnership Loan.
 
     As  a result  of the  consummation of  the Transactions,  payments received
under tax sharing agreements and the reimbursement of general corporate expenses
by   National    Propane   have    been    limited.   See    'The    Partnership
Agreement  -- Reimbursement for Services.' As a result of the April 1996 sale of
the textile business portion of  its textile segment (the 'Graniteville  Sale'),
Triarc's  textile business  no longer makes  any payments under  the tax sharing
agreement with  Triarc  or reimburses  Triarc  for general  corporate  expenses.
Triarc  expects  to  compensate  for  such  lower  cash  availability  from  its
subsidiaries through  additional  cash  on hand  and  marketable  securities  of
approximately $177.0 million as of November 30, 1996.
 
     The  Federal income  tax returns of  Triarc and its  subsidiaries have been
examined by  the  IRS for  the  tax years  1985  through 1988.  Triarc  and  its
subsidiaries  have resolved all  issues related to such  audit and in connection
therewith paid approximately $1.0 million  through December 1996 and expects  to
pay  approximately $2.5 million in the first quarter of 1997 in final settlement
of such examination.  The IRS  is currently  finalizing its  examination of  the
Federal income tax returns of Triarc and its subsidiaries for the tax years from
1989  through 1992  and has  issued notices  of proposed  adjustments increasing
Triarc's taxable income by approximately $140.0 million, the tax effect of which
has not yet been determined. Triarc  is contesting the majority of the  proposed
adjustments  and, accordingly, the amount and timing of any payments required as
a result thereof cannot presently be determined. No tax payments with respect to
such years were required in 1996.
 
     As a result of payments to Triarc in connection  with the  consummation  of
the Transactions and certain other transactions, Triarc's liquidity has improved
significantly  since  November  1994,  when  National  Propane  reclassified  an
existing  intercompany  note from Triarc as a component of stockholders'  equity
because it  determined,  based upon  circumstances  at such time,  that Triarc's
liquidity  position was  insufficient  to enable  Triarc to repay the note.  The
factors present that resulted in that  determination  included (i) the reduction
of Triarc's  consolidated  cash to approximately  $47.0 million at September 30,
1994 from  approximately  $119.0 million at December 31, 1993 and (ii) a pending
acquisition transaction which, if completed, would have required the utilization
of a significant amount of Triarc's available cash.
 
     There can be no assurance that Triarc will continue to have cash on hand or
will  in the  future receive sufficient  distributions from  its subsidiaries in
order to enable it  to satisfy its obligations  under the Partnership Loan.  The
failure  of Triarc to make payments of principal and interest on the Partnership
Loan when due would have an adverse effect on the ability of the Partnership  to
make  any distributions to Unitholders. Furthermore,  as a result of the holding
company structure of Triarc, creditors  of Triarc, including the Partnership  as
the  holder  of  the  Partnership  Note, will  effectively  rank  junior  to all
creditors of  Triarc's other  subsidiaries.  In the  event of  the  dissolution,
bankruptcy,  liquidation or reorganization of such subsidiaries, the Partnership
as the holder of the Partnership Note  would not receive any amounts in  respect
thereof  until after the payment in full  of the creditors of such subsidiaries.
As of September 30, 1996, the aggregate amount of indebtedness of Triarc and its
subsidiaries to which  the Partnership  as the  holder of  the Partnership  Note
would  be effectively subordinated would have been approximately $585.8 million.
The failure  by Triarc  to repay  the  Partnership Loan  would have  a  material
adverse effect on the financial condition of the Partnership.
 
     Triarc  is a public company  and its Class A Common  Stock is listed on the
New York Stock  Exchange under  the symbol 'TRY.'  Triarc's principal  executive
offices  are  located at  280  Park Avenue,  New York,  New  York 10017  and its
telephone number is (212) 451-3000. Certain reports, proxy statements and  other
information filed by Triarc with the Commission can be obtained from Triarc upon
request  at no  cost and  can be  inspected and  copied at  the public reference
facilities maintained by the  Commission at Judiciary  Plaza, 450 Fifth  Street,
N.W.,  Washington, D.C.  20549; and  at the  Commission's regional  offices at 7
World Trade  Center, Suite  1300, New  York, New  York 10048;  and  Northwestern
Atrium   Center,  500  West  Madison   Street,  Suite  1400,  Chicago,  Illinois
60661-2511. Copies of such  material can be obtained  from the Public  Reference
Section   of  the  Commission  at  Judiciary  Plaza,  450  Fifth  Street,  N.W.,
Washington, D.C.  20549,  at  prescribed  rates.  Such  documents  can  also  be
inspected at the office of the NYSE, 20 Broad Street, New York, New York 10005.
 
                                       66


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                       SELECTED HISTORICAL AND PRO FORMA
                   CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL AND OPERATING DATA
 
     In  connection with the Conveyance, the Partnership became the successor to
the businesses of  National Propane. Because  the Conveyance was  a transfer  of
assets  and liabilities in exchange for partnership interests among a controlled
group of companies, it has been accounted  for in a manner similar to a  pooling
of  interests, resulting in the presentation of the Partnership as the successor
to the continuing businesses of National  Propane. For purposes only of (i)  the
'Summary  Historical and Pro  Forma Consolidated Financial  and Operating Data',
(ii)  the  following  table  and  the  footnotes  thereto,  (iii)  'Management's
Discussion  and Analysis of  Financial Condition and  Results of Operations' and
(iv) the  condensed consolidated  financial statements  and notes  thereto,  the
entity  representative of both  the operations of (1)  National Propane prior to
the Conveyance and the  Transactions and (2) the  Partnership subsequent to  the
Conveyance and the Transactions, is referred to as 'National'.
 
     The  following  table  presents  selected  consolidated  financial  data of
National for each of the years in the two-year period ended April 30, 1993,  the
ten-month  transition period ended December  31, 1993, each of  the years in the
two-year period  ended  December  31,  1995 and  the  nine-month  periods  ended
September  30, 1995 and 1996. The  selected consolidated statement of operations
data for the ten-month transition period ended December 31, 1993 and for the two
years ended December  31, 1994 and  1995 and the  selected consolidated  balance
sheet data as of December 31, 1994 and 1995 have been derived from the financial
statements  included  elsewhere  herein, which  financial  statements  have been
audited by  Deloitte &  Touche  LLP, independent  auditors (whose  report  makes
reference  to the  report of  other auditors),  contained elsewhere  herein. The
selected consolidated statement of operations data for each of the years in  the
two-year  period ended April 30, 1993 and the nine-month periods ended September
30, 1995 and 1996 and the selected  consolidated balance sheet data as of  April
30,  1992 and 1993, December  31, 1993 and September  30, 1996 have been derived
from National's unaudited  consolidated financial statements  which reflect,  in
the  opinion  of National's  management,  all adjustments  necessary  to present
fairly the data for such periods. Due  to the seasonal nature of the  National's
business,  the interim results of operations are not indicative of results to be
expected for full years.  The following table  also presents unaudited  selected
pro  forma consolidated financial  data of National for  the year ended December
31, 1995 and as of and for  the nine months ended September 30, 1996  reflecting
the  IPO, additional Transactions and the Private  Placement as if they had been
consummated as of January 1, 1995  with respect to statement of operations  data
and  as of September 30, 1996 with  respect to balance sheet data. The unaudited
selected pro forma consolidated financial data is not necessarily indicative  of
the  financial position or  the results of  operations of National  had the IPO,
additional Transactions and the Private Placement been consummated on the  dates
indicated  or of the future results of  operations of National. The data for all
of the periods presented below have been restated to reflect the effects of  the
June 1995 merger of Public Gas with and into National which is further described
in  Note  3 to  the accompanying  consolidated financial  statements. National's
selected historical  and pro  forma consolidated  financial and  operating  data
should  be read  in conjunction with  the consolidated  financial statements and
notes thereto, the pro forma consolidated financial statements and notes thereto
and 'Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results  of
Operations' included elsewhere herein.
 
                                       67
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>

                       SELECTED HISTORICAL AND PRO FORMA
             CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL AND OPERATING DATA--(CONTINUED)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                       HISTORICAL                             PRO FORMA(B)
                                              -------------------------------------------------------------   ------------
                                                FISCAL YEAR ENDED      TEN MONTHS
                                                    APRIL 30,            ENDED              YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                              ---------------------   DECEMBER 31,   -------------------------------------
                                                1992         1993       1993(A)        1994                 1995
                                              --------     --------   ------------   --------      -----------------------
                                                                  (IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER UNIT DATA)
<S>                                           <C>          <C>        <C>            <C>           <C>        <C>
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS DATA:
   Operating revenues.......................  $144,667     $151,931     $119,249     $151,651      $148,983     $148,983
   Cost of sales............................   109,329      117,366       92,301      109,683       109,059      109,059
                                              --------     --------   ------------   --------      --------   ------------
   Gross profit.............................    35,338       34,565       26,948       41,968        39,924       39,924
   Selling, general and administrative
     expenses (other than management fees
     charged by parents)....................    16,776       19,578       16,501       18,657        22,423       23,923
   Management fees charged by parents(c)....     3,271        2,328        3,485        4,561         3,000       --
   Facilities relocation and corporate
     restructuring..........................     --           7,647(d)      8,429(d)    --            --          --
                                              --------     --------   ------------   --------      --------   ------------
   Operating profit (loss)..................    15,291        5,012(d)     (1,467)(d)   18,750       14,501       16,001
                                              --------     --------   ------------   --------      --------   ------------
   Interest expense.........................   (17,696)     (16,770)      (9,949)      (9,726)      (11,719)     (11,550)
   Interest income from Triarc(e)...........    16,334       17,127       10,360        9,751         --           5,500
   Other income, net........................     1,699          131        1,727        1,169           904          904
                                              --------     --------   ------------   --------      --------   ------------
                                                   337          488        2,138        1,194       (10,815)      (5,146)
                                              --------     --------   ------------   --------      --------   ------------
   Income before income taxes, extraordinary
     charge and cumulative effect of change
     in accounting principles...............    15,628        5,500          671       19,944         3,686       10,855
   Provision for (benefit from) income
     taxes..................................     5,833        2,624        1,018        7,923         4,291          200
                                              --------     --------   ------------   --------      --------   ------------
   Income (loss) before extraordinary charge
     and cumulative effect of change in
     accounting principles..................     9,795        2,876         (347)      12,021          (605)      10,655
   Extraordinary charge.....................     --           --          --           (2,116)(f)     --          --
   Cumulative effect of change in accounting
     principles.............................     --           6,259(g)     --           --            --          --
                                              --------     --------   ------------   --------      --------   ------------
   Net income (loss)........................  $  9,795     $  9,135     $   (347)    $  9,905      $   (605)    $ 10,655
                                              --------     --------   ------------   --------      --------   ------------
                                              --------     --------   ------------   --------      --------   ------------
   Income before extraordinary charge per
     Unit(h)................................                                                                       $0.91
                                                                                                              ------------
                                                                                                              ------------
BALANCE SHEET DATA (AT PERIOD END):
   Working capital (deficit)................  $(24,469)(i) $ 13,163     $  5,479     $   (631)     $ (4,357)
   Due from Triarc(e).......................    92,804       65,999       71,172        --            --
   Total assets.............................   234,699      218,095      191,955      137,581       139,112
   Long-term debt...........................    78,556       67,511       51,851       98,711       124,266
   Stockholders' equity (deficit)(e)........    81,666       88,063       88,971      (19,502)      (48,600)
   Partners' capital........................     --           --          --            --            --
OPERATING DATA:
   EBITDA(j)................................  $ 23,670     $ 13,087     $  5,483     $ 28,774      $ 25,146     $ 26,646
   Capital expenditures(k)..................     7,039        8,290       11,260       12,593        11,013       11,013
   Retail propane gallons sold(l)...........   145,708      154,839      117,415      152,335       150,141      150,141
 
<CAPTION>
                                                                      PRO FORMA(B)
                                                                      ------------
                                                          NINE MONTHS
                                                        ENDED SEPTEMBER
                                              ------------------------------------
                                                1995                1996
                                              ---------   ------------------------
<S>                                           <C>         <C>         <C>
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS DATA:
   Operating revenues.......................  $102,461    $116,018      $116,018
   Cost of sales............................    77,541      89,097        89,097
                                              ---------   ---------   ------------
   Gross profit.............................    24,920      26,921        26,921
   Selling, general and administrative
     expenses (other than management fees
     charged by parents)....................    15,506      17,009        17,759
   Management fees charged by parents(c)....     2,250       1,500        --
   Facilities relocation and corporate
     restructuring..........................     --          --           --
                                              ---------   ---------   ------------
   Operating profit (loss)..................     7,164       8,412         9,162
                                              ---------   ---------   ------------
   Interest expense.........................    (8,731 )    (9,067 )      (8,494)
   Interest income from Triarc(e)...........     --          1,370         4,120
   Other income, net........................       698         662           662
                                              ---------   ---------   ------------
                                                (8,033 )    (7,035 )      (3,712)
                                              ---------   ---------   ------------
   Income before income taxes, extraordinary
     charge and cumulative effect of change
     in accounting principles...............      (869 )     1,377         5,450
   Provision for (benefit from) income
     taxes..................................      (264 )     1,922           150
                                              ---------   ---------   ------------
   Income (loss) before extraordinary charge
     and cumulative effect of change in
     accounting principles..................      (605 )      (545 )    $  5,300
                                                                      ------------
                                                                      ------------
   Extraordinary charge.....................     --         (2,631 )(f)
   Cumulative effect of change in accounting
     principles.............................     --          --
                                              ---------   ---------
   Net income (loss)........................  $   (605 )  $ (3,176 )
                                              ---------   ---------
                                              ---------   ---------
   Income before extraordinary charge per
     Unit(h)................................                               $0.45
                                                                      ------------
                                                                      ------------
BALANCE SHEET DATA (AT PERIOD END):
   Working capital (deficit)................              $ 11,883      $ 19,250
   Due from Triarc(e).......................                40,700        40,700
   Total assets.............................               175,675       183,042
   Long-term debt...........................               126,968       126,968
   Stockholders' equity (deficit)(e)........                 --           --
   Partners' capital........................                26,542        33,909
OPERATING DATA:
   EBITDA(j)................................  $ 13,852      16,711      $ 17,461
   Capital expenditures(k)..................     6,933       5,553         5,553
   Retail propane gallons sold(l)...........   101,809     110,616       110,616
</TABLE>
 
- ------------
 
 (a) In  October  1993 National's  fiscal year  ended April  30 and  Public Gas'
     fiscal year  ended  February 28  were  changed  to a  calendar  year  ended
     December  31. In  order to  conform the  reporting periods  of the combined
     entities and to select a period deemed to meet the Securities and  Exchange
     Commission  requirement for filing financial statements for a period of one
     year, the ten-month period ended December 31, 1993 ('Transition 1993')  has
     been  presented  above  and  in  the  accompanying  consolidated  financial
     statements. The selected  consolidated financial and  operating data as  of
     and  for the fiscal  years ended April  30, 1992 and  1993 ('Fiscal 1993'),
     however, reflect  the former  year-ends of  both National  and Public  Gas.
     Accordingly,  Fiscal 1993 and  Transition 1993 each  include the results of
     National for  the  two-month  period  ended  April  30,  1993  as  follows:
     Operating   revenues   --  $28,266;   Operating   loss  --   $(5,190);  Net
     loss -- $(3,375) (see Note (d) below).
 
 (b) For a description of the adjustments and assumptions used in preparing  the
     Unaudited  Pro Forma  Condensed Consolidated Financial  and Operating Data,
     see Notes to the Unaudited  Pro Forma Condensed Consolidated Balance  Sheet
     and Statement of Operations included elsewhere herein.
 
 (c) Management  fees charged  by parents include  costs charged  to National by
     Triarc and to Public Gas  by SEPSCO, its parent  prior to the Merger.  (See
     Note  19 to the accompanying  consolidated financial statements for further
     discussion).
 
 (d) Includes  certain  significant  pretax  charges  recorded  in  April   1993
     affecting  Fiscal 1993 and  Transition 1993 operating  profit consisting of
     (i) $8.4  million  of  facilities relocation  and  corporate  restructuring
     charges  ($7.6 million  of which affected  both Fiscal  1993 and Transition
     1993 due to National's April 1993  being included in both periods and  $0.8
     million  of which affected  only Transition 1993) and  (ii) $0.5 million of
     allocated costs of a payment to the Special Committee of Triarc's Board  of
     Directors  ($0.4 million of which affected  both Fiscal 1993 and Transition
     1993). (See Note 20 to the accompanying consolidated financial statements).
 
 (e) In November, 1994, National  reclassified its receivable  from Triarc as  a
     component  of stockholders' equity and began reserving all interest accrued
     subsequent thereto. Receivables from SEPSCO  are classified as a  component
     of
 
                                                    (see footnotes on next page)
 
                                       68
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
(footnotes from preceding page)
     stockholders'  equity for  all of  the above periods.  (See Note  13 to the
     accompanying consolidated  financial statements).
 
 (f) The extraordinary charges primarily represent the write-off of  unamortized
     deferred  financing costs and original issue discount (in the 1994 period),
     net of income taxes, associated with the early extinguishment of debt.
 
 (g) The cumulative  effect of  change in  accounting principles  resulted  from
     National's adoption of SFAS No. 109 effective May 1, 1992.
 
 (h) See  Note  (f)  of  Notes to  Unaudited  Pro  Forma  Condensed Consolidated
     Statement of Operations included elsewhere  herein for details relating  to
     the calculation of net income per Unit.
 
 (i) Reflects  the classification of $35.0 million  of long-term debt, which was
     repaid in Fiscal 1993, as a current liability.
 
 (j) EBITDA  is  defined  as  operating  profit  (loss)  plus  depreciation  and
     amortization  (excluding amortization of  deferred financing costs). EBITDA
     should not be considered as an  alternative to net income (as an  indicator
     of  operating performance) or as an alternative  to cash flow (as a measure
     of liquidity or ability to service  debt obligations) and is not a  measure
     of  performance or financial condition  under generally accepted accounting
     principles, but provides additional  information for evaluating  National's
     ability  to distribute  the Minimum  Quarterly Distribution.  Cash flows in
     accordance with generally  accepted accounting principles  consist of  cash
     flows  from (i) operating,  (ii) investing and  (iii) financing activities.
     Cash flows from operating activities  reflect net income (loss)  (including
     charges  for interest and  income taxes not  reflected in EBITDA), adjusted
     for (i) all  non-cash charges  or income  (including, but  not limited  to,
     depreciation  and amortization)  and (ii)  changes in  operating assets and
     liabilities (not reflected in EBITDA).  Further, cash flows from  investing
     and  financing activities are  not included in EBITDA.  For a discussion of
     National's operating  performance  and cash  flows  provided by  (used  in)
     operating, investing and financing activities, see 'Management's Discussion
     and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations.'
 
 (k) National's  capital expenditures, including  capital leases, fall generally
     into three categories: (i) maintenance capital expenditures, which  include
     expenditures  for replacement of property, plant and equipment, (ii) growth
     capital expenditures for  the expansion of  existing operations, and  (iii)
     acquisition capital expenditures, which include expenditures related to the
     acquisition of retail propane operations.
 
     An  analysis by category for the years ended December 31, 1994 and 1995 and
     the nine months ended September 30, 1995 and 1996 is as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                     NINE MONTHS
                                                                                YEAR ENDED         ENDED SEPTEMBER
                                                                               DECEMBER 31,              30,
                                                                            ------------------     ----------------
                                                                             1994       1995        1995      1996
                                                                            -------    -------     ------    ------
                                                                                        (IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                                                         <C>        <C>         <C>       <C>
Maintenance(1)...........................................................   $ 4,228    $ 4,030     $3,670    $2,275
Growth...................................................................     3,672      4,936      3,104     2,722
Acquisition..............................................................     4,693      2,047(2)     159       556
                                                                            -------    -------     ------    ------
     Total...............................................................   $12,593    $11,013     $6,933    $5,553
                                                                            -------    -------     ------    ------
                                                                            -------    -------     ------    ------
</TABLE>
 
        --------------------
        (1) Includes expenditures not expected  to occur on  an annual basis  as
            follows:  1994 --  $1,790 (primarily  computer hardware  and systems
            installation); 1995 -- $590 (primarily the purchase of an airplane).
        (2) Includes $1,864 of assets purchased  and contributed by Triarc  (see
            Note 19 to the accompanying consolidated financial statements).
 
 (l) Retail  propane gallons sold  includes sales to  (i) residential customers,
     (ii) commercial and industrial customers, (iii) agricultural customers, and
     (iv) dealers (located primarily  in the Northeast)  that resell propane  to
     residential and commercial customers.
 
                                       69



<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                    MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF
                 FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
 
     SPECIAL  NOTE:  CERTAIN  STATEMENTS  SET  FORTH  BELOW  UNDER  THIS CAPTION
CONSTITUTE 'FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS'  WITHIN THE MEANING  OF THE REFORM  ACT.
SEE 'SPECIAL NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS' ON PAGE 4 FOR ADDITIONAL
FACTORS RELATING TO SUCH STATEMENTS.
 
     In  connection with the Conveyance, the Partnership became the successor to
the business  of National  Propane. Because  the Conveyance  was a  transfer  of
assets  and liabilities in exchange for partnership interests among a controlled
group of companies, it has been accounted  for in a manner similar to a  pooling
of  interests, resulting in the presentation of the Partnership as the successor
to the continuing businesses of National  Propane. For purposes only of (i)  the
'Summary  Historical and Pro  Forma Consolidated Financial  and Operating Data,'
(ii) the 'Selected Historical and Pro Forma Consolidated Financial and Operating
Data,'  (iii)  this  section  and  (iv)  the  condensed  consolidated  financial
statements and notes thereto, the entity representative of both the operation of
(1)  National Propane prior to  the Conveyance and the  Transactions and (2) the
Partnership subsequent to the Conveyance and the Transactions, is referred to as
'National.'
 
GENERAL
 
     National  (referred  to  as  the  'Company'  in  the  audited  consolidated
financial statements set forth elsewhere herein) is primarily engaged in (i) the
retail  marketing of propane to residential customers, commercial and industrial
customers, agricultural  customers  and to  dealers  (located primarily  in  the
Northeast) that resell propane to residential and commercial customers, and (ii)
the  retail marketing of propane-related  supplies and equipment, including home
and commercial  appliances. National  believes it  is the  sixth largest  retail
marketer  of propane in terms  of retail volume in  the United States, supplying
approximately 250,000 active retail and wholesale customers in 25 states through
its 166 service centers. National's operations are concentrated in the  Midwest,
Northeast, Southeast and Southwest regions of the United States.
 
     National  residential and  commercial customers  use propane  primarily for
space heating,  water heating,  clothes drying  and cooking.  In the  industrial
market propane is used as a motor fuel for over-the-road vehicles, forklifts and
stationary  engines, to  fire furnaces,  as a cutting  gas and  in other process
applications. Agricultural  customers  use  propane  for  tobacco  curing,  crop
drying,  poultry brooding and  weed control. Dealers  re-market propane in small
quantities, primarily in cylinders, for residential and commercial uses.
 
     The retail propane sales volumes are very dependent on weather  conditions.
National  sells  approximately 66%  of its  retail volume  during the  first and
fourth quarters, which are the winter heating season. As a result, cash flow  is
greatest  during  the  first and  fourth  quarters  as customers  pay  for their
purchases. Propane sales  are also  dependent on climatic  conditions which  may
affect  agricultural regions.  National believes  that its  exposure to regional
weather patterns is lessened because of the geographic diversity of its areas of
operations and through sales to commercial and industrial markets, which are not
as sensitive to variations in weather conditions.
 
     Gross profit margins are not only affected by weather patterns but also  by
changes  in customer mix. In addition, gross profit margins vary by geographical
region. Accordingly, profit margins could  vary significantly from year to  year
in a period of identical sales volumes.
 
     National  reports on  a calendar  year basis;  accordingly its  results are
affected by two different  winter heating seasons: the  end of the first  year's
heating season, National's first fiscal quarter, and the beginning of the second
heating season, National's fourth fiscal quarter.
 
     Profitability  is also affected  by the price  and availability of propane.
Worldwide availability of both gas liquids and oil affects the supply of propane
in domestic markets. National does not believe it is overly dependent on any one
supplier. National primarily  buys propane on  both one year  contracts and  the
spot  market  and generally  does  not enter  into  any fixed  price take-or-pay
contracts. Furthermore,  National  purchases  propane from  a  wide  variety  of
sources.  In 1995 and in the first  three quarters of 1996, no provider supplied
over 15% of National's propane needs.
 
                                       70
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
     Based on demand  and weather  conditions the  price of  propane can  change
quickly over a short period of time; in most cases the increased cost of propane
is passed on to the customer. However, in cases where increases cannot be passed
on  or when the price of propane escalates faster than the Partnership's ability
to raise customer  prices, margins will  be negatively affected.  In the  fourth
quarter  of 1996, the price of  propane was significantly higher than historical
levels. Between November 1, 1996 and December 31, 1996, the price of propane  in
the  spot market  at Mont  Belvieu, Texas, the  largest storage  facility in the
United States, averaged $0.5953 per gallon, with a high of $0.7050 per gallon on
December 16, 1996 and a low of  $0.4875 per gallon on December 31, 1996.  During
the 1995-96 winter season, from November 1, 1995 to March 31, 1996, the price of
propane  at Mont Belvieu averaged $0.3672 per  gallon, with a high of $0.5250 on
February 15, 1996 and a  low $0.3037 on November  15, 1995. Between November  1,
1996  and December 31, 1996, the price of  propane in the spot market at Conway,
Kansas averaged $0.7494 per gallon, with a high of $1.04 per gallon on  December
16, 1996 and a low of $0.5100 per gallon on November 7, 1996. During the 1995-96
winter  season, from November 1, 1995 to March 31, 1996, the price of propane at
Conway averaged $0.3713 per gallon, with a high of $0.4363 on February 15,  1996
and  a low $0.3237 on November 15, 1995. The Partnership has to date purchased a
significant amount of its  propane in the Conway,  Kansas spot market.  Although
the  increased  wholesale  price  of  propane  has  increased  the Partnership's
revenues for the  fourth quarter of  1996, the Partnership  was unable to  fully
pass  on the increased  product cost to  its customers resulting  in a lower per
gallon profit margin.  As a result,  the Partnership expects  that it will  have
slightly  lower operating income for the fourth  quarter of 1996 compared to the
corresponding period of 1995.
 
     The propane industry is very  competitive. National competes against  other
major  propane companies as well as local marketers in most of its markets, with
the most competition in the Midwest United States. Propane also competes against
other energy sources, primarily natural gas, oil and electricity.
 
     The following discussion compares  the results of  operations for the  nine
months  ended September 30, 1996 with the  nine months ended September 30, 1995,
the year ended December 31, 1995 with  the year ended December 31, 1994 and  the
year ended December 31, 1994 with the twelve months ended December 31, 1993. All
of  such periods reflect the  effects of the June  1995 merger (the 'Merger') of
Public Gas Company with and into National. Because the Merger was a transfer  of
assets  and  liabilities in  exchange  for shares  among  a controlled  group of
companies, it  has been  accounted  for in  a manner  similar  to a  pooling  of
interests  and, accordingly, all prior periods have been restated to reflect the
Merger.
 
RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
 
     In connection with  National's change in  fiscal year end  during 1993,  as
described  in Note 4 to the consolidated financial statements for the year ended
December 31,  1995  appearing  elsewhere herein,  National's  audited  financial
statements  include  the ten-month  transition period  ended December  31, 1993.
Solely for purposes of comparing the results of operations of National for  1994
with  those of the  comparable twelve-month period,  the statement of operations
for the ten-month transition  period ended December 31,  1993 has been  combined
with  the results of operations for the two-month period ended February 28, 1993
to form the combined  unaudited twelve months ended  December 31, 1993 which  is
presented  below along with the comparable  amounts for the years ended December
31, 1994 and 1995 and the nine months ended September 30, 1995 and 1996:
 
                                       71
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>

                        NATIONAL PROPANE PARTNERS, L.P.
          (SUCCESSOR TO NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES)
                CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                   TWELVE MONTHS         YEAR ENDED             NINE MONTHS
                                                       ENDED            DECEMBER 31,        ENDED SEPTEMBER 30,
                                                   DECEMBER 31,     --------------------    --------------------
                                                       1993           1994        1995        1995        1996
                                                   -------------    --------    --------    --------    --------
                                                                          (IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                                <C>              <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>
Revenues........................................     $ 154,841      $151,651    $148,983    $102,461    $116,018
Costs and expenses:
     Cost of sales..............................       117,950       109,683     109,059      77,541      89,097
     Selling, general and administrative
       expenses.................................        18,881        18,657      22,423      15,506      17,009
     Management fees charged by parents.........         4,242         4,561       3,000       2,250       1,500
     Facilities relocation and corporate
       restructuring............................         8,429         --          --          --          --
                                                   -------------    --------    --------    --------    --------
                                                       149,502       132,901     134,482      95,297     107,606
                                                   -------------    --------    --------    --------    --------
          Operating profit......................         5,339        18,750      14,501       7,164       8,412
Other income (expense):
     Interest expense...........................       (12,737)       (9,726)    (11,719)     (8,731)     (9,067)
     Interest income from Triarc................        13,342         9,751       --             --       1,370
     Other income, net..........................         1,408         1,169         904         698         662
                                                   -------------    --------    --------    --------    --------
                                                         2,013         1,194     (10,815)     (8,033)     (7,035)
                                                   -------------    --------    --------    --------    --------
     Income (loss) before income taxes and
       extraordinary charge.....................         7,352        19,944       3,686        (869)      1,377
Provision for (benefit from) income taxes.......         3,671         7,923       4,291        (264)      1,922
                                                   -------------    --------    --------    --------    --------
     Income (loss) before extraordinary
       charge...................................         3,681        12,021        (605)       (605)       (545)
Extraordinary charge............................       --             (2,116)      --          --         (2,631)
                                                   -------------    --------    --------    --------    --------
          Net income (loss).....................     $   3,681      $  9,905    $   (605)   $   (605)   $ (3,176)
                                                   -------------    --------    --------    --------    --------
                                                   -------------    --------    --------    --------    --------
</TABLE>
 
NINE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1996 COMPARED TO NINE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30,
1995
 
     Revenues. Revenues increased $13.6 million, or 13.2%, to $116.0 million  in
the  nine months ended September 30, 1996  as compared to $102.5 million for the
nine months  ended September  30, 1995  with propane  revenues increasing  $13.9
million, or 14.9% to $107.8 million in 1996 compared with $93.9 million in 1995.
The  increase is  principally due  to increased  propane sales  volume as retail
gallons sold for 1996 increased 8.8  million gallons, or 8.7%, to 110.6  million
gallons  in 1996 compared to 101.8 million gallons in 1995. Based on Degree Days
data (the 'Degree Days Data'), published  by the National Climatic Data  Center,
as  applied to the geographical regions of National's operations, the nine month
period ended  September 30,  1996 was  8.7% colder  than the  nine months  ended
September 30, 1995. The $14.0 million increased propane revenue is due to volume
increases  ($8.1 million)  and increased  selling price  due to  increased costs
($7.7 million), partially offset by  a decrease due to  a shift in customer  mix
toward  lower-priced commercial accounts ($1.8  million). National's other lines
of revenue, primarily appliance sales and tank and equipment rental income,  did
not change significantly from period to period.
 
     Gross  Profit.  Gross  profit increased  $2.0  million, or  8.0%,  to $26.9
million in 1996 compared  with $24.9 million in  1995 due principally to  higher
propane  sales volume ($4.5 million) in 1996  compared with 1995 offset by lower
margins due to (i) increased product costs which could not be fully passed on to
certain customers in  the form of  higher selling  prices, (ii) a  shift in  the
customer  mix  toward  lower-margin commercial  accounts  ($1.8  million), (iii)
slightly higher operating expenses included in cost of sales ($0.3 million)  and
(iv)  lower  margins on  other  product lines  ($0.4  million). The  increase in
operating expenses is due to National  beginning operations at five new  propane
plants  during the last quarter of 1995 and the first half of 1996. These plants
have not yet  achieved sales volumes  to make a  positive contribution to  gross
profit.
 
     Selling,   General  and  Administrative   Expenses.  Selling,  general  and
administrative expenses increased  $1.5 million,  or 9.7%, to  $17.0 million  in
1996  compared with $15.5  million in 1995  due principally to  increases in bad
debt expense,  insurance costs,  rent expense  and business  taxes, as  well  as
stand-alone costs associated with the Partnership effective July 2, 1996.
 
                                       72
 

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     Management  Fees Charged By Parents. Management fees decreased $0.8 million
to $1.5 million in 1996 compared to $2.3 million in 1995 due to management  fees
being eliminated upon the commencement of the operations of the Partnership.
 
     Interest Expense. Interest expense increased $0.3 million, or 3.9%, to $9.0
million  in 1996  compared to  $8.7 million  in 1995.  This increase  was due to
higher average borrowings partially offset by lower average interest rates.
 
     Interest Income from Triarc. Interest income from Triarc in 1996 is due  to
interest on the Partnership Loan to Triarc.
 
     Other Income, Net. Other income, net remained constant in 1996 and 1995.
 
     Provision for Income Taxes. The provision for income taxes in 1996 and 1995
is  related to National's operations  prior to the IPO.  The Partnership and the
Operating  Partnership  are  not  tax  paying  entities  except  for  NSSI,  the
wholly-owned  corporate subsidiary. As such, the  1996 period does not include a
tax benefit on the third quarter loss, a seasonally weak quarter.
 
     Extraordinary Charge. The extraordinary charge in  1996 is a result of  the
early  extinguishment of  $128.5 million  of existing  indebtedness and consists
primarily of the write-off of deferred  financing costs of $2.6 million, net  of
income tax benefit of $1.7 million.
 
YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995 COMPARED TO YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994
 
     Revenues.  Revenues declined  $2.7 million, or  1.8%, to  $149.0 million in
1995 compared with $151.7 million in 1994 with propane revenues decreasing  $2.3
million,  or 1.6%, to  $136.3 million in  1995 (compared with  $138.6 million in
1994). This  decrease is  principally due  to reduced  propane sales  volume  as
retail gallons sold for 1995 decreased 2.2 million, or 1.4%, to 150.1 million in
1995  compared with 152.3 million in 1994. This decrease in propane sales volume
is primarily the  net effect of  an unusually  warm winter season  in the  first
quarter  of 1995 partially offset  by (i) the impact  of acquisitions which were
made in the second half of 1994 and the second half of 1995, and (ii) a slightly
colder fourth quarter  in 1995. Based  on Degree  Days Data, as  applied to  the
geographical  regions of  National's operations, the  first quarter  of 1995 was
14.4% warmer than the first quarter of  1994. During the first quarter of  1995,
excluding the positive impact of increased volumes due to acquisitions, National
sold  8.6 million fewer gallons than during  the same quarter in 1994. Partially
offsetting the impact  of the  warmer temperatures was  (i) an  increase of  5.9
million  gallons from businesses acquired during the second half of 1994 and the
first quarter of  1995, and (ii)  higher volume resulting  from slightly  colder
temperatures  in the  fourth quarter  of 1995.  A slight  decrease in National's
other lines of revenue, primarily  appliance sales, accounted for the  remainder
of the decrease in revenues.
 
     Gross Profit. Gross profit declined $2.0 million, or 4.8%, to $39.9 million
in  1995 compared with  $41.9 million in  1994 due principally  to (i) the lower
propane sales volume in 1995 compared  with 1994, and (ii) lower profit  margins
(26.8%  in 1995  compared with 27.7%  in 1994) reflecting  higher product costs.
These higher product costs could  be passed along only  in part to customers  in
the  form of higher selling  prices and were partially  offset by lower overhead
costs.
 
     Selling,  General  and  Administrative   Expenses.  Selling,  general   and
administrative  expenses increased $3.8  million, or 20.2%,  to $22.4 million in
1995 compared with $18.6  million in 1994. This  increase reflects higher  costs
for  (i)  medical  benefits,  (ii)  costs  relating  to  new  marketing programs
initiated in  1995  and  (iii)  increased amortization  of  Goodwill  and  other
intangibles.  The  increased  amortization  of  Goodwill  and  other intangibles
reflects (i) the full year effects of  acquisitions in 1994 as well as  Goodwill
'pushed  down' to Public Gas in April  1994 in connection with the SEPSCO Merger
discussed in Note 14 to the consolidated financial statements included elsewhere
herein and (ii) the effect of acquisitions in 1995.
 
     Management Fees Charged by Parents. Management fees decreased $1.6  million
to  $3.0  million in  1995 compared  with  $4.6 million  in 1994.  This decrease
resulted from $1.6  million of  management fees charged  in 1994  by SEPSCO  for
services  provided  to Public  Gas  Company ('Public  Gas').  No such  fees were
charged in 1995 since the management services to Public Gas were provided by the
management of National.
 
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     Operating Profit. Operating profit declined  by $4.2 million, or 22.7%,  to
$14.5  million in 1995  compared with $18.7  million in 1994  due to the factors
noted above.
 
     Interest Expense. Interest  expense increased  $2.0 million,  or 20.5%,  to
$11.7  million in 1995 compared with $9.7 million in 1994. This increase was due
to higher borrowings under National's revolving credit and term loan  agreement,
including  the full year 1995 effect of  borrowings in October 1994 to finance a
$40.0 million  dividend  to Triarc,  and  was  only partially  offset  by  lower
interest rates.
 
     Interest  Income  from  Triarc. The  interest  income from  Triarc  of $9.8
million in 1994 did not recur in 1995 due to National's reclassification of  its
receivable  from Triarc as a component of stockholders' equity in November 1994.
This reclassification occurred because Triarc's liquidity position was no longer
sufficient to enable it to repay  the receivable and, therefore, the  receivable
was  no  longer expected  to  be repaid  except  through an  equity transaction.
Concurrent with the reclassification, National  ceased accruing interest on  the
receivable.
 
     Other Income, Net. Other income, net decreased $0.3 million to $0.9 million
in  1995 compared with  $1.2 million in  1994 principally due  to lower interest
income from finance charges on appliance sales.
 
     Provision for Income Taxes. The provision for income taxes in 1995 and 1994
reflect effective rates  of 116%  and 40%,  respectively. The  higher 1995  rate
reflects  a $2.5 million provision for income tax contingencies in 1995 relating
to proposed adjustments raised by the Internal Revenue Service for the tax years
1989 through 1992 (see Note 11 of notes to consolidated financial statements).
 
     Extraordinary Charge. In 1994, National recognized an extraordinary  charge
of  $2.1 million  in connection  with the  early extinguishment  of its  13 1/8%
senior subordinated debentures due 1999 (the '13 1/8% Debentures') consisting of
the write-off of previously unamortized deferred financing costs of $0.9 million
and previously  unamortized original  issue  discount of  $2.6 million,  net  of
income tax benefit of $1.4 million.
 
YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994 COMPARED TO TWELVE MONTHS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1993
(UNAUDITED)
 
     Revenues.  Revenues decreased $3.1  million, or 2.1%,  to $151.7 million in
1994 compared with $154.8 million in 1993 with propane revenues decreasing  $1.2
million,  or 0.8%,  to $138.5  million in 1994  compared with  $139.7 million in
1993. The decrease is principally due to reduced propane sales volume as gallons
sold for 1994 decreased 1.3 million, or 0.8%, to 152.3 million in 1994  compared
with  153.6  million  in 1993.  Based  on  Degree Days  Data  applicable  to the
geographic regions in which National operates,  1994 was 6.2% warmer than  1993.
During  the  fourth  quarter of  1994,  reflecting  the warm  winter  season and
excluding the positive impact of  increased volumes from acquisitions,  National
sold  8.3  million  fewer  gallons  than in  the  same  quarter  in  1993. Also,
reflecting the  warmer 1994  weather, National  sold 2.5  million fewer  gallons
during  the second and third  quarters of 1994 compared  to the year ago period,
exclusive of the effect of acquisitions. During the first quarter of 1994, which
was colder than  in the same  quarter in  1993, National sold  3.4 million  more
gallons  than during the same quarter in  1993, excluding the positive impact of
acquisitions. Partially offsetting the  impact of the  warm temperatures was  an
increase  in 1994 over 1993  of 6.1 million gallons  from businesses acquired in
1994. Revenues  from leasing  vehicles  and other  equipment to  affiliates  and
former  affiliates  of National  decreased  to $0.1  million  in 1994  from $2.4
million in 1993. Such leasing business was significantly curtailed after  SEPSCO
disposed of certain operations which were the principal customers of the leasing
operations.
 
     Gross  Profit.  Gross profit  increased $5.1  million,  or 13.8%,  to $42.0
million in  1994 despite  the  decrease in  sales  volume and  leasing  activity
revenues  noted above. This improvement resulted from (i) lower costs of propane
reflecting  economies  gained  through  centralized  purchasing  (only  a  small
percentage  of which  was passed on  to customers  in the form  of lower selling
prices), (ii)  lower  delivery  costs  associated  with  efficiency  initiatives
commenced  in August  1993 and (iii)  increased tank and  cylinder rental income
with no significant related costs.
 
     Selling,  General  and  Administrative   Expenses.  Selling,  general   and
administrative expenses were relatively unchanged amounting to $18.7 million for
1994 compared with $18.9 million in 1993.
 
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<PAGE>
     Management  Fees Charged by Parents. Management fees increased $0.3 million
to $4.6  million in  1994 compared  with  $4.3 million  in 1993.  This  increase
reflects  a  slightly  higher  relative  allocation  of  costs  to  National for
management services compared with Triarc's other affiliates.
 
     Facilities Relocation  and Corporate  Restructuring.  The $8.4  million  of
facilities  relocation and corporate  restructuring costs in  1993 relate to the
change in control of National and  Triarc that occurred in April 1993.  Included
in  this charge are (a) National's allocated share of the estimated costs of (i)
terminating the  lease on  Triarc's then  existing corporate  facility and  (ii)
entering into a consulting agreement with the former Vice Chairman of Triarc for
which no substantial services are required and for which Triarc has not received
and  does not expect to receive any services that will have substantial value to
Triarc and  its subsidiaries  and  (b) the  estimated  costs of  (i)  conforming
subsidiary  identifications to National, (ii) training  employees to use the new
management  information  system  necessitated  by  National's  new   centralized
operating  strategy, (iii) terminating employees  and related severance payments
and (iv)  relocating and  reorganizing National's  corporate headquarters.  Such
costs  are  further  described in  Note  20 to  National's  financial statements
appearing elsewhere herein. No similar charges were incurred in 1994.
 
     Operating Profit.  Operating profit  increased by  $13.4 million  to  $18.7
million  in 1994  compared with $5.3  million in  1993 due to  the factors noted
above.
 
     Interest Expense.  Interest  expense  decreased by  $3.0  million  to  $9.7
million  in 1994  compared with  $12.7 million  in 1993.  This decrease reflects
lower average borrowing levels and, to a lesser extent, the lower interest rates
of a new revolving credit  and term loan agreement  entered into by National  in
1994.
 
     Interest  Income from  Triarc. Interest  income from  Triarc decreased $3.5
million to $9.8 million in 1994 compared with $13.3 million in 1993  principally
reflecting  the $40.0 million collection on  the receivable from Triarc in April
1993 and,  to  a  lesser extent,  lower  interest  income in  1994  due  to  the
aforementioned November 1994 reclassification of the receivable from Triarc as a
component  of stockholders' equity compared  with a full year  of such income in
1993.
 
     Provision for Income Taxes. The provision for income taxes in 1994 and 1993
reflects  effective  rates  of  40%  and  50%,  respectively.  The  decrease  is
principally  due to the effects in 1993 of (i) the nondeductible costs allocated
to National  of  a consulting  agreement  between  Triarc and  its  former  Vice
Chairman  referred  to above  and (ii)  the  effect on  net deferred  income tax
liabilities of the 1% increase in the  Federal income statutory tax rate to  35%
effective in 1993.
 
     Extraordinary  Charge. In 1994 National recognized the previously discussed
extraordinary charge in connection with the early extinguishment of the 13  1/8%
Debentures.
 
LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES
 
     National's  cash  balances  increased $1.8  million  during  the nine-month
period ended  September 30,  1996 to  $4.7 million  and decreased  $1.2  million
during  the full  year 1995 to  $2.8 million as  of December 31,  1995 from $4.0
million as of December 31, 1994. The increase during the 1996 nine-month  period
reflected  cash provided by operating activities of $13.2 million offset by cash
used in  investing  activities  of  $5.8 million  and  cash  used  in  financing
activities  of $5.6 million. The decrease in 1995 resulted from cash provided by
operating activities of $15.9 million more than offset by cash used in investing
and financing activities of $9.5 million and $7.6 million, respectively.
 
     The cash  flows from  operating activities  of $13.2  million in  the  1996
period  consisted of a  net loss of  $3.2 million offset  by non-cash charges of
$11.7 million,  principally  depreciation  and  amortization  and  write-off  of
deferred  financing costs, and  a $4.7 million decrease  in working capital. The
change in  working  capital is  primarily  made up  of  a seasonal  decrease  in
receivables  ($5.2 million) offset  by a seasonal  increase in inventories ($3.6
million) and  an  increase  in  accounts  payable  and  accrued  expenses  ($3.1
million). The increase in accounts payable and accrued expenses is primarily due
to  accrued interest  on the  First Mortgage  Notes and  an increase  in accrued
casualty insurance reserves as  a result of  National's periodic examination  of
its  reserves. The  cash provided by  operating activities during  the full year
1995 of $15.9 million resulted from a net loss of $0.6 million more than  offset
by  noncash charges  of $14.8  million and a  $1.7 million  reduction in working
capital.
 
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<PAGE>
     Cash used  in  investing  activities during  the  nine-month  period  ended
September  30,  1996  and the  year  ended  December 31,  1995  included capital
expenditures, excluding  capital  leases  and acquisitions,  amounting  to  $5.0
million  and $8.1 million, respectively. Of the amount for the nine-month period
ended September 30, 1996,  $2.3 million was for  recurring maintenance and  $2.7
million  was to support growth  of operations. Of the  1995 amount, $2.6 million
was for recurring maintenance needed to sustain National's operations at current
levels, $0.6 million was for projects of a non-recurring nature and $4.9 million
was  to  support  growth  of  operations.  Recurring  maintenance   expenditures
consisted  primarily  of expenditures  for maintenance  of equipment  to support
current business levels. National budgeted maintenance capital expenditures  and
growth capital expenditures for the fourth quarter of 1996 of approximately $1.0
million   and  $0.8  million,  respectively,  and  had  outstanding  commitments
amounting to $1.2  million for  such capital  expenditures as  of September  30,
1996.
 
     Cash  paid for business  acquisitions in 1995 amounted  to $0.4 million for
three acquisitions. In addition, Triarc acquired a propane distribution business
for approximately $4.2 million in 1995 which it contributed to National.  During
1996,  National Propane acquired  four unaffiliated propane  distributors for an
aggregate of $1.0 million.
 
     In December 1995, National borrowed  $30.0 million under the Former  Credit
Facility,  and dividended such amount to  subsidiaries of Triarc ($22.7 million)
and SEPSCO ($7.3 million) in proportion to their respective percentage ownership
in National. On February 22, 1996, the 11 7/8% senior subordinated debentures of
SEPSCO were redeemed. The cash for such redemption came from the proceeds of the
$30.0 million  of borrowings  (which were  restricted, under  the Former  Credit
Facility,  to  the  redemption  of  the  11  7/8%  Debentures),  liquidation  of
marketable securities and existing cash  balances. The indebtedness incurred  in
part to finance such redemption was repaid in connection with the Transactions.
 
     Cash  used by  financing activities of  $5.6 million  during the nine-month
period ended  September 30,  1996 primarily  reflects the  IPO and  the  private
placement  of First Mortgage Notes offset by  the repayment of the previous debt
facilities and the payment of a  dividend and inter-company balances to  Triarc.
Cash  used in  financing activities  during 1995  of $7.6  million reflected the
aggregate $30.0 million dividend paid to  subsidiaries of Triarc and SEPSCO  and
$0.8  million of deferred financing costs  partially offset by net borrowings of
long-term debt of $23.2 million. Such net borrowings principally result from the
$30.0 million  borrowing  under the  Former  Credit Facility  in  December  1995
discussed  above, less $9.5 million of repayments of Former Credit Facility term
loans.
 
     Total partners' capital at September 30, 1996 was $26.5 million as compared
to a total  stockholders'  deficit of $48.6  million at December 31,  1995.  The
increase of $75.1  million  reflects the $117.9  million net proceeds of the IPO
and the retention of $19.7 million of net  liabilities  by the Managing  General
Partner  offset by $59.3  million  which was used to pay a dividend to Triarc at
the time of the IPO and the net loss of $3.2  million for the nine month  period
ended September 30, 1996. Total  stockholders'  deficit  increased $29.1 million
during 1995 from a deficit of $19.5  million at December 31,  1994,  principally
reflecting  the $30.0  million  dividend  to  subsidiaries  of Triarc and SEPSCO
discussed  above.  In addition,  the increase of $2.6 million in the  receivable
from SEPSCO, which is classified as a component of stockholders' equity, and the
net  loss of $0.6  million  incurred  during  1995  contributed  to the  deficit
increase  but were more than offset by the capital  contribution  from Triarc of
two propane gas businesses it had acquired in 1995 amounting to $4.2 million.
 
     The  Operating Partnership entered into a $55 million Bank Credit Facility,
which includes a  $15 million Working  Capital Facility to  be used for  working
capital  and other  general partnership purposes  and a  $40 million Acquisition
Facility. At December 31, 1996, $6.0  million and $1.9 million were  outstanding
under  the Working Capital Facility  and the Acquisition Facility, respectively.
The Partnership expects to meet  its requirements for its capital  expenditures,
acquisition  programs and debt  service through a combination  of cash flow from
operations, the availability of the Bank Credit Facility and the interest on the
Partnership Loan.
 
     National's principal cash requirements are maintenance capital expenditures
(currently budgeted at $3.5 million for the year ending December 31, 1997),  and
funds  for growth  and business  acquisitions, if  any. There  were no scheduled
principal repayments  in  1996 under  the  Bank  Credit Facility  or  the  First
Mortgage  Notes. The Working Capital  Facility requires that for  a period of at
least 30 consecutive days
 
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in each year between March 1 and August 31, the principal amount outstanding  be
reduced  to  zero. There  are  no scheduled  principal  repayments in  1997 with
respect to the First Mortgage Notes.
 
INITIAL PUBLIC OFFERING OF COMMON UNITS AND OTHER TRANSACTIONS
 
     The Partnership was organized on March 13, 1996 and was formed to  acquire,
own and operate National Propane's propane business and substantially all of the
related  assets of National Propane.  The Partnership's activities are conducted
through the Operating Partnership (including a wholly-owned corporate subsidiary
of the  Operating Partnership).  In connection  with the  IPO, National  Propane
conveyed  substantially all of its propane-related assets and liabilities (other
than amounts  due  from  a  parent, deferred  financing  costs  and  income  tax
liabilities) to the Operating Partnership.
 
     The  Partnership  issued 6,190,476  Common Units  at  an offering  price of
$21.00  per  Common  Unit,  representing   limited  partner  interests  in   the
Partnership,  pursuant to the IPO and concurrently issued 4,533,638 Subordinated
Units, representing subordinated general  partner interests in the  Partnership,
as  well  as an  aggregate  4% unsubordinated  general  partner interest  in the
Partnership and the Operating Partnership, on a combined basis, to the  Managing
General Partner and the Special General Partner.
 
     As a  result  of (i) the  IPO and the  issuance  of  111,104  Common  Units
pursuant to the exercise of the IPO Over-Allotment  Option, (ii) the issuance of
the First Mortgage Notes, (iii) the repayment of all borrowings under the Former
Credit  Facility,  (iv) the  Partnership  Loan of $40.7  million and dividend to
Triarc  of  $59.3   million,   respectively   and  (v)  certain   other  related
transactions,  as of September 30, 1996, the Operating Partnership had aggregate
partners'  capital of $26.5  million  representing  an increase of $75.1 million
over the  stockholders'  deficit  of  National  Propane  of $48.6  million as of
December  31,  1995,  before the  effects of such  transactions.  The  Operating
Partnership  also has a cash  interest-bearing  receivable  from Triarc of $40.7
million. The Partnership's operating cash flows also reflect (i) interest income
on the $40.7 million  receivable from Triarc ($5.5 million annually,  reflecting
the 13.5% interest rate),  (ii) reduced interest  expense  reflecting lower debt
levels  and  (iii)   significantly   reduced  Federal  income  taxes  since  the
Partnership is not subject to future income taxes on its propane-related  income
(such taxes will be borne by its partners).
 
CONTINGENCIES
 
     In  May 1994 National Propane was  informed of coal tar contamination which
was discovered at one of its properties in Wisconsin. National Propane purchased
the property from a company  which had purchased the  assets of a utility  which
had   previously  owned  the  property.   National  Propane  believes  that  the
contamination occurred during  the use of  the property as  a coal  gasification
plant  by such utility. In  order to assess the  extent of the problem, National
Propane engaged  environmental consultants  who began  work in  August 1994.  In
December  1994  the  environmental  consultants provided  a  report  to National
Propane which indicated the estimated range of potential remediation costs to be
between approximately $0.4 million  and $0.9 million  depending upon the  actual
extent  of  impacted  soils,  the  presence  and  extent,  if  any,  of impacted
groundwater and the remediation method  actually required to be implemented.  In
February  1996,  based upon  new  information, National  Propane's environmental
consultants provided  a  second  report  which presented  the  two  most  likely
remediation  methods and revised the estimates of the costs of such methods. The
range of  estimated costs  for the  first method,  which involves  treatment  of
groundwater and excavation, treatment and disposal of contaminated soil, is from
$1.6  million to $3.3 million.  The range for the  second method, which involves
only treatment of groundwater  and the building of  a soil containment wall,  is
from  $0.4 million to $0.8 million. Based on discussions with National Propane's
environmental  consultants,  both  methods  are  acceptable  remediation  plans.
National  Propane, however, will have to agree on a final plan with the State of
Wisconsin. Since receiving  notice of  the contamination,  National Propane  has
engaged in discussions of a general nature concerning remediation with the State
of Wisconsin. These discussions are ongoing and there is no indication as yet of
the  time  frame for  a decision  by the  State  of Wisconsin  on the  method of
remediation. Accordingly, it is unknown  which remediation method will be  used.
National Propane is also engaged in ongoing discussions of a general nature with
the  successor to  the utility  that operated a  coal gasification  plant on the
property. There is as yet no indication that the
 
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<PAGE>
successor will share the costs of remediation. National Propane, if found liable
for any of such costs,  would attempt to recover  such costs from the  successor
owner. National Propane has notified its insurance carriers of the contamination
and the likely incurrence of costs to undertake remediation. Pursuant to a lease
relating  to the Marshfield facility, the ownership of which was not transferred
to the Operating  Partnership at  the closing of  the IPO,  the Partnership  has
agreed  to  be liable  for any  costs of  remediation in  excess of  any amounts
recovered from such  successor or  from insurance.  Since no  amount within  the
ranges  of remediation costs can be determined to be a better estimate, National
has accrued $0.4 million at December 31,  1995 and September 30, 1996, in  order
to  provide for the  minimum costs estimated for  the second remediation method,
incurred  legal  fees   and  other   professional  costs.   See  'Business   and
Properties  -- Transfer of the Partnership Assets.' The ultimate outcome of this
matter  cannot  presently  be  determined  and,  depending  upon  the  cost   of
remediation  required, may have  a material adverse  effect on the Partnership's
consolidated financial position, results  of operations or  ability to make  the
Minimum Quarterly Distribution to all Unitholders.
 
     The  IRS is currently finalizing its examination of Triarc's Federal income
tax returns for the tax years 1989  through 1992 and has issued to date  notices
of  proposed  adjustments relating  to  National Propane.  Such  notices propose
increasing National Propane's taxable income by approximately $22.5 million, the
tax effect of which  has not yet been  determined. During 1995 National  Propane
provided  $2.5 million relating to the  proposed adjustments. In connection with
the formation of the Partnership, the  tax sharing agreement between Triarc  and
National Propane was amended to provide that Triarc would be responsible for any
Federal  income  tax liability  with respect  to  the proposed  adjustments. The
amount and  timing  of  any payments  required  as  a result  of  such  proposed
adjustments cannot presently be determined. No tax payments with respect to such
years  were  required  in  1996.  (See Note  11  to  the  Consolidated Financial
Statements included elsewhere herein.)
 
     The  Partnership   is  involved   in   ordinary  claims,   litigation   and
administrative  proceedings  and  investigations  of  various  types  in several
jurisdictions incidental to its  business. In the opinion  of management of  the
Managing  General  Partner, the  outcome  of any  such  matter, or  all  of them
combined, will not  have a  material adverse effect  on National's  consolidated
financial condition or results of operations.
 
DESCRIPTION OF INDEBTEDNESS
 
  DESCRIPTION OF FIRST MORTGAGE NOTES
 
     Immediately  prior to  the IPO,  the Managing  General Partner  issued $125
million aggregate  principal  amount  of  First  Mortgage  Notes  in  a  private
placement,  which First Mortgage Notes were assumed by the Operating Partnership
in connection with the  Conveyance. The following is  a summary of the  material
terms  of the First  Mortgage Notes, all  of which were  issued pursuant to Note
Agreements entered  into  among  the Managing  General  Partner,  the  Operating
Partnership  and each purchaser  of the First  Mortgage Notes (collectively, the
'Note Agreements'), which is an exhibit  to the Registration Statement of  which
this  Prospectus  is  a part.  THIS  SUMMARY  IS QUALIFIED  IN  ITS  ENTIRETY BY
REFERENCE TO THE NOTE AGREEMENTS.
 
     The Operating Partnership's obligations under  the Note Agreements and  the
First  Mortgage  Notes are  secured,  on an  equal  and ratable  basis  with the
Operating Partnership's  obligations  under  the  Bank  Credit  Facility,  by  a
mortgage  on substantially all  of the real property  and liens on substantially
all of  the  operating assets,  equipment  and  other assets  of  the  Operating
Partnership  (including all of its right  under the Partnership Note), including
the capital stock but not the operating assets and equipment of National Sales &
Service, Inc. ('NSSI'),  a wholly-owned  corporate subsidiary  of the  Operating
Partnership,  a pledge by the Partnership of its limited partner interest in the
Operating Partnership  and a  pledge  by the  Managing  General Partner  of  its
general  partner interest  in the Operating  Partnership and all  of the capital
stock of the Special General  Partner (collectively, the 'Mortgaged  Property').
The  First Mortgage Notes will mature June 30, 2010 and will require eight equal
annual prepayments of  $15,625,000, without  premium, of  the principal  thereof
beginning  June 30,  2003. Pursuant  to the Note  Agreements and  subject to the
provisions of the Bank Credit Facility, the Operating Partnership may prepay the
First Mortgage Notes  in whole  or in  part at a  premium provided  in the  Note
Agreements. Under certain circumstances following the disposition of assets, the
Operating Partnership is required to
 
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prepay  at a premium  the First Mortgage  Notes with certain  of the proceeds of
such asset dispositions. In addition, pursuant to the Note Agreements, within 90
days after any  'Change of  Control' (as defined  in the  Note Agreements),  the
Operating  Partnership is required to make an  offer to each holder of the First
Mortgage Notes to  prepay all, but  not less  than all, of  such holder's  First
Mortgage Notes at a premium provided in the Note Agreements. Interest accrues on
the  First Mortgage Notes at the rate  of 8.54% per annum, payable semi-annually
in arrears.
 
     The Note Agreements contain  various restrictive and affirmative  covenants
applicable  to  the Operating  Partnership and  its Restricted  Subsidiaries (as
defined in the Note Agreement), including (i) restrictions on the incurrence  of
additional  indebtedness  other than  (a)  borrowings permitted  under  the Bank
Credit Facility  provided  that  the  principal  amount  outstanding  under  the
Acquisition  Facility,  together  with  all  outstanding  indebtedness  incurred
pursuant to clauses (g)(z)(A) and (h)(y) below, does not exceed $40 million, (b)
certain specified pre-existing indebtedness,  (c) certain indebtedness  incurred
in  connection with additions (including by  way of acquisitions of businesses),
repairs or improvements to the Operating Partnership's assets, not to exceed the
net proceeds of any partnership interests  sold by the Operating Partnership  or
capital  contributions to the  Operating Partnership to  finance such additions,
repairs or improvements, (d) additional indebtedness, if after giving effect  to
the  incurrence thereof and the repayment of any debt being refinanced or repaid
(x) the pro forma ratio of Consolidated Cash Flow to Consolidated Pro Forma Debt
Service (each as defined in  the Note Agreements) is  greater than 2.50 for  the
period  of four fiscal quarters  next succeeding the date  of incurrence of such
debt, and  (y)  the  pro  forma  ratio of  Consolidated  Cash  Flow  to  Maximum
Consolidated  Pro Forma Debt Service (each as defined in the Note Agreements) is
greater than 1.25  for the period  of four fiscal  quarters next succeeding  the
date  of  incurrence of  such debt,  (e) unsecured  debt owed  to either  of the
General Partners or  an Affiliate of  either of the  General Partners,  provided
that  such debt is expressly  subordinated to the First  Mortgage Notes and does
not exceed a total of $20 million in the aggregate at any time outstanding,  (f)
certain   intercompany  subordinated  indebtedness,   (g)  certain  pre-existing
indebtedness of acquired Persons or assets, provided that (x) such  indebtedness
was not incurred in anticipation of such acquisition, (y) no Default or Event of
Default  (each as  defined in  the Note  Agreement) shall  have occurred  and be
continuing and (z)  either (A)  such indebtedness, together  with the  principal
amount  outstanding under the Acquisition Facility,  does not exceed $40 million
or (B) after giving effect to such acquisition, the Operating Partnership  could
incur  at least $1 of  additional indebtedness pursuant to  clause (d) above and
(h) certain indebtedness issued to a seller of assets or stock purchased by  the
Partnership  provided that (x) the financial  terms of such indebtedness are the
same as (or more favorable than) that set forth in the Acquisition Facility  and
(y)  such indebtedness, together with the principal amount outstanding under the
Acquisition Facility and  indebtedness incurred pursuant  to (g)(2)(A) does  not
exceed $40 million, (ii) restrictions on certain liens, investments, guarantees,
loans,  advances, subsidiary dividends,  fixed price supply  contracts, lines of
business, mergers,  consolidations,  sales  of  assets,  and  transactions  with
affiliates  and  (iii)  restrictions  on  the  payment  of  dividends  or  other
distributions in respect of any partnership  interest if the pro forma ratio  of
Consolidated  Cash Flow to Consolidated Interest Expense (as defined in the Note
Agreements) is less than 1.75 to 1.0.
 
     Under the Note Agreements,  as long as no  default exists or would  result,
the  Operating Partnership will  be permitted to make  cash distributions to the
Partnership not  more frequently  than  quarterly in  an  amount not  to  exceed
Available Cash (as defined in the Note Agreements) for the immediately preceding
quarter.  The Note Agreements require that  Available Cash be reduced to reflect
reserves for various items, including,  without duplication, the following:  (i)
in each calendar quarter a reserve equal to at least 50% of the aggregate amount
of  all interest payments in respect of  all indebtedness upon which interest is
due semiannually or less frequently  to be made in  the next quarter, (ii)  with
respect  to any indebtedness secured equally and ratably with the First Mortgage
Notes of which  principal is payable  annually, in the  third, second and  first
calendar  quarters  immediately preceding  each  calendar quarter  in  which any
scheduled principal payment is due with respect to the First Mortgage Notes  and
other  Indebtedness, a reserve equal to at least 25%, 50% and 75%, respectively,
of the aggregate principal amount to be  repaid on the First Mortgage Notes  and
such other indebtedness on such payment date and (iii) with respect to the First
Mortgage  Notes and any other indebtedness  secured equally and ratably with the
First  Mortgage  Notes   of  which   principal  is   payable  semiannually,   in
 
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each calendar quarter which immediately precedes a quarter in which principal is
payable  in respect of the  First Mortgage Notes and  such other indebtedness, a
reserve equal to at  least 50% of  the aggregate amount of  all principal to  be
paid  in respect of the  Mortgage Notes and such  other indebtedness in the next
quarter; provided that the amount of such reserve specified in clauses (ii)  and
(iii)  above for principal amounts to be  paid shall be reduced by the aggregate
principal amount of all  binding, irrevocable letters  of credit established  to
refinance such principal amounts.
 
     Except  as described  below, if  an Event  of Default  exists on  the First
Mortgage Notes,  the holders  of a  majority in  principal amount  of the  First
Mortgage  Notes  may accelerate  the maturity  of the  First Mortgage  Notes and
exercise other rights and remedies. In the case of an Event of Default  referred
to  in (a)  below, any  holder of  the First  Mortgage Notes  may accelerate the
maturity of the First Mortgage Notes such  holder owns. In the case of an  Event
of  Default referred to  in (g) below,  the acceleration of  the maturity of the
Notes will occur automatically. Events of Default include (a) failure to pay any
principal or premium when due, or interest within five business days of the date
due, on the First Mortgage Notes,  (b) a material misrepresentation in the  Note
Agreements,  (c) failure to perform or otherwise comply with covenants contained
in the Note Agreements  and related documents, (d)  a payment default under  the
Bank Credit Facility and any other default under the Bank Credit Facility or any
other  indebtedness the aggregate  principal amount of  which exceeds $5 million
which results in such  indebtedness becoming due before  its stated maturity  or
scheduled  due date,  (e) a  material failure of  any of  the security documents
relating to the Mortgaged Property to be  in full force and effect, (f)  certain
unsatisfied  final judgments in excess of $5  million or requiring a split-up or
divestiture of the Operating Partnership,  and (g) various events of  bankruptcy
or  insolvency involving the Operating  Partnership, Managing General Partner or
any Restricted Subsidiary.
 
  DESCRIPTION OF THE BANK CREDIT FACILITY
 
     Concurrently with the IPO, the Operating Partnership entered into the  Bank
Credit  Facility with a group of commercial  banks, for which The First National
Bank of Boston acted as administrative agent. The following is a summary of  the
material  terms  of  the  Bank  Credit Facility,  which  is  an  exhibit  to the
Registration Statement  of which  this Prospectus  is a  part. THIS  SUMMARY  IS
QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY REFERENCE TO THE BANK CREDIT FACILITY.
 
     The Bank Credit Facility consists of a $40 million Acquisition Facility and
a  $15 million Working Capital Facility. The Operating Partnership's obligations
under the Bank Credit Facility are secured,  on an equal and ratable basis  with
the  Operating Partnership's obligations under the  Note Agreement and the First
Mortgage Notes, by a security interest or pledge of the Mortgaged Property.  The
Bank  Credit Facility  bears interest  at a  rate based  upon, at  the Operating
Partnership's option, either (i) the London Interbank Offered Rate plus a margin
generally ranging from 1.00% to 1.75% or  (ii) the higher of (x) the Prime  Rate
(as  defined in the  Bank Credit Facility)  and (y) the  Federal Funds Effective
Rate (as defined in the  Bank Credit Facility) plus 1/2  of 1%, in either  case,
plus a margin generally ranging from 0.0% to 0.25%, plus, in the case of clauses
(i) and (ii) above, with respect to any period in which the First Mortgage Notes
have  received  a Sub-investment  Grade Rating  (as defined  in the  Bank Credit
Facility), a  premium  generally ranging  from  0.125% to  0.750%.  A  quarterly
commitment  fee on the unused  portion of the Bank  Credit Facility based on the
Leverage Ratio (as defined in the  Bank Credit Facility) and the current  rating
of the First Mortgage Notes is payable on the Bank Credit Facility.
 
     The  Working Capital Facility will mature on June 30, 1999. For a period of
at least 30 consecutive days in each year between March 1 and August 31 of  such
year,  the  Operating Partnership  must  reduce the  aggregate  principal amount
outstanding under the Working Capital Facility to zero. Loans under the  Working
Capital  Facility will be used for working capital and other general partnership
purposes.
 
     The Acquisition Facility will revolve until June 30, 1998, after which time
any loans outstanding will amortize  in equal quarterly installments until  June
30,  2001, which installments will be adjusted to apply mandatory prepayments or
reductions in commitments  under the  Acquisition Facility  to the  amortization
schedule.  Loans under the  Acquisition Facility will be  used solely to finance
(i) acquisitions by the Operating  Partnership and (ii) capital expenditures  by
the  Operating Partnership to  improve its existing  capital assets, to increase
its customer base or to construct new capital assets.
 
     Borrowings under the Bank Credit Facilities will be subject to satisfaction
of customary conditions and,  in addition, in the  case of each borrowing  under
the Acquisition Facility, pro forma compliance
 
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with  certain  financial  covenants.  At December  31,  1996,  $7.9  million was
outstanding under the Bank Credit Facility.
 
     The Bank  Credit  Facility  contains various  restrictive  and  affirmative
covenants   applicable  to   the  Operating   Partnership  and   its  Restricted
Subsidiaries (as defined in the Bank Credit Facility) including (i) restrictions
on indebtedness other than (a) the  First Mortgage Notes, (b) certain  permitted
indebtedness  incurred to finance the making of expenditures for the improvement
or repair of or addition to the Assets (as defined in the Bank Credit Facility),
(c) certain  indebtedness incurred  by any  Restricted Subsidiary  owing to  the
Operating  Partnership or another Restricted  Subsidiary not exceeding specified
amounts, (d)  certain  additional unsecured  indebtedness  owed to  the  General
Partners  or the  Partnership, provided that  such indebtedness  does not exceed
specified amounts  and is  subordinated  to obligations  under the  Bank  Credit
Facility  on terms satisfactory to the banks under such facility, (e) additional
indebtedness, if on  the date  such indebtedness  is incurred  and after  giving
effect  thereto,  certain  financial  tests are  met,  (f)  certain pre-existing
indebtedness of  acquired  persons  and indebtedness  incurred  to  acquire  any
person, business or assets, provided that, among other things, such indebtedness
was  not  incurred  in  anticipation  of  such  acquisition  and  that  all such
indebtedness  does  not  exceed  specified  amounts,  (g)  certain  pre-existing
indebtedness  not exceeding $1.5 million, (h) so  long as no Event of Default or
Default (each  as defined  in the  Bank  Credit Facility)  has occurred  and  is
continuing,   certain  additional  indebtedness  secured  under  the  Collateral
Documents (as defined  in the Bank  Credit Facility) which  is incurred for  any
extension,  renewal, refunding or  replacement of the  First Mortgage Notes, and
(i) so long as no  Event of Default or Default  has occurred and is  continuing,
certain   indebtedness  incurred  for  any   extension,  renewal,  refunding  or
replacement  of   indebtedness,  and   (ii)  restrictions   on  certain   liens,
investments,  guarantees,  loans,  advances,  lines  of  business, acquisitions,
mergers, consolidations,  sales  of  assets, sale  and  leaseback  transactions,
entering  into transactions with affiliates, sales  of receivables, and sales of
equity  interests  in  subsidiaries.  In  addition,  the  Bank  Credit  Facility
prohibits  Triarc or  any of  its subsidiaries,  DWG Acquisition  Group, L.P. or
Messrs. Peltz  or May  from acquiring  any propane  business while  they are  an
Affiliate of the Partnership.
 
     The  Bank Credit Facility  requires Available Cash (as  defined in the Bank
Credit Facility)  to  reflect  reserves for  various  items,  including  without
duplication  the following: (i) in  each calendar quarter a  reserve equal to at
least 50% of the  aggregate amount of  all interest payments  in respect of  all
indebtedness  upon which interest  is due semiannually or  less frequently to be
made in the next quarter, (ii) with respect to any indebtedness secured  equally
and  ratably  with  the  First  Mortgage Notes  of  which  principal  is payable
annually, in the third, second and first calendar quarters immediately preceding
each calendar  quarter in  which any  scheduled principal  payment is  due  with
respect  to the First Mortgage Notes and  other indebtedness, a reserve equal to
at least 25%, 50% and 75%, respectively, of the aggregate principal amount to be
repaid on the First Mortgage Notes  and such other indebtedness on such  payment
date  and  (iii)  with  respect  to  the  First  Mortgage  Notes  and  any other
indebtedness secured equally and ratably with the First Mortgage Notes of  which
principal  is payable semiannually,  in each calendar  quarter which immediately
precedes a  quarter in  which principal  is  payable in  respect of  such  First
Mortgage  Notes and such other  indebtedness a reserve equal  to at least 50% of
the aggregate  amount of  all  principal to  be paid  in  respect of  the  First
Mortgage  Notes and other  such indebtedness in the  next quarter; provided that
the amount  of  such reserve  specified  in clauses  (ii)  and (iii)  above  for
principal  amounts to be paid shall be reduced by the aggregate principal amount
of all  binding, irrevocable  letters of  credit established  to refinance  such
principal  amounts. Under  the Bank  Credit Facility, so  long as  no Default or
Event of Default exists or would result and the ratio of Consolidated Cash  Flow
to  Consolidated Interest  Expense (as defined  in the Bank  Credit Facility) is
greater than 1.75 to 1.00, the  Operating Partnership will be permitted to  make
cash  distributions to the Partnership not  more frequently than quarterly in an
amount not to exceed Available Cash for the immediately preceding quarter.
 
     In addition, the Bank Credit Facility requires that (i) the ratio of  Total
Funded  Debt  to Consolidated  Cash Flow  (each  as defined  in the  Bank Credit
Facility) be no  greater than  4.50 to 1  through June  30, 1997 and  4.25 to  1
thereafter and (ii) Net Working Capital (as defined in the Bank Credit Facility)
exceed certain minimums.
 
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     Events  of  Default  include  (a)  failure  to  pay  any  principal  or any
reimbursement obligation under  any letter of  credit when due,  or interest  or
fees  or other amounts within five business days of the due date, (b) failure to
perform or  otherwise  comply  with  covenants  contained  in  the  Bank  Credit
Facility,  (c)  a  material misrepresentation  in  the Bank  Credit  Facility or
related loan documents  or certain  documents related to  the Transactions,  (d)
certain  payment cross-defaults with  respect to any  indebtedness the aggregate
principal amount of which  exceeds $3 million  and certain other  cross-defaults
with  respect to indebtedness the aggregate principal amount of which exceeds $5
million, (e) the invalidity of the Bank Credit Facility, any of the related loan
documents or  certain  documents  relating  to  the  Transactions,  (f)  certain
unsatisfied  judgments  in excess  of $2.5  million or  requiring a  split-up or
divestiture of  the Operating  Partnership, (g)  certain events  resulting in  a
Material Adverse Effect (as defined in the Bank Credit Facility) and (h) various
events of bankruptcy or insolvency involving the Managing General Partner or any
Restricted Subsidiary. In addition a 'Change in Control' (as defined in the Bank
Credit  Facility) will  result in  the Operating  Partnership being  required to
repay all indebtedness under the Bank Credit Facility.
 
EFFECTS OF INFLATION
 
     In general, inflation  has not had  any significant impact  on National  in
recent  years and changes in propane  prices, in particular, have been dependent
on factors  generally  more significant  than  inflation, such  as  weather  and
availability  of supply.  However, to the  extent inflation  affects the amounts
National pays  for propane  as well  as operating  and administrative  expenses,
National  attempts to limit the effects  of inflation through passing on propane
cost increases to customers in the form  of higher selling prices to the  extent
it  can do so as  well as cost controls  and productivity improvements. As such,
inflation has not had a material adverse effect on National's profitability  and
National  does not  believe normal inflationary  pressures will  have a material
adverse effect on future results of operations of National.
 
RECENTLY ISSUED ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS
 
     Effective  October  1,  1995   National  adopted  Statement  of   Financial
Accounting  Standards ('SFAS') No. 121, 'Accounting for Impairment of Long-Lived
Assets and for Long-Lived Assets to Be Disposed of.' This standard requires that
long-lived assets  and certain  identifiable  intangibles held  and used  by  an
entity  be reviewed for  impairment whenever events  or changes in circumstances
indicate that  the carrying  amount of  an  asset may  not be  recoverable.  The
adoption  of this standard  had no effect on  National's consolidated results of
operations or financial position.
 
     In October 1995 the  Financial Accounting Standards  Board issued SFAS  No.
123  'Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation' ('SFAS 123') which was adopted by
National in the  year ended December  31, 1996.  SFAS 123 defines  a fair  value
based  method  of accounting  for  employee stock-based  compensation (including
Units) and encourages adoption of that  method of accounting. Such method  would
initially  apply  generally only  to  awards granted  in  the year  SFAS  123 is
adopted. However, SFAS 123 allows  entities to continue to measure  compensation
cost  under  the  intrinsic  value  method  prescribed  by  existing  accounting
pronouncements. Such entities, however, must make certain pro forma  disclosures
as  if  the fair  value  method had  been  applied. Through  September  30, 1996
National has not granted  any stock options; however,  Triarc has granted  stock
options  to purchase Triarc  common stock to certain  key employees of National.
Upon consummation of the IPO, the Managing General Partner adopted the  National
Propane Corporation 1996 Unit Option Plan pursuant to which the Managing General
Partner  may grant  to certain  officers, employees  and consultants  options to
purchase Common  Units  and  Subordinated  Units and  UARs  covering  up  to  an
aggregate   of  1,250,000  Common  Units   and  Subordinate  Units  (subject  to
adjustment), plus an additional  number of Units  equal to 1%  of the number  of
Units  outstanding as of each December  31 following the Option Plan's effective
date. The adoption of SFAS 123 will not have any effect on National's results of
operations or financial position since (i) SFAS 123 generally does not apply  to
stock-based  compensation granted prior  to the year  of adoption, (ii) National
currently intends to  elect to  account for stock-based  compensation using  the
intrinsic  value method if the employees of the Managing General Partner or NSSI
are granted any  stock-based compensation  and (iii)  National understands  that
Triarc  would  also  elect to  account  for stock-based  compensation  using the
intrinsic value method for any further stock options granted to employees of the
Managing General Partner or NSSI.
 
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                            BUSINESS AND PROPERTIES
 
     SPECIAL  NOTE:  CERTAIN  STATEMENTS  SET  FORTH  BELOW  UNDER  THIS CAPTION
CONSTITUTE 'FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS'  WITHIN THE MEANING  OF THE REFORM  ACT.
SEE 'SPECIAL NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS' ON PAGE 4 FOR ADDITIONAL
FACTORS RELATING TO SUCH STATEMENTS.
 
GENERAL
 
     The  Partnership, a  Delaware limited partnership  formed in  March 1996 to
acquire, own and operate the business and assets of National Propane, is engaged
primarily in (i) the retail marketing of propane to residential, commercial  and
industrial,  and agricultural customers and to dealers (located primarily in the
Northeast) that resell propane to residential and commercial customers and  (ii)
the  retail marketing of propane-related  supplies and equipment, including home
and commercial  appliances. The  Partnership believes  it is  the sixth  largest
retail  marketer of propane in  terms of volume in  the United States, supplying
approximately 250,000 active retail and wholesale customers in 25 states through
its 166 service centers located in  24 states. The Partnership's operations  are
concentrated  in the Midwest, Northeast, Southeast  and Southwest regions of the
United  States.  The  retail  propane  sales  volume  of  the  Partnership   was
approximately  150 million gallons in 1995.  In 1995, approximately 48.6% of the
Partnership's retail sales  volume was  to residential customers,  34.2% was  to
commercial  and industrial  customers, 6.3%  was to  agricultural customers, and
10.9% was  to dealers.  Sales to  residential customers  in 1995  accounted  for
approximately 64% of the Partnership's gross profit on propane sales, reflecting
the higher-margin nature of this segment of the market. Approximately 90% of the
tanks used by the Partnership's retail customers are owned by the Partnership.
 
     National  Propane was incorporated in 1953  under the name Conservative Gas
Corporation.  During  the   period  the  Partnership   was  controlled  by   DWG
Corporation,  Triarc's  predecessor,  the Partnership's  business  was conducted
through  nine  regionally  branded  companies  without  central  management   or
coordinated  pricing or distribution  strategies. In April  1993, a partnership,
the sole general partners of which are Nelson Peltz and Peter W. May,  completed
the   Acquisition,  in  which  it  acquired  approximately  28.6%  of  the  then
outstanding  shares  of  Triarc's  common  stock.  Since  the  Acquisition,  the
Partnership's  new management  team, headed  by Ronald  D. Paliughi,  who became
President and Chief  Executive Officer of  National Propane in  April 1993,  has
implemented  an operating plan designed to  make the Partnership more efficient,
profitable and competitive.
 
     Since the Acquisition, the  Partnership's management has: (i)  consolidated
nine  separately branded businesses  into a single company  with a new, national
brand and  logo; (ii)  consolidated  eight regional  offices into  one  national
headquarters;   (iii)  installed   the  Partnership's   first  system-wide  data
processing  system;  (iv)   implemented  system-wide   pricing,  marketing   and
purchasing  strategies, thereby reducing the cost duplication and purchasing and
pricing inefficiencies associated with the Partnership's formerly  decentralized
structure;  and (v) centralized and  standardized accounting, administrative and
other corporate services. As a result of these initiatives, the Partnership  has
become  more efficient  and competitive,  and believes  it is  now positioned to
capitalize on opportunities  for business  growth, both  internally and  through
acquisitions.
 
     Although management has focused primarily on implementing the new operating
plan,  the Partnership has acquired seven propane businesses since November 1993
resulting in an increase in volume  sales of approximately 14.2 million  gallons
annually.  Four of these acquired businesses operate in the Midwest, two operate
in the  Southwest and  one in  the Southeast.  Generally, National  Propane  has
financed  acquisitions either with cash on hand  or through the issuance of debt
securities. The Partnership recently entered into a letter of intent to  acquire
an   additional  propane  business  for  approximately  $1.0  million;  however,
consummation of this transaction is subject to customary closing conditions  and
completion  of definitive documentation, and no assurance can be given that this
acquisition will be completed.
 
     The Partnership believes that its competitive strengths include: (i)  gross
profit  and operating margins  that it believes  to be among  the highest of the
major  retail  propane  companies   whose  financial  statements  are   publicly
available;  (ii) the concentration of its  operations in colder regions (such as
the upper Midwest and Northeast), high margin regions (such as the Northeast and
Florida), and regions experiencing  population growth (such  as Florida and  the
Southwest); (iii) an experienced management
 
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team; (iv) a well-trained and motivated work force; and (v) an effective pricing
management  system.  However, the  propane  industry is  highly  competitive and
includes a number  of large national  firms that may  have greater financial  or
other resources or lower operating costs than the Partnership.
 
     Prior  to June 1995, the propane  business of the Partnership was conducted
through two separate  subsidiaries of  Triarc, Public Gas  Company and  National
Propane   Corporation  (collectively,  the   'Propane  Companies').  To  further
centralize the Partnership's businesses, on June 29, 1995, the operations of the
Propane Companies were formally consolidated by merging Public Gas Company  with
and into National Propane.
 
     Concurrently  with  the closing  of the  IPO,  pursuant to  the Conveyance,
National Propane contributed substantially all  of its assets (which assets  did
not  include  an existing  intercompany  note from  Triarc,  approximately $59.3
million of the net proceeds  from the issuance of  the First Mortgage Notes  and
certain   other  assets)  and   related  liabilities  (other   than  income  tax
liabilities) to  the  Operating  Partnership. In  general,  the  management  and
employees  who managed  and operated  the propane  business of  National Propane
prior to the IPO  continue to manage and  operate the Partnership's business  as
officers  of the  Managing General Partner  and its  affiliates. The Partnership
does not  directly  employ  any  of the  persons  responsible  for  managing  or
operating the Partnership. See 'The Transactions' and 'Management -- Partnership
Management.'  The  following discussion  of  and references  to  the Partnership
include the  business,  operations  and  assets  of  its  predecessor,  National
Propane.
 
OPERATING STRATEGY
 
     The  Partnership's  operating  strategy  is  to  increase  its  efficiency,
profitability and  competitiveness,  while  better  serving  its  customers,  by
building on the efforts it has already undertaken to improve pricing management,
marketing and purchasing and to consolidate its operations.
 
      Improved  Pricing  Management: The  $1.4  million pricing  system recently
      installed in  substantially  all  of  the  Partnership's  service  centers
      provides  central management with current,  system-wide supply, demand and
      competitive  pricing  information.  Based  on  that  information,  pricing
      managers located in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, determine the prices to be charged
      to  the  Partnership's  existing residential  customers.  With  respect to
      commercial  and  industrial  customers,  agricultural  customers  and  new
      residential  customers, management makes  daily pricing recommendations to
      local managers who determine prices based on such recommendations as  well
      as  local conditions.  The Partnership  believes that  this combination of
      central and local decision  making enables it  to more effectively  manage
      prices.  In  addition,  to  further enhance  its  pricing  management, the
      Partnership  intends  to  equip  its  delivery  personnel  with  hand-held
      computer  terminals that simplify  customer billing and  the collection of
      price and volume information.
 
      Improved Marketing: The Partnership  intends to differentiate itself  from
      smaller,  local competitors by strengthening its image as a reliable, full
      service, nationwide  propane  supplier.  To  that  end,  (i)  all  of  the
      Partnership's  service centers  operate under  the National  Propane brand
      (other than certain service centers obtained by the Partnership in  recent
      acquisitions) and offer 24 hour/7 day-a-week service for emergency repairs
      and  deliveries, (ii) the Partnership conducts coordinated advertising and
      marketing campaigns,  (iii) the  Partnership's employees  attend  training
      courses  at its new training  center or at service  centers where they are
      employed and  (iv)  the Partnership  is  in the  process  of  establishing
      appliance  showrooms at several  service centers in  an effort to increase
      sales and rental income.
 
      Efficient Purchasing:  The  Partnership  intends to  further  improve  its
      propane  purchasing and storage strategies,  thereby making more efficient
      use of its system-wide storage capacity. When conditions are  appropriate,
      the  Partnership intends to  purchase and store  propane during the summer
      months when  prices are  generally lower  and sell  these supplies  during
      periods  of higher propane prices. In addition, the Partnership intends to
      use its existing  storage facilities or  acquire additional facilities  to
      minimize transportation costs by storing propane near large concentrations
      of its customers.
 
                                       84
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
      Consolidating  Operations:  The  Partnership  will  continue  to  look for
      opportunities  to  consolidate  its  operations.  Since  July  1993,   the
      Partnership  has reduced its workforce by approximately 26%, from 1,228 to
      911 full-time employees as of November 30, 1996.
 
STRATEGIES FOR GROWTH
 
     The Partnership's strategies  for growth involve  expanding its  operations
and  increasing  its market  share through  strategic acquisitions  and internal
growth, including the opening of new service centers.
 
     STRATEGIC ACQUISITIONS
 
     The Partnership expects the overall demand for propane to remain relatively
constant over the next several  years, with year-to-year industry volumes  being
affected  primarily by  weather patterns.  Accordingly, while  the Partnership's
business strategy includes  opening new locations,  adding new retail  customers
and  retaining existing customers, the ability  of the Partnership's business to
grow will  depend  in  large  part  on  its  ability  to  acquire  other  retail
distributors. In recent years the Partnership's ability to acquire other propane
companies  has  been  constrained primarily  due  to (i)  management's  focus on
implementing  the  new  operating  plan,  (ii)  the  need  to  make  significant
maintenance  capital expenditures not made in  prior years and (iii) limitations
under the Existing Credit Facility. Having successfully implemented much of  the
operating  plan  and significantly  improved its  capital structure  through the
October 1994 refinancing of relatively  high cost indebtedness, the  Partnership
is  now in a  better position to pursue  acquisition opportunities, although the
Partnership's  significant  leverage  may   adversely  affect  its  ability   to
consummate  such acquisitions. In addition,  the Partnership has the flexibility
to fund acquisitions by either drawing  on the $40 million Acquisition  Facility
or  issuing additional Common Units. The Partnership believes there are numerous
potential  acquisition  candidates  because  the  propane  industry  is   highly
fragmented,  with  approximately  8,000  retailers  (according  to  the National
Propane Gas  Association  (the  'NPGA'))  and  with  the  10  largest  retailers
constituting approximately 32% of industry sales (according to LP-GAS magazine).
Moreover, no retailer has more than 10% of industry sales.
 
     The  Partnership  intends  to  take  two  approaches  to  acquisitions: (i)
primarily  to  build  on  its  broad  geographic  base  by  acquiring   smaller,
independent   competitors  that   operate  within   the  Partnership's  existing
geographic areas  and incorporating  them  into the  Partnership's  distribution
network  and (ii) to  acquire propane businesses  in areas in  the United States
outside of  its  current geographic  base  where  it believes  there  is  growth
potential  and where an attractive return on its investment can be achieved. The
Partnership recently  entered into  a  letter of  intent  to acquire  a  propane
business   for  approximately  $1.0  million;   however,  consummation  of  this
transaction is  subject  to  customary  closing  conditions  and  completion  of
definitive  documentation, and no  assurance can be  given that this acquisition
will be completed. Although  the Partnership continues to  evaluate a number  of
propane  distribution companies, including regional  and national firms, as part
of its  ongoing  acquisition  program,  except as  described  in  the  preceding
sentence,  the Partnership does  not have any  present agreements or commitments
with respect to any  acquisition. There can be  no assurance, however, that  the
Partnership  will identify attractive acquisition candidates in the future, that
the Partnership will be able to acquire such candidates on acceptable terms,  or
will  be able to finance  such acquisitions. If the  Partnership is able to make
acquisitions, there can be no assurance  that such acquisitions will not  dilute
earnings  and distributions or that any additional debt incurred to finance such
acquisitions will not adversely  affect the ability of  the Partnership to  make
distributions  to  Unitholders. In  addition, to  the  extent that  warm weather
adversely  affects  the  Partnership's  operating  and  financial  results,  the
Partnership's  access to capital and its  acquisition activities may be limited.
The Managing General Partner has broad discretion in making acquisitions, and it
is expected that the Managing General Partner generally will not seek Unitholder
approval of acquisitions.
 
     INTERNAL GROWTH
 
     In addition  to pursuing  expansion through  acquisitions, the  Partnership
intends  to pursue internal growth at its existing service centers and to expand
its business by opening new service centers. The
 
                                       85
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
Partnership believes that  it can attract  new customers and  expand its  market
base  by (i) providing  superior service, (ii)  introducing innovative marketing
programs and (iii) focusing on population growth areas.
 
     The Partnership  intends  to leverage  its  position as  a  reliable,  full
service  propane  company  to  attract  new  customers,  particularly  in  those
locations  where   the  Partnership   competes  against   smaller,   independent
distributors.  For example, many  propane customers rely  on their suppliers for
technical services  and  advice because  of  the increasing  complexity  of  the
equipment  such customers use. The Partnership believes that in some areas it is
the only propane  company that can  fully provide such  services and advice.  To
enable  them to  provide such services  and advice,  the Partnership's employees
attend a training  course at the  Partnership's new training  facility in  Cedar
Rapids,  Iowa or at the service centers where they are employed. Since the third
quarter of 1995, over 220 employees  have attended these eight-hour courses.  In
1997,  the Partnership expects to establish  a second training center near Great
Barrington, Massachusetts for its employees located in the Northeast.
 
     In addition, the Partnership's marketing programs, in particular, its Water
Heater Program,  are designed  to attract  new customers.  In the  Water  Heater
Program, the Partnership offers to users of electric or fuel oil water heaters a
free  propane  water heater  (excluding installation)  in  return for  signing a
five-year  propane  purchase  agreement.  Approximately  3,500  customers   have
participated  in the Water Heater  Program since it was  introduced in the first
quarter of 1995.
 
     Furthermore, the Partnership operates in several growth areas of the United
States. The Partnership believes that it is one of the leading propane retailers
in western Colorado, a rapidly growing market. The Partnership also operates  in
central  Arizona, an area that has  experienced a significant rate of population
growth in  recent years.  In addition,  the Partnership  is one  of the  leading
propane  retailers  in  Florida,  the  population  of  which  has  increased  by
approximately 9.5% since 1990.
 
     The Partnership also intends to expand its business by opening new  service
centers,  known as 'scratch-starts,'  in areas where  there is relatively little
competition. Scratch starts are newly  opened service centers generally  staffed
with  a single employee, which typically  involve minimal start up costs because
the infrastructure of the new service  center is developed as the customer  base
expands  and  the  Partnership  can, in  many  circumstances,  transfer existing
assets,  such  as  storage  tanks,  to   the  new  service  center.  Under   its
'scratch-start'  program, the Partnership intends to open new service centers in
specific types of  markets, such  as resorts and  new residential  developments,
which  have  been targeted  because of  the unavailability  of natural  gas, the
limited number of competitors and the potential number of relatively high margin
residential accounts. Under  this program, the  Partnership has recently  opened
three  new service centers in  California and one in  each of Idaho, Georgia and
South Carolina.
 
INDUSTRY BACKGROUND
 
     Propane, a by-product of natural gas processing and petroleum refining,  is
a  clean-burning energy source  recognized for its  transportability and ease of
use relative to  alternative stand-alone  energy sources.  Propane is  extracted
from  natural gas  or oil  wellhead gas at  processing plants  or separated from
crude oil  during the  refining  process. Propane  is normally  transported  and
stored  in a liquid  state under moderate pressure  or refrigeration for economy
and ease of handling in shipping and distribution. When the pressure is released
or the temperature is increased,  it is useable as  a flammable gas. Propane  is
colorless  and odorless; an odorant is added  to allow its detection. Propane is
clean-burning, producing negligible amounts of pollutants when consumed.
 
     The  Partnership's  retail  customers  fall  into  four  broad  categories:
residential   customers,  commercial  and   industrial  customers,  agricultural
customers and dealers (located primarily  in the Northeast) that resell  propane
to  residential  and  commercial customers.  Residential  customers  use propane
primarily  for  space  heating,  water  heating,  cooking  and  clothes  drying.
Commercial and industrial customers use propane for commercial applications such
as  cooking and clothes drying and industrial uses such as fueling over-the-road
vehicles, forklifts and stationary  engines, firing furnaces,  as a cutting  gas
and  in  other  process  applications. Agricultural  customers  use  propane for
tobacco curing, crop drying, poultry brooding and weed control.
 
                                       86
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
     Based  upon  information  provided  by  the  NPGA,  propane  accounts   for
approximately  3.0% to 4.0% of total energy consumption in the United States, an
average level that has remained relatively  constant for the past ten years.  In
addition,  propane  is now  the world's  most widely  used alternative  fuel for
automobiles with  approximately  350,000 and  3.5  million vehicles  running  on
propane  in  the United  States and  worldwide,  respectively (according  to the
NPGA). The  Partnership  believes,  based on  industry  publications,  that  the
domestic  retail  market  for  propane  is  approximately  9.4  billion  gallons
annually.
 
PRODUCTS, SERVICES AND MARKETING
 
     The Partnership distributes its  propane through a nationwide  distribution
network  integrating  166  service  centers  in  24  states.  The  Partnership's
operations are  located  primarily  in the  Midwest,  Northeast,  Southeast  and
Southwest  regions of the United States.  The chart below sets forth information
regarding the Partnership's  retail volume  sales and service  centers for  each
region:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                             MIDWEST(1)    NORTHEAST    SOUTHEAST     SOUTHWEST(2)      TOTAL
                                             ----------    ---------    ---------    --------------    -------
<S>                                          <C>           <C>          <C>          <C>               <C>
Volume (in thousands of gallons)(3).......     71,234        33,192       26,561         19,154        150,141
% of Total Volume.........................       47.4%         22.1%        17.7%          12.8%         100.0%
Number of Service Centers(4)..............         73            35           32             26            166
</TABLE>
 
- ------------
 
(1) Includes one service center in Texas.
 
(2) Includes California and Idaho.
 
(3) For the year ended December 31, 1995.
 
(4) As of December 31, 1996.
 
                            ------------------------
     Typically,  service centers  are found  in suburban  and rural  areas where
natural gas is not  readily available. Generally, such  locations consist of  an
office  and a warehouse and service facility,  with one or more 18,000 to 30,000
gallon storage  tanks on  the premises.  Each  service center  is managed  by  a
district manager and also typically employs a customer service representative, a
service  technician  and one  or two  bulk truck  drivers. However,  new service
centers established under the Partnership's 'scratch start' program generally do
not have offices, warehouses or service facilities and are typically staffed  by
a single employee.
 
     In  1995 the Partnership served  approximately 250,000 active customers. No
single customer accounted for 10% or more of the Partnership's revenues in 1995.
Generally, the number  of customers  increases during  the fall  and winter  and
decreases  during the spring and summer.  Historically, approximately 66% of the
Partnership's retail propane volume  has been sold  during the six-month  season
from  October through March, as many customers use propane for heating purposes.
Consequently,  sales,  gross  profits  and   cash  flows  from  operations   are
concentrated  in  the Partnership's  first and  fourth  fiscal quarters.  To the
extent necessary, the  Partnership may reserve  cash from the  first and  fourth
fiscal  quarters for distribution to Unitholders  in the second and third fiscal
quarters.
 
     As noted above, year-to-year demand for propane is affected by the relative
severity of the  winter and other  climatic conditions. For  example, while  the
frigid  temperatures that were  experienced by the United  States in January and
February of 1994  significantly increased  the overall demand  for propane,  the
warm  weather during the winter of  1994-1995 significantly reduced such demand.
The Partnership believes, however, that the geographic diversity of its areas of
operations helps  to  reduce  its  exposure to  regional  weather  patterns.  In
addition,  retail sales to the commercial and industrial markets, while affected
by economic patterns, are not as  sensitive to variations in weather  conditions
as  sales to residential and agricultural markets. For information on the impact
of annual  variations in  weather  on the  operations  of the  Partnership,  see
'Management's  Discussion  and Analysis  of Financial  Condition and  Results of
Operations -- General.'
 
     Retail deliveries of  propane are  usually made  to customers  by means  of
bobtail  and  rack  trucks. Propane  is  pumped  from the  bobtail  truck, which
generally holds 2,800 gallons of propane, into a stationary storage tank on  the
customer's   premises.  The  capacity   of  these  tanks   usually  ranges  from
 
                                       87
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
approximately 50 to approximately  1,000 gallons, with a  typical tank having  a
capacity  of 250 to  500 gallons. Typically, service  centers deliver propane to
most of their residential customers at regular intervals, based on estimates  of
such   customers'  usage,  thereby  eliminating  the  customers'  need  to  make
affirmative purchase decisions. The Partnership also delivers propane to  retail
customers  in  portable  cylinders,  which typically  have  a  capacity  of 23.5
gallons. When these cylinders  are delivered to  customers, empty cylinders  are
picked  up for replenishment at the  Partnership's distribution locations or are
refilled in place. The Partnership also delivers propane to certain other retail
customers, primarily dealers  and large  commercial accounts,  in larger  trucks
known  as  transports, which  have an  average  capacity of  approximately 9,000
gallons. Propane is  generally transported from  refineries, pipeline  terminals
and   storage  facilities  (including   the  Partnership's  underground  storage
facilities  in  Hutchinson,  Kansas   and  Loco  Hills,   New  Mexico)  to   the
Partnership's  bulk plants by a combination of common carriers, owner-operators,
railroad tank cars and, in certain circumstances, the Partnership's own  highway
transport fleet. See ' -- Properties.'
 
     Although  overall demand for  propane is affected  by climate, availability
and cost of alternative energy sources, changes in price and other factors,  the
Partnership  believes  that residential  demand  for its  propane  is relatively
stable for the following reasons. First, residential demand for propane has been
relatively  unaffected  by  general  economic  conditions  due  to  the  largely
non-discretionary   nature  of  most  propane  purchases  by  the  Partnership's
customers. Second, when the Partnership's customers have switched to natural gas
and other competing energy sources, the  Partnership has generally been able  to
redeploy  its  tanks and  attract  new customers  in  other areas.  Third, while
significant price  increases can  result in  a loss  of customers,  many of  the
Partnership's   residential  customers,   particularly  in   the  Northeast  and
Southeast, are relatively  less price  sensitive because they  tend to  purchase
significantly less propane on an individual basis than customers in the Midwest.
Finally,  the  Partnership's  residential  customers  tend  to  remain  with the
Partnership because of the  inconvenience of switching  tanks and suppliers.  In
many  states certain fire safety regulations  restrict the refilling of a leased
tank solely to the propane supplier that owns the tank and, therefore, customers
who  do  not  own  their  own  tanks  are  less  likely  to  switch   suppliers.
Approximately  90% of the  tanks used by the  Partnership's retail customers are
leased to them by  the Partnership. Despite these  factors, no assurance can  be
given  that  demand for  The  Partnership's propane  will  not decline,  and any
significant decline could have a material adverse affect on the Partnership.
 
     The Partnership also sells,  leases and services  equipment related to  its
propane  distribution business. In the residential market, the Partnership sells
household appliances  such  as cooking  ranges,  water heaters,  space  heaters,
central  furnaces and clothes dryers, as  well as less traditional products such
as barbecue equipment and  gas logs. In the  industrial market, the  Partnership
sells  or leases specialized equipment for the use of propane as fork lift truck
fuel, in metal  cutting and atmospheric  furnaces and for  portable heating  for
construction.  In the  agricultural market,  specialized equipment  is leased or
sold for the use  of propane as  engine fuel and for  chicken brooding and  crop
drying.  The sale  of specialized  equipment, service  income and  rental income
represented less than 10% of the Partnership's operating revenues during  fiscal
1995.  In an  effort to  increase sales and  rental income,  the Partnership has
recently established model appliance showrooms  at its service centers in  Cedar
Rapids,  Iowa, New Smyrna Beach,  Florida and West Palm  Beach, Florida, where a
broad range  of  propane-related equipment  and  appliances are  displayed.  The
Partnership intends to establish additional appliance showrooms at other service
centers.  Parts  and appliance  sales, installation  and service  activities are
conducted through NSSI,  a wholly-owned  corporate subsidiary  of the  Operating
Partnership.
 
PROPANE SUPPLY AND STORAGE
 
     The  profitability  of  the Partnership  is  dependent upon  the  price and
availability of propane as well as seasonal and climatic factors. Contracts  for
propane are typically made on a year-to-year basis, but the price of the propane
to  be  delivered  depends  upon  market conditions  at  the  time  of delivery.
Worldwide availability of both gas liquids and oil affects the supply of propane
in domestic markets,  and from time  to time  the ability to  obtain propane  at
attractive  prices  may  be  limited  as a  result  of  market  conditions, thus
affecting price levels to all distributors of propane. Should the wholesale cost
of propane decline in the future,  the Partnership believes that its margins  on
its  retail  propane  distribution  business would  increase  in  the short-term
because retail prices tend to change less rapidly than
 
                                       88
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
wholesale prices. Should  the wholesale  cost of propane  increase, for  similar
reasons, retail marketing profitability would likely be reduced at least for the
short-term until retail prices can be increased. Since 1993, the Partnership has
generally been successful in maintaining retail gross margins on an annual basis
despite  changes in the wholesale cost of  propane. There may be times, however,
when the Partnership  will be unable  to pass  on fully price  increases to  its
customers.  Consequently, the  Partnership's profitability will  be sensitive to
changes in wholesale propane prices, and a substantial increase in the wholesale
cost  of  propane   could  adversely  affect   the  Partnership's  margins   and
profitability.  Except  for  occasional  opportunistic  buying  and  storage  of
propane, the Partnership has not  engaged in any significant hedging  activities
with respect to its propane supply requirements, although it may do so from time
to  time in the  future. See 'Management's Discussion  and Analysis of Financial
Condition and Results of Operations -- General.'
 
     The Partnership  purchased  propane  from over  35  domestic  and  Canadian
suppliers  during 1996, primarily major  oil companies and independent producers
of both gas liquids and oil, and  it also purchased propane on the spot  market.
In  1996, the  Partnership purchased  approximately 85%  and 15%  of its propane
supplies from domestic and  Canadian suppliers, respectively. Approximately  90%
of  propane purchases  by the  Partnership in 1996  were on  a contractual basis
(generally, under  one  year agreements  subject  to annual  renewal),  but  the
percentage of contract purchases may vary from year to year as determined by the
Managing  General Partner. Supply contracts generally  do not lock in prices but
rather provide  for pricing  in accordance  with posted  prices at  the time  of
delivery or the current prices established at major storage points, such as Mont
Belvieu, Texas and Conway, Kansas. Some contracts include a pricing formula that
typically  is based  on such  market prices.The  Partnership is  not currently a
party to any supply contracts containing 'take or pay' provisions.
 
     Warren Petroleum Company ('Warren'), a division of Chevron U.S.A., supplied
14.9% of the  Partnership's propane in  1996. The Partnership  believes that  if
supplies  from either  Warren or  Conoco were interrupted,  it would  be able to
secure  adequate  propane  supplies  from  other  sources  without  a   material
disruption of its operations; however, the Partnership believes that the cost of
procuring  replacement  supplies  might  be materially  higher,  at  least  on a
short-term basis, which  could adversely  affect the  Partnership's margins.  No
other  single supplier provided more than 10% of the Partnership's total propane
supply during 1996. Although the Partnership has long-standing relations with  a
number  of  its  important  suppliers  and has  generally  been  able  to secure
sufficient propane to meet its customers' needs, no assurance can be given  that
supplies  of propane  will be readily  available in the  future. The Partnership
expects a sufficient supply  to continue to be  available during 1997.  However,
increased  demand for propane  in periods of severe  cold weather, or otherwise,
could cause future propane supply interruptions or significant volatility in the
price of  propane. In  the fourth  quarter of  1996, the  price of  propane  was
significantly  higher  than  historical  levels. Between  November  1,  1996 and
December 31, 1996,  the price of  propane in  the spot market  at Mont  Belvieu,
Texas,  the largest storage facility in  the United States, averaged $0.5953 per
gallon, with a  high of $0.7050  per gallon on  December 16, 1996  and a low  of
$0.4875  per gallon on December 31, 1996. During the 1995-96 winter season, from
November 1,  1995 to  March  31, 1996,  the price  of  propane at  Mont  Belvieu
averaged  $0.3672 per gallon, with a high of  $0.5250 on Feburary 15, 1996 and a
low $0.3037 on  November 15,  1995. Between November  1, 1996  and December  31,
1996, the price of propane in the spot market at Conway, Kansas averaged $0.7494
per  gallon, with a high of  $1.04 per gallon on December  16, 1996 and a low of
$0.5100 per gallon on November 7,  1996. During the 1995-96 winter season,  from
November  1, 1995  to March 31,  1996, the  price of propane  at Conway averaged
$0.3713 per gallon, with a high of $0.4363 on February 15, 1996 and a low 0.3237
on November 15, 1995. The Partnership has to date purchased a significant amount
of its  propane  in the  Conway,  Kansas  spot market.  Although  the  increased
wholesale  price of  propane has  increased the  Partnership's revenues  for the
fourth quarter  of  1996,  the Partnership  was  unable  to fully  pass  on  the
increased  product cost to its customers resulting  in a lower per gallon profit
margin. As a result,  the Partnership expects that  it will have slightly  lower
operating  income for the  fourth quarter of 1996  compared to the corresponding
period of 1995.
 
                                       89
 

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<PAGE>
     The following table shows the average monthly prices of propane in the spot
market during the last five years at Mont Belvieu, Texas and Conway, Kansas, two
major storage areas:

[GRAPHICAL  REPRESENTATION  of   the  average  monthly  propane  prices  in  the
Spot-Market at Mont  Belvieu,  TX  and  Conway, KS from January 1991 to December
1996. Prices range from a low of approximately $0.24 per gallon  to  a  high  of
approximately $0.81 per gallon.]

     The  Partnership owns underground storage  facilities in Hutchinson, Kansas
and Loco Hills, New Mexico, leases  above ground storage facilities in  Crandon,
Wisconsin and Orlando, Florida, and owns or leases smaller storage facilities in
other  locations  throughout the  United States.  As of  December 31,  1996, the
Partnership's total  storage capacity  was  approximately 33.1  million  gallons
(including  approximately  one  million gallons  of  storage  capacity currently
leased to third  parties). For a  further description of  these facilities,  see
'  -- Properties.'  By utilizing its  ability to store  propane, the Partnership
believes that  it should  be able  to lower  its annual  cost of  goods sold  by
maximizing  supplies  purchased  during  periods of  seasonably  low  prices and
minimizing purchases during periods of seasonally high prices. However,  because
of the potential volatility of propane prices, the market price of propane could
fall  below  the  price  at  which the  Partnership  purchased  propane  held in
inventory, thereby adversely affecting gross margins or sales or rendering sales
from such inventory unprofitable.
 
PRICING POLICY
 
     The Partnership believes that its pricing policy is an essential element in
the marketing of propane. The $1.4 million pricing system recently installed  in
substantially   all  of  the  Partnership's  service  centers  provides  central
management with  current, system-wide  supply,  demand and  competitive  pricing
information.  Based  on  that  information, pricing  managers  located  in Cedar
Rapids, Iowa, determine the prices to  be charged to the Partnership's  existing
residential  customers.  With respect  to  commercial and  industrial customers,
agricultural customers  and new  residential customers,  management makes  daily
pricing  recommendations to  local managers who  determine prices  based on such
recommendations as well as local conditions. The Partnership believes that  this
flexible,  joint pricing management system enables the Partnership to react more
effectively to  cost increases,  and  will permit  it,  in most  situations,  to
respond  to changes in supply costs in a manner that protects its gross margins,
to the extent possible.
 
     To further enhance its price  management, the Partnership intends to  equip
its  delivery personnel with hand-held computer terminals ('HHTs') that simplify
customer billing and the collection of customer data, including price and volume
information. The  HHTs  are  also  able  to  print  accurate  customer  delivery
statements  that can be  provided to the customer  by the Partnership's delivery
personnel. The Partnership began testing the HHTs in a limited number of service
centers in the  Midwest in  March 1996.  The results  of these  tests have  been
successful  to  date,  and  the  Partnership  has  deployed  the  HHTs  at eight
additional locations during 1996.
 
                                       90
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
COMPETITION
 
     Propane competes primarily with natural gas, electricity and fuel oil as an
energy source, principally on the basis of price, availability and  portability.
Propane  serves as  an alternative  to natural gas  in rural  and suburban areas
where natural gas is unavailable or portability of product is required.  Propane
is  generally more  expensive than  natural gas  on an  equivalent BTU  basis in
locations served by natural  gas, although propane  is sold in  such areas as  a
standby  fuel for  use during  peak demand  periods and  during interruptions in
natural gas  service. The  expansion  of natural  gas into  traditional  propane
markets  has historically been inhibited by the capital costs required to expand
distribution and  pipeline  systems.  Although  the  extension  of  natural  gas
pipelines  tends to  displace propane  distribution in  the areas  affected, the
Partnership believes  that new  opportunities for  propane sales  arise as  more
geographically remote neighborhoods are developed.
 
     Propane  is  generally less  expensive to  use  than electricity  for space
heating, water heating, clothes drying and cooking. Although propane is  similar
to  fuel oil  in certain applications,  as well  as in market  demand and price,
propane and  fuel oil  have generally  developed their  own distinct  geographic
markets,   reducing  competition  between  such   fuels.  Because  furnaces  and
appliances that burn  propane will not  operate on  fuel oil and  vice versa,  a
conversion  from  one  fuel  to  the  other  requires  the  installation  of new
equipment.
 
     In addition to competing with  alternative energy sources, the  Partnership
competes  with  other  companies  engaged  in  the  retail  propane distribution
business. Competition in the propane industry is highly fragmented and generally
occurs on  a  local basis  with  other large  full-service  multi-state  propane
marketers,   thousands  of   smaller  local   independent  marketers   and  farm
cooperatives. Based on industry publications, the Partnership believes that  the
domestic  retail  market  for  propane  is  approximately  9.4  billion  gallons
annually, that the 10 largest retailers, including the Partnership, account  for
approximately 32% of the total retail sales of propane in the United States, and
that  no single marketer has a greater than 10% share of the total retail market
in the United  States. Most of  the Partnership's service  centers compete  with
several  marketers or  distributors and certain  service centers  compete with a
large number of marketers or distributors.  Each service center operates in  its
own  competitive environment  because retail marketers  tend to  locate in close
proximity to customers  in order  to lower the  cost of  providing service.  The
Partnership's  typical  service  center  has an  effective  marketing  radius of
approximately 50 miles.
 
     The ability to compete  effectively further depends  on the reliability  of
service,  responsiveness to  customers and  the ability  to maintain competitive
prices. The Partnership believes that  its reliability and service  capabilities
differentiate it from many of its competitors. The Partnership's service centers
offer  24-hour/7-day-a-week service  for emergency  repairs and  deliveries. The
Partnership also believes  that its  safety procedures are  more stringent  than
many  of its small,  independent competitors and that  the perceived benefits of
such  safety  procedures  give  the  Partnership  a  competitive  advantage.  In
addition, if legislation is enacted that mandates compliance with similar safety
procedures, the Partnership would not be required to invest as heavily to comply
as would many of its smaller, independent competitors.
 
PROPERTIES
 
     The  Partnership maintains a large  number of diverse properties, including
appliance showrooms,  maintenance facilities,  bulk plants,  warehousing  space,
garages,  storage depots or  large gas tanks  and related distribution equipment
and underground  space for  gas  storage. The  Partnership believes  that  these
properties,  taken as  a whole, are  generally well-maintained  and adequate for
current and foreseeable  business needs.  The majority of  these properties  are
owned by the Partnership.
 
                                       91
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
     Certain  information about  the major properties  of the  Partnership as of
December 31, 1996, is set forth in the following table.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
  DESCRIPTION OF FACILITIES                  NUMBER OF FACILITIES
- ------------------------------   --------------------------------------------    STORAGE CAPACITY
                                                                                 ----------------
                                                                                 (IN THOUSANDS OF
                                                                                     GALLONS)
<S>                              <C>                     <C>                     <C>
Service Centers located                   127                    owned
  throughout the United                    39                   leased
  States(1)
                                          ---
                                          166                                          7,678
 
Remote Storage Facilities                  58                    owned
                                           23                   leased
                                          ---
                                           81                                          2,201
Above Ground Storage
  Facilities:
     Crandon, Wisconsin(2)....              1                   leased                   241
     Orlando, Florida(3)......              1                   leased                 1,020
                                          ---                                        -------
                                            2                                          1,261
Underground Storage
  Facilities:
     Hutchinson, Kansas(4)....              1                    owned                12,000
     Loco Hills, New Mexico...              1                    owned                10,000
                                          ---                                        -------
                                            2                                         22,000
                                                                                     -------
          Total...............                                                        33,140
                                                                                     -------
                                                                                     -------
</TABLE>
 
- ------------
 
(1) Includes six service  centers recently established  under the  Partnership's
    'scratch start' program.
 
(2) The  facility is leased on a year-to-year basis, and the lease is terminable
    by either party upon 30 days' notice.
 
(3) The Partnership leases the  real property from a  third party pursuant to  a
    ground  lease that terminates on October  31, 2006. The Partnership owns the
    storage facility located at such property and leases it to Warren  Petroleum
    pursuant  to  an  agreement that  terminates  October  31, 1999  and  may be
    cancelled  by  the   Partnership  upon   60  days'   notice  under   certain
    circumstances.
 
(4) The Partnership owns the underground storage facility, which, pursuant to an
    operating  agreement, is operated  by a third party  that owns the equipment
    necessary to use the facility for propane storage. Such operating  agreement
    may  be terminated  by either  party at  the end  of any  calendar year upon
    thirty days' notice.
                            ------------------------
 
     The transportation of  propane requires specialized  equipment. The  trucks
utilized  for  this  purpose carry  specialized  steel tanks  that  maintain the
propane in a liquefied  state. As of  December 31, 1996,  the Partnership had  a
fleet  of 7 transport truck tractors, all  of which are owned by the Partnership
and approximately 400 bulk delivery trucks and 400 service and light trucks, all
of which are owned by the Partnership. In addition, as of December 31, 1996, the
Partnership had approximately 150 cylinder delivery vehicles and 55 automobiles.
As of December 31,  1996, the Partnership  owned approximately 210,000  customer
storage tanks with typical capacities of 250 to 500 gallons.
 
     The  Partnership believes that it has satisfactory title to or valid rights
to use all of  its material properties. Substantially  all of the  Partnership's
assets  (other than the assets of NSSI) are pledged to secure the First Mortgage
Notes and  indebtedness  under  the  Bank  Credit  Facility.  See  'Management's
Discussion    and   Analysis    of   Financial   Condition    and   Results   of
Operations  --  Description   of  Indebtedness.'  In   addition,  some  of   the
Partnership's  properties are subject  to liabilities and  leases and immaterial
encumbrances, easements  and restrictions,  although  the Partnership  does  not
believe  that any such burdens will  materially interfere with the continued use
by the Partnership of its properties, taken as a whole. The Partnership believes
that it has, or  in the ordinary  course of business  will obtain, all  required
material  approvals, authorizations,  orders, licenses,  permits, franchises and
consents of,  and has  obtained  or made  all required  material  registrations,
qualifications and filings with, the various state
 
                                       92
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
and  local governmental and regulatory authorities  which relate to ownership of
the Partnership's properties or the operations of its business.
 
TRADEMARKS AND TRADENAMES
 
     The Partnership utilizes  a number  of trademarks and  tradenames which  it
owns (including 'National PropaneTM'), some of which have a significant value in
the marketing of its products.
 
GOVERNMENT REGULATION
 
     The   Partnership  is   subject  to   various  federal,   state  and  local
environmental, health and  safety laws  and regulations.  Generally, these  laws
impose  limitations on the  discharge of pollutants  and establish standards for
the handling of  solid and  hazardous wastes.  These laws  include the  Resource
Conservation   and  Recovery  Act,  the  Comprehensive  Environmental  Response,
Compensation and Liability Act ('CERCLA'),  the Clean Air Act, the  Occupational
Safety  and Health Act, the Emergency Planning  and Community Right to Know Act,
the Clean Water  Act and comparable  state statutes. CERCLA,  also known as  the
'Superfund'  law, imposes joint and several liability without regard to fault or
the legality of  the original  conduct on certain  classes of  persons that  are
considered  to  have  contributed to  the  release  or threatened  release  of a
'hazardous substance' into the environment. Propane is not a hazardous substance
within the meaning of CERCLA. However, automotive waste products, such as  waste
oil,  generated  by  the  Partnership's  truck  fleet,  as  well  as  'hazardous
substances'  disposed  of  during  past  operations  by  third  parties  on  the
Partnership's properties, could subject the Partnership to CERCLA. Such laws and
regulations   could  result  in   civil  or  criminal   penalties  in  cases  of
non-compliance or impose  liability for remediation  costs. Also, third  parties
may  make claims against owners or operators of properties for personal injuries
and property damage associated with releases of hazardous or toxic substances.
 
     National Fire Protection  Association Pamphlets  No. 54 and  No. 58,  which
establish  rules  and  procedures governing  the  safe handling  of  propane, or
comparable regulations, have been adopted as the industry standard in all of the
states in  which  the  Partnership  operates. In  some  states  these  laws  are
administered  by  state  agencies, and  in  others  they are  administered  on a
municipal level. With  respect to the  transportation of propane  by truck,  the
Partnership  is  subject  to  regulations promulgated  under  the  Federal Motor
Carrier Safety  Act. These  regulations cover  the transportation  of  hazardous
materials   and   are  administered   by   the  United   States   Department  of
Transportation. The  Partnership  conducts  ongoing training  programs  to  help
ensure  that its operations  are in compliance  with applicable regulations. The
Partnership maintains various permits that are necessary to operate some of  its
facilities,  some of  which may be  material to its  operations. The Partnership
believes that the procedures  currently in effect at  all of its facilities  for
the  handling, storage and distribution of  propane are consistent with industry
standards and are in  compliance in all material  respects with applicable  laws
and regulations.
 
     In  May 1994, National Propane was informed of coal tar contamination which
was discovered  at one  of  its properties  in Marshfield,  Wisconsin.  National
Propane  purchased the property from a company which had purchased the assets of
a utility that had previously owned the property. National Propane believes that
the contamination occurred during the use of the property as a coal gasification
plant by such utility. In  order to assess the  extent of the problem,  National
Propane  engaged environmental  consultants who  began work  in August  1994. In
December 1994, the environmental consultants issued a report to National Propane
which  estimated  the  range  of  potential  remediation  costs  to  be  between
approximately  $0.4 million and $0.9 million depending upon the actual extent of
impacted soils, the presence  and extent, if any,  of impacted ground water  and
the  remediation method actually  required to be  implemented. In February 1996,
based upon new information National Propane's environmental consultants issued a
second report  which  presented the  two  most likely  remediation  methods  and
revised estimates of the costs of such methods. The range of estimated costs for
the  first  method,  which  involves treatment  of  groundwater  and excavation,
treatment and  disposal of  contaminated  soil, is  from  $1.6 million  to  $3.3
million.  The range  for the second  method, which involves  treatment of ground
water and building  a containment wall,  is from $0.4  million to $0.8  million.
Based  on  discussions  with National  Propane  environmental  consultants, both
methods are acceptable
 
                                       93
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
remediation plans. The Partnership will have  to agree upon the final plan  with
the  State of Wisconsin.  Since receiving notice  of the contamination, National
Propane has engaged in  discussions of a  general nature concerning  remediation
with  the State  of Wisconsin.  These discussions  are ongoing  and there  is no
indication as yet of the time frame for a decision by the State of Wisconsin  on
the  method of remediation. Accordingly, it  is unknown which remediation method
will be  used. National  Propane is  also engaged  in ongoing  discussions of  a
general  nature  with  the  successor  to  the  utility  that  operated  a  coal
gasification plant  on the  property. There  is as  yet no  indication that  the
successor  will share  the costs  of remediation.  If National  Propane is found
liable for any of such costs, it will attempt to recover them from the successor
owner. National Propane has notified its insurance carriers of the contamination
and the likely incurrence of costs to undertake remediation. Pursuant to a lease
relating to the Marshfield facility, the ownership of which was not  transferred
to  the Operating  Partnership at  the closing of  the IPO,  the Partnership has
agreed to be liable for any costs of remediation in excess of amounts  recovered
from  such successor  or from  insurance. Since no  amount within  the ranges of
remediation costs  can be  determined  to be  a  better estimate,  National  has
accrued  $0.4 million at December  31, 1995 and September  30, 1996, in order to
provide for  the minimum  costs  estimated for  the second  remediation  method,
incurred  legal fees and other  professional costs. See 'Management's Discussion
and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations -- Contingencies.'
The ultimate  outcome  of  this  matter  cannot  presently  be  determined  and,
depending  upon the  cost of remediation  required, may have  a material adverse
effect on the Partnership's financial position, results of operations or ability
to make the Minimum Quarterly Distribution to all Unitholders.
 
     In connection  with  all acquisitions  of  retail propane  businesses  that
involve  the purchase of real estate,  the Partnership conducts an environmental
review in an attempt to determine  whether any substance other than propane  has
been  sold from, or stored on, any such  real estate prior to its purchase. Such
review  may  include  questioning  the  seller,  obtaining  representations  and
warranties concerning the seller's compliance with environmental laws and visual
inspections  of the properties, whereby the  General Partner's employees, and in
certain  cases,  independent  environmental   consulting  firms  hired  by   the
Partnership,  look  for evidence  of hazardous  substances  or the  existence of
underground storage tanks.
 
     Future developments, such as stricter environmental, health or safety  laws
and  regulations  thereunder, could  affect  Partnership operations.  It  is not
anticipated  that  the  Partnership's  compliance  with  or  liabilities   under
environmental,  health and safety  laws and regulations,  including CERCLA, will
have a material adverse effect on the Partnership. To the extent that there  are
any  environmental  liabilities  unknown to  the  Partnership  or environmental,
health or safety laws or  regulations are made more  stringent, there can be  no
assurance  that the Partnership's  results of operations  will not be materially
and adversely affected.
 
EMPLOYEES
 
     As of November  30, 1996, the  Managing General Partner  had 911 full  time
employees,   of  whom  72  were  general  and  administrative  (including  fleet
maintenance personnel),  23  were sales,  432  were transportation  and  product
supply  and 384 were district employees. In  addition, at November 30, 1996, the
Managing General Partner had 46 temporary and part-time employees. Approximately
131 of such full-time employees are covered by collective bargaining  agreements
that  expire on  various dates  in 1997,  1998, and  1999. The  Managing General
Partner believes that its relations with both its union and non-union  employees
are satisfactory.
 
     The  Partnership has no  employees; however, for  certain purposes, such as
workers' compensation claims, employees of the Managing General Partner who  are
providing  services for the benefit of the Partnership may also be considered to
be employees of the Partnership under applicable state law.
 
LITIGATION AND CONTINGENT LIABILITIES
 
     There  are  a  number  of  lawsuits  pending  or  threatened  against   the
Partnership.  In general, these  lawsuits have arisen in  the ordinary course of
the Partnership's business and  involve claims for actual  damages, and in  some
cases  punitive damages, arising from the  alleged negligence of the Partnership
or
 
                                       94
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
as a result of product defects or similar matters. Of the pending or  threatened
matters,  a number involve property damage, and several involve serious personal
injuries or  deaths  and the  claims  made  are for  relatively  large  amounts.
Although  any litigation is inherently uncertain,  based on past experience, the
information currently available to it and the availability of insurance coverage
in certain  matters,  the Partnership  does  not  believe that  the  pending  or
threatened  litigation of  which the Partnership  is aware will  have a material
adverse effect on its results of operations or its financial condition. However,
any one  or  all  of these  matters  taken  together may  adversely  affect  the
Partnership's  quarterly  or  annual results  of  operations and  may  limit the
Partnership's ability to make distributions to Unitholders.
 
     In addition, certain contingent  liabilities related to National  Propane's
operations  were assumed by the Partnership in connection with the Transactions.
These contingent liabilities include  potential environmental remediation  costs
(primarily  costs related  to the remediation  of coal tar  contamination at the
Managing General Partner's Marshfield, Wisconsin facility). As of September  30,
1996  the Partnership has accrued a  liability of approximately $0.4 million for
contingent liabilities associated with the Marshfield facility. There can be  no
assurance  that the ultimate  liability relating to this  matter will not exceed
the $0.4 million reserved or that such  matter will not have a material  adverse
effect  on the Partnership's  results of operations,  financial condition or its
ability to make the Minimum Quarterly Distribution to all Unitholders.
 
                                       95


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                                   MANAGEMENT
 
PARTNERSHIP MANAGEMENT
 
     The  Managing General  Partner manages and  operates the  activities of the
Partnership. Unitholders  do  not  directly or  indirectly  participate  in  the
management  or  operation of  the  Partnership and  have  no actual  or apparent
authority to  enter into  contracts on  behalf  of, or  to otherwise  bind,  the
Partnership.  The  Managing  General  Partner  owes  a  fiduciary  duty  to  the
Unitholders.  See  'Conflicts   of  Interest   and  Fiduciary   Responsibility.'
Notwithstanding  any limitation on  obligations or duties,  the Managing General
Partner and the Special General Partner  are liable, as the general partners  of
the Partnership, for all debts of the Partnership (to the extent not paid by the
Partnership),  except  to  the  extent that  indebtedness  or  other obligations
incurred by the Partnership are made specifically non-recourse to either or both
of the General Partners. Whenever possible, the Managing General Partner intends
to make any such  indebtedness or other obligations  non-recourse to it and  the
Special  General Partner. However,  if the Operating  Partnership defaults under
the First  Mortgage Notes  or the  Bank Credit  Facility, the  Managing  General
Partner  will be  liable for any  deficiency remaining after  foreclosure on the
Operating Partnership's assets.
 
     The Managing General Partner appointed Frederick W. McCarthy and Willis  G.
Ryckman  III, who are neither officers nor  employees of the General Partners or
any Affiliate of the General Partners, to its Board of Directors. Such directors
serve on the Audit Committee with the authority to review, at the request of the
Managing  General Partner,  specific matters  as to  which the  Managing General
Partner believes there may be  a conflict of interest  in order to determine  if
the resolution of such conflict proposed by the Managing General Partner is fair
and  reasonable to the Partnership. Absent specific delegation from the Board of
Directors of the Managing General Partner, determinations of the Audit Committee
are advisory and do not bind the Managing General Partner. Any matters  approved
by  the Audit Committee will be conclusively deemed to be fair and reasonable to
the Partnership, approved by all partners of the Partnership and not a breach by
the Managing General Partner  of any duties  it may owe  the Partnership or  the
Unitholders.  In  addition,  the  Audit  Committee  reviews  external  financial
reporting  of  the  Partnership,  recommends  engagement  of  the  Partnership's
independent  accountants and  reviews the Partnership's  procedures for internal
auditing and the  adequacy of  the Partnership's  internal accounting  controls.
With  respect to such additional matters, the Audit Committee may act on its own
initiative to question the Managing  General Partner and, absent the  delegation
of specific authority by the entire Board of Directors, its recommendations will
be advisory.
 
     The  Special General  Partner, a  wholly owned  subsidiary of  the Managing
General Partner, is a  non-managing general partner of  the Partnership and  the
Operating  Partnership with  no operations  or business  other than  acting as a
general partner of the Partnership and  the Operating Partnership. In the  event
that  the Managing  General Partner  is merged with  and into  Triarc, the Audit
Committee of the Special  General Partner will  perform the functions  described
above  previously  performed  by the  Audit  Committee of  the  Managing General
Partner. The Audit Committee of the  Special General Partner is composed of  the
same  directors  that  serve on  the  Audit  Committee of  the  Managing General
Partner. In addition, if following a merger of the Managing General Partner with
and into Triarc, a bankruptcy event involving Triarc occurs, the Special General
Partner will become the  managing general partner  of the Partnership,  continue
the business of the Partnership and have all the rights, authority and powers of
the Managing General Partner described in this Prospectus.
 
     As  is commonly  the case  with publicly  traded limited  partnerships, the
Partnership does not directly employ any of the persons responsible for managing
or operating the  Partnership. In  general, the management  of National  Propane
continues  to  manage and  operate the  Partnership's  business as  officers and
employees of the Managing General Partner and its Affiliates. See 'Business  and
Properties -- Employees.'
 
                                       96
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER
 
     The  following table  sets forth  certain information  with respect  to the
current directors and executive officers of the Managing General Partner.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
               NAME                   AGE                 POSITION WITH THE MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER
- -----------------------------------   ---   ----------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<S>                                   <C>   <C>
Nelson Peltz.......................   54    Director
Peter W. May.......................   54    Director
Frederick W. McCarthy..............   55    Director
Willis G. Ryckman III..............   52    Director
Ronald D. Paliughi.................   53    President, Chief Executive Officer and Director
Ronald R. Rominiecki...............   43    Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
C. David Watson....................   38    Senior Vice President, Administration, General Counsel and Assistant
                                              Secretary
</TABLE>
 
     Nelson Peltz has  been a  director of the  Managing General  Partner and  a
director  and Chairman of the Board and  Chief Executive Officer of Triarc since
April 23, 1993.  Since then, he  has also been  a director and  Chairman of  the
Board  and Chief  Executive Officer of  certain of  Triarc's other subsidiaries,
including RC/Arby's  Corporation  formerly  known  as  Royal  Crown  Corporation
('RCAC').  He is  also a  general partner of  DWG Acquisition  Group, L.P. ('DWG
Acquisition'), whose principal  business is ownership  of securities of  Triarc.
From  its formation in January 1989 until April 23, 1993, Mr. Peltz was Chairman
and Chief Executive Officer of Trian Group, Limited Partnership ('Trian'), which
provided investment banking and management  services for entities controlled  by
Mr.  Peltz and Mr.  May. From 1983 to  December 1988, he  was Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer  and a  director of  Triangle Industries,  Inc.  ('Triangle'),
which,  through wholly-owned subsidiaries, was, at  that time, a manufacturer of
packaging products,  copper electrical  wire  and cable  and steel  conduit  and
currency  and coin handling  products. From November 1989  through May 1992, Mr.
Peltz was  director of  Mountleigh Group  plc, a  British property  trading  and
retailing  company ('Mountleigh').  He served  in various  executive capacities,
including Executive Chairman,  of Mountleigh  from November  1989 until  October
1991.
 
     Peter  W. May  has been a  director of  the Managing General  Partner and a
director and President  and Chief Operating  Officer of Triarc  since April  23,
1993.  Since then, he has also been a director and President and Chief Operating
Officer of certain of Triarc's other subsidiaries, including RCAC. He is also  a
general  partner of  DWG Acquisition. From  its formation in  January 1989 until
April 23, 1993, Mr. May was President  and Chief Operating Officer of Trian.  He
was  President and Chief Operating Officer and  a director of Triangle from 1983
until December 1988. From November 1989 through May 1992, Mr. May was a director
of Mountleigh and served as Joint Managing Director of Mountleigh from  November
1989  until October 1991. Mr. May was also named a director on April 29, 1993 of
The Leslie  Fay  Companies, Inc.  following  its filing  on  April 5,  1993  for
protection under Chapter 11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code.
 
     Frederick  W. McCarthy has been a  director of the Managing General Partner
since September 25,  1996. Mr.  McCarthy has  been Chairman  of Triumph  Capital
Group,  Inc.,  an  investment  management firm,  since  1990.  Mr.  McCarthy was
formerly a Managing  Director of Drexel  Burnham Lambert where  he was  employed
from  1974 until 1990. Mr. McCarthy serves as a director of EnviroWorks, Inc., a
manufacturer of lawn and garden products, and of Paragon Acceptance Corporation,
an automotive finance company.
 
     Willis G. Ryckman III has been  a director of the Managing General  Partner
since  September 25, 1996.  Mr. Ryckman has  served as the  Chairman of Tri-Tech
Labs, Inc., a holding company, since June 1992, Chairman of Irma Shorell,  Inc.,
a cosmetics company, since April 1993, and Managing Director and Chief Operating
Officer  of Associated Capital, a  hedge fund, since April  1995 and Chairman of
Omni Capital, a finance company, since  January 1996. Mr. Ryckman is a  Director
of Banyan Hotel Management Corporation, Krasdale Foods, Inc. and Panavision Inc.
 
     Ronald  D. Paliughi has  been President and Chief  Executive Officer of the
Managing General Partner since April 29, 1993. From May 1992 through April 1993,
Mr. Paliughi was a temporary, full time officer in the U.S. Army National Guard,
serving as an Army Aviator. During 1991, he served on
 
                                       97
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
active duty as  an Army  Aviator and  commissioned officer  in Operation  Desert
Shield/Storm.    From   1987   to   1990,   Mr.   Paliughi   was   Senior   Vice
President -- Western Operations of AmeriGas Propane, Inc. (then a subsidiary  of
UGI  Corporation),  the largest  propane company  in the  U.S. During  1986, Mr.
Paliughi was Director of Retail Operations of CalGas Corporation. For more  than
14  years prior,  he held  various positions  with VanGas,  Inc. ('VanGas'), the
western subsidiary of Suburban Propane Gas (then a division of Quantum  Chemical
Corporation),  the third largest U.S. propane  company. He last served as Senior
Vice President/General Manager, the top executive officer at VanGas.
 
     Ronald R. Rominiecki  joined the  Managing General Partner  on December  1,
1995  as Senior Vice President  and Chief Financial Officer.  From April 1994 to
November 1995,  he served  as  Vice President  and  Chief Financial  Officer  of
O'Brien Environmental Energy, Inc. ('O'Brien'), a publicly-owned company engaged
in  cogeneration and other energy related  businesses. In September 1994 O'Brien
filed a petition in bankruptcy under Chapter 11 of the United States Code.  From
June 1988 to March 1994, Mr. Rominiecki was Corporate Controller at Westmoreland
Coal Company, a NYSE listed company.
 
     C.  David Watson  has been  Senior Vice  President, Administration, General
Counsel and Assistant Secretary of  the Managing General Partner since  December
19,  1996.  From  December 2,  1996  to December  18,  1996 he  was  Senior Vice
President. He is responsible for  legal matters, real estate, fleet  management,
plant  engineering,  safety,  risk management,  human  resources,  insurance and
public relations. Prior to his employment with the Managing General Partner,  he
was  with the law firm of Jenner & Block in Chicago, Illinois, as a partner from
January 1, 1993 to  November 30, 1996,  and as an  associate from September  25,
1986 to December 31, 1992.
 
     Each  director  has  been  elected  to  serve  until  the  Managing General
Partner's  next  annual  meeting  of  stockholders  and  until  such  director's
successor  is  duly elected  and qualified  or until  his death,  resignation or
removal. The term of office of each  executive officer is until the next  annual
meeting  of the Board of Directors of the Managing General Partner and until his
successor is elected and qualified or until his death, resignation or removal.
 
REIMBURSEMENT OF EXPENSES OF THE MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER
 
     In general, the management  and employees of  National Propane who  managed
and  operated the propane business  and assets of National  Propane prior to the
IPO continue to manage  and operate the Partnership's  business as officers  and
employees  of the Managing  General Partner and  its Affiliates. The Partnership
does not have any officers or employees of its own. The Operating  Partnership's
corporate subsidiary does, however, have its own employees to manage and operate
its  business. The Managing General Partner  does not receive any management fee
or other compensation in connection with its management of the Partnership,  but
is reimbursed at cost for all direct and indirect expenses incurred on behalf of
the  Partnership, including the costs of compensation and employee benefit plans
described herein properly allocable to  the Partnership, and all other  expenses
necessary  or appropriate to the  conduct of the business  of, and allocable to,
the Partnership. The  Partnership Agreement provides  that the Managing  General
Partner  shall determine the  expenses that are allocable  to the Partnership in
any reasonable manner  determined by the  Managing General Partner  in its  sole
discretion.  Affiliates of the  Managing General Partner  (including Triarc) may
perform certain  administrative services  for the  Managing General  Partner  on
behalf  of the  Partnership. Such  Affiliates will  not receive  a fee  for such
services performed for or on behalf  of the Partnership, but will be  reimbursed
for  all  direct  and indirect  expenses  incurred in  connection  therewith. In
addition, the  General  Partners and  their  Affiliates may  provide  additional
services  to  the  Partnership,  for  which  the  Partnership  will  be  charged
reasonable fees as determined by the Managing General Partner.
 
     In addition,  in connection  with  the IPO,  the Managing  General  Partner
received  an aggregate  2% unsubordinated General  Partner Interest  and a 40.6%
interest (at that date) as holder of the Subordinated Units as consideration for
its contribution  to the  Partnership of  its limited  partner interest  in  the
Operating  Partnership, which was received as consideration for its contribution
to the Operating Partnership of the  propane business of National Propane.  Such
Subordinated  Units currently represent a 38.7% interest in the Partnership. The
Managing General Partner will  be entitled to distributions  on such Units,  and
the  Managing General  Partner will  be entitled  to incentive  distributions as
holder  of  the  Incentive  Distribution   rights,  as  described  under   'Cash
Distribution Policy.'
 
                                       98
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
 
     The  following table sets forth the  annual salaries, bonuses and all other
compensation awards  and payouts  earned by  the President  and Chief  Executive
Officer  and by certain named executive officers of the Managing General Partner
(collectively, the  'Named  Officers') for  services  rendered to  the  Managing
General  Partner and its subsidiaries during the fiscal years ended December 31,
1996, 1995 and 1994.
 
                           SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                       ANNUAL
                                                    COMPENSATION             OTHER
                                               ----------------------        ANNUAL
      NAME AND PRINCIPAL POSITION        YEAR  SALARY($)     BONUS($)     COMPENSATION
- ---------------------------------------- ----  ---------     --------     ------------
 
<S>                                      <C>   <C>           <C>          <C>
Ronald D. Paliughi ..................... 1996   277,083      500,000 (4)     --
  President and Chief Executive Officer  1995   250,000        --            --
                                         1994   250,000      300,000         --
Ronald R. Rominiecki ................... 1996   165,000      100,000 (4)     --
  Senior Vice President and Chief        1995    13,750(8)     --            --
  Financial Officer                      1994     --           --            --
C. David Watson ........................ 1996    10,417(10)    --            --
  Senior Vice President, Administration, 1995     --           --            --
  General Counsel and Assistant          1994     --           --            --
  Secretary
Laurie B. Crawford ..................... 1996   122,917      124,500         --
  Former Senior Vice President,          1995    88,333        --            --
  Administration, General Counsel and    1994    78,472       20,000         --
  Assistant Secretary
 
<CAPTION>
                                                       LONG-TERM COMPENSATION
                                           ----------------------------------------------
                                                               AWARDS
                                           ----------------------------------------------
                                                                  NUMBER OF
                                                                  SECURITIES       LTIP
                                           RESTRICTED STOCK       UNDERLYING      PAYOUTS      ALL OTHER
      NAME AND PRINCIPAL POSITION           AWARD(S)(#)(1)    OPTIONS/SARS(#)(2)    ($)    COMPENSATION(3)($)
- ----------------------------------------   -----------------  ------------------  -------  ------------------
<S>                                      <C><C>               <C>                 <C>      <C>
Ronald D. Paliughi .....................        --                    --               --          --
  President and Chief Executive Officer         --                  30,000(5)          --            2,592
                                              5,000                 51,000(6)          --           96,178(7)
Ronald R. Rominiecki ...................        --                    --               --          --
  Senior Vice President and Chief               --                  20,000(5)          --           63,000(9)
  Financial Officer                             --                    --               --          --
C. David Watson ........................        --                    --               --          --
  Senior Vice President, Administration,        --                    --               --          --
  General Counsel and Assistant                 --                    --               --          --
  Secretary
Laurie B. Crawford .....................        --                    --               --          --
  Former Senior Vice President,                 --                   7,500(11)         --            1,579
  Administration, General Counsel and           --                  10,000(11)         --            1,117
  Assistant Secretary
</TABLE>
 
- ------------
 
 (1) All  restricted  stock awards were of Triarc's  Class A Common  Stock,  par
     value $.10 per share (the 'Class A Common  Stock'),  and were made pursuant
     to Triarc's 1993 Equity Participation Plan (described below).  Restrictions
     on such shares lapsed prior to December 31, 1996.
 
 (2) All stock  option  grants  were  made  pursuant  to  Triarc's  1993  Equity
     Participation Plan. The option grants are described below under 'Option/SAR
     Grants in Last Fiscal Year, Individual Grants.'
 
 (3) Amounts  of  other compensation  with  respect to  1996  have not  yet been
     determined. Except  as otherwise  noted, consists  only of  life  insurance
     premiums and 401(k) contributions paid by National Propane.
 
 (4) To  be  paid  by  Triarc  in  connection  with  activities  related  to the
     monetization of its propane business.
 
 (5) One-third of the options granted will vest on each of the first, second and
     third  anniversaries  of  the  date  of  grant  and  the  options  will  be
     exercisable  at  any  time  between  the  date  of  vesting  and  the tenth
     anniversary of the date of grant.
 
 (6) With respect to 26,000  of the options granted,  one-third of such  options
     will vest on each of the first, second and third anniversary of the date of
     grant.  With respect  to the  remaining 25,000  options, one-third  of such
     options will vest on each of the third, fourth and fifth anniversary of the
     date of grant. All of such options will be exercisable at any time  between
     the date of vesting and the tenth anniversary of the date of grant.
 
 (7) Includes  $33,333 for certain  salary allowances and  $60,829 of reimbursed
     moving expenses  in  connection with  Mr.  Paliughi's relocation  to  Cedar
     Rapids, Iowa.
 
 (8) Mr.  Rominiecki began his  employment with the  Managing General Partner on
     December 1,  1995. The  amount reported  is based  on an  annual salary  of
     $165,000.
 
 (9) Represents  a one-time  bonus payable  in connection  with Mr. Rominiecki's
     employment by the Managing General Partner.
 
                                              (footnotes continued on next page)
 
                                       99
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
(footnotes continued from previous page)
 
(10) Mr. Watson  began  his employment  with  the Managing  General  Partner  on
     December  2, 1996.  The amount  reported was based  on an  annual salary of
     $125,000. See ' -- Employment Arrangements with Executive Officers' below.
 
(11) In connection  with the  termination of  Ms. Crawford's  employment by  the
     Managing  General Partner on December 18, 1996, all of Ms. Crawford's stock
     options immediately vested and are exercisable until March 18, 1997.
 
CASH INCENTIVE PLANS
 
     Triarc has implemented an annual cash incentive plan (the 'Annual Incentive
Plan') for  executive officers  and key  employees of  National Propane  and  is
presently  developing a  mid-term cash  incentive plan  (the 'Mid-Term Incentive
Plan') for executive officers and key employees of National Propane.
 
     The Annual Incentive Plan is designed to provide annual incentive awards to
participants, 50% of which are based on whether National Propane has met certain
pre-determined goals  and  50% of  which  is based  on  the performance  of  the
participant  during  the  preceding  year.  Under  the  Annual  Incentive  Plan,
participants may receive awards of a specified percentage of their then  current
base salaries, which percentage varies depending upon the level of seniority and
responsibility  of the participant. Such percentage is set by National Propane's
management in consultation with management of Triarc. The Board of Directors  of
National Propane, in consultation with management of Triarc and the Compensation
Committee  of the Triarc Board of  Directors (the 'Compensation Committee'), may
elect to  adjust  awards  on  a discretionary  basis  to  reflect  the  relative
individual  contribution  of  the executive  or  key employee,  to  evaluate the
'quality' of  National  Propane's earnings  or  to take  into  account  external
factors  that affect  performance results.  The Board  of Directors  of National
Propane also may decide that multiple performance objectives related to National
Propane's and/or the individual's  performance may be  appropriate and, in  such
event,  such factors would be  weighted in order to  determine the amount of the
annual incentive awards. The Annual  Incentive Plan is administered by  National
Propane's  Board  of Directors  and Triarc's  management and  may be  amended or
terminated by such Board of Directors and Triarc's management at any time.
 
     Under the  Mid-Term Incentive  Plan, incentive  awards will  be granted  to
participants  if National  Propane achieves an  agreed upon profit  over a three
year performance cycle.  During each plan  year, an amount  will be accrued  for
each  participant based upon  the amount by which  National Propane's profit for
such  year  exceeds  a  minimum  return  to  be  determined.  A  new  three-year
performance  cycle will  begin each  year, such  that after  the third  year the
annual cash amount paid to participants pursuant to the Mid-Term Incentive  Plan
should  equal  the target  award if  National Propane's  profit goals  have been
achieved for  the full  three-year cycle.  The Board  of Directors  of  National
Propane,  together with  Triarc's management  and the  Compensation Committee of
Triarc's Board of  Directors, may  adjust, upward or  downward, an  individual's
award  based upon  an assessment  of the  individual's relative  contribution to
National Propane's longer-term  profit performance.  The Board  of Directors  of
Triarc  and Triarc's  management may amend  or terminate  the Mid-Term Incentive
Plan at any time.
 
     From time to time, the Compensation  Committee of the Triarc Board may,  at
the  request of Triarc's  or National Propane's  management, award discretionary
bonuses based on performance to certain executive officers. The amounts of  such
bonuses  will be based  on the Compensation Committee's  evaluation of each such
individual's contribution.
 
TRIARC'S 1993 EQUITY PARTICIPATION PLAN
 
     Certain  executive   officers  of   the  Managing   General  Partner   have
participated  in the Triarc Companies, Inc. 1993 Equity Participation Plan which
was adopted  on April  24, 1993,  and which  provides that  awards may  be  made
thereunder  until April 24, 1998. The plan provides for, among other things, the
grant of options to purchase Triarc's  Class A Common Stock, Stock  Appreciation
Rights  ('SARs')  and  restricted shares  of  Class A  Common  Stock. Directors,
selected officers and key employees of,  and key consultants to, Triarc and  its
subsidiaries, including the Managing General
 
                                      100
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
Partner, are eligible to participate in the plan. The plan is being administered
by  the  Compensation Committee  of  the Triarc  Board  of Directors,  which may
determine from time to time to grant options, SARs and restricted stock.
 
            OPTIONS/SAR GRANTS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR INDIVIDUAL GRANTS
 
     No options to purchase shares of Triarc  Class A Common Stock or SARs  have
been granted to any of the Named Officers in respect of 1996.
 
          OPTION/SAR EXERCISES IN 1996 AND YEAR-END OPTION/SAR VALUES
 
     The  following table sets  forth certain information  concerning options to
purchase shares of Triarc  Class A Common  Stock, and the values  at the end  of
1996  of unexercised in-the-money  options to purchase shares  of Triarc Class A
Common Stock granted to the Named Officers outstanding as of the end of 1996. No
Named Officer exercised any options to  purchase Triarc Class A Common Stock  in
1996.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                NUMBER OF SECURITIES            VALUE OF UNEXERCISED
                                                               UNDERLYING UNEXERCISED        IN-THE-MONEY OPTIONS/SARS
                                                                  OPTIONS/SARS AT
                                                                    FISCAL 1996                    AT FISCAL 1996
                                                                      YEAR-END                      YEAR-END(1)
                                                            ----------------------------    ----------------------------
                          NAME                              EXERCISABLE    UNEXERCISABLE    EXERCISABLE    UNEXERCISABLE
- ---------------------------------------------------------   -----------    -------------    -----------    -------------
 
<S>                                                         <C>            <C>              <C>            <C>
Ronald D. Paliughi.......................................      40,667           80,333        $26,750         $34,000
Ronald R. Rominiecki.....................................       6,667           13,333          9,167          18,333
C. David Watson..........................................      --                --              --              --
Laurie B. Crawford.......................................      17,500            --            14,063            --
</TABLE>
 
- ------------
 
(1) On  December 31, 1996, the last day of Fiscal 1996, the closing price of the
    Triarc Class A Common Stock was $11.50 per share.
 
UNIT OPTION PLAN
 
     Effective upon the closing of the IPO, the Managing General Partner adopted
the National  Propane Corporation  1996 Unit  Option Plan  (the 'Option  Plan'),
which  permits the  issuance of  options (the  'Options') and  Unit appreciation
rights ('UARs') to eligible persons. An aggregate of 1,250,000 Common Units  and
Subordinated  Units are initially reserved for  issuance as of the Option Plan's
effective date. Pursuant to the terms  of the Option Plan, an additional  number
of  Units equal to 1% of the number  of Units outstanding as of each December 31
following the Option Plan's effective date will be added to the total number  of
Units  that may be issued  thereafter. Accordingly, as of  December 31, 1996, an
additional 67,015 Units were available for  issuance under the Option Plan.  The
number  of Units available for issuance will  also be increased by the number of
Units received by the Managing General Partner as payment of the exercise  price
of  Options and by the number of Units purchased by the Managing General Partner
from an  amount equal  to the  cash proceeds  received by  the Managing  General
Partner  on the exercise of Options. The  number of Units available for issuance
pursuant to the Option Plan is  subject to adjustment in certain  circumstances.
The  following is  a summary  of the material  terms of  the Option  Plan and is
qualified in its entirety by reference to  the Option Plan, which is an  exhibit
to the Registration Statement of which this Prospectus is a part.
 
     The   Option  Plan  has  been  designed  to  furnish  additional  incentive
compensation to selected directors, officers,  employees and consultants of  the
Managing  General Partner and its Affiliates  and to increase their personal and
proprietary interest in the future performance of the Partnership. Approximately
1,000 directors,  officers,  employees,  and consultants  will  be  eligible  to
participate  in the Option  Plan. In addition,  in the event  that the provision
relating to disinterested administration in Rule 16b-3 under the 1934 Act (as in
effect on the Option Plan's effective date) becomes inapplicable to the Managing
General Partner and the Partnership, directors who are not employees or officers
of the Managing General Partner will be eligible to receive Options and UARs.
 
                                      101
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
     The  Option  Plan  is  administered  by  the  Managing  General   Partner's
compensation  committee (the 'Committee'). The Committee, in its sole discretion
and authority,  but subject  to the  terms of  the Option  Plan, determines  the
directors,  officers,  employees and  consultants  who are  eligible  to receive
Options and UARs and the date of grant, number of Units, exercise price, vesting
schedule, duration (not  to exceed  ten years)  and other  terms and  conditions
applicable  to each Option and UAR granted  under the Option Plan. The Committee
may accelerate the  exercisability of Options  and UARs. No  Option or UAR  with
respect  to Subordinated  Units will  become exercisable  before the  end of the
Subordination Period.
 
     On a change of control (as defined in the Option Plan), the Committee  will
have  discretion to accelerate the  exercisability (and duration) of outstanding
Options and UARs or cancel outstanding Options and UARs in exchange for cash.
 
     The exercise price of each  Option may be paid in  the form of cash,  check
acceptable  to the Managing  General Partner, Units held  by the participant for
such period as  may be  required to  avoid a  charge to  earnings for  financial
reporting  purposes,  or  such  other form  of  consideration  permitted  by the
Committee, including by assignment of a portion of the proceeds on sale of Units
deliverable upon exercise or any combination of the foregoing.
 
     Units delivered by the Managing General Partner on exercise of an Option or
UAR may  consist  of Units  acquired  in the  open  market or  from  any  person
(including  Units newly issued  by the Partnership), Units  already owned by the
Managing General Partner, or any combination of the foregoing. Options and  UARs
are generally nontransferable.
 
     With  respect to each Unit delivered upon the exercise of an Option (unless
newly issued by the Partnership), the Managing General Partner shall be entitled
to reimbursement by  the Partnership for  the excess,  if any, of  (i) the  fair
market  value of each such Unit (as of  the date of exercise of such Option) or,
in the case of Units  purchased in the open market,  the price actually paid  by
the Managing General Partner therefor over (ii) the exercise price of the Option
relating  to such Unit.  With respect to  the settlement of  a UAR, the Managing
General Partner shall be  entitled to reimbursement by  the Partnership for  (i)
the  amount of cash, if any, paid in connection with such settlement or (ii) the
fair market value of each such Unit delivered in connection with such settlement
(unless such Unit is  newly issued by  the Partnership). Thus,  the cost of  the
Options and UARs will be borne by the Partnership.
 
     The  Committee may grant UARs in such amounts and subject to such terms and
conditions as the  Committee may determine.  UARs may be  granted in  connection
with  all or  any part  of, or  independently of,  any Option  granted under the
Option Plan. The grantee  of a UAR  has the right to  receive from the  Managing
General  Partner an amount equal to (a) the  excess of (i) the fair market value
of a Unit on the date of exercise of the UAR over (ii) the fair market value  of
a  Unit on the date  of grant (or over  the Option exercise price  if the UAR is
granted in connection  with an Option),  multiplied by (b)  the number of  Units
with respect to which the UAR is exercised. Payment to the grantee upon exercise
of  a UAR will be in cash or in  Units (valued at their fair market value on the
date of exercise of the  UAR) or both, all as  the Committee shall determine  in
its  sole discretion. Upon the  exercise of a UAR  granted in connection with an
Option, the number of Units  subject to the related  Option shall be reduced  by
the  number  of Units  with  respect to  which the  UAR  is exercised.  Upon the
exercise of an  Option in  connection with  which a  UAR has  been granted,  the
number  of Units subject  to the related UAR  shall be reduced  by the number of
Units with respect to which the Option is exercised.
 
     The Board of Directors  of the Managing General  Partner in its  discretion
may  terminate the Option Plan at any time with respect to any Units for which a
grant has not theretofore been made. The  Board of Directors will also have  the
right  to alter or amend the Option Plan,  any award made thereunder or any part
thereof from time to  time; provided, that no  change in any previously  granted
Option  or UAR may be made which would  impair the rights of the grantee without
the consent of such grantee; and provided further, that to the extent  necessary
to  comply with Rule 16b-3  under the 1934 Act,  no such amendment or alteration
will, without  the  requisite consent  under  such Rule  16b-3:  (i)  materially
increase  the total  number of  Units available for  Options and  UARs under the
Option  Plan,  subject  to  certain  exceptions;  (ii)  materially  modify   the
requirements  as  to eligibility  for participation  in  the Option  Plan; (iii)
extend   the   maximum    period   during   which    Options   and   UARs    may
 
                                      102
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
be  granted  under the  Option Plan;  or (iv)  materially increase  the benefits
accruing to participants under the Option Plan.
 
     Generally, no tax is imposed on the grantee upon the grant of an Option  or
UAR  under the Plan and neither the Partnership nor the Managing General Partner
will be entitled to a tax deduction  by reason of such a grant. Generally,  upon
the  exercise of an Option,  the optionee will be  taxable on ordinary income in
the year of exercise in an amount equal  to the excess of the fair market  value
of  the Units  on the date  of exercise over  the Option exercise  price and the
employer will be entitled  to a deduction in  an equivalent amount. In  general,
upon exercising a UAR, the amount of any cash received and the fair market value
on  the exercise date of any Units or other property received are taxable to the
recipient as ordinary  income and  deductible by  the employer.  Insofar as  the
Partnership  will  reimburse the  Managing  General Partner  for  the difference
between the cost incurred by the Managing General Partner in acquiring Units  to
deliver  to  the optionee  or  holder of  UARs  upon exercise  and  the proceeds
received by the Managing  General Partner from the  optionee in connection  with
such  exercise,  the  Managing  General Partner  will  generally  be  treated as
receiving income in  the amount of  such reimbursement and  the Partnership  may
claim  a deduction for such payment. Upon  a subsequent disposition of the Units
received upon exercise of an Option or  UAR, any appreciation after the date  of
exercise  will generally qualify as capital gain. If the Units received upon the
exercise of an Option or UAR are transferred to the optionee subject to  certain
restrictions,  then  the taxable  income realized  by  the optionee,  unless the
optionee elects otherwise,  and the  corresponding tax  deduction (assuming  any
federal  income tax withholding  requirements are satisfied)  should be deferred
and should be measured  at the fair market  value of the Units  at the time  the
restrictions  lapse. The restrictions imposed  on certain individuals by Section
16(b) of the  1934 Act  may constitute such  a transfer  restriction during  the
period  prescribed thereby with respect to  Options or UARs exercised within six
months of the grant date thereof.
 
     No Options or UARs have been granted as of the date of this Prospectus.
 
COMPENSATION OF DIRECTORS
 
     The Managing  General  Partner  pays  no  additional  remuneration  to  its
employees (or employees of any of its Affiliates) for serving as directors or to
directors  who are not employees  of the Managing General  Partner or any of its
Affiliates. The Managing General Partner may  in the future pay remuneration  to
its  directors. In addition, the Partnership  anticipates that directors who are
not employees  of  the  Managing  General Partner  or  its  Affiliates  will  be
compensated  for serving as such, will  be reimbursed for out-of-pocket expenses
and will be  eligible to participate  in the Partnership's  or Managing  General
Partner's Unit purchase or option plans, if any.
 
EMPLOYMENT ARRANGEMENTS WITH EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
 
     Mr.  Paliughi has an employment contract with the Managing General Partner,
effective as of April 24, 1993, as  amended, pursuant to which (i) the  Managing
General  Partner agrees to employ Mr.  Paliughi as President and Chief Executive
Officer through January  2, 1998, (ii)  Mr. Paliughi receives  a base salary  of
$300,000  per annum (effective June 15,  1996) during his employment (subject to
increase at the  discretion of the  Board of Directors),  (iii) Mr. Paliughi  is
eligible to participate in the Annual Incentive Plan, enabling him to receive an
annual  cash bonus of up to 75% of his base salary based upon the achievement of
certain individual and Partnership performance objectives, (iv) Mr. Paliughi  is
eligible  to participate in the Mid-Term Incentive Plan, enabling him to receive
an annual bonus award at  least equal to 75% of  his base salary based upon  the
achievement  by the Partnership of certain financial performance objectives over
a three-year  performance  cycle, (v)  Mr.  Paliughi is  entitled  to  severance
benefits  generally equal  to two years  base salary  and bonuses (approximately
$1,050,000 if such termination occurred on June 15, 1996) and certain relocation
payments in the event he is terminated other than for cause (as defined), or  if
his  existing employment agreement  is not renewed  or extended on substantially
similar terms  and  (vi)  Mr.  Paliughi is  entitled  to  participate  in  other
generally  available  compensation  plans and  receives  various  other benefits
including reimbursement of  certain expenses. The  agreement also restricts  Mr.
Paliughi  from  competing  with the  General  Partner  for 24  months  after the
termination of the  agreement if  such termination results  from Mr.  Paliughi's
voluntary
 
                                      103
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
resignation  or  the Managing  General Partner's  termination of  Mr. Paliughi's
employment for cause (as defined in the agreement).
 
     Mr. Rominiecki has a severance agreement with the Managing General  Partner
which  provides  that in  the event  he  is terminated  by the  Managing General
Partner other than for cause  (as defined in the  agreement), he is entitled  to
severance  benefits generally  equal to  his annual  compensation (approximately
$165,000 if such  termination occurred  on June  15, 1996)  if such  termination
occurs  prior to December 1, 1996 or within  one year of a change of control (as
defined in  the  agreement) of  the  Managing  General Partner  or  six  month's
compensation if such termination occurs thereafter.
 
     Mr.  Watson has an  employment agreement with  the Managing General Partner
pursuant   to   which   (i)   Mr.   Watson   is   employed   as   Senior    Vice
President  -- Administration  and General  Counsel effective  December 19, 1996,
(ii) Mr. Watson receives a base salary  of $125,000 per annum, (iii) Mr.  Watson
is eligible to participate in the Annual Incentive Plan, enabling him to receive
an annual cash bonus of up to 50% of his base salary, based upon the achievement
of certain individual and Partnership performance objectives, (iv) Mr. Watson is
eligible  to participate in the Mid-Term Incentive Plan, enabling him to receive
an annual  bonus  award  equal  to  40% of  his  base  salary,  based  upon  the
achievement  by the Partnership of certain financial performance objectives over
a three-year performance cycle, (v) Mr. Watson is entitled to severance benefits
generally equal  to one  year's  base salary  and bonuses  in  the event  he  is
terminated  other than for cause (as defined)  during the term of his employment
agreement, (vi) Mr.  Watson received  a relocation  allowance equal  to the  net
amount  of  two  months  salary,  which amount  must  be  repaid  if  Mr. Watson
voluntarily separates from the  Managing General Partner  within the first  year
from  his date of hire, and (vii) Mr. Watson is entitled to participate in other
generally available  compensation  plans  and receive  various  other  benefits,
including reimbursement of certain expenses.
 
     Ms.  Crawford's employment by the  Managing General Partner ended effective
December 18, 1996. In accordance with the terms of her employment agreement with
the Managing General Partner, Ms. Crawford will receive (i) severance pay at the
annual base salary of $137,500 from  January 1, 1997 through December 18,  1998,
(ii)  $65,625 in the first  quarter of 1997 and $68,750  in the first quarter of
1998 in lieu of  bonuses which otherwise  would have been  paid to Ms.  Crawford
with respect to 1996 and 1997 and (iii) accrued and unpaid vacation time through
the  date of termination. In addition, Ms.  Crawford is eligible to maintain her
current health  and  medical  coverage  for 18  months  following  the  date  of
termination at the cost of the Managing General Partner. In addition, all of Ms.
Crawford's  Triarc stock  options immediately  vested and  are exercisable until
March 18, 1997.
 
                                      104
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
         SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT
 
OWNERSHIP OF PARTNERSHIP UNITS BY THE DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE
OFFICERS OF THE MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER AND THE SELLING UNITHOLDER
 
     The table below  sets forth  the beneficial  ownership as  of December  31,
1996,  by each person known by the Managing General Partner to be the beneficial
owner of more than 5%  of any class of Units  of the Partnership, including  the
Selling Unitholder, each director and each Named Officer of the Managing General
Partner and the executive officers and directors of the Managing General Partner
as a group. The Common Units are traded on the NYSE.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                            CLASS OF      AMOUNT AND NATURE OF
         NAME AND ADDRESS OF BENEFICIAL OWNER                 UNITS           OWNERSHIP(1)        PERCENT OF CLASS
- -------------------------------------------------------   -------------   --------------------    ----------------
 
<S>                                                       <C>             <C>                     <C>
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Incorporated ...   Common                  401,250(2)              6.0%
  250 Vesey Street
  New York, N.Y. 10281
National Propane Corporation ..........................   Subordinated          4,533,638                 100%
  IES Tower, Suite 1700
  200 First Street, S.E.
  Cedar Rapids, I.A. 52401
Nelson Peltz ..........................................   Common                    1,210(3)                 *
  280 Park Avenue
  New York, N.Y. 10017
Peter W. May ..........................................   Common                   30,000                    *
  280 Park Avenue
  New York, N.Y. 10017
Frederick W. McCarthy .................................   Common                       --                    *
  222 Lakeview Avenue
  West Palm Beach, FL 33401
Willis G. Ryckman III .................................   Common                       --                    *
  477 Madison Avenue
  New York, NY 10022
Ronald D. Paliughi.....................................   Common                       --                    *
Ronald R. Rominiecki...................................   Common                      200                    *
C. David Watson........................................   Common                       --                    *
All executive officers and directors as a group
  (7 persons)..........................................   Common                   31,410                    *%
</TABLE>
 
- ------------
 
*  Less than 1%
 
(1) Except  as otherwise indicated, each person  has sole voting and dispositive
    power with respect to such Units.
 
(2) In addition  to the  400,000  Common Units  offered hereby,  includes  1,250
    Common  Units held  in discretionary  customer accounts.  As to  250 of such
    Common Units, the Selling Unitholder has joint voting and dispositive power.
 
(3) Includes 1,210  Units  owned by  minor  children  of Mr.  Peltz.  Mr.  Peltz
    disclaims beneficial ownership of these Units.
 
                                      105
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
OWNERSHIP OF TRIARC COMMON STOCK BY THE DIRECTORS
AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER
AND CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS
 
     All  of the issued  and outstanding shares  of common stock  of the General
Partner are  indirectly  owned  by  Triarc.  The  table  below  sets  forth  the
beneficial  ownership  as of  December 31,  1996,  by each  person known  by the
Managing General Partner  to be  the beneficial  owner of  more than  5% of  the
outstanding  shares of Triarc Class A  Common Stock (constituting the only class
of voting capital stock of Triarc), each director and each Named Officer of  the
Managing  General  Partner  and  the executive  officers  and  directors  of the
Managing General Partner as a group. Triarc's Class A Common Stock is traded  on
the NYSE.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                            AMOUNT AND NATURE
                 NAME AND ADDRESS OF BENEFICIAL OWNER                        OF OWNERSHIP(1)       PERCENT OF CLASS
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------   ---------------------    ----------------
 
<S>                                                                       <C>                      <C>
Nelson Peltz ..........................................................   6,974,967(2)(3)(4)(5)           28.1%
  280 Park Avenue
  New York, NY 10017
Peter W. May ..........................................................   6,653,000(2)(4)(6)              27.1%
  280 Park Avenue
  New York, NY 10017
DWG Acquisition Group, L.P. ...........................................   5,982,867(4)                    25.1%
  1201 North Market Street
  Wilmington, DE 19801
William Ehrman ........................................................   1,460,093(7)(8)                  6.1%
  300 Park Avenue
  New York, NY 10022
Frederick Ketcher .....................................................   1,390,493(7)(9)                  5.8%
  300 Park Avenue
  New York, NY 10022
Jonas Gerstl ..........................................................   1,376,793(7)(10)                 5.8%
  300 Park Avenue
  New York, NY 10022
Frederic Greenberg ....................................................   1,370,793(7)(11)                 5.7%
  300 Park Avenue
  New York, NY 10022
James McLaren .........................................................   1,365,793(7)(12)                 5.7%
  300 Park Avenue
  New York, NY 10022
Frederick W. McCarthy..................................................        --                        *
Willis G. Ryckman III..................................................        --                        *
Ronald D. Paliughi.....................................................      59,000(13)                  *
Ronald R. Rominiecki...................................................       6,667(14)                  *
C. David Watson........................................................        --                        *
All executive officers and directors as a group (7 persons)............   7,710,767                       30.2%
</TABLE>
 
- ------------
 
*  Less than 1%.
 
 (1) Except  as otherwise indicated, each person has sole voting and dispositive
     power with respect to such shares.
 
 (2) Includes 5,982,867 shares held by DWG  Acquisition, of which Mr. Peltz  and
     Mr. May are the sole general partners.
 
 (3) Includes 200 shares owned by a family trust of which Mr. Peltz is a general
     partner. Mr. Peltz disclaims beneficial ownership of such 200 shares.
 
 (4) The Partnership is informed that DWG Acquisition has pledged such shares to
     a  financial institution on behalf of Messrs. Peltz and May to secure loans
     made to them.
 
 (5) Includes options to purchase 965,000 shares  of Class A Common Stock  which
     have vested or will vest within 60 days of December 31, 1996.
 
 (6) Includes  options to purchase 643,333 shares  of Class A Common Stock which
     have vested or will vest within 60 days of December 31, 1996.
 
                                              (footnotes continued on next page)
 
                                      106
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
(footnotes continued from previous page)
 
 (7) The information set forth herein with respect to Messrs. Ehrman, Greenberg,
     Ketcher, Gerstl and McLaren is based  solely on information contained in  a
     Schedule  13D,  dated  July  16, 1996,  filed  pursuant  to  the Securities
     Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.
 
 (8) Includes 39,150 shares  of Class  A Common Stock  owned by  members of  Mr.
     Ehrman's  immediate family and an aggregate  of 1,365,793 shares of Class A
     Common Stock he may be deemed to  beneficially own as a general partner  of
     EGS  Associates, L.P.,  a Delaware limited  partnership ('EGS Associates'),
     EGS  Partners,  L.L.C.,   a  Delaware  limited   liability  company   ('EGS
     Partners'),  Bev  Partners,  L.P.,  a  Delaware  limited  partnership ('Bev
     Partners'), and  Jonas  Partners,  L.P.,  a  Delaware  limited  partnership
     ('Jonas Partners').
 
 (9) Includes  1,100 shares  of Class A  Common Stock  owned by a  member of Mr.
     Ketcher's immediate  family  and  his mother-in-law  and  an  aggregate  of
     1,365,793  shares of Class A Common Stock  he may be deemed to beneficially
     own as a general partner of EGS Associates, EGS Partners, Bev Partners  and
     Jonas Partners.
 
(10) Includes  8,500 shares  of Class A  Common Stock  owned by a  member of Mr.
     Gerstl's immediate family and an aggregate  of 1,365,793 shares of Class  A
     Common  Stock he may be deemed to  beneficially own as a general partner of
     EGS Associates, EGS Partners, Bev Partners and Jonas Partners.
 
(11) Includes 3,000 shares  of Class A  Common Stock  owned by a  member of  Mr.
     Greenberg's  immediate family and an aggregate of 1,365,793 shares of Class
     A Common Stock he may be deemed to beneficially own as a general partner of
     EGS Associates, EGS Partners, Bev Partners and Jonas Partners.
 
(12) Constitutes the shares of Class A Common Stock Mr. McLaren may be deemed to
     beneficially own as a general partner of EGS Associates, EGS Partners,  Bev
     Partners and Jonas Partners.
 
(13) Includes  options to purchase  49,000 shares of Class  A Common Stock which
     have vested or will vest within 60 days of December 31, 1996.
 
(14) Represents options to purchase 6,667 shares  of Class A Common Stock  which
     have vested or will vest within 60 days of December 31, 1996.
 
                            ------------------------
     The   foregoing  table  does  not  include  5,997,622  shares  of  Triarc's
non-voting Class B Common  Stock owned by Victor  Posner or entities related  to
Victor  Posner as a result of a certain Settlement Agreement dated on January 9,
1995. The shares of  Class B Common Stock  can be converted without  restriction
into an equal number of shares of Class A Common Stock following a transfer to a
non-affiliate  of Victor Posner.  Triarc has certain rights  of first refusal if
such shares are proposed to be sold  to an unaffiliated party. If the  5,997,622
currently  outstanding shares  of the Class  B Common Stock  were converted into
shares of Class A Common Stock, such shares would constitute approximately 20.1%
of the then outstanding shares of Class A Common Stock as of December 31, 1996.
 
                                      107
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                 CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS
 
RIGHTS OF THE GENERAL PARTNERS
 
     The Partnership and  the Managing  General Partner  have extensive  ongoing
relationships with Triarc and its Affiliates. Affiliates of the Managing General
Partner,  including  Triarc,  perform certain  administrative  services  for the
Managing General Partner on  behalf of the Partnership.  Such Affiliates do  not
receive  a fee for such services, but are reimbursed for all direct and indirect
expenses incurred in connection therewith.  See 'Management -- Reimbursement  of
Expenses  of the  Managing General Partner.'  In addition,  the Managing General
Partner  owns  all  of  the  Subordinated  Units,  representing  40.4%  of   the
outstanding  Units. Triarc indirectly owns 100% of the General Partners. Through
the Managing  General  Partner's  ability  to  control  the  management  of  the
Partnership and its right to vote the Subordinated Units (effectively giving the
Managing   General  Partner  the   ability  to  veto   certain  actions  of  the
Partnership), the Managing General Partner  and its Affiliates have the  ability
to exercise substantial control over the Partnership. See 'Conflicts of Interest
and Fiduciary Responsibility.'
 
TRANSACTIONS INVOLVING TRIARC AND ITS AFFILIATES
 
     In January 1996, the Partnership entered into a five-year lease, as lessee,
with  Graniteville, then  a wholly owned  subsidiary of Triarc,  as lessor, with
respect to certain storage facilities  located in Graniteville, South  Carolina.
As consideration for the use of the leased premises, the Partnership is required
to  provide all  of Graniteville's  annual propane  requirements (up  to 700,000
gallons annually) at cost plus  delivery expenses. Pursuant to the  Graniteville
Sale,  such lease was assigned to Avondale and amended to provide that it may be
terminated by either party thereto upon six months' notice.
 
     In August 1995 Triarc, through a  wholly owned subsidiary, acquired all  of
the  outstanding  stock  of  two related  propane  distribution  businesses. The
aggregate  purchase  price  was   approximately  $4.2  million  (including   the
assumption of certain existing indebtedness). In September 1995 the stock of the
subsidiary  which acquired  the two companies  was contributed by  Triarc to NPC
Holdings, Inc. ('NPC Holdings')  which, in turn, contributed  such stock to  the
Managing  General Partner. In consideration  for such contribution, NPC Holdings
received an additional 30 shares of the Managing General Partner's common stock,
increasing its ownership of the Managing General Partner to 75.7% from 75.2%.
 
     In December 1995, National  Propane borrowed $30  million under the  Former
Credit  Facility and  dividended such  amount to  subsidiaries of  Triarc ($22.7
million) and SEPSCO ($7.3 million) in proportion to their respective  percentage
ownership  in  National  Propane.  On  February 22,  1996,  the  11  7/8% senior
subordinated debentures of SEPSCO  were redeemed. The  cash for such  redemption
came from the proceeds of the $30 million of borrowings (which, under the Former
Credit  Facility, were restricted to the  redemption of the 11 7/8% Debentures),
liquidation  of   marketable  securities   and  existing   cash  balances.   The
indebtedness  incurred in  part to  finance such  redemption was  assumed by the
Operating Partnership and repaid in connection with the Transactions.
 
     In  the  fourth  quarter  of  1995,  the  Managing  General  Partner   sold
approximately  $3.9 million face amount of its accounts receivable to Triarc for
approximately $3.8  million.  As collections  on  such accounts  receivable  are
received  by  the Managing  General Partner  they  are remitted  to Triarc  on a
periodic basis. This arrangement terminated on July 2, 1996 with a final payment
to Triarc of approximately $300,000.
 
     The  Managing  General  Partner  receives  from Triarc  certain  management
services  including  legal,  accounting,  tax,  insurance,  financial  and other
management  services.  Effective  April 23, 1993 the  Managing  General  Partner
entered into a management  services agreement with Triarc,  which was amended as
of July 2, 1996 (as so amended, the 'Management Services  Agreement'),  pursuant
to which Triarc is entitled to certain management fees from the Managing General
Partner for services  which do not relate to the business or  operations  of the
Partnership or its subsidiaries and to (i) reimbursement of expenses incurred by
it from the Partnership or the Operating  Partnership  regarding  administrative
services performed with respect to the business or operations of the Partnership
and its subsidiaries and (ii) such reasonable fees as may be agreed to by Triarc
and the Partnership for the performance by Triarc of any other services provided
by it that relate to the business of the Partnership and its subsidiaries. Prior
to April 23, 1993, the costs of management  services were allocated by Triarc to
its  subsidiaries  under a former  management  services  agreement  (the 'Former
Management
 
                                      108
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
Services  Agreement') based first directly on  the cost of the services provided
and then, for those costs which could not be directly allocated, based upon  the
relative  revenues and tangible assets as a percentage of Triarc's corresponding
consolidated amounts.  Additionally, in  Transition  1993 the  Managing  General
Partner  was allocated certain costs  representing uncollectible amounts owed to
Triarc  for  similar  management  services  by  certain  affiliates  or   former
affiliates.   For  additional  information  regarding  the  Management  Services
Agreement and  the Former  Management Services  Agreement, see  note 19  to  the
consolidated financial statements of National Propane.
 
     Chesapeake  Insurance Company Limited ('Chesapeake Insurance'), an indirect
subsidiary of Triarc,  provided certain  insurance coverage  and reinsurance  of
certain  risks to the Managing General Partner  until October 1993 at which time
Chesapeake Insurance  ceased  writing all  insurance  and reinsurance.  The  net
premium  expense incurred  was approximately $4  million in  Transition 1993. In
addition, on April 1, 1995 the Managing General Partner issued a promissory note
to Chesapeake Insurance for $900,000. $125,000 of the principal of such note was
repaid on December 31,  1995 and the  remaining $775,000 was  repaid on June  7,
1996.
 
     Triarc's   wholly  owned  leasing  subsidiary,   NPC  Leasing  Corp.  ('NPC
Leasing'), leases vehicles  and other equipment  to companies that  are or  were
affiliates  of the Managing  General Partner under  long-term lease obligations.
The Managing General Partner distributed the shares of NPC Leasing to Triarc  as
a dividend on July 2, 1996. NPC Leasing has had no billings with the Partnership
since the closing of the IPO.
 
     The  Managing General Partner holds an intercompany note of Triarc's in the
aggregate principal amount  of approximately  $30.0 million as  of December  31,
1996.  Concurrent with the closing of the IPO, the Managing General Partner made
a dividend of approximately $51.4 million  aggregate principal amount of a  then
outstanding  $81.4  million  intercompany  note  to  Triarc.  See  'The  IPO and
Additional Transactions.' For additional information regarding the  intercompany
note, see Note 13 to the consolidated financial statements of National Propane.
 
PARTNERSHIP NOTE
 
     Concurrent  with the closing of the IPO, the Operating Partnership made the
Partnership Loan to Triarc. Management believes that, based on the terms of  the
Partnership Note, taken as a whole, the Partnership Note has a fair market value
of  not less than  100% of its  principal amount. For  information regarding the
Partnership Loan and Triarc, see 'Cash Distribution Policy -- Partnership  Loan'
and 'Certain Information Regarding Triarc.'
 
     See 'The IPO and Additional Transactions,' 'Units Eligible for Future Sale'
and  'The  Selling Unitholder'  for  information regarding  certain transactions
between the Selling Unitholder and the Partnership.
 
               CONFLICTS OF INTEREST AND FIDUCIARY RESPONSIBILITY
 
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST
 
     Certain conflicts  of interest  could  arise as  a  result of  the  General
Partners'  relationships  with  their stockholders,  on  the one  hand,  and the
Partnership, on  the other  hand. The  directors and  officers of  the  Managing
General  Partner and the Special General Partner have fiduciary duties to manage
such Managing General Partner, including its investments in its subsidiaries and
Affiliates, in  a  manner beneficial  to  their stockholders.  In  general,  the
Managing  General Partner has  a fiduciary duty  to manage the  Partnership in a
manner beneficial  to  the  Partnership and  the  Unitholders.  The  Partnership
Agreement  contains provisions that  allow the Managing  General Partner to take
into account  the  interests  of  parties in  addition  to  the  Partnership  in
resolving  conflicts of  interest, thereby  limiting its  fiduciary duty  to the
Unitholders as well as  provisions that may restrict  the remedies available  to
Unitholders  for actions taken that  might, without such limitations, constitute
breaches of  fiduciary duty.  The duty  of  the directors  and officers  of  the
Managing  General Partner  to the stockholders  of the  Managing General Partner
may, therefore,  come into  conflict with  the duties  of the  Managing  General
Partner to the Partnership and the Unitholders. The Audit Committee of the Board
of Directors of the
 
                                      109
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
Managing  General Partner will, at the  request of the Managing General Partner,
review conflicts of interest that may arise between the Managing General Partner
or its Affiliates,  on the  one hand,  and the  Partnership, on  the other.  See
'Management  -- Partnership Management' and ' -- Fiduciary Duties of the General
Partners.'
 
     Conflicts of interest could arise in the situations described below,  among
others:
 
CERTAIN  ACTIONS TAKEN BY THE MANAGING GENERAL  PARTNER MAY AFFECT THE AMOUNT OF
CASH AVAILABLE  FOR  DISTRIBUTION TO  UNITHOLDERS  OR ACCELERATE  THE  RIGHT  TO
CONVERT SUBORDINATED UNITS
 
     Decisions  of the Managing  General Partner with respect  to the amount and
timing  of   cash  expenditures,   participation  in   capital  expansions   and
acquisitions,  borrowings,  issuance of  additional  Units and  reserves  in any
quarter may  affect  whether,  or  the extent  to  which,  there  is  sufficient
Available Cash from Operating Surplus to meet the Minimum Quarterly Distribution
and  Target  Distribution Levels  on  all Units  in  such quarter  or subsequent
quarters.  The  Partnership  Agreement  provides  that  any  borrowings  by  the
Partnership  or the approval  thereof by the Managing  General Partner shall not
constitute a breach  of any duty  owed by  the Managing General  Partner to  the
Partnership  or the  Unitholders including borrowings  that have  the purpose or
effect, directly or indirectly, of enabling the the Managing General Partner  to
receive  Incentive Distributions or  hasten the expiration  of the Subordination
Period or  the conversion  of  the Subordinated  Units  into Common  Units.  The
Partnership Agreement provides that the Partnership may make loans to and borrow
funds from the General Partners and their Affiliates. Further, any actions taken
by  the Managing  General Partner  consistent with  the standards  of reasonable
discretion set forth in the definitions of Available Cash, Operating Surplus and
Capital Surplus will be deemed  not to breach any  duty of the Managing  General
Partner  to the  Partnership or  the Unitholders.  The Managing  General Partner
intends  to  submit  any  question  regarding  amendments  to  the   Partnership
Agreement,  the enforcement of  Triarc's obligations under  the Partnership Note
and other matters that could  have, in each case,  a material adverse affect  on
the  limited partners to  the Audit Committee  of the Board  of Directors of the
Managing General  Partner.  See  'Risk  Factors --  Conflicts  of  Interest  and
Fiduciary Responsibility' and 'Cash Distribution Policy.'
 
BORROWINGS  BY THE PARTNERSHIP MAY ENABLE THE MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER TO PERMIT
PAYMENTS OF DISTRIBUTIONS ON THE SUBORDINATED UNITS
 
     The Managing  General Partner  generally must  act as  a fiduciary  to  the
Partnership  and the Unitholders, and therefore must generally consider the best
interests of the Partnership when deciding whether to make capital or  operating
expenditures   or  take  other  steps  with  respect  to  the  business  of  the
Partnership. However,  the  Partnership  Agreement provides  that  it  will  not
constitute  a  breach of  the General  Partner's  fiduciary duty  if Partnership
borrowings are  effected  that,  directly or  indirectly,  enable  the  Managing
General  Partner  to permit  the payment  of  distributions on  the Subordinated
Units.
 
THE GENERAL PARTNER MAY MERGE WITH AND INTO TRIARC
 
     The Partnership Agreement  provides that the  Managing General Partner  may
merge  with and into Triarc (the 'Triarc  Merger') without the prior approval of
any Unitholder; provided, however, that immediately prior to such merger (a) the
Partnership has received an Opinion of Counsel, (b) the Special General  Partner
has not converted or transferred any portion of its General Partner Interest and
(c)  the Special General Partner  has a net worth equal  to at least $15 million
independent of  its  interest  in  the Partnership  Group  (as  defined  in  the
Glossary). The Partnership Note contains a covenant of Triarc that, in the event
of  the merger or  consolidation of the  Managing General Partner  with and into
Triarc,  Triarc  will  concurrently  therewith   pledge  as  security  for   the
Partnership  Loan  certain assets  of the  Managing  General Partner.  See 'Cash
Distribution  Policy  --  Partnership  Loan.'  The  Partnership  Agreement  also
provides  that after  a merger  of the General  Partner into  Triarc, Triarc may
conduct businesses and activities of its own in which the Partnership will  have
no  economic interest. On October  29, 1996, Triarc announced  that its Board of
Directors approved a plan to
 
                                      110
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
undertake the Spinoff Transactions.  It is expected that  the Triarc Merger  may
occur  in  connection with  the Spinoff  Transactions. See  'Certain Information
Regarding Triarc.'
 
CERTAIN PARTNERSHIP ACTIONS REQUIRE THE APPROVAL OF THE UNITHOLDERS
 
     The Partnership and the  Unitholders may not  take certain actions  without
the  affirmative vote of the holders of 66  2/3% of the outstanding Units or, in
certain cases, a Unit Majority (which, during the Subordination Period, requires
the affirmative vote of the  holders of a majority of  the Common Units and  the
Subordinated  Units each  voting as a  separate class). The  affirmative vote of
66 2/3% of the outstanding Units  (including Units held by the General  Partners
and  their Affiliates) is required to  remove the Managing General Partner (with
or without  Cause). Certain  amendments to  the Partnership  Agreement, a  sale,
merger  or  other  disposition  of  substantially  all  of  the  assets  of  the
Partnership  and  certain  issuances   of  Partnership  Securities  during   the
Subordination  Period require the  approval of a  Unit Majority. At  the date of
this Prospectus, the Managing  General Partner owns  a sufficient percentage  of
the outstanding Units to require the Managing General Partner's affirmative vote
to  take such  actions. The  Managing General Partner  may give  or withhold its
approval of any such action  or vote its Subordinated  Units for or against  any
such  action, as the case may be, in its sole discretion without considering any
interest of, or factors affecting, the  Partnership or any Unitholder. See  'The
Partnership Agreement.'
 
EMPLOYEES OF THE MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER AND ITS AFFILIATES WHO PROVIDE
SERVICES TO THE PARTNERSHIP ALSO PROVIDE SERVICES TO OTHER BUSINESSES
 
     The  Partnership does not have any employees and relies on employees of its
subsidiaries, the Managing General Partner and its Affiliates, including Triarc.
Prior to any merger  of the Managing General  Partner into Triarc, the  Managing
General  Partner will not conduct any other business  as long as it is a general
partner of  the Partnership.  After any  such merger,  Triarc, as  the  Managing
General  Partner, may conduct businesses and activities  of its own in which the
Partnership will  have  no economic  interest.  In addition,  Triarc  and  other
Affiliates  of  the Managing  General Partner,  principally direct  and indirect
wholly owned subsidiaries  of Triarc,  will conduct business  and activities  of
their  own in which the Partnership will have no economic interest. Accordingly,
there may be competition between the Partnership and Affiliates of the  Managing
General  Partner, including  Triarc, for  the time  and effort  of employees who
provide services to both. Certain officers of Affiliates of the Managing General
Partner divide  their time  between  the business  of  the Partnership  and  the
business  of  the Affiliates  and are  not  be required  to spend  any specified
percentage or amount of their time on the business of the Partnership.
 
THE PARTNERSHIP WILL REIMBURSE THE  MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER AND ITS  AFFILIATES
FOR CERTAIN EXPENSES
 
     Under  the terms of the Partnership Agreement, the Managing General Partner
and its  Affiliates  are reimbursed  by  the Partnership  for  certain  expenses
incurred  on behalf  of the Partnership,  including costs  incurred in providing
corporate staff and support services to the Partnership (including  compensation
costs incurred under employee benefit plans). The Partnership Agreement provides
that  the  Managing  General  Partner  shall  determine  the  expenses  that are
allocable to the Partnership in any reasonable manner determined by the Managing
General Partner  in its  sole discretion.  See 'Management  -- Reimbursement  of
Expenses of the Managing General Partner' and 'Certain Relationships and Related
Transactions.'
 
THE  MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER INTENDS TO LIMIT ITS LIABILITY WITH RESPECT TO THE
PARTNERSHIP'S OBLIGATIONS
 
     Whenever possible,  the  Managing  General Partner  intends  to  limit  the
Partnership's  liability  under contractual  arrangements  to all  or particular
assets of the  Partnership, with  the other party  thereto to  have no  recourse
against  the  Managing General  Partner, the  Special  General Partner  or their
respective assets. The  Partnership Agreement  provides that any  action by  the
Managing General Partner in so limiting the liability of the General Partners or
that  of  the Partnership  will not  be deemed  to  be a  breach of  the General
Partners' fiduciary duties,  even if  the Partnership could  have obtained  more
favorable terms without such limitation on liability.
 
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COMMON  UNITHOLDERS WILL  HAVE NO RIGHT  TO ENFORCE OBLIGATIONS  OF THE MANAGING
GENERAL PARTNER AND ITS AFFILIATES UNDER AGREEMENTS WITH THE PARTNERSHIP
 
     The Partnership  will acquire  or  provide many  services  from or  to  the
Managing  General Partner  and its Affiliates  (including Triarc)  on an ongoing
basis, including those described above.  The agreements relating thereto do  not
grant  to  the  holders  of  the  Common  Units,  separate  and  apart  from the
Partnership, the  right  to enforce  the  obligations of  the  Managing  General
Partner  and its Affiliates in favor of the Partnership. Therefore, the Managing
General Partner will be primarily responsible for enforcing such obligations.
 
CONTRACTS BETWEEN THE  PARTNERSHIP, ON THE  ONE HAND, AND  THE MANAGING  GENERAL
PARTNER AND ITS AFFILIATES, ON THE OTHER, WILL NOT BE THE RESULT OF ARMS'-LENGTH
NEGOTIATIONS
 
     Under  the terms of the Partnership Agreement, the Managing General Partner
is not restricted from paying the Managing General Partner or its Affiliates for
any services rendered  (provided such services  are rendered on  terms fair  and
reasonable   to  the  Partnership)  or   entering  into  additional  contractual
arrangements with  any  of  them  on behalf  of  the  Partnership.  Neither  the
Partnership   Agreement  nor  any   of  the  other   agreements,  contracts  and
arrangements between the Partnership, on the one hand, and the Managing  General
Partner  and  its  Affiliates,  on the  other,  are  or will  be  the  result of
arm's-length negotiations. All of such transactions entered into after the  sale
of  the Common Units offered in  the Offering are to be  on terms which are fair
and reasonable to the Partnership, provided that any transaction shall be deemed
fair and reasonable if (i) such transaction is approved by the Audit  Committee,
(ii)  its terms are  no less favorable  to the Partnership  than those generally
being provided to or available from unrelated third parties or (iii) taking into
account  the  totality  of  the  relationships  between  the  parties   involved
(including other transactions that may be particularly favorable or advantageous
to  the Partnership), the  transaction is fair to  the Partnership. The Managing
General Partner and its Affiliates have no obligation to permit the  Partnership
to  use  any facilities  or  assets of  the  Managing General  Partner  and such
Affiliates, except as  may be provided  in contracts entered  into from time  to
time  specifically dealing  with such  use, and  there is  no obligation  on the
Managing General Partner and its Affiliates to enter into any such contracts.
 
POTENTIAL ROLL-UP TRANSACTIONS
 
     The Partnership Agreement does not  prohibit the Partnership from  engaging
in  roll-up transactions. Although  the Managing General  Partner has no present
intention of causing the  Partnership to engage in  any such transaction, it  is
possible  it will do so in the future.  There can be no assurance that a roll-up
transaction  would  not  have  a  material  adverse  effect  on  a  Unitholder's
investment in the Partnership.
 
COMMON UNITHOLDERS HAVE NOT BEEN REPRESENTED BY COUNSEL
 
     The  Common Unitholders were not represented  by counsel in connection with
the preparation of  the Partnership  Agreement or other  agreements referred  to
herein.  The attorneys, accountants  and others who  have performed services for
the Partnership  in  connection with  the  IPO, the  Transactions,  the  Private
Placement  and the Offering  have been employed by  the Managing General Partner
and its Affiliates and  may continue to represent  the Managing General  Partner
and  its Affiliates. Attorneys, accountants and others who will perform services
for the  Partnership in  the future  will be  selected by  the Managing  General
Partner  or the Audit Committee  and may also perform  services for the Managing
General Partner  and its  Affiliates. The  Managing General  Partner may  retain
separate counsel for the Partnership or the Unitholders, depending on the nature
of the conflict that arises, but it does not intend to do so in most cases.
 
PARTNERSHIP INTERESTS ARE SUBJECT TO THE MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER'S LIMITED CALL
RIGHT
 
     The  Partnership Agreement provides that it will not constitute a breach of
the Managing General Partner's fiduciary duties if the Managing General  Partner
exercises  its right to call for  and purchase partnership interests as provided
in the Partnership Agreement or  assign this right to  its Affiliates or to  the
Partnership.  The Managing General Partner thus may use its own discretion, free
of fiduciary duty restrictions, in  determining whether to exercise such  right.
As a consequence, a holder of partnership
 
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<PAGE>
interests  may have his partnership interests  purchased from him even though he
may not desire to sell them, and the price paid may be less than the amount  the
holder  would desire to  receive upon sale  of his partnership  interests. For a
description of  such  right, see  'The  Partnership Agreement  --  Limited  Call
Right.'
 
THE GENERAL PARTNERS' AFFILIATES MAY COMPETE WITH THE PARTNERSHIP
 
     The  General  Partners are  not restricted  from  engaging in  any business
activities other  than  the  retail  sales  of  propane  to  end  users  in  the
continental United States, even if they are in competition with the Partnership.
As  a result, conflicts of interest may  arise between Affiliates of the General
Partners, on the one  hand, and the Partnership,  on the other. The  Partnership
Agreement  expressly provides  that, subject  to certain  limited exceptions, it
shall not constitute a breach of  the General Partners' fiduciary duties to  the
Partnership  or the Unitholders for Affiliates of the General Partners to engage
in direct  competition with  the Partnership,  other than  with respect  to  the
retail  sale of propane to end users  within the continental United States. Such
competition may  include  the  trading, transportation,  storage  and  wholesale
distribution  of  propane.  The  Partnership Agreement  also  provides  that the
General Partners and  their Affiliates  have no obligation  to present  business
opportunities to the Partnership.
 
FIDUCIARY DUTIES OF THE GENERAL PARTNERS
 
     The General Partners are accountable to the Partnership and the Unitholders
as  fiduciaries. Consequently, the General Partners must exercise good faith and
integrity in handling the assets and affairs of the Partnership. In contrast  to
the  relatively well-developed law concerning  fiduciary duties owed by officers
and directors  to the  shareholders of  a corporation,  the law  concerning  the
duties  owed  by  general partners  to  other  partners and  to  partnerships is
relatively undeveloped. Neither the Delaware Revised Uniform Limited Partnership
Act (the 'Delaware Act') nor case  law defines with particularity the  fiduciary
duties  owed by general  partners to limited partners  or a limited partnership,
but the Delaware Act provides that  Delaware limited partnerships may, in  their
partnership  agreements,  restrict or  expand  the fiduciary  duties  that might
otherwise be  applied by  a court  in analyzing  the standard  of duty  owed  by
general  partners to limited partners and the partnership. The provisions of the
Delaware Act that allow the fiduciary duties  of a general partner to be  waived
or  restricted by a partnership  agreement have not been  resolved in a court of
law, and the General Partners have  not obtained an opinion of counsel  covering
the  provisions set forth in the Partnership  Agreement that purport to waive or
restrict fiduciary duties  of the General  Partners. Unitholders should  consult
their own legal counsel concerning the fiduciary responsibilities of the General
Partners  and their  officers and  directors and  the remedies  available to the
Unitholders.
 
     Fiduciary duties are generally considered  to include an obligation to  act
with good faith, fairness and loyalty. Such duty of loyalty, in the absence of a
provision  in  a  partnership  agreement  providing  otherwise,  would generally
prohibit a general  partner of a  Delaware limited partnership  from taking  any
action or engaging in any transaction as to which it has a conflict of interest.
In  order to induce the  Managing General Partner to  manage the business of the
Partnership, the  Partnership  Agreement,  as permitted  by  the  Delaware  Act,
contains  various  provisions  intended  to  have  the  effect  of  limiting the
fiduciary duties that might otherwise be owed by the Managing General Partner to
the Partnership and  its partners and  waiving or consenting  to conduct by  the
Managing General Partner and its Affiliates that might otherwise raise issues as
to compliance with fiduciary duties or applicable law.
 
     The  Partnership  Agreement  provides that  in  order to  become  a limited
partner of the Partnership, a holder of Common Units is required to agree to  be
bound  by the provisions thereof, including the provisions discussed above. This
is in accordance with the policy of  the Delaware Act favoring the principle  of
freedom  of contract and enforceability  of partnership agreements. The Delaware
Act also provides that a partnership agreement is not unenforceable by reason of
its not having been signed  by a person being admitted  as a limited partner  or
becoming an assignee in accordance with the terms thereof.
 
     The  Partnership Agreement  provides that  whenever a  conflict of interest
arises between the General  Partners or their Affiliates,  on the one hand,  and
the Partnership or any other partner, on the other, the Managing General Partner
shall  resolve such  conflict. The  General Partners shall  not be  in breach of
their obligations  under  the  Partnership  Agreement or  their  duties  to  the
Partnership or the
 
                                      113
 

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<PAGE>
Unitholders  if the resolution  of such conflict  is fair and  reasonable to the
Partnership, and any  resolution shall  conclusively be  deemed to  be fair  and
reasonable  to the Partnership if  such resolution is (i)  approved by the Audit
Committee (although no party is obligated to seek such approval and the Managing
General Partner may adopt a resolution or course of action that has not received
such approval), (ii) on  terms no less favorable  to the Partnership than  those
generally  being provided to or available  from unrelated third parties or (iii)
fair to the Partnership, taking into  account the totality of the  relationships
between   the  parties  involved  (including  other  transactions  that  may  be
particularly favorable or  advantageous to the  Partnership). In resolving  such
conflict,   the  Managing  General   Partner  may  (unless   the  resolution  is
specifically provided for  in the Partnership  Agreement) consider the  relative
interests  of the parties involved in such  conflict or affected by such action,
any customary  or accepted  industry  practices or  historical dealings  with  a
particular person or entity and, if applicable, generally accepted accounting or
engineering practices or principles and such other factors as it deems relevant.
Thus,  unlike the  strict duty of  a fiduciary who  must act solely  in the best
interests of his  beneficiary, the  Partnership Agreement  permits the  Managing
General  Partner  to consider  the interests  of  all parties  to a  conflict of
interests,  including  the   interests  of  the   General  Partners  and   their
stockholders.  In connection  with the resolution  of any  conflict that arises,
unless the Managing General Partner has acted in bad faith, the action taken  by
the  Managing General Partner  shall not constitute a  breach of the Partnership
Agreement, any other agreement or  any standard of care  or duty imposed by  the
Delaware  Act or other  applicable law. The  Partnership Agreement also provides
that in certain circumstances the Managing  General Partner may act in its  sole
discretion, in good faith or pursuant to other appropriate standards.
 
     The Delaware Act provides that a limited partner may institute legal action
on  behalf  of  the partnership  (a  partnership derivative  action)  to recover
damages from a third  party where the general  partner has refused to  institute
the  action or  where an effort  to cause  the general partner  to do  so is not
likely  to  succeed.  In  addition,  the  statutory  or  case  law  of   certain
jurisdictions  may permit a limited partner  to institute legal action on behalf
of himself or all other similarly situated limited partners (a class action)  to
recover damages from a general partner for violations of its fiduciary duties to
the limited partners.
 
     The  Partnership Agreement also provides that any standard of care and duty
imposed thereby  or  under the  Delaware  Act or  any  applicable law,  rule  or
regulation  will be modified, waived or limited, to the extent permitted by law,
as required  to  permit  the  Managing General  Partner  and  its  officers  and
directors  to  act  under  the  Partnership  Agreement  or  any  other agreement
contemplated therein  and  to  make  any  decision  pursuant  to  the  authority
prescribed  in the  Partnership Agreement so  long as such  action is reasonably
believed by the Managing General Partner to be in, or not inconsistent with, the
best interests of the Partnership.  Further, the Partnership Agreement  provides
that  the Managing General  Partner and its  officers and directors  will not be
liable for  monetary  damages  to  the  Partnership,  the  limited  partners  or
assignees  for errors of judgment  or for any acts  or omissions if the Managing
General Partner and such other persons acted in good faith.
 
     In addition, under the terms of the Partnership Agreement, the  Partnership
is  required to  indemnify the General  Partners and  their officers, directors,
employees, Affiliates,  partners, agents  and trustees,  to the  fullest  extent
permitted  by  law,  against liabilities,  costs  and expenses  incurred  by the
General Partners or other such persons, if the General Partners or such  persons
acted  in good faith and in  a manner they reasonably believed  to be in, or not
opposed to,  the best  interests of  the Partnership  and, with  respect to  any
criminal  proceedings,  had  no  reasonable cause  to  believe  the  conduct was
unlawful. See 'The Partnership Agreement -- Indemnification.' Thus, the  General
Partners  could  be  indemnified for  their  negligent  acts if  they  meet such
requirements concerning good faith and the best interests of the Partnership.
 
                        DESCRIPTION OF THE COMMON UNITS
 
     The Common Units are registered under the Securities Exchange Act of  1934,
as  amended  (the 'Exchange  Act'), and  the  rules and  regulations promulgated
thereunder, and the Partnership  is subject to the  reporting and certain  other
requirements  of the Exchange Act. The  Partnership is required to file periodic
reports  containing  financial  and  other  information  with  the   Commission.
Purchasers  of Common Units in the Offering and subsequent transferees of Common
Units (or their brokers, agents
 
                                      114
 

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<PAGE>
or nominees on their behalf) will be required to execute Transfer  Applications,
the  form of which is  included as Appendix A  to this Prospectus. Purchasers in
the Offering may hold Common Units in nominee accounts, provided that the broker
(or other nominee) executes  and delivers a Transfer  Application and becomes  a
limited partner. The Partnership will be entitled to treat the nominee holder of
a  Common Unit as the absolute owner  thereof, and the beneficial owner's rights
will be limited  solely to those  that it has  against the nominee  holder as  a
result of or by reason of any understanding or agreement between such beneficial
owner and nominee holder.
 
THE UNITS
 
     The   Common  Units  and  the  Common   Units  issued  upon  conversion  of
Subordinated Units represent limited partner  interests in the Partnership.  The
Subordinated  Units held by  the Managing General Partner  or its Affiliates are
(unless  such  Persons  elect  otherwise)  general  partner  interests  in   the
Partnership.  The holders of Common Units and Subordinated Units are entitled to
participate in Partnership distributions and  exercise the rights or  privileges
available  to  Common  Unitholders and  Subordinated  Unitholders, respectively,
under the Partnership Agreement.  For a description of  the relative rights  and
preferences  of  Common  Units  and Subordinated  Units  in  and  to Partnership
distributions, together  with a  description of  the circumstances  under  which
Subordinated  Units  may  convert  into  Common  Units,  see  'Cash Distribution
Policy.' For a  description of  the rights  and privileges  of limited  partners
under the Partnership Agreement, see 'The Partnership Agreement.'
 
TRANSFER AGENT AND REGISTRAR
 
DUTIES
 
     American Stock Transfer & Trust Company is the registrar and transfer agent
(the  'Transfer  Agent')  for the  Common  Units  and receives  a  fee  from the
Partnership for serving  in such capacities.  All fees charged  by the  Transfer
Agent  for transfers of Common Units will be borne by the Partnership and not by
the holders of Common Units, except that fees similar to those customarily  paid
by stockholders for surety bond premiums to replace lost or stolen certificates,
taxes  and other governmental charges, special charges for services requested by
a holder of a Common Unit and other similar fees or charges will be borne by the
affected holder. There  will be no  charge to holders  for disbursements of  the
Partnership's  cash distributions. The  Partnership has agreed  to indemnify the
Transfer Agent, its agents and each of their respective shareholders, directors,
officers and employees against all claims and losses that may arise out of  acts
performed  or  omitted in  respect of  its  activities as  such, except  for any
liability due  to any  negligence, gross  negligence, bad  faith or  intentional
misconduct of the indemnified person or entity.
 
RESIGNATION OR REMOVAL
 
     The Transfer Agent may at any time resign, by notice to the Partnership, or
be  removed by the Partnership, such  resignation or removal to become effective
upon the  appointment by  the  Partnership of  a  successor transfer  agent  and
registrar  and  its acceptance  of such  appointment. If  no successor  has been
appointed and accepted  such appointment  within 30  days after  notice of  such
resignation or removal, the Managing General Partner is authorized to act as the
transfer agent and registrar until a successor is appointed.
 
TRANSFER OF COMMON UNITS
 
     Until  a Common Unit has been transferred  on the books of the Partnership,
the Partnership  and  the Transfer  Agent,  notwithstanding any  notice  to  the
contrary,  may treat  the record  holder thereof as  the absolute  owner for all
purposes, except as otherwise required by law or stock exchange regulations. The
transfer of the Common Units to persons that purchase directly from the  Selling
Unitholder  will be accomplished through  the completion, execution and delivery
of a Transfer Application by such investor in connection with such Common Units.
Any subsequent transfers of a Common Unit  will not be recorded by the  Transfer
Agent  or  recognized  by the  Partnership  unless the  transferee  executes and
 
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<PAGE>
delivers  a  Transfer  Application.  By  executing  and  delivering  a  Transfer
Application (the form of which is set forth as Appendix A to this Prospectus and
which is also set forth on the reverse side of the certificates representing the
Common  Units), the transferee of Common Units  (i) becomes the record holder of
such Common  Units and  shall constitute  an assignee  until admitted  into  the
Partnership  as  a  substitute  limited  partner,  (ii)  automatically  requests
admission as a substituted limited partner  in the Partnership, (iii) agrees  to
be  bound  by  the  terms  and  conditions  of,  and  executes,  the Partnership
Agreement, (iv)  represents that  such transferee  has the  capacity, power  and
authority to enter into the Partnership Agreement, (v) grants powers of attorney
to  the Partnership and  any liquidator of  the Partnership as  specified in the
Partnership Agreement, and (vi) makes the consents and waivers contained in  the
Partnership  Agreement. An assignee will become a substituted limited partner of
the Partnership in respect of the  transferred Common Units upon the consent  of
the Partnership and the recordation of the name of the assignee on the books and
records  of the Partnership. Such consent may be withheld in the sole discretion
of the Managing General Partner.
 
     Common Units  are securities  and are  transferable according  to the  laws
governing  transfer of  securities. In  addition to  other rights  acquired upon
transfer, the transferor gives the transferee the right to request admission  as
a  substituted limited partner in the  Partnership in respect of the transferred
Common Units. A purchaser or transferee of Common Units who does not execute and
deliver a Transfer Application obtains only  (a) the right to assign the  Common
Units to a purchaser or other transferee and (b) the right to transfer the right
to  seek  admission as  a substituted  limited partner  in the  Partnership with
respect to the  transferred Common  Units. Thus,  a purchaser  or transferee  of
Common  Units who does not  execute and deliver a  Transfer Application will not
receive cash distributions  unless the  Common Units are  held in  a nominee  or
'street  name' account and  the nominee or  broker has executed  and delivered a
Transfer Application with  respect to  such Common  Units, and  may not  receive
certain federal income tax information or reports furnished to record holders of
Common  Units. The transferor of  Common Units will have  a duty to provide such
transferee with all information that may be necessary to obtain registration  of
the  transfer of the Common Units, but a transferee agrees, by acceptance of the
certificate representing Common Units, that the transferor will not have a  duty
to  insure the execution of the Transfer  Application by the transferee and will
have no liability or responsibility if  such transferee neglects or chooses  not
to  execute and forward the Transfer Application to the Transfer Agent. See 'The
Partnership   Agreement   --   Status   as   Limited   Partner   or   Assignee.'
 
                                      116



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<PAGE>
                           THE PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT
 
     The  following  paragraphs  are  a summary  of  certain  provisions  of the
Partnership Agreement. The  Partnership Agreement  for the  Partnership and  the
Partnership  Agreement for the Operating Partnership (the 'Operating Partnership
Agreement') are exhibits to the Registration Statement of which this  Prospectus
is a part. The Partnership will provide prospective investors with a copy of the
Partnership Agreement and the Operating Partnership Agreement upon request at no
charge.  THE  FOLLOWING  SUMMARY  OF  MATERIAL  PROVISIONS  OF  THE  PARTNERSHIP
AGREEMENT (AND EACH OTHER SUMMARY CONTAINED IN THIS PROSPECTUS OF ANY PROVISIONS
OF THE PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT) IS QUALIFIED  IN ITS ENTIRETY BY REFERENCE TO  THE
PARTNERSHIP  AGREEMENTS FOR THE  PARTNERSHIP AND FOR  THE OPERATING PARTNERSHIP.
The Partnership is the sole limited partner of the Operating Partnership,  which
owns,  manages  and operates  the Partnership's  business. The  Managing General
Partner and the  Special General Partner  serve as the  general partners of  the
Partnership  and  of the  Operating  Partnership. Unless  specifically described
otherwise,  references  herein   to  the   'Partnership  Agreement'   constitute
references to the Partnership Agreement and the Operating Partnership Agreement,
collectively.
 
     Certain  material provisions  of the  Partnership Agreement  are summarized
elsewhere in  this Prospectus  under various  headings. With  regard to  various
transactions  and relationships of the Partnership with the General Partners and
their Affiliates,  see 'Risk  Factors  -- Conflicts  of Interest  and  Fiduciary
Responsibility,'   'Certain   Relationships  and   Related   Transactions,'  and
'Conflicts of  Interest  and  Fiduciary  Responsibility.'  With  regard  to  the
management  of the Partnership, see 'Management.' With regard to the transfer of
Common Units, see 'Description of the Common Units -- Transfer of Common Units.'
With regard to distributions of Available Cash, see 'Cash Distribution  Policy.'
With  regard  to  allocations  of  taxable income  and  taxable  loss,  see 'Tax
Considerations.' Prospective investors  are urged  to review  these sections  of
this Prospectus and the Partnership Agreement carefully.
 
ORGANIZATION
 
     The  Partnership and the Operating Partnership  were organized on March 13,
1996 and March  15, 1996,  respectively, as Delaware  limited partnerships.  The
Managing  General  Partner  and  the Special  General  Partner  are  the general
partners of the Partnership and the Operating Partnership. The General  Partners
own  an  effective  combined  4% unsubordinated  General  Partner  Interest, the
Managing General Partner owns a 38.7% subordinated general partner interest  (as
holder of the Subordinated Units) and the Common Unitholders own a 57.3% limited
partner interest, in the Partnership and the Operating Partnership on a combined
basis.
 
SPECIAL GENERAL PARTNER
 
     The  Special General  Partner, a  wholly owned  subsidiary of  the Managing
General Partner, is a  non-managing general partner of  the Partnership and  the
Operating  Partnership.  Pursuant  to  the  Partnership  Agreement,  the Special
General Partner  is  prohibited  from  conducting any  business  or  having  any
operations  other than those incidental  to serving as a  general partner of the
Partnership and  the  Operating  Partnership.  The  Partnership  Agreement  also
provides  that the Board of Directors of the Special General Partner shall be at
all times composed of the same individuals who compose the Board of Directors of
the Managing  General Partner.  In the  event the  Managing General  Partner  is
merged  with and into Triarc, the Audit Committee of the Special General Partner
will perform the functions  previously performed by the  Audit Committee of  the
Managing  General Partner. In addition,  the Partnership Agreement provides that
if, following a  merger of the  Managing General Partner  with and into  Triarc,
Triarc involuntarily withdraws as general partner of the Partnership pursuant to
bankruptcy  or certain related events, the  Special General Partner shall become
the managing general partner of the Partnership and shall continue the  business
of the Partnership, without any Unitholder approval.
 
     Provided  that  the Triarc  Merger has  not  occurred, the  Special General
Partner may convert  all or  a portion  of its  combined unsubordinated  general
partner  interest into  Units having rights  to distributions  of Available Cash
from Operating  Surplus  equal  to  the  distribution  rights  with  respect  to
Available  Cash from  Operating Surplus  of the  combined unsubordinated general
partner interest  so  converted.  For example,  the  Special  General  Partner's
combined    effective    2%    interest    in    the    Partnership    and   the
 
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Operating Partnership would be exchanged into 234,067 Units. Additional  capital
contributions  by the Special General Partner upon other issuances of additional
Partnership securities  will  increase  the  number of  Units  into  which  such
combined interest is exchanged. Such Units shall be issued as Subordinated Units
and/or  Common  Units in  the same  proportion  as Subordinated  Units initially
issued to the General Partner are  at such time constituted. Upon conversion  of
all  of the  Special General  Partner's combined  unsubordinated general partner
interests, the  Special General  Partner will  no longer  be obligated  to  make
additional  capital contributions upon other issuances of additional Partnership
securities.
 
PURPOSE
 
     The purpose of the Partnership  under the Partnership Agreement is  limited
to  serving as the limited partner of  the Operating Partnership and engaging in
any business activity  that may be  engaged in by  the Operating Partnership  or
that  is approved  by the  Managing General  Partner. The  Operating Partnership
Agreement provides that  the Operating  Partnership may engage  in any  activity
engaged  in by  National Propane and  its subsidiaries immediately  prior to the
IPO, and any other activity approved  by the Managing General Partner.  Although
the  Managing General Partner has the ability under the Partnership Agreement to
cause the  Partnership and  the Operating  Partnership to  engage in  activities
other  than  propane  marketing  and related  businesses,  the  Managing General
Partner has no current  intention of doing so.  The Managing General Partner  is
authorized  in general to  perform all acts  deemed necessary to  carry out such
purposes and  to conduct  the business  of  the Partnership.  See '  --  Certain
Required Approvals of the Managing General Partner.'
 
CAPITAL CONTRIBUTIONS
 
     For  a  description  of  the  initial  capital  contributions  made  to the
Partnership, see 'The IPO and Additional Transactions.' The Unitholders are  not
obligated to make additional capital contributions to the Partnership, except as
described below under ' -- Limited Liability.'
 
POWER OF ATTORNEY
 
     Each  Limited Partner  (as defined  in the  Glossary), and  each person who
acquires a  Unit  from  a  Unitholder  and  executes  and  delivers  a  Transfer
Application with respect thereto, grants to the Managing General Partner and, if
a  liquidator of the Partnership has been appointed, such liquidator, a power of
attorney to, among other things, execute and file certain documents required  in
connection   with  the   qualification,  continuance   or  dissolution   of  the
Partnership, or the amendment  of the Partnership  Agreement in accordance  with
the  terms thereof and to make consents and waivers contained in the Partnership
Agreement.
 
LIMITED LIABILITY
 
     Assuming that a Limited Partner does not participate in the control of  the
business of the Partnership within the meaning of the Delaware Act and that such
Limited  Partner  otherwise  acts  in  conformity  with  the  provisions  of the
Partnership Agreement, his  liability under  the Delaware Act  will be  limited,
subject  to  certain possible  exceptions, to  the amount  of capital  that such
Limited Partner is obligated to contribute to the Partnership in respect of  his
Common  Units plus such Limited Partner's share of any undistributed profits and
assets of the  Partnership. If it  were determined, however,  that the right  or
exercise  of the right by the Limited Partners  as a group, to remove or replace
the General Partners, to approve certain amendments to the Partnership Agreement
or to  take  other action  pursuant  to the  Partnership  Agreement  constituted
'participation in the control' of the Partnership's business for the purposes of
the  Delaware Act, then the Limited Partners could be held personally liable for
the Partnership's obligations  under the laws  of the State  of Delaware to  the
same  extent  as  the General  Partners  with  respect to  persons  who transact
business with  the  Partnership  reasonably  believing,  based  on  the  Limited
Partner's conduct, that the Limited Partner is a general partner.
 
     Under  the Delaware Act, a limited  partnership may not make a distribution
to a partner to the  extent that at the time  of the distribution, after  giving
effect to the distribution, all liabilities of the
 
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partnership,  other than liabilities to partners on account of their partnership
interests and liabilities  for which  the recourse  of creditors  is limited  to
specific property of the Partnership, exceed the fair value of the assets of the
limited partnership. For the purpose of determining the fair value of the assets
of  a limited  partnership, the  Delaware Act  provides that  the fair  value of
property subject to liability for which  recourse of creditors is limited  shall
be included in the assets of the limited partnership only to the extent that the
fair value of that property exceeds that nonrecourse liability. The Delaware Act
provides that a limited partner who receives such a distribution and knew at the
time  of the distribution that the distribution was in violation of the Delaware
Act  shall  be  liable  to  the  limited  partnership  for  the  amount  of  the
distribution  for  three years  from  the date  of  the distribution.  Under the
Delaware Act, an assignee who becomes a substituted limited partner of a limited
partnership is liable for the obligations of his assignor to make  contributions
to the partnership, except the assignee is not obligated for liabilities unknown
to  him  at  the  time he  became  a  limited  partner and  which  could  not be
ascertained from the partnership agreement.
 
     The Operating Partnership currently  conducts business in approximately  25
states.  Maintenance  of limited  liability  may require  compliance  with legal
requirements in such jurisdictions in  which the Operating Partnership  conducts
business,  including qualifying the Operating  Partnership to do business there.
Limitations on  the liability  of  limited partners  for  the obligations  of  a
limited  partnership have not been clearly established in many jurisdictions. If
it were determined that  the Partnership was, by  virtue of its limited  partner
interest  in the Operating Partnership or  otherwise, conducting business in any
state without compliance  with the  applicable limited  partnership statute,  or
that  the right or exercise of the right  by the Limited Partners as a group, to
remove or replace  the General Partners,  to approve certain  amendments to  the
Partnership  Agreement,  or to  take other  action  pursuant to  the Partnership
Agreement constituted  'participation  in  the  control'  of  the  Partnership's
business for the purposes of the statutes of any relevant jurisdiction, then the
Limited   Partners  could  be  held  personally  liable  for  the  Partnership's
obligations under the law of such jurisdiction to the same extent as the General
Partners under  certain  circumstances. The  Partnership  will operate  in  such
manner  as  the  Managing  General Partner  deems  reasonable  and  necessary or
appropriate to preserve the limited liability of the Limited Partners.
 
ISSUANCE OF ADDITIONAL SECURITIES
 
     The Partnership Agreement authorizes the Managing General Partner to  cause
the  Partnership  to  issue an  unlimited  number of  additional  limited and/or
general partner interests  and other  equity securities of  the Partnership  for
such  consideration and on such  terms and conditions as  are established by the
Managing General Partner  in its  sole discretion  without the  approval of  any
Limited  Partners;  provided that,  during the  Subordination Period,  except as
provided in clauses (i) and (ii) of the following sentence, the Partnership  may
not  issue equity securities of  the Partnership ranking prior  or senior to the
Common Units or  an aggregate  of more  than 3,095,238  additional Common  Units
(including  the 400,000 Common  Units sold in the  Private Placement and offered
hereby) or an equivalent number of securities ('parity securities') ranking on a
parity with the  Common Units (excluding  the 111,074 Common  Units issued  upon
exercise  of the IPO Over-Allotment Option,  and Common Units issued pursuant to
employee benefit  plans,  upon  conversion  of  the  Special  General  Partner's
combined   unsubordinated   general   partner  interest,   upon   conversion  of
Subordinated Units and subject  to adjustment in the  event of a combination  or
subdivision  of Common Units) without the approval  of the holders of at least a
Unit Majority. During the  Subordination Period the  Partnership may also  issue
(i)  an unlimited number of additional Common Units or parity securities without
the approval of the Unitholders if  such issuance occurs (A) in connection  with
an  Acquisition or a Capital Improvement or (B)  within 365 days of, and the net
proceeds from such issuance are used to repay debt incurred in connection  with,
an  Acquisition or a Capital Improvement, in each case where such Acquisition or
Capital Improvement  involves  assets  that  would  have,  if  acquired  by  the
Partnership  as of  the date  that is  one year  prior to  the first  day of the
quarter in which such transaction is to be effected, resulted in an increase  in
(1)  the amount of Adjusted Operating Surplus  generated by the Partnership on a
per-Unit basis for all outstanding Units with  respect to each of the four  most
recently completed quarters (on a pro forma basis) over (2) the actual amount of
Adjusted  Operating Surplus generated by the Partnership on a per-Unit basis for
all outstanding Units with respect to each of such
 
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<PAGE>
four quarters (or, if the  issuance of Units with  respect to an Acquisition  or
Capital  Improvement occurs within the first four full quarters from the Closing
Date, then based on the Partnership's  pro forma Adjusted Operating Surplus  for
any  full  quarter for  which  there was  no  actual performance);  and  (ii) an
unlimited number  of  Units  or  parity  securities prior  to  the  end  of  the
Subordination  Period and without the approval of  the Unitholders if the use of
proceeds from  such  issuance is  exclusively  to repay  up  to $50  million  in
indebtedness  of a member of the Partnership Group (as defined in the Glossary),
in each case only  where the aggregate amount  of distributions that would  have
been  paid with respect  to such newly  issued Units and  the related additional
distributions that would have  been made to the  General Partners in respect  of
the  four-quarter period ending prior  to the first day  of the quarter in which
the issuance  is to  be consummated  (assuming such  additional Units  had  been
outstanding   throughout  such  period  and  that  distributions  equal  to  the
distributions that were actually paid on the outstanding Units during the period
were paid on such additional Units)  did not exceed the interest costs  actually
incurred  during such period  on the indebtedness  that is to  be repaid (or, if
such indebtedness was not outstanding  throughout the entire period, would  have
been  incurred had  such indebtedness been  outstanding for  the entire period).
From time  to time,  the  Partnership may  file  a registration  statement  with
respect  to Common Units to be issued in connection with Acquisitions or Capital
Improvements. In addition, the Partnership may file a Registration Statement  on
Form S-8 with respect to Units that have been issued pursuant to the Unit Option
Plan.  In accordance  with Delaware  law and  the provisions  of the Partnership
Agreement, the Partnership may also issue additional partnership interests that,
in the  discretion of  the Managing  General Partner,  may have  special  voting
rights to which the Common Units are not entitled.
 
     The  General Partners will have the right, which they may from time to time
assign in whole or in part to any of their Affiliates, to purchase Common Units,
Subordinated Units  or  other equity  securities  of the  Partnership  from  the
Partnership  whenever, and on  the same terms that,  the Partnership issues such
securities or  rights to  Persons  other than  the  General Partners  and  their
Affiliates,  to the extent necessary to  maintain the percentage interest of the
General  Partners  and  their  Affiliates   in  the  Partnership  that   existed
immediately  prior  to  each  such  issuance.  Moreover,  upon  the  issuance of
additional Partnership Securities each of the General Partners will be  required
to  make contributions  to the Partnership  which, when added  to the additional
amount contributed in exchange for such Partnership Securities, will equal 2% of
such  additional  capital  contributions.  The   holders  of  Common  Units   or
Subordinated Units (other than the General Partners and their Affiliates) do not
have preemptive rights to acquire additional Common Units, Subordinated Units or
other  partnership interests that may be issued by the Partnership. Furthermore,
the General Partners  and any  of their Affiliates  may acquire  Units or  other
Partnership  Securities  and, except  as otherwise  provided in  the Partnership
Agreement, shall be entitled to exercise all  rights of a holder or assignee  of
such  Units or Partnership Securities, as  the case may be. Additional issuances
of Units,  including  Subordinated  Units  or other  equity  securities  of  the
Partnership  ranking junior to  the Common Units, may  reduce the likelihood of,
and the amount of, any distributions above the Minimum Quarterly Distribution.
 
AMENDMENT OF PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT
 
     Amendments to the Partnership Agreement may be proposed only by or with the
consent of the Managing General Partner. In order to adopt a proposed amendment,
the Partnership  is required  to seek  written approval  of the  holders of  the
number  of Units  required to approve  such amendment  or call a  meeting of the
Unitholders to  consider  and  vote  upon  the  proposed  amendment,  except  as
described  below.  Proposed  amendments  (unless  otherwise  specified)  must be
approved by holders of a majority of the outstanding Units (including Units held
by the General Partners and their  Affiliates), except that no amendment may  be
made which would (i) enlarge the obligations of any Limited Partner, without its
consent,  (ii) enlarge the obligations of, restrict  in any way any action by or
rights of,  or reduce  in any  way the  amounts distributable,  reimbursable  or
otherwise  payable by the Partnership  to, the General Partners  or any of their
Affiliates without the Managing General Partner's consent, which may be given or
withheld in its sole discretion, (iii) change the term of the Partnership,  (iv)
provide that the Partnership is not dissolved upon the expiration of its term or
(v)  give  any Person  the  right to  dissolve  the Partnership  other  than the
Managing General Partner's right to  dissolve the Partnership with the  approval
of holders of a Unit Majority.
 
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<PAGE>
     The   Managing  General  Partner  may  generally  make  amendments  to  the
Partnership Agreement without the approval of any Limited Partner or assignee to
reflect (i)  a change  in  the name  of the  Partnership,  the location  of  the
principal  place of  business of  the Partnership,  the registered  agent or the
registered office of the  Partnership, (ii) admission, substitution,  withdrawal
or  removal of  partners in accordance  with the Partnership  Agreement, (iii) a
change that,  in  the  sole  discretion of  the  Managing  General  Partner,  is
necessary  or  advisable  to  qualify  or  continue  the  qualification  of  the
Partnership as  a limited  partnership or  a partnership  in which  the  Limited
Partners  have limited liability  or to ensure that  neither the Partnership nor
the Operating  Partnership  will be  treated  as  an association  taxable  as  a
corporation  or otherwise  taxed as  an entity  for federal  income tax purposes
(except approval  of  holders  of a  Unit  Majority  will be  required  if  such
amendment would result in a delisting or a suspension of trading of any class of
Units  on the principal national securities  exchange or over the counter market
where such class of Units is then traded), (iv) an amendment that is  necessary,
in the opinion of counsel to the Partnership, to prevent the Partnership, or the
General  Partners or their  directors, officers, agents or  trustees from in any
manner being subjected to the provisions of the Investment Company Act of  1940,
as  amended, the Investment  Advisors Act of  1940, as amended,  or 'plan asset'
regulations adopted under the Employee  Retirement Income Security Act of  1974,
as  amended,  whether or  not substantially  similar  to plan  asset regulations
currently applied or proposed, (v) subject to the limitations on the issuance of
additional Common Units or other limited or general partner interests  described
above,  an amendment that in the sole discretion of the Managing General Partner
is necessary or  advisable in  connection with the  authorization of  additional
limited  or general partner interests, (vi) any amendment expressly permitted in
the Partnership Agreement  to be  made by  the Managing  General Partner  acting
alone,  (vii) an  amendment effected, necessitated  or contemplated  by a merger
agreement that  has been  approved  pursuant to  the  terms of  the  Partnership
Agreement,  (viii) any  amendment that, in  the sole discretion  of the Managing
General Partner, is necessary or advisable  in connection with the formation  by
the  Partnership of, or its investment in, any corporation, partnership or other
entity (other  than the  Operating Partnership)  as otherwise  permitted by  the
Partnership  Agreement, (ix) a change in the  fiscal year and/or taxable year of
the Partnership and changes related thereto,  (x) a conversion of Units held  by
the  Managing General Partner or its Affiliates  at the election of the Managing
General Partner or its  Affiliates from general  partner interests into  limited
partner interests, and (xi) any other amendments substantially similar to any of
the foregoing.
 
     In   addition  to  the  Managing  General  Partner's  right  to  amend  the
Partnership Agreement as described above, the Managing General Partner may  make
amendments  to the Partnership Agreement without  the approval of any Unitholder
or assignee if such amendments (i) do not adversely affect the Limited  Partners
in any material respect, (ii) are necessary or advisable (in the sole discretion
of  the Managing  General Partner)  to satisfy  any requirements,  conditions or
guidelines contained  in any  opinion, directive,  ruling or  regulation of  any
federal  or state agency  or judicial authority  or contained in  any federal or
state statute, (iii) are necessary or  advisable (in the sole discretion of  the
Managing  General Partner) to facilitate  the trading of the  Common Units or to
comply with any  rule, regulation,  guideline or requirement  of any  securities
exchange on which the Common Units are or will be listed for trading, compliance
with any of which the Managing General Partner deems to be in the best interests
of  the  Partnership and  the Unitholders,  (iv) are  necessary or  advisable in
connection with any  action taken by  the Managing General  Partner relating  to
splits  or combinations of  Units pursuant to the  provisions of the Partnership
Agreement or (v) are required to effect the intent expressed in this  Prospectus
or  contemplated by the Partnership Agreement. The Managing General Partner will
not be required to obtain an Opinion of Counsel (as defined in the Glossary)  in
the  event  of  the  amendments  described  in  the  two  immediately  preceding
paragraphs. No  other  amendments  to  the  Partnership  Agreement  will  become
effective  without  the  approval  of  holders of  at  least  90%  of  the Units
(including Units held by the General  Partners and their Affiliates) unless  the
Partnership has obtained an Opinion of Counsel to the effect that such amendment
will  not  affect the  limited  liability under  applicable  law of  any limited
partner in the Partnership or the limited partner of the Operating  Partnership.
Any amendment that materially and adversely affects the rights or preferences of
any  type or class  of outstanding Units  in relation to  other classes of Units
will require the approval of at least a  majority of the type or class of  Units
so affected.
 
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<PAGE>
MERGER, SALE OR OTHER DISPOSITION OF ASSETS
 
     The  Managing General Partner is prohibited,  without the prior approval of
holders of a Unit Majority, from causing the Partnership to, among other things,
sell, exchange or otherwise dispose of all or substantially all of its assets in
a single transaction or  a series of related  transactions (including by way  of
merger,  consolidation  or  other combination)  or  approving on  behalf  of the
Partnership the sale, exchange or other disposition of all or substantially  all
of  the assets of  the Operating Partnership; provided  that the Partnership may
mortgage,  pledge,  hypothecate  or  grant   a  security  interest  in  all   or
substantially  all  of  the  Partnership's  assets  without  such  approval. The
Partnership may also sell all or substantially  all of its assets pursuant to  a
foreclosure  or other realization  upon the foregoing  encumbrances without such
approval. The Unitholders are  not entitled to  dissenters' rights of  appraisal
under  the Partnership Agreement  or applicable Delaware  law in the  event of a
merger or consolidation of the Partnership,  a sale of substantially all of  the
Partnership's assets or any other transaction or event.
 
TERMINATION AND DISSOLUTION
 
     The  Partnership  will  continue  until December  31,  2086,  unless sooner
terminated pursuant  to  the  Partnership Agreement.  The  Partnership  will  be
dissolved  upon (i) the election of the Managing General Partner to dissolve the
Partnership, if  approved by  the holders  of a  Unit Majority,  (ii) the  sale,
exchange  or other  disposition of  all or substantially  all of  the assets and
properties of the Partnership and the Operating Partnership, (iii) the entry  of
a  decree of judicial dissolution  of the Partnership or  (iv) the withdrawal or
removal of the  Managing General Partner  or the occurrence  of any other  event
that  results in its ceasing to be  the Managing General Partner (other than (x)
by reason  of a  transfer  of its  unsubordinated  general partner  interest  in
accordance  with the Partnership Agreement,  (y) withdrawal or removal following
approval and admission of a  successor or (z) certain bankruptcy-related  events
of  the Managing General Partner but only if at such time Triarc is the Managing
General Partner and the Special General  Partner is not bankrupt at such  time).
Upon a dissolution pursuant to (x) or (y) of clause (iv) above, the holders of a
Unit  Majority may also elect, within  certain time limitations, to reconstitute
the Partnership and continue its business  on the same terms and conditions  set
forth in the Partnership Agreement by forming a new limited partnership on terms
identical  to those set forth in the Partnership Agreement and having as general
partner an entity approved by the holders of at least a Unit Majority subject to
receipt by the Partnership of an Opinion of Counsel. Upon a dissolution pursuant
to (z) of  clause (iv) above,  the Special General  Partner shall  automatically
become  the Managing General Partner and  the Partnership shall continue without
any Unitholder action.
 
LIQUIDATION AND DISTRIBUTION OF PROCEEDS
 
     Upon  dissolution   of  the   Partnership,   unless  the   Partnership   is
reconstituted  and continued as a new limited partnership, the Person authorized
to wind up the affairs of  the Partnership (the 'Liquidator') will, acting  with
all  of the powers  of the Managing  General Partner that  such Liquidator deems
necessary or  desirable in  its  good faith  judgment in  connection  therewith,
liquidate  the Partnership's assets and apply the proceeds of the liquidation as
provided  in  'Cash   Distribution  Policy   --  Distributions   of  Cash   Upon
Liquidation.'  Under certain  circumstances and subject  to certain limitations,
the Liquidator may defer liquidation or distribution of the Partnership's assets
for a reasonable period of time or  distribute assets to partners in kind if  it
determines  that a sale  would be impractical  or would cause  undue loss to the
partners.
 
WITHDRAWAL OR REMOVAL OF THE GENERAL PARTNERS
 
     The Managing General Partner has agreed not to withdraw voluntarily as  the
managing  general partner of the Partnership and the Operating Partnership prior
to June 30, 2006  (with limited exceptions  described below), without  obtaining
the  approval of  the holders of  a Unit  Majority and furnishing  an Opinion of
Counsel. On or after June 30, 2006, the Managing General Partner may withdraw as
the  Managing  General  Partner  (without  first  obtaining  approval  from  any
Unitholder)  by giving  90 days'  written notice,  and such  withdrawal will not
constitute  a  violation  of  the  Partnership  Agreement.  Notwithstanding  the
foregoing,   the  Managing  General  Partner  may  withdraw  without  Unitholder
 
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<PAGE>
approval upon 90 days' notice  to the Limited Partners if  more than 50% of  the
outstanding Common Units are held or controlled by one Person and its Affiliates
(other  than  the  General  Partners and  their  Affiliates).  In  addition, the
Partnership Agreement permits the Managing  General Partner (in certain  limited
instances)  to sell or  otherwise transfer all of  its General Partner Interest,
without the approval of the Unitholders. See ' -- Transfer of General  Partners'
Interests  and Right to Receive Incentive  Distributions and Conversion of Units
Held by Managing General Partner into Limited Partner Interests.'
 
     Upon the withdrawal of the Managing General Partner under any circumstances
(other than as a result of (x) a transfer by the Managing General Partner of all
or a part  of its  General Partner  Interest or  (y) certain  bankruptcy-related
events  of the Managing General Partner but only if the Managing General Partner
is Triarc and the  Special General Partner  is not bankrupt  at such time),  the
holders  of a Unit Majority may select  a successor to such withdrawing Managing
General Partner.  If such  a successor  is not  elected, or  is elected  but  an
Opinion  of Counsel cannot be obtained, the Partnership will be dissolved, wound
up and liquidated, unless within 180 days after such withdrawal the holders of a
Unit Majority agree in writing to  continue the business of the Partnership  and
to the appointment of a successor Managing General Partner. See ' -- Termination
and Dissolution.'
 
     The  Managing General  Partner may  not be  removed unless  such removal is
approved by the vote of the holders of not less than 66 2/3% of the  outstanding
Units  (including Units held  by the General Partners  and their Affiliates) and
the Partnership receives an Opinion of Counsel. Any such removal is also subject
to the approval of a successor general partner by the vote of the holders of not
less than  a  Unit  Majority. Units  held  by  the General  Partners  and  their
Affiliates  shall be deemed to be outstanding for purposes of any such vote. The
Partnership Agreement  also provides  that if  the Managing  General Partner  is
removed  as general partner  of the Partnership  other than for  Cause and Units
held by the General Partners and their Affiliates are not voted in favor of such
removal (i) the Special General Partner shall withdraw as general partner of the
Partnership and the  Operating Partnership, (ii)  the Subordination Period  will
end  and all outstanding Subordinated Units will immediately convert into Common
Units on a one-for-one basis, (iii) any existing Common Unit Arrearages will  be
extinguished  and (iv) the General Partners will have the right to convert their
General Partner Interests and the right to receive Incentive Distributions  into
Common  Units or to receive in exchange  for such interests a cash payment equal
to the fair market value (as determined below) of such interests.
 
     Withdrawal or removal of the Managing General Partner as a general  partner
of  the Partnership also constitutes withdrawal or  removal, as the case may be,
of  the  Managing  General  Partner  as  a  general  partner  of  the  Operating
Partnership.  The withdrawal  or removal of  the Managing General  Partner, as a
general partner  of  the  Partnership,  will also  constitute  a  withdrawal  or
removal, as the case may be, of the Special General Partner as a general partner
of  the Partnership and the Operating  Partnership unless such withdrawal of the
Managing General Partner is caused by  certain bankruptcy related events of  the
Managing  General Partner but only if the Managing General Partner is Triarc and
the Special General  Partner is not  bankrupt at  such time (in  which case  the
Special  General Partner will automatically  become the managing general partner
and the Partnership will continue without any action by Unitholders).
 
     In the event of  withdrawal of the General  Partners where such  withdrawal
violates  the Partnership Agreement,  a successor general  partner will have the
option to purchase the unsubordinated general partner interests of the departing
General Partners (the 'Departing Partners') in the Partnership and the Operating
Partnership and the right to receive Incentive Distributions for a cash  payment
equal  to the fair market value of such interests. Under all other circumstances
where the  General Partners  withdraw or  are removed  by the  Unitholders,  the
Departing Partners will have the option to require the successor general partner
to  purchase  such unsubordinated  general  partner interests  of  the Departing
Partners and the right  to receive Incentive Distributions  for such amount.  In
each  case, such fair market  value will be determined  by agreement between the
Departing Partners and  the successor  general partner,  or if  no agreement  is
reached,  by an independent investment banking firm or other independent experts
selected by the Departing Partners and  the successor general partner (or if  no
expert  can be  agreed upon,  by an  expert chosen  by agreement  of the experts
selected by each  of them).  In addition, the  Partnership will  be required  to
reimburse   the   Departing  Partners   for  all   amounts  due   the  Departing
 
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<PAGE>
Partners,  including,  without  limitation,  all  employee-related  liabilities,
including  severance liabilities, incurred in connection with the termination of
any employees  employed  by  the  Departing Partners  for  the  benefit  of  the
Partnership.
 
     If  neither  of the  above-described options  are  exercised by  either the
Departing  Partners  or  the  successor  general  partner,  as  applicable,  the
Departing  General Partners will have the  right to convert their unsubordinated
general partner interests  and their  right to  receive Incentive  Distributions
into Common Units equal to the fair market value of such interests as determined
by an investment banking firm or other independent expert selected in the manner
described  in the preceding paragraph or to receive cash from the Partnership in
exchange for such interests.
 
TRANSFER OF GENERAL PARTNERS' INTERESTS AND RIGHT TO RECEIVE INCENTIVE
DISTRIBUTIONS
AND CONVERSION OF UNITS HELD BY THE MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER INTO LIMITED
PARTNER INTERESTS
 
     Except for (x) a transfer by either of the General Partners of all, but not
less than all,  of their General  Partner Interests in  the Partnership and  the
Operating  Partnership to  (a) an  Affiliate (including  Triarc) or  (b) another
Person in connection with the merger or consolidation of either of the  Managing
General  Partner with or into another Person,  (y) the transfer by either of the
General Partners of all or substantially all of its assets to another Person, or
(z) the transfer  by operation  of law  upon the  merger or  liquidation of  the
Managing  General Partner with and into Triarc  but only if, (i) the Partnership
has received an  Opinion of Counsel,  (ii) the Special  General Partner has  not
converted or transferred any portion of its 1.0% general partner interest in the
Partnership or 1.0101% general partner interest in the Operating Partnership and
(iii)  the Special General Partner has a net worth equal to at least $15 million
independent of its  interest in the  Partnership Group, neither  of the  General
Partners  may transfer all  or any part  of its General  Partner Interest in the
Partnership to another Person  prior to June 30,  2006, without the approval  of
the  holders of a  Unit Majority; provided  that, in each  case, such transferee
assumes the rights and duties of the Managing General Partner to whose  interest
such  transferee has  succeeded, agrees  to be  bound by  the provisions  of the
Partnership Agreement, furnishes an Opinion of Counsel and agrees to acquire all
(or the appropriate portion thereof, as applicable) of the transferring Managing
General Partner's interests in the Operating Partnership and agrees to be  bound
by  the  provisions  of  the Operating  Partnership  Agreement.  The Partnership
Agreement permits  the Managing  General Partner  to transfer  its  Subordinated
Units  and Common Units to  one or more Persons.  The Partnership Note, however,
contains certain agreements by Triarc  that could restrict the Managing  General
Partner's ability to transfer or sell Subordinated Units. See 'Cash Distribution
Policy -- Partnership Loan.' The Managing General Partner and its Affiliates may
each  at their election  convert any portion  of the Units  from general partner
interests into limited  partner interests. In  addition, the Subordinated  Units
held by the Managing General Partner will convert into limited partner interests
upon  (i) the  conversion into  Common Units  or (ii)  immediately prior  to the
transfer of the Subordinated Units to transferees who are unaffiliated with  the
Managing  General Partner. Furthermore, the  Special General Partner can convert
its General Partner  Interest into  Units. See  ' --  Special General  Partner.'
Furthermore,  the Managing General Partner  shall have the right  at any time to
transfer its right to receive Incentive Distributions to one or more Persons (as
an assignment of such  rights or as  a special limited  partner interest in  the
Partnership)  subject  only  to  any  reasonable  restrictions  on  transfer and
requirements for registering the transfer of such right as may be adopted by the
Managing  General  Partner  without  Unitholder  approval.  At  any  time,   the
Affiliates  of the General Partners (including  Triarc) may sell or transfer all
or part of their respective direct or indirect interest in the General  Partners
to  an Affiliate  or an  unaffiliated third  party without  the approval  of the
Unitholders.
 
LIMITED CALL RIGHT
 
     If at any time less than 20% of the then-issued and outstanding partnership
interests of any class are held by  Persons other than the General Partners  and
their Affiliates, the Managing General Partner will have the right, which it may
assign  in whole or in part  to any of its Affiliates  or to the Partnership, to
acquire all, but not  less than all, of  the remaining partnership interests  of
such  class held by such unaffiliated Persons as of a record date to be selected
by the Managing General Partner, on at least 10
 
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but not more than  60 days' notice. The  purchase price in the  event of such  a
purchase  shall be  the greater  of (i)  the highest  price paid  by the General
Partners or any of their  Affiliates for partnership interests purchased  within
the 90 days preceding the date on which the Managing General Partner first mails
notice  of its  election to  purchase such  partnership interests,  and (ii) the
Current Market Price (as defined in the Glossary) of such partnership  interests
as  of  the date  three days  prior  to the  date such  notice  is mailed.  As a
consequence of  the Managing  General Partner's  right to  purchase  outstanding
partnership   interests,  a  holder  of  partnership  interests  may  have  such
partnership interests purchased even though he  may not desire to sell them,  or
the  price paid may be  less than the amount the  holder would desire to receive
upon the sale of his partnership interests. The tax consequences to a Unitholder
of the exercise of this call right are the same as a sale by such Unitholder  of
his Common Units in the market. See 'Tax Considerations -- Disposition of Common
Units.'
 
MEETINGS; VOTING
 
     Except  as described below with respect to  a Person or group owning 20% or
more of all Units, Unitholders or assignees  who are record holders of Units  on
the  record date set pursuant  to the Partnership Agreement  will be entitled to
notice of, and to vote  at, meetings of Unitholders and  to act with respect  to
matters  as to which approvals  may be solicited. With  respect to voting rights
attributable to Common  Units that  are owned  by an  assignee who  is a  record
holder  but who  has not yet  been admitted  as a Limited  Partner, the Managing
General Partner shall be deemed to  be the Limited Partner with respect  thereto
and  shall, in exercising the  voting rights in respect  of such Common Units on
any matter,  vote such  Common Units  at the  written direction  of such  record
holder. Absent such direction, such Common Units will not be voted (except that,
in  the case of Common  Units held by the Managing  General Partner on behalf of
Non-citizen Assignees (as  defined below),  the Managing  General Partner  shall
distribute  the votes in respect of such Common  Units in the same ratios as the
votes of Limited Partners in respect of other Common Units are cast).
 
     The Managing  General  Partner does  not  anticipate that  any  meeting  of
Unitholders  will  be  called in  the  foreseeable  future. Any  action  that is
required or permitted to be  taken by the Unitholders may  be taken either at  a
meeting  of the Unitholders or without a  meeting if consents in writing setting
forth the action so taken are signed by holders of such number of Units as would
be necessary  to authorize  or take  such  action at  a meeting  of all  of  the
Unitholders.  Meetings of the Unitholders may  be called by the Managing General
Partner or  by  Unitholders  owning  in  the  aggregate  at  least  20%  of  the
outstanding  Common  Units  of  the  class  for  which  a  meeting  is proposed.
Unitholders may vote either in person or by proxy at meetings. The holders of  a
majority  of the  outstanding Units of  the class  for which a  meeting has been
called represented in person or by proxy  will constitute a quorum at a  meeting
of  Unitholders  of  such  class  or classes,  unless  any  such  action  by the
Unitholders requires approval by holders of a greater percentage of such  Units,
in which case the quorum shall be such greater percentage.
 
     Each  record  holder of  a  Unit has  a  vote according  to  his percentage
interest in the Partnership, although additional limited and/or general  partner
interests  having special voting rights could  be issued by the Managing General
Partner. See ' -- Issuance of Additional Securities.' However, if any Person  or
group  (other than the  General Partners and their  Affiliates) acquires, in the
aggregate, beneficial  ownership  of  20%  or  more  of  the  total  Units  then
outstanding, such Person or group loses voting rights with respect to all of its
Units  and such Units may not be voted  on any matter and will not be considered
to be  outstanding  when sending  notices  of  a meeting  of  limited  partners,
calculating  required votes, determining  the presence of a  quorum or for other
similar Partnership  purposes. The  Partnership Agreement  provides that  Common
Units  held in nominee  or street name account  will be voted  by the broker (or
other nominee) pursuant to  the instruction of the  beneficial owner unless  the
arrangement  between the  beneficial owner  and his  nominee provides otherwise.
Except as otherwise  provided in the  Partnership Agreement, Subordinated  Units
will vote together with the Common Units as a single class.
 
     Any notice, demand, request, report or proxy material required or permitted
to  be given  or made  to record holders  of Common  Units (whether  or not such
record holder has been admitted as a partner) under the terms of the Partnership
Agreement will be delivered to  the record holder by  the Partnership or by  the
Transfer Agent at the request of the Partnership.
 
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STATUS AS LIMITED PARTNER OR ASSIGNEE
 
     Except  as described above under '  -- Limited Liability,' the Common Units
offered hereby are  fully paid,  and Unitholders will  not be  required to  make
additional contributions to the Partnership.
 
     An  assignee of a Common Unit  or Subordinated Unit subsequent to executing
and  delivering  a  Transfer  Application,  but  pending  its  admission  as   a
substituted  Limited Partner in  the Partnership, is entitled  to an interest in
the Partnership equivalent  to that  of a Limited  Partner with  respect to  the
right  to share in allocations and distributions from the Partnership, including
liquidating distributions. The Managing General  Partner will vote and  exercise
other powers attributable to Common Units or Subordinated Units, as the case may
be,  owned by an assignee who has not become a substitute Limited Partner at the
written direction of such assignee. See ' -- Meetings; Voting.' Transferees  who
do  not execute and  deliver a Transfer  Application will be  treated neither as
assignees nor  as record  holders of  Common Units,  and will  not receive  cash
distributions,  federal income  tax allocations  or reports  furnished to record
holders of Common  Units. See 'Description  of the Common  Units -- Transfer  of
Common Units.'
 
NON-CITIZEN ASSIGNEES; REDEMPTION
 
     If the Partnership is or becomes subject to federal, state or local laws or
regulations  that, in the reasonable determination  of the Partnership, create a
substantial risk of  cancellation or  forfeiture of  any property  in which  the
Partnership  has an interest because  of the nationality, citizenship, residency
or other related status of any  Partner or assignee, the Partnership may  redeem
the Common Units held by such Partner or assignee at their Current Market Price.
In  order  to avoid  any such  cancellation or  forfeiture, the  Partnership may
require each Partner or assignee  to furnish information about his  nationality,
citizenship,  residency or  related status.  If a  Partner or  assignee fails to
furnish information  about such  nationality,  citizenship, residency  or  other
related status within 30 days after a request for such information, such Limited
Partner  or  assignee may  be treated  as  a non-citizen  assignee ('Non-citizen
Assignee'). In addition to other limitations on the rights of an assignee who is
not a substituted  Partner, a Non-citizen  Assignee does not  have the right  to
direct  the voting of his Common Units and may not receive distributions in kind
upon liquidation of the Partnership.
 
INDEMNIFICATION
 
     The Partnership Agreement provides that the Partnership will indemnify each
General Partner, any Departing Partner, any Person who is or was an Affiliate of
either of the General Partners  or any Departing Partner,  any Person who is  or
was  an  officer, director,  partner  or trustee  of  a General  Partner  or any
Departing Partner or  any affiliate  of either of  the General  Partners or  any
Departing  Partner, or  any Person  who is or  was serving  at the  request of a
General Partner  or any  Departing Partner  or any  Affiliate of  either of  the
General  Partners or  any Departing Partner  as an  officer, director, employee,
partner, agent  or trustee  of another  Person ('Indemnitees'),  to the  fullest
extent  permitted by law, from and against  any and all losses, claims, damages,
liabilities (joint or several),  expenses (including, without limitation,  legal
fees and expenses), judgments, fines, penalties, interest, settlements and other
amounts arising from any and all claims, demands, actions, suits or proceedings,
whether   civil,  criminal,  administrative  or   investigative,  in  which  any
Indemnitee may be  involved, or  is threatened  to be  involved, as  a party  or
otherwise,  by reason of  its status as  any of the  foregoing; provided that in
each case  the  Indemnitee  acted in  good  faith  and in  a  manner  that  such
Indemnitee  reasonably believed to be in or not opposed to the best interests of
the Partnership and, with respect to any criminal proceeding, had no  reasonable
cause  to  believe its  conduct was  unlawful.  Any indemnification  under these
provisions will be only out  of the assets of  the Partnership, and the  General
Partners  shall  not  be  personally  liable  for,  or  have  any  obligation to
contribute or  loan  funds  or  assets  to  the  Partnership  to  enable  it  to
effectuate,  such indemnification. The Partnership is authorized to purchase (or
to reimburse the General Partners or their Affiliates for the cost of) insurance
against liabilities asserted against  and expenses incurred  by such persons  in
connection   with  the  Partnership's  activities,  regardless  of  whether  the
Partnership  would  have  the  power  to  indemnify  such  person  against  such
liabilities  under the provisions described  above. National Propane Corporation
(and, after  the  Triarc  Merger, Triarc)  has  generally  indemnified  National
Propane  SGP, Inc. for all  liabilities arising as a  result of National Propane
SGP, Inc.'s status  as general partner  of the Partnership  and the  Partnership
Group.
 
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BOOKS AND REPORTS
 
     The  Partnership is required  to keep appropriate books  of the business of
the Partnership at the principal offices  of the Partnership. The books will  be
maintained  for both tax  and financial reporting purposes  on an accrual basis.
For financial reporting and tax purposes, the fiscal year of the Partnership  is
the calendar year.
 
     As soon as practicable, but in no event later than 120 days after the close
of each fiscal year, the Managing General Partner will furnish or make available
to  each record holder  of Units (as of  a record date  selected by the Managing
General Partner) an annual report containing audited financial statements of the
Partnership for  the past  fiscal year,  prepared in  accordance with  generally
accepted  accounting principles. As  soon as practicable, but  in no event later
than 90 days after the  close of each quarter (except  the last quarter of  each
fiscal  year), the  Managing General Partner  will furnish or  make available to
each record  holder of  Units (as  of a  record date  selected by  the  Managing
General  Partner)  a report  containing  unaudited financial  statements  of the
Partnership with respect to  such quarter and such  other information as may  be
required by law.
 
     The  Partnership will  use all  reasonable efforts  to furnish  each record
holder of  a Unit  information reasonably  required for  tax reporting  purposes
within  90  days after  the close  of  each calendar  year. Such  information is
expected to be furnished  in summary form so  that certain complex  calculations
normally  required  of partners  can be  avoided.  The Partnership's  ability to
furnish such summary information to  Unitholders will depend on the  cooperation
of  such Unitholders in supplying certain  information to the Partnership. Every
Unitholder (without  regard  to whether  he  supplies such  information  to  the
Partnership)  will receive information to assist  him in determining his federal
and state tax liability and filing his federal and state income tax returns.
 
RIGHT TO INSPECT PARTNERSHIP BOOKS AND RECORDS
 
     The Partnership  Agreement  provides that  a  Limited Partner  can,  for  a
purpose  reasonably  related to  such Limited  Partner's  interest as  a limited
partner, upon reasonable demand  and at his own  expense, have furnished to  him
(i)  a current list of the  name and last known address  of each partner, (ii) a
copy of the  Partnership's tax returns,  (iii) information as  to the amount  of
cash,  and a description and statement of the agreed value of any other property
or services, contributed or to  be contributed by each  partner and the date  on
which  each  became a  partner, (iv)  copies of  the Partnership  Agreement, the
certificate of limited  partnership of the  Partnership, amendments thereto  and
powers  of  attorney  pursuant  to  which  the  same  have  been  executed,  (v)
information regarding the  status of  the Partnership's  business and  financial
condition  and  (vi)  such  other  information  regarding  the  affairs  of  the
Partnership as is just and reasonable. The Partnership may, and intends to, keep
confidential from the Limited  Partners trade secrets  or other information  the
disclosure  of which the Partnership  believes in good faith  is not in the best
interests of the Partnership or which the  Partnership is required by law or  by
agreements with third parties to keep confidential.
 
REIMBURSEMENT FOR SERVICES
 
     The  Partnership  Agreement  provides  that the  General  Partners  are not
entitled to receive any compensation for  their services as general partners  of
the Partnership; the General Partners are, however, entitled to be reimbursed on
a  monthly  basis (or  such  other basis  as  the Managing  General  Partner may
reasonably determine) for all direct and indirect expenses such General  Partner
incurs  or payments it makes on behalf of  or for the benefit of the Partnership
(including payments made or expenses incurred under employee benefit plans), and
all other  necessary or  appropriate expenses  allocable to  the Partnership  or
otherwise  reasonably incurred  by the General  Partners in  connection with the
operation of the  Partnership's business  (including expenses  allocated to  the
General  Partners by their Affiliates).  The Partnership Agreement provides that
the Managing General Partner shall determine the expenses that are allocable  to
the  Partnership in  any reasonable  manner determined  by the  Managing General
Partner in its sole discretion. In addition, Affiliates of the General  Partners
(including  Triarc) may perform administrative services for the General Partners
on behalf of the Partnership. Such Affiliates will be reimbursed for all  direct
and indirect expenses incurred in
 
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connection therewith. Furthermore, the General Partners and their Affiliates may
provide  additional services to the Partnership,  for which the Partnership will
be charged reasonable fees as determined by the Managing General Partner.
 
CHANGE OF MANAGEMENT PROVISIONS
 
     The Partnership Agreement contains certain provisions that are intended  to
discourage  a Person  or group  from attempting  to remove  the Managing General
Partner as general partner of the Partnership or otherwise change management  of
the  Partnership. If any  Person or group  (other than the  General Partners and
their Affiliates) acquires,  in the  aggregate, beneficial ownership  of 20%  or
more  of the  Units of any  class then  outstanding, such Person  or group loses
voting rights with respect  to all of  its Units. In  addition, if the  Managing
General Partner is removed as Managing General Partner other than for Cause, (i)
the  Subordination Period will  end and all  outstanding Subordinated Units will
immediately convert into Common Units on a one-for-one basis, (ii) any  existing
Common Units Arrearages will be extinguished and (iii) the General Partners will
have  the right  to convert  their General  Partner Interests  and the  right to
receive Incentive Distributions into Common Units or to receive in exchange  for
such  interests a cash payment equal to the fair market value of such interests.
See ' -- Withdrawal or Removal of the General Partners.'
 
REGISTRATION RIGHTS
 
     Pursuant to the terms of the  Partnership Agreement and subject to  certain
limitations described therein, the Partnership has agreed to register for resale
under  the Securities Act and applicable  state securities laws any Common Units
or other  securities  of  the  Partnership  (including  Subordinated  Units  and
Incentive  Rights) proposed to be sold by the Managing General Partner or any of
its Affiliates. The Partnership is obligated  to pay all expenses incidental  to
such  registration, excluding underwriting discounts and commissions. See 'Units
Eligible for Future Sale.'
 
                         UNITS ELIGIBLE FOR FUTURE SALE
 
     The Managing General  Partner holds  4,533,638 Subordinated  Units, all  of
which  will convert into Common Units at the end of the Subordination Period and
some of which may convert earlier. In addition, the Special General Partner  may
convert  all  or a  portion of  its General  Partner Interest  into a  number of
Subordinated Units (or Common Units after  the end of the Subordination  Period)
having rights to distributions of Available Cash from Operating Surplus equal to
the distribution rights with respect to Available Cash from Operating Surplus of
the  General Partner Interest so converted,  provided that the Triarc Merger has
not occurred.  See 'Cash  Distribution Policy  -- Distributions  from  Operating
Surplus  during Subordination  Period.' The  sale of  these Units  could have an
adverse impact on the price  of the Common Units or  on any trading market  that
may  develop. For a  discussion of the transactions  whereby the General Partner
acquired the  Subordinated Units  in  connection with  the organization  of  the
Partnership, see 'The IPO and Additional Transactions.'
 
     The  Common  Units offered  hereby will  generally be  transferable without
restriction or further registration  under the Securities  Act, except that  any
Common Units owned by 'an affiliate' of the Partnership (as that term is defined
in  the  rules and  regulations  under the  Securities  Act) may  not  be resold
publicly  except  in  compliance  with  the  registration  requirements  of  the
Securities  Act or pursuant to an  exemption therefrom under Rule 144 thereunder
('Rule 144') or otherwise. Rule 144 permits securities acquired by an  affiliate
of  the issuer in an offering to be sold  into the market in an amount that does
not exceed, during any three-month  period, the greater of  (i) 1% of the  total
number  of  such  securities outstanding  or  (ii) the  average  weekly reported
trading volume of the  Common Units for  the four calendar  weeks prior to  such
sale.  Sales  under  Rule  144  are  also  subject  to  certain  manner  of sale
provisions,  notice  requirements  and   the  availability  of  current   public
information  about the Partnership. A  person who is not  deemed to have been an
affiliate of the  Partnership at any  time during the  three months preceding  a
sale,  and who has beneficially owned his Common Units for at least three years,
would be entitled to sell such Common Units under Rule 144 without regard to the
public information requirements, volume  limitations, manner of sale  provisions
or notice requirements of Rule 144.
 
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<PAGE>
     Prior to the end of the Subordination Period, the Partnership may not issue
equity securities of the Partnership ranking prior or senior to the Common Units
or  an aggregate of  more than 3,095,238 additional  Common Units (including the
400,000 Common Units  sold in the  Private Placement and  offered hereby) or  an
equivalent  amount  of securities  ranking  on a  parity  with the  Common Units
(excluding  the  111,074  Common   Units  issued  upon   exercise  of  the   IPO
Over-Allotment Option, Common Units issued upon conversion of Subordinated Units
or  in connection with Acquisitions or  Capital Improvements or the repayment of
certain indebtedness  or pursuant  to  employee benefit  plans) in  either  case
without  the approval of the  holders of at least  a Unit Majority, except under
certain circumstances. After the Subordination Period, the Partnership,  without
a  vote of the Unitholders,  may issue an unlimited  number of additional Common
Units or other equity securities of the  Partnership on a parity with or  senior
to  the Common Units. The Partnership  Agreement does not impose any restriction
on the Partnership's ability  to issue equity securities  ranking junior to  the
Common  Units at any  time. Any issuance  of additional Common  Units or certain
other equity  securities  would  result  in  a  corresponding  decrease  in  the
proportionate  ownership interest in  the Partnership represented  by, and could
adversely affect the  cash distributions to  and market price  of, Common  Units
then  outstanding.  See 'The  Partnership  Agreement --  Issuance  of Additional
Securities.'
 
     Pursuant to the Partnership Agreement, the Managing General Partner and its
Affiliates will have  the right, upon  the terms and  subject to the  conditions
therein, to cause the Partnership to register under the Securities Act and state
securities  laws the offer and sale of any Units or other Partnership Securities
that it holds. Subject to the terms and conditions of the Partnership Agreement,
such registration rights allow the  Managing General Partner and its  affiliates
or  their assigns, holding any  Units to require registration  of any such Units
and to include  any such Units  in a  registration by the  partnership of  other
Units,  including Units  offered by the  Partnership or by  any Unitholder. Such
registration rights  will  continue  in  effect  for  two  years  following  any
withdrawal  or removal of the Managing General Partner as the general partner of
the Partnership. In connection with any such registration, the Partnership  will
indemnify  each Unitholder participating in  such registration and its officers,
directors and controlling  Persons from  and against any  liabilities under  the
Securities  Act  or  any state  securities  laws arising  from  the registration
statement or prospectus. The Partnership will  bear the reasonable costs of  any
such   registration,  excluding  underwriting   discounts  and  commissions.  In
addition, the Managing General Partner and  its Affiliates may sell their  Units
in private transactions at any time, subject to compliance with applicable laws.
 
     Pursuant  to  a  Registration  Agreement between  the  Partnership  and the
Selling Unitholder (the  'Registration Agreement'), the  Selling Unitholder  has
the  right, upon the terms  and subject to the  conditions therein, to cause the
Partnership to  register under  the Securities  Act the  offer and  sale of  the
Common  Units  purchased pursuant  to  the Purchase  Agreement  and held  by the
Selling Unitholder or any  of its affiliated transferees.  Subject to the  terms
and conditions of the Registration Agreement, such registration rights allow the
Selling  Unitholder or such  transferees to require the  Partnership to (i) file
the Registration Statement of  which this Prospectus is  a part and to  maintain
the  effectiveness  thereof  for  a  period  of  six  months,  (ii)  effect  the
registration of  the  Common Units  owned  by  the Selling  Unitholder  or  such
transferees  at  any  time following  six  months after  the  shelf registration
statement is no longer effective and to maintain the effectiveness thereof for a
period of  six  months  and  (iii)  to  include  any  such  Common  Units  in  a
registration  by the Partnership  of other Common  Units, including Common Units
offered by the Partnership or by  any Common Unitholder. In connection with  any
such  registration,  the  Partnership  will  indemnify  each  Common  Unitholder
participating in  such  registration  and  its  directors,  officers,  employee,
attorneys   and  controlling  persons  from  and  against  certain  liabilities,
including liabilities, arising  under the Securities  Act. The Partnership  will
bear  certain  of the  costs of  any  such registration,  excluding underwriting
discounts and commissions and transfer fees.
 
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                               TAX CONSIDERATIONS
 
     This section  is a  summary  of material  tax  considerations that  may  be
relevant  to prospective  Unitholders and, to  the extent set  forth below under
' --  Legal Opinions  and Advice,'  represents the  opinion of  Andrews &  Kurth
L.L.P., special counsel to the General Partners and the Partnership ('Counsel'),
insofar  as it relates to  matters of law and legal  conclusions. A copy of such
opinion has been filed as an exhibit to the Registration Statement of which this
Prospectus is  a part.  This section  is based  upon current  provisions of  the
Internal  Revenue  Code  of 1986,  as  amended ('Code'),  existing  and proposed
regulations thereunder and current  administrative rulings and court  decisions,
all  of which are subject to change.  Subsequent changes in such authorities may
cause the tax consequences to vary substantially from the consequences described
below. Unless  the context  otherwise requires,  references in  this section  to
Partnership   are  references  to   both  the  Partnership   and  the  Operating
Partnership.
 
     No attempt has  been made  in the following  discussion to  comment on  all
federal  income  tax  matters  affecting  the  Partnership  or  the Unitholders.
Moreover, the discussion focuses on  Unitholders who are individual citizens  or
residents of the United States and has only limited application to corporations,
estates, trusts, non-resident aliens or other Unitholders subject to specialized
tax  treatment (such as tax-exempt institutions, individual retirement accounts,
REITs or mutual funds). Accordingly, each prospective Unitholder should consult,
and should depend on, his own tax advisor in analyzing the federal, state, local
and foreign tax consequences  to him of the  ownership or disposition of  Common
Units.
 
     SPECIAL  NOTE:  CERTAIN  STATEMENTS  SET  FORTH  BELOW  UNDER  THIS CAPTION
CONSTITUTE 'FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS'  WITHIN THE MEANING  OF THE REFORM  ACT.
SEE 'SPECIAL NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS' ON PAGE 4 FOR ADDITIONAL
FACTORS RELATING TO SUCH STATEMENTS.
 
LEGAL OPINIONS AND ADVICE
 
     Counsel  has expressed its  opinion that, based  on the representations and
subject to the qualifications set forth in the detailed discussion that follows,
for  federal  income  tax  purposes  (i)  the  Partnership  and  the   Operating
Partnership  will each  be treated  as a partnership  and (ii)  owners of Common
Units (with certain exceptions, as described in 'Limited Partner Status'  below)
will  be  treated  as  partners  of  the  Partnership  (but  not  the  Operating
Partnership). In  addition,  all statements  as  to  matters of  law  and  legal
conclusions  contained  in this  section,  unless otherwise  noted,  reflect the
opinion of Counsel.
 
     Although no attempt has been made in the following discussion to comment on
all  federal  income  tax  matters  affecting  the  Partnership  or  prospective
Unitholders, Counsel has advised the Partnership that, based on current law, the
following  is  a  general  description  of  the  principal  federal  income  tax
consequences that  should arise  from the  ownership and  disposition of  Common
Units  and,  insofar as  it relates  to  matters of  law and  legal conclusions,
addresses the  material  tax  consequences to  Unitholders  who  are  individual
citizens or residents of the United States.
 
     No  ruling  has been  or will  be requested  from the  IRS with  respect to
classification of  the  Partnership as  a  partnership for  federal  income  tax
purposes,  whether  the  Partnership's propane  operations  generate 'qualifying
income' under SS7704 of the Code  or any other matter affecting the  Partnership
or prospective Unitholders. An opinion of counsel represents only that counsel's
best  legal judgment and does not bind the IRS or the courts. Thus, no assurance
is given that the  opinions set forth  herein would be sustained  by a court  if
contested by the IRS. Any such contest with the IRS may materially and adversely
impact  the market  for the Common  Units and  the prices at  which Common Units
trade. In addition, the costs of any contest with the IRS will be borne directly
or indirectly  by the  Unitholders  and the  General Partners.  Furthermore,  no
assurance  is  given that  the  treatment of  the  Partnership or  an investment
therein  will  not   be  significantly   modified  by   future  legislative   or
administrative  changes or court decisions. Any such modification may or may not
be retroactively applied.
 
     For the reasons hereinafter described, Counsel has not rendered an  opinion
with  respect  to the  following  specific federal  income  tax issues:  (i) the
treatment of a Unitholder  whose Common Units  are loaned to  a short seller  to
cover  a short  sale of Common  Units (see '  -- Tax Treatment  of Operations --
 
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Treatment of Short Sales'), (ii) whether a Unitholder acquiring Common Units  in
separate transactions must maintain a single aggregate adjusted tax basis in his
Common  Units (see '  -- Disposition of  Common Units --  Recognition of Gain or
Loss'), (iii)  whether  the  Partnership's  monthly  convention  for  allocating
taxable  income and  losses is permitted  by existing  Treasury Regulations (see
' --  Disposition  of  Common  Units  --  Allocations  Between  Transferors  and
Transferees'),  and  (iv)  whether  the  Partnership's  method  for depreciating
Section 743 adjustments, utilized to maintain the uniformity of the economic and
tax characteristics of the Common Units, is sustainable (see ' -- Uniformity  of
Units').
 
TAX RATES AND CHANGES IN FEDERAL INCOME TAX LAWS
 
     The  top marginal income tax  rate for individuals is  36% subject to a 10%
surtax on individuals with  taxable income in excess  of $271,050 per year.  The
surtax  is computed by applying a 39.6% rate  to taxable income in excess of the
threshold. The net capital gain of an individual is subject to a maximum 28% tax
rate.
 
     The 1995 Proposed Legislation that was  passed by Congress on November  17,
1995,  as part of  the Revenue Reconciliation  Act of 1995,  would alter the tax
reporting system  and  the  deficiency collection  system  applicable  to  large
partnerships  (generally  defined as  electing partnerships  with more  than 100
partners) and would make  certain additional changes to  the treatment of  large
partnerships,  such  as the  Partnership. Certain  of  the proposed  changes are
discussed later  in this  section. The  1995 Proposed  Legislation is  generally
intended  to  simplify  the  administration of  the  tax  rules  governing large
partnerships such as the Partnership. In addition, the 1995 Proposed Legislation
contained provisions which would have reduced the maximum tax rate applicable to
the net capital gains of an individual to 19.8%.
 
     On March 19, 1996, President  Clinton introduced tax legislation, known  as
the  Revenue  Reconciliation Act  of  1996, that  would  impact the  taxation of
certain financial products, including partnership interests. One proposal  would
treat  a taxpayer as  having sold an 'appreciated'  partnership interest (one in
which gain would be recognized  if such interest were  sold) if the taxpayer  or
related  persons enters into one  or more positions with  respect to the same or
substantially  identical  property   which,  for   some  period,   substantially
eliminates  both the risk  of loss and  opportunity for gain  on the appreciated
financial position  (including selling  'short against  the box'  transactions).
Certain of these proposed changes are also discussed later in this section under
'Disposition of Common Units.'
 
     President Clinton vetoed the 1995 Proposed Legislation on December 6, 1995.
As  of the date of this Prospectus, it is not possible to predict whether any of
the  changes  set  forth   in  the  1995   Proposed  Legislation,  the   Revenue
Reconciliation  Act of 1996 or any other  changes in the federal income tax laws
that would impact the Partnership and the Unitholders will ultimately be enacted
or, if enacted, what form they will take, what the effective dates will be,  and
what, if any, transition rules will be provided.
 
PARTNERSHIP STATUS
 
     A  partnership is  not a  taxable entity and  incurs no  federal income tax
liability. Instead, each partner is required to take into account his  allocable
share  of  items of  income,  gain, loss  and  deduction of  the  Partnership in
computing  his  federal  income  tax  liability,  regardless  of  whether   cash
distributions  are  made.  Distributions  by  a  partnership  to  a  partner are
generally not taxable unless the amount of any cash distributed is in excess  of
the partner's adjusted basis in his partnership interest.
 
     No  ruling has been or will be sought from  the IRS as to the status of the
Partnership or the Operating Partnership as a partnership for federal income tax
purposes. Instead the  Partnership has relied  on the opinion  of Counsel  that,
based  upon the Code, the regulations  thereunder, published revenue rulings and
court decisions,  the Partnership  and the  Operating Partnership  will each  be
classified as a partnership for federal income tax purposes.
 
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<PAGE>
     In  rendering  its  opinion, Counsel  has  relied  on the  accuracy  of the
following factual  representations  made  by the  Partnership  and  the  General
Partners:
 
          (a) With respect to the Partnership and the Operating Partnership, the
     General  Partners, at  all times  while acting  as general  partners of the
     Partnership and the  Operating Partnership  (since the IPO),  have had  and
     will  have a  combined net  worth, computed on  a fair  market value basis,
     excluding interests in the Partnership and in the Operating Partnership and
     any amounts  due from  the  Partnership or  the Operating  Partnership  and
     deferred taxes, of not less than $15 million;
 
          (b)  The Partnership has been and  will be operated in accordance with
     (i) all applicable  partnership statutes, (ii)  the Partnership  Agreement,
     and (iii) this Prospectus;
 
          (c)  The  Operating  Partnership  has been  and  will  be  operated in
     accordance with (i) all applicable  partnership statutes, (ii) the  limited
     partnership   agreement  for  the  Operating  Partnership,  and  (iii)  the
     description thereof in this Prospectus;
 
          (d)  The  General  Partners   have  and  will,   at  all  times,   act
     independently  of  the limited  partners  (other than  any  limited partner
     interest held by the General Partners); and
 
          (e) For each taxable  year of the  Partnership's existence, more  than
     90%  of the gross  income of the  Partnership has been  and will be derived
     from (i) marketing of propane, (ii)  interest (from other than a  financial
     business)  and dividends,  and (iii)  other items  of income  which, in the
     opinion of Counsel,  constitute 'qualifying income'  within the meaning  of
     Section 7704(d) of the Code.
 
     Counsel's  opinion as to the  partnership classification of the Partnership
in the event of  a change in  the general partner is  based upon the  assumption
that the new general partner will satisfy the foregoing representations.
 
     Section  7704 of the Code  provides that publicly-traded partnerships will,
as a  general  rule,  be  taxed as  corporations.  However,  an  exception  (the
'Qualifying   Income   Exception')  exists   with  respect   to  publicly-traded
partnerships of which 90%  or more of  the gross income  for every taxable  year
consists  of  'qualifying income.'  Counsel is  of  the opinion  that qualifying
income includes interest from  the Partnership Loan to  Triarc, interest on  the
Partnership's  customer account balances  and other interest  (from other than a
financial  business),  dividends   (including  dividends   from  the   corporate
subsidiary  of  the  Operating  Partnership)  and  income  and  gains  from  the
transportation and marketing of  crude oil, natural  gas, and products  thereof,
including  the retail and wholesale marketing  of propane and the transportation
of propane  and natural  gas liquids.  The Managing  General Partner,  based  on
advice  of  Counsel, estimates,  that at  least 90%  of the  Partnership's gross
income will constitute  qualifying income. The  Partnership estimates, based  on
advice  of Counsel, that less  than 6% of its gross  income for its taxable year
ending December 31, 1996 did  not constitute qualifying income. The  Partnership
further  estimates that  less than  6% of its  gross income  for each subsequent
taxable year will not constitute qualifying income.
 
     If the Partnership  fails to  meet the Qualifying  Income Exception  (other
than  a failure which  is determined by the  IRS to be  inadvertent and which is
cured within a reasonable time after discovery), the Partnership will be treated
as if it had transferred all of  its assets (subject to liabilities) to a  newly
formed  corporation (on the first day of the  year in which it fails to meet the
Qualifying Income Exception) in return for  stock in that corporation, and  then
distributed  that stock to the partners in liquidation of their interests in the
Partnership. This contribution and liquidation should be tax-free to Unitholders
and the Partnership, so  long as the  Partnership, at that  time, does not  have
liabilities  in excess of  the basis of its  assets. Thereafter, the Partnership
would be treated as a corporation for federal income tax purposes.
 
     If the  Partnership  or  the  Operating  Partnership  were  treated  as  an
association  taxable as a corporation in any taxable year, either as a result of
a failure to  meet the Qualifying  Income Exception or  otherwise, its items  of
income,  gain, loss  and deduction  would be  reflected only  on its  tax return
rather than being passed through to the Unitholders, and its net income would be
taxed to the  Partnership or the  Operating Partnership at  corporate rates.  In
addition,  any  distribution made  to a  Unitholder would  be treated  as either
taxable  dividend  income  (to  the  extent  of  the  Partnership's  current  or
accumulated  earnings and profits) or (in the absence of earnings and profits or
to the  extent any  distribution exceeds  current and  accumulated earnings  and
profits) a nontaxable return of capital
 
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<PAGE>
(to  the extent of  the Unitholder's tax  basis in his  Common Units) or taxable
capital gain (after the Unitholder's tax basis in the Common Units is reduced to
zero). Accordingly,  treatment  of  either  the  Partnership  or  the  Operating
Partnership  as  an  association taxable  as  a  corporation would  result  in a
material reduction in  a Unitholder's cash  flow and after-tax  return and  thus
would likely result in a substantial reduction of the value of the Units.
 
     The  discussion below is based on  the assumption that the Partnership will
be classified as a partnership for federal income tax purposes.
 
LIMITED PARTNER STATUS
 
     Unitholders who have  become limited  partners of the  Partnership will  be
treated  as  partners  of  the  Partnership  for  federal  income  tax purposes.
Moreover, the IRS has ruled that assignees of partnership interests who have not
been admitted  to  a partnership  as  partners, but  who  have the  capacity  to
exercise   substantial  dominion  and  control  over  the  assigned  partnership
interests, will be treated as partners  for federal income tax purposes. On  the
basis  of this ruling, except  as otherwise described herein,  Counsel is of the
opinion  that  (a)   assignees  who   have  executed   and  delivered   Transfer
Applications,   and  are  awaiting  admission   as  limited  partners,  and  (b)
Unitholders whose Common Units are held in  street name or by a nominee and  who
have  the right to direct the nominee  in the exercise of all substantive rights
attendant to the ownership of their Common Units will be treated as partners  of
the Partnership for federal income tax purposes. As this ruling does not extend,
on  its facts,  to assignees  of Common  Units who  are entitled  to execute and
deliver Transfer Applications and thereby become entitled to direct the exercise
of attendant rights, but who fail to execute and deliver Transfer  Applications,
Counsel's  opinion does not extend to these persons. Income, gain, deductions or
losses would not appear to  be reportable by a Unitholder  who is not a  partner
for  federal income tax purposes, and any  cash distributions received by such a
Unitholder would therefore be  fully taxable as  ordinary income. These  holders
should  consult their own tax advisors with  respect to their status as partners
in the  Partnership  for federal  income  tax  purposes. A  purchaser  or  other
transferee  of  Common  Units  who  does  not  execute  and  deliver  a Transfer
Application may not receive  certain federal income  tax information or  reports
furnished  to record holders of Common Units unless the Common Units are held in
a nominee or  street name account  and the  nominee or broker  has executed  and
delivered a Transfer Application with respect to such Common Units.
 
     A beneficial owner of Common Units whose Common Units have been transferred
to  a short seller to complete a short sale would appear to lose his status as a
partner with respect to such Common  Units for federal income tax purposes.  See
' -- Tax Treatment of Operations -- Treatment of Short Sales.'
 
TAX CONSEQUENCES OF UNIT OWNERSHIP
 
FLOW-THROUGH OF TAXABLE INCOME
 
     No  federal  income tax  will  be paid  by  the Partnership.  Instead, each
Unitholder will be  required to report  on his income  tax return his  allocable
share  of the  income, gains, losses  and deductions of  the Partnership without
regard  to  whether  corresponding  cash  distributions  are  received  by  such
Unitholder.  Consequently,  a  Unitholder  may  be  allocated  income  from  the
Partnership even if  he has not  received a cash  distribution. Each  Unitholder
will be required to include in income his allocable share of Partnership income,
gain,  loss and deduction for the taxable year of the Partnership ending with or
within the taxable year of the Unitholder.
 
TREATMENT OF PARTNERSHIP DISTRIBUTIONS
 
     Distributions by  the Partnership  to a  Unitholder generally  will not  be
taxable  to the Unitholder for federal income  tax purposes to the extent of his
basis  in  his   Common  Units   immediately  before   the  distribution.   Cash
distributions  in excess of a Unitholder's basis generally will be considered to
be gain from the  sale or exchange  of the Common  Units, taxable in  accordance
with  the rules  described under  ' -- Disposition  of Common  Units' below. Any
reduction in a Unitholder's share of the Partnership's liabilities for which  no
partner,  including  the  General  Partners, bears  the  economic  risk  of loss
 
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<PAGE>
('nonrecourse liabilities') will be  treated as a distribution  of cash to  that
Unitholder.  To the extent  that Partnership distributions  cause a Unitholder's
'at risk' amount to be less  than zero at the end  of any taxable year, he  must
recapture  any  losses  deducted in  previous  years.  See '  --  Limitations on
Deductibility of Partnership Losses.'
 
     A decrease in a Unitholder's Percentage Interest in the Partnership because
of the issuance by the Partnership of additional Common Units will decrease such
Unitholder's share of nonrecourse liabilities of the Partnership, and thus  will
result   in  a  corresponding  deemed  distribution  of  cash.  A  non-pro  rata
distribution of money or property may result in ordinary income to a Unitholder,
regardless of his basis  in his Common Units,  if such distribution reduces  the
Unitholder's  share  of  the Partnership's  'unrealized  receivables' (including
depreciation recapture) and/or substantially appreciated 'inventory items' (both
as defined in Section 751 of the Code) (collectively, 'Section 751 Assets').  To
that  extent,  the Unitholder  will be  treated as  having been  distributed his
proportionate share of the Section 751  Assets and having exchanged such  assets
with  the  Partnership in  return for  the  non-pro rata  portion of  the actual
distribution made to him. This latter  deemed exchange will generally result  in
the  Unitholder's realization  of ordinary  income under  Section 751(b)  of the
Code. Such income will equal the excess of (1) the non-pro rata portion of  such
distribution  over (2) the Unitholder's basis for  the share of such Section 751
Assets deemed relinquished in the exchange.
 
BASIS OF COMMON UNITS
 
     A Unitholder's initial tax basis for his Common Units will be the amount he
paid for  the Common  Units  plus his  share  of the  Partnership's  nonrecourse
liabilities. That basis will be increased by his share of Partnership income and
by any increases in his share of Partnership nonrecourse liabilities. That basis
will be decreased (but not below zero) by distributions from the Partnership, by
the  Unitholder's share of Partnership  losses, by any decrease  in his share of
Partnership nonrecourse  liabilities and  by his  share of  expenditures of  the
Partnership  that are not deductible in computing its taxable income and are not
required to be capitalized. A limited partner will have no share of  Partnership
debt  which is recourse to a partner, but  will have a share, generally based on
his share of profits, of Partnership debt which is not recourse to any  partner.
The Partnership does not anticipate having nonrecourse liabilities, however. See
' -- Disposition of Common Units -- Recognition of Gain or Loss.'
 
LIMITATIONS ON DEDUCTIBILITY OF PARTNERSHIP LOSSES
 
     The  deduction by a Unitholder  of his share of  Partnership losses will be
limited to  the tax  basis  in his  Units  and, in  the  case of  an  individual
Unitholder or a corporate Unitholder (if more than 50% in the value of its stock
is  owned  directly  or  indirectly  by five  or  fewer  individuals  or certain
tax-exempt organizations), to the amount  which the Unitholder is considered  to
be  'at risk' with respect to the Partnership's activities, if that is less than
the Unitholder's basis. A Unitholder must recapture losses deducted in  previous
years  to the  extent that Partnership  distributions cause  the Unitholder's at
risk amount  to be  less  than zero  at  the end  of  any taxable  year.  Losses
disallowed  to a Unitholder or recaptured as  a result of these limitations will
carry forward and will be allowable to the extent that the Unitholder's basis or
at risk amount  (whichever is  the limiting factor)  is subsequently  increased.
Upon  the taxable disposition of a Unit, any gain recognized by a Unitholder can
be offset by losses that were previously suspended by the at risk limitation but
may not be offset by losses suspended  by the basis limitation. Any excess  loss
(above such gain) previously suspended by the at risk or basis limitations is no
longer utilizable.
 
     In  general, a Unitholder will be at risk to the extent of the tax basis of
his Units, excluding  any portion  of that basis  attributable to  his share  of
Partnership  nonrecourse  liabilities,  reduced  by  any  amount  of  money  the
Unitholder borrows to acquire or hold his  Units if the lender of such  borrowed
funds  owns an interest in  the Partnership, is related to  such a person or can
look only to Units for repayment. A Unitholder's at risk amount will increase or
decrease as the basis  of the Unitholder's Units  increases or decreases  (other
than  basic increases or decreases attributable to increases or decreases in his
share of Partnership nonrecourse liabilities).
 
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<PAGE>
     The passive loss limitations  generally provide that individuals,  estates,
trusts  and certain closely-held corporations  and personal service corporations
can deduct losses from  passive activities (generally,  activities in which  the
taxpayer  does not materially participate) only  to the extent of the taxpayer's
income from those passive activities.  The passive loss limitations are  applied
separately  with respect to each  publicly-traded partnership. Consequently, any
passive losses generated  by the Partnership  will only be  available to  offset
future  income generated by the Partnership and  will not be available to offset
income  from   other  passive   activities  or   investments  (including   other
publicly-traded  partnerships)  or  salary or  active  business  income. Passive
losses which  are  not deductible  because  they exceed  a  Unitholder's  income
generated  by the Partnership  may be deducted  in full when  he disposes of his
entire investment  in the  Partnership  in a  fully  taxable transaction  to  an
unrelated  party.  The  passive  activity loss  rules  are  applied  after other
applicable limitations on  deductions such as  the at risk  rules and the  basis
limitation.
 
     A  Unitholder's share of net  income from the Partnership  may be offset by
any suspended passive losses from the Partnership,  but it may not be offset  by
any  other current or carryover losses  from other passive activities, including
those attributable to other publicly-traded partnerships. The IRS has  announced
that  Treasury Regulations will be issued  which characterize net passive income
from a  publicly-traded Partnership  as investment  income for  purposes of  the
limitations on the deductibility of investment interest.
 
LIMITATIONS ON INTEREST DEDUCTIONS
 
     The  deductibility  of  a  non-corporate  taxpayer's  'investment  interest
expense' is generally limited to the  amount of such taxpayer's 'net  investment
income.'  As noted, a Unitholder's net  passive income from the Partnership will
be treated as investment income for this purpose. In addition, the  Unitholder's
share  of  the  Partnership's portfolio  income  will be  treated  as investment
income. Investment  interest  expense  includes  (i)  interest  on  indebtedness
properly  allocable  to property  held  for investment,  (ii)  the Partnership's
interest expense  attributed  to portfolio  income,  and (iii)  the  portion  of
interest expense incurred to purchase or carry an interest in a passive activity
to   the  extent  attributable  to  portfolio   income.  The  computation  of  a
Unitholder's investment interest expense will take into account interest on  any
margin  account borrowing or other loan incurred  to purchase or own a Unit. Net
investment income includes gross  income from property  held for investment  and
amounts  treated as  portfolio income  pursuant to  the passive  loss rules less
deductible expenses (other than interest) directly connected with the production
of investment income, but generally does  not include gains attributable to  the
disposition of property held for investment.
 
ALLOCATION OF PARTNERSHIP INCOME, GAIN, LOSS AND DEDUCTION
 
     In  general, if the  Partnership has a  net profit, items  of income, gain,
loss and  deduction  will  be  allocated among  the  General  Partners  and  the
Unitholders  in  accordance with  their respective  percentage interests  in the
Partnership. With respect to any taxable  year, a class of Unitholders (such  as
Common  Units) that receives more cash  than another class (such as Subordinated
Units), on a per Unit basis, will  be allocated additional income equal to  that
excess.  If the  Partnership has  a net  loss, items  of income,  gain, loss and
deduction will generally be  allocated, first, to the  General Partners and  the
Unitholders  in  accordance with  their respective  Percentage Interests  to the
extent of their positive capital  accounts (as maintained under the  Partnership
Agreement), and, second, to the General Partners.
 
     Certain  items  of Partnership  income, deduction,  gain  and loss  will be
allocated to account for  the difference between the  tax basis and fair  market
value  of certain property held by the Partnership ('Contributed Property'). The
effect of these allocations to a Unitholder  will be essentially the same as  if
the tax basis of the Contributed Property were equal to its fair market value at
the time of contribution. In addition, certain items of recapture income will be
allocated  to the extent possible to  the partner allocated the deduction giving
rise to the treatment of such gain as recapture income in order to minimize  the
recognition  of ordinary income  by some Unitholders,  but these allocations may
not be respected. If  these allocations of recapture  income are not  respected,
the  amount of the income or gain allocated  to a Unitholder will not change but
instead a change in the character of the income
 
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<PAGE>
allocated to a Unitholder would  result. Finally, although the Partnership  does
not  expect that its operations will result  in the creation of negative capital
accounts, if negative capital accounts nevertheless result, items of Partnership
income and  gain  will  be allocated  in  an  amount and  manner  sufficient  to
eliminate the negative balance as quickly as possible.
 
     Regulations  provide  that an  allocation of  items of  partnership income,
gain, loss or deduction,  other than an allocation  to eliminate the  difference
between  a partner's 'book' capital account (credited with the fair market value
of Contributed Property) and 'tax' capital account (credited with the tax  basis
of  Contributed Property)  (the 'Book-Tax  Disparity'), will  generally be given
effect for federal income tax  purposes in determining a partner's  distributive
share  of an item of income, gain, loss  or deduction only if the allocation has
substantial economic effect. In any  other case, a partner's distributive  share
of  an item  will be determined  on the basis  of the partner's  interest in the
partnership, which will be determined by  taking into account all the facts  and
circumstances,   including   the   partner's  relative   contributions   to  the
partnership, the interests of the partners  in economic profits and losses,  the
interest of the partners in cash flow and other nonliquidating distributions and
rights  of the partners to distributions of capital upon liquidation. Counsel is
of the opinion that,  with the exception of  the allocation of recapture  income
discussed  above,  allocations under  the  Partnership Agreement  will  be given
effect for federal income tax  purposes in determining a partner's  distributive
share  of  an item  of  income, gain,  loss  or deduction.  There  are, however,
uncertainties in the Treasury Regulations relating to allocations of Partnership
income, and investors should be aware  that the allocations of recapture  income
in the Partnership Agreement may be successfully challenged by the IRS.
 
TAX TREATMENT OF OPERATIONS
 
ACCOUNTING METHOD AND TAXABLE YEAR
 
     The Partnership uses the fiscal year ending December 31 as its taxable year
and  has  adopted  the  accrual  method of  accounting  for  federal  income tax
purposes. Each Unitholder will  be required to include  in income his  allocable
share of Partnership income, gain, loss and deduction for the fiscal year of the
Partnership  ending  within  or with  the  taxable  year of  the  Unitholder. In
addition, a  Unitholder who  has a  taxable year  ending on  a date  other  than
December  31 and  who disposes of  all of his  Units following the  close of the
Partnership's taxable year but before the close of his taxable year must include
his allocable share of  Partnership income, gain, loss  and deduction in  income
for  his taxable  year with  the result that  he will  be required  to report in
income for his  taxable year his  distributive share  of more than  one year  of
Partnership  income, gain,  loss and deduction.  See ' --  Disposition of Common
Units -- Allocations Between Transferors and Transferees.'
 
INITIAL TAX BASIS, DEPRECIATION AND AMORTIZATION
 
     The tax basis of the assets of the Partnership will be used for purposes of
computing depreciation and  cost recovery  deductions and,  ultimately, gain  or
loss  on the disposition  of such assets. The  Partnership assets will initially
have an aggregate tax basis equal to the tax basis of the assets in the hands of
the  Managing  General  Partner  immediately  prior  to  the  formation  of  the
Partnership  plus the amount of gain  recognized by the Managing General Partner
as a result of the formation of  the Partnership. The federal income tax  burden
associated  with  the  difference  between the  fair  market  value  of property
contributed by the Managing General Partners  and the tax basis established  for
such  property will  be borne by  the General  Partners. See '  -- Allocation of
Partnership Income, Gain, Loss and Deduction.'
 
     The Partnership may elect to  use allowable depreciation and cost  recovery
methods  that will  result in the  largest depreciation deductions  in the early
years  of  the  Partnership.  The  Partnership  will  not  be  entitled  to  any
amortization  deductions with respect to goodwill conveyed to the Partnership on
formation, other  than with  respect to  goodwill that  was amortizable  by  the
General   Partners.  Property  subsequently  acquired   or  constructed  by  the
Partnership may be depreciated using accelerated methods permitted by the Code.
 
     If the Partnership disposes of  depreciable property by sale,  foreclosure,
or  otherwise, all  or a  portion of  any gain  (determined by  reference to the
amount of depreciation previously deducted and
 
                                      136
 

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<PAGE>
the nature of the property) may be  subject to the recapture rules and taxed  as
ordinary  income rather  than capital gain.  Similarly, a partner  who has taken
cost recovery or depreciation deductions with  respect to property owned by  the
Partnership may be required to recapture such deductions as ordinary income upon
a  sale of his interest  in the Partnership. See  ' -- Allocation of Partnership
Income,  Gain,   Loss  and   Deduction'   and  '   --  Disposition   of   Common
Units -- Recognition of Gain or Loss.'
 
     Costs  incurred in  organizing the  Partnership may  be amortized  over any
period selected  by  the Partnership  not  shorter  than 60  months.  The  costs
incurred  in promoting the issuance  of Units must be  capitalized and cannot be
deducted currently, ratably or  upon termination of  the Partnership. There  are
uncertainties  regarding the  classification of costs  as organization expenses,
which may be amortized, and as syndication expenses, which may not be amortized.
For example, under recently proposed regulations, the Underwriter's spread would
be treated as a syndication cost.
 
SECTION 754 ELECTION
 
     The Partnership will  make the  election permitted  by Section  754 of  the
Code.  That election is irrevocable without the consent of the IRS. The election
will generally permit the Partnership to adjust a Common Unit purchaser's  basis
in  the Partnership's assets ('inside basis')  pursuant to Section 743(b) of the
Code to reflect his purchase price. The Section 743(b) adjustment belongs to the
purchaser and  not  to other  partners.  (For  purposes of  this  discussion,  a
partner's  inside basis in  the Partnership's assets will  be considered to have
two components: (1) his share of the Partnership's basis in such assets ('Common
Basis') and (2) his Section 743(b) adjustment to that basis.)
 
     Proposed Treasury  Regulation  Section 1.168-2(n)  generally  requires  the
Section 743(b) adjustment attributable to recovery property to be depreciated as
if  the  total amount  of such  adjustment  were attributable  to newly-acquired
recovery property  placed  in service  when  the purchaser  acquires  the  Unit.
Similarly,  the legislative  history of Section  197 indicates  that the Section
743(b) adjustment attributable to an amortizable Section 197 intangible (such as
goodwill) should be treated as a  newly-acquired asset placed in service in  the
month  when the purchaser  acquires the Unit.  Under Treasury Regulation Section
1.167(c)-1(a)(6), a Section 743(b)  adjustment attributable to property  subject
to  depreciation  under  Section  167  of the  Code  rather  than  cost recovery
deductions under  Section 168  is  generally required  to be  depreciated  using
either  the  straight-line  method or  the  150% declining  balance  method. The
depreciation and  amortization  methods and  useful  lives associated  with  the
Section  743(b) adjustment,  therefore, may differ  from the  methods and useful
lives generally used to depreciate the Common Basis in such properties. Pursuant
to  the  Partnership  Agreement,  the  Partnership  is  authorized  to  adopt  a
convention  to preserve the uniformity  of Units even if  such convention is not
consistent with Treasury Regulation Section 1.167(c)-1(a)(6), Proposed  Treasury
Regulation  Section 1.168-2(n) or the legislative  history of Section 197 of the
Code. See ' -- Uniformity of Units.'
 
     Although Counsel is unable to opine as to the validity of such an approach,
the Partnership intends to depreciate the portion of a Section 743(b) adjustment
attributable to unrealized  appreciation in  the value  of Contributed  Property
including goodwill (to the extent of any unamortized Book-Tax Disparity) using a
rate   of  depreciation  or  amortization   derived  from  the  depreciation  or
amortization method  and  useful  life  applied to  the  Common  Basis  of  such
property,  despite its  inconsistency with Proposed  Treasury Regulation Section
1.168-2(n), Treasury Regulation  Section 1.167(c)-l(a)(6) (neither  of which  is
expected to directly apply to a material portion of the Partnership's assets) or
the  legislative history of Section 197 of  the Code. To the extent such Section
743(b) adjustment is attributable to  appreciation in excess of the  unamortized
book-tax  disparity,  the  Partnership will  apply  the rules  described  in the
Regulations and legislative history. As a consequence, it is not expected that a
subsequent holder will  be entitled to  any significant amortization  deductions
with  respect  to goodwill.  If the  Partnership  determines that  such position
cannot reasonably  be  taken,  the  Partnership  may  adopt  a  depreciation  or
amortization  convention under which all purchasers  acquiring Units in the same
month would receive depreciation or amortization, whether attributable to Common
Basis or Section 743(b)  adjustment, based upon the  same applicable rate as  if
they  had  purchased a  direct  interest in  the  Partnership's assets.  Such an
aggregate approach  may  result in  lower  annual depreciation  or  amortization
deductions  than  would  otherwise  be  allowable  to  certain  Unitholders. See
' -- Uniformity of Units.'
 
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<PAGE>
     The allocation of the Section 743(b) adjustment must be made in  accordance
with  the Code. The IRS may seek to reallocate some or all of any Section 743(b)
adjustment not  so  allocated by  the  Partnership  to goodwill,  which,  as  an
intangible  asset, would be  amortizable over a  longer period of  time than the
Partnership's tangible assets.
 
     A Section 754  election is advantageous  if the transferee's  basis in  his
Units is higher than such Units' share of the aggregate basis to the Partnership
of  the Partnership's assets immediately prior to  the transfer. In such a case,
as a result of  the election, the  transferee would have a  higher basis in  his
share  of  the Partnership's  assets for  purposes  of calculating,  among other
items, his depreciation and  depletion deductions and his  share of any gain  or
loss  on a sale of the Partnership's  assets. Conversely, a Section 754 election
is disadvantageous if the  transferee's basis in such  Units is lower than  such
Unit's  share of  the aggregate  basis of  the Partnership's  assets immediately
prior to the transfer. Thus, the fair market value of the Units may be  affected
either favorably or adversely by the election.
 
     The  calculations involved in the Section 754 election are complex and will
be made by the Partnership on the  basis of certain assumptions as to the  value
of  Partnership  assets  and  other  matters. There  is  no  assurance  that the
determinations made by the  Partnership will not  be successfully challenged  by
the  IRS and  that the  deductions resulting  from them  will not  be reduced or
disallowed altogether. Should the IRS require a different basis adjustment to be
made, and should, in the Partnership's opinion, the expense of compliance exceed
the benefit of the election, the Partnership may seek permission from the IRS to
revoke the  Section 754  election for  the Partnership.  If such  permission  is
granted,  a subsequent purchaser of  Units may be allocated  more income than he
would have been allocated had the election not been revoked.
 
ALTERNATIVE MINIMUM TAX
 
     Each Unitholder  will be  required to  take into  account his  distributive
share  of any items of Partnership income, gain, deduction, or loss for purposes
of the alternative minimum tax.
 
     A  Unitholder's  alternative  minimum  taxable  income  derived  from   the
Partnership  may be higher than his share  of Partnership net income because the
Partnership  may  use  accelerated  methods  of  depreciation  for  purposes  of
computing  federal taxable income or loss. The minimum tax rate for noncorporate
taxpayers is 26% on the first $175,000 of alternative minimum taxable income  in
excess  of the  exemption amount and  28% on any  additional alternative minimum
taxable income. Prospective Unitholders should  consult with their tax  advisors
as  to  the  impact  of  an  investment in  Units  on  their  liability  for the
alternative minimum tax.
 
VALUATION OF PARTNERSHIP PROPERTY AND BASIS OF PROPERTIES
 
     The federal income  tax consequences  of the ownership  and disposition  of
Units  will depend in part on estimates  by the Partnership of the relative fair
market values, and determinations of the initial tax basis, of the assets of the
Partnership. Although  the  Partnership  may  from time  to  time  consult  with
professional  appraisers with respect to valuation matters, many of the relative
fair market value estimates will be made by the Partnership. These estimates and
determinations of basis are subject to challenge and will not be binding on  the
IRS  or the courts. If  the estimates of fair  market value or determinations of
basis are subsequently found to be incorrect, the character and amount of  items
of  income, gain,  loss or deductions  previously reported  by Unitholders might
change, and Unitholders  might be  required to  adjust their  tax liability  for
prior years.
 
TREATMENT OF SHORT SALES
 
     A  Unitholder whose Units are  loaned to a 'short  seller' to cover a short
sale of Units may be considered as having disposed of ownership of those  Units.
If  so, he would no longer  be a partner with respect  to those Units during the
period of the loan  and may recognize  gain or loss from  the disposition. As  a
result, during this period, any Partnership income, gain, deduction or loss with
respect  to those  Units would  not be  reportable by  the Unitholder,  any cash
distributions received by the  Unitholder with respect to  those Units would  be
fully  taxable  and all  of such  distributions  would appear  to be  treated as
ordinary income. Unitholders  desiring to  assure their status  as partners  and
avoid the risk of gain
 
                                      138
 

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<PAGE>
recognition  should  modify  any  applicable  brokerage  account  agreements  to
prohibit their brokers from borrowing their Units. The IRS has announced that it
is actively studying  issues relating  to the tax  treatment of  short sales  of
partnership  interests. (See '  -- Tax Rates  and Changes in  Federal Income Tax
Laws').
 
DISPOSITION OF COMMON UNITS
 
RECOGNITION OF GAIN OR LOSS
 
     Gain or loss will be recognized on a sale of Units equal to the  difference
between the amount realized and the Unitholder's tax basis for the Units sold. A
Unitholder's amount realized will be measured by the sum of the cash or the fair
market   value  of  other  property  received  plus  his  share  of  Partnership
nonrecourse liabilities.  Because the  amount realized  includes a  Unitholder's
share of Partnership nonrecourse liabilities, the gain recognized on the sale of
Units  could result in a tax liability in  excess of any cash received from such
sale.
 
     Prior Partnership distributions in excess of cumulative net taxable  income
in  respect of a  Common Unit which  decreased a Unitholder's  tax basis in such
Common Unit will, in effect, become taxable income if the Common Unit is sold at
or above original  cost (and  may partially become  taxable income  even if  the
Common Unit is sold below original cost).
 
     Gain or loss recognized by a Unitholder (other than a 'dealer' in Units) on
the  sale or exchange  of a Unit held  for more than one  year will generally be
taxable as long-term capital gain or loss. A portion of this gain or loss (which
could be  substantial),  however,  will  be separately  computed  and  taxed  as
ordinary income or loss under Section 751 of the Code to the extent attributable
to   assets  giving  rise   to  depreciation  recapture   or  other  'unrealized
receivables'  or  to   'substantially  appreciated  inventory'   owned  by   the
Partnership.  The  term  'unrealized receivables'  includes  potential recapture
items,  including  depreciation  recapture.   Inventory  is  considered  to   be
'substantially  appreciated' if its value exceeds  120% of its adjusted basis to
the  Partnership.  Ordinary  income  attributable  to  unrealized   receivables,
substantially  appreciated inventory  and depreciation recapture  may exceed net
taxable gain realized upon the  sale of the Unit and  may be recognized even  if
there is a net taxable loss realized on the sale of the Unit. Thus, a Unitholder
may  recognize both  ordinary income  and a capital  loss upon  a disposition of
Units. Net capital loss may offset no more than $3,000 of ordinary income in the
case of individuals and may only be used  to offset capital gain in the case  of
corporations.
 
     The IRS has ruled that a partner who acquires interests in a Partnership in
separate  transactions  must  combine  those  interests  and  maintain  a single
adjusted tax basis. Upon a  sale or other disposition of  less than all of  such
interests,  a portion of that tax basis  must be allocated to the interests sold
using an 'equitable apportionment' method. The  ruling is unclear as to how  the
holding  period of these interests is determined once they are combined. If this
ruling is applicable to the holders of Common Units, a Common Unitholder will be
unable to select high  or low basis Common  Units to sell as  would be the  case
with  corporate  stock.  It is  not  clear  whether the  ruling  applies  to the
Partnership, because, similar to corporate  stock, interests in the  Partnership
are  evidenced by separate certificates. Accordingly  Counsel is unable to opine
as to the effect such  ruling will have on  the Unitholders. In addition,  under
the  financial product provisions of the  Revenue Reconciliation Act of 1996, in
the case  of partnership  interests in  publicly traded  partnerships which  are
substantially  identical, the  basis of  such interests  and any  adjustments to
basis, would be determined on an average basis, and a taxpayer would be  treated
as  selling  such  interests  on  a  first-in,  first-out  basis.  A  Unitholder
considering the purchase of  additional Common Units or  a sale of Common  Units
purchased  in separate  transactions should  consult his  tax advisor  as to the
possible consequences of such ruling and subsequent legislation.
 
ALLOCATIONS BETWEEN TRANSFERORS AND TRANSFEREES
 
     In general, the Partnership's taxable income and losses will be  determined
annually, will be prorated on a monthly basis and subsequently apportioned among
the Unitholders in proportion to the number of Units owned by each of them as of
the  opening of the NYSE on the first business day of the month (the 'Allocation
Date'). However,  gain  or loss  realized  on a  sale  or other  disposition  of
Partnership  assets  other  than in  the  ordinary  course of  business  will be
allocated among the Unitholders
 
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<PAGE>
on the Allocation Date in the month in which that gain or loss is recognized. As
a result,  a Unitholder  transferring Common  Units in  the open  market may  be
allocated income, gain, loss and deduction accrued after the date of transfer.
 
     The  use  of  this method  may  not  be permitted  under  existing Treasury
Regulations. Accordingly, Counsel  is unable to  opine on the  validity of  this
method  of  allocating income  and deductions  between  the transferors  and the
transferees of  Units.  If  this  method  is  not  allowed  under  the  Treasury
Regulations  (or only applies to transfers of  less than all of the Unitholder's
interest), taxable  income or  losses of  the Partnership  might be  reallocated
among  the Unitholders.  The Partnership is  authorized to revise  its method of
allocation between transferors and transferees (as well as among partners  whose
interests  otherwise  vary  during a  taxable  period)  to conform  to  a method
permitted under future Treasury Regulations.
 
     A Unitholder who owns Units at any  time during a quarter and who  disposes
of  such Units prior to the record date set for a cash distribution with respect
to such quarter will  be allocated items of  Partnership income, gain, loss  and
deductions attributable to such quarter but will not be entitled to receive that
cash distribution.
 
NOTIFICATION REQUIREMENTS
 
     A  Unitholder  who  sells or  exchanges  Units  is required  to  notify the
Partnership in writing of that sale or exchange within 30 days after the sale or
exchange and in any event by no later than January 15 of the year following  the
calendar  year  in  which the  sale  or  exchange occurred.  The  Partnership is
required  to  notify  the  IRS  of  that  transaction  and  to  furnish  certain
information   to  the  transferor  and   transferee.  However,  these  reporting
requirements do not  apply with  respect to  a sale by  an individual  who is  a
citizen  of the  United States and  who effects  the sale or  exchange through a
broker. Additionally, a transferor and a  transferee of a Unit will be  required
to  furnish statements to the  IRS, filed with their  income tax returns for the
taxable year in which the sale or  exchange occurred, that set forth the  amount
of  the consideration  received for  the Unit that  is allocated  to goodwill or
going concern  value of  the  Partnership. Failure  to satisfy  these  reporting
obligations may lead to the imposition of substantial penalties.
 
CONSTRUCTIVE TERMINATION
 
     The  Partnership and the  Operating Partnership will  be considered to have
been terminated if  there is  a sale or  exchange of  50% or more  of the  total
interests  in  Partnership  capital  and profits  within  a  12-month  period. A
termination results  in the  closing of  a Partnership's  taxable year  for  all
partners and the Partnership's assets are regarded as having been distributed to
the  partners and reconveyed to the Partnership,  which is then treated as a new
partnership. A termination of  the Partnership will cause  a termination of  the
Operating  Partnership and any Subsidiary  Partnership. Such a termination could
also result in penalties or loss of  basis adjustments under Section 754 of  the
Code  if  the Partnership  were  unable to  determine  that the  termination had
occurred.  (Under  the  1995  Proposed  Legislation,  termination  of  a   large
partnership,  such as the Partnership  would not occur by  reason of the sale or
exchange of interests in the partnership.)
 
     In the case of a Unitholder reporting on a taxable year other than a fiscal
year ending December  31, the closing  of the  tax year of  the Partnership  may
result  in more than 12 months' taxable  income or loss of the Partnership being
includable in his taxable income for the year of termination. In addition,  each
Unitholder  will realize taxable gain  to the extent that  any money deemed as a
result of the termination to have  been distributed to him exceeds the  adjusted
basis  of his Units. New  tax elections required to  be made by the Partnership,
including a new election under Section 754 of the Code, must be made  subsequent
to  a constructive termination. A termination could also result in a deferral of
Partnership deductions  for depreciation.  Finally, a  termination might  either
accelerate  the application of or subject the Partnership to any tax legislation
enacted prior to the termination.
 
                                      140
 

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<PAGE>
ENTITY-LEVEL COLLECTIONS
 
     If the Partnership is  required or elects under  applicable law to pay  any
federal,  state or local income  tax on behalf of  any Unitholder or any General
Partners or any former  Unitholder, the Partnership is  authorized to pay  those
taxes  from  Partnership funds.  Such payment,  if  made, will  be treated  as a
distribution of cash to the partner on whose behalf the payment was made. If the
payment is made on behalf of a  person whose identity cannot be determined,  the
Partnership  is authorized  to treat  the payment  as a  distribution to current
Unitholders. Alternatively, the Partnership may elect to treat an amount paid on
behalf of  the  General  Partners  and Unitholders  as  an  expenditure  of  the
Partnership  if  the  amount paid  on  behalf  of the  General  Partners  is not
substantially greater  than 4%  of the  total amount  paid. The  Partnership  is
authorized  to  amend  the  Partnership Agreement  in  the  manner  necessary to
maintain uniformity  of intrinsic  tax characteristics  of Units  and to  adjust
subsequent distributions, so that after giving effect to such distributions, the
priority  and characterization  of distributions otherwise  applicable under the
Partnership Agreement is maintained as nearly as is practicable. Payments by the
Partnership as  described above  could give  rise to  an overpayment  of tax  on
behalf  of an individual partner  in which event the  partner could file a claim
for credit or refund.
 
UNIFORMITY OF UNITS
 
     Because the Partnership cannot match transferors and transferees of  Units,
uniformity  of the economic and tax characteristics  of the Units to a purchaser
of such Units must be maintained. In the absence of uniformity, compliance  with
a  number of  federal income  tax requirements,  both statutory  and regulatory,
could be  substantially diminished.  A  lack of  uniformity  can result  from  a
literal  application  of  Proposed Treasury  Regulation  Section  1.168-2(n) and
Treasury Regulation  Section  1.167(c)-1(a)(6)  or the  legislative  history  of
Section  197  and  from  the  application of  the  'ceiling  limitation'  on the
Partnership's ability  to make  allocations  to eliminate  book-tax  disparities
attributable  to Contributed Properties  and Partnership property  that has been
revalued and reflected in the partners capital accounts ('Adjusted Properties').
Any non-uniformity could have a negative impact  on the value of the Units.  See
' -- Tax Treatment of Operations -- Section 754 Election.'
 
     The  Partnership  intends to  depreciate the  portion  of a  Section 743(b)
adjustment attributable to unrealized appreciation  in the value of  Contributed
Property  or  Adjusted  Property  (to the  extent  of  any  unamortized Book-Tax
Disparity) using  a  rate  of  depreciation or  amortization  derived  from  the
depreciation  or amortization method and useful life applied to the Common Basis
of such property,  despite its inconsistency  with Proposed Treasury  Regulation
Section  1.168-2(n) and Treasury Regulation Section 1.167(c)-l(a)(6) (neither of
which is expected to directly apply  to a material portion of the  Partnership's
assets)  or the legislative  history of Section  197. See '  -- Tax Treatment of
Operations Section 754 Election.' To  the extent such Section 743(b)  adjustment
is attributable to appreciation in excess of the unamortized Book-Tax Disparity,
the   Partnership  will  apply  the  rules  described  in  the  Regulations  and
legislative history. If the Partnership  determines that such a position  cannot
reasonably  be taken, the Partnership may  adopt a depreciation and amortization
convention under which all  purchasers acquiring Units in  the same month  would
receive depreciation and amortization deductions, whether attributable to common
basis  or Section 743(b) basis,  based upon the same  applicable rate as if they
had purchased  a direct  interest  in the  Partnership's  property. If  such  an
aggregate  approach is adopted,  it may result in  lower annual depreciation and
amortization deductions than would otherwise be allowable to certain Unitholders
and risk the loss of depreciation  and amortization deductions not taken in  the
year  that such deductions are otherwise  allowable. This convention will not be
adopted if  the  Partnership  determines  that  the  loss  of  depreciation  and
amortization  deductions will have a material adverse effect on the Unitholders.
If the Partnership chooses not to utilize this aggregate method, the Partnership
may use  any  other  reasonable  depreciation  and  amortization  convention  to
preserve  the uniformity of the intrinsic  tax characteristics of any Units that
would not  have  a material  adverse  effect on  the  Unitholders. The  IRS  may
challenge  any method of depreciating the Section 743(b) adjustment described in
this paragraph. If  such a  challenge were  sustained, the  uniformity of  Units
might be affected.
 
                                      141
 

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<PAGE>
TAX-EXEMPT ORGANIZATIONS AND CERTAIN OTHER INVESTORS
 
     Ownership   of   Units  by   employee   benefit  plans,   other  tax-exempt
organizations, nonresident aliens, foreign  corporations, other foreign  persons
and  regulated investment companies raises issues unique to such persons and, as
described below, may have substantially adverse tax consequences.
 
     Employee benefit plans  and most  other organizations  exempt from  federal
income tax (including individual retirement accounts and other retirement plans)
are  subject  to  federal  income  tax  on  unrelated  business  taxable income.
Virtually all of  the taxable income  derived by such  an organization from  the
ownership  of a Unit will be unrelated  business taxable income and thus will be
taxable to such a Unitholder.
 
     A regulated investment company or 'mutual  fund' is required to derive  90%
or  more of its  gross income from  interest, dividends, gains  from the sale of
stocks or securities or foreign currency  or certain related sources. It is  not
anticipated  that any significant amount of  the Partnership's gross income will
include that type of income.
 
     Non-resident aliens and foreign corporations, trusts or estates which  hold
Units  will be  considered to  be engaged  in business  in the  United States on
account of ownership of Units.  As a consequence they  will be required to  file
federal  tax returns in respect of their share of Partnership income, gain, loss
or deduction and pay federal  income tax at regular rates  on any net income  or
gain.  Generally, a  Partnership is  required to  pay a  withholding tax  on the
portion of  the Partnership's  income which  is effectively  connected with  the
conduct  of a  United States  trade or  business and  which is  allocable to the
foreign partners, regardless of whether any actual distributions have been  made
to   such  partners.   However,  under   rules  applicable   to  publicly-traded
partnerships, the Partnership will withhold (currently at the rate of 39.6%)  on
actual  cash distributions made  quarterly to foreign  Unitholders. Each foreign
Unitholder must obtain a taxpayer identification number from the IRS and  submit
that  number to the Transfer Agent of the  Partnership on a Form W-8 in order to
obtain credit for the taxes withheld. A change in applicable law may require the
Partnership to change these procedures.
 
     Because a foreign corporation which owns  Units will be treated as  engaged
in  a United  States trade  or business,  such a  corporation may  be subject to
United States  branch profits  tax at  a rate  of 30%,  in addition  to  regular
federal  income tax, on its allocable share of the Partnership's income and gain
(as adjusted for changes in the  foreign corporation's 'U.S. net equity')  which
are effectively connected with the conduct of a United States trade or business.
That tax may be reduced or eliminated by an income tax treaty between the United
States and the country with respect to which the foreign corporate Unitholder is
a  'qualified resident.'  In addition, such  a Unitholder is  subject to special
information reporting requirements under Section 6038C of the Code.
 
     Under a ruling  of the  IRS, a foreign  Unitholder who  sells or  otherwise
disposes of a Unit will be subject to federal income tax on gain realized on the
disposition  of such Unit to the extent  that such gain is effectively connected
with a United States trade or business of the foreign Unitholder. Apart from the
ruling, a foreign Unitholder will not be taxed upon the disposition of a Unit if
that foreign Unitholder has held less than  5% in value of the Units during  the
five-year  period ending  on the date  of the  disposition and if  the Units are
regularly traded  on  an  established  securities market  at  the  time  of  the
disposition.
 
ADMINISTRATIVE MATTERS
 
PARTNERSHIP INFORMATION RETURNS AND AUDIT PROCEDURES
 
     The Partnership intends to furnish to each Unitholder, within 90 days after
the  close of each calendar year,  certain tax information, including a Schedule
K-1, which sets  forth each  Unitholder's allocable share  of the  Partnership's
income,  gain, loss and deduction for the preceding Partnership taxable year. In
preparing this information, which will generally not be reviewed by counsel, the
Partnership will use various accounting and reporting conventions, some of which
have been mentioned in  the previous discussion,  to determine the  Unitholder's
allocable  share of income, gain, loss and deduction. There is no assurance that
any of those conventions will yield a result which conforms to the  requirements
of  the  Code, regulations  or administrative  interpretations  of the  IRS. The
Partnership
 
                                      142
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
cannot assure prospective Unitholders that the IRS will not successfully contend
in court that such accounting  and reporting conventions are impermissible.  Any
such  challenge by the IRS  could negatively affect the  value of the Units. The
federal income tax information returns filed  by the Partnership may be  audited
by  the  IRS.  Adjustments  resulting  from  any  such  audit  may  require each
Unitholder to adjust a prior year's tax liability, and possibly may result in an
audit of the Unitholder's own return.  Any audit of a Unitholder's return  could
result in adjustments of non-Partnership as well as Partnership items.
 
     Partnerships  generally are  treated as  separate entities  for purposes of
federal tax audits, judicial review of administrative adjustments by the IRS and
tax settlement proceedings. The  tax treatment of  partnership items of  income,
gain,  loss and deduction are determined in a partnership proceeding rather than
in separate proceedings with the partners. The Code provides for one partner  to
be  designated as the 'Tax Matters  Partner' for these purposes. The Partnership
Agreement appoints the Managing  General Partner as the  Tax Matters Partner  of
the Partnership.
 
     The  Tax  Matters Partner  will  make certain  elections  on behalf  of the
Partnership and  Unitholders  and can  extend  the statute  of  limitations  for
assessment  of tax deficiencies against  Unitholders with respect to Partnership
items. The Tax Matters Partner may bind a Unitholder with less than a 1% profits
interest in the Partnership to a settlement with the IRS unless that  Unitholder
elects,  by filing a statement  with the IRS, not to  give such authority to the
Tax Matters Partner. The Tax Matters Partner may seek judicial review (by  which
all  the Unitholders are bound) of a final partnership administrative adjustment
and, if the Tax Matters Partner fails  to seek judicial review, such review  may
be  sought by any Unitholder having at least a 1% interest in the profits of the
Partnership and by the Unitholders having in the aggregate at least a 5% profits
interest. However, only one action for judicial review will go forward, and each
Unitholder with an interest in the outcome may participate.
 
     A Unitholder must file a statement  with the IRS identifying the  treatment
of  any item on  his federal income tax  return that is  not consistent with the
treatment of  the item  on the  Partnership's return.  Intentional or  negligent
disregard of the consistency requirement may subject a Unitholder to substantial
penalties.  Under  the 1995  Proposed  Legislation, partners  in  electing large
partnerships would  be required  to  treat all  Partnership  items in  a  manner
consistent with the Partnership return.
 
     Under  the  reporting provisions  of  the 1995  Proposed  Legislation, each
partner of an electing large partnership would take into account separately  his
share  of the following items, determined  at the partnership level: (1) taxable
income or loss from  passive loss limitation activities;  (2) taxable income  or
loss  from other activities (such as portfolio  income or loss); (3) net capital
gains to the extent  allocable to passive loss  limitation activities and  other
activities;  (4)  tax  exempt  interest;  (5)  a  net  alternative  minimum  tax
adjustment separately computed for passive loss limitation activities and  other
activities;   (6)   general  credits;   (7)   low-income  housing   credit;  (8)
rehabilitation credit; (9) foreign income taxes; (10) credit for producing  fuel
from  a  nonconventional  source; and  (11)  any  other items  the  Secretary of
Treasury deems appropriate. The House  version of the 1995 Proposed  Legislation
would  also make a  number of changes  to the tax  compliance and administrative
rules relating to partnerships. One provision would require that each partner in
a large partnership, such as the Partnership, take into account his share of any
adjustments to partnership items  in the year such  adjustments are made.  Under
current  law, adjustments relating  to partnership items  for a previous taxable
year are taken into account by those  persons who were partners in the  previous
taxable  year. Alternatively, under the 1995 Proposed Legislation, a partnership
could elect to or, in some circumstances, could be required to, directly pay the
tax resulting from any such adjustments. In either case, therefore,  Unitholders
could bear significant economic burdens associated with tax adjustments relating
to periods predating their acquisition of Units.
 
     It  cannot  be  predicted  whether  or  in  what  form  the  1995  Proposed
Legislation, or other  tax legislation  that might affect  Unitholders, will  be
enacted.  However,  if  tax  legislation is  enacted  which  includes provisions
similar to those discussed above, a  Unitholder might experience a reduction  in
cash distributions.
 
                                      143
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
NOMINEE REPORTING
 
     Persons  who hold an interest  in the Partnership as  a nominee for another
person are required  to furnish  to the Partnership  (a) the  name, address  and
taxpayer  identification number  of the  beneficial owner  and the  nominee; (b)
whether the beneficial owner is (i) a person that is not a United States person,
(ii) a foreign  government, an  international organization  or any  wholly-owned
agency  or instrumentality  of either  of the  foregoing, or  (iii) a tax-exempt
entity; (c) the amount  and description of Units  held, acquired or  transferred
for  the beneficial  owner; and (d)  certain information including  the dates of
acquisitions and transfers, means of acquisitions and transfers, and acquisition
cost for purchases, as well  as the amount of  net proceeds from sales.  Brokers
and  financial  institutions  are required  to  furnish  additional information,
including whether  they are  United States  persons and  certain information  on
Units they acquire, hold or transfer for their own account. A penalty of $50 per
failure  (up to a maximum of $100,000 per  calendar year) is imposed by the Code
for failure  to report  such  information to  the  Partnership. The  nominee  is
required  to  supply the  beneficial  owner of  the  Units with  the information
furnished to the Partnership.
 
REGISTRATION AS A TAX SHELTER
 
     The Code requires that 'tax shelters'  be registered with the Secretary  of
the  Treasury. The temporary  Treasury Regulations interpreting  the tax shelter
registration provisions of the Code are extremely broad. It is arguable that the
Partnership will not  be subject to  the registration requirement  on the  basis
that  it  will  not constitute  a  tax  shelter. However,  the  Managing General
Partner, as  a  principal  organizer  of the  Partnership,  has  registered  the
Partnership  as a tax shelter with the IRS  in the absence of assurance that the
Partnership will not be subject to tax shelter registration and in light of  the
substantial penalties which might be imposed if registration is required and not
undertaken.  The Partnership has  applied for a  tax shelter registration number
with the IRS.  ISSUANCE OF  THE REGISTRATION NUMBER  DOES NOT  INDICATE THAT  AN
INVESTMENT  IN THE PARTNERSHIP  OR THE CLAIMED TAX  BENEFITS HAVE BEEN REVIEWED,
EXAMINED OR APPROVED BY THE IRS.  The Partnership must furnish the  registration
number  to the Unitholders, and a Unitholder  who sells or otherwise transfers a
Unit in a  subsequent transaction must  furnish the registration  number to  the
transferee.  The penalty for failure of the  transferor of a Unit to furnish the
registration number  to  the transferee  is  $100  for each  such  failure.  The
Unitholders must disclose the tax shelter registration number of the Partnership
on  Form 8271 to be attached  to the tax return on  which any deduction, loss or
other benefit  generated  by  the  Partnership  is  claimed  or  income  of  the
Partnership  is included.  A Unitholder  who fails  to disclose  the tax shelter
registration number on his  return, without reasonable  cause for that  failure,
will  be subject  to a  $250 penalty for  each failure.  Any penalties discussed
herein are not deductible for federal income tax purposes.
 
ACCURACY-RELATED PENALTIES
 
     An additional  tax  equal  to 20%  of  the  amount of  any  portion  of  an
underpayment  of tax  which is  attributable to  one or  more of  certain listed
causes, including negligence or disregard  of rules or regulations,  substantial
understatements  of  income  tax  and  substantial  valuation  misstatements, is
imposed by the Code. No  penalty will be imposed,  however, with respect to  any
portion  of an underpayment if it is shown that there was a reasonable cause for
that portion and  that the taxpayer  acted in  good faith with  respect to  that
portion.
 
     A  substantial understatement of  income tax in any  taxable year exists if
the amount of the understatement exceeds the greater of 10% of the tax  required
to  be shown  on the  return for the  taxable year  or $5,000  ($10,000 for most
corporations). The amount of any understatement subject to penalty generally  is
reduced  if any portion is attributable to  a position adopted on the return (i)
with respect to which there  is, or was, 'substantial  authority' or (ii) as  to
which  there is a reasonable basis and  the pertinent facts of such position are
disclosed on the return. Certain more stringent rules apply to 'tax shelters,' a
term that in this  context does not  appear to include  the Partnership. If  any
Partnership item of income, gain, loss or deduction included in the distributive
shares  of Unitholders  might result in  such an 'understatement'  of income for
which no 'substantial authority' exists, the Partnership intends to disclose the
pertinent facts  on  its  return.  In addition,  the  Partnership  will  make  a
 
                                      144
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
reasonable  effort  to furnish  sufficient information  for Unitholders  to make
adequate disclosure on their returns to avoid liability for this penalty.
 
     A substantial valuation misstatement  exists if the  value of any  property
(or  the adjusted basis of any property) claimed on a tax return is 200% or more
of the amount determined to be the correct amount of such valuation or  adjusted
basis. No penalty is imposed unless the portion of the underpayment attributable
to  a  substantial  valuation  misstatement  exceeds  $5,000  ($10,000  for most
corporations). If the  valuation claimed  on a  return is  400% or  more of  the
correct valuation, the penalty imposed increases to 40%.
 
STATE, LOCAL AND OTHER TAX CONSIDERATIONS
 
     In  addition to federal income taxes,  Unitholders will be subject to other
taxes, such as state and local income taxes, unincorporated business taxes,  and
estate,  inheritance  or intangible  taxes that  may be  imposed by  the various
jurisdictions in which the Partnership does business or owns property,  Although
an  analysis  of those  various taxes  is not  presented here,  each prospective
Unitholder should  consider their  potential  impact on  his investment  in  the
Partnership. The Partnership will initially own property and conduct business in
New  York, Florida, Michigan and 22 other  states. A Unitholder will be required
to file state income tax returns and to pay state income taxes in some or all of
these states and may be  subject to penalties for  failure to comply with  those
requirements.  Based on  1995 revenues,  the Managing  General Partner currently
anticipates that substantially all of the Partnership's income will be generated
in  Arkansas,   Arizona,  Colorado,   Connecticut,  Florida,   Iowa,   Illinois,
Massachusetts,  Michigan, Minnesota,  Missouri, New  Hampshire, New  Mexico, New
York and  Wisconsin.  Each of  the  states, other  than  Florida, in  which  the
Managing General Partner currently anticipates that a substantial portion of the
Partnership's  income will be generated currently imposes a personal income tax.
In certain states, tax losses may not produce a tax benefit in the year incurred
(if, for example, the Partnership has no income from sources within that  state)
and also may not be available to offset income in subsequent taxable years. Some
of  the states  may require  the Partnership, or  the Partnership  may elect, to
withhold a percentage of income from  amounts to be distributed to a  Unitholder
who  is not  a resident of  the state. Withholding,  the amount of  which may be
greater or  less than  a particular  Unitholder's income  tax liability  to  the
state,   generally  does  not  relieve  the  non-resident  Unitholder  from  the
obligation to file an income tax return.  Amounts withheld may be treated as  if
distributed  to Unitholders for purposes  of determining the amounts distributed
by the  Partnership.  See '  --  Disposition  of Common  Units  --  Entity-Level
Collections.'  Based  on  current law  and  its estimate  of  future Partnership
operations, the Partnership anticipates that any amounts required to be withheld
will not be material.
 
     It is the responsibility  of each Unitholder to  investigate the legal  and
tax  consequences, under  the laws  of pertinent  states and  localities, of his
investment in the Partnership.  Accordingly, each prospective Unitholder  should
consult,  and must depend upon, his own tax counsel or other advisor with regard
to those matters. Further, it is  the responsibility of each Unitholder to  file
all  state and local,  as well as federal,  tax returns that  may be required of
such Unitholder. Counsel has not rendered an  opinion on the state or local  tax
consequences of an investment in the Partnership.
 
                                      145



<PAGE>

<PAGE>
            INVESTMENT IN THE PARTNERSHIP BY EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS
 
     An  investment in the Partnership by an employee benefit plan is subject to
certain additional  considerations because  the investments  of such  plans  are
subject to the fiduciary responsibility and prohibited transaction provisions of
the  Employee Retirement Income  Security Act of 1974  as amended ('ERISA'), and
restrictions imposed  by Section  4975 of  the Code.  As used  herein, the  term
'employee  benefit plan'  includes, but  is not  limited to,  qualified pension,
profit-sharing and stock bonus plans,  Keogh plans, simplified employee  pension
plans  and tax deferred annuities  or Individual Retirement Accounts established
or maintained  by an  employer  or employee  organization: Among  other  things,
consideration  should be given  to (a) whether such  investment is prudent under
Section 404(a)(i)(B) of ERISA; (b) whether in making such investment, such  plan
will  satisfy the diversification requirement  of Section 404(a)(1)(C) of ERISA;
and (c) whether such investment will result in recognition of unrelated business
taxable income  by such  plan and,  if so,  the potential  after-tax  investment
return.   See  'Tax  Considerations   --  Uniformity  of   Units  --  Tax-Exempt
Organizations  and  Certain  Other   Investors.'  The  person  with   investment
discretion   with  respect  to  the  assets  of  an  employee  benefit  plan  (a
'fiduciary') should  determine  whether  an investment  in  the  Partnership  is
authorized  by the appropriate  governing instrument and  is a proper investment
for such plan.
 
     Section 406 of ERISA and  Section 4975 of the  Code (which also applies  to
Individual  Retirement  Accounts that  are not  considered  part of  an employee
benefit plan)  prohibit  an  employee  benefit plan  from  engaging  in  certain
transactions involving 'plan assets' with parties that are 'parties in interest'
under ERISA or 'disqualified persons' under the Code with respect to the plan.
 
     In  addition  to considering  whether  the purchase  of  Common Units  is a
prohibited transaction, a fiduciary of an employee benefit plan should  consider
whether  such plan will,  by investing in  the Partnership, be  deemed to own an
undivided interest in the  assets of the Partnership,  with the result that  the
General  Partners also would be  fiduciaries of such plan  and the operations of
the Partnership  would  be subject  to  the regulatory  restrictions  of  ERISA,
including   its  prohibited  transaction  rules,   as  well  as  the  prohibited
transaction rules of the Code.
 
     The Department  of  Labor  regulations provide  guidance  with  respect  to
whether  the assets of an entity in  which employee benefit plans acquire equity
interests would be deemed 'plan assets' under certain circumstances. Pursuant to
these regulations,  an entity's  assets  would not  be  considered to  be  'plan
assets'  if, among  other things, (a)  the equity interest  acquired by employee
benefit plans are publicly offered securities -- i.e., the equity interests  are
widely  held by 100 or more investors  independent of the issuer and each other,
freely transferable and registered pursuant to certain provisions of the federal
securities laws,  (b)  the entity  is  an 'operating  company'  -- i.e.,  it  is
primarily  engaged in the production or sale  of a product or service other than
the investment of capital either directly or through a majority owned subsidiary
or subsidiaries,  or (c)  there is  no significant  investment by  benefit  plan
investors,  which is  defined to mean  that less than  25% of the  value of each
class of equity  interest (disregarding  certain interests held  by the  General
Partner,  its affiliates,  and certain  other persons)  is held  by the employee
benefit plans  referred  to  above, Individual  Retirement  Accounts  and  other
employee  benefit plans not  subject to ERISA (such  as governmental plans). The
Partnership's  assets  should  not  be  considered  'plan  assets'  under  these
regulations  because  it  is  expected  that  the  investment  will  satisfy the
requirements in (a) and (b) above and may also satisfy the requirements in (c).
 
     Plan fiduciaries contemplating  a purchase of  Common Units should  consult
with  their own counsel regarding  the consequences under ERISA  and the Code in
light of  the serious  penalties imposed  on persons  who engage  in  prohibited
transactions or other violations.
 
                                      146
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                             THE SELLING UNITHOLDER
 
     As  of  December  31,  1996,   Merrill  Lynch,   Pierce,   Fenner  &  Smith
Incorporated,  the Selling  Unitholder,  held, in addition to the 400,000 Common
Units to which this  prospectus  relates,  1,250 Common  Units in  discretionary
customer  accounts.  Such Common Units represent in the aggregate  approximately
6.0%  of the  Common  Units  outstanding  on  such  date.  Because  the  Selling
Unitholder  may offer all, or a portion of or none of the Common  Units  offered
hereby,  no estimate  can be given as to the number of Common Units that will be
held by the Selling  Unitholder upon  termination of such offering.  The Selling
Unitholder acted as co-managing  underwriter of the IPO and  co-placement  agent
with respect to the First Mortgage Notes and provided related investment banking
services   regarding  the  IPO  and  the  Transactions  and  received  customary
underwriting  discounts,  commissions  and  fees in  connection  therewith.  The
Selling  Unitholder  from  time to time  has  provided  and will  provide  other
investment  banking  services  to  Triarc  and its affiliates.  See 'The IPO and
Additional Transactions' and 'Units Eligible for Future Sale'.
 
                              PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION
 
     This  Prospectus, as appropriately amended or  supplemented, may be used by
the Selling Unitholder or any transferee affiliated with the Selling  Unitholder
in connection with the offering of up to 400,000 Common Units in transactions in
which  they and any broker-dealer through whom such Common Units are sold may be
deemed to  be  underwriters  within  the meaning  of  the  Securities  Act.  The
Partnership  will  receive  none of  the  proceeds  from any  such  sales. There
presently are no arrangements or understandings, formal or informal,  pertaining
to  the distribution of the Common  Units described herein. Upon the Partnership
being notified by the Selling Unitholder that any material arrangement has  been
entered  into with a broker-dealer for the sale of Common Units bought through a
block trade, special offering, exchange distribution or secondary  distribution,
a  supplemented  Prospectus will  be filed,  pursuant to  Rule 424(b)  under the
Securities Act, setting forth  (i) the name of  the person offering such  Common
Units  and the participating  broker-dealer(s), (ii) the  number of Common Units
involved, (iii)  the  price  at which  the  Common  Units were  sold,  (iv)  the
commission  paid  or  the  discount  allowed  to  such  broker-dealer(s),  where
applicable, (v) that such broker-dealer(s) did not conduct any investigation  to
verify  the information set out in this Prospectus and (vi) other facts material
to the transaction.
 
     The Selling  Unitholder  or  any transferee  affiliated  with  the  Selling
Unitholder  may sell the Common Units being  offered hereby from time to time in
transactions (which may involve crosses and block transactions) on the NYSE,  in
the  over-the-counter market, in negotiated transactions or otherwise, at market
prices prevailing at the time of the  sale or at negotiated prices. The  Selling
Unitholder  or such  transferees may  sell some  or all  of the  Common Units in
transactions involving broker-dealers, who  may act solely  as agent and/or  may
acquire   Common  Units  as  principal.  Broker-dealers  participating  in  such
transactions as agent may receive commissions from the Selling Unitholder  (and,
if  they  act  as  agent for  the  purchaser  of such  Common  Units,  from such
purchaser), such  commissions  may be  at  negotiated rates  where  permissible.
Participating  broker-dealers  may agree  with  the Selling  Unitholder  or such
transferees to sell a specified number of Common Units at a stipulated price per
Common Unit and, to the extent such  broker-dealer is unable to do so acting  as
an  agent for the Selling Unitholder, to purchase as principal any unsold Common
Units at the  price required to  fulfill the broker-dealer's  commitment to  the
Selling  Unitholder. In addition  or alternatively, Common Units  may be sold by
the  Selling  Unitholder,   such  transferees   and/or  by   or  through   other
broker-dealers   in  special  offerings,  exchange  distributions  or  secondary
distributions pursuant to  and in  compliance with  the governing  rules of  the
NYSE,  and  in  connection  therewith commissions  in  excess  of  the customary
commission prescribed  by such  governing  rules may  be paid  to  participating
broker-dealers,  or, in the case of  certain secondary distributions, a discount
or  concession  from  the  offering  price  may  be  allowed  to   participating
broker-dealers in excess of the customary commission. Broker-dealers who acquire
Common  Units as principal may thereafter resell  such Common Units from time to
time in transactions (which may involve crosses and block transactions and which
may involve sales to or through other broker-dealers, including transactions  of
the  nature  described in  the  preceding two  sentences)  on the  NYSE,  in the
over-the-counter market,  in negotiated  transactions  or otherwise,  at  market
prices prevailing at the time of sale or at negotiated prices, and in connection
with  such resales may pay to or  receive commissions from the purchaser of such
Common Units.
 
                                      147
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
     The Partnership  has agreed  to indemnify  the Selling  Unitholder  against
certain liabilities, including liabilities arising under the Securities Act. The
Selling   Unitholder  may  indemnify  any  broker-dealer  that  participates  in
transactions involving sales  of the Common  Units against certain  liabilities,
including liabilities arising under the Securities Act.
 
                                 LEGAL MATTERS
 
     The validity of the Common Units offered hereby will be passed upon for the
Partnership  by Paul,  Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton  & Garrison, New  York, New York.
Certain other matters will be passed upon for the Partnership by Andrews & Kurth
L.L.P., New York, New York. Members of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton &  Garrison
own an aggregate of 1,100 shares of Triarc's Class A Common Stock and 260 Common
Units.
 
                                    EXPERTS
 
     The   financial  statements   of  National  Propane   Corporation  and  its
consolidated subsidiaries  as of  December 31,  1994 and  1995 and  for the  ten
months  ended December 31,  1993 and for  the years ended  December 31, 1994 and
1995 (except Public  Gas Company  for the ten  months ended  December 31,  1993)
included in this prospectus have been audited by Deloitte & Touche LLP as stated
in  their  reports  appearing herein.  The  financial statements  of  Public Gas
Company for the ten months ended  December 31, 1993 (consolidated with those  of
National Propane and not separately included herein) have been audited by Arthur
Andersen  LLP,  as  stated  in  their  report  included  herein.  Such financial
statements are included herein in reliance  upon the respective reports of  such
firms  given upon their authority as experts in accounting and auditing. Both of
the foregoing firms are independent auditors.
 
                                      148
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                             AVAILABLE INFORMATION
 
     The Partnership  is  subject  to  the  informational  requirements  of  the
Exchange  Act, and in  accordance therewith files  reports, proxy statements and
other  information   with   the   Securities  and   Exchange   Commission   (the
'Commission'). Such reports, proxy statements and other information filed by the
Partnership  can be inspected and copied at  the prescribed rates, at the public
reference facilities of  the Commission at  Room 1024, 450  Fifth Street,  N.W.,
Washington,  D.C. 20549,  and at  the Commission's  regional offices  at 7 World
Trade Center, Suite  1300, New  York, New  York 10048,  and Northwestern  Atrium
Center, 500 W. Madison Street, Chicago, Illinois 60661. The Partnership's Common
Stock  is  traded on  the  NYSE. Reports  and  other information  concerning the
Partnership may be inspected  at the principal  office of the  NYSE at 20  Broad
Street, New York, New York 10005.
 
     This  Prospectus constitutes a part of a Registration Statement on Form S-1
filed by the  Partnership with  the Commission  under the  Securities Act.  This
Prospectus  omits  certain  of  the information  contained  in  the Registration
Statement and the exhibits and schedules  thereto, in accordance with the  rules
and  regulations  of  the  Commission. For  further  information  concerning the
Partnership and the securities offered hereby,  reference is hereby made to  the
Registration Statement and the exhibits and schedules filed therewith, which may
be inspected without charge at the office of the Commission at 450 Fifth Street,
N.W.,  Washington,  D.C. 20549  and copies  of  which may  be obtained  from the
Commission at prescribed rates. The Commission  maintains a World Wide Web  Site
(http://www.sec.gov)  that contains  such material  regarding issuers  that file
electronically with the Commission. The Registration Statement has been so filed
and may be obtained at such site. Any statements contained herein concerning the
provisions of any document are not necessarily complete, and, in each  instance,
reference  is made  to the  copy of  such document  filed as  an exhibit  to the
Registration Statement  or  otherwise  filed  with  the  Commission.  Each  such
statement is qualified in its entirety by such reference.
 
                                      149



<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                   INDEX TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                              PAGE
                                                                                                              ----
 
<S>                                                                                                           <C>
Pro Forma Financial Statements:
     National Propane Partners, L.P. (Successor to National Propane Corporation and Subsidiaries) Unaudited
      Pro Forma Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements:
          Unaudited Pro Forma Condensed Consolidated Statement of Operations --
            Year Ended December 31, 1995...................................................................    F-2
            Nine Months Ended September 30, 1996...........................................................    F-3
          Notes to Unaudited Pro Forma Condensed Consolidated Statements of Operations.....................    F-4
Historical Financial Statements:
     National Propane Corporation:
          Independent Auditors' Reports....................................................................    F-5
          Consolidated Balance Sheets -- December 31, 1994 and 1995........................................    F-7
          Consolidated Statements of Operations -- Ten months ended December 31, 1993, years ended December
          31, 1994 and 1995 and three months ended March 31, 1995 and 1996.................................    F-8
          Consolidated Statements of Additional Capital -- Ten months ended December 31, 1993, years ended
          December 31, 1994 and 1995 and three months ended March 31, 1996.................................    F-9
          Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows -- Ten months ended December 31, 1993, years ended December
          31, 1994 and 1995 and three months ended March 31, 1995 and 1996.................................   F-10
          Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.......................................................   F-12
     National Propane Partners, L.P. (Successor to National Propane Corporation and Subsidiaries):
          Unaudited Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets -- December 31, 1995 and September 30, 1996......   F-28
          Unaudited Condensed Consolidated Statements of Operations -- Three months ended September 30,
          1995 and 1996; nine months ended September 30, 1995 and 1996.....................................   F-29
          Unaudited Condensed Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows -- Nine months ended September 30, 1995
          and 1996.........................................................................................   F-30
          Notes to Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements.............................................   F-31
</TABLE>
 
                                      F-1
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                        NATIONAL PROPANE PARTNERS, L.P.
          (SUCCESSOR TO NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES)
             UNAUDITED PRO FORMA CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS
                                 OF OPERATIONS
 
     In  connection with the Conveyance, the Partnership became the successor to
the businesses  of  National Propane.  The  entity representative  of  both  the
operations  of (i) National Propane prior to the Conveyance and the Transactions
and (ii) the Partnership subsequent to  the Conveyance and the Transactions,  is
referred to herein as 'National.'
 
     The  following  unaudited pro  forma  condensed consolidated  statements of
operations  of  National  have  been  prepared  by  adjusting  the  consolidated
statements  of operations  for the  year ended  December 31,  1995 and  the nine
months ended September  30, 1996 appearing  on page F-8  and F-29,  respectively
herein,  to give effect to the Transactions and the Private Placement as if they
had occurred on January 1, 1995. The pro forma adjustments are described in  the
accompanying  notes  to  the  pro  forma  condensed  consolidated  statements of
operations which should  be read in  conjunction with such  unaudited pro  forma
condensed  consolidated  statements  of operations.  Such  pro  forma statements
should also  be  read  in conjunction  with  National's  consolidated  financial
statements  and notes thereto included elsewhere herein. The following unaudited
pro forma condensed consolidated statements of  operations do not purport to  be
indicative  of the actual results  of National that would  have occurred had the
Transactions and Private Placement actually been consummated on January 1,  1995
or  of future results  of operations which will  be obtained as  a result of the
consummation of the Transactions.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                              YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                                                       -------------------------------------------
                                                                                      PRO FORMA
                                                                       HISTORICAL    ADJUSTMENTS        PRO FORMA
                                                                       ----------    -----------       -----------
                                                                           (IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT UNIT AMOUNTS)
 
<S>                                                                    <C>           <C>               <C>
Operating revenues..................................................    $ 148,983      $  --           $   148,983
                                                                       ----------    -----------       -----------
Operating costs and expenses:
     Cost of sales..................................................      109,059         --               109,059
     Selling, general and administrative expenses (other than
       management fees charged by parent)...........................       22,423        1,500(a)           23,923
     Management fees charged by parent..............................        3,000       (3,000)(b)            --
                                                                       ----------    -----------       -----------
                                                                          134,482       (1,500)            132,982
                                                                       ----------    -----------       -----------
     Operating profit...............................................       14,501        1,500              16,001
                                                                       ----------    -----------       -----------
Other income (expense):
     Interest expense...............................................      (11,719)         169(c)          (11,550)
     Interest income from Triarc....................................         --          5,500(d)            5,500
     Other income, net..............................................          904         --                   904
                                                                       ----------    -----------       -----------
                                                                          (10,815)       5,669              (5,146)
                                                                       ----------    -----------       -----------
Income before income taxes..........................................        3,686        7,169              10,855
Provision for income taxes..........................................        4,291       (4,091)(e)             200
                                                                       ----------    -----------       -----------
Net income (loss)...................................................    $    (605)     $11,260         $    10,655
                                                                       ----------    -----------       -----------
                                                                       ----------    -----------       -----------
General partners' interest in net income(f).........................                                   $       426
                                                                                                       -----------
                                                                                                       -----------
Unitholders' interest in net income(f)..............................                                   $    10,229
                                                                                                       -----------
                                                                                                       -----------
Net income per Unit(f)..............................................                                   $      0.91
                                                                                                       -----------
                                                                                                       -----------
Weighted average number of Units outstanding(f).....................                                    11,235,188
                                                                                                       -----------
                                                                                                       -----------
</TABLE>
 
     See notes to unaudited pro forma condensed consolidated statements of
                                  operations.
 
                                      F-2
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                        NATIONAL PROPANE PARTNERS, L.P.
          (SUCCESSOR TO NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES)
             UNAUDITED PRO FORMA CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS
                          OF OPERATIONS -- (CONTINUED)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                          NINE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1996
                                                                       -------------------------------------------
                                                                                      PRO FORMA
                                                                       HISTORICAL    ADJUSTMENTS        PRO FORMA
                                                                       ----------    -----------       -----------
                                                                           (IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT UNIT AMOUNTS)
 
<S>                                                                    <C>           <C>               <C>
Operating revenues..................................................    $ 116,018      $  --           $   116,018
                                                                       ----------    -----------       -----------
Operating costs and expenses:
     Cost of sales..................................................       89,097         --                89,097
     Selling, general and administrative expenses (other than
       management fees charged by parent)...........................       17,009          750(a)           17,759
     Management fees charged by parent..............................        1,500       (1,500)(b)           --
                                                                       ----------    -----------       -----------
                                                                          107,606         (750)           (106,856)
                                                                       ----------    -----------       -----------
     Operating profit...............................................        8,412          750               9,162
                                                                       ----------    -----------       -----------
Other income (expense):
     Interest expense...............................................       (9,067)         573(c)           (8,494)
     Interest income from Triarc....................................        1,370        2,750(d)            4,120
     Other income, net..............................................          662         --                   662
                                                                       ----------    -----------       -----------
                                                                           (7,035)       3,323              (3,712)
                                                                       ----------    -----------       -----------
Income before income taxes and extraordinary charge.................        1,377        4,073               5,450
Provision for income taxes..........................................        1,922       (1,772)(e)             150
                                                                       ----------    -----------       -----------
Income (loss) before extraordinary charge...........................    $    (545)     $ 5,845         $     5,300
                                                                       ----------    -----------       -----------
                                                                       ----------    -----------       -----------
General partners' unsubordinated interest in income before
  extraordinary charge(f)...........................................                                   $       212
                                                                                                       -----------
                                                                                                       -----------
Unitholders' interest in income before extraordinary charge(f)......                                   $     5,088
                                                                                                       -----------
                                                                                                       -----------
Income before extraordinary charge per Unit(f)......................                                   $      0.45
                                                                                                       -----------
                                                                                                       -----------
Weighted average number of Units outstanding(f).....................                                    11,235,188
                                                                                                       -----------
                                                                                                       -----------
</TABLE>
 
     See notes to unaudited pro forma condensed consolidated statements of
                                  operations.
 
                                      F-3
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                        NATIONAL PROPANE PARTNERS, L.P.
          (SUCCESSOR TO NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES)
         NOTES TO UNAUDITED PRO FORMA CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT
                                 OF OPERATIONS
                             (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)
 
(a) To reflect  the  estimated  stand-alone  general  and  administrative  costs
    associated  with the Partnership for  the period prior to  July 2, 1996, the
    date the Partnership commenced operations,  as costs incurred after July  2,
    1996  are reflected in the operations  of the Partnership. The following are
    primarily based on actual quotes for third party services and salary  levels
    commensurate with the market:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                           YEAR ENDED      NINE MONTHS ENDED
                                                                          DECEMBER 31,       SEPTEMBER 30,
                                                                              1995               1996
                                                                          ------------    -------------------
 
<S>                                                                       <C>             <C>
Cost of tax return preparation and recordkeeping.......................      $  250              $ 125
Investor relations.....................................................         200                100
Insurance..............................................................         200                100
Audit and legal services...............................................         250                125
Registrar and stock exchange fees......................................         125                 62
Direct charges from Triarc.............................................         175                 88
Other..................................................................         300                150
                                                                          ------------          ------
                                                                             $1,500              $ 750
                                                                          ------------          ------
                                                                          ------------          ------
</TABLE>
 
(b) To  reflect  the elimination  of the  management  services fee  allocated by
    Triarc for  the period  prior to  July  2, 1996,  the date  the  Partnership
    commenced operations.
 
(c) Represents adjustments to interest expense as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                           YEAR ENDED      NINE MONTHS ENDED
                                                                          DECEMBER 31,       SEPTEMBER 30,
                                                                              1995               1996
                                                                          ------------    -------------------
 
<S>                                                                       <C>             <C>
     Interest expense on the Former Credit Facility....................     $  9,641            $ 5,318
     Interest expense on Other Former Indebtedness.....................          458                276
     Amortization of deferred financing costs associated with the
       Former Credit Facility..........................................        1,305                597
     Interest expense on the First Mortgage Notes (interest rate of
       8.54%)..........................................................      (10,675)            (5,338)
     Amortization of deferred financing costs associated with the First
       Mortgage Notes..................................................         (560)              (281)
                                                                          ------------         --------
                                                                            $    169            $   573
                                                                          ------------         --------
                                                                          ------------         --------
</TABLE>
 
(d) To reflect interest income at 13.5% on the $40,700 Partnership Loan.
 
(e) To  reflect the reduction of the provision  for income taxes as income taxes
    will be borne by the partners and not the Partnership, except for  corporate
    income  taxes relative  to the  Partnership's wholly  owned subsidiary which
    conducts certain of the Partnership's operations.
 
(f) The General Partners' allocation  of net income is  based on their  combined
    General  Partner 4% interest in  the Partnership (excluding the Subordinated
    Units). The General Partners' 4% allocation of net income has been  deducted
    before calculating the net income per unit. The allocation of net income for
    Common Units and Subordinated Units is based on the terms of the Partnership
    Agreement and assumes that 6,701,550 Common Units and 4,533,638 Subordinated
    Units were outstanding at all times during the periods indicated.
 
                                      F-4



<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                          INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' REPORT
 
To the Board of Directors and Stockholders of
NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION:
 
     We  have audited the  accompanying consolidated balance  sheets of National
Propane Corporation (the 'Company') (75.7% owned by NPC Holdings, Inc. and 24.3%
owned by PGC Holdings, Inc., both of which are wholly-owned by Triarc Companies,
Inc.) and  subsidiaries  as of  December  31, 1994  and  1995, and  the  related
consolidated statements of operations, additional capital and cash flows for the
ten  months ended December  31, 1993 and  the years ended  December 31, 1994 and
1995. These  financial  statements  are  the  responsibility  of  the  Company's
management.  Our  responsibility is  to express  an  opinion on  these financial
statements based  on  our audits.  The  consolidated financial  statements  give
retroactive  effect to the merger  of the Company and  Public Gas Company, which
has been accounted for as  a combination of entities  under common control in  a
manner  similar to a pooling of  interests as described in Notes  1 and 3 to the
consolidated financial statements. We did not audit the financial statements  of
Public  Gas Company for the ten months ended December 31, 1993, which statements
(not shown  separately  herein) reflect  total  revenues of  $23,394,000.  Those
statements were audited by other auditors whose report has been furnished to us,
and  our opinion, insofar as  it relates to the  amounts included for Public Gas
Company for the  ten months  ended December  31, 1993,  is based  solely on  the
report of such other auditors.
 
     We  conducted  our audits  in accordance  with generally  accepted auditing
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to  obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also  includes
assessing  the  accounting principles  used  and significant  estimates  made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement  presentation.
We  believe  that our  audits and  the report  of the  other auditors  provide a
reasonable basis for our opinion.
 
     In our opinion, based on our audits  and the report of the other  auditors,
the  consolidated financial statements referred to  above present fairly, in all
material respects, the  financial position  of the Company  and subsidiaries  at
December  31, 1994 and 1995, and the  results of their operations and their cash
flows for the ten months  ended December 31, 1993  and the years ended  December
31, 1994 and 1995 in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.
 
DELOITTE & TOUCHE LLP
Cedar Rapids, Iowa
March 13, 1996
 
                                      F-5
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
               REPORT OF INDEPENDENT CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS
 
To PUBLIC GAS COMPANY:
 
     We  have audited  the statements of  income and retained  earnings and cash
flows for the ten months  ended December 31, 1993  of Public Gas Company.  These
financial  statements  (not  presented  herein) are  the  responsibility  of the
Company's management.  Our responsibility  is  to express  an opinion  on  these
financial statements based on our audit.
 
     We  conducted  our audit  in  accordance with  generally  accepted auditing
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to  obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also  includes
assessing  the  accounting principles  used  and significant  estimates  made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement  presentation.
We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.
 
     In  our opinion, the financial statements  referred to above (not presented
herein) present fairly, in all material respects, the results of operations  and
cash  flows of Public Gas Company for the  ten months ended December 31, 1993 in
conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.
 
ARTHUR ANDERSEN LLP
Miami, Florida,
April 14, 1994.
 
                                      F-6
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                 NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
                          CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
                      (IN THOUSANDS EXCEPT FOR SHARE DATA)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                DECEMBER 31,
                                                                                            ---------------------
                                                                                              1994         1995
                                                                                            ---------    --------
 
<S>                                                                                         <C>          <C>
                                         ASSETS
Current assets:
     Cash................................................................................   $   3,983    $  2,825
     Receivables, net (Notes 5 and 19)...................................................      17,065      16,391
     Inventories.........................................................................      10,182      10,543
     Other current assets (Note 11)......................................................       3,556       4,340
                                                                                            ---------    --------
          Total current assets (Note 10).................................................      34,786      34,099
Properties, net (Notes 7, 10 and 14).....................................................      82,176      83,214
Unamortized costs in excess of net assets of acquired companies (Notes 8, 12, 14, 18 and
  19)....................................................................................      13,481      15,161
Other assets (Note 9)....................................................................       7,138       6,638
                                                                                            ---------    --------
                                                                                            $ 137,581    $139,112
                                                                                            ---------    --------
                                                                                            ---------    --------
                     LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY (DEFICIT)
Current liabilities:
     Current portion of long-term debt (Note 10).........................................   $  12,298    $ 11,278
     Accounts payable....................................................................       6,759       7,836
     Due to a parent and another affiliate (Note 11).....................................       8,736       9,972
     Accrued interest....................................................................       1,657       2,233
     Accrued insurance...................................................................       1,010       2,961
     Other accrued expenses..............................................................       4,957       4,176
                                                                                            ---------    --------
          Total current liabilities......................................................      35,417      38,456
                                                                                            ---------    --------
Long-term debt (Note 10).................................................................      98,711     124,266
Deferred income taxes (Notes 11 and 14)..................................................      20,761      22,878
Customer deposits........................................................................       2,194       2,112
 
Commitments and contingencies (Notes 2, 11, 16 and 17)
Stockholders' equity (deficit) (Note 10):
     Preferred stock, 221,900 shares authorized, no shares issued or outstanding (Note
      12)................................................................................        --           --
     Common stock, $1 par value; 1,000 and 3,000 shares authorized, 1,000 and 1,360
      shares issued and outstanding in 1994 and 1995, respectively (Notes 3 and 19)......           1           1
     Additional paid-in capital..........................................................      32,164      36,270
     Retained earnings (accumulated deficit).............................................      61,663      (3,479)
     Due from parents (Note 13)..........................................................    (113,330)    (81,392)
                                                                                            ---------    --------
          Total stockholders' deficit....................................................     (19,502)    (48,600)
                                                                                            ---------    --------
                                                                                            $ 137,581    $139,112
                                                                                            ---------    --------
                                                                                            ---------    --------
</TABLE>
 
          See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
 
                                      F-7
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                 NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
                     CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
                                 (IN THOUSANDS)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                              TEN MONTHS          YEAR ENDED 
                                                                                ENDED            DECEMBER  31,
                                                                             DECEMBER 31,    --------------------
                                                                                 1993          1994        1995
                                                                             ------------    --------    --------
 
<S>                                                                          <C>             <C>         <C>
Revenues..................................................................     $119,249      $151,651    $148,983
                                                                             ------------    --------    --------
Costs and expenses:
     Cost of sales (including charges from related parties of $4,020 in
       the ten months ended December 31, 1993 -- Note 19).................       92,301       109,683     109,059
     Selling, general and administrative expenses (including charges from
       related parties of $884 in the ten months ended December 31, 1993)
       (Notes 17, 18 and 20)..............................................       16,501        18,657      22,423
     Management fees charged by parents (Note 19).........................        3,485         4,561       3,000
     Facilities relocation and corporate restructuring (including charges
       from related parties of $2,821) (Note 20)..........................        8,429          --          --
                                                                             ------------    --------    --------
                                                                                120,716       132,901     134,482
                                                                             ------------    --------    --------
 
          Operating profit (loss).........................................       (1,467)       18,750      14,501
                                                                             ------------    --------    --------
 
Other income (expense):
     Interest expense.....................................................       (9,949)       (9,726)    (11,719)
     Interest income from Triarc Companies, Inc. (Note 13)................       10,360         9,751        --
     Other income, net (Notes 6 and 20)...................................        1,727         1,169         904
                                                                             ------------    --------    --------
                                                                                  2,138         1,194     (10,815)
                                                                             ------------    --------    --------
          Income before income taxes and extraordinary charge.............          671        19,944       3,686
Provision for income taxes (Note 11)......................................        1,018         7,923       4,291
                                                                             ------------    --------    --------
     Income (loss) before extraordinary charge............................         (347)       12,021        (605)
Extraordinary charge (Note 15)............................................        --           (2,116)       --
                                                                             ------------    --------    --------
     Net income (loss)....................................................     $   (347)     $  9,905    $   (605)
                                                                             ------------    --------    --------
                                                                             ------------    --------    --------
</TABLE>
 
          See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
 
                                      F-8
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                 NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
                 CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF ADDITIONAL CAPITAL
                                 (IN THOUSANDS)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                  RETAINED
                                                                  ADDITIONAL      EARNINGS
                                                                   PAID-IN      (ACCUMULATED    DUE FROM     TREASURY
                                                                   CAPITAL        DEFICIT)       PARENTS      STOCK
                                                                  ----------    ------------    ---------    --------
 
<S>                                                               <C>           <C>             <C>          <C>
Balance at February 28, 1993...................................    $ 21,505       $ 95,866      $ (27,430)    $ (638)
     Net loss..................................................       --              (347)         --          --
     Dividends paid............................................       --            (1,886)         --          --
     Capital contribution from deferred gain on sale of
       interests in Southeastern Public Service Company
       ('SEPSCO') and CFC Holdings Corp. to Triarc Companies,
       Inc. ('Triarc') (Note 6)................................       2,255          --             --          --
     Increase in due from SEPSCO classified in equity (Note
       13).....................................................       --             --            (1,605)      --
                                                                  ----------    ------------    ---------    --------
Balance at December 31, 1993...................................      23,760         93,633        (29,035)      (638)
     Net income................................................       --             9,905          --          --
     Dividends paid (including $40,030 in cash) (Note 10)......       --           (41,875)         --          --
     Repurchases of preferred stock (Note 12)..................         (62)         --             --          (234)
     Cancellation of preferred stock (Note 12).................         378          --             --           872
     Reclassification of due from Triarc to equity (Note 13)...       --             --           (81,392)      --
     Increase in SEPSCO's basis in Public Gas Company ('Public
       Gas') resulting from the repurchase of the 28.9%
       minority interest in SEPSCO (Note 14)...................       8,088          --             --          --
     Increase in due from SEPSCO classified in equity..........       --             --            (2,903)      --
                                                                  ----------    ------------    ---------    --------
Balance at December 31, 1994...................................      32,164         61,663       (113,330)      --
     Net loss..................................................       --              (605)         --          --
     Dividends paid (Note 10)..................................       --           (30,000)         --          --
     Increase in due from SEPSCO classified in equity (Note
       13).....................................................       --             --            (2,599)      --
     Dividend of due from SEPSCO (Note 13).....................       --           (34,537)        34,537       --
     Capital contribution (Note 19)............................       4,240          --             --          --
     Repurchase of the 0.3% minority interest in Public Gas
       (Note 3)................................................        (134)         --             --          --
                                                                  ----------    ------------    ---------    --------
Balance at December 31, 1995...................................    $ 36,270       $ (3,479)     $ (81,392)    $ --
                                                                  ----------    ------------    ---------    --------
                                                                  ----------    ------------    ---------    --------
</TABLE>
 
          See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
 
                                      F-9
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                 NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
                     CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
                                 (IN THOUSANDS)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                              TEN MONTHS      YEAR ENDED DECEMBER
                                                                                ENDED                 31,
                                                                             DECEMBER 31,    ----------------------
                                                                                 1993          1994         1995
                                                                             ------------    ---------    ---------
<S>                                                                          <C>             <C>          <C>
Cash flows from operating activities:
     Net income (loss)....................................................     $   (347)     $  9,905      $  (605)
     Adjustments to reconcile net income (loss) to net cash and
       equivalents provided by (used in) operating activities:
          Depreciation and amortization of properties.....................        6,917         9,427        9,546
          Amortization of original issue discount and deferred financing
            costs.........................................................        1,046         1,077        1,305
          Amortization of costs in excess of net assets of acquired
            companies.....................................................           33           261          617
          Other amortization..............................................         --             336          482
          Write-off of deferred financing costs and original issue
            discount......................................................         --           3,498          --
          Interest income from Triarc accrued and not collected...........      (10,360)       (9,751)         --
          Provision for (benefit from) deferred income taxes..............         (880)        1,773        1,995
          Provision for doubtful accounts.................................          661           685          848
          Provision for facilities relocation and corporate
            restructuring.................................................        8,429           --           --
          Payments on facilities relocation and corporate restructuring...       (1,678)       (4,115)         --
          Equity in net loss of affiliate.................................          430           --           --
          Other, net......................................................         (639)        2,061          (79)
          Changes in operating assets and liabilities:
               Decrease (increase) in accounts receivable.................        1,801        (1,305)         (56)
               Increase in inventories....................................       (2,248)       (1,229)        (286)
               Increase in other current assets...........................         (237)       (1,278)        (662)
               Increase (decrease) in accounts payable and accrued
                 expenses.................................................       (6,163)         (624)       2,823
                                                                             ------------    ---------    ---------
                    Net cash provided by (used in) operating activities...       (3,235)       10,721       15,928
                                                                             ------------    ---------    ---------
Cash flows from investing activities:
     Business acquisitions................................................         (693)       (5,203)        (373)
     Capital expenditures.................................................       (7,457)       (6,436)      (8,082)
     Proceeds from sales of properties....................................        1,452         1,375
     Proceeds from sale of investments, net of tax........................        2,424           --           --
     Decrease in finance-type lease receivables from affiliates...........       25,670         1,458           32
     Decrease in due from affiliates......................................          982         7,754          --
     Decrease (increase) in due from parents..............................       46,909        (6,007)      (1,643)
                                                                             ------------    ---------    ---------
               Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities........       69,287        (7,059)      (9,467)
                                                                             ------------    ---------    ---------
Cash flows from financing activities:
     Proceeds from long-term debt.........................................        6,234       100,781       32,729
     Repayments of long-term debt.........................................      (76,997)      (60,678)      (9,532)
     Dividends............................................................          (41)      (40,030)     (30,000)
     Repurchase of National Propane Corporation preferred stock...........         --            (234)         --
     Repurchase of Public Gas Company preferred stock.....................         --            (704)         --
     Payment of deferred financing costs..................................         --          (5,390)        (816)
                                                                             ------------    ---------    ---------
               Net cash used in financing activities......................      (70,804)       (6,255)      (7,619)
                                                                             ------------    ---------    ---------
</TABLE>
 
                                                  (table continued on next page)
 
                                      F-10
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                 NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
              CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS -- (CONTINUED)
                                 (IN THOUSANDS)
 
(table continued from previous page)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                              TEN MONTHS      YEAR ENDED DECEMBER
                                                                                ENDED                 31,
                                                                             DECEMBER 31,    ----------------------
                                                                                 1993          1994         1995
                                                                             ------------    ---------    ---------
<S>                                                                          <C>             <C>          <C>
Net decrease in cash......................................................       (4,752)       (2,593)      (1,158)
Cash at beginning of period...............................................     $ 11,328      $  6,576      $ 3,983
                                                                             ------------    ---------    ---------
Cash at end of period.....................................................     $  6,576      $  3,983      $ 2,825
                                                                             ------------    ---------    ---------
                                                                             ------------    ---------    ---------
Supplemental disclosures of cash flow information:
     Cash paid during the period for:
          Interest........................................................     $ 10,771      $ 11,110      $11,158
                                                                             ------------    ---------    ---------
                                                                             ------------    ---------    ---------
          Income taxes (net of refunds)...................................     $  1,309      $  1,163      $ 1,261
                                                                             ------------    ---------    ---------
                                                                             ------------    ---------    ---------
Supplemental schedule of noncash investing and financing activities:
     Capital expenditures:
          Total capital expenditures......................................     $ 10,588      $  7,900      $ 8,966
          Amounts representing capitalized leases.........................       (3,131)       (1,464)        (884)
                                                                             ------------    ---------    ---------
          Capital expenditures paid in cash...............................     $  7,457      $  6,436      $ 8,082
                                                                             ------------    ---------    ---------
                                                                             ------------    ---------    ---------
</TABLE>
 
     Due to their non-cash nature, the  following are also not reflected in  the
respective consolidated statements of cash flows:
 
          During  the  ten months  ended December  31, 1993  and the  year ended
     December 31, 1994,  the Company  offset 'Due from  Triarc Companies,  Inc.'
     ('Triarc')   with  amounts   otherwise  payable  for   (i)  $1,845,000  and
     $1,845,000,  respectively,  in  dividends   payable  to  Triarc  and   (ii)
     $1,622,000  and $790,000,  respectively, in amounts  due to  Triarc under a
     management services agreement.
 
          In April  1994 Triarc  acquired  the 28.9%  minority interest  in  its
     subsidiary, Southeastern Public Service Company ('SEPSCO'), that it did not
     already  own through the  issuance of its  common stock. SEPSCO's increased
     basis  in  Public  Gas  Company  ('Public  Gas')  (its  then   wholly-owned
     subsidiary) resulting from this transaction was 'pushed down' to Public Gas
     resulting  in increases  to 'Unamortized costs  in excess of  net assets of
     acquired companies' of  $5,483,000, 'Properties'  of $4,255,000,  'Deferred
     income  taxes'  of $1,650,000  with an  offsetting increase  to 'Additional
     paid-in capital' of $8,088,000. See  Note 14 to the consolidated  financial
     statements for further discussion.
 
          In connection with Public Gas' repurchase of its convertible preferred
     stock,   SEPSCO's  increased  basis  in  Public  Gas  resulting  from  this
     transaction was 'pushed  down' to Public  Gas resulting in  an increase  of
     $642,000  in  'Unamortized  costs  in  excess  of  net  assets  of acquired
     companies' and a charge to 'Additional paid-in capital' of $62,000 with  an
     offsetting increase in receivables from SEPSCO.
 
          In  June 1995  aggregate receivables  from SEPSCO  of $34,537,000 were
     dividended to SEPSCO prior to a merger of Public Gas with and into National
     Propane Corporation (see Notes 3 and 13).
 
          In August 1995  the stock  of a subsidiary  of Triarc  which held  the
     stock  of  two  related entities  engaged  in the  liquefied  petroleum gas
     distribution business was  contributed to National  Propane Corporation  by
     Triarc  in September, 1995 resulting in  an increase to 'Additional paid-in
     capital'  of  $4,240,000.  See  Note  19  to  the  consolidated   financial
     statements for further discussion.
 
          See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
 
                                      F-11



<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                 NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
(1) SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
 
PRINCIPLES OF CONSOLIDATION AND BASIS OF PRESENTATION
 
     The  consolidated  financial statements  include  the accounts  of National
Propane  Corporation  (referred  to  herein  alone  or  with  its   wholly-owned
subsidiaries as the 'Company') and its wholly-owned subsidiaries. The Company is
75.7%  owned  by NPC  Holdings, Inc.  ('NPC  Holdings') and  24.3% owned  by PGC
Holdings, Inc.,  ('PGC Holdings'),  a  wholly-owned subsidiary  of  Southeastern
Public  Service  Company ('SEPSCO').  NPC Holdings  and SEPSCO  are wholly-owned
subsidiaries of Triarc Companies, Inc. ('Triarc'). All significant  intercompany
balances  and transactions have  been eliminated in  consolidation. In June 1995
Public Gas Company ('Public  Gas') was merged (the  'Merger') with and into  the
Company as more fully described in Note 3 below. Since the Merger was a transfer
of  assets and liabilities  in exchange for  shares among a  controlled group of
companies, it  has been  accounted  for in  a manner  similar  to a  pooling  of
interests  and, accordingly, all prior periods have been restated to reflect the
Merger.  'National  Propane'  is  used  herein  to  refer  to  National  Propane
Corporation, excluding the accounts of Public Gas, prior to the Merger.
 
INVENTORIES
 
     Inventories,  all of which are classified  as finished goods, are stated at
the lower of cost (first-in, first-out basis) or market.
 
PROPERTIES AND DEPRECIATION
 
     Properties are carried at cost less accumulated depreciation.  Depreciation
of  properties  is computed  on the  straight-line  method over  their estimated
useful lives of 20 to 45 years for buildings and improvements, 4 to 30 years for
equipment and customer installation  costs, 3 to 10  years for office  furniture
and  fixtures  and 3  to 8  years for  automotive and  transportation equipment.
Leased assets  capitalized are  amortized over  the shorter  of their  estimated
useful  lives or the  terms of the  respective leases. Gains  and losses arising
from disposals are included in current operations.
 
UNAMORTIZED COSTS IN EXCESS OF NET ASSETS OF ACQUIRED COMPANIES
 
     Costs in excess of  net assets of  acquired companies ('Goodwill')  arising
after   November  1,  1970  are  being  amortized  on  the  straight-line  basis
principally over 15 to  30 years; Goodwill of  $3,560,000 arising prior to  that
date  is not being amortized.  The amount of impairment,  if any, in unamortized
Goodwill is measured  based on projected  future results of  operations. To  the
extent  future results  of operations of  those acquired companies  to which the
Goodwill relates  through  the  period  such Goodwill  is  being  amortized  are
sufficient  to absorb the related amortization,  the Company has deemed there to
be no impairment of Goodwill.
 
IMPAIRMENT OF LONG-LIVED ASSETS
 
     Effective October  1,  1995  the Company  adopted  Statement  of  Financial
Accounting  Standards No. 121,  'Accounting for Impairment  of Long-Lived Assets
and for  Long-Lived Assets  to  Be Disposed  of.'  This standard  requires  that
long-lived  assets  and certain  identifiable intangibles  held  and used  by an
entity be reviewed for  impairment whenever events  or changes in  circumstances
indicate  that  the carrying  amount of  an  asset may  not be  recoverable. The
adoption of this standard had no effect on the Company's consolidated results of
operations or financial position.
 
AMORTIZATION OF DEFERRED FINANCING COSTS AND DEBT DISCOUNT
 
     Deferred financing  costs  and  original  issue  debt  discount  are  being
amortized  as interest expense over  the lives of the  respective debt using the
interest rate method.
 
                                      F-12
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                 NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
ACCRUED INSURANCE
 
     Accrued insurance includes reserves for  incurred but not reported  claims.
Such  reserves are based on actuarial  studies using historical loss experience.
Adjustments  to   estimates  recorded   resulting  from   subsequent   actuarial
evaluations  or ultimate payments are reflected in the operations of the periods
in which such adjustments become known.
 
INCOME TAXES
 
     The Company is included in the consolidated Federal income tax return filed
by Triarc except that, prior to April  14, 1994, Public Gas was included in  the
consolidated  Federal income tax return of SEPSCO. Under a tax sharing agreement
with Triarc, the Company provides for Federal income taxes on the same basis  as
if  it filed a separate consolidated return.  All Federal income tax payments or
refunds are made through Triarc. Deferred income taxes are provided to recognize
the tax  effect  of  temporary  differences between  the  bases  of  assets  and
liabilities for tax and financial statement purposes.
 
REVENUE RECOGNITION
 
     The  Company  records sales  of  liquefied petroleum  gas  ('propane') when
inventory is delivered to the customer.
 
(2) SIGNIFICANT RISKS AND UNCERTAINTIES
 
NATURE OF OPERATIONS
 
     The Company is  engaged primarily  in the  retail marketing  of propane  to
residential   customers,  commercial  and   industrial  customers,  agricultural
customers and resellers. The Company  also markets propane related supplies  and
equipment including home and commercial appliances. The Company's operations are
concentrated  in the midwest, northeast, southeast  and southwest regions of the
United States.
 
USE OF ESTIMATES
 
     The preparation  of  financial  statements  in  conformity  with  generally
accepted  accounting  principles  requires  management  to  make  estimates  and
assumptions that  affect the  reported  amounts of  assets and  liabilities  and
disclosure  of contingent  assets and liabilities  at the date  of the financial
statements and  the  reported  amounts  of  revenues  and  expenses  during  the
reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.
 
SIGNIFICANT ESTIMATES
 
     The  Company's significant estimates are for costs related to (i) insurance
loss reserves (see Note 1), (ii) income tax examinations (see Note 11) and (iii)
an environmental contingency (see Note 17).
 
CERTAIN RISK CONCENTRATIONS
 
     The Company's significant risk concentration arises from propane being  its
principal  product.  Both  sales  levels  and  costs  of  propane  are extremely
sensitive to weather  conditions, particularly in  the residential home  heating
market.  The Company's profitability depends on  the spread between its cost for
propane and the selling  price. The Company  generally is able  to pass on  cost
increases  to the customer in the form  of higher selling prices. However, where
increases cannot be passed on, margins can be adversely affected. The Company is
also impacted by the competitive nature of  the propane industry, as well as  by
competition  from  alternative  energy  sources such  as  natural  gas,  oil and
electricity.
 
                                      F-13
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                 NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
(3) PUBLIC GAS MERGER
 
     Effective June 29, 1995, Public  Gas, previously a wholly-owned  subsidiary
of  SEPSCO engaged  in the LP  gas business,  was merged with  and into National
Propane, with  National  Propane continuing  as  the surviving  corporation.  In
consideration  for their  investments in  Public Gas  and National  Propane, PGC
Holdings received 330 shares of the merged corporation representing 24.8% of its
issued and outstanding  common stock and  NPC Holdings continued  to hold  1,000
shares  representing 75.2% of the  stock of the merged  corporation (see Note 19
for discussion  of  subsequent issuance  of  30  shares of  the  Company).  Such
percentages  were based upon the relative fair values of Public Gas and National
Propane prior  to the  Merger. In  June 1995  prior to  the Merger,  Public  Gas
acquired  the 0.3% of its common stock that SEPSCO did not own for approximately
$134,000.
 
     The  following  sets  forth  summary  operating  results  of  the  combined
entities:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               TEN MONTHS
                                                                 ENDED                     YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                              DECEMBER 31,    --------------------------------------------------
                                                                  1993                 1994                       1995
                                                              ------------    -----------------------    -----------------------
                                                                                        (IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                                           <C>             <C>                        <C>
Operating revenues:
     National Propane......................................     $ 95,911             $ 123,588                  $ 133,456(a)
     Public Gas............................................       23,394                28,110                     15,542(b)
     Eliminations..........................................          (56)                  (47)                       (15)
                                                              ------------         -----------                -----------
                                                                $119,249             $ 151,651                  $ 148,983
                                                              ------------         -----------                -----------
                                                              ------------         -----------                -----------
Income (loss) before extraordinary charge:
     National Propane......................................     $ (1,433)            $  10,072                  $  (2,287)(a)
     Public Gas............................................        1,086                 1,949                      1,682(b)
                                                              ------------         -----------                -----------
                                                                $   (347)            $  12,021                  $    (605)
                                                              ------------         -----------                -----------
                                                              ------------         -----------                -----------
Net income (loss):
     National Propane......................................     $ (1,433)            $   7,956                  $  (2,287)(a)
     Public Gas............................................        1,086                 1,949                      1,682(b)
                                                              ------------         -----------                -----------
                                                                $   (347)            $   9,905                  $    (605)
                                                              ------------         -----------                -----------
                                                              ------------         -----------                -----------
</TABLE>
 
- ------------
 
 (a) Reflects  the  results of  National  Propane prior  to  the Merger  and the
     combined Company after the Merger.
 
 (b) Reflects the results of Public Gas prior to the Merger.
 
(4) CHANGE IN FISCAL YEAR
 
     In October 1993 National  Propane's fiscal year ended  April 30 and  Public
Gas'  fiscal  year ended  February  28 were  changed  to a  calendar  year ended
December 31. In order to conform the reporting periods of the combining entities
and to select  a period deemed  to meet the  Securities and Exchange  Commission
requirement  for  filing financial  statements  for a  period  of one  year, the
ten-month period ended December 31, 1993 ('Transition 1993') has been  presented
in  the accompanying consolidated  financial statements. As  used herein, '1994'
and '1995' refer to the years ended December 31, 1994 and 1995, respectively.
 
                                      F-14
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                 NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
(5) RECEIVABLES
 
     The following is a summary of the components of receivables:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                        DECEMBER 31,
                                                                                     ------------------
                                                                                      1994       1995
                                                                                     -------    -------
                                                                                       (IN THOUSANDS)
 
<S>                                                                                  <C>        <C>
Receivables:
     Trade........................................................................   $17,896    $16,939
     Other........................................................................       241        432
                                                                                     -------    -------
                                                                                      18,137     17,371
Less allowance for doubtful accounts (trade)......................................     1,072        980
                                                                                     -------    -------
                                                                                     $17,065    $16,391
                                                                                     -------    -------
                                                                                     -------    -------
</TABLE>
 
     The following is an analysis of the allowance for doubtful accounts for the
periods ended December 31, 1993, 1994 and 1995:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                            TRANSITION
                                                                               1993        1994      1995
                                                                            ----------    ------    ------
                                                                                    (IN THOUSANDS)
 
<S>                                                                         <C>           <C>       <C>
Balance at beginning of period...........................................     $1,552      $1,343    $1,072
Provision for doubtful accounts..........................................        661         685       848
Uncollectible accounts written off.......................................       (870)       (956)     (940)
                                                                            ----------    ------    ------
Balance at end of period.................................................     $1,343      $1,072    $  980
                                                                            ----------    ------    ------
                                                                            ----------    ------    ------
</TABLE>
 
(6) INVESTMENTS IN AFFILIATES
 
     On April 23, 1993 the  Company sold to Triarc all  of its ownership in  the
common  stock of CFC Holdings  and in SEPSCO for  an aggregate of $3,900,000, or
$3,731,000 in excess of  the net book  value of the  investments of $169,000  at
that  date. The  $3,731,000 excess less  related income taxes  of $1,476,000 was
accounted for as a deferred gain and  reported as a capital contribution in  the
accompanying  consolidated  financial statements  for  Transition 1993  since it
resulted from a transaction among a controlled group of companies. The Company's
equity in net loss of affiliates of $430,000 is included in 'Other income,  net'
in the accompanying consolidated statement of operations for Transition 1993.
 
(7) PROPERTIES
 
     The following is a summary of the components of properties:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                       DECEMBER 31,
                                                                                   --------------------
                                                                                     1994        1995
                                                                                   --------    --------
                                                                                      (IN THOUSANDS)
 
<S>                                                                                <C>         <C>
Land............................................................................   $  5,357    $  5,303
Buildings and improvements......................................................     11,498      11,760
Equipment and customer installation costs.......................................    112,576     119,614
Office furniture and fixtures...................................................      4,596       4,947
Automotive and transportation equipment.........................................     19,199      21,937
Leased assets capitalized.......................................................      1,584       1,655
                                                                                   --------    --------
                                                                                    154,810     165,216
Less accumulated depreciation and amortization..................................     72,634      82,002
                                                                                   --------    --------
                                                                                   $ 82,176    $ 83,214
                                                                                   --------    --------
                                                                                   --------    --------
</TABLE>
 
                                      F-15
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                 NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
(8) UNAMORTIZED COSTS IN EXCESS OF NET ASSETS OF ACQUIRED COMPANIES
 
     The following is a summary of the components of unamortized costs in excess
of net assets of acquired companies:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                        DECEMBER 31,
                                                                                     ------------------
                                                                                      1994       1995
                                                                                     -------    -------
                                                                                       (IN THOUSANDS)
 
<S>                                                                                  <C>        <C>
Costs in excess of net assets of acquired companies...............................   $14,745    $16,712
Less accumulated amortization.....................................................     1,264      1,551
                                                                                     -------    -------
                                                                                     $13,481    $15,161
                                                                                     -------    -------
                                                                                     -------    -------
</TABLE>
 
(9) OTHER ASSETS
 
     The following is a summary of the components of other assets:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                          DECEMBER 31,
                                                                                        ----------------
                                                                                         1994      1995
                                                                                        ------    ------
                                                                                         (IN THOUSANDS)
 
<S>                                                                                     <C>       <C>
Deferred financing costs.............................................................   $5,390    $6,206
Non-compete agreements...............................................................    1,429     1,929
Long-term receivables, net of unearned interest income...............................      645       300
Other................................................................................      355       544
                                                                                        ------    ------
                                                                                         7,819     8,979
                                                                                        ------    ------
Less accumulated amortization:
     Deferred financing costs........................................................      204     1,509
     Non-compete agreements..........................................................      459       761
     Other...........................................................................       18        71
                                                                                        ------    ------
                                                                                           681     2,341
                                                                                        ------    ------
                                                                                        $7,138    $6,638
                                                                                        ------    ------
                                                                                        ------    ------
</TABLE>
 
     The  Company's  wholly-owned leasing  subsidiary,  NPC Leasing  Corp. ('NPC
Leasing'), leases vehicles  and other equipment  to companies that  are or  were
affiliates  of the Company under long-term lease obligations which are accounted
for as  finance-type leases  and are  included in  long-term receivables  above.
Lease  billings by NPC Leasing to current  and former affiliates, other than the
Company, which included interest and principal, during Transition 1993, 1994 and
1995 were $8,213,000, $168,000 and  $47,000, respectively. Such amounts  include
interest  of $1,676,000, $25,000  and $3,000 in Transition  1993, 1994 and 1995,
respectively, which are included in 'Revenues' in the accompanying  consolidated
statements of operations.
 
                                      F-16
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                 NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
(10) LONG-TERM DEBT
 
     Long-term debt consisted of the following:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                       DECEMBER 31,
                                                                                   --------------------
                                                                                     1994        1995
                                                                                   --------    --------
                                                                                      (IN THOUSANDS)
 
<S>                                                                                <C>         <C>
Bank Facility:
     Term notes, Tranche A, weighted average interest rate of 8.53% at December
       31, 1995, due through March 31, 2000.....................................   $ 60,000    $ 34,333
     Term notes, Tranche B, weighted average interest rate of 8.72% at December
       31, 1995, due through March 31, 2002.....................................     30,000      29,750
     Term note, Tranche C, bearing interest at 9.44% at December 31, 1995, due
       through March 31, 2003...................................................      --         20,000
     Revolving loans, weighted average interest rate of 8.09% at December 31,
       1995, due March 31, 2000.................................................     10,500      43,229
                                                                                   --------    --------
          Total Bank Facility...................................................    100,500     127,312
Equipment notes, bearing interest at rates of 7% to 12%, due through 2002.......      4,239       2,917
Acquisition notes, bearing interest at rates of 6% to 10%, due through 2004.....      5,090       4,060
Capital lease obligations.......................................................      1,180       1,255
                                                                                   --------    --------
          Total debt............................................................    111,009     135,544
Less current portion of long-term debt..........................................     12,298      11,278
                                                                                   --------    --------
                                                                                   $ 98,711    $124,266
                                                                                   --------    --------
                                                                                   --------    --------
</TABLE>
 
     The  aggregate annual  maturities of  long-term debt  are as  follows as of
December 31, 1995:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

YEAR ENDING
DECEMBER 31,                                                                              (IN THOUSANDS)
- -----------
 
<S>                                                                                        <C>
   1996.................................................................................      $ 11,278
   1997.................................................................................        10,591
   1998.................................................................................        13,375
   1999.................................................................................        13,494
   2000.................................................................................        37,489
   Thereafter...........................................................................        49,317
                                                                                           --------------
                                                                                              $135,544
                                                                                           --------------
                                                                                           --------------
</TABLE>
 
     Bank Facility  -- In  October 1994  the Company  entered into  a  revolving
credit  and term loan agreement with a group of banks (the 'Bank Facility'). The
$150,000,000 Bank Facility, as amended, consists of a revolving credit  facility
with  a current maximum availability as of  December 31, 1995 of $57,167,000 and
three tranches of term  loans with an original  availability of $90,000,000  and
outstanding  amounts aggregating $84,083,000 (net of repayments through December
31, 1995 of $5,917,000)  as of December 31,  1995. Approximately $13,900,000  of
the  revolving  credit  facility is  restricted  for niche  acquisitions  by the
Company (the 'Acquisition Sublimit'); however, the Company is not currently able
to borrow  under the  Acquisition  Sublimit due  to debt  covenant  limitations.
Accordingly,  the  Company has  no availability  under the  Bank Facility  as of
December 31, 1995.  Any outstanding  borrowings under  the Acquisition  Sublimit
convert  to term loans  in October 1997; such  term loans would  be due in equal
installments from December 1997 through December 2000. Borrowings under the Bank
Facility bear interest, at  the Company's option, at  rates based either on  30,
60, 90 or 180-day LIBOR (ranging from 5.53% to 5.72% at December 31, 1995) or an
alternate base rate (the 'ABR'). The ABR represents the higher of the prime rate
(8  1/2%  at December  31, 1995)  or 1/2%  over  the Federal  funds rate  (6% at
December 31, 1995). Revolving  loans bear interest  at 2 1/4%  over LIBOR or  1%
over   ABR.  The  aggregate  availability  of  revolving  loans  (assuming  full
availability under the Acquisition Sublimit)
 
                                      F-17
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                 NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
reduces by  $3,000,000  in  1996,  $15,896,000  in  1997,  $3,958,000  in  1998,
$4,042,000  in 1999 with  the remaining availability  of $30,271,000 maturing in
March 2000. The term loans bear interest at rates ranging from 2 1/2% to 3  1/2%
over  LIBOR or  1 1/4%  to 2  1/4% over  ABR, respectively,  and the $84,083,000
outstanding amount of such  loans at December 31,  1995 amortizes $6,250,000  in
1996, $6,417,000 in 1997, $8,167,000 in 1998, $8,333,000 in 1999, $10,291,000 in
2000  and $44,625,000 thereafter through 2003. In connection with the closing of
the Bank Facility, the Company paid a cash dividend to Triarc of $40,000,000  in
October 1994.
     The  Bank  Facility contains  various covenants  which (a)  require meeting
certain financial amount and ratio tests; (b) limit, among other items, (i)  the
incurrence  of  indebtedness,  (ii)  the retirement  of  certain  debt  prior to
maturity, (iii) investments, (iv)  asset dispositions, (v) capital  expenditures
and (vi) affiliate transactions other than in the normal course of business; and
(c)  restrict the payment  of dividends to  Triarc. As of  December 31, 1995 the
Company had  $5,000,000 available  for the  payment of  dividends; however,  the
Company  is effectively prevented from paying  dividends due to the restrictions
of the financial amount  and ratio tests noted  above. The Company's debt  under
the Bank Facility is guaranteed by Triarc.
     On  December 27, 1995 the Company  borrowed $30,000,000 under the revolving
credit facility, and dividended such  amount to Triarc ($22,721,000) and  SEPSCO
($7,279,000)  in  proportion to  their  respective percentage  ownership  of the
Company. The use of the proceeds of the $30,000,000 borrowing was restricted  to
the  redemption  of the  $45,000,000  outstanding principal  amount  of SEPSCO's
11 7/8% senior  subordinated debentures  due February 1,  1998; such  redemption
occurred on February 22, 1996.
     Equipment  Notes  --  Certain of  the  equipment  notes are  issued  by the
Company's wholly-owned leasing subsidiary,  NPC Leasing, and are  collateralized
by  vehicles and other equipment which NPC  Leasing leases to current and former
affiliates. The equipment notes bear interest at rates which range from 1% to 2%
above the  prime  rate  in effect  at  the  time the  obligations  are  incurred
(combined  weighted average rate of 9.1% and 8.6% at December 31, 1994 and 1995,
respectively), and are payable in both equal monthly and quarterly  installments
over  varying terms of up to 60 months.  Payments under certain of the notes are
guaranteed by the Company and/or Triarc.
     Under the  Company's  various debt  agreements,  substantially all  of  the
Company's  assets  and the  Company's outstanding  common  stock are  pledged as
collateral.
     The fair values of the  revolving loans and the  term loans under the  Bank
Facility at December 31, 1994 and 1995 approximated their carrying values due to
their  floating interest rates. The fair values of all other long-term debt were
assumed to  reasonably approximate  their carrying  amounts since  the  interest
rates approximate current levels.
 
(11) INCOME TAXES
     The  provision for  income taxes  before extraordinary  charge for  the ten
months ended December 31, 1993  and the years ended  December 31, 1994 and  1995
consists of the following components:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                           TEN MONTHS                     YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                       ENDED DECEMBER 31,    --------------------------------------------------
                                                              1993                    1994                       1995
                                                       ------------------    -----------------------    -----------------------
                                                                                    (IN THOUSANDS)
 
<S>                                                    <C>                   <C>                        <C>
Current:
     Federal........................................         $1,562                  $ 5,099                    $ 1,890
     State..........................................            336                    1,051                        406
                                                            -------                  -------                    -------
                                                              1,898                    6,150                      2,296
                                                            -------                  -------                    -------
Deferred:
     Federal........................................           (724)                   1,456                      2,114
     State..........................................           (156)                     317                       (119)
                                                            -------                  -------                    -------
                                                               (880)                   1,773                      1,995
                                                            -------                  -------                    -------
                                                             $1,018                  $ 7,923                    $ 4,291
                                                            -------                  -------                    -------
                                                            -------                  -------                    -------
</TABLE>
 
                                      F-18
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                 NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
     The  difference  between  the reported  tax  provision and  a  computed tax
provision based on income  before income taxes and  extraordinary charge at  the
statutory Federal income tax rate of 35% is reconciled as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                           TEN MONTHS                     YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                       ENDED DECEMBER 31,    --------------------------------------------------
                                                              1993                    1994                       1995
                                                       ------------------    -----------------------    -----------------------
                                                                                    (IN THOUSANDS)
 
<S>                                                    <C>                   <C>                        <C>
Income taxes computed at Federal statutory tax
  rate..............................................         $  235                  $ 6,980                    $ 1,290
Increase (decrease) in taxes resulting from:
     Provision for income tax contingencies.........           --                     --                          2,500
     State income taxes, net of Federal income tax
       benefit......................................            117                      889                        187
     Change in the statutory Federal income tax
       rate.........................................            301                   --                         --
     Nondeductible consulting agreement (Note 20)...            352                   --                         --
     Amortization of non-deductible goodwill........             12                       29                        126
     Other, net.....................................              1                       25                        188
                                                            -------                  -------                    -------
                                                             $1,018                  $ 7,923                    $ 4,291
                                                            -------                  -------                    -------
                                                            -------                  -------                    -------
</TABLE>
 
     The  net  current deferred  income tax  asset  (included in  'Other current
assets') and the net noncurrent deferred  income tax liability are comprised  of
the following components:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                        DECEMBER 31,
                                                                                     ------------------
                                                                                      1994       1995
                                                                                     -------    -------
                                                                                       (IN THOUSANDS)
 
<S>                                                                                  <C>        <C>
Allowance for doubtful accounts...................................................   $   424    $   384
Accrued employee benefit costs....................................................       300        224
Accrued interest for income tax matters...........................................       198        198
Accrued environmental costs.......................................................       158        171
Casualty insurance loss reserves..................................................      --          213
Other, net........................................................................       114        126
                                                                                     -------    -------
Net current deferred income tax asset.............................................   $ 1,194    $ 1,316
                                                                                     -------    -------
                                                                                     -------    -------
 
Accelerated depreciation and other properties basis differences...................   $20,922    $20,546
Reserve for income tax contingencies..............................................      --        2,500
Other, net........................................................................      (161)      (168)
                                                                                     -------    -------
Net noncurrent deferred income tax liability......................................   $20,761    $22,878
                                                                                     -------    -------
                                                                                     -------    -------
</TABLE>
 
     As  of December 31, 1994  and 1995, accrued income  taxes payable to Triarc
are included in  'Due to  a parent and  another affiliate'  in the  accompanying
consolidated   balance  sheets  and  amounted   to  $2,657,000  and  $3,815,000,
respectively.
 
     The Internal Revenue  Service (the 'IRS')  is currently examining  Triarc's
Federal income tax returns for the tax years 1989 through 1992 and has issued to
date  notices  of proposed  adjustments relating  to  the Company.  Such notices
propose increasing the Company's taxable income by approximately $19,000,000, of
which $6,600,000  represent  temporary  differences  and  $12,400,000  represent
permanent  differences, which  will be  contested by  Triarc, the  tax effect of
which has not yet been determined. The temporary items, if settled as  proposed,
will  result in deductions from taxable income in periods subsequent to the year
to which the adjustment  relates, and therefore would  not result in  additional
tax  expense. During 1995 the Company provided $2,500,000 included in 'Provision
for income taxes'  relating to  the Company's estimate  of the  tax effect  upon
settlement of the
 
                                      F-19
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                 NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
$12,400,000  of permanent differences and interest, net of tax benefit, relative
to the  settlement  of  both  the  permanent  and  temporary  differences.  Such
provision  was based  on the  Company's experience  with settling  prior audits,
discussions with the IRS regarding these adjustments, as well as evaluating  the
current  issues  with outside  counsel. The  amount and  timing of  any payments
required  as  a  result  of  such  proposed  adjustments  cannot  presently   be
determined.  However, the  Company believes  that adequate  provisions have been
made for any income tax liabilities that may result from the resolution of  such
proposed  adjustments. As  such the  Company does  not believe  it is reasonably
possible that  the tax  contingency will  result in  a settlement  at an  amount
substantially in excess of the $2,500,000 provided.
 
(12) PREFERRED STOCK
 
COMPANY
 
     On June 20, 1994 the Company repurchased for treasury stock 9,206 shares of
its  $21 par value preferred  stock (the 'Preferred Stock')  and 1,637 shares of
its $25 par value Second Preferred  Stock (the 'Second Preferred Stock') at  par
value  aggregating  $234,000  representing  all  of  the  remaining  issued  and
outstanding preferred shares. Such preferred shares, were subsequently cancelled
resulting in an increase to 'Additional paid-in capital' of $378,000.
 
     A summary of  the changes in  the aggregate number  of shares of  Preferred
Stock  and Second Preferred Stock held in  treasury for Transition 1993 and 1994
is as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                     TRANSITION
                                                                                        1993        1994
                                                                                     ----------    -------
                                                                                        (IN THOUSANDS)
 
<S>                                                                                  <C>           <C>
Number of shares at beginning of period...........................................     47,780       47,780
Repurchase of preferred stock.....................................................      --          10,843
Cancellation of preferred stock...................................................      --         (58,623)
                                                                                     ----------    -------
Number of shares at end of period.................................................     47,780        --
                                                                                     ----------    -------
                                                                                     ----------    -------
</TABLE>
 
     A summary  of the  changes in  the  aggregate number  of issued  shares  of
Preferred  Stock and Second Preferred  Stock for Transition 1993  and 1994 is as
follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                     TRANSITION
                                                                                        1993        1994
                                                                                     ----------    -------
                                                                                        (IN THOUSANDS)
 
<S>                                                                                  <C>           <C>
Number of shares at beginning of period...........................................     58,623       58,623
Cancellation of preferred stock...................................................      --         (58,623)
                                                                                     ----------    -------
Number of shares at end of period.................................................     58,623        --
                                                                                     ----------    -------
                                                                                     ----------    -------
</TABLE>
 
PUBLIC GAS
 
     On June 21,  1994 Public  Gas repurchased 70,369  shares of  its $1.00  par
value   convertible  preferred   stock  (the  'Public   Gas  Preferred  Stock'),
representing all of the then issued  and outstanding preferred shares of  Public
Gas  for  $704,000. The  carrying value  of  the Public  Gas Preferred  Stock of
$62,000 was charged to 'Additional paid-in  capital' and the $642,000 excess  of
the  purchase price over  the carrying value represented  the reacquisition of a
minority interest in Public  Gas at SEPSCO  and, as such,  was 'pushed down'  to
Public  Gas  and recorded  as  'Unamortized costs  in  excess of  net  assets of
acquired companies' in the accompanying consolidated balance sheets.
 
                                      F-20
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                 NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
(13) DUE FROM PARENTS
 
     Due from Parents, which has been reflected as a component of  stockholders'
equity (deficit) consisted of the following:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                 DECEMBER 31,
                                                                                              -------------------
                                                                                                1994       1995
                                                                                              --------    -------
                                                                                                (IN THOUSANDS)
 
<S>                                                                                           <C>         <C>
Interest-bearing advances to Triarc........................................................   $ 81,392    $81,392
Noninterest-bearing advances to SEPSCO.....................................................     31,938      --
                                                                                              --------    -------
                                                                                              $113,330    $81,392
                                                                                              --------    -------
                                                                                              --------    -------
</TABLE>
 
     The  receivables from Triarc and SEPSCO have been classified as a component
of stockholders'  equity because  they were  not expected  to be  repaid  except
through  equity transactions and with respect  to Triarc, its liquidity position
is not sufficient to enable it to repay the advances. The receivable from SEPSCO
(including additional  advances during  1995 of  $2,599,000) was  dividended  to
SEPSCO  prior  to  the Merger  (see  Note  3). The  receivable  from  Triarc was
reclassified to a  component of  stockholders' equity  at November  30, 1994  at
which  time it was determined  Triarc's liquidity position may  not enable it to
repay the advances.  Concurrent with  the reclassification,  the Company  ceased
accruing  interest on the receivable. Prior thereto interest income was recorded
on the advances at 8.9% subsequent to October 6, 1994 and at 16.5% prior thereto
except that prior to April 23, 1993 the first $30,000,000 of the receivable bore
interest at 11.75%. Such interest rates  represented the Company's cost of  debt
capital.  Interest income on such advances aggregated $10,360,000 and $9,751,000
during Transition 1993 and 1994, respectively.
 
(14) SEPSCO MERGER
 
     On April  14, 1994,  SEPSCO's shareholders  other than  Triarc approved  an
agreement  and plan  of merger between  Triarc and SEPSCO  (the 'SEPSCO Merger')
pursuant to which on  that date a  subsidiary of Triarc  was merged into  SEPSCO
whereby  each  holder of  shares of  SEPSCO's common  stock (the  'SEPSCO Common
Stock') other  than Triarc,  aggregating a  28.9% minority  interest in  SEPSCO,
received  in  exchange for  each share  of  SEPSCO common  stock, 0.8  shares of
Triarc's class A common stock or an aggregate of 2,691,824 shares. Following the
SEPSCO Merger,  SEPSCO  became  a  wholly-owned subsidiary  of  Triarc  and  its
subsidiaries.
 
     The  fair value as  of April 14,  1994 of the  2,691,824 shares of Triarc's
class A common stock issued in the SEPSCO Merger, net of certain related  costs,
aggregated  $52,105,000 (the  'Merger Consideration').  Triarc had  an excess of
$23,888,000 of Merger Consideration over  Triarc's minority interest in  SEPSCO.
The SEPSCO Merger has been accounted for by Triarc and SEPSCO in accordance with
the  'pushdown' method of accounting and in accordance therewith, $17,004,000 of
such $23,888,000 excess was  'pushed down' to  SEPSCO (the remaining  $6,884,000
was  'pushed down'  to an  affiliated subsidiary)  reflecting Triarc's increased
basis in SEPSCO. SEPSCO, in turn, 'pushed  down' $8,088,000 to Public Gas as  an
increase  in SEPSCO's basis in Public Gas. Such amount increased the 'Additional
paid-in capital' of the Company reflecting Triarc's and SEPSCO's increased bases
in Public Gas and was assigned as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                           (IN THOUSANDS)
 
<S>                                                                                        <C>
Goodwill................................................................................      $  5,483
Properties..............................................................................         4,255
Deferred income taxes...................................................................        (1,650)
                                                                                           --------------
Additional paid-in capital..............................................................      $  8,088
                                                                                           --------------
                                                                                           --------------
</TABLE>
 
                                      F-21
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                 NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
(15) EXTRAORDINARY CHARGE
 
     In connection  with  the early  extinguishment  of the  Company's  13  1/8%
Debentures  in October 1994,  the Company recognized  an extraordinary charge of
$2,116,000 consisting  of  the  write-off  of  previously  unamortized  deferred
financing  costs of $875,000 and  previously unamortized original issue discount
of $2,623,000, net of income tax benefit of $1,382,000.
 
(16) RETIREMENT AND INCENTIVE COMPENSATION PLANS
 
     The Company maintains a 401(k) defined contribution plan (the 'Plan') which
covers all employees meeting  certain eligibility requirements including  active
eligible  employees of Public Gas (whose  account balances were transferred into
the Plan)  subsequent to  the Merger  discussed  in Note  3. Prior  to  becoming
participants  in the  Plan, such Public  Gas employees participated  in a mirror
plan maintained  by  SEPSCO  (the  'SEPSCO  Plan').  The  Plan  allows  eligible
employees  to contribute up to  15% of their compensation  and the Company makes
matching contributions of 25% of employee contributions up to the first 5% of an
employee's contribution. The Company also makes an annual contribution equal  to
1/4  of  1%  of  employee's  compensation.  In  connection  with  these employer
contributions,  the  Company  provided  $147,000,  $157,000  and  $142,000,   in
Transition 1993, 1994 and 1995, respectively.
 
     Under  certain union contracts, the Company is required to make payments to
the unions' pension funds based upon hours worked by the eligible employees.  In
connection with these union plans, the Company provided $1,079,000, $726,000 and
$669,000  in Transition 1993, 1994 and  1995, respectively. Information from the
administrators of the  union plans  is not available  to permit  the Company  to
determine its proportionate share of unfunded vested benefits, if any.
 
(17) LEGAL MATTERS
 
     In  May 1994 the Company  was informed of coal  tar contamination which was
discovered at one  of its  properties in  Wisconsin. The  Company purchased  the
property  from a company which  had purchased the assets  of a utility which had
previously owned  the  property. The  Company  believes that  the  contamination
occurred  during the use  of the property  as a coal  gasification plant by such
utility. In  order to  assess the  extent  of the  problem the  Company  engaged
environmental  consultants who began  work in August 1994.  In December 1994 the
environmental consultants provided a report  to the Company which indicated  the
estimated  range  of potential  remediation  costs to  be  between approximately
$415,000 and $925,000 depending  upon the actual extent  of impacted soils,  the
presence  and extent, if any, of impacted groundwater and the remediation method
actually required  to be  implemented. Since  no amount  within this  range  was
determined  to be a better estimate, the Company provided a charge in the fourth
quarter of  1994  of  $415,000,  the minimum  gross  amount  (with  no  expected
recovery)  within the range, which amount  was included in 'Selling, general and
administrative expenses'  in the  accompanying  1994 consolidated  statement  of
operations.  In  February  1996,  based  upon  new  information,  the  Company's
environmental consultants provided a second report which presented the two  most
likely  remediation methods and revised estimates  of the costs of such methods.
The range of estimated costs for  the first method, which involves treatment  of
groundwater and excavation, treatment and disposal of contaminated soil, is from
$1,600,000  to $3,300,000. The range for  the second method, which involves only
treatment of groundwater and  the building of a  soil containment wall, is  from
$432,000  to  $750,000. Based  on  discussion with  the  Company's environmental
consultants both methods are acceptable remediation plans. The Company, however,
will have to agree on a final plan with the State of Wisconsin. Since  receiving
notice of the contamination, the Company has engaged in discussions of a general
nature  concerning remediation with the State  of Wisconsin. The discussions are
ongoing and there is no  indication as yet of the  time frame for a decision  by
the  State of Wisconsin on the method of remediation. Accordingly, it is unknown
which remediation method will be used. Since no amount within the ranges can  be
determined to be a better estimate, the Company
 
                                      F-22
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                 NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
accrued  an additional  $41,000 in  December 1995  in order  to provide  for the
minimum costs estimated  for the second  remediation method and  legal fees  and
other  professional costs.  The provisions  through December  31, 1995 aggregate
$456,000 and payments through December 31, 1995 amounted to $24,000 resulting in
a remaining accrual of  $432,000 at that  date. The Company  is also engaged  in
ongoing  discussions of a  general nature with  a successor to  the utility that
operated a  coal  gasification  plant  on  the property.  There  is  as  yet  no
indication  that  a successor  owner will  share the  costs of  remediation. The
Company, if found liable for  any of such costs,  would attempt to recover  such
costs  from  the successor  owner. The  ultimate outcome  of this  matter cannot
presently be determined and,  depending upon the  cost of remediation  required,
may  have  a material  adverse effect  on  the Company's  consolidated financial
position or results of operations.
 
     The Company is involved in  ordinary claims, litigation and  administrative
proceedings  and  investigations  of  various  types  in  several  jurisdictions
incidental to its  business. In the  opinion of management  of the Company,  the
outcome  of any such matter,  or all of them combined,  will not have a material
adverse effect on the Company's  consolidated financial condition or results  of
operations.
 
(18) ACQUISITIONS
 
     During  Transition  1993,  1994  and  1995  the  Company  acquired  several
companies engaged in the sale of  propane and related merchandise. The  purchase
prices (including debt issued and assumed) aggregated $1,382,000, $8,967,000 and
$373,000,  and resulted  in increases  in Goodwill  of $475,000,  $3,096,000 and
$116,000 in  Transition 1993,  1994 and  1995, respectively.  (See Note  19  for
discussion of Triarc's 1995 acquisition on behalf of the Company).
 
(19) TRANSACTIONS WITH AFFILIATES
 
     In  August 1995 Triarc, through a  wholly owned subsidiary, acquired all of
the outstanding  stock of  two  companies engaged  in the  propane  distribution
business.  The aggregate purchase price was $4,240,000 (including the assumption
of certain existing indebtedness). In September 1995 the stock of the subsidiary
which acquired  the two  companies was  contributed by  Triarc to  NPC  Holdings
which,  in  turn,  contributed  such stock  to  the  Company.  Such contribution
resulted  in  increases  in  the  Company's  'Additional  paid-in  capital'   of
$4,240,000  and Goodwill of $2,181,000.  In consideration for such contribution,
NPC Holdings received  an additional 30  shares of the  Company's common  stock,
increasing its ownership of the Company to 75.7% from 75.2%.
 
     In  the fourth  quarter of  1995 the Company  sold certain  of its accounts
receivable to Triarc  for cash of  $3,809,000. As collections  on such  accounts
receivable are received by the Company they are remitted to Triarc on a periodic
basis.  As of December  31, 1995, such  remittances aggregated $1,412,000. Under
the agreement  pursuant to  which  the receivables  were  sold, the  Company  is
obligated   to   repurchase  any   receivables  which   are  determined   to  be
uncollectible, up to a maximum  of 10% of the  face amount originally sold.  The
Company  believes that its allowance for  doubtful accounts is adequate to allow
for any repurchases that may be required.
 
     The Company  receives from  Triarc  certain management  services  including
legal,  accounting,  tax, insurance,  financial  and other  management services.
Effective  April  23,  1993  National  Propane  (and  Triarc's  other  principal
subsidiaries, including SEPSCO) entered into a new management services agreement
(the  'New  Management  Services  Agreement')  with  Triarc  which  revised  the
allocation method  for  those  costs  which cannot  be  directly  allocated.  As
revised,  such costs  are allocated  based upon  the greater  of (i)  the sum of
earnings before  income taxes,  depreciation and  amortization and  (ii) 10%  of
revenues,  as a percentage of  Triarc's corresponding consolidated amount. Prior
to the  Merger,  a portion  of  the costs  allocated  to SEPSCO  under  the  New
Management Services Agreement were allocated to Public Gas based on the relative
portion  of Public Gas' revenues to  SEPSCO's consolidated revenues (the 'SEPSCO
Allocation Method'). Prior to the Merger,  Public Gas also received from  SEPSCO
operating  management services  the costs  of which  were charged  to Public Gas
 
                                      F-23
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                 NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
also in accordance with the SEPSCO  Allocation Method. Prior to April 23,  1993,
the  costs of management  services were allocated by  Triarc to its subsidiaries
under a former  management services agreement  (the 'Former Management  Services
Agreement')  based first directly on the cost of the services provided and then,
for those costs which could not  be directly allocated, based upon the  relative
revenues   and  tangible  assets  as  a  percentage  of  Triarc's  corresponding
consolidated amounts. Management  of the  Company believes  that all  allocation
methods  referred to above  are reasonable. The Company  understands Triarc is a
holding company with no independent operations of its own and substantially  all
of the expenses it incurs are for services on behalf of its affiliated companies
and, accordingly, are chargeable to such companies in accordance with management
services agreements including the Former and New Management Services Agreements.
However,  the Company believes  that the allocated  costs discussed above exceed
those which would have been, and are expected to be, incurred by the Company  on
a  standalone basis.  Such costs  for services  provided by  Triarc (including a
portion of the charges allocated by Triarc  to SEPSCO and, in turn, from  SEPSCO
to  the Company)  would have approximated  amounts not in  excess of $1,250,000,
$1,500,000 and $1,500,000 for Transition  1993, 1994 and 1995, respectively.  It
is  not practicable, however, to  estimate the costs that  Public Gas would have
incurred on a  standalone basis for  services provided by  SEPSCO in  Transition
1993  and  1994.  Additionally, in  Transition  1993 the  Company  was allocated
certain costs  representing uncollectible  amounts owed  to Triarc  for  similar
management  services by certain  affiliates or former  affiliates. The Company's
portion of  such  allocation  under the  Former  Management  Services  Agreement
amounted  to $98,000 for Transition 1993. These costs were allocated principally
on the same  basis as  the costs of  management services,  an allocation  method
management  of the  Company believes was  reasonable. Such costs  to the Company
would have been lower if the Company  had operated as an unaffiliated entity  of
Triarc  to the extent the cost of such services would not have been incurred had
services not been provided to the entities unable to pay. A summary of the costs
charged to the Company for management services is as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                TEN MONTHS
                                                                  ENDED         YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                               DECEMBER 31,    --------------------------
                                                                   1993           1994           1995
                                                               ------------    ----------    ------------
                                                                             (IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                                            <C>             <C>           <C>
Costs allocated by Triarc to the Company under the New
  Management Services Agreement.............................      $1,827         $3,000         $3,000
Costs related to the New Management Services Agreement
  allocated by SEPSCO to Public Gas.........................         447          --            --
Costs of management services provided by SEPSCO to Public
  Gas.......................................................         783          1,561         --
Costs allocated to National Propane and Public Gas under the
  Former Management Services Agreement......................         428          --            --
                                                               ------------    ----------    ------------
                                                                  $3,485         $4,561         $3,000
                                                               ------------    ----------    ------------
                                                               ------------    ----------    ------------
</TABLE>
 
     Until January  31, 1994  the  Company, through  Triarc and  SEPSCO,  leased
office space from a trust for the benefit of Victor Posner and his children (the
'Posner  Lease'). Rent allocated by Triarc  to the Company (including Public Gas
through SEPSCO) amounted  to $277,000  for Transition  1993 and  is included  in
'Selling,  general and administrative expenses' in the accompanying consolidated
statement of operations.  During Transition  1993, the Company  also recorded  a
provision  of  $1,814,000  included  in  'Facilities  relocation  and  corporate
restructuring' in the accompanying consolidated statement of operations for  its
allocated  share  of the  remaining  payments on  the  Posner Lease  due  to its
cancellation effective January 31, 1994 (see  Note 20). Prior to April 23,  1993
the  rent  was  allocated  based  on  direct  square  footage  utilized  and the
allocation methods  previously described  under the  Former Management  Services
Agreement.  Subsequent to April 23, 1993  the rent allocation method was changed
and was based on  direct square footage utilized  and the allocation methods  of
the New Management Services
 
                                      F-24
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                 NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
Agreement.  Management of the  Company believes such  methods are reasonable and
the rent charged for direct usage  approximated the rent the Company would  have
incurred on a stand-alone basis.
 
     Chesapeake  Insurance Company Limited ('Chesapeake Insurance'), an indirect
subsidiary of Triarc,  provided certain  insurance coverage  and reinsurance  of
certain  risks  to  the Company  until  October  1993 at  which  time Chesapeake
Insurance ceased writing all insurance and reinsurance. The net premium  expense
incurred  was $4,064,000 in Transition 1993. Such amount is included in 'Cost of
sales' ($3,971,000) and 'Selling, general and administrative expenses' ($93,000)
in the accompanying consolidated statement  of operations. Such costs have  been
allocated  based upon the  relative loss experience  after consultation with the
Company's insurance broker. Management of  the Company believes such  allocation
method  was reasonable  and resulted in  insurance charges to  the Company which
approximated those the Company would have received directly in the open market.
 
     Insurance and Risk Management, Inc. ('IRM'), which was an affiliate of  the
Company  until  April 23,  1993, acted  as  agent or  broker in  connection with
insurance coverage  obtained  by  the Company  and  provided  claims  processing
services to the Company. The commissions and payments incurred for such services
were  approximately $49,000 in Transition 1993. Such amount is included in 'Cost
of  sales'  in  the  accompanying  consolidated  statement  of  operations.  The
arrangement  with IRM  was terminated in  connection with the  change in control
discussed in Note 20.
 
     Also, see Note 9 relative to  certain transactions of NPC Leasing and  Note
20  relative to certain charges, primarily  related to facilities relocation and
corporation restructuring, allocated to the Company by Triarc.
 
(20) SIGNIFICANT TRANSITION 1993 CHARGES
 
     The results of operations for Transition 1993 included certain  significant
charges summarized below:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                           (IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                                                                        <C>
Estimated costs allocated to the Company by Triarc to terminate the lease on its
  existing corporate facilities (Note 19)...............................................      $  1,814
Estimated costs associated with conforming subsidiaries' identifications to 'National
  Propane'..............................................................................         2,000
Estimated costs associated with systems installation necessitated by National Propane's
  new operating strategy................................................................         1,500
Estimated costs associated with certain employee terminations and related severance
  payments..............................................................................         1,050
Estimated costs to relocate and reorganize the Company's corporate headquarters.........         1,058
Total costs allocated to the Company by Triarc related to a five-year consulting
  agreement between Triarc and the former Vice Chairman of Triarc.......................         1,007
                                                                                           --------------
     Total facilities relocation and corporate restructuring charges....................         8,429(a)
Estimated costs allocated to the Company by Triarc for compensation paid to the Special
  Committee of the Board of Directors of Triarc.........................................           514(b)
Income tax benefit relating to the above charges........................................        (3,489)
Equity in significant charges of affiliate, net of taxes................................           281(c)
                                                                                           --------------
                                                                                              $  5,735
                                                                                           --------------
                                                                                           --------------
</TABLE>
 
 (a) Included in 'Facilities relocation and corporate restructuring.'
 
 (b) Included in 'Selling, general and administrative expenses.'
 
 (c) Included in 'Other income, net.'
 
                            ------------------------
 
     These  charges relate to the change in control (the 'Change in Control') of
the Company and  Triarc that  resulted from  the closing  on April  23, 1993  of
transactions contemplated by a stock purchase
 
                                      F-25
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                 NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
agreement  between  DWG Acquisition  Group, L.P.  ('DWG Acquisition'),  the sole
general partners of which are Nelson Peltz and Peter W. May, the Chairman of the
Board and Chief Executive Officer and the President and Chief Operating Officer,
respectively, of Triarc  and directors of  the Company, and  Victor Posner,  the
then  Chairman and Chief  Executive Officer of the  Company and certain entities
controlled by  him, whereby  DWG  Acquisition acquired  control of  Triarc  from
Victor Posner.
 
     As  part of  the Change in  Control, the  Board of Directors  of Triarc was
reconstituted. At the April 24, 1993  meeting of the reconstituted Triarc  Board
of Directors, based on a report and recommendations from a management consulting
firm  that  had  conducted  an  extensive  review  of  Triarc's  operations  and
management  structure,  the  Triarc  Board  of  Directors  approved  a  plan  of
decentralization  and  restructuring which  entailed,  among other  matters, the
following features: (i) the strategic decision to manage Triarc in the future on
a decentralized, rather  than on a  centralized, basis; (ii)  the hiring of  new
executive officers for Triarc and the hiring of new chief executive officers and
new  senior management teams  for certain subsidiaries  of Triarc, including the
Company; (iii) the termination of a significant number of employees as a  result
of  both the new management philosophy and  the hiring of an almost entirely new
management team; and (iv) the relocation of the corporate headquarters of Triarc
and of all of its subsidiaries whose headquarters were located in South Florida,
including NPC Leasing and SEPSCO. Accordingly, the Company's allocable share  of
the  cost to relocate its corporate headquarters  and terminate the lease on its
existing corporate facilities, which extended through April 1997, of $1,814,000,
and estimated corporate restructuring charges of $5,608,000 including  personnel
relocation   costs  and   employee  severance   costs,  all   stemmed  from  the
decentralization and restructuring plan formally  adopted at the April 24,  1993
meeting of Triarc's reconstituted Board of Directors.
 
     Prior  to the Change in Control,  the Company's business was operated under
various names in different locations throughout the United States. As a part  of
the  strategy  of centralizing  the Company's  operations, new  management ('New
Management') which began  with the Change  in Control made  the decision at  the
time  of  the  Change  in  Control to  refocus  National  Propane's  identity by
operating substantially all of its entities and marketing its product under  the
name  'National Propane'. Since this decision was made at the time of the Change
in Control, National  Propane accrued  the estimated costs  of implementing  the
decision  of  $2,000,000  in  the  accompanying  Transition  1993  statement  of
operations. Such costs consist principally of repainting and replacing decals on
the Company's  vehicles and  equipment with  the 'National  Propane' colors  and
logo.
 
     New Management also identified various new operating strategies in order to
refocus  the Company's direction and manage  the Company on a centralized basis.
New Management determined that the management information systems which were  in
place  at  the time  of the  Change in  Control were  inadequate to  support the
implementation of  the  new  strategies  including  the  centralization  of  the
Company's  operations from six regional centers  and two corporate facilities to
one new corporate headquarters.  Since the decision to  change such systems  was
made at the time of the Change in Control, the estimated costs of implementation
of  $1,500,000, primarily related  to retraining personnel,  were accrued in the
accompanying Transition 1993 consolidated statement of operations.
 
     In connection with the Change in Control, Victor Posner and Steven  Posner,
the  then Vice Chairman  of the Company,  resigned as officers  and directors of
Triarc and its subsidiaries. In order to induce Steven Posner to resign,  Triarc
entered  into a consulting agreement with  him extending through April 1998. The
Company's allocable  share of  costs  of $1,007,000  related to  the  consulting
agreement  was recorded  as a charge  in Transition 1993  because the consulting
agreement does not require any substantial services and Triarc has not  received
nor  did it expect to  receive any services that  will have substantial value to
Triarc and its subsidiaries.
 
     The Company's equity in net loss of affiliates included similar significant
charges which were allocated by Triarc to CFC Holdings amounting to $281,000 and
is  included  in  'Other  income,  net'  in  the  accompanying  Transition  1993
consolidated statement of operations.
 
                                      F-26
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                 NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
(21) INITIAL PUBLIC OFFERING OF COMMON UNITS AND OTHER TRANSACTIONS
 
     On  March 13, 1996 National Propane  Partners, L.P. (the 'Partnership') was
formed  to  acquire,  own  and  operate  the  Company's  propane  business   and
substantially  all  of  the related  assets  of the  Company.  The Partnership's
activities will be conducted through an operating partnership, National  Propane
L.P.  (the 'Operating  Partnership'), the limited  partner in which  will be the
Partnership. The  Company  and  National  Propane  SGP,  Inc.,  a  wholly  owned
subsidiary  of  the Company  (the 'Special  General  Partner') intend  to convey
substantially all of  their propane-related  assets and  liabilities other  than
amounts  due  from  parent  ($81,392,000  as  of  December  31,  1995), deferred
financing costs ($4,697,000 as of December 31, 1995) and net deferred income tax
liabilities ($21,562,000 as of December 31, 1995) to the Operating Partnership.
 
     The Partnership  intends  to  issue 6,190,476  Common  Units,  representing
limited  partner interests in the Partnership, pursuant to a public offering and
to concurrently issue  4,533,638 Subordinated  Units, representing  subordinated
general  partner interests in the Partnership,  to the Company. In addition, the
Company and the Special General Partner  will each receive a 2% general  partner
interest  in the Partnership and the Operating Partnership, on a combined basis.
In connection  therewith  the  Partnership  will  issue  $125,000,000  of  first
mortgage  notes  to institutional  investors and  repay  all of  its outstanding
borrowings under the Bank  Facility ($127,312,000 as of  December 31, 1995)  and
$6,732,000  (as of December 31, 1995) of other debt. The early redemption of the
Bank Facility  will  result in  an  extraordinary  charge for  the  writeoff  of
unamortized  deferred financing  costs, net of  income tax benefit,  which as of
December 31,  1995 would  have approximated  $2,800,000. Concurrently  with  the
Offering, the Company will also pay a cash dividend to Triarc of $59,300,000 and
the  Operating Partnership will  provide a loan to  Triarc of $40,700,000. There
can be no assurance, however, that the Company will be able to consummate  these
transactions.
 
                                      F-27



<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                        NATIONAL PROPANE PARTNERS, L.P.
                   (SUCCESSOR TO NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION
                               AND SUBSIDIARIES)
                     CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                      DECEMBER 31,    SEPTEMBER 30,
                                                                                        1995(A)           1996
                                                                                      ------------    -------------
                                                                                             (IN THOUSANDS)
                                                                                               (UNAUDITED)
<S>                                                                                   <C>             <C>
                                      ASSETS
Current assets:
     Cash and cash equivalents.....................................................     $  2,825        $   4,671
     Receivables, net..............................................................       16,391           10,258
     Finished goods inventories....................................................       10,543           14,197
     Interest receivable from Triarc Companies, Inc. ..............................       --                1,370
     Due from Triarc and other current assets......................................        4,340            1,526
                                                                                      ------------    -------------
          Total current assets.....................................................       34,099           32,022
Due from Triarc Companies, Inc. ...................................................       --               40,700
Properties, net....................................................................       83,214           81,178
Unamortized costs in excess of net assets of acquired companies....................       15,161           14,760
Other assets.......................................................................        6,638            7,015
                                                                                      ------------    -------------
                                                                                        $139,112        $ 175,675
                                                                                      ------------    -------------
                                                                                      ------------    -------------
 
              LIABILITIES AND PARTNERS' CAPITAL/STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT
Current liabilities:
     Current portion of long-term debt.............................................     $ 11,278        $     315
     Accounts payable..............................................................        7,836            6,986
     Due to Triarc Companies, Inc. and another affiliate...........................        9,972            --
     Accrued expenses..............................................................        9,370           12,838
                                                                                      ------------    -------------
          Total current liabilities................................................       38,456           20,139
Long-term debt.....................................................................      124,266          126,968
Deferred income taxes..............................................................       22,878            --
Customer deposits..................................................................        2,112            2,026
Commitments and contingencies......................................................
Partners' capital/Stockholders' deficit:
     Stockholders' deficit.........................................................      (48,600)           --
     Common unitholders' capital...................................................         --             14,816
     General partners' capital -- including subordinated units.....................         --             11,726
                                                                                      ------------    -------------
          Total Partners' capital/Stockholders' deficit............................      (48,600)          26,542
                                                                                      ------------    -------------
                                                                                        $139,112        $ 175,675
                                                                                      ------------    -------------
                                                                                      ------------    -------------
</TABLE>
 
- ------------
 
 (A) Derived  from the audited consolidated  financial statements as of December
     31, 1995
 
     See accompanying notes to condensed consolidated financial statements
 
                                      F-28
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                        NATIONAL PROPANE PARTNERS, L.P.
                   (SUCCESSOR TO NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION
                               AND SUBSIDIARIES)
                CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                THREE MONTHS ENDED           NINE MONTHS ENDED 
                                                                  SEPTEMBER 30,                 SEPTEMBER 30,
                                                            --------------------------   -----------------------------
                                                                1995           1996          1995            1996
                                                            -------------   ----------   -------------   -------------
                                                                       (IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT UNIT AMOUNTS)
                                                                                   (UNAUDITED)
 
<S>                                                         <C>             <C>          <C>             <C>
Revenues..................................................     $25,736      $   27,720     $ 102,461       $ 116,018
                                                            -------------   ----------   -------------   -------------
Cost of sales:
     Cost of product -- propane and appliances............      10,961          13,253        43,814          55,066
     Other operating expenses applicable to revenues......      10,419          11,578        33,727          34,031
                                                            -------------   ----------   -------------   -------------
          Gross profit....................................       4,356           2,889        24,920          26,921
Selling, general and administrative.......................       5,626           4,756        15,506          17,009
Management fees...........................................         750          --             2,250           1,500
                                                            -------------   ----------   -------------   -------------
          Operating income (loss).........................      (2,020)         (1,867)        7,164           8,412
                                                            -------------   ----------   -------------   -------------
Other income (expense):
     Interest expense.....................................      (2,906)         (2,825)       (8,731)         (9,067)
     Interest income from Triarc Companies, Inc. .........      --               1,370       --                1,370
     Other income, net....................................         209             152           698             662
                                                            -------------   ----------   -------------   -------------
                                                                (2,697)         (1,303)       (8,033)         (7,035)
                                                            -------------   ----------   -------------   -------------
          Income (loss) before income taxes and
            extraordinary charge..........................      (4,717)         (3,170)         (869)          1,377
Provision for (benefit from) income taxes.................      (1,839)         --              (264)          1,922
                                                            -------------   ----------   -------------   -------------
          Loss before extraordinary charge................      (2,878)         (3,170)         (605)           (545)
Extraordinary charge......................................      --              (2,631)      --               (2,631)
                                                            -------------   ----------   -------------   -------------
          Net loss........................................     $(2,878)     $   (5,801)    $    (605)      $  (3,176)
                                                            -------------   ----------   -------------   -------------
                                                            -------------   ----------   -------------   -------------
General partners' interest in:
     Loss before extraordinary charge.....................                  $     (127)
     Extraordinary charge.................................                      (2,631)
                                                                            ----------
          Net loss........................................                  $   (2,758)
                                                                            ----------
                                                                            ----------
Unitholders' interest in net loss.........................                  $   (3,043)
                                                                            ----------
                                                                            ----------
Net loss per unit.........................................                  $    (0.28)
                                                                            ----------
                                                                            ----------
Weighted average number of units outstanding..............                  10,809,834
                                                                            ----------
                                                                            ----------
</TABLE>
 
     See accompanying notes to condensed consolidated financial statements
 
                                      F-29
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                        NATIONAL PROPANE PARTNERS, L.P.
                   (SUCCESSOR TO NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION
                               AND SUBSIDIARIES)
                CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                              NINE MONTHS ENDED
                                                                                                SEPTEMBER 30,
                                                                                             --------------------
                                                                                              1995        1996
                                                                                             -------    ---------
                                                                                                (IN THOUSANDS)
                                                                                                 (UNAUDITED)
<S>                                                                                          <C>        <C>
Cash flows from operating activities:
     Net loss.............................................................................   $  (605)   $  (3,176)
     Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash provided by operating activities
          Depreciation and amortization of properties.....................................     6,070        7,489
          Amortization of costs in excess of net assets of acquired companies.............       373          540
          Amortization of deferred financing costs........................................       958          710
          Other amortization..............................................................       245          270
          Write-off of deferred financing costs...........................................     --           4,126
          Provision for doubtful accounts.................................................       577          947
          Deferred income tax benefit.....................................................    (1,222)      (2,520)
          Gain on sales of properties.....................................................      (135)         (39)
          Other, net......................................................................      (568)         (73)
          Changes in operating assets and liabilities:
               Decrease in receivables....................................................     7,271        5,187
               Increase in inventories....................................................    (3,938)      (3,636)
               Decrease in prepaid expenses and other current assets......................       611          104
               Increase (decrease) in accounts payable and accrued expenses...............    (2,171)       3,154
                                                                                             -------    ---------
          Net cash provided by operating activities.......................................     7,466       13,229
                                                                                             -------    ---------
Cash flows from investing activities:
     Capital expenditures.................................................................    (6,615)      (4,997)
     Business acquisitions................................................................      (290)      (1,030)
     Proceeds from sales of properties....................................................       426          237
                                                                                             -------    ---------
          Net cash used in investing activities...........................................    (6,479)      (5,790)
                                                                                             -------    ---------
Cash flows from financing activities:
     Repayments of long-term debt.........................................................   (13,157)    (137,302)
     Proceeds of First Mortgage Notes.....................................................     --         125,000
     Proceeds from other long-term debt...................................................     8,500        3,800
     Payment of dividend to Triarc Companies, Inc.........................................     --         (59,300)
     Net proceeds of initial public offering..............................................     --         117,933
     (Increase) decrease in due to/from Triarc Companies, Inc. and another affilate.......     1,244      (50,611)
     Deferred financing costs.............................................................      (812)      (5,087)
     Other................................................................................     --             (26)
                                                                                             -------    ---------
          Net cash used in financing activities...........................................    (4,225)      (5,593)
                                                                                             -------    ---------
Net increase (decrease) in cash...........................................................    (3,238)       1,846
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period..........................................     3,983        2,825
                                                                                             -------    ---------
Cash and cash equivalents at end of period................................................   $   745    $   4,671
                                                                                             -------    ---------
                                                                                             -------    ---------
</TABLE>
 
     See accompanying notes to condensed consolidated financial statements
 
                                      F-30



<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                        NATIONAL PROPANE PARTNERS, L.P.
                   (SUCCESSOR TO NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION
                               AND SUBSIDIARIES)
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
NOTE 1 -- ORGANIZATION
 
     National Propane Partners, L.P. (the 'Partnership') was formed on March 13,
1996  as  a Delaware  limited partnership.  The  Partnership and  its subsidiary
partnership National Propane, L.P (the  'Operating Partnership') were formed  to
acquire,  own and operate the propane  business and substantially all the assets
and liabilities (principally all assets  and liabilities other than amounts  due
from  a parent, deferred financing costs and income tax liabilities) of National
Propane Corporation  and  subsidiaries  ('National  Propane',  and  referred  to
subsequent  to the  initial public offering  (described below)  as the 'Managing
General  Partner'),  a  wholly-owned   subsidiary  of  Triarc  Companies,   Inc.
('Triarc').  In addition, National Sales &  Service, Inc. ('NSSI'), a subsidiary
of the Operating Partnership, was formed to acquire and operate the service work
and appliance and parts sales business of National Propane. The Partnership, the
Operating Partnership and NSSI are  collectively referred to hereinafter as  the
'Partnership  Entities'. The Partnership Entities  consummated in July, 1996, an
initial  public   offering,  (the   'Offering'),  of   6,301,550  common   units
representing  limited partner interests in  the Partnership (the 'Common Units')
for an offering price of $21.00 per Common Unit aggregating $132,333,000  before
$14,400,000 of underwriting discounts and commissions and other expenses related
to  the  Offering. On  July 2,  1996 the  Managing General  Partner issued  in a
private placement $125,000,000 of 8.54% First  Mortgage Notes due June 30,  2010
(the  'First Mortgage  Notes'). The  Operating Partnership  assumed the Managing
General Partner's obligation under the  First Mortgage Notes in connection  with
the  conveyance on July  2, 1996 (the 'Partnership  Conveyance') by the Managing
General Partner and  National Propane  SGP Inc.,  a subsidiary  of the  Managing
General  Partner (the 'Special General Partner'  and, together with the Managing
General Partner, referred to as the 'General Partners'), of substantially all of
their assets  and liabilities  (which did  not include  an existing  $81,392,000
intercompany note from Triarc, $59,300,000 of the net proceeds from the issuance
of  the First  Mortgage Notes  which was used  to make a dividend  to Triarc and
certain net  liabilities of  the  General Partners).  On  November 6,  1996  the
Partnership  sold an additional 400,000 Common Units through a private placement
at a price  of $21.00  per Common Unit  aggregating $8,400,000  before fees  and
estimated  expenses of $1,033,000, resulting in  net proceeds to the Partnership
of $7,367,000.
 
     The  General  Partners  own  general  partner  interests  representing   an
aggregate  4% unsubordinated general partner interest in the Partnership and the
Operating Partnership on  a combined  basis. In addition,  the Managing  General
Partner   owns   4,533,638   subordinated  units   (the   'Subordinated  Units')
representing a 40.2% (38.7%  after the November 6,  1996 sale of 400,000  Common
Units)  subordinated general partner  interest in the  Partnership Entities. The
Common Units and the Subordinated Units together represent the limited partners'
interest (the 'Limited Partners' Interest').
 
NOTE 2 -- BASIS OF PRESENTATION
 
     The accompanying  unaudited  condensed  consolidated  financial  statements
presented  herein  reflect the  effects of  the  Partnership Conveyance  and the
Offering, in  which  the  Partnership  Entities  became  the  successor  to  the
businesses  of  National  Propane.  Because  the  Partnership  Conveyance  was a
transfer of assets and liabilities in exchange for partnership interests among a
controlled group of companies, it has been accounted for in a manner similar  to
a  pooling  of  interests,  resulting in  the  presentation  of  the Partnership
Entities as the successor to the continuing businesses of National Propane.  The
entity  representative of both  the operations of (i)  National Propane prior to
the Partnership Conveyance, the Offering and related transactions which occurred
on  July  2,  1996  and  (ii)  the  Partnership  Entities  subsequent  to   such
transactions,  is referred to herein as 'National'. Those assets and liabilities
not conveyed to the Partnership were  retained by the Managing General  Partner.
Such   condensed  consolidated  financial  statements   have  been  prepared  in
accordance with Rule 10-01 of Regulation  S-X promulgated by the Securities  and
Exchange Commission and, therefore, do not include
 
                                      F-31
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                        NATIONAL PROPANE PARTNERS, L.P.
                   (SUCCESSOR TO NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION
                               AND SUBSIDIARIES)
      NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
all  information and  footnotes necessary for  a fair  presentation of financial
position, results  of operations  and cash  flows in  conformity with  generally
accepted  accounting  principles.  In  the  opinion  of  National,  however, the
accompanying   condensed   consolidated   financial   statements   contain   all
adjustments,  consisting  only  of normal  recurring  adjustments,  necessary to
present fairly National's  financial position,  results of  operations and  cash
flows.
 
     The  condensed consolidated financial statements  including the nine months
ended September  30, 1995  reflect the  effects  of the  June 1995  merger  (the
'Merger') of Public Gas Company with and into National. Prior thereto Public Gas
was  an indirect  wholly-owned subsidiary  of Triarc.  Because the  Merger was a
transfer of assets  and liabilities in  exchange for shares  among a  controlled
group  of companies, it has been accounted for  in a manner similar to a pooling
of interests and, accordingly, the aforementioned 1995 period has been  restated
to reflect the Merger.
 
NOTE 3 -- PROPERTIES
 
     The following is a summary of the components of properties, net:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                  DECEMBER 31,    SEPTEMBER 30,
                                                                      1995            1996
                                                                  ------------    -------------
                                                                         (IN THOUSANDS)
 
<S>                                                               <C>             <C>
Properties, at cost............................................     $165,216        $ 170,441
Less accumulated depreciation..................................       82,002           89,263
                                                                  ------------    -------------
                                                                    $ 83,214        $  81,178
                                                                  ------------    -------------
                                                                  ------------    -------------
</TABLE>
 
NOTE 4 -- LONG TERM DEBT AND EXTRAORDINARY CHARGE
 
     First  Mortgage  Notes --  National issued  $125,000,000 of  First Mortgage
Notes in a private placement, and prepaid $128,469,000 of existing indebtedness,
resulting in  an  extraordinary  charge,  net of  income  taxes,  of  $2,631,000
relating  primarily to the  write-off of $4,126,000  of deferred financing costs
applicable to such early extinguishment of  debt. The First Mortgage Notes  bear
interest  at a fixed annual  rate of 8.54% payable  semi-annually in arrears and
amortize in eight equal  annual installments of  $15,625,000 beginning June  30,
2003 through June 30, 2010.
 
     Bank Credit Facility -- Concurrent with the Offering, National entered into
a  $55 million bank credit facility (the 'Bank Credit Facility') with a group of
banks. The Bank Credit Facility includes a $15 million working capital  facility
(the  'Working Capital  Facility') and a  $40 million  acquisition facility (the
'Acquisition Facility'), the use of which is restricted to business acquisitions
and capital expenditures for growth. The Bank Credit Facility bears interest, at
National's option, at  either (i)  the 30, 60,  90 or  180-day London  Interbank
Offered Rate plus a margin generally ranging from 1% to 1.75% or (ii) the higher
of  (a) the prime rate and (b) the Federal funds rate plus 0.5%, in either case,
plus a margin of up  to 0.25%. The Working Capital  Facility matures in full  in
July  1999.  However,  National must  reduce  the borrowings  under  the Working
Capital Facility to zero for  a period of at least  30 consecutive days in  each
year  between March 1 and August 31. The Acquisition Facility converts to a term
loan in  July 1998  and  amortizes thereafter  in equal  quarterly  installments
through July 2001.
 
     National's  Bank  Credit  Facility  and the  First  Mortgage  Notes contain
certain restrictive  covenants which,  among other  items, (i)  require  meeting
certain  financial amount and ratio tests,  (ii) limit the incurrence of certain
other additional indebtedness  and certain investments,  asset dispositions  and
transactions  with affiliates  other than in  the normal course  of business and
(iii) restrict  the payment  of distributions  by the  Operating Partnership  if
certain other covenants are not met.
 
                                      F-32
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                        NATIONAL PROPANE PARTNERS, L.P.
                   (SUCCESSOR TO NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION
                               AND SUBSIDIARIES)
      NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
     National's  obligations under  both the First  Mortgage Notes  and the Bank
Credit Facility are secured on an  equal and ratable basis by substantially  all
of  the assets of the  Operating Partnership and are  guaranteed by the Managing
General Partner.
 
NOTE 5 -- INCOME TAXES
 
     National's provision  for  (benefit from)  income  taxes for  each  of  the
periods  presented  varies from  the Federal  statutory income  tax rate  of 35%
principally due  to  (i)  state  income  taxes,  (ii)  the  effect  of  goodwill
amortization  and, (iii) since July  2, 1996, the change  in legal/tax status of
National to  a partnership.  For  federal and  state  income tax  purposes,  the
earnings attributed to the Partnership and Operating Partnership are included in
the  tax returns  of the  individual partners.  As a  result, no  recognition of
income tax  expense  has been  reflected  in National's  consolidated  financial
statements   relating  to  the   earnings  of  the   Partnership  and  Operating
Partnership. The earnings attributed  to NSSI are subject  to federal and  state
income  taxes.  Accordingly, National's  consolidated financial  statements will
reflect income tax  expense related  to NSSI's earnings,  if any.  There was  no
income  tax provision  or benefit  relating to  NSSI in  the three  months ended
September 30, 1996 since any provision or benefit would be immaterial to NSSI or
National for  this  three  month  period. In  connection  with  the  Partnership
Conveyance,  all income  tax liabilities were  retained by  the Managing General
Partner.
 
NOTE 6 -- ACQUISITIONS
 
     During 1996  National  acquired the  assets  of four  unaffiliated  propane
distributors for aggregate cash consideration of $1,030,000.
 
NOTE 7 -- CONTINGENCIES
 
     In  May 1994, National Propane was informed of coal tar contamination which
was discovered at one of its properties in Wisconsin. National Propane purchased
the property from a company  which had purchased the  assets of a utility  which
had   previously  owned  the  property.   National  Propane  believes  that  the
contamination occurred during  the use of  the property as  a coal  gasification
plant  by such utility.  In order to  assess the extent  of the problem National
Propane engaged  environmental consultants  who began  work in  August 1994.  In
February  1996, National  Propane's environmental consultants  provided a report
which presented the  two most likely  remediation methods and  estimates of  the
costs  of such methods. The range of estimated costs for the first method, which
involves treatment  of groundwater  and excavation,  treatment and  disposal  of
contaminated  soil, is from  $1,600,000 to $3,300,000. The  range for the second
method, which involves only treatment of groundwater and the building of a  soil
containment  wall,  is  from  $432,000 to  $750,000.  Based  on  discussion with
National  Propane's  environmental  consultants  both  methods  are   acceptable
remediation plans. National Propane, however, will have to agree on a final plan
with  the  State  of Wisconsin.  Since  receiving notice  of  the contamination,
National Propane  has engaged  in  discussions of  a general  nature  concerning
remediation  with the State of Wisconsin.  The discussions are ongoing and there
is no  indication as  yet of  the time  frame for  a decision  by the  State  of
Wisconsin  on  the  method  of remediation.  Accordingly,  it  is  unknown which
remediation method will  be used. National  Propane is also  engaged in  ongoing
discussions of a general nature with such successor to the utility that operated
a  coal gasification plant on  the property. There is  as yet no indication that
the prior owner will share the costs of remediation. National Propane, if  found
liable  for any such costs,  would attempt to recover  such costs from the prior
owner. In connection with the Partnership Conveyance, the Wisconsin property was
retained by the Managing General Partner. Pursuant to a lease with the  Managing
General  Partner relating to this facility National  has agreed to be liable for
any costs of remediation in excess of amounts
 
                                      F-33
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                        NATIONAL PROPANE PARTNERS, L.P.
                   (SUCCESSOR TO NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION
                               AND SUBSIDIARIES)
      NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
recovered from such prior  owner or from insurance.  Since no amount within  the
ranges  can be determined to be a better estimate, National has accrued $432,000
at December 31, 1995 and September 30, 1996 in order to provide for the  minimum
costs  estimated for the  second remediation method and  incurred legal fees and
other professional costs. The ultimate  outcome of this matter cannot  presently
be  determined and, depending  on the cost  of remediation required,  may have a
material adverse effect on  National's consolidated financial position,  results
of  operations  or ability  to make  the Minimum  Quarterly Distribution  to all
Unitholders (see Note 12).
 
     National is  involved in  ordinary  claims, litigation  and  administrative
proceedings  and  investigations  of  various  types  in  several  jurisdictions
incidental to its  business. In the  opinion of management,  the outcome of  any
such matter, or all of them combined, will not have a material adverse effect on
National's consolidated financial condition or results of operations.
 
NOTE 8 -- UNAUDITED PRO FORMA SUMMARIZED OPERATING RESULTS
 
     The  following unaudited supplemental pro  forma information sets forth the
operating results of National for the  nine months ended September 30, 1996  and
has been adjusted as if the Partnership had been formed as of January 1, 1996 to
give  effect to (i) the elimination of  management fees paid to Triarc, (ii) the
addition  of  the  estimated   stand-alone  general  and  administrative   costs
associated  with National's operation as a  partnership, (iii) a net decrease to
interest expense  to reflect  the  interest expense  associated with  the  First
Mortgage Notes and to eliminate interest expense on the refinanced debt and (iv)
the elimination of the provision for income taxes, as income taxes will be borne
by the partners and not the Partnership or the Operating Partnership, except for
corporate  income taxes relative to NSSI.  Such following pro forma supplemental
financial information does not purport to be indicative of the actual results of
operations that would have resulted had  the Partnership been formed on  January
1, 1996 or of the future results of operations of National.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                     NINE MONTHS ENDED
                                                                     SEPTEMBER 30, 1996
                                                           --------------------------------------
                                                           (IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER UNIT AMOUNT)
<S>                                                        <C>
Revenues................................................                  $116,018
Operating income........................................                     9,162
Income before income taxes and extraordinary charge.....                     5,450
Income before extraordinary charge......................                     5,300
General partners' unsubordinated interest in income
  before extraordinary charge...........................                       212
Unitholders' interest in income before extraordinary
  charge................................................                     5,088
Unitholders' income before extraordinary charge per
  unit..................................................                      0.47
Weighted average number of units outstanding(a).........                10,809,834

</TABLE>

                             ----------------------

(a)  Such  weighted  average  number of units  outstanding  do not  reflect  the
     November 6, 1996 sale of 400,000 common units as discussed in Note 13.
 
NOTE 9 -- UNIT OPTION PLAN
 
     Effective  July 2, 1996, the Managing  General Partner adopted the National
Propane Corporation 1996 Unit Option Plan (the 'Option Plan'), which permits the
grant of options to purchase Common  Units and Subordinated Units and the  grant
of  Unit appreciation rights  ('UARs') covering up to  an aggregate of 1,250,000
Common  Units  and  Subordinated  Units   (subject  to  adjustment  in   certain
circumstances)  plus an additional number of Units  equal to 1% of the number of
Units outstanding as of each December  31 following the Option Plan's  effective
date  which  will be  added to  the total  number  of units  that may  be issued
thereafter. No  options  or  UARS  have  been  granted  under  the  Option  Plan
 
                                      F-34
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                        NATIONAL PROPANE PARTNERS, L.P.
                   (SUCCESSOR TO NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION
                               AND SUBSIDIARIES)
      NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
as  of September 30, 1996.  Any expenses recognized relating  to the Unit Option
Plan will  be allocated  to  the Partnership  in  accordance with  an  agreement
between the Managing General Partner and the Partnership.
 
NOTE 10 -- RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS
 
     Concurrent  with the closing  of the Offering,  National made a $40,700,000
loan to Triarc. The loan bears interest at 13.5% per annum, amortizes $5,087,500
per year commencing 2003 and is secured by a pledge by Triarc of all the  shares
of  capital stock  of the  Managing General  Partner that  are owned  by Triarc.
Interest is payable semi-annually in arrears on each June 30 and December 30.
 
NOTE 11 -- STATEMENT OF STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY (DEFICIT)/PARTNERS' CAPITAL
 
     The changes in National's Stockholders' equity (deficit)/Partner's  capital
for the nine months ended September 30, 1996 were as follows (in thousands):
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                      STOCKHOLDERS'
                                                                         EQUITY/
                                                                         GENERAL
                                                  NOTE RECEIVABLE       PARTNERS'        LIMITED PARTNERS'
                                                    FROM TRIARC          CAPITAL              CAPITAL          TOTAL
                                                  ---------------    ----------------    -----------------    --------
 
<S>                                               <C>                <C>                 <C>                  <C>
Balance at December 31, 1995...................      $ (81,392)          $ 32,792             $--             $(48,600)
Assets/(liabilities) retained by the Managing
  General Partner(a)...........................         81,392            (61,683)            --                19,709
Cash dividend to Triarc........................        --                 (59,300)            --               (59,300)
Cash dividend to Triarc for NPC Leasing
  Corp.........................................        --                     (24)            --                   (24)
Net proceeds of Offering.......................        --                 101,348              16,585          117,933
Net income for the period January 1, 1996 to
  June 30, 1996................................        --                   2,625             --                 2,625
Net  loss  for  the  period  July  1,  1996  to
  September 30, 1996:
     Loss before extraordinary charge..........        --                  (1,401)             (1,769)          (3,170)
     Extraordinary charge......................        --                  (2,631)            --                (2,631)
                                                  ---------------    ----------------    -----------------    --------
Balance at September 30, 1996..................      $ --                $ 11,726             $14,816         $ 26,542
                                                  ---------------    ----------------    -----------------    --------
                                                  ---------------    ----------------    -----------------    --------
</TABLE>
 
- ------------
 
 (a) In connection with the Partnership Conveyance, the Managing General Partner
     retained  the  $81,392,000  receivable  from  Triarc  and  net  liabilities
     totaling  $19,709,000 which consist primarily  of net deferred income taxes
     payable. In addition,  in accordance with  the Partnership Conveyance,  the
     extraordinary  charge for the  early extinguishment of  debt, net of income
     taxes, was allocated entirely to the General Partners.
 
NOTE 12 -- QUARTERLY DISTRIBUTIONS OF AVAILABLE CASH
 
     Subsequent to the Offering National will  distribute to its partners, on  a
quarterly basis, all of its 'Available Cash' which generally means, with respect
to  any fiscal quarter of National, all cash  on hand at the end of such quarter
less the  amount  of cash  reserves  that is  necessary  or appropriate  in  the
discretion of the Managing General Partner to (i) provide for the proper conduct
of  National's business, (ii) comply with applicable law or any Partnership debt
instrument or  other agreement,  or  (iii) provide  funds for  distributions  to
Unitholders  and the General Partners in respect of  any one or more of the next
four quarters.
 
                                      F-35
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                        NATIONAL PROPANE PARTNERS, L.P.
                   (SUCCESSOR TO NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION
                               AND SUBSIDIARIES)
      NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
     Available Cash  will  generally  be  distributed  96%  to  the  Unitholders
(including the Managing General Partner as the holder of Subordinated Units) and
4%  to the General Partners, pro rata, except that if distributions of Available
Cash exceed Target Distribution Levels above the Minimum Quarterly Distribution,
the General  Partners  will receive  an  additional percentage  of  such  excess
distributions  that will increase  to up to  50% of the  distributions above the
highest Target Distribution Level.
 
     With respect to each quarter during the Subordination Period, to the extent
there is sufficient Available  Cash, the holders of  Common Units will have  the
right  to receive the Minimum Quarterly Distribution ($0.525 per Unit), plus any
Common Unit  Arrearages, prior  to any  distribution of  Available Cash  to  the
holders of Subordinated Units. Subordinated Units will not accrue any arrearages
with respect to distributions for any quarter.
 
     The  Subordination Period will generally extend  until the first day of any
quarter beginning after June 30, 2001  in respect of which (i) distributions  of
Available  Cash from Operating Surplus on  the Common Units and the Subordinated
Units with  respect  to  each  of the  three  consecutive  four-quarter  periods
immediately  preceding  such date  equaled or  exceeded the  sum of  the Minimum
Quarterly Distribution on all of  the outstanding Common Units and  Subordinated
Units  during such periods, (ii) the Adjusted Operating Surplus generated during
each of the  three consecutive four-quarter  periods immediately preceding  such
date equaled or exceeded the sum of the Minimum Quarterly Distribution on all of
the outstanding Common Units and Subordinated Units and the related distribution
on  the General  Partner Interests  during such periods  and (iii)  there are no
outstanding Common Unit Arrearages.
 
     Prior to the end of the Subordination Period, a portion of the Subordinated
Units will convert into  Common Units on  a one-for-one basis  on the first  day
after the record date established for the distribution in respect of any quarter
ending  on or after  (a) June 30,  1999 (with respect  to 1,133,410 Subordinated
Units, subject to adjustment  as discussed below), and  (b) June 30, 2000  (with
respect  to 1,133,410  Subordinated Units,  subject to  adjustments as discussed
below) in respect of  which (i) distributions of  Available Cash from  Operating
Surplus  on the Common Units and the  Subordinated Units with respect to each of
the three  consecutive  four-quarter  periods immediately  preceding  such  date
equaled  or exceeded the sum of the Minimum Quarterly Distribution on all of the
outstanding Common Units and  Subordinated Units during  such periods, (ii)  the
Adjusted  Operating  Surplus  generated  during  each  of  the  two  consecutive
four-quarter periods immediately preceding such date equaled or exceeded the sum
of the Minimum Quarterly Distribution on all of the outstanding Common Units and
Subordinated Units and the related distribution on the General Partner Interests
during such periods, and (iii) there are no outstanding Common Unit  Arrearages;
provided,   however,  that  the  early  conversion  of  the  second  tranche  of
Subordinated Units may  not occur until  at least one  year following the  early
conversion  of the  first tranche  of Subordinated  Units. Such  number of units
eligible for  early conversion  on June  30, 1999  and June  30, 2000  shall  be
subject  to increase in each case by a number of Subordinated Units equal to 25%
of the total Units  issued upon conversion of  the Special General Partner's  2%
General Partner Interest.
 
     Upon  expiration of  the Subordination  Period, all  remaining Subordinated
Units will convert into Common Units on a one-for-one basis and will  thereafter
participate, pro rata, with the other Common Units in distributions of Available
Cash.  In addition,  if the  Managing General  Partner is  removed as  a general
partner of the  Partnership other than  for Cause (i)  the Subordination  Period
will  end and all  outstanding Subordinated Units  will immediately convert into
Common Units on a  one-for-one basis, (ii) any  existing Common Unit  Arrearages
will  be extinguished  and (iii)  the General  Partners will  have the  right to
convert their  remaining General  Partner Interests  (and the  right to  receive
Incentive  Distributions) into Common  Units or to receive  cash in exchange for
such interests.
 
                                      F-36
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                        NATIONAL PROPANE PARTNERS, L.P.
                   (SUCCESSOR TO NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION
                               AND SUBSIDIARIES)
      NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
     On November 14, 1996  National paid its  initial quarterly distribution  of
$0.525  per Common and Subordinated Unit to Unitholders of record on November 1,
1996, with  a proportionate  amount for  the 4%  unsubordinated general  partner
interest,  or  an  aggregate of  $5,924,000,  including $2,616,000  paid  to the
General Partners  related  to  the Subordinated  Units  and  the  unsubordinated
general partner interest.
 
NOTE 13 -- SUBSEQUENT EVENT
 
     On  November 6, 1996, National sold  400,000 Common Units through a private
placement at a price of $21.00 per Common Unit aggregating $8,400,000 before the
estimated fees and expenses of $1,033,000 resulting in estimated net proceeds to
National of $7,367,000.
 
                                      F-37



<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                                                                      APPENDIX A
 
     No  transfer of the Common Units evidenced hereby will be registered on the
books of the Partnership, unless the Certificate evidencing the Common Units  to
be  transferred is surrendered  for registration or  transfer and an Application
for Transfer of Common Units has been executed by a transferee either (a) on the
form set forth below or (b) on a separate application that the Partnership  will
furnish  on request without charge. A transferor  of the Common Units shall have
no duty to the transferee with respect to execution of the transfer  application
in  order for  such transferee  to obtain  registration of  the transfer  of the
Common Units.
 
                    APPLICATION FOR TRANSFER OF COMMON UNITS
 
     The undersigned ('Assignee') hereby applies for transfer to the name of the
Assignee of the Common Units evidenced hereby.
 
     The Assignee (a) requests  admission as a  Substituted Limited Partner  and
agrees  to comply  with and be  bound by,  and hereby executes,  the Amended and
Restated Agreement of  Limited Partnership  of National  Propane Partners,  L.P.
(the  'Partnership'), as  amended, supplemented or  restated to  the date hereof
(the 'Partnership Agreement'), (b) represents and warrants that the Assignee has
all right, power and authority and, if an individual, the capacity necessary  to
enter  into the Partnership Agreement, (c) appoints the Managing General Partner
of the Partnership and,  if a Liquidator shall  be appointed, the Liquidator  of
the  Partnership  as  the  Assignee's  attorney-in-fact  to  execute,  swear to,
acknowledge  and  file   any  document,  including,   without  limitation,   the
Partnership  Agreement and any amendment thereto  and the Certificate of Limited
Partnership  of  the  Partnership  and  any  amendment  thereto,  necessary   or
appropriate for the Assignee's admission as a Substituted Limited Partner and as
a  party to the Partnership  Ageement, (d) gives the  power of attorney provided
for in  the Partnership  Agreement, and  (e)  makes the  waivers and  gives  the
consents and approvals contained in the Partnership Agreement. Capitalized terms
not  defined herein have the meanings assigned  to such terms in the Partnership
Agreement.
 
Date:.................................
 
Date:.................................
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                        <C>
                                                           
 ........................................................  ......................................................
 SOCIAL SECURITY OR OTHER IDENTIFYING NUMBER OF ASSIGNEE                   SIGNATURE OF ASSIGNEE
 
                                                           
                                                           
 ........................................................  ......................................................
      PURCHASE PRICE INCLUDING COMMISSIONS, IF ANY                      NAME AND ADDRESS OF ASSIGNEE
</TABLE>
 
Type of Entity (check one):
 
 [ ] Individual               [ ] Partnership               [ ] Corporation
 [ ]  Trust                   [ ] Other  (specify)   ......................
 
Nationality (check one)
 
                  [ ] U.S. Citizen, Resident or Domestic Entity
                  [ ] Foreign Corporation               [ ] Non-resident Alien
 
                                      A-1
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
     If  the  U.S. Citizen,  Resident  or Domestic  Entity  box is  checked, the
following certification must be completed.
 
     Under Section 1445(e) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
'Code'), the Partnership must withhold tax with respect to certain transfers  of
property  if a holder of an interest in  the Partnership is a foreign person. To
inform the  Partnership that  no withholding  is required  with respect  to  the
undersigned  interestholder's interest  in it, the  undersigned hereby certifies
the following  (or, if  applicable, certifies  the following  on behalf  of  the
interestholder).
 
Complete Either A or B:
 
A. Individual Interestholder
 
   1. I am not a non-resident alien for purposes of U.S. income taxation.
 
   2. My U.S. taxpayer identification number (Social Security Number) is
 
       ....................................................................... .
 
   3. My home address is  .................................................... .
 
B. Partnership, Corporation or Other Interestholder
 
   1.  ........................................................ is not a foreign
                                     (NAME OF INTERESTHOLDER)
      corporation,  foreign  partnership, foreign  trust  or foreign  estate (as
      those terms are defined in the Code and Treasury Regulations).
 
   2. The interestholder's U.S. employer identification number is  ........... .
 
   3. The interestholder's office address and place of incorporation (if
      applicable) is
 
       ....................................................................... .
 
     The interestholder agrees to notify the Partnership within sixty (60)  days
of the date the interestholder becomes a foreign person.
 
     The  interestholder understands that  this certificate may  be disclosed to
the Internal Revenue  Service by the  Partnership and that  any false  statement
contained herein could be punishable by fine, imprisonment or both.
 
     Under   penalties  of  perjury,  I  declare   that  I  have  examined  this
certification and to the best of my knowledge and belief it is true, correct and
complete and, if  applicable, I further  declare that I  have authority to  sign
this document on behalf of
 
                        .................................
                             NAME OF INTERESTHOLDER
 
                        .................................
                               SIGNATURE AND DATE
 
                        .................................
                             TITLE (IF APPLICABLE)
 
     Note:  If the Assignee  is a broker, dealer,  bank, trust company, clearing
corporation, other nominee holder or  an agent of any  of the foregoing, and  is
holding  for  the  account  of  any other  person,  this  application  should be
completed by an  officer thereof or,  in the case  of a broker  or dealer, by  a
registered  representative who is  a member of  a registered national securities
exchange or a member  of the National Association  of Securities Dealers,  Inc.,
or,  in the  case of  any other  nominee holder,  a person  performing a similar
function. If the  Assignee is a  broker, dealer, bank,  trust company,  clearing
corporation,  other nominee owner or an agent of any of the foregoing, the above
certification as to any person for whom the Assignee will hold the Common  Units
shall be made to the best of the Assignee's knowledge.
 
                                      A-2



<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                                                                      APPENDIX B
 
                           GLOSSARY OF CERTAIN TERMS
 
     Acquisition:  Any transaction in which any  member of the Partnership Group
acquires (through an asset acquisition, merger, stock acquisition or other  form
of  investment)  control over  all or  a  portion of  the assets,  properties or
business of another Person for the purpose of increasing the operating  capacity
or revenues of the Partnership Group above the operating capacity or revenues of
the Partnership Group existing immediately prior to such transaction.
 
     Adjusted  Operating Surplus: With respect  to any period, Operating Surplus
generated during  such period,  as  adjusted to  (a) exclude  Operating  Surplus
attributable  to (i) any net increase  in working capital borrowings during such
period and (ii) any  net reduction in cash  reserves for Operating  Expenditures
that otherwise increased the Operating Surplus generated during such period, and
(b)  include  (i) any  net decrease  in working  capital borrowings  during such
period, and (ii) any  net increase in cash  reserves for Operating  Expenditures
during  such  period  required  by  any debt  instrument  for  the  repayment of
principal, interest or premium on indebtedness. Adjusted Operating Surplus  does
not  include that portion of Operating Surplus  included in clause (a)(i) of the
definition of Operating Surplus.
 
     Affiliate: With respect  to any  Person, another Person  that controls,  is
controlled  by or is under common  control with (either directly or indirectly),
such  Person  (including,  with  respect   to  the  General  Partners,   without
limitation,  Triarc, DWG Acquisition Group, L.P.,  Nelson Peltz, Peter W. May or
any of their respective Affiliates).  For purposes of this definition  'control'
of a Person means the ability to direct or cause the direction of the management
and  policies of such Person whether through the ownership of voting securities,
by contract or otherwise.
 
     Audit Committee: A  committee of  the board  of directors  of the  Managing
General  Partner or the Special General Partner composed entirely of two or more
directors who are  neither officers nor  employees of such  General Partner  nor
officers,  directors  or  employees of  any  Affiliate of  such  General Partner
(except that such directors may be directors of both General Partners).
 
     Available Cash:  With respect  to any  fiscal quarter  of the  Partnership,
prior to liquidation of the Partnership:
 
          (a)  the sum of (i)  all cash and cash  equivalents of the Partnership
     Group on hand at the end of such quarter, and (ii) all additional cash  and
     cash  equivalents  of  the  Partnership  Group  on  hand  on  the  date  of
     determination of Available Cash with respect to such quarter resulting from
     borrowings for working capital purposes made subsequent to the end of  such
     quarter, less
 
          (b)  the amount of any cash  reserves that is necessary or appropriate
     in the reasonable discretion of the Managing General Partner to (i) provide
     for the  proper conduct  of the  business of  the Partnership  Group,  (ii)
     comply  with  applicable law  or  any loan  agreement,  security agreement,
     mortgage, debt instrument  or other  agreement or obligation  to which  any
     member  of the Partnership Group is a party  or by which it is bound or its
     assets are subject, or (iii) provide funds for distributions to Unitholders
     and the General Partners  in respect of  any one or more  of the next  four
     quarters;  provided,  however, that  the Managing  General Partner  may not
     establish cash  reserves pursuant  to (iii)  above if  the effect  of  such
     reserves  would be that the Partnership is unable to distribute the Minimum
     Quarterly Distribution on all  Common Units with  respect to such  quarter;
     and provided further, that disbursements made or cash reserves established,
     increased or reduced after the end of any quarter but on or before the date
     on  which  the  Partnership makes  its  distribution of  Available  Cash in
     respect of such  quarter shall be  deemed to have  been made,  established,
     increased or reduced for purposes of determining Available Cash within such
     quarter  if the Managing General Partner so determines. Notwithstanding the
     foregoing, 'Available Cash' after the liquidation of the Partnership occurs
     shall equal zero.
 
     Bank  Credit   Facility:  The   $40  million   acquisition  facility   (the
'Acquisition  Facility')  and  the  $15 million  working  capital  facility (the
'Working Capital Facility'), both entered into by the Operating Partnership.
 
                                      B-1
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
     BTU: British  thermal unit.  The quantity  of heat  required to  raise  the
temperature of one pound of water by one degree Fahrenheit.
 
     Capital  Account: The capital account maintained  for a Partner pursuant to
the Partnership Agreement.  The Capital  Account of a  partner in  respect of  a
General  Partner  Interest, a  Common Unit,  a  Subordinated Unit,  an Incentive
Distribution Right or any other Partnership  Interest shall be the amount  which
such  Capital Account  would be if  such general partner  interest, Common Unit,
Subordinated Unit, Incentive Distribution  Right, or other Partnership  Interest
were  the only interest in the Partnership held  by a Partner from and after the
date on which  such general  partner interest, Common  Unit, Subordinated  Unit,
Incentive Distribution Right or other Partnership Interest was first issued.
 
     Capital Improvements: Additions or improvements to the capital assets owned
by  any member of  the Partnership Group  or the acquisition  of existing or the
construction of  new  capital  assets  (including,  without  limitation,  retail
distribution  outlets,  propane  tanks,  pipeline  systems,  storage facilities,
appliance showrooms, training facilities and  related assets), made to  increase
the  operating capacity of the Partnership  Group over the operating capacity of
the Partnership Group existing immediately prior to such addition,  improvement,
acquisition or construction.
 
     Capital Surplus: All Available Cash distributed by the Partnership from any
source will be treated as being distributed from Operating Surplus until the sum
of  all Available  Cash distributed  since the  commencement of  the Partnership
equals the  Operating  Surplus as  of  the end  of  the quarter  prior  to  such
distribution.  Any  excess Available  Cash  will be  deemed  to be  from Capital
Surplus.
 
     Cause: Means (A)  a court of  competent jurisdiction has  entered a  final,
non-appealable  judgment finding the Managing  General Partner liable for actual
fraud, gross negligence  or willful or  wanton misconduct in  its capacity as  a
general  partner of the Partnership or (B) the Special General Partner, prior to
the Triarc Merger does not have the same directors on its Board of Directors  as
the Managing General Partner.
 
     Closing  Date:  The first  date  on which  Common  Units were  sold  by the
Partnership in the IPO.
 
     Common  Unit  Arrearage:  The  amount   by  which  the  Minimum   Quarterly
Distribution in respect of a quarter during the Subordination Period exceeds the
distribution  of Available  Cash from Operating  Surplus actually  made for such
quarter on a  Common Unit, cumulative  for such quarter  and all prior  quarters
during the Subordination Period.
 
     Common  Units: A  Unit representing  a fractional  part of  the Partnership
Interests of all partners of the  Partnership and assignees of any such  limited
partner's  interest and having the rights and obligations specified with respect
to Common Units in the Partnership Agreement.
 
     Conveyance,  Contribution  and  Assumption  Agreement:  Collectively,   the
Conveyance,  Contribution and Assumption  Agreement, dated the  Closing Date, by
and among the Operating  Partnership, the General  Partners and the  Partnership
and  the Contribution and  Assumption Agreement, dated the  Closing Date, by and
among the Operating Partnership, the  General Partners and NSSI, which  together
provide  for, among  other things, the  principal transaction  pursuant to which
substantially all of the assets of the General Partners will be transferred  and
substantially  all  of  their  liabilities  will  be  assumed  by  the Operating
Partnership.
 
     Current Market Price: With respect  to any class of  Units as of any  date,
the  average of the  daily Closing Prices  (as hereinafter defined)  per Unit of
such class  for  the  20  consecutive  Trading  Days  (as  hereinafter  defined)
immediately  prior to such date. 'Closing Price' for any day means the last sale
price on such day, regular way, or in case no such sale takes place on such day,
the average of the  closing bid and  asked prices on such  day, regular way,  in
either  case  as reported  in the  principal consolidated  transaction reporting
system with respect to  securities listed on  the principal national  securities
exchange  on which the Units of such class are listed or admitted to trading or,
if the Units of such class are not listed or admitted to trading on any national
securities exchange, the last quoted  price on such day,  or, if not so  quoted,
the  average of the high bid  and low asked prices on  such day in the over-the-
counter market, as reported by  the National Association of Securities  Dealers,
Inc.  Automated Quotation System or such other system  then in use, or if on any
such day the Units of  such class are not quoted  by any such organization,  the
average   of   the   closing   bid   and   asked   prices   on   such   day   as
 
                                      B-2
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
furnished by a professional market  maker making a market  in the Units of  such
class  selected by the Managing General Partner, or if on any such day no market
maker is making  a market in  the Units of  such class, the  fair value of  such
Units  on such day  as determined reasonably  and in good  faith by the Managing
General Partner.  'Trading Day'  means a  day on  which the  principal  national
securities  exchange  on which  Units of  any  class are  listed or  admitted to
trading is open for the transaction of business or, if the Units of a class  are
not  listed or admitted to trading on any national securities exchange, a day on
which banking institutions in New York City generally are open.
 
     Degree Day: Degree Days measure the amount by which the average of the high
and low temperature on a given day is below 65 degrees Fahrenheit. For  example,
if  the high temperature is 60 degrees and the low temperature is 40 degrees for
a National  Oceanic and  Atmospheric  Administration measurement  location,  the
average  temperature is 50 degrees and the number of Degree Days for that day is
15.
 
     Delaware Act: The Delaware Revised  Uniform Limited Partnership Act, 6  Del
C.  SS17-101, et seq., as  amended, supplemented or restated  from time to time,
and any successor to such statute.
 
     Departing Partner: A former  General Partner from  and after the  effective
date of any withdrawal or removal of such former General Partner pursuant to the
provisions of the Partnership Agreement.
 
     EBITDA:   Operating  income  (loss)   plus  depreciation  and  amortization
(excluding amortization of deferred financing cost). As used in this Prospectus,
EBITDA is not intended to  be construed as an alternative  to net income (as  an
indicator  of operating performance),  or as an  alternative to cash  flow (as a
measure of liquidity or ability to service debt obligations).
 
     General Partners:  The Managing  General Partner  and the  Special  General
Partner  and their  successors or permitted  assigns as general  partners of the
Partnership and the Operating Partnership.
 
     Incentive Distributions: The distributions of Available Cash from Operating
Surplus initially made to the Managing General Partner that are in excess of the
General Partners' aggregate General Partner Interests and are not related to the
Managing General Partner's ownership of Subordinated Units or Common Units.  The
Managing General Partner may transfer its right to receive such distributions to
one or more Persons.
 
     Initial Common Units: The Common Units sold in the IPO.
 
     Initial  Unit Price: $21.00 per  Common Unit, the amount  per Unit equal to
the initial public offering price of the Initial Common Units in the IPO.
 
     Interim Capital Transactions: (a)  Borrowings, refinancings and  refundings
of  indebtedness and  sales of debt  securities (other than  for working capital
purposes and other  than for  items purchased on  open account  in the  ordinary
course  of business) by any member of the Partnership Group, (b) sales of equity
interests by any member of the Partnership Group (including Common Units sold to
the Underwriters pursuant to the exercise of the over-allotment option), and (c)
sales or other voluntary or involuntary dispositions of any assets of any member
of the  Partnership  Group  (other  than (i)  sales  or  other  dispositions  of
inventory  in the ordinary course of  business, (ii) sales or other dispositions
of  other  current  assets,  including,  without  limitation,  receivables   and
accounts,  in the ordinary course of business, (iii) sales or other dispositions
of assets as a  part of normal  retirements or replacements)  or (iv) like  kind
exchanges  of operating assets to the  extent that the operating assets received
are of equal or  greater value, in  each case prior to  the commencement of  the
dissolution and liquidation of the Partnership.
 
     Limited  Partner: Unless the context otherwise requires, any Person holding
a limited  partner  interest  in  the Partnership  and  having  the  rights  and
obligations specified with respect to a Limited Partner (as such term is defined
in the Partnership Agreement).
 
     Managing  General Partner: National Propane  Corporation and its successors
and permitted assigns, as managing general partner of the Partnership.
 
     Minimum Quarterly Distribution: $0.525 per Common Unit with respect to each
quarter or $2.10 per Common Unit  on an annualized basis, subject to  adjustment
as described in 'Cash Distribution Policy -- Distributions from Capital Surplus'
and  ' -- Adjustment  of Minimum Quarterly  Distribution and Target Distribution
Levels.'
 
                                      B-3
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
     Operating Expenditures: All Partnership Group expenditures, including,  but
not  limited to,  taxes, reimbursements  of the  General Partners,  debt service
payments and capital expenditures, subject to the following:
 
          (a) Payments (including  prepayments) of principal  of and premium  on
     indebtedness  shall not be  an Operating Expenditure if  the payment is (i)
     required in connection  with the sale  or other disposition  of assets,  or
     (ii)  made in connection with the  refinancing or refunding of indebtedness
     with the  proceeds  from  new  indebtedness or  from  the  sale  of  equity
     interests.  For  purposes of  the  foregoing, at  the  election and  in the
     reasonable discretion  of  the Managing  General  Partner, any  payment  of
     principal  or premium shall be  deemed to be refunded  or refinanced by any
     indebtedness incurred or to be incurred by the Partnership Group within 180
     days before or after such payment to the extent of the principal amount  of
     and premium on such indebtedness.
 
     General  Partner Interests: The 4%  unsubordinated general partner interest
in the  Partnership and  the Operating  Partnership on  a combined  basis.  This
interest   applies  to  all   distributions  and  allocations,   except  if  the
over-allotment option is exercised, this interest will be entitled to a  smaller
percentage of the liquidation proceeds.
 
     (b)  Operating Expenditures shall not include (i) capital expenditures made
for Acquisitions  or  for  Capital Improvements,  (ii)  payment  of  transaction
expenses  relating to  Interim Capital  Transactions, or  (iii) distributions to
partners. Where  capital  expenditures are  made  in part  for  Acquisitions  or
Capital  Improvements  and  in part  for  other purposes,  the  Managing General
Partner's good  faith allocation  between the  amounts paid  for each  shall  be
conclusive.
 
     Operating   Partnership:  National   Propane,  L.P.,   a  Delaware  limited
partnership,  the  Partnership's  subsidiary  operating  partnership,  and   any
successors   thereto  and  any  other   subsidiary  operating  partnerships  and
corporations.
 
     Operating Partnership  Agreement: The  Amended  and Restated  Agreement  of
Limited  Partnership of  the Operating Partnership  (which is an  exhibit to the
Registration Statement  of  which this  Prospectus  is a  part),  as it  may  be
amended, supplemented or restated from time to time.
 
     Operating  Surplus: At the  close of any fiscal  quarter of the Partnership
prior to liquidation, on a cumulative basis and without duplication:
 
          (a) the sum of (i) $15,400,000, plus all cash and cash equivalents  of
     the  Partnership Group  as of  the close  of business  on the  Closing Date
     (approximately $4.6 million), and (ii) all cash receipts of the Partnership
     Group for the period beginning on the Closing Date and ending with the last
     day  of  such  period,  other  than  cash  receipts  from  Interim  Capital
     Transactions, less
 
          (b)  the sum of (i) Operating Expenditures for the period beginning on
     the Closing Date and ending with the  last day of such period and (ii)  the
     amount  of cash reserves  that is necessary or  advisable in the reasonable
     discretion of  the Managing  General Partner  to provide  funds for  future
     Operating  Expenditures;  provided however,  disbursements  made (including
     contributions to  a member  of the  Partnership Group  or disbursements  on
     behalf  of a member of the Partnership Group) or cash reserves established,
     increased or reduced after the end of any quarter but on or before the date
     on which  the  Partnership makes  its  distribution of  Available  Cash  in
     respect  of such  quarter shall be  deemed to have  been made, established,
     increased or reduced for purposes of determining Operating Surplus,  within
     such  quarter  if the  Managing  General Partner  so  determines. Operating
     Surplus after the liquidation of the Partnership occurs shall equal zero.
 
     Opinion of  Counsel: A  written  opinion of  counsel  (who may  be  regular
counsel  to Triarc,  the Partnership  or the  General Partners  or any  of their
Affiliates) acceptable  to  the  Managing  General  Partner  in  its  reasonable
discretion  to the effect that the taking of a particular action will not result
in the loss of the limited liability of the limited partners of the  Partnership
under  the Delaware Act or cause the Partnership to be treated as an association
taxable as a corporation or otherwise taxed as an entity for federal income  tax
purposes.
 
     Partnership:   National   Propane  Partners,   L.P.,  a   Delaware  limited
partnership, and any successor thereto.
 
     Partnership Agreement:  The  Amended  and  Restated  Agreement  of  Limited
Partnership of the Partnership, as amended by Amendment No. 1 thereto (which are
exhibits to the Registration
 
                                      B-4
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
Statement  of which this  Prospectus is a  part), as it  may be further amended,
supplemented or  restated  from  time  to  time.  Unless  the  context  requires
otherwise,  references to the Partnership Agreement constitute references to the
Partnership  Agreement  of  the   Partnership  and  the  Operating   Partnership
Agreement, collectively.
 
     Partnership  Group:  The  Partnership, the  Operating  Partnership  and any
subsidiary of either such entity, treated as a single consolidated partnership.
 
     Partnership Interest: An interest in  the Partnership, which shall  include
General  Partner Interests, Common Units,  Subordinated Units, rights to receive
Incentive Distributions or any other equity securities of the Partnership, or  a
combination thereof or interest therein as the case may be.
 
     Partnership  Loan: The $40.7 million loan from the Operating Partnership to
Triarc made on the Closing Date.
 
     Partnership Security:  Means any  class  or series  of Units,  any  option,
right,  warrant or  appreciation rights relating  thereto, or any  other type of
equity interest that  the Partnership may  lawfully issue, or  any unsecured  or
secured debt obligation of the Partnership that is convertible into any class or
series of equity interests of the Partnership.
 
     Person:   An  individual  or  a  corporation,  limited  liability  company,
partnership,  joint  venture,  trust,  unincorporated  organization,  government
agency or political subdivision thereof or other entity.
 
     Special  General Partner: National Propane SGP, Inc. and its successors and
permitted assigns, as non-managing general partner of the Partnership.
 
     Subordination Period: The Subordination Period will generally extend  until
the  first day of any quarter beginning after  June 30, 2001 in respect of which
(i) distributions of Available Cash from  Operating Surplus on the Common  Units
and  the  Subordinated  Units with  respect  to  each of  the  three consecutive
four-quarter periods immediately preceding such date equaled or exceeded the sum
of the Minimum Quarterly Distribution on all of the outstanding Common Units and
Subordinated Units  during such  periods, (ii)  the Adjusted  Operating  Surplus
generated  during each of the three consecutive four-quarter periods immediately
preceding such  date  equaled or  exceeded  the  sum of  the  Minimum  Quarterly
Distribution  on all of the outstanding  Common Units and Subordinated Units and
the related distribution  on the  General Partner Interests  in the  Partnership
during  such periods, and (iii) there are no outstanding Common Unit Arrearages.
A portion of the Subordinated Units will convert into Common Units on the  first
day  after the record  date established for  the distribution in  respect of any
quarter ending  on  or  after (a)  June  30,  1999 (with  respect  to  1,133,410
Subordinated Units, plus 25% of all Subordinated Units issued upon conversion of
all  or a portion of the Special General Partner's General Partner Interest) and
(b) June 30, 2000 (with respect to 1,133,410 Subordinated Units, plus 25% of all
Subordinated Units issued  upon conversion of  all or a  portion of the  Special
General   Partner's  General  Partner   Interest),  in  respect   of  which  (i)
distributions of Available Cash from Operating  Surplus on the Common Units  and
the   Subordinated  Units  with  respect  to   each  of  the  three  consecutive
four-quarter periods immediately preceding such date equaled or exceeded the sum
of the Minimum Quarterly distribution on all of the outstanding Common Units and
Subordinated Units  during such  periods, (ii)  the Adjusted  Operating  Surplus
generated  during each of  the two consecutive  four-quarter periods immediately
preceding such  date  equaled or  exceeded  the  sum of  the  Minimum  Quarterly
Distribution  on all of the outstanding  Common Units and Subordinated Units and
the related  distribution on  the General  Partner Interest  in the  Partnership
during  such periods, and (iii) there are no outstanding Common Unit Arrearages;
provided,  however,  that  the  early  conversion  of  the  second  tranche   of
Subordinated  Units may not  occur until at  least one year  following the early
conversion of  the first  tranche of  Subordinated Units.  In addition,  if  the
Managing  General Partner is removed as general partner of the Partnership other
than for  Cause  (i) the  Subordination  Period  will end  and  all  outstanding
Subordinated  Units will immediately convert into  Common Units on a one-for-one
basis, (ii) any existing Common Unit  Arrearages will be extinguished and  (iii)
the  General  Partners will  have  the right  to  convert their  general partner
interests (and the right to  receive Incentive Distributions) into Common  Units
or to receive cash in exchange for such interests.
 
     Subordinated Unit: A Unit representing a fractional part of the Partnership
Interests of all partners of the Partnership and assignees of any such partner's
interest  and  having  the  rights and  obligations  specified  with  respect to
Subordinated Units in the Partnership Agreement.
 
                                      B-5
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
     Target Distribution  Levels: See  'Cash  Distribution Policy  --  Incentive
Distributions -- Hypothetical Annualized Yield.'
 
     Transfer  Application: An application for transfer of Units in the form set
forth on the back of a certificate,  substantially in the form included in  this
Prospectus  as Appendix  B or in  a form substantially  to the same  effect in a
separate instrument.
 
     Unitholders: Holders of the Common Units and the Subordinated Units.
 
     Unit Majority: During the Subordination Period, at least a majority of  the
outstanding  Common Units,  voting as a  class, and  at least a  majority of the
outstanding Subordinated Units, voting  as a class and,  thereafter, at least  a
majority of the outstanding Units voting as a class.
 
     Units: The Common Units and the Subordinated Units, collectively, but shall
not include rights to receive Incentive Distributions.
 
     Unrecovered  Capital: At any time, with respect to a Unit, the Initial Unit
Price, less  the sum  of all  distributions theretofore  made in  respect of  an
Initial  Common Unit constituting Capital Surplus  and any distributions of cash
(or the net agreed value  of any distributions in  kind) in connection with  the
dissolution  and liquidation of  the Partnership theretofore  made in respect of
such Unit, adjusted as the Managing General Partner determines to be appropriate
to give effect to any distribution, subdivision or combination of such Units.
 
                                      B-6



<PAGE>

<PAGE>
____________________________________         ___________________________________
 
     NO  DEALER, SALESPERSON OR OTHER INDIVIDUAL HAS BEEN AUTHORIZED TO GIVE ANY
INFORMATION OR  MAKE ANY  REPRESENTATIONS NOT  CONTAINED IN  THIS PROSPECTUS  IN
CONNECTION  WITH THE OFFERING COVERED BY THIS PROSPECTUS. IF GIVEN OR MADE, SUCH
INFORMATION OR REPRESENTATIONS MUST NOT BE RELIED UPON AS HAVING BEEN AUTHORIZED
BY THE PARTNERSHIP. THIS PROSPECTUS DOES NOT  CONSTITUTE AN OFFER TO SELL, OR  A
SOLICITATION  OF AN OFFER TO BUY, THE COMMON UNITS IN ANY JURISDICTION WHERE, OR
TO ANY  PERSON TO  WHOM, IT  IS UNLAWFUL  TO MAKE  SUCH OFFER  OR  SOLICITATION.
NEITHER THE DELIVERY OF THIS PROSPECTUS NOR ANY SALE MADE HEREUNDER SHALL, UNDER
ANY  CIRCUMSTANCES, CREATE ANY IMPLICATION THAT THERE HAS NOT BEEN ANY CHANGE IN
THE FACTS SET  FORTH IN THIS  PROSPECTUS OR  IN THE AFFAIRS  OF THE  PARTNERSHIP
SINCE THE DATE HEREOF.
 
                            ------------------------
                               TABLE OF CONTENTS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                         PAGE
                                                                                                                      ----------
<S>                                                                                                                   <C>
Prospectus Summary...................................................................................................     6
Risk Factors.........................................................................................................     33
The IPO and Additional Transactions..................................................................................     46
Capitalization.......................................................................................................     48
Price Range of Common Units and Distributions........................................................................     48
Cash Distribution Policy.............................................................................................     49
Certain Information Regarding Triarc.................................................................................     61
Selected Historical and Pro Forma Consolidated Financial and Operating Data..........................................     67
Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations................................     70
Business and Properties..............................................................................................     83
Management...........................................................................................................     96
Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management.......................................................    105
Certain Relationships and Related Transactions.......................................................................    108
Conflicts of Interest and Fiduciary Responsibility...................................................................    110
Description of the Common Units......................................................................................    115
The Partnership Agreement............................................................................................    117
Units Eligible for Future Sale.......................................................................................    128
Tax Considerations...................................................................................................    129
Investment in the Partnership by Employee Benefit Plans..............................................................    146
The Selling Unitholder...............................................................................................    147
Plan of Distribution.................................................................................................    147
Legal Matters........................................................................................................    148
Experts..............................................................................................................    148
Additional Information...............................................................................................    149
Index to Financial Statements........................................................................................    F-1
Form of Application for Transfer of Common Units..................................................................... Appendix A
Glossary of Certain Terms............................................................................................ Appendix B
</TABLE>
 
                              400,000 COMMON UNITS
 
                                NATIONAL PROPANE
                                 PARTNERS, L.P.
 
                                  REPRESENTING
                           LIMITED PARTNER INTERESTS
 
                         ------------------------------
                                   PROSPECTUS
                         ------------------------------
 
                                         , 1997
 
____________________________________         ___________________________________



<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                                    PART II
                     INFORMATION NOT REQUIRED IN PROSPECTUS
 
ITEM 13. OTHER EXPENSES OF ISSUANCE AND DISTRIBUTION
 
     Set forth below are the expenses expected to be incurred in connection with
the  issuance and  distribution of  the securities  registered hereby.  With the
exception of the  Securities and  Exchange Commission registration  fee and  the
NYSE filing fee, the amounts set forth below are estimates.
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                  <C>
Securities and Exchange Commission registration fee...............................   $  2,470
National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. filing fee.......................      1,315
Legal fees and expenses...........................................................    160,000
Printing expenses.................................................................    125,000
Accounting fees and expenses......................................................    150,000
Miscellaneous expenses............................................................      6,215
                                                                                     --------
     Total........................................................................   $445,000
                                                                                     --------
                                                                                     --------
</TABLE>
 
ITEM 14. INDEMNIFICATION OF DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS
 
     The    Section    of    the    Prospectus    entitled    'The   Partnership
Agreement -- Indemnification' is incorporated herein by this reference.
 
     Subject  to  any  terms,  conditions  or  restrictions  set  forth  in  the
Partnership   Agreements,  Section  17-108  of   the  Delaware  Revised  Limited
Partnership Act empowers a  Delaware limited partnership  to indemnify and  hold
harmless  any partner or  other person from  and against all  claims and demands
whatsoever.
 
ITEM 15. RECENT SALES OF UNREGISTERED SECURITIES
 
     The  Section  of  the  Prospectus  entitled  'The  Selling  Unitholder'  is
incorporated herein by reference.
 
ITEM 16. EXHIBITS AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES
 
     a. Exhibits:
 
<TABLE>
<C>         <S>
  3.1(1)    -- Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership of National Propane Partners, L.P. dated as  of
               July 2, 1996
  3.2(1)    -- Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership  of National Propane, L.P. dated as of July  2,
               1996
  3.3(3)    -- Amendment No. 1 dated November 1, 1996 to  the Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited  Partnership
               of National Propane, L.P. dated as of July 2, 1996
 *5.1       -- Opinion of  Paul, Weiss,  Rifkind, Wharton  & Garrison as  to the  legality of  the securities  being
               registered
 *8.1       -- Opinion of Andrews & Kurth L.L.P. relating to tax matters
 10.1(3)    -- Purchase  Agreement, dated  as of  November 7,  1996, among  National Propane  Corporation,  National
               Propane SGP, Inc., National Propane Partners, L.P., National Propane, L.P.  and  Merrill Lynch  & Co.
 10.2(3)    -- Registration Agreement, dated  as of November  7, 1996, between National  Propane Partners, L.P.  and
               Merrill Lynch & Co.
 10.3(1)    -- Credit Agreement, dated as of June 26, 1996, among National Propane, L.P.,  The First National Bank of
               Boston, as administrative agent and a lender, Bank of America NT & SA, as a lender, and BA Securities,
               Inc., as syndication agent
 10.4(1)    -- Note Purchase Agreement,  dated as of  June 26, 1996, among  National  Propane,  L.P.  and each of the
               Purchasers listed in Schedule A thereto relating  to $125 million aggregate principal amount of  8.54%
               First Mortgage Notes due June 30, 2010
</TABLE>
 
                                      II-1
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
 
<TABLE>
<C>         <S>
 10.5(1)    -- Conveyance, Contribution and Assumption Agreement,  dated as of July 2,  1996, by and  among  National
               Propane, L.P., National Propane Partners, L.P., National Propane Corporation and National Propane SGP,
               Inc.
 10.6(1)    -- Contribution and Assumption Agreement, dated as of July 2, 1996, by and among National  Propane, L.P.,
               National Propane Corporation, National Propane SGP, Inc. and National Sales & Service, Inc.
 10.7(1)    -- Note, in the principal amount of $40.7 million, issued by Triarc Companies, Inc. to  National Propane,
               L.P.
 10.8(1)    -- National Propane 1996 Unit Option Plan
 10.9(1)    -- Amendment to Employment Agreement of Ronald D. Paliughi, dated as of June 10, 1996.
 10.10(2)   -- Employment Agreement, dated as of April 24, 1993, between National Propane Corporation and  Ronald  D.
               Paliughi  (including Amendment No. 1,  dated as of December  7, 1994 and Amendment  No. 2, dated as of
               March 27, 1995)
 10.11(2)   -- Severance Agreement, dated as of December 1, 1995, between National Propane Corporation  and Ronald R.
               Rominiecki
 10.12(2)   -- Severance Agreement, dated as of March 27,  1995, between National Propane Corporation  and Laurie  B.
               Crawford
*10.13      -- Employment  Agreement,  dated November 20, 1996,  between National  Propane  Corporation  and C. David
               Watson
 10.13(2)   -- Triarc's 1993 Equity Participation Plan
 10.14(2)   -- Form of Non-Incentive Stock Option Agreement under Triarc's 1993 Equity Participation Plan
*21.1       -- List of Subsidiaries
*23.1       -- Consent of Deloitte & Touche LLP
*23.2       -- Consent of Arthur Andersen LLP
*23.3       -- Consent of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison (included in Exhibit 5.1)
*23.4       -- Consent of Andrews & Kurth L.L.P. (included in Exhibit 8.1)
*24.1       -- Powers of Attorney (included on signature page)
</TABLE>
 
- ------------
 
*  Filed herewith
 
(1) Filed with the  Partnership's Current Report  on Form 8-K  dated August  16,
    1996 and incorporated herein by reference.
 
(2) Filed  with the Partnership's Registration Statement on Form S-1 filed March
    26, 1996 (Registration No. 333-2768) and incorporated herein by reference.
 
(3) Filed with the Partnership's Current Report  on Form 8-K dated November  14,
    1996 and incorporated herein by reference.
 
     b. Financial Statement Schedules --
 
     All  financial statement schedules  are omitted because  the information is
not required,  is  not  material  or is  otherwise  included  in  the  financial
statements or related notes thereto.
 
ITEM 17. UNDERTAKINGS
 
     Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities Act
of  1933,  as amended  (the 'Securities  Act'), may  be permitted  to directors,
officers and controlling  persons of  the Registrant pursuant  to the  foregoing
provisions, or otherwise, the Registrant has been advised that in the opinion of
the  Securities and Exchange  Commission such indemnification  is against public
policy as expressed in  the Securities Act and  is, therefor, unenforceable.  In
the  event that a claim for indemnification against such liabilities (other than
the payment  by the  Registrant of  expenses  incurred or  paid by  a  director,
officer or controlling person of the Registrant in the successful defense of any
action, suit or proceeding) is asserted by such director, officer or controlling
person in connection with the securities
 
                                      II-2
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
being  registered, the Registrant will, unless in the opinion of its counsel the
matter has  been  settled  by  controlling  precedent,  submit  to  a  court  of
appropriate  jurisdiction  the question  whether such  indemnification by  it is
against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act and will be governed by
the final adjudication of such issue.
 
     The undersigned Registrant hereby undertakes:
 
          (a) To file,  during any  period in which  offers or  sales are  being
     made,  a post-effective  amendment to  this Registration  Statement: (i) to
     include any prospectus required by Section 10(a)(3) of the Securities  Act;
     (ii)  to reflect in  the prospectus any  facts or events  arising after the
     effective  date  of  the  Registration   Statement  (or  the  most   recent
     post-effective  amendment thereof) which, individually or in the aggregate,
     represent a  fundamental  change  in  the  information  set  forth  in  the
     Registration  Statement;  (iii) to  include  any material  information with
     respect to  the  plan  of  distribution not  previously  disclosed  in  the
     Registration  Statement or any  material change to  such information in the
     Registration Statement.
 
          (b) That,  for the  purpose  of determining  any liability  under  the
     Securities  Act, each such post-effective amendment shall be deemed to be a
     new registration statement relating to the securities offered therein,  and
     the  offering of  such securities at  that time  shall be deemed  to be the
     initial bona fide offering thereof.
 
          (c) To remove from registration by means of a post-effective amendment
     any  of  the  securities  being  registered  which  remain  unsold  at  the
     termination of the offering.
 
          (d)   That  for  purposes  of  determining  any  liability  under  the
     Securities Act, the information omitted  from the form of Prospectus  filed
     as  part  of this  Registration Statement  in reliance  upon Rule  430A and
     contained in a form of Prospectus filed by the Registrant pursuant to  Rule
     424(b)(1) or (4) or 497(h) under the Securities Act shall be deemed to be a
     part  of  this  Registration  Statement  as of  the  time  it  was declared
     effective.
 
          (e) That  for  the purpose  of  determining any  liability  under  the
     Securities  Act,  each post-effective  amendment  that contains  a  form of
     Prospectus shall be deemed to be  a new Registration Statement relating  to
     the securities offered therein, and the offering of such securities at that
     time shall be deemed to be the initial bona fide offering thereof.
 
                                      II-3



<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                                   SIGNATURES
 
     Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, the
Registrant  has  duly caused  this Registration  Statement to  be signed  on its
behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly  authorized, in the City of New  York,
State of New York, on January 10, 1997.
 
                                          NATIONAL PROPANE PARTNERS, L.P.
 
                                          By: NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION
                                            AS GENERAL PARTNER
 
                                          By:       /S/ RONALD R. ROMINIECKI
                                          ......................................
                                            Name: Ronald R. Rominiecki
                                            Title: Senior Vice President and
                                                   Chief Financial Officer
 
                               POWER OF ATTORNEY
 
     Each  person whose signature appears below  appoints Nelson Peltz and Peter
W. May and each of them, any of  whom may act without the joinder of the  other,
as  his  true  and  lawful  attorneys-in-fact and  agents,  with  full  power of
substitution and resubstitution, for  him and in his  name, place and stead,  in
any and all capacities, to sign any and all amendments (including post-effective
amendments)  to  this  Registration  Statement  and  any  Registration Statement
(including any amendment thereto) for this Offering that is to be effective upon
filing pursuant to Rule 462(b) under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and
to file  the  same,  with all  exhibits  thereto,  and all  other  documents  in
connection therewith, the Securities and Exchange Commission, granting unto said
attorneys-in-fact and agents full power and authority to do and perform each and
every  act and thing requisite and necessary to be done, as fully to all intents
and purposes as he might or would do in person, hereby ratifying and  confirming
all  that  said attorney-in-fact  and  agents or  any of  them  or their  or his
substitute and  substitutes, may  lawfully do  or  cause to  be done  by  virtue
hereof.
 
     PURSUANT  TO THE  REQUIREMENTS OF THE  SECURITIES ACT OF  1933, AS AMENDED,
THIS REGISTRATION STATEMENT  HAS BEEN  SIGNED BY  THE FOLLOWING  PERSONS IN  THE
CAPACITIES INDICATED AS OF JANUARY    , 1997.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                SIGNATURE                                      TITLE                              DATE
- ------------------------------------------  --------------------------------------------   -------------------
<C>                                         <S>                                            <C>
             /S/ NELSON PELTZ               Director of National Propane                    January 10, 1997
 .........................................    Corporation
              (NELSON PELTZ)
 
             /S/ PETER W. MAY               Director of National Propane                    January 10, 1997
 .........................................    Corporation
              (PETER W. MAY)
 
          /S/ RONALD D. PALIUGHI            President, Chief Executive Officer and          January 10, 1997
 .........................................    Director of National Propane
           (RONALD D. PALIUGHI)               Corporation (Principal Executive Officer)
 
         /S/ RONALD R. ROMINIECKI           Senior Vice President and Chief                 January 10, 1997
 .........................................    Financial Officer of National Propane
          (RONALD R. ROMINIECKI)              Corporation (Principal Financial and
                                              Accounting Officer)
 
        /S/ FREDERICK W. MCCARTHY           Director of National Propane Corporation        January 10, 1997
 .........................................
         (FREDERICK W. MCCARTHY)
 
        /S/ WILLIS G. RYCKMAN III           Director of National Propane Corporation        January 10, 1997
 .........................................
         (WILLIS G. RYCKMAN III)
</TABLE>
 
                                      II-4


<PAGE>





<PAGE>

                                                                     EXHIBIT 5.1

                    PAUL, WEISS, RIFKIND, WHARTON & GARRISON
                           1285 Avenue of the Americas
                             New York, NY 10019-6064

(212) 373-3000                                  January 10, 1997




National Propane Partners, L.P.
Suite 1700, IES Tower
200 1st Street, S.E.
Cedar Rapids, Iowa  52401

                         National Propane Partners, L.P.
                       Registration Statement on Form S-1

Ladies and Gentlemen:

               In connection with the above-captioned Registration Statement on
Form S-1 (the "Registration Statement") being filed today with the Securities
and Exchange Commission pursuant to the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the
"Act"), and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder (the "Rules"), we
have been requested to render our opinion as to the legality of 400,000 common
units (the "Common Units") representing limited partner interests in National
Propane Partners, L.P. (the "Partnership") to be registered thereunder, which
are being offered by Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated.

               In connection with this opinion, we have examined originals, or
copies certified or otherwise identified to our satisfaction, of the following
documents: the Registration Statement (including all amendments thereto) and the
Certificate of Limited Partnership of the Partnership. In addition, we have
examined such statutes and regulations and such other certificates, agreements
and documents as we deemed relevant and necessary as a basis for the opinions
hereinafter expressed.

               In our examination of the aforesaid documents, we have assumed,
without independent investigation, the genuineness of all signatures, the
authenticity of all documents submitted to us as originals, the conformity to
the original documents of all documents submitted to us as certified,
photostatic, reproduced or conformed copies of valid existing agreements or
other documents, the authenticity of all such latter documents and the legal
capacity of all individuals who 




<PAGE>

<PAGE>


National Propane Partners, L.P.                             2

have executed any of the documents. As to certain matters of fact, we have
relied on representations, statements or certificates of officers of the
managing general partner of the Partnership.

               Based upon the foregoing, and subject to the assumptions set
forth herein, we are of the opinion that the Common Units have been validly
issued, fully paid (to the extent required by the Agreement of Limited
Partnership of the Partnership) and non-assessable, except as such
non-assessability may be affected by the matters set forth in the Registration
Statement under the caption "The Partnership Agreement - Limited Liability."

               Our opinions expressed above are limited to the Delaware Revised
Uniform Limited Partnership Act, as amended. Our opinions are rendered only with
respect to the laws, and the rules, regulations and orders thereunder, which
are currently in effect.

               We consent to the filing of this opinion as an exhibit to the
Registration Statement and to the reference to our name under the caption "Legal
Matters" in the prospectus included in the Registration Statement. In giving
this consent, we do not thereby agree that we come within the category of
persons whose consent is required by the Act or the Rules.

                                Very truly yours,

                                /s/ Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison

                                    PAUL, WEISS, RIFKIND, WHARTON & GARRISON

<PAGE>





<PAGE>

                 [Letterhead of Andrews & Kurth L.L.P.]

                                       January 10, 1997

National Propane Partners, L.P.
Suite 1700, IES Tower
200 1st Street, S.E.
Cedar Rapids, Iowa 52401-2067

                                   Tax Opinion

Gentlemen:

        We have acted as special counsel to National  Propane  Partners,  L.P, a
Delaware  limited  partnership  (the  "Partnership"),  in  connection  with  the
registration under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the "Act") of 400,000
common units  representing  limited partner  interests  ("Common  Units") in the
Partnership  which  may  be  sold  by  a  selling  unitholder  pursuant  to  the
Partnership's  registration  statement on Form S-1 filed with the Securities and
Exchange  Commission  on the date hereof  (the  "Registration  Statement").  The
Common Units will be sold or delivered by the selling unitholder, or transferees
affiliated  with it, from time to time in amounts,  at prices and on terms to be
determined  as  described  in  supplements  ("Prospectus  Supplements")  to  the
prospectus (the "Prospectus") contained in the Registration Statement.

        All statements of legal  conclusions  contained in the discussion  under
the caption "Tax  Considerations"  in the Prospectus,  unless  otherwise  noted,
represent our opinion with respect to the matters set forth therein.

        In  addition,  based on the  foregoing,  we are of the opinion  that the
federal income tax discussion in the Prospectus with respect to those matters as
to which no legal  conclusions  are provided is an accurate  discussion  of such
federal  income tax matters  (except for the  representations  and statements of
fact of the Partnership and its general  partners,  included in such discussion,
as to which we express no opinion).

        This  opinion is  delivered  as of the date hereof and we  disclaim  any
responsibility to update this opinion at any time following the date hereof.

 


<PAGE>

<PAGE>



National Propane Partners, L.P.
January 10, 1997

Page 2

        We  hereby  consent  to the  references  to our firm  and  this  opinion
contained in the Prospectus included in the Registration Statement.

                                                   Very truly yours,

                                                   Andrews & Kurth L.L.P.
                                                   425 Lexington Ave.
                                                   New York, NY 10017


<PAGE>



<PAGE>
                                                                   EXHIBIT 10.13
 
                          NATIONAL PROPANE CORPORATION
                             SUITE 1700, IES TOWER
                              200 1ST STREET, N.E.
                         CEDAR RAPIDS, IOWA 52401-2067
 
                                                               November 20, 1996
 
C. David Watson, Esq.
1728 Schey Court
Naperville, IL 60565
 
Dear David:
 
     It  is with great pleasure that we hereby confirm your employment as Senior
Vice President  --  Administration  and  General  Counsel  of  National  Propane
Corporation ('NPC'), the general partner of National Propane Partners, L.P. (the
'MLP'),  effective December 19, 1996,  on the terms and  conditions set forth in
this letter and in the attached term sheet (the 'Term Sheet'). From December  2,
1996 through December 18, 1996, you will be a Senior Vice President of NPC.
 
     You  will report to  the President and  Chief Executive Officer  of NPC and
your duties will be performed primarily at the corporate headquarters of NPC  in
Cedar  Rapids, Iowa. As of December 19,  1996, you will be responsible for legal
affairs, governmental affairs, human  resources, safety and environmental,  risk
management/insurance, engineering & fleet and the flight department.
 
     In  the event of termination by NPC  of your employment without good cause,
NPC shall, (i) within 30 days after the  date of such termination, pay to you  a
lump  sum equal to  one-half (1/2) your annual  rate of salary  in effect at the
date of termination, (ii) commencing 6  months after the date of termination  of
your  employment, pay to you a sum equal to your annual rate of salary in effect
at the date of termination, payable in semi-monthly installments for a period of
six (6) months; provided, however, that if you have secured full-time employment
during the  period  of  the semi-monthly  payments,  the  semi-monthly  payments
required  to be  made by NPC  after you  begin receiving payments  from your new
employer will be offset by the compensation you earn from any such new  employer
during  the period in  which you receive  semi-monthly payments hereunder, (iii)
within 30 days after date  of such termination, pay to  you a lump sum equal  to
annual  target incentive and any funds accumulated as part of your Mid-Term cash
performance plan, and (iv) any  unit options granted to  you (a) which have  not
vested  on the termination date  shall terminate and become  null and void as of
such date and (b) which  have vested on the  termination date must be  exercised
within 90 days or be forfeited.
 
     For purposes of this agreement 'for cause' means: (i) commission of any act
of  fraud or gross negligence by you  in the course of your employment hereunder
which, in the case of gross negligence,  has a materially adverse effect on  the
business  or financial condition of NPC or any of its affiliates; (ii) voluntary
termination by you of your employment or  failure, refusal or neglect by you  to
comply  with any  of your  material obligations hereunder  or failure  by you to
comply with a reasonable instruction of any superior officer of NPC or its Board
of Directors, which failure,  refusal or neglect, if  curable, is not fully  and
completely  cured to  the reasonable satisfaction  of NPC as  soon as reasonably
possible upon written notice to you; (iii)  engagement by you in any conduct  or
the  commission by you of any act which  is, in the reasonable opinion of NPC is
materially injurious or detrimental to the substantial interest of NPC or any of
its affiliates;  (iv) indictment  for  any act,  whether  with respect  to  your
employment  or otherwise,  which is  in violation  of the  criminal laws  of the
United States or any state thereof or  any similar foreign law to which you  may
be  subject; (v)  any failure  substantially to  comply with  any written rules,
regulations, policies or procedures  of NPC or any  of its affiliates which,  if
not  complied with, could  have a material adverse  effect on NPC  or any of its
affiliates; or  (vi) any  willful  failure to  comply with  NPC  or any  of  its
affiliates' internal policies regarding insider trading.
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
     You  acknowledge that  as a  senior executive  officer of  NPC you  will be
involved,  at  the  highest  level,  in  the  development,  implementation,  and
management of NPC's and the MLP's business strategies and plans, including those
which  involve  NPC and  the  MLP's finances,  marketing  operations, industrial
relations, operations and acquisitions. By  virtue of your unique and  sensitive
position,  your  employment by  a competitor  of  NPC and  the MLP  represents a
serious competitive  danger to  NPC and  the MLP  and the  use of  your  talent,
knowledge,  and information about NPC's and  the MLP's business, strategies, and
plans can and would constitute a valuable competitive advantage over NPC and the
MLP. In view of the foregoing, if either your employment with NPC ends prior  to
the  end of the term by reason of  your resignation in breach of this agreement,
or your employment is terminated  by NPC for good  cause, then you covenant  and
agree  that in either  case for a  period of eighteen  (18) months following the
termination of  your  employment, you  will  not engage  or  be engaged  in  any
capacity, directly or indirectly, including, but not limited to, as an employee,
agent,  consultant,  manager,  executive,  owner, or  stockholder  (except  as a
passive investor  owning less  than  two percent  interest  in a  publicly  held
company) in the propane industry.
 
     You agree to treat such as confidential and not to disclose to anyone other
than  NPC and its subsidiaries and affiliated  companies, and you agree that you
will not at  any time  during your  employment and for  a period  of four  years
thereafter,  without the prior written consent  of NPC divulge, furnish, or make
known or accessible to,  or use for  the benefit of anyone  other than NPC,  its
subsidiaries, and affiliated companies, any information of a confidential nature
relating  in any way  to the business  of NPC or  its subsidiaries or affiliated
companies, or any of their respective direct business customers, unless (i)  you
are  required to  disclose such  information by  requirements of  law, (ii) such
information is in the  public domain through  no fault of  yours, or (iii)  such
information has been lawfully acquired by you from other sources unless you know
that   such  information   was  obtained  in   violation  of   an  agreement  of
confidentiality.
 
     You agree  that in  addition to  any other  remedy provided  at law  or  in
equity,  (a) NPC shall  be entitled to  a temporary restraining  order, and both
preliminary and permanent injunctive relief  restraining you from violating  the
provision  of the preceding two paragraphs, (b)  you will indemnify and hold NPC
harmless from and against any and all damages or loss incurred by NPC or any  of
its  affiliates (including attorneys' fees and expenses) as a result of any such
violation; and (c)  NPC's remaining  obligations this agreement,  if any,  shall
cease (other than payment of your base salary through the date of such violation
and any earned but unpaid vacation or except as may be required by law).
 
     This  agreement  shall  be  governed  by the  laws  of  the  State  of Iowa
applicable to agreements made and to be performed entirely within such State.
 
     If you  agree with  the terms  outlined above  and in  the Employment  Term
Sheet,  please date and sign  the copy of this  letter enclosed for that purpose
and return it to us.
 
     Best regards,
 
                                          Sincerely,

                                          /s/ Ronald D. Paliughi
                                          ......................................
                                          Ronald D. Paliughi
                                          President and Chief Executive Officer
 
                                          Agreed and Accepted

                                          /s/ C. David Watson
                                          ......................................
                                          C. David Watson
 
                                          November 20, 1996
                                          ......................................
                                          Date
 
                                       2
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                                C. DAVID WATSON
                             EMPLOYMENT TERM SHEET
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
       PROVISION                       TERM                                     COMMENTS
- ------------------------   -----------------------------  ----------------------------------------------------
 
<S>                        <C>                            <C>
Base Salary.............   $125,000/year                  Subject to increase at discretion of NPC Board.
Annual Incentive........   $62,500/cycle target (50%  of  Company and individual performance assessed for each
                             salary)                        fiscal   year  relative  to  objective  agreed  in
                                                            advance between executive and CEO of NPC.
Mid-Term Cash...........   $50,000/cycle target (40%  of  The   CEO  of  NPC  will  develop  a  mid-term  cash
                             salary)                        performance plan calibrated to deliver the  target
                                                            award  for  delivering agreed  upon profit  over a
                                                            three-year performance cycle  during each year  of
                                                            the  three-year  cycle an  amount will  be accrued
                                                            based upon a share of the company's profits over a
                                                            minimum return; a new three-year cycle begins each
                                                            year so that after the third year the annual  cash
                                                            pay-out  should equal or exceed the target; no cap
                                                            on potential award.
Unit Options............   Grants consistent with status                           --
                             to  be   awarded   by   NPC
                             Compensation Committee.
Relocation..............   See attachment.                                         --
Health, Medical,           Participation in NPC Plans.                             --
  Insurance Benefits....
Car.....................   Commencing    on   or   about                           --
                             December 19, 1996, you will
                             be provided  an  automobile
                             for  the  period  ending on
                             the earlier of (i) the date
                             your family  moves  to  the
                             Cedar  Rapids  metropolitan
                             area or (ii) June 30, 1997.
Vacation................   Consistent with other  senior                           --
                             executive officers.
</TABLE>
 
RELOCATION ALLOWANCE
 
     A one-time miscellaneous relocation allowance will be provided equal to the
net  amount of two  months' salary (i.e.,  your monthly base  salary less normal
payroll deductions). The purpose of this allowance is to help cover any expenses
connected with the move for which reimbursement is not covered by the Relocation
Program and which are  specific to your own  personal needs. If you  voluntarily
(i)  decide not relocate or (ii) separate from the Company within the first year
from your date of hire, the full amount  of the moving allowance paid to you  is
required  to be reimbursed to  the Company. Such amount  will be subtracted as a
payroll deduction or by other means satisfactory to the Company.
 
                                       3
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
Dear Relocating Executive:
 
     Congratulations on your new assignment. You and your family will  encounter
many personal and professional opportunities in your new location. For all of us
at  the Company,  your move,  and the  ongoing relocation  of key  employees, is
considered crucial  to our  continued success  in today's  competitive  business
environment.  For that reason, we  commit to help you  accomplish your move with
minimal disruption to you and your family.
 
     Through the Relocation Program described in this booklet, the Company  will
provide  you with the professional and  financial resources necessary to make it
possible for you and  your family to relocate  smoothly and effectively.  Please
make  full use of the support available to  you through this Program. As a first
step, take time to review  your concerns, and begin  thinking out the steps  you
need to take in order to plan for a successful move.
 
     It  is the intent of  the Program to cover  the reasonable costs associated
with your move.  For this  reason the  Program has  been designed  to offer  you
special  relocation services  and financial  assistance provisions.  The Program
will either provide services  to you outright, or  will offer reimbursement  for
relocation  expenses, according  to certain  established guidelines  outlined in
this booklet.
 
     We recognize that  while wanting to  become quickly effective  in your  new
job, you will also need to manage additional personal responsibilities resulting
from  your  relocation. We  have an  on-site  Relocation Coordinator  located in
Florida who will  coordinate all relocation  issues from the  Company's side.  A
Relocation  Counselor from Prudential has been  assigned to the Company and will
help you get started in the Program and facilitate delivery of many helpful  and
timesaving  services available to you and your family. Your Relocation Counselor
will assist you in planning  your move process. Prudent  and early use of  these
critical  resources will result in an easier, more cost-effective relocation for
you and your family.
 
     We hope you find this booklet a worthwhile introduction to the programs and
services of the  Corporate Relocation  Program and wish  you and  your family  a
smooth transition.
 
                             BEFORE YOU BEGIN . . .
 
     The Company strongly urges you to take advantage of the personal assistance
which  has been designed specifically for  the needs of the Company's relocating
employees. Before you begin to prepare to sell  your home or to look for a  home
in  the  new area  -- please  familiarize  yourself with  the provisions  of our
Program and contact a Relocation Counselor if you have not already done so.
 
     The following  individuals at  Prudential Relocation  Management have  been
assigned to complete our team for your relocation:

Mr. Glenn Hansen               Director, Client Services
                               (404) 612-6013
                               (800) 358-6889

Ms. Pat Spivey                 Senior Relocation Counselor
                               (404) 612-6057
                               (800) 358-6889
 
     Please note that, even though the Counselors are situated in Atlanta, their
responsibility for the Company's relocating families is nationwide.
 
     After you have had initial contact with your Counselor, he/she will work to
bring  you a wealth of services, advice  and expertise which will help make your
move as trouble-free as possible. (Please refer to the Prudential  Homemarketing
Relocation Kit which will be sent to you from Prudential under separate cover.)
 
                                       4
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                                  ELIGIBILITY
 
     You  are eligible for the assistance described in the guide if you meet the
following requirements:
 
JOB STATUS
 
     You are a  full-time, executive  employee who is  asked by  the Company  to
relocate  as a result of  being newly hired, or being  offered a job transfer or
reassignment.
 
DISTANCE RULE
 
     Your new distance to work  is at least 35  miles greater than your  current
distance  to  work.  This measurement  is  based  on the  most  direct, commonly
traveled route.
 
TIME LIMIT FOR REIMBURSEMENT
 
     You have  12 months  after the  effective  date of  transfer to  claim  all
relocation-related  reimbursements. (Please refer to the Relocation Tax Bulletin
which is included as Appendix A).
 
                                  HOMEFINDING
 
     Selecting a new community  and home is one  of the most important  personal
decisions  you will make as a result of your job transfer. The following Program
has been designed  to enable  you to  visit your  new community,  and to  become
familiar  with the  neighborhoods or areas  in which you  would ideally consider
living. In addition, you  may use the  time in the new  area to select  schools,
interview  family care providers, or begin a job search for your spouse or other
household members. Your Relocation Counselor will be available to you throughout
this process.
 
HOMEFINDING EXPENSE ALLOWANCE
 
     In order to give you sufficient time for your home search, the Company will
reimburse expenses for  a total of  up to  7 days and  nights, including  travel
time.  You may use this Homefinding Expense Allowance in order to take up to two
trips within that 7 day total.
 
     Your  reimbursed   expenses   relate   to   home   search   and   community
familiarization  for  you,  your  spouse, and  your  immediate  family.  The IRS
regulations require receipts for  all expenses incurred which  are in excess  of
$25.00.
 
     Reimbursements   cover  reasonable  and  necessary  home  search  expenses,
according to normal Company business travel guidelines, including:
 
        Round-trip, first class air fare
        Car rental
        Use of your personal car (at the Company mileage rate)
        Reasonable lodging and meal expenses
        Miscellaneous expenses: telephone, tolls, etc.
 
                                    HOMESALE
 
     There are many vital concerns surrounding the sale of your home:  receiving
the  best possible price,  coordinating all the  details of your  home sale, and
managing your household move, to name only a few. The following Program provides
a comprehensive service which  will help you work  constructively to obtain  the
best  price for your home.  In addition, it includes  an incentive Program which
can help you  benefit even further.  And, just  in case, the  Program offers  an
appraised  offer for  your home,  if you  are not  able to  find a  buyer in the
market.
 
     To address these  concerns, and  to simply relieve  much of  the burden  of
detail  involved in your relocation, the  Company has contracted with Prudential
Relocation Management to provide  a range of  services. Through their  services,
you   will  be   provided  with   counseling  to   help  you   take  prompt  and
 
                                       5
 

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<PAGE>
prudent action in  marketing your home.  You will also  have continuing  support
during the negotiation and conclusion of your sale.
 
     The  Program gives you the opportunity to look for a buyer who will pay the
highest possible price, while it offers you the security of an Offer to buy your
home  at  its  most  probable  sales  price,  as  established  by   professional
appraisals.  The established price as set by the appraisal process is called the
Appraised Value  Offer.  The highest  price  possible established  by  potential
buyers  is called the Amended Value Offer. These two options are outlined in the
next several pages.
 
     One note of caution: Because of IRS regulations, if you choose to sell your
home yourself, without using  these homesale options  and related services,  the
Company will not provide gross-up for adverse tax consequences you may incur for
any  of your homesale  related expenses. The  Company has elected  to engage the
services of Prudential Relocation Management for reasons of service and  economy
both  to  you and  to  the Company  --  so it  is  strongly encouraged  that you
participate in this Program.
 
CONDOMINIUMS, COOPERATIVE APARTMENTS
 
     If you own a condominium or cooperative apartment as a principal residence,
the relocation service firm will provide their normal homesale assistance.
 
                                 HOME MARKETING
 
     Your key to getting the  best price for your home  is to get it  positioned
wisely  and aggressively in your local real estate market. Your guide throughout
the Home Sale portion of your relocation is your Relocation Counselor. It is his
or her job to begin working with you before you list your home for sale in order
to develop a marketing strategy which will work best for your property.
 
     The marketing advice your Counselor offers includes helping to determine an
attractive   and   reasonable   asking   price,   reviewing   any   contemplated
reconditioning  projects, and working to help your real estate broker assure you
proper and appropriate advertising, publicity and promotion.
 
     Your Counselor is  available to you  virtually from 'day  one,' before  you
ever put your home on the market. You will receive advice and assistance on many
key issues which can give you an advantage in your local real estate market.
 
     In  addition to the assistance already  mentioned, your Counselor will also
help you:
 
       List your home with a broker who can maximize your home's exposure.
 
       Consider  recommendations   which   will  eliminate   anticipated   buyer
       objections.
 
      Update  the marketing strategy  for your home  through regular discussions
      with you and your broker.
 
      Review all purchase offers which you  receive, whether above or below  the
      Appraised Value Offer.
 
LISTING CLAUSE
 
     The  following listing  clause is necessary  to protect your  right to sell
your home  to the  relocation firm,  at any  time, without  owing an  additional
commission to your broker.
 
     Please  note that before  you begin to  work with your  broker, or actually
execute a listing agreement, it is important to include a clause in your listing
agreement which reserves your  right to sell to  the relocation firm --  without
incurring a commission payable to your broker. A sample wording follows:
 
          'The listing agreement is subject to the following provisions:
 
          It  is understood and agreed, regardless of whether or not an offer is
     presented by a ready, willing and able buyer that:
 
             1. No commission  or compensation  shall be  earned by  or due  and
        payable  to broker until  the sale of the  property has been consummated
        between seller  and buyer,  the deed  delivered to  the buyer,  and  the
        purchase price delivered to seller; and
 
                                       6
 

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<PAGE>
             2.  The  seller reserves  the  right to  sell  the property  to the
        relocation firm. Upon execution by a named Prospective purchaser and  me
        (us)  of an agreement of sale with respect to the property, this Listing
        Agreement shall  immediately terminate  without obligation  on my  (our)
        part to either pay a commission or to continue this listing.'
 
     This  clause preserves your right to accept the Appraised Value Offer, with
no obligation to pay a broker's commission fee. This does not, however,  prevent
your  broker  from receiving  a commission  if  you sell  your home  through the
Amended Value Offer.
 
APPRAISALS AND THE APPRAISED VALUE OFFER
 
     The Relocation Management Company guarantees you the eventual sale of  your
home   at  a  price  determined  by  professional  appraisers.  Two  independent
appraisers, selected by you from a list provided by your Counselor, will  review
the  features of  your home,  and will  submit a  report indicating  your home's
estimated most probable sale price.
 
     Your Appraised Value Offer is established by averaging the two  appraisals.
If  the  two appraisals  vary by  more than  5%  of the  higher figure,  a third
appraisal will be  performed. In  this event,  your Appraised  Value Offer  will
equal the average of the two closest appraisals.
 
     Once the appraisals have been completed and reviewed by your Counselor, you
will receive an Appraised Value Offer to buy your home, along with copies of the
appraiser's  reports. The Appraised Value Offer is valid for 60 days after it is
verbally conveyed  to you.  During the  60 days  your Appraised  Value Offer  is
valid, you can try to improve upon the Appraised Value Offer in the marketplace,
with  the continued marketing assistance and advice of your Counselor. If you do
not find a buyer who  will pay a higher price  during that time, the  relocation
firm  will purchase your  home at the  price established as  the Appraised Value
Offer.
 
AMENDED VALUE SALE
 
     If you succeed in obtaining any offer during your 60-day marketing  period,
bring  the offer to the  attention of your Counselor.  You, your broker, and the
Counselor will work closely  together during the negotiation.  After a price  is
agreed  upon, if the offer is acceptable  to both you and your Counselor, please
be sure not to sign anything. Your  Counselor will sign the Contract of Sale  on
your  behalf. You  will then sell  your property  to the relocation  firm at the
higher of the two offers: the Appraised Value Offer or the Amended Value  Offer.
Once  you have signed the Contract of  Sale, the relocation firm will attempt to
complete the sale to  the buyer at  the price. This is  called an Amended  Value
Sale.
 
     You will receive your equity based on the Appraised Value Offer. Prudential
Relocation Management will then attempt to complete the sale of the home to your
buyer.  Before 'amending' the Appraised  Value Offer to the  price your buyer is
willing to pay, your  Counselor will use  his or her  best efforts to  determine
whether  the buyer is likely to receive  adequate financing to make the purchase
at the  offered price.  It is  also  crucial that  the prepared  sale  agreement
provides  for a fixed purchase price. It should also contain terms substantially
consistent with the terms of the Contract of Sale between you and the relocation
firm, and may  not depend  on the satisfaction  of any  contingency (other  than
financing).
 
     Pleas  note: In the case of an Amended Value Sale, regardless of whether or
not the relocation firm is  able to complete the sale  (i.e. close the sale)  to
the  buyer, your  sale to  the relocation  firm is  considered final  once it it
determined that the  buyer is qualified  and all contracts  with the buyer  have
been duly executed.
 
SALE BONUS PROGRAM
 
     The   critical  factors  in  finding  a   buyer  are  to  price  your  home
realistically, and to carefully consider all  offers in light of the net  return
to you.
 
     The  Sale Bonus  Program provides  for an incentive  payment if  you find a
buyer and conclude an Amended  Value Sale. To be  certain that you are  eligible
for this payment, you must report each offer
 
                                       7
 

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<PAGE>
you  receive to your Counselor, even if it is below the amount of your Appraised
Value Offer. Your Counselor will then help determine the offer's net benefit  to
you in light of the Bonus Program Sale.
 
     You  are eligible  for the Sale  Bonus if you  find a buyer  whose offer is
acceptable to  you  and  your Counselor.  Once  you  secure the  sale,  you  are
guaranteed  a bonus of $5,000.  Even if the buyer's  offer is somewhat less than
the relocation firm's Appraised  Value Offer for your  home, in some cases  your
Counselor  may agree to accept the offer because  it will result in a higher net
return to you.
 
     Here is an illustration of how it works:

EXAMPLE
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                           Assumption: Appraised Value Offer -- $300,000
<S>                       <C>                       <C>                       <C>
Selling Price                    $  295,000                $  300,000              $   305,000
Price to You                     $  300,000                $  300,000              $   305,000
Sale Bonus                       $    5,000                $    5,000              $     5,000
You Receive                      $  305,000                $  305,000              $   310,000
</TABLE>
 
     The Sale Bonus is considered taxable income, and will be paid to you  after
the sale of your home has closed. It is not grossed-up for taxes.
 
DUPLICATE HOUSING EXPENSES
 
     Your Counselor will work with you to help plan for a timely transition from
your  old home to your  new home so that you  can avoid facing duplicate housing
costs.
 
     But in the event you have closed on your home in the new location, and have
not yet completed the  sale of your  old home, the  Company will cover  mortgage
interest for your old home up to 60 days.
 
                                 HOME PURCHASE
 
     If you owned a home at the previous location, or are contemplating becoming
a  first-time homeowner as a result of your relocation, the Program will provide
assistance with certain home purchase expenses.
 
CLOSING COSTS
 
     Reimbursement will  be made  for all  normal and  reasonable home  purchase
costs  you  encounter  which are  normally  paid  by the  buyer.  Such  fees are
reimbursable to you under  the Program, up  to a value of  2.5% of the  purchase
price of your new home.
 
     Expenses include, but are not limited to, the following:
 
Attorney fees                             Title search
Transfer taxes -- state and local         Survey fees
Credit reports                            Abstract fees
Recording fees                            Notary fees
Required inspections
  (total not to exceed $500)
 
 
     Many  lenders charge a range of  'up-front' fees which have different names
and different  purposes. Depending  on the  region you  are moving  to, and  the
practices  of your lender,  you may encounter such  costs, for example: Mortgage
placement fee, lender's service charges,  application fee, origination fee,  and
mortgage discount points.
 
                                       8
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
     If  you  have  questions  about  mortgage  options  available  to  you when
financing your  new  home, your  Counselor  can  refer you  to  several  helpful
resources.
 
NORMAL HOME OWNERSHIP COSTS
 
     Certain  costs are normally incurred in  the home purchase transaction, and
are considered a part of normal home ownership. These costs are, therefore,  not
reimbursed  by the  Program. Expenses  you may  anticipate include,  but are not
limited to, the following:
 
Prepaid real estate taxes                  Prepaid mortgage interest
Utility fees                               Property insurance
Owner's or Mortgage Title Insurance


 
RENTER'S RELOCATION PROGRAM
 
APARTMENT SEARCH AND FINDER'S FEES
 
     If you wish to rent in the new location, the Program provides assistance in
helping you find a rental residence.  This assistance is available through  your
Relocation Counselor. Your Counselor will discuss your family needs with you and
help you review available rental housing options.
 
     In  addition, you  may find  that real  estate agents  or apartment finders
charge a  fee  for  their services.  The  Program  covers the  cost  of  such  a
documented fee, up to 10% of the annual rent on your new residence.
 
LEASE TERMINATION PENALTIES
 
     If  your  need to  terminate  the lease  or  rental agreement  on  your old
residence, the Company provides  reimbursement for reasonable lease  termination
charges.  The provision applies to loss  of deposit or cancellation penalties up
to the value of two months' rent.
 
TEMPORARY LIVING
 
     It may be necessary  for you alone,  or your and  your family together,  to
assume  a temporary  residence in the  new location before  permanent housing is
available. Your Relocation  Counselor will  assist you  in working  out all  the
timing  issues, and with the assistance of local real estate professionals, your
Counselor can help arrange for temporary accommodations.
 
     If you need to take up temporary residence on your own, before your  family
joins  you in  the new location,  you will  be reimbursed for  travel and living
expenses for up to 60 days.
 
TRANSPORTATION OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS
 
MOVER'S SERVICE
 
     The Program provides you with moving  services to assist you in  relocating
your  household goods  quickly and efficiently.  To make your  household move as
trouble-free  as  possible,  be  sure  to  contact  your  Relocation   Counselor
approximately  10 days in advance of your move. Even if you are not sure of your
exact move  date,  Prudential can  begin  making arrangements  with  the  moving
company  and can provide detailed information about preparing for your move. You
should not make arrangements with a moving company directly.
 
     The program offers the following household move services:
 
          Packing of your household goods                  Moving van transport
 
          Unpacking of  your household  goods and  furniture (and  boxes if  you
     wish) at the new residence
 
     Special  moving requests which require  preapproval are for special crating
for art and antiques.
 
                                       9
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
     Your will be notified in advance of  the date the movers will pick up  your
furnishings  and  belongings.  Generally, it  takes  one  day to  wrap  and pack
household goods and a second day to load the van.
 
     Once the van arrives  at your new residence,  the mover is responsible  for
placing  your furniture and boxed  belongings in the exact  rooms you select. If
you wish, they will also unpack all  of the boxes and reassemble the  furniture,
such as beds and tables.
 
STORAGE
 
     With  most timing  issues, your Relocation  Counselor can  be of invaluable
help, and  should  be sought  out  for assistance  in  avoiding the  expense  of
temporary storage. For this reason, the Program does not provide for the storage
of household goods without prior approval.
 
APPLIANCES
 
     You  will be reimbursed  for installation of most  major appliances, if the
same or similar appliances existed at your former residence. Reimbursable  costs
include:  Plumbing, electrical,  labor and  materials required  to disconnect or
reconnect.
 
AUTOMOBILE SHIPMENT
 
     The Program provides for the shipment of up to two automobiles.
 
ITEMS EXCLUDED FROM THE MOVING PROGRAM
 
     There are restrictions on moving animals, plants, boats, valuables, such as
currency, jewelry, hazardous items, and other items not suited for furniture van
transport.
 
     The Company will not pay to  move pianos, grandfather clocks, pool  tables,
weight machine, tread mills and other bulk and overweight items.
 
MOVING YOUR FAMILY
 
FAMILY MOVING TRIP
 
     The  Company provides reimbursement for  transportation, lodging, meals and
expenses, within regular  Company guidelines, for  you and your  family on  your
moving trip to the new location.
 
                                       10


<PAGE>



<PAGE>
                                                                    EXHIBIT 21.1
 
                        SUBSIDIARIES OF THE PARTNERSHIP

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                       SUBSIDIARY                                          STATE OF ORGANIZATION
- --------------------------------------------------------  --------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                       <C>
National Propane, L.P.                                                            Delaware
 
National Sales & Service, Inc.                                                    Delaware
 
Carib Gas Corporation of St. Croix                                                Delaware
 
Carib Gas Corporation of St. Thomas                                               Delaware
</TABLE>




<PAGE>




<PAGE>
                                                                    EXHIBIT 23.1
 
                         INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' CONSENT
 
     We  consent to the  use in this Registration  Statement of National Propane
Partners, L.P. on Form S-1 of our report dated March 13, 1996, appearing in  the
Prospectus,  which is part of such  Registration Statement, and to the reference
to us  under  the  headings  'Selected Historical  and  Pro  Forma  Consolidated
Financial and Operating Data' and 'Experts' in such Prospectus.


/s/ DELOITTE & TOUCHE LLP

 
DELOITTE & TOUCHE LLP

Cedar Rapids, Iowa
January 10, 1997

<PAGE>





<PAGE>

                                                                   EXHIBIT 23.2

              CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS

     As  independent certified public accountants, we  hereby consent to the use
of our report on  the financial statements (not  included herein) of Public  Gas
Company  for the ten months ended December 31, 1993 and to all references to our
Firm included in this registration statement of National Propane Partners,  L.P.
on Form S-1.
 

/s/ ARTHUR ANDERSEN LLP

ARTHUR ANDERSEN LLP
 
Miami, Florida,
     January 10, 1997.


<PAGE>




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