AMERIPRIME FUNDS
497, 1999-07-15
Previous: AMERIPRIME FUNDS, NSAR-A, 1999-07-15
Next: ECHOCATH INC, 10QSB, 1999-07-15



                            PROSPECTUS JULY 15, 1999

                                AUXIER FOCUS FUND

                             8050 S. W. Warm Springs
                                    Suite 130
                               Tualatin, OR 97062

               For Information, Shareholder Services and Requests:
                      Toll Free 877-3-AUXIER (877-328-9437)


         The  investment  objective  of the Auxier Focus Fund (the "Fund") is to
provide long term capital appreciation.  The Fund seeks to achieve its objective
by investing primarily in a portfolio of common stocks that the Advisor,  Auxier
Asset  Management,  LLC,  believes offers growth  opportunities  at a reasonable
price.  The Advisor selects stocks on the basis of several  criteria,  including
price-earnings  ratio,  rate of  earnings  growth,  depth  of  management,  past
financial  stability,  present and  projected  industry  position  and  dividend
record.

         The  Fund is  "no-load,"  which  means  that  investors  incur no sales
charges,  commissions or deferred sales charges on the purchase or redemption of
their shares.  The Fund is one of the mutual funds comprising  AmeriPrime Funds,
an open-end management  investment company,  distributed by AmeriPrime Financial
Securities, Inc.

         This Prospectus  provides the information a prospective  investor ought
to know  before  investing  and  should be  retained  for  future  reference.  A
Statement of Additional  Information dated July 15, 1999 has been filed with the
Securities  and Exchange  Commission  (the  "SEC"),  is  incorporated  herein by
reference,  and can be obtained  without charge by calling the Fund at the phone
number listed  above.  The SEC  maintains a Web Site  (http://www.sec.gov)  that
contains the  Statement of  Additional  Information,  material  incorporated  by
reference,  and other information regarding registrants that file electronically
with the SEC.






















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.






<PAGE>


                            SUMMARY OF FUND EXPENSES

         The tables  below are  provided to assist an investor in  understanding
the direct and indirect  expenses that an investor may incur as a shareholder in
the Fund. The expense  information is based on estimated amounts for the current
fiscal year.  The expenses are  expressed as a percentage of average net assets.
THE EXAMPLE SHOULD NOT BE CONSIDERED A REPRESENTATION OF FUTURE FUND PERFORMANCE
OR EXPENSES, BOTH OF WHICH MAY VARY.

         Shareholders  should  be aware  that the Fund is a  no-load  fund  and,
accordingly,  a  shareholder  does not pay any sales charge or  commission  upon
purchase or  redemption  of shares of the Fund.  In addition,  the Fund does not
charge a 12b-1  fee.  Unlike  most  other  mutual  funds,  the Fund does not pay
directly for transfer agency,  pricing,  custodial,  auditing or legal services,
nor  does it pay  directly  any  general  administrative  or  other  significant
operating  expenses.  The Advisor pays all of the operating expenses of the Fund
except  brokerage,  taxes,  borrowing costs, fees and expenses of non-interested
person trustees and extraordinary expenses.

    SHAREHOLDER TRANSACTION EXPENSES

Sales Load Imposed on Purchases                      NONE
Sales Load Imposed on Reinvested Dividends           NONE
Deferred Sales Load                                  NONE
Redemption Fees                                      NONE
Exchange Fees                                        NONE

    ANNUAL FUND OPERATING EXPENSES (as a percentage of average net assets)1

Management Fees                                      1.35%
12b-1 Fees                                           NONE
Other Expenses2                                      0.00%
Total Fund Operating Expenses                        1.35%

    1 The Fund's total  operating  expenses are equal to the management fee paid
    to the Advisor because the Advisor pays all of the Fund's operating expenses
    (except as described above).

    2 The Fund  estimates that other expenses (fees and expenses of the trustees
    who are not "interested  persons" as defined in the Investment  Company Act)
    will be less than .005% of average net assets for the first fiscal year.

         The tables  above are  provided to assist an investor in  understanding
the direct and indirect  expenses that an investor may incur as a shareholder in
the Fund.

Example

          You would pay the following expenses on a $1,000 investment,  assuming
(1) 5% annual return and (2) redemption at the end of each time period:

                          1 YEAR        3 YEARS
                            $14          $43







<PAGE>


                                    THE FUND

         The Auxier Focus Fund (the "Fund") was  organized as a  non-diversified
series of AmeriPrime  Funds,  an Ohio business  trust (the "Trust") on March 22,
1999.  This  prospectus  offers shares of the Fund and each share  represents an
undivided,  proportionate  interest in the Fund. The  investment  advisor to the
Fund is Auxier Asset Management, LLC (the "Advisor").

                       INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE AND STRATEGIES

         The  investment  objective  of the Fund is to provide long term capital
appreciation.  The Fund seeks to achieve its objective by investing primarily in
a  portfolio  of  common   stocks  that  the  Advisor   believes   offer  growth
opportunities at a reasonable  price. The Advisor selects stocks on the basis of
several criteria, including price-earnings ratio, rate of earnings growth, depth
of management,  consistency in past operating results, and present and projected
industry position.  The Fund may also invest in debt securities that are, in the
Advisor's opinion, undervalued.

         Under  normal  circumstances,  the Fund will  invest  primarily  in the
common   stock  of  medium  to  large  U.S.   companies   (those   with   market
capitalizations  above  $1  billion).  Most  equity  securities  in  the  Fund's
portfolio will be listed on a national exchange.  As a non-diversified fund, the
Fund's  portfolio may at times focus on a limited  number of companies  that the
Advisor believes offer superior prospects for growth.  See "Investment  Policies
and  Techniques and Risk  Considerations"  for  information  regarding the risks
associated  with  non-diversification.  For temporary  defensive  purposes under
abnormal  market or economic  conditions,  the Fund may hold all or a portion of
its assets in money market  instruments,  securities of other no-load registered
investment companies or U.S. government repurchase agreements. The Fund may also
invest  in  such  instruments  at any  time to  maintain  liquidity  or  pending
selection of investments in accordance  with its policies.  If the Fund acquires
securities of another investment  company,  the shareholders of the Fund will be
subject to additional management fees.

         As all investment  securities are subject to inherent  market risks and
fluctuations  in value due to earnings,  economic and political  conditions  and
other factors,  the Fund cannot give any assurance that its investment objective
will be achieved. In addition, it should be noted that the Advisor is a recently
formed  business that has not previously  managed  assets  organized as a mutual
fund and the Fund has no operating history.  Rates of total return quoted by the
Fund may be higher or lower than past quotations,  and there can be no assurance
that any rate of total return will be maintained.  See "Investment  Policies and
Techniques and Risk Considerations" for a more detailed discussion of the Fund's
investment practices.

                            HOW TO INVEST IN THE FUND

         The Fund is  "no-load"  and  shares  of the Fund are sold  directly  to
investors on a continuous  basis,  subject to a minimum  initial  investment  of
$2,000 and minimum subsequent  investments of $100. These minimums may be waived
by the Advisor for accounts  participating in an automatic  investment  program.
Investors choosing to purchase or redeem their shares through a broker/dealer or
other institution may be charged a fee by that institution.  Investors  choosing
to purchase or redeem  shares  directly  from the Fund will not incur charges on
purchases or redemptions.  To the extent investments of individual investors are
aggregated into an omnibus account established by an investment adviser,  broker
or other intermediary, the account minimums apply to the omnibus account, not to
the account of the individual investor.

INITIAL PURCHASE

         BY MAIL - You may purchase shares of the Fund by completing and signing
the investment  application  form which  accompanies this Prospectus and mailing
it, in proper form, together with a check (subject to the above minimum amounts)
made payable to the Auxier Focus Fund, and sent to the P.O. Box listed below. If
you prefer overnight delivery, use the overnight address listed below.

     U.S. Mail:                            Overnight:
     Auxier Focus Fund                     Auxier Focus Fund
     c/o Unified Fund Services, Inc.       c/o Unified Fund Services, Inc.
     P.O. Box 6110                         431 North Pennsylvania Street
     Indianapolis,  Indiana  46204-6110    Indianapolis, Indiana  46204

         Your  purchase of shares of the Fund will be effected at the next share
price calculated after receipt of your investment.
<PAGE>

         BY WIRE - You may also  purchase  shares of the Fund by wiring  federal
funds from your bank, which may charge you a fee for doing so. If money is to be
wired,  you must call the Transfer Agent at  877-3-AUXIER to set up your account
and obtain an account number. You should be prepared at that time to provide the
information  on the  application.  Then,  you should  provide your bank with the
following information for purposes of wiring your investment:

                  Firstar Bank, N.A. Cinti/Trust
                  ABA #0420-0001-3
                  Attn: Auxier Focus Fund
                  D.D.A. #  489022988
                  Account Name _________________ (write in shareholder name)
                  For the Account # ______________ (write in account number)

         You are required to mail a signed  application  to the Custodian at the
above address in order to complete your initial wire purchase.  Wire orders will
be accepted only on a day on which the Fund,  Custodian  and Transfer  Agent are
open for business.  A wire purchase will not be considered  made until the wired
money is received and the purchase is accepted by the Fund. Any delays which may
occur in wiring  money,  including  delays which may occur in  processing by the
banks, are not the  responsibility  of the Fund or the Transfer Agent.  There is
presently  no fee for the  receipt  of wired  funds,  but the  right  to  charge
shareholders for this service is reserved by the Fund.

ADDITIONAL INVESTMENTS

         You may purchase  additional shares of the Fund at any time (subject to
minimum investment  requirements) by mail, wire, or automatic  investment.  Each
additional  mail  purchase  request  must  contain  your name,  the name of your
account(s),  your account number(s),  and the name of the Fund. Checks should be
made payable to the Auxier  Focus Fund and should be sent to the address  listed
above. A bank wire should be sent as outlined above.

AUTOMATIC INVESTMENT PLAN

         You  may  make  regular  investments  in the  Fund  with  an  Automatic
Investment Plan by completing the appropriate section of the account application
and attaching a voided personal check.  Investments may be made monthly to allow
dollar-cost  averaging by  automatically  deducting  $100 or more from your bank
checking  account.  You may change the amount of your  monthly  purchase  at any
time.

TAX SHELTERED RETIREMENT PLANS

         Since the Fund is oriented to longer  term  investments,  shares of the
Fund may be an appropriate investment medium for tax sheltered retirement plans,
including:  individual  retirement plans (IRAs);  simplified  employee  pensions
(SEPs);  SIMPLE plans;  401(k)  plans;  qualified  corporate  pension and profit
sharing plans (for employees);  tax deferred  investment plans (for employees of
public school systems and certain types of charitable organizations);  and other
qualified  retirement  plans.  You should  contact  the  Transfer  Agent for the
procedure  to open an IRA or SEP  plan,  as  well as more  specific  information
regarding these  retirement plan options.  Consultation  with an attorney or tax
advisor  regarding  these plans is advisable.  Custodial fees for an IRA will be
paid by the shareholder by redemption of sufficient  shares of the Fund from the
IRA  unless  the fees are paid  directly  to the IRA  custodian.  You can obtain
information about the IRA custodial fees from the Transfer Agent.



OTHER PURCHASE INFORMATION

         Dividends begin to accrue after you become a shareholder. The Fund does
not issue  share  certificates.  All  shares  are held in  non-certificate  form
registered  on the  books of the  Fund and the  Fund's  Transfer  Agent  for the
account of the  shareholder.  The rights to limit the amount of purchases and to
refuse to sell to any person  are  reserved  by the Fund.  If your check or wire
does not clear,  you will be  responsible  for any loss incurred by the Fund. If
you are already a shareholder,  the Fund can redeem shares from any  identically
registered  account in the Fund as reimbursement for any loss incurred.  You may
be prohibited or restricted from making future purchases in the Fund.



<PAGE>


                              HOW TO REDEEM SHARES

         All redemptions  will be made at the net asset value  determined  after
the redemption  request has been received by the Transfer Agent in proper order.
Shareholders may receive  redemption  payments in the form of a check or federal
wire  transfer.  The  proceeds  of the  redemption  may be more or less than the
purchase  price of your  shares,  depending  on the  market  value of the Fund's
securities at the time of your redemption. Presently there is no charge for wire
redemptions;  however,  the Fund  reserves the right to charge for this service.
Any charges for wire  redemptions will be deducted from the  shareholder's  Fund
account by redemption of shares.  Investors choosing to purchase or redeem their
shares through a broker/dealer or other institution may be charged a fee by that
institution.

         BY MAIL -  You may redeem any part of your account in the Fund at no
                    charge by mail.  Your request should be addressed to:
                    Auxier Focus Fund
                    c/o Unified Fund Services, Inc.
                    P.O. Box 6110
                    Indianapolis, Indiana  46204-6110

         "Proper  order" means your  request for a redemption  must include your
letter of instruction, including the Fund name, account number, account name(s),
the address and the dollar  amount or number of shares you wish to redeem.  This
request must be signed by all registered share owner(s) in the exact name(s) and
any special capacity in which they are registered. For all redemptions, the Fund
requires  that  signatures  be guaranteed by a bank or member firm of a national
securities   exchange.   Signature   guarantees   are  for  the   protection  of
shareholders.  At the discretion of the Fund or Unified Fund  Services,  Inc., a
shareholder,  prior to redemption,  may be required to furnish  additional legal
documents to insure proper authorization.

         BY  TELEPHONE - You may redeem any part of your  account in the Fund by
calling  the  Transfer  Agent at (877)  3-AUXIER.  You must first  complete  the
Optional Telephone Redemption and Exchange section of the investment application
to institute this option. The Fund, the Transfer Agent and the Custodian are not
liable  for  following  redemption  or  exchange  instructions  communicated  by
telephone that they reasonably  believe to be genuine.  However,  if they do not
employ reasonable procedures to confirm that telephone instructions are genuine,
they  may  be  liable  for  any  losses  due  to   unauthorized   or  fraudulent
instructions.  Procedures employed may include recording telephone  instructions
and requiring a form of personal identification from the caller.

         The telephone  redemption and exchange  procedures may be terminated at
any time by the Fund or the Transfer  Agent.  During  periods of extreme  market
activity it is possible  that  shareholders  may  encounter  some  difficulty in
telephoning the Fund,  although neither the Fund nor the Transfer Agent has ever
experienced  difficulties  in receiving  and in a timely  fashion  responding to
telephone requests for redemptions or exchanges.  If you are unable to reach the
Fund by telephone, you may request a redemption or exchange by mail.


         ADDITIONAL INFORMATION - If you are not certain of the requirements for
a  redemption  please call the  Transfer  Agent at (877)  3-AUXIER.  Redemptions
specifying  a  certain  date or  share  price  cannot  be  accepted  and will be
returned.  You will be mailed the  proceeds on or before the fifth  business day
following the  redemption.  However,  payment for redemption made against shares
purchased by check will be made only after the check has been  collected,  which
normally may take up to fifteen days.  Also, when the New York Stock Exchange is
closed (or when trading is  restricted)  for any reason other than its customary
weekend or holiday closing or under any emergency  circumstances,  as determined
by the Securities and Exchange  Commission,  the Fund may suspend redemptions or
postpone payment dates.

         Because the Fund incurs certain fixed costs in maintaining  shareholder
accounts,  the Fund reserves the right to require any  shareholder to redeem all
of his or her shares in the Fund on 30 days' written  notice if the value of his
or her shares in the Fund is less than $2,000 due to  redemption,  or such other
minimum  amount  as the Fund may  determine  from time to time.  An  involuntary
redemption  constitutes a sale. You should  consult your tax advisor  concerning
the tax consequences of involuntary redemptions.  A shareholder may increase the
value of his or her shares in the Fund to the minimum  amount  within the 30 day
period.  Each share of the Fund is subject to redemption at anytime if the Board
of Trustees determines in its sole discretion that failure to so redeem may have
materially adverse consequences to all or any of the shareholders of the Fund.



<PAGE>



                             SHARE PRICE CALCULATION

         The value of an  individual  share in the Fund (the net asset value) is
calculated  by  dividing  the total  value of the Fund's  investments  and other
assets (including  accrued income),  less any liabilities  (including  estimated
accrued expenses),  by the number of shares  outstanding,rounded  to the nearest
cent.  Net asset value per share is  determined  as of the close of the New York
Stock Exchange  (4:00 p.m.,  Eastern time) on each day that the exchange is open
for business,  and on any other day on which there is sufficient  trading in the
Fund's  securities to materially affect the net asset value. The net asset value
per share of the Fund will fluctuate.

         Securities   which  are  traded  on  any  exchange  or  on  the  NASDAQ
over-the-counter market are valued at the last quoted sale price. Lacking a last
sale  price,  a security  is valued at its last bid price  except  when,  in the
Advisor's  opinion,  the last bid price does not accurately  reflect the current
value of the security.  All other securities for which  over-the-counter  market
quotations are readily available are valued at their last bid price. When market
quotations are not readily  available,  when the Advisor determines the last bid
price  does  not  accurately  reflect  the  current  value  or  when  restricted
securities  are being valued,  such  securities are valued as determined in good
faith by the Advisor, subject to review of the Board of Trustees of the Trust.

         Fixed  income   securities   generally   are  valued  by  using  market
quotations,  but may be valued on the  basis of  prices  furnished  by a pricing
service when the Advisor believes such prices accurately reflect the fair market
value of such securities.  A pricing service utilizes electronic data processing
techniques   based  on  yield  spreads   relating  to  securities  with  similar
characteristics to determine prices for normal institutional-size  trading units
of debt  securities  without  regard to sale or bid prices.  When prices are not
readily  available  from a  pricing  service,  or when  restricted  or  illiquid
securities  are being valued,  securities are valued at fair value as determined
in good faith by the Advisor,  subject to review of the Board of Trustees. Short
term investments in fixed income securities with maturities of less than 60 days
when acquired, or which subsequently are within 60 days of maturity,  are valued
by using the amortized cost method of valuation,  which the Board has determined
will represent fair value.

                           DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS

         The Fund intends to distribute  substantially all of its net investment
income as  dividends  to its  shareholders  on an annual  basis,  and intends to
distribute  its net long term capital gains and its net short term capital gains
at least once a year.

         Income  dividends  and capital  gain  distributions  are  automatically
reinvested  in  additional  shares  at the net  asset  value  per  share  on the
distribution  date.  An election to receive a cash payment of  dividends  and/or
capital gain  distributions may be made in the application to purchase shares or
by separate  written notice to the Transfer Agent.  Shareholders  will receive a
confirmation  statement reflecting the payment and reinvestment of dividends and
summarizing  all other  transactions.  If cash  payment  is  requested,  a check
normally will be mailed within five business days after the payable date. If you
withdraw your entire account,  all dividends  accrued to the time of withdrawal,
including  the day of  withdrawal,  will be paid at that time.  You may elect to
have  distributions on shares held in IRAs and 403(b) plans paid in cash only if
you are 59 1/2 years old or permanently and totally disabled or if you otherwise
qualify under the applicable plan.

                                      TAXES

         The Fund  intends  to  qualify  each  year as a  "regulated  investment
company" under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.  By so qualifying,
the Fund will not be  subject  to federal  income  taxes to the  extent  that it
distributes  substantially  all of its net  investment  income and any  realized
capital gains.

         For  federal  income  tax  purposes,  dividends  paid by the Fund  from
ordinary  income are  taxable to  shareholders  as ordinary  income,  but may be
eligible in part for the dividends received deduction for corporations. Pursuant
to the Tax Reform Act of 1986 (the "Tax Reform Act"),  all  distributions of net
short term capital gains to  individuals  are taxed at the same rate as ordinary
income.  All  distributions  of net capital gains to  corporations  are taxed at
regular  corporate  rates. Any  distributions  designated as being made from net
realized  long term  capital  gains are  taxable  to  shareholders  as long term
capital gains regardless of the holding period of the shareholder.

         The Fund will mail to each shareholder  after the close of the calendar
year a statement  setting forth the federal  income tax status of  distributions
made during the year.  Dividends  and capital  gains  distributions  may also be
subject to state and local taxes.  Shareholders  are urged to consult  their own
tax advisors regarding  specific  questions as to federal,  state or local taxes
and the tax effect of distributions and withdrawals from the Fund.
<PAGE>

         On the application or other appropriate form, the Fund will request the
shareholder's  certified taxpayer  identification number (social security number
for  individuals)  and a  certification  that the  shareholder is not subject to
backup withholding.  Unless the shareholder provides this information,  the Fund
will  be  required  to  withhold  and  remit  to the  U.S.  Treasury  31% of the
dividends,  distributions  and redemption  proceeds  payable to the shareholder.
Shareholders should be aware that, under regulations promulgated by the Internal
Revenue Service, the Fund may be fined $50 annually for each account for which a
certified taxpayer identification number is not provided. In the event that such
a fine is imposed with respect to a specific  account in any year,  the Fund may
make a corresponding charge against the account.

                              OPERATION OF THE FUND

         The Fund is a  non-diversified  series of AmeriPrime Funds, an open-end
management  investment  company organized as an Ohio business trust on August 8,
1995. The Board of Trustees supervises the business activities of the Fund. Like
other  mutual  funds,   the  Fund  retains  various   organizations  to  perform
specialized services. The Fund retains Auxier Asset Management,  LLC, 8050 S. W.
Warm  Springs,  Suite 130,  Tualatin,  OR 97062 (the  "Advisor"),  to manage the
assets of the Fund. The Advisor  determines the securities to be held or sold by
the Fund,  and the portion of the Fund's assets to be held  uninvested,  subject
always to the Fund's  investment  objectives,  policies  and  restrictions,  and
subject  further to such policies and  instructions as the Board of Trustees may
establish.  The  Advisor,  an Oregon  limited  liability  company,  is a private
investment management company controlled by J. Jeffrey Auxier.

Mr. Auxier is President and Chief Investment Officer of the Advisor, responsible
for the day-to-day  management of the Fund's portfolio.  He is a graduate of the
University of Oregon,  and began his  investment  career in 1982. Mr. Auxier has
extensive money management experience. As a portfolio manager with Smith Barney,
Mr. Auxier  managed money for high net worth  clients on a  discretionary  basis
from 1988 until he founded the  Advisor in July 1998.  In 1993,  Mr.  Auxier was
designated a Smith Barney Senior Portfolio Management Director, the highest rank
in the  company's  Portfolio  Management  Program,  and  was  chosen  as the top
Portfolio  Manager  from  among  50  Portfolio  Managers  in  the  Smith  Barney
Consulting Group. In 1997 and 1998, Money Magazine named him as one of their top
ten brokers in the country.  Mr. Auxier was a Senior Vice  President  with Smith
Barney when he left to found the Advisor.

         The Fund is  authorized  to pay the  Advisor  a fee  equal to an annual
average rate of 1.35% of its average  daily net assets.  The Advisor pays all of
the operating  expenses of the Fund except  brokerage,  taxes,  borrowing costs,
fees and expenses of non-interested person trustees and extraordinary  expenses.
In this regard, it should be noted that most investment  companies pay their own
operating expenses directly,  while the Fund's expenses,  except those specified
above, are paid by the Advisor.

         The   Fund   retains   AmeriPrime   Financial   Services,   Inc.   (the
"Administrator") to manage the Fund's business affairs and provide the Fund with
administrative services, including all regulatory reporting and necessary office
equipment,  personnel and facilities.  The Administrator  receives a monthly fee
from the Advisor equal to an annual  average rate of 0.10% of the Fund's average
daily net assets up to fifty million dollars, 0.075% of the Fund's average daily
net assets  from fifty to one hundred  million  dollars and 0.050% of the Fund's
average daily net assets over one hundred million dollars  (subject to a minimum
annual payment of $30,000).  The Fund retains  Unified Fund Services,  Inc., 431
North Pennsylvania Street, Indianapolis, Indiana 46204 (the "Transfer Agent") to
serve as transfer agent,  dividend  paying agent and shareholder  service agent.
The Trust retains AmeriPrime Financial  Securities,  Inc., 1793 Kingswood Drive,
Suite 200,  Southlake,  Texas 76092 (the  "Distributor") to act as the principal
distributor of the Fund's shares.  The services of the  Administrator,  Transfer
Agent and Distributor are operating expenses paid by the Advisor.

         Consistent with the Rules of Fair Practice of the National  Association
of  Securities  Dealers,  Inc.,  and subject to its  obligation  of seeking best
qualitative execution,  the Advisor may give consideration to sales of shares of
the  Fund as a factor  in the  selection  of  brokers  and  dealers  to  execute
portfolio  transactions.  The Advisor  (not the Fund) may pay certain  financial
institutions  (which may include banks,  brokers,  securities  dealers and other
industry professionals) a fee for providing distribution related services and/or
for performing certain administrative  servicing functions for Fund shareholders
to the extent these  institutions  are allowed to do so by  applicable  statute,
rule or regulation.


<PAGE>


           INVESTMENT POLICIES AND TECHNIQUES AND RISK CONSIDERATIONS

         This  section  contains  general  information  about  various  types of
securities and investment  techniques that the Fund may purchase or employ.  The
Statement of Additional Information provides more information.

         EQUITY SECURITIES. Equity securities consist of common stock, preferred
stock,  convertible  preferred stock,  convertible  bonds,  rights and warrants.
Common stocks, the most familiar type,  represent an equity (ownership) interest
in a  corporation.  Warrants  are options to  purchase  equity  securities  at a
specified price for a specific time period. Rights are similar to warrants,  but
normally  have a  short  duration  and  are  distributed  by the  issuer  to its
shareholders.  Although equity  securities have a history of long-term growth in
value,  their  prices  fluctuate  based  on  changes  in a  company's  financial
condition  and on overall  market  and  economic  conditions.  The Fund will not
invest more than 5% of its net assets in each of the following: preferred stock,
convertible preferred stock and convertible bonds.

         The Fund may invest in foreign equity securities by purchasing American
Depository  Receipts  ("ADRs").  ADRs are certificates  evidencing  ownership of
shares of a foreign-  based issuer held in trust by a bank or similar  financial
institution.  They are  alternatives  to the direct  purchase of the  underlying
securities in their national markets and currencies. To the extent that the Fund
does invest ADRs,  such  investments  may be subject to special  risks,  such as
changes in restrictions on foreign currency  transactions and rates of exchange,
and changes in the  administrations or economic and monetary policies of foreign
governments. The Fund will not invest more than 20% of its net assets in ADRs.

         Investments in equity  securities are subject to inherent  market risks
and fluctuations in value due to earnings, economic conditions and other factors
beyond the control of the Adviser.  As a result,  the return and net asset value
of the Fund will fluctuate.  Securities in the Fund's portfolio may not increase
as much as the market as a whole and some undervalued securities may continue to
be undervalued for long periods of time.  Although profits in some Fund holdings
may  be  realized  quickly,  it is  not  expected  that  most  investments  will
appreciate rapidly.

         DEBT  SECURITIESError!  Bookmark  not  defined..  The Fund may buy debt
securities of all types and qualities. Bonds and other debt instruments are used
by issuers to borrow money from investors.  The issuer pays the investor a fixed
or variable  rate of interest,  and must repay the amount  borrowed at maturity.
Some debt  securities,  such as zero coupon bonds, do not pay current  interest,
but are  purchased at a discount  from their face values.  Debt  securities  are
generally interest rate sensitive,  which means that their volume will generally
decrease when interest  rates rise and increase when interest  rates fall.  Debt
securities,  loans,  and other direct debt have  varying  degrees of quality and
varying levels of sensitivity to changes in interest  rates.  Longer-term  bonds
are generally more sensitive to interest rate changes than short term bonds.

         REPURCHASE  AGREEMENTS.  The Fund may invest in  repurchase  agreements
fully collateralized by U.S. Government obligations. A repurchase agreement is a
short-term investment in which the purchaser (i.e., the Fund) acquires ownership
of a U.S.  Government or U.S.  Government agency obligation (which may be of any
maturity) and the seller agrees to repurchase the obligation at a future time at
a set price, thereby determining the yield during the purchaser's holding period
(usually  not more than seven days from the date of  purchase).  Any  repurchase
transaction in which the Fund engages will require full collateralization of the
seller's obligation during the entire term of the repurchase  agreement.  In the
event of a bankruptcy or other default of the seller,  the Fund could experience
both delays in liquidating the underlying security and losses in value. However,
the Fund intends to enter into  repurchase  agreements  only with Firstar,  N.A.
(the  Fund's  Custodian),  other  banks  with  assets of $1  billion or more and
registered  securities  dealers  determined by the Advisor (subject to review by
the  Board  of  Trustees)  to  be   creditworthy.   The  Advisor   monitors  the
creditworthiness of the banks and securities dealers with which the Fund engages
in repurchase transactions.

         NON-DIVERSIFIED  INVESTMENT  COMPANY.  The  Fund  is  classified  as  a
"non-diversified"  investment  company  and,  as  such,  may  invest  a  greater
proportion of its assets in the  securities  of a smaller  number of issuers and
therefore  may be subject to greater  market and credit risk than a more broadly
diversified  fund. As the Fund intends to comply with  Subchapter M of the Code,
the Fund may  invest up to 50% of its  assets at the end of each  quarter of its
fiscal  year in as few as two  issuers,  provided  that no more  than 25% of the
assets are  invested in one issuer.  With  respect to the  remaining  50% of its
assets at the end of each quarter, it may invest no more than 5% in one issuer.

         GENERAL.  The Fund may invest up to 15% of its net  assets in  illiquid
securities,  including  repurchase  agreements maturing in more than seven days.
The Fund may  invest up to 5% of its net  assets in  securities  sold under Rule
144A (unregistered  securities that can be resold to institutions only under SEC
Rule  144A).  The Fund may  borrow  amounts  up to 5% of its net  assets to meet
redemption requests.


<PAGE>

                               GENERAL INFORMATION

         FUNDAMENTAL  POLICIES.  The  investment  limitations  set  forth in the
Statement of Additional  Information as fundamental  policies may not be changed
without the affirmative  vote of the majority of the  outstanding  shares of the
Fund.  The  investment  objective  of  the  Fund  may  be  changed  without  the
affirmative  vote of a majority of the outstanding  shares of the Fund. Any such
change may result in the Fund having an investment  objective different from the
objective  which  the  shareholders   considered  appropriate  at  the  time  of
investment in the Fund.

         PORTFOLIO  TURNOVER.  The Fund  does not  intend  to  purchase  or sell
securities for short term trading  purposes.  However,  if the objectives of the
Fund would be better served,  short-term  profits or losses may be realized from
time to time. It is  anticipated  that  portfolio  turnover of the Fund will not
exceed 100%.

         SHAREHOLDER  RIGHTS. Any Trustee of the Trust may be removed by vote of
the shareholders  holding not less than two-thirds of the outstanding  shares of
the Trust.  The Trust  does not hold an annual  meeting  of  shareholders.  When
matters are submitted to shareholders  for a vote, each  shareholder is entitled
to one vote for each whole  share he owns and  fractional  votes for  fractional
shares he owns. All shares of the Fund have equal voting rights and  liquidation
rights.  Prior to the  public  offering  of the Fund,  Kenneth  D.  Trumpfheller
purchased for  investment all of the  outstanding  shares of the Fund and may be
deemed to control the Fund. Shareholder inquiries should be made by telephone to
877-3-AUXIER,  or by mail,  c/o Unified Fund  Services,  Inc., to P.O. Box 6110,
Indianapolis, Indiana 46204-6110.

         YEAR 2000  ISSUE.  Like other  mutual  funds,  financial  and  business
organizations  and  individuals  around the world,  the Fund could be  adversely
affected if the computer  systems used by the  Advisor,  Administrator  or other
service providers to the Fund do not properly process and calculate date-related
information  and data from and after January 1, 2000.  This is commonly known as
the "Year 2000 Issue." The Advisor and Administrator  have taken steps that they
believe are  reasonably  designed to address the Year 2000 Issue with respect to
computer  systems  that  are  used  and to  obtain  reasonable  assurances  that
comparable steps are being taken by the Fund's major service providers.  At this
time, however,  there can be no assurance that these steps will be sufficient to
avoid any adverse  impact on the Fund. In addition,  the Advisor cannot make any
assurances  that the Year 2000 Issue will not affect the  companies in which the
Fund invests or worldwide markets and economies.

                             PERFORMANCE INFORMATION

         The Fund may periodically  advertise "average annual total return." The
"average  annual  total  return"  of  the  Fund  refers  to the  average  annual
compounded  rate of return over the stated  period that would  equate an initial
amount  invested at the  beginning of a stated  period to the ending  redeemable
value of the  investment.  The  calculation  of "average  annual  total  return"
assumes the reinvestment of all dividends and distributions.

         The   Fund   may   also    advertise    performance    information   (a
"non-standardized  quotation")  which is  calculated  differently  from "average
annual  total  return." A  non-standardized  quotation  of total return may be a
cumulative  return  which  measures  the  percentage  change  in the value of an
account  between the beginning and end of a period,  assuming no activity in the
account other than reinvestment of dividends and capital gains distributions.  A
non-standardized  quotation  may also be an average  annual  compounded  rate of
return  over a  specified  period,  which may be a period  different  from those
specified for "average  annual total  return." In addition,  a  non-standardized
quotation may be an indication of the value of a $10,000 investment (made on the
date of the initial  public  offering  of the Fund's  shares) as of the end of a
specified period. A non-standardized quotation will always be accompanied by the
Fund's "average annual total return" as described above.

         The Fund may also include in advertisements data comparing  performance
with other mutual funds as reported in non-related  investment media,  published
editorial   comments   and   performance   rankings   compiled  by   independent
organizations  and  publications  that monitor the  performance  of mutual funds
(such as  Lipper  Analytical  Services,  Inc.,  Morningstar,  Inc.,  Fortune  or
Barron's). Performance information may be quoted numerically or may be presented
in a table, graph or other  illustration.  In addition,  Fund performance may be
compared to well-known  indices of market  performance  including the Standard &
Poor's (S&P) 500 Index and the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

THE ADVERTISED  PERFORMANCE DATA OF THE FUND IS BASED ON HISTORICAL  PERFORMANCE
AND IS NOT INTENDED TO INDICATE FUTURE PERFORMANCE. RATES OF TOTAL RETURN QUOTED
BY THE FUND MAY BE HIGHER OR LOWER  THAN  PAST  QUOTATIONS,  AND THERE CAN BE NO
ASSURANCE THAT ANY RATE OF TOTAL RETURN WILL BE MAINTAINED.  THE PRINCIPAL VALUE
OF AN INVESTMENT IN THE FUND WILL FLUCTUATE SO THAT A SHAREHOLDER'S SHARES, WHEN
REDEEMED, MAY BE WORTH MORE OR LESS THAN THE SHAREHOLDER'S ORIGINAL INVESTMENT.


<PAGE>



                               INVESTMENT ADVISOR
                          Auxier Asset Management, LLC.
                       8050 S. W. Warm Springs, Suite 130
                               Tualatin, OR 97062

CUSTODIAN                               DISTRIBUTOR
Firstar Bank, N.A.                      AmeriPrime Financial Securities, Inc.
425 Walnut Street, M.L. 6118            1793 Kingswood Drive, Suite 200
Cincinnati, Ohio  45202                 Southlake, Texas  76092

TRANSFER AGENT (ALL PURCHASES AND       INDEPENDENT AUDITORS
ALL REDEMPTION REQUESTS)                McCurdy & Associates CPA's, Inc.
Unified Fund Services, Inc.             27955 Clemens Road
431 North Pennsylvania Street           Westlake, Ohio  44145
Indianapolis, Indiana  46204

LEGAL COUNSEL                           ADMINISTRATOR
Brown, Cummins & Brown Co., L.P.A.      AmeriPrime Financial Services, Inc.
3500 Carew Tower, 441 Vine Street       1793 Kingswood Drive, Suite 200
Cincinnati, Ohio  45202                 Southlake, Texas  76092


         No person has been  authorized to give any  information  or to make any
representations,  other than those contained in this  Prospectus,  in connection
with the  offering  contained  in this  Prospectus,  and if given or made,  such
information or  representations  must not be relied upon as being  authorized by
the Fund.  This  Prospectus does not constitute an offer by the Fund to sell its
shares in any state to any person to whom it is  unlawful  to make such offer in
such state.


<PAGE>


TABLE OF CONTENTS                                                       PAGE


SUMMARY OF FUND EXPENSES
         Shareholder Transaction Expenses
         Annual Fund Operating Expenses

THE FUND

INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE AND STRATEGIES

HOW TO INVEST IN THE FUND
         Initial Purchase
         Additional Investments
         Automatic Investment Plan
         Tax Sheltered Retirement Plans
         Other Purchase Information

HOW TO REDEEM SHARES
         By Mail
         By Telephone
         Additional Information

SHARE PRICE CALCULATION

DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS

TAXES

OPERATION OF THE FUND

INVESTMENT POLICIES AND TECHNIQUES
         Equity Securities
         Debt Securities
         Repurchase Agreements
         Non-Diversified Investment Company
         General

GENERAL INFORMATION
         Fundamental Policies
         Portfolio Turnover
         Shareholder Rights
         Year 2000 Issues

<PAGE>

                                AUXIER FOCUS FUND

                       STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION



                                  July 15, 1999

         This Statement of Additional Information is not a prospectus. It should
be read in  conjunction  with the Prospectus of Auxier Focus Fund dated July 15,
1999. A copy of the  Prospectus can be obtained by writing the Transfer Agent at
431 North Pennsylvania Street,  Indianapolis,  Indiana 46204, or by calling Toll
Free 1-877-3-AUXIER (877-328-9437).




































<PAGE>


                       STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION


                                TABLE OF CONTENTS

                                                                            PAGE


DESCRIPTION OF THE TRUST.......................................................1

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ABOUT FUND INVESTMENTS AND RISK
 CONSIDERATIONS................................................................1

INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS.........................................................5

THE INVESTMENT ADVISOR.........................................................8

TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS..........................................................8

PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS AND BROKERAGE...........................................9

DETERMINATION OF SHARE PRICE..................................................10

INVESTMENT PERFORMANCE........................................................11

CUSTODIAN.....................................................................12

TRANSFER AGENT................................................................12

ACCOUNTANTS...................................................................12

DISTRIBUTOR...................................................................12

ADMINISTRATOR.................................................................12


<PAGE>





DESCRIPTION OF THE TRUST

         The  Auxier  Focus  Fund  (the  "Fund")  was  organized  as a series of
AmeriPrime  Funds (the  "Trust").  The Trust is an open-end  investment  company
established  under the laws of Ohio by an  Agreement  and  Declaration  of Trust
dated August 8, 1995 (the "Trust  Agreement").  The Trust Agreement  permits the
Trustees  to issue an  unlimited  number  of shares of  beneficial  interest  of
separate  series  without  par  value.  The  Fund is one of a  series  of  funds
currently authorized by the Trustees.

         Each share of a series  represents an equal  proportionate  interest in
the assets and  liabilities  belonging  to that  series with each other share of
that series and is entitled to such  dividends and  distributions  out of income
belonging to the series as are declared by the Trustees.  The shares do not have
cumulative  voting  rights  or any  preemptive  or  conversion  rights,  and the
Trustees have the authority from time to time to divide or combine the shares of
any series  into a greater or lesser  number of shares of that series so long as
the proportionate beneficial interest in the assets belonging to that series and
the rights of shares of any other series are in no way affected.  In case of any
liquidation  of a series,  the holders of shares of the series being  liquidated
will been titled to receive as a class a distribution out of the assets,  net of
the liabilities,  belonging to that series.  Expenses attributable to any series
are  borne by that  series.  Any  general  expenses  of the  Trust  not  readily
identifiable  as belonging to a particular  series are allocated by or under the
direction of the  Trustees in such manner as the  Trustees  determine to be fair
and equitable. No shareholder is liable to further calls or to assessment by the
Trust without his or her express consent.

         For information concerning the purchase and redemption of shares of the
Fund,  see "How to Invest in the Fund" and "How to Redeem  Shares" in the Fund's
Prospectus.  For a description  of the methods used to determine the share price
and value of the Fund's  assets,  see "Share  Price  Calculation"  in the Fund's
Prospectus.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ABOUT FUND INVESTMENTS AND RISK CONSIDERATIONS

         This  section  contains  a more  detailed  discussion  of  some  of the
investments  the  Fund  may make  and  some of the  techniques  it may  use,  as
described in the Prospectus  (see  "Investment  Objectives and  Strategies"  and
"Investment Policies and Techniques and Risk Considerations").

         A.  American  Depository  Receipts  (ADRs).  ADRs are  subject to risks
similar to those associated with direct  investment in foreign  securities.  For
example,  there  may be less  information  publicly  available  about a  foreign
company  then about a U.S.  company,  and foreign  companies  are not  generally
subject to accounting,  auditing and financial reporting standards and practices
comparable  to those in the U.S.  Other risks  associated  with  investments  in
foreign   securities   include  changes  in  restrictions  on  foreign  currency
transactions and rates of exchanges,  changes in the administrations or economic
and monetary policies of foreign governments, the imposition of exchange control
regulations,  the possibility of expropriation decrees and other adverse foreign
governmental action, the imposition of foreign taxes, less liquid markets,  less
government  supervision  of  exchanges,   brokers  and  issuers,  difficulty  in
enforcing   contractual   obligations,   delays  in   settlement  of  securities
transactions  and greater price  volatility.  In addition,  investing in foreign
securities will generally result in higher commissions than investing in similar
domestic securities.



<PAGE>


          B. Debt Securities.  The Fund may invest in all types and qualities of
debt securities.  CORPORATE DEBT SECURITIES. Corporate debt securities are bonds
or notes issued by  corporations  and other  business  organizations,  including
business  trusts,  in  order to  finance  their  credit  needs.  Corporate  debt
securities  include  commercial  paper which consist of short term (usually from
one  to  two  hundred  seventy  days)  unsecured   promissory  notes  issued  by
corporations in order to finance their current operations.  Fixed rate corporate
debt securities tend to exhibit more price volatility  during times of rising or
falling interest rates than securities with floating rates of interest.  This is
because floating rate securities behave like short-term  instruments in that the
rate of  interest  they  pay is  subject  to  periodic  adjustments  based  on a
designated  interest  rate  index.  Fixed  rate  securities  pay a fixed rate of
interest and are more sensitive to  fluctuating  interest  rates.  In periods of
rising  interest  rates the value of a fixed  rate  security  is likely to fall.
Fixed rate  securities with  short-term  characteristics  are not subject to the
same price  volatility as fixed rate  securities  without such  characteristics.
Therefore,  they behave more like floating rate securities with respect to price
volatility.

         Many corporate debt obligations permit the issuers to call the security
and thereby redeem their  obligations  earlier than the stated  maturity  dates.
Issuers  are more  likely to call bonds  during  periods of  declining  interest
rates.  In these cases,  if the Fund owns a bond which is called,  the Fund will
receive  its return of  principal  earlier  than  expected  and would  likely be
required to reinvest the proceeds at lower interest rates,  thus reducing income
to the Fund.

         Corporate zero coupon  securities are: (i) notes or debentures which do
not pay current interest and are issued at substantial discounts from par value,
or (ii) notes or debentures that pay no current interest until a stated date one
or more years  into the  future,  after  which the  issuer is  obligated  to pay
interest until maturity,  usually at a higher rate than if interest were payable
from the date of issuance.

         VARIABLE  RATE  SECURITIES.  Variable  rate demand notes are  long-term
corporate  debt  instruments  that have variable or floating  interest rates and
provide the Fund with the right to tender the  security  for  repurchase  at its
stated principal amount plus accrued  interest.  Such securities  typically bear
interest at a rate that is intended to cause the securities to trade at par. The
interest rate may float or be adjusted at regular intervals  (ranging from daily
to annually),  and is normally based on an interest index or a stated percentage
of a prime rate or another published rate. Many variable rate demand notes allow
the Fund to demand the  repurchase  of the  security on not more than seven days
prior  notice.  Other notes only  permit the Fund to tender the  security at the
time of each interest rate adjustment or at other fixed intervals.

         FLOATING RATE SECURITIES.  Floating rate securities are debt securities
with  interest  payments  or  maturity  values  that are not  fixed,  but  float
inversely to an underlying  index or price.  These  securities  may be backed by
U.S.  Government or corporate  issuers,  or by collateral such as mortgages.  In
certain cases,  a change in the underlying  index or price may have a leveraging
effect on the periodic coupon  payments,  creating larger possible swings in the
prices of such  securities than would be expected when taking into account their
maturities alone. The indices and prices upon which such securities can be based
include interest rates, currency rates and commodities prices.

         Floating rate  securities  pay interest  according to a coupon which is
reset  periodically.  The reset  mechanism may be formula based,  or reflect the
passing through of floating interest payments on an underlying  collateral pool.
The coupon is usually reset daily, weekly, monthly,  quarterly or semi-annually,
but other schedules are possible.  Floating rate obligations generally exhibit a
low price  volatility for a given stated  maturity or average life because their
coupons adjust with changes in interest rates. If their  underlying index is not
an  interest  rate,  or the reset  mechanism  lags the  movement of rates in the
current market, greater price volatility may be experienced.
<PAGE>

         INVERSE FLOATING RATE SECURITIES.  Inverse floating rate securities are
similar to floating  rate  securities  except that their  coupon  payments  vary
inversely with an underlying  index by use of a formula.  Inverse  floating rate
securities  tend to exhibit  greater price  volatility  than other floating rate
securities.  Because the changes in the coupon are usually negatively correlated
with changes in overall interest rates,  interest rate risk and price volatility
on inverse floating rate obligations can be high, especially if leverage is used
in the  formula.  Index  securities  pay a fixed  rate of  interest,  but have a
maturity value that varies by formula,  so that when the obligation  matures,  a
gain  or  loss  is  realized.  The  risk of  index  obligations  depends  on the
volatility of the underlying  index,  the coupon payment and the maturity of the
obligation.

         LOWER QUALITY DEBT SECURITIES.  Lower quality debt securities (commonly
called "junk bonds") often are considered to be speculative  and involve greater
risk of default or price change due to changes in the issuer's  creditworthiness
or changes in economic  conditions.  The market prices of these  securities will
fluctuate over time,  may fluctuate more than higher quality  securities and may
decline  significantly  in  periods of general  economic  difficulty,  which may
follow periods of rising interest rates. The market for lower quality securities
may  be  less  liquid  than  the  market  for  securities  of  higher   quality.
Furthermore,  the liquidity of lower quality  securities  may be affected by the
market's  perception of their credit quality.  Therefore,  judgment may at times
play a  greater  role in  valuing  these  securities  than in the case of higher
quality  securities,  and it also may be more difficult  during certain  adverse
market  conditions to sell lower quality  securities at their fair value to meet
redemption requests or to respond to changes in the market.

         Lower quality securities  present risks based on payment  expectations.
For example,  high yield bonds may contain redemption or call provisions.  If an
issuer  exercises the provisions in a declining  interest rate market,  the Fund
would have to replace the security with a lower yielding security,  resulting in
a decreased  return for  investors.  Conversely,  a high yield bond's value will
decrease  in a rising  interest  rate  market,  as will the value of the  Fund's
assets. If the Fund experiences unexpected net redemptions, this may force it to
sell its high yield bonds,  without regard to their investment  merits,  thereby
decreasing  the asset  base upon  which the  Fund's  expenses  can be spread and
possibly reducing the Fund's rate of return.

         Since the risk of default is higher for lower  quality  securities  and
sometimes increases with the age of these securities, the Advisor's research and
credit  analysis are an integral  part of managing any  securities  of this type
held by the Fund. [IN CONSIDERING INVESTMENTS FOR THE FUND, THE ADVISOR ATTEMPTS
TO IDENTIFY THOSE ISSUERS OF HIGH-YIELDING  SECURITIES WHOSE FINANCIAL CONDITION
IS ADEQUATE TO MEET FUTURE  OBLIGATIONS,  HAS IMPROVED OR IS EXPECTED TO IMPROVE
IN THE FUTURE.  THE ADVISOR'S  ANALYSIS FOCUSES ON RELATIVE VALUES BASED ON SUCH
FACTORS AS INTEREST OR DIVIDEND COVERAGE, ASSET COVERAGE, EARNING PROSPECTS, AND
THE EXPERIENCE AND MANAGERIAL STRENGTH OF THE ISSUER.]

         MUNICIPAL  SECURITIES.  Municipal  securities  are generally  issued to
finance public works, such as airports,  bridges, highways,  housing, hospitals,
mass transportation projects,  schools, streets, and water and sewer works. They
are also  issued to repay  outstanding  obligations,  to raise funds for general
operating  expenses,  and  to  make  loans  to  other  public  institutions  and
facilities.

         The two principal  classifications of municipal securities are "general
obligation" and "revenue"  bonds.  General  obligation  bonds are secured by the
issuer's pledge of its full faith and credit and taxing power for the payment of
principal and interest. Interest on and principal of revenue bonds, however, are
payable only from the revenue  generated by the facility financed by the bond or
other specified  sources of revenue.  Revenue bonds do not represent a pledge of
credit or  create  any debt of or  charge  against  the  general  revenues  of a
municipality or public authority.
<PAGE>

         Municipal  securities  may carry fixed or floating  rates of  interest.
Most  municipal  securities  pay  interest  in arrears on a  semiannual  or more
frequent  basis.  However,  certain  securities,   typically  known  as  capital
appreciation  bonds  or zero  coupon  bonds,  do not  provide  for any  interest
payments prior to maturity. Such securities are normally sold at a discount from
their stated value,  or provide for periodic  increases in their stated value to
reflect a compounded interest rate. The market value of these securities is also
more sensitive to changes in market  interest rates than securities that provide
for current interest payments.

         Municipal securities in the form of notes generally are used to provide
for short-term  capital needs, in  anticipation of an issuer's  receipt of other
revenues or financing,  and typically have maturities of up to three years. Such
instruments may include Tax Anticipation Notes, Revenue Anticipation Notes, Bond
Anticipation  Notes, Tax and Revenue  Anticipation  Notes and Construction  Loan
Notes. The obligations of an issuer of municipal notes are generally  secured by
the anticipated revenues from taxes, grants or bond financing.  An investment in
such instruments,  however,  presents a risk that the anticipated  revenues will
not be  received  or that such  revenues  will be  insufficient  to satisfy  the
issuer's  payment  obligations  under  the  notes  or that  refinancing  will be
otherwise unavailable.

         C. Illiquid Securities. The Fund may invest up to 15% of its net assets
in illiquid  securities.  Illiquid securities generally include securities which
cannot be disposed of promptly  and in the ordinary  course of business  without
taking a reduced price, and "restricted securities".  Securities may be illiquid
due to  contractual or legal  restrictions  on resale or lack of a ready market.
The following  securities are considered to be illiquid:  repurchase  agreements
and reverse repurchase agreements maturing in more than seven days,  nonpublicly
offered securities and restricted securities.

         D.  Restricted  Securities.  Restricted  securities  are securities the
resale of which is  subject  to legal or  contractual  restrictions.  Restricted
securities may be sold only in privately  negotiated  transactions,  in a public
offering with respect to which a  registration  statement is in effect under the
Securities  Act of 1933 or pursuant to Rule 144 or Rule 144A  promulgated  under
such Act. Where  registration is required,  the Fund may be obligated to pay all
or part of the  registration  expense,  and a  considerable  period  may  elapse
between the time of the decision to sell and the time such  security may be sold
under an  effective  registration  statement.  If during  such a period  adverse
market conditions were to develop,  the Fund might obtain a less favorable price
than the price it could have obtained when it decided to sell.

         With respect to Rule 144A securities,  these restricted  securities are
treated as exempt from the 15% limit on  illiquid  securities,  provided  that a
dealer or institutional  trading market in such securities exists. The Fund will
not,  however  invest  more than 5% of its net  assets in Rule 144A  securities.
Under  the  supervision  of the  Board of  Trustees  of the  Fund,  the  Advisor
determines the liquidity of restricted  securities and, through reports from the
Advisor,  the Board will monitor trading activity in restricted  securities.  If
institutional trading in restricted securities were to decline, the liquidity of
the Fund could be adversely affected.

         E. Borrowing. The Fund may borrow amounts up to 5% of its net assets to
meet  redemption  requests.  Because the Fund's  investment  swill  fluctuate in
value,  whereas the interest  obligations on borrowed funds may be fixed, during
times of  borrowing,  the Fund's net asset value may tend to increase  more then
its  investments  increase  in value,  and  decrease  more when its  investments
decrease in value. in addition,  interest costs on borrowings may fluctuate with
changing  market  interest  rates and may partially  offset or exceed the return
earned on the borrowed  funds.  Also,  during times of borrowing  under  adverse
market  conditions,  the Fund might have to sell  portfolio  securities  to meet
interest  or  principal   payments  at  a  time  when   fundamental   investment
considerations would not favor such sales.
<PAGE>

         F.  Preferred  Stock.  Preferred  stock has a preference in liquidation
(and,  generally dividends) over common stock but is subordinated in liquidation
to debt.  As a general  rule the market  value of  preferred  stocks  with fixed
dividend rates and no conversion rights varies inversely with interest rates and
perceived  credit risk,  with the price  determined by the dividend  rate.  Some
preferred stocks are convertible  into other  securities,  (for example,  common
stock) at a fixed price and ratio or upon the occurrence of certain events.  The
market price of convertible  preferred stocks  generally  reflects an element of
conversion  value.  Because many  preferred  stocks lack a fixed  maturity date,
these securities generally fluctuate  substantially in value when interest rates
change;  such  fluctuations  often exceed  those of long-term  bonds of the same
issuer. Some preferred stocks pay an adjustable dividend that may be based on an
index, formula, auction procedure or other dividend rate reset mechanism. In the
absence of credit  deterioration,  adjustable rate preferred stocks tend to have
more stable market values than fixed rate preferred stocks. All preferred stocks
are also  subject to the same types of credit  risks of the issuer as  corporate
bonds.  In addition,  because  preferred  stock is junior to debt securities and
other obligations of an issuer, deterioration in the credit rating of the issuer
will  cause  greater  changes in the value of a  preferred  stock than in a more
senior debt security with similar yield characteristics. Preferred stocks may be
rated by S&P and Moody's  although  there is no minimum rating which a preferred
stock  must have  (and a  preferred  stock  may not be rated) to be an  eligible
investment  for the Fund.  The Advisor  expects,  however,  that  generally  the
preferred  stocks in which the Fund invests will be rated at least CCC by S&P or
Caa by Moody's  or, if  unrated,  of  comparable  quality in the  opinion of the
Advisor.  Preferred  stocks  rated  CCC by S&P  are  regarded  as  predominantly
speculative  with  respect  to the  issuer's  capacity  to pay  preferred  stock
obligations  and represent the highest  degree of speculation  among  securities
rated between BB and CCC; preferred stocks rated Caa by Moody's are likely to be
in arrears on dividend payments. Moody's rating with respect to preferred stocks
does not purport to indicate the future status of payments of dividends.

         G.  Convertible  Securities.  A  convertible  security  is  a  bond  or
preferred  stock  which may be  converted  at a stated  price  within a specific
period of time into a specified  number of shares of common stock of the same or
different  issuer.  Convertible  securities  are  senior  to  common  stock in a
corporation's capital structure, but usually are subordinated to non-convertible
debt securities. While providing a fixed income stream generally higher in yield
than in the income derived from a common stock but lower than that afforded by a
non-convertible debt security, convertible security also affords an investor the
opportunity,  through its  conversion  feature,  to  participate  in the capital
appreciation of common stock into which it is convertible.

         In general, the market value of a convertible security is the higher of
its  investment  value (its value as a fixed income  security) or its conversion
value (the value of the  underlying  shares of common  stock if the  security is
converted).  As a fixed  income  security,  the  market  value of a  convertible
security generally increases when interest rates decline and generally decreases
when interest rates rise; however, the price of a convertible security generally
increases as the market value of the underlying stock  increases,  and generally
decreases as the market value of the underlying  stock declines.  Investments in
convertible securities generally entail less risk than investments in the common
stock of the same issuer.



<PAGE>


INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS

         Fundamental.  The  investment  limitations  described  below  have been
adopted   by  the  Trust  with   respect   to  the  Fund  and  are   fundamental
("Fundamental"), i.e., they may not be changed without the affirmative vote of a
majority of the  outstanding  shares of the Fund. As used in the  Prospectus and
this Statement of Additional Information, the term "majority" of the outstanding
shares of the Fund means the lesser of (1) 67% or more of the outstanding shares
of the  Fund  present  at a  meeting,  if the  holders  of more  than 50% of the
outstanding  shares of the Fund are present or represented  at such meeting;  or
(2) more  than 50% of the  outstanding  shares  of the  Fund.  Other  investment
practices which may be changed by the Board of Trustees  without the approval of
shareholders to the extent permitted by applicable law, regulation or regulatory
policy are considered non-fundamental ("Non-Fundamental").

         1. Borrowing Money.  The Fund will not borrow money,  except (a) from a
bank,  provided that immediately after such borrowing there is an asset coverage
of 300% for all  borrowings of the Fund; or (b) from a bank or other persons for
temporary  purposes  only,  provided that such  temporary  borrowings  are in an
amount  not  exceeding  5% of the  Fund's  total  assets  at the  time  when the
borrowing is made. This limitation does not preclude the Fund from entering into
reverse repurchase transactions, provided that the Fund has an asset coverage of
300% for all  borrowings  and  repurchase  commitments  of the Fund  pursuant to
reverse repurchase transactions.

         2. Senior Securities.  The Fund will not issue senior securities.  This
limitation is not  applicable  to  activities  that may be deemed to involve the
issuance  or sale of a senior  security  by the Fund,  provided  that the Fund's
engagement in such  activities is consistent with or permitted by the Investment
Company  Act  of  1940,  as  amended,  the  rules  and  regulations  promulgated
thereunder or interpretations  of the Securities and Exchange  Commission or its
staff.

         3.  Underwriting.  The Fund will not act as  underwriter  of securities
issued by other persons.This limitation is not applicable to the extent that, in
connection with the disposition of portfolio  securities  (including  restricted
securities),  the  Fund may be  deemed  an  underwriter  under  certain  federal
securities laws.

         4. Real Estate.  The Fund will not  purchase or sell real estate.  This
limitation is not applicable to investments in marketable  securities  which are
secured by or  represent  interests  in real estate.  This  limitation  does not
preclude the Fund from investing in mortgage-related  securities or investing in
companies engaged in the real estate business or that have a significant portion
of their assets in real estate (including real estate investment trusts).

         5. Commodities.  The Fund will not purchase or sell commodities  unless
acquired as a result of  ownership  of  securities  or other  investments.  This
limitation  does not preclude  the Fund from  purchasing  or selling  options or
futures  contracts,  from investing in securities or other instruments backed by
commodities  or from  investing in companies  which are engaged in a commodities
business or have a significant portion of their assets in commodities.

         6. Loans. The Fund will not make loans to other persons,  except (a) by
loaning portfolio securities,  (b) by engaging in repurchase agreements,  or (c)
by  purchasing  nonpublicly  offered  debt  securities.  For  purposes  of  this
limitation,  the term "loans"  shall not include the purchase of a portion of an
issue of publicly distributed bonds, debentures or other securities.
<PAGE>

         7.  Concentration.  The Fund will not  invest  25% or more of its total
assets  in  a  particular  industry.   This  limitation  is  not  applicable  to
investments  in  obligations  issued or guaranteed by the U.S.  government,  its
agencies and instrumentalities or repurchase agreements with respect thereto.

         With  respect  to the  percentages  adopted  by the  Trust  as  maximum
limitations  on its  investment  policies and  limitations,  an excess above the
fixed percentage will not be a violation of the policy or limitation  unless the
excess results  immediately and directly from the acquisition of any security or
the action taken.  This  paragraph  does not apply to the  borrowing  policy set
forth in paragraph 1 above.

         Notwithstanding  any  of  the  foregoing  limitations,  any  investment
company, whether organized as a trust, association or corporation, or a personal
holding  company,  may be merged or consolidated  with or acquired by the Trust,
provided  that  if such  merger,  consolidation  or  acquisition  results  in an
investment in the securities of any issuer  prohibited by said  paragraphs,  the
Trust  shall,  within  ninety  days  after  the  consummation  of  such  merger,
consolidation or acquisition, dispose of all of the securities of such issuer so
acquired or such  portion  thereof as shall bring the total  investment  therein
within  the  limitations  imposed  by said  paragraphs  above  as of the date of
consummation.

          Non-Fundamental.  The following  limitations  have been adopted by the
Trust  with  respect  to the  Fund  and  are  Non-Fundamental  (see  "Investment
Restrictions" above).

         1. Pledging. The Fund will not mortgage,  pledge, hypothecate or in any
manner transfer, as security for indebtedness,  any assets of the Fund except as
may be necessary in  connection  with  borrowings  described in  limitation  (1)
above. Margin deposits,  security interests,  liens and collateral  arrangements
with respect to transactions involving options,  futures contracts,  short sales
and other permitted  investments and techniques are not deemed to be a mortgage,
pledge or hypothecation of assets for purposes of this limitation.

         2. Borrowing.  The Fund will not purchase any security while borrowings
(including reverse repurchase agreements) representing more than 5% of its total
assets are outstanding.

         3. Margin Purchases. The Fund will not purchase securities or evidences
of interest thereon on "margin." This limitation is not applicable to short term
credit  obtained  by the  Fund  for the  clearance  of  purchases  and  sales or
redemption  of  securities,  or to  arrangements  with  respect to  transactions
involving  options,   futures   contracts,   short  sales  and  other  permitted
investments and techniques.

         4. Short Sales. The Fund will not effect short sales of securities.

         5. Options.  The Fund will not purchase or sell puts, calls, options or
straddles  except as described  in the  Prospectus  or  Statement of  Additional
Information.

         6. Illiquid  Investments.  The Fund will not invest more than 5% of its
net assets in securities for which there are legal or  contractual  restrictions
on resale and other illiquid securities.

         7.  Loans of  Portfolio  Securities.  The Fund  will not make  loans of
portfolio securities.



<PAGE>


THE INVESTMENT ADVISOR

          The Fund's investment advisor is Auxier Asset Management, LLC, 8050 S.
W. Warm Springs,  Suite 130, Tualatin, OR 97062. J. Jeffrey Auxier may be deemed
to be a controlling  person of the Advisor due to his ownership of a majority of
its shares.

         Under the terms of the  management  agreement  (the  "Agreement"),  the
Advisor  manages  the Fund's  investments  subject to  approval  of the Board of
Trustees  and pays all of the  expenses  of the Fund  except  brokerage,  taxes,
borrowing  costs,  fees and expenses of the  non-interested  person trustees and
extraordinary expenses (including  organizational expenses). As compensation for
its management  services and agreement to pay the Fund's  expenses,  the Fund is
obligated to pay the Advisor a fee  computed and accrued  daily and paid monthly
at an annual  rate of 1.35% of the  average  daily net  assets of the Fund.  The
Advisor  may  waive  all or  part  of its  fee,  at any  time,  and at its  sole
discretion,  but such action shall not obligate the Advisor to waive any fees in
the future.

         The Advisor  retains the right to use the name  "Auxier" in  connection
with another investment company or business enterprise with which the Advisor is
or  may  become  associated.   The  Trust's  right  to  use  the  name  "Auxier"
automatically  ceases ninety days after  termination of the Agreement and may be
withdrawn by the Advisor on ninety days written notice.

         The Advisor may make payments to banks or other financial  institutions
that provide  shareholder  services and  administer  shareholder  accounts.  The
Glass-Steagall   Act   prohibits   banks  from   engaging  in  the  business  of
underwriting,  selling or  distributing  securities.  Although the scope of this
prohibition  under the  Glass-Steagall  Act has not been clearly  defined by the
courts or appropriate regulatory agencies,  management of the Fund believes that
the  Glass-Steagall Act should not preclude a bank from providing such services.
However, state securities laws on this issue may differ from the interpretations
of federal law  expressed  herein and banks and  financial  institutions  may be
required to register as dealers pursuant to state law. If a bank were prohibited
from  continuing  to perform all or a part of such  services,  management of the
Fund  believes  that  there  would  be no  material  impact  on the  Fund or its
shareholders.  Banks may charge their customers fees for offering these services
to the extent permitted by applicable  regulatory  authorities,  and the overall
return to those  shareholders  availing  themselves of the bank services will be
lower  than to those  shareholders  who do not.  The Fund may from  time to time
purchase  securities  issued by banks which provide such services;  however,  in
selecting  investments  for the  Fund,  no  preference  will be  shown  for such
securities.



<PAGE>


TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS

         The names of the Trustees and executive officers of the Trust are shown
below.  Each Trustee who is an "interested  person" of the Trust,  as defined in
the Investment Company Act of 1940, is indicated by an asterisk.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

==================================== ---------------- ======================================================================
       NAME, AGE AND ADDRESS         POSITION                        PRINCIPAL OCCUPATIONS DURING PAST 5 YEARS
==================================== ---------------- ======================================================================
<S>                                  <C>              <C>
*Kenneth D. Trumpfheller             President and    President, Treasurer and Secretary of AmeriPrime Financial Services,
Age:  40                             Trustee          Inc., the Fund's administrator, and AmeriPrime Financial Securities,
1793 Kingswood Drive                                  Inc., the Fund's distributor, since 1994.  Prior to December, 1994,
Suite 200                                             a senior client executive with SEI Financial Services.
Southlake, Texas  76092
==================================== ---------------- ======================================================================
Paul S. Bellany                      Secretary,       Secretary, Treasurer and Chief Financial Officer of AmeriPrime
Age:  39                             Treasurer        Financial Services, Inc. and AmeriPrime Financial Securities, Inc.;
1793 Kingswood Drive                                  various positions with Fidelity Investments from 1987 to 1998; most
Suite 200                                             recently Fund Reporting Unit Manager.
Southlake, Texas  76092
==================================== ---------------- ======================================================================
Steve L. Cobb                        Trustee          President of Chandler Engineering Company, L.L.C., oil and gas
Age:  41                                              services company; various positions with Carbo Ceramics, Inc., oil
2001 Indianwood Avenue                                field manufacturing/supply company, from 1984 to 1997, most recently
Broken Arrow, OK  74012                               Vice President of Marketing.
==================================== ================ ======================================================================
Gary E. Hippenstiel                  Trustee          Director, Vice President and Chief Investment Officer of Legacy
Age:  51                                              Trust Company since 1992; President and Director of Heritage Trust
600 Jefferson Street                                  Company from 1994-1996; Vice President and Manager of Investments of
Suite 350                                             Kanaly Trust Company from 1988 to 1992.
Houston, TX  77063
==================================== ================ ======================================================================
</TABLE>

         The compensation  paid to the Trustees of the Trust for the fiscal year
ended  October 31, 1998 is set forth in the  following  table.  Trustee fees are
Trust expenses and each series of the Trust pays a portion of the Trustee fees.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

==================================== ----------------------- ==================================
                                           AGGREGATE                TOTAL COMPENSATION
                                          COMPENSATION           FROM TRUST (THE TRUST IS
               NAME                        FROM TRUST             NOT IN A FUND COMPLEX)
==================================== ----------------------- ==================================
<S>                                         <C>                          <C>
Kenneth D. Trumpfheller                         0                            0
==================================== ----------------------- ==================================
Steve L. Cobb                                $4,000                       $4,000
==================================== ======================= ==================================
Gary E. Hippenstiel                          $4,000                       $4,000
==================================== ======================= ==================================
</TABLE>

PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS AND BROKERAGE

         Subject to policies  established by the Board of Trustees of the Trust,
the Advisor is responsible for the Fund's portfolio decisions and the placing of
the Fund's  portfolio  transactions.  In  placing  portfolio  transactions,  the
Advisor seeks the best qualitative  execution for the Fund,  taking into account
such factors as price (including the applicable  brokerage  commission or dealer
spread), the execution capability,  financial  responsibility and responsiveness
of the broker or dealer and the brokerage and research  services provided by the
broker or dealer.  The Advisor  generally seeks favorable  prices and commission
rates that are reasonable in relation to the benefits received.
<PAGE>

         The Advisor is specifically authorized to select brokers or dealers who
also  provide  brokerage  and  research  services  to the Fund  and/or the other
accounts over which the Advisor exercises investment  discretion and to pay such
brokers or dealers a commission in excess of the  commission  another  broker or
dealer would charge if the Advisor  determines in good faith that the commission
is reasonable  in relation to the value of the  brokerage and research  services
provided.  The determination may be viewed in terms of a particular  transaction
or the Advisor's overall responsibilities with respect to the Trust and to other
accounts over which it exercises investment discretion.

         Research  services  include  supplemental   research,   securities  and
economic  analyses,  statistical  services and  information  with respect to the
availability  of securities or purchasers or sellers of securities  and analyses
of reports concerning  performance of accounts.  The research services and other
information  furnished  by  brokers  through  whom the Fund  effects  securities
transactions  may also be used by the Advisor in servicing  all of its accounts.
Similarly, research and information provided by brokers or dealers serving other
clients  may be useful to the  Advisor in  connection  with its  services to the
Fund.  Although  research  services and other information are useful to the Fund
and the Advisor,  it is not possible to place a dollar value on the research and
other information  received.  It is the opinion of the Board of Trustees and the
Advisor that the review and study of the research and other information will not
reduce the  overall  cost to the  Advisor of  performing  its duties to the Fund
under the Agreement.

         Over-the-counter  transactions  will be  placed  either  directly  with
principal market makers or with  broker-dealers,  if the same or a better price,
including commissions and executions, is available.  Fixed income securities are
normally  purchased  directly from the issuer, an underwriter or a market maker.
Purchases  include a concession  paid by the issuer to the  underwriter  and the
purchase price paid to a market maker may include the spread between the bid and
asked prices.

         To the extent that the Trust and another of the Advisor's  clients seek
to acquire the same  security at about the same time,  the Trust may not be able
to acquire as large a position in such  security as it desires or it may have to
pay a higher  price for the  security.  Similarly,  the Trust may not be able to
obtain  as large  an  execution  of an order to sell or as high a price  for any
particular  portfolio  security  if the other  client  desires  to sell the same
portfolio  security at the same time. On the other hand, if the same  securities
are  bought  or sold at the same  time by more than one  client,  the  resulting
participation  in volume  transactions  could produce better  executions for the
Trust. In the event that more than one client wants to purchase or sell the same
security  on a given  date,  the  purchases  and sales will  normally be made by
random client selection.

DETERMINATION OF SHARE PRICE

         The price (net asset value) of the shares of the Fund is  determined as
of 4:00 p.m., Eastern time on each day the Trust is open for business and on any
other day on which  there is  sufficient  trading  in the Fund's  securities  to
materially  affect the net asset value.  The Trust is open for business on every
day except Saturdays, Sundays and the following holidays: New Year's Day, Martin
Luther King, Jr. Day, President's Day, Good Friday,  Memorial Day,  Independence
Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving and


<PAGE>


          Christmas.  For a description of the methods used to determine the net
asset value (share price), see "Share Price Calculation" in the Prospectus.

INVESTMENT PERFORMANCE

         "Average  annual  total  return,"  as  defined  by the  Securities  and
Exchange Commission,  is computed by finding the average annual compounded rates
of return for the period indicated that would equate the initial amount invested
to the ending redeemable value, according to the following formula:

                                P(1+T)n=ERV

             Where:   P        =       a hypothetical $1,000 initial investment
                      T        =       average annual total return
                      n        =       number of years
                     ERV       =       ending redeemable value at the end
                                       of  the  applicable  period  of  the
                                       hypothetical  $1,000 investment made
                                       at the  beginning of the  applicable
                                       period.

The computation  assumes that all dividends and  distributions are reinvested at
the net asset  value on the  reinvestment  dates and that a complete  redemption
occurs at the end of the applicable period.

         In addition to providing average annual total return, the Fund may also
provide  non-standardized  quotations of total return for differing  periods and
may provide the value of a $10,000  investment  (made on the date of the initial
public offering of the Fund's shares) as of the end of a specified period.

         The Fund's  investment  performance  will vary  depending  upon  market
conditions,  the composition of the Fund's  portfolio and operating  expenses of
the Fund. These factors and possible differences in the methods and time periods
used in calculating non-standardized investment performance should be considered
when comparing the Fund's performance to those of other investment  companies or
investment vehicles.  The risks associated with the Fund's investment objective,
policies and techniques  should also be  considered.  At any time in the future,
investment  performance may be higher or lower than past performance,  and there
can be no assurance that any performance will continue.

         From time to time, in advertisements,  sales literature and information
furnished to present or prospective  shareholders,  the  performance of the Fund
may be compared to indices of broad groups of unmanaged securities considered to
be  representative  of or  similar  to the  portfolio  holdings  of the  Fund or
considered to be representative of the stock market in general. The Fund may use
the Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index or the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

         In  addition,  the  performance  of the Fund may be  compared  to other
groups of mutual  funds  tracked by any widely used  independent  research  firm
which ranks  mutual  funds by overall  performance,  investment  objectives  and
assets,  such as Lipper  Analytical  Services,  Inc. or  Morningstar,  Inc.  The
objectives,  policies, limitations and expenses of other mutual funds in a group
may not be the same as those  of the  Fund.  Performance  rankings  and  ratings
reported  periodically in national  financial  publications such as Barron's and
Fortune also may be used.



<PAGE>


CUSTODIAN

         Firstar Bank,  N.A.,  425 Walnut  Street,  Cincinnati,  Ohio 45202,  is
Custodian  of  the  Fund's  investments.   The  Custodian  acts  as  the  Fund's
depository,  safekeeps its portfolio  securities,  collects all income and other
payments  with  respect  thereto,  disburses  funds at the  Fund's  request  and
maintains records in connection with its duties.

TRANSFER AGENT

         Unified Fund Services, Inc. ("Unified"), 431 North Pennsylvania Street,
Indianapolis,  Indiana  46204,  acts as the Fund's  transfer  agent and, in such
capacity,   maintains  the  records  of  each  shareholder's  account,   answers
shareholders'  Inquiries  concerning  their  accounts,  processes  purchases and
redemptions of the Fund's shares,  acts as dividend and distribution  disbursing
agent and performs  other  accounting  and  shareholder  service  functions.  In
addition,  Unified  provides  the Fund  with  fund  accounting  services,  which
includes certain monthly reports,  record-keeping  and other  management-related
services.  For its services as fund  accountant,  Unified receives an annual fee
from the  Advisor  equal to  0.0275%  of the  Fund's  assets up to $100  million
(subject to various monthly minimum fees, the maximum being $2,000 per month for
assets of $20 to $100 million).

ACCOUNTANTS

         The firm of McCurdy & Associates,  CPA's, 27955 Clemens Road, Westlake,
Ohio 44145,  has been selected as independent  public  accountants for the Trust
for the fiscal year  ending  June 30,  1999.  McCurdy &  Associates  performs an
annual audit of the Fund's financial statements and provides financial,  tax and
accounting consulting services as requested.

DISTRIBUTOR

         AmeriPrime Financial Securities, Inc., 1793 Kingswood Drive, Suite 200,
Southlake, Texas 76092, is the exclusive agent for distribution of shares of the
Fund.  The  Distributor  is  obligated  to sell the shares of the Fund on a best
efforts basis only against  purchase  orders for the shares.  Shares of the Fund
are offered to the public on a continuous basis.

ADMINISTRATOR

         The Fund retains AmeriPrime  Financial  Services,  Inc., 1793 Kingswood
Drive,  Suite 200,  Southlake,  TX 76092,  (the  "Administrator")  to manage the
Fund's  business  affairs  and provide  the Fund with  administrative  services,
including all regulatory reporting and necessary office equipment, personnel and
facilities.


<PAGE>



                                   APPENDIX A
                      DESCRIPTION OF CORPORATE BOND RATINGS
                       STANDARD & POOR'S RATINGS SERVICES

         The ratings are based on current information furnished by the issuer or
obtained by Standard & Poor's from other sources it considers reliable. Standard
& Poor's does not perform  any audit in  connection  with any rating and may, on
occasion,  rely on unaudited financial information.  The ratings may be changed,
suspended  or withdrawn  as a result of changes in, or  unavailability  of, such
information or for other circumstances.

         The  ratings  are  based,   in  varying   degrees,   on  the  following
considerations:

I.  Likelihood  of  default-capacity  and  willingness  of the obliger as to the
timely  payment of interest and  repayment of principal in  accordance  with the
terms of the obligation.

II.      Nature and provisions of the obligation.

III.  Protection  afforded by, and relative  position of the  obligation  in the
event of  bankruptcy,  reorganization  or other  arrangement  under  the laws of
bankruptcy and other laws affecting creditors' rights.

     AAA - Debt  rated  "AAA" has the  highest  rating  assigned  by  Standard &
Poor's. Capacity to pay interest and repay principal is extremely strong.

     AA - Debt rated "AA" has a very strong  capacity to pay  interest and repay
principal and differs from the higher rated issues only in small degree.

     A - Debt  rated  "A"  has a  strong  capacity  to pay  interest  and  repay
principal  although it is somewhat more  susceptible  to the adverse  effects of
changes in  circumstances  and  economic  conditions  than debt in higher  rated
categories.

     BBB - Debt rated "BBB" is  regarded  as having an adequate  capacity to pay
interest and repay principal.  Whereas it normally exhibits adequate  protection
parameters,  adverse  economic  conditions  or changing  circumstances  are more
likely to lead to a weakened  capacity to pay interest and repay  principal  for
debt in this category than in higher rated categories.

     BB, B, CCC, CC, C - Debt rated "BB", "B", "CCC", "CC", and "C" is regarded,
on  balance,  as  predominantly  speculative  with  respect to  capacity  to pay
interest and repay  principal in  accordance  with the terms of the  obligation.
"BB"  indicates the lowest degree of  speculation  and "C" the highest degree of
speculation.  While  such debt will  likely  have some  quality  and  protective
characteristics,  these are  outweighed  by large  uncertainties  or major  risk
exposures to adverse conditions.

     BB - Debt rate "BB" has less near-term  vulnerability to default than other
speculative issues. However, it faces major ongoing uncertainties or exposure to
adverse  business,   financial  or  economic  conditions  which  could  lead  to
inadequate  capacity to meet timely  interest and principal  payments.  The "BB"
rating  category  is also  used for debt  subordinated  to  senior  debt that is
assigned an actual or implied "BBB" rating.

     B - Debt rated "B" has a greater vulnerability to default but currently has
the  capacity  to meet  interest  payments  and  principal  repayments.  Adverse
business,  financial  or  economic  conditions  will likely  impair  capacity or
willingness to pay interest and repay principal. The "B" rating category is also
used for debt  subordinated to senior debt that is assigned an actual or implied
"BB" or "BB-" rating.

     CCC - Debt  rated  "CCC"  has a  currently  identifiable  vulnerability  to
default,  and is  dependent  upon  favorable  business,  financial  and economic
conditions to meet timely payment of interest and repayment of principal. In the
event of adverse business, financial or economic conditions, it is not likely to
have the capacity to pay interest and repay principal. The "CCC" rating category
is also used for debt  subordinated to senior debt that is assigned an actual or
implied "B" or "B-" rating.

     CC - The rating "CC" is typically  applied to debt  subordinated  to senior
debt that is assigned an actual or implied "CCC" rating.

     C - The rating "C" is typically applied to debt subordinated to senior debt
which is assigned an actual or implied "CCC-" debt rating. The "C" rating may be
used to cover a situation where a bankruptcy  petition has been filed,  but debt
service payments are continued.
<PAGE>

     C1 - The rating "C1" is reserved  for income  bonds on which no interest is
being paid.

     D - Debt rated "D" is in payment  default.  The "D" rating category is used
when interest  payments or principal  payments are not made on the date due even
if the  applicable  grace  period  has not  expired,  unless  Standard  & Poor's
believes  that such  payments  will be made  during such grace  period.  The "D"
rating  also  will be used  upon the  filing of a  bankruptcy  petition  if debt
service payments are jeopardized.

     Plus (+) or Minus (-):  The  ratings  from "AA" to "CCC" may be modified by
the addition of a plus or minus sign to show relative  standing within the major
categories.

                         MOODY'S INVESTORS SERVICE, INC.

     Aaa - Bonds which are rated Aaa are judged to be of the best quality.  They
carry the smallest  degree of investment  risk and are generally  referred to as
"gilt edged." Interest  payments are protected by a large or by an exceptionally
stable margin and principal is secure. While the various protective elements are
likely to change,  such changes as can be visualized are most unlikely to impair
the fundamentally strong position of such issues.

     Aa - Bonds  which are  rated Aa are  judged  to be of high  quality  by all
standards. Together with the Aaa group they comprise what are generally known as
high-grade  bonds.  They are rated lower than the best bonds because  margins of
protection may not be as large as in Aaa  securities,  fluctuation of protective
elements may be of greater  amplitude,  or there may be other  elements  present
which make the long-term risk appear somewhat greater than the Aaa securities.

     A - Bonds which are rated A possess many  favorable  investment  attributes
and are to be  considered  as  upper-medium-grade  obligations.  Factors  giving
security to principal and interest are considered adequate,  but elements may be
present which suggest a susceptibility to impairment some time in the future.

     Baa - Bonds which are rated Baa are considered as medium-grade  obligations
(i.e., they are neither highly protected nor poorly secured).  Interest payments
and principal  security appear adequate for the present,  but certain protective
elements may be lacking or may be  characteristically  unreliable over any great
length of time. Such bonds lack outstanding  investment  characteristics  and in
fact have speculative characteristics as well.

     Ba - Bonds  which are rated Ba are  judged  to have  speculative  elements:
their future  cannot be  considered  as  well-assured.  Often the  protection of
interest  and  principal  payments  may be very  moderate  and  thereby not well
safeguarded  during  both good and bad times  over the  future.  Uncertainty  of
position characterizes bonds in this class.

     B - Bonds which are rated B generally lack characteristics of the desirable
investment.  Assurance of interest and principal  payments or of  maintenance of
other terms of the contract over any long period of time may be small.

     Caa - Bonds which are rated Caa are of poor standing. Such issues may be in
default or there may be present  elements of danger with respect to principal or
interest.

     Ca - Bonds which are rated Ca represent  obligations  which are speculative
in a high  degree.  Such  issues  are  often in  default  or have  other  marked
shortcomings.

     C - Bonds which are rated C are the lowest rated class of bonds, and issues
so rated can be regarded as having  extremely  poor  prospects of ever attaining
any real investment standing.

Moody's  applies  numerical  modifiers:  1,  2  and  3 in  each  generic  rating
classification  from Aa  through B in its  corporate  bond  rating  system.  The
modifier 1 indicates  that the  security  ranks in the higher end of its generic
rating category,  the modifier 2 indicates a mid-range ranking, and the modifier
3  indicates  that  the  issue  ranks in the  lower  end of its  generic  rating
category.







© 2022 IncJournal is not affiliated with or endorsed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission