UNITED HIGH INCOME FUND INC
485APOS, 1999-04-30
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                                                                File No. 2-63643
                                                               File No. 811-2907

                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

                             Washington, D. C. 20549

                                    Form N-1A

REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933     X

                        Pre-Effective Amendment No. ____
                         Post-Effective Amendment No. 28

                                     and/or

REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT
OF 1940                                                     X

                                Amendment No. 25


                         UNITED HIGH INCOME FUND, INC.
   -------------------------------------------------------------------------
                      (Exact Name as Specified in Charter)

              6300 Lamar Avenue, Overland Park, Kansas 66202-4200
   -------------------------------------------------------------------------
               (Address of Principal Executive Office) (Zip Code)

       Registrant's Telephone Number, including Area Code (913) 236-2000

    Kristen A. Richards, P. O. Box 29217, Shawnee Mission, Kansas 66201-9217
   -------------------------------------------------------------------------
                     (Name and Address of Agent for Service)

It is proposed that this filing will become effective
_____ immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b)
_____ on (date) pursuant to paragraph (b)
_____ 60 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)
__X__ on June 30, 1999 pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)
_____ 75 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(2)
_____ on (date) pursuant to paragraph (a)(2) of Rule 485
_____ this post-effective amendment designates a new effective date for a
      previously filed post-effective amendment
       ==================================================================

                    DECLARATION REQUIRED BY RULE 24f-2 (a)(1)

         The issuer has registered an indefinite  amount of its securities under
the  Securities  Act of 1933  pursuant  to Rule  24f-2  (a)(1).  Notice  for the
Registrant's  fiscal year  ending  March 31, 1999 will be filed on or about June
25, 1999.

The Securities and Exchange Commission has not approved or disapproved the
Fund's securities, or determined whether this Prospectus is accurate or
adequate. It is a criminal offense to state otherwise.
<PAGE>

   
United High Income Fund, Inc.

This Fund seeks as its primary goal a high level of current income. As a
secondary goal, the Fund seeks capital growth when consistent with its primary
goal. The Fund invests primarily in a diversified portfolio of high-yield,
high-risk, fixed-income securities, the risks of which are, in the judgment of
the Fund's investment manager, consistent with the Fund's goals.

Prospectus
June 30, 1999

<PAGE>

Table of Contents

An Overview of the Fund....................................................... 6

Performance................................................................... 8
                                                                              
Fees and Expenses.............................................................10

About the Investment Principles of the Fund...................................16

   Investment Goals and Principal Strategies..................................16
      Risk Considerations of Principal Strategies and Other Investments.......17

   Year 2000 and Euro Issues..................................................18

Financial Highlights..........................................................34

About Your Account............................................................36

   Choosing a Share Class.......................................................
      Sales Charge Reductions and Waivers.......................................
      Waivers for Certain Investors.............................................

   Ways to Set Up Your Account................................................38

   Buying Shares..............................................................40

   Minimum Investments........................................................45

   Adding to Your Account.....................................................46

   Selling Shares.............................................................47

   Telephone Transactions.......................................................

   Shareholder Services.......................................................52
      Personal Service........................................................52
      Reports.................................................................52
      Exchanges...............................................................53
      Automatic Transactions..................................................53

   Distributions and Taxes....................................................54
      Distributions...........................................................54
      Taxes...................................................................55


The Management of the Fund....................................................58

   Portfolio Management.......................................................59

   Management Fee.............................................................60

<PAGE>

An Overview of the Fund

Goals

United High Income Fund, Inc. (the "Fund") seeks, as a primary goal, a high
level of current income. As a secondary goal, the Fund seeks capital growth when
consistent with its primary goal.

Principal Strategies
The Fund seeks to achieve its goals by investing in a diversified portfolio of
high-yield, high-risk, fixed-income securities, the risks of which are, in the
judgment of Waddell & Reed Investment Management Company ("WRIMCO"), the Fund's
investment manager, consistent with the Fund's goals.

The Fund invests primarily in lower quality bonds, commonly called "junk bonds,"
which are bonds rated BB and below by Standard and Poor's ("S&P") and Ba and
below by Moody's Investor Services ("MIS)". The Fund may also invest a 
significant portion of its assets in common or preferred stock in order to seek
capital growth.

Principal Risks of Investing in the Fund
Because the Fund owns different types of investments, a variety of factors can
affect its investment performance, such as:

o    the credit quality, earnings performance and other conditions of the
     companies whose securities the Fund holds;

o    the susceptibility of junk bonds to greater risks of non-payment or
     default, price volatility and lack of liquidity than higher-rated bonds;

o    an increase in interest rates, which may cause the value of a bond held by
     the Fund to decline;

o    changes in the maturities of bonds owned by the Fund;

o    adverse bond and stock market conditions, sometimes in response to general
     economic or industry news, that may cause the prices of the Fund's holdings
     to fall as part of a broad market decline; and

o    the skill of WRIMCO in evaluating and managing the interest rate and credit
     risks of the Fund's portfolio.

The Fund can invest in companies of any size. Market risk for small- or
medium-sized companies may be greater than that for large companies. For
example, smaller companies may have limited financial resources, limited product
lines or inexperienced management.

Investments in foreign securities present additional risks such as currency
fluctuations and political or economic conditions affecting the foreign country.

As with any mutual fund, the value of the Fund's shares will change and you
could lose money on your investment. An investment in the Fund is not a bank
deposit and is not insured or guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation or any other government agency.

Who May Want to Invest

The Fund is designed for investors who primarily seek a level of current income
that is higher than is normally available with securities in the higher rated
categories and, secondarily, seek capital growth where consistent with this
income goal, through a diversified, actively managed portfolio. The Fund is not
suitable for all investors. You should consider whether the Fund fits with your
particular investment objectives.



Performance

The chart and table below provide some indication of the risks of investing in
the Fund by showing changes in the Fund's performance from year to year and by
showing how the Fund's average annual returns for 1, 5 and 10 years compare with
those of a broad measure of market performance.

o     The chart presents the total annual returns for Class A and shows how
      performance has varied from year to year over the past ten years.

o     The table shows Class A and Class Y average annual returns and compares
      them to the market indicators listed. 

o     Both the chart and the table assume reinvestment of dividends and 
      distributions. As with all mutual funds, the Fund's past performance does
      not necessarily indicate how it will perform in the future.

Note that the performance information in the chart and table is based on
calendar-year periods, while the information shown in the Financial Highlights
section of this Prospectus and in the Fund's shareholder reports is based on the
Fund's fiscal year.

                          Chart of Year-by-Year Returns
                         as of December 31 each year (%)

         1989                                      -8.07%
         1990                                     -14.97%
         1991                                      37.45%
         1992                                      16.33%
         1993                                      17.69%
         1994                                      -3.66%
         1995                                      17.8%
         1996                                      11.88%
         1997                                      14.32%
         1998                                       3.88%

         In the period shown in the chart, the highest quarterly return was
         12.12% (the first quarter of 1991) and the lowest quarterly return was
         -8.09% (the fourth quarter of 1989). The Class A return for the fiscal
         year ended March 31, 1999 was 1.70%.

         The chart does not reflect any sales charge that you may be required to
         pay upon purchase of the Fund's Class A shares. If the sales charge
         were included, the returns would be less than those shown. Class Y
         shares are not subject to a sales charge.

                          Average Annual Total Returns
                           as of December 31, 1998 (%)

                                 1 Year           5 Years          10 Years
                                 ------------------------------------------
Class A Shares of the Fund        -2.09%            7.29%             7.71%
Salomon Brothers High Yield
     Composite Index               4.04%            9.55%            11.44%
Lipper High Current Yield Fund
     Universe Average              3.85%            8.55%             8.34%

                          Average Annual Total Returns
                           as of December 31, 1998 (%)

                                                                   Life of
                                                  1 Year           Class*
Class Y Shares of the Fund                          4.06%            9.89%%
Salomon Brothers High Yield
     Composite Index                                4.04%            9.77%
Lipper High Current Yield Fund
     Universe Average                               3.85%            8.21%

The table reflects the maximum sales charge that you my be required to pay upon
purchase of the Fund's Class A shares.

The index shown is a broad-based, securities market index that is unmanaged. The
Lipper average is a composite of mutual funds with goals similar to the goals of
the Fund.

*Since January 4, 1996 for Class Y shares.

<PAGE>



Fees and Expenses

This table describes the fees and expenses that you may pay if you buy and hold
shares of the Fund.

Shareholder Fees
(fees paid directly from your investment)
                                               Class A             Class Y
Maximum Sales Charge (Load)
     Imposed on Purchases
     (as a percentage of
     offering price)                             5.75%              None

Maximum Deferred
     Sales Charge (Load)
     (as a percentage of
     amount invested)                             None              None

Maximum Sales Charge (Load)
     Imposed on Reinvested
     Dividends (and                               None              None
   other Distributions)

Redemption Fees                                   None              None

Exchange Fee                                      None              None

Maximum Account Fee                               None              None

Annual Fund Operating Expenses
(expenses that are deducted from Fund assets)
                                               Class A             Class Y
Management Fees                                   0.%               0. %
Distribution and
  Service (12b-1 Fees)(10                         0.%              None
Other Expenses                                    0.%               0. %
Total Annual Fund
 Operating Expenses                               0.%               0. %

Example:
This example is intended to help you compare the cost of investing in the shares
of the Fund with the cost of investing in other mutual funds. The example
assumes that (a) you invest $10,000 in the particular Class A or Class Y shares
for each time period specified, (b) your investment has a 5% return each year,
and (c) the expenses remain the same. Although your actual costs may be higher
or lower, based on these assumptions, your costs would be:

                                              Class A              Class Y
 1 year                                         $
 3 years                                        $
 5 years                                        $
10 years                                        $

         Your costs would be the same whether or not you redeemed your shares at
the end of each time period. For a more complete discussion of certain expenses
and fees, see "Management Fees."
- ------------------
(1) It is possible that long-term Class A shareholders of the Fund may bear 
12b-1 distribution fees that are more than the maximum front-end sales charge
permitted under the rules of the National Association of Securities Dealers,
Inc.
<PAGE>



The Investment Principles of the Fund


Investment Goals and Principal Strategies and Other Investments

         The primary goal of the Fund is to earn a high level of current income.
As a secondary goal, the Fund seeks capital growth when consistent with its
primary goal. The Fund seeks to achieve these goals by investing primarily in a
diversified portfolio of high-yield, high-risk, fixed income securities, the
risks of which are, in the judgment of WRIMCO, consistent with the Fund's goals.
There is no guarantee that the Fund will achieve its goals.

         There are three main types of securities that the Fund owns: debt
securities, preferred stock and common stock. The Fund may also own convertible
securities. In general, the high income that the Fund seeks is paid by debt
securities in the lower rating categories of the established rating services or
unrated securities that are determined by WRIMCO to be of comparable quality;
these are securities rated BBB or lower by S&P, or Baa or lower by MIS and
unrated securities. Lower-quality debt securities (which include "junk bonds")
are considered to be speculative and involve greater risk of default or price
changes due to changes in the issuer's creditworthiness. The market prices of
these securities may fluctuate more than higher-quality securities and may
decline significantly in periods of general economic difficulty.

         The Fund will normally invest at least 80% of its total assets to seek
a high level of current income. The Fund limits its acquisition of common stock
so that no more than 20% of its assets will consist of common stock and no more
than 10% of its assets will consist of non-dividend-paying common stock.

         WRIMCO may look at a number of factors in selecting securities for the
Fund's portfolio. These include an issuer's past, current and estimated future:

o     financial strength;

o     cash flow;

o     management;

o     borrowing requirements; and

o     responsiveness to changes in interest rates and business conditions.

         When WRIMCO believes that a full or partial temporary defensive
position is desirable, due to present or anticipated market or economic
conditions, WRIMCO may take any one or more of the following steps with respect
to up to all of the assets in the Fund's portfolio:

o     shorten the average maturity of the Fund's debt portfolio;

o     hold cash or cash equivalents (short-term investments, such as commercial
      paper and certificates of deposit) in varying amounts designed for
      defensive purposes; and 

o     emphasize high-grade debt securities.

         Taking a temporary defensive position in any one or more of these
manners might reduce the yield on the Fund's portfolio.

         The Fund may also invest in other types of investments and use certain
other instruments in seeking to achieve the Fund's goals. For example, the Fund
may invest in options, futures contracts, asset-backed securities and other
derivative instruments if it is permitted to invest in the type of asset by
which the return on, or value of, the derivative is measured. At this time, the
Fund has limited exposure to derivative investments. You will find more
information in the Statement of Additional Information ("SAI") about the Fund's
permitted investments and strategies, as well as the restrictions that apply to
them.

Risk Considerations of Principal Strategies and Other Investments

Risks exist in any investment. The Fund is subject to market risk, financial
risk and, in some cases, prepayment risk. 

o     Market risk is the possibility of a change in the price of the security
      because of market factors including changes in interest rates. Bonds with
      longer maturities are more interest-rate sensitive. For example, if
      interest rates increase, the value of a bond with a longer maturity is
      more likely to decrease. Because of market risks, the share price of the
      Fund will likely change as well.

o     Financial risk is based on the financial situation of the issuer of the
      security. The financial risk of the Fund depends on the credit quality of
      the underlying securities in which it invests.

o     Prepayment risk is the possibility that, during periods of falling
      interest rates, a debt security with a high stated interest rate will be
      prepaid before its expected maturity date.

         Because the Fund owns different types of investments, its performance
will be affected by a variety of factors. In general, the value of the Fund's
investments and the income it generates will vary from day to day, generally due
to changes in interest rates, market conditions, and other company and economic
news. Performance will also depend on WRIMCO's skill in selecting investments.

         Certain types of the Fund's authorized investments and strategies (such
as derivative instruments) involve special risks. Lower-quality debt securities
are considered to be speculative and involve greater risk of default or price
changes due to changes in the issuer's creditworthiness. The market prices of
these securities may fluctuate more than higher-quality securities and may
decline significantly in periods of general economic difficulty. Foreign
securities and foreign currencies may involve risks relating to currency
fluctuations, political or economic conditions in the foreign country, and the
potentially less stringent investor protection and disclosure standards of
foreign markets. These factors could make foreign investments, especially those
in developing countries, more volatile.


Year 2000 and Euro Issues

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 WRIMCO and the Fund's other service providers do not properly process
and calculate date-related information and data from and after January 1, 2000.
WRIMCO is taking steps that it believes are reasonably designed to address year
2000 computer-related problems with respect to the computer systems that it uses
and to obtain assurances that comparable steps are being taken by the Fund's
other, major service providers. Although there can be no assurances, WRIMCO
believes these steps will be sufficient to avoid any adverse impact on the Fund.
Similarly, the companies and other issuers in which the Fund invests could be
adversely affected by year 2000 computer-related problems, and there can be no
assurance that the steps taken, if any, by these issuers will be sufficient to
avoid any adverse impact on the Fund.

Also, the Fund could be adversely affected by the conversion of certain European
currencies into the Euro. This conversion, which is underway, is scheduled to be
completed in 2002. However, problems with the conversion process and delays
could increase volatility in world capital markets and affect European capital
markets in particular.


<PAGE>



Financial Highlights

         The following information is to help you understand the financial
performance of the Fund's Class A* and Class Y shares for the fiscal periods
shown. Certain information reflects financial results for a single Fund share.
"Total return" shows how much your investment would have increased (or
decreased) during each period, assuming reinvestment of all dividends and
distributions. This information has been audited by Deloitte & Touche LLP, whose
independent auditors' report, along with the Fund's financial statements for the
fiscal year ended March 31, 1999, are included in the SAI, which is available
upon request.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Class A
                                                                                        For the fiscal year ended March 31,
                                 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                     1999          1998          1997          1996          1995*         1994          1993    
                                 ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------  
<S>                              <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>         
Per-share Data
Net asset value,
     beginning of period ......  $     9.25    $     9.09    $     8.70    $     9.20    $     9.21    $     8.82    $     7.51  
                                 ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------  
Income from investment
     operations:
     Net investment income ....        0.82          0.80          0.79          0.80          0.80          0.83          0.95  
     Net realized and
         unrealized gain (loss)
         on investments .......        0.79          0.16          0.40         (0.51)        (0.01)         0.40          1.29  
                                 ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------  
         Total from investment
              operations ......        1.61          0.96          1.19          0.29          0.79          1.23          2.24  
                                 ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------  
Less distributions:
     Declared from net
         investment income ....       (0.82)        (0.80)        (0.80)        (0.79)        (0.80)        (0.84)        (0.93) 
     From capital gains .......       (0.00)        (0.00)        (0.00)        (0.00)        (0.00)        (0.00)        (0.00) 
                                 ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------  
Total distributions ...........       (0.82)        (0.80)        (0.80)        (0.79)        (0.80)        (0.84)        (0.93) 
                                 ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------  
Net asset value,
     end of period ............  $    10.04    $     9.25    $     9.09    $     8.70    $     9.20    $     9.21    $     8.82  
                                 ==========    ==========    ==========    ==========    ==========    ==========    ==========  
Total return** ................       18.03%        10.94%        14.16%         3.41%         8.69%        14.72%        31.72% 
Ratios/Supplemental Data
Net assets, end of period
     (000 omitted) ............  $1,101,860    $  983,273    $  971,916    $  933,576    $1,006,619    $  986,867    $  910,917  
Ratio of expenses to average
     net assets ...............        0.84%         0.89%         0.85%         0.84%         0.78%         0.75%         0.79% 
Ratio of net investment income
     to average net assets ....        8.38%         8.68%         8.74%         9.07%         8.51%         9.28%        11.56% 
Portfolio turnover rate .......       63.40%        53.17%        41.67%        18.94%        54.80%        58.68%        62.12% 

<CAPTION>
                                        1992          1991         1990
                                    ----------    ----------    ----------
<S>                                 <C>           <C>           <C>       
Per-share Data
Net asset value,
     beginning of period ......     $     8.51    $    11.63    $    12.14
                                    ----------    ----------    ----------
Income from investment
     operations:
     Net investment income ....           1.16          1.44          1.53
     Net realized and
         unrealized gain (loss)
         on investments .......          (1.00)        (3.08)        (0.51)
                                    ----------    ----------    ----------
         Total from investment
              operations ......           0.16         (1.64)         1.02
                                    ----------    ----------    ----------
Less distributions:
     Declared from net
         investment income ....          (1.16)        (1.48)        (1.51)
     From capital gains .......          (0.00)        (0.00)        (0.02)
                                    ----------    ----------    ----------
Total distributions ...........          (1.16)        (1.48)        (1.53)
                                    ----------    ----------    ----------
Net asset value,
     end of period ............     $     7.51    $     8.51    $    11.63
                                    ==========    ==========    ==========
Total return** ................           2.56%      -15.57%          8.90%
Ratios/Supplemental Data
Net assets, end of period
     (000 omitted) ............     $  735,376    $  874,615    $1,250,504
Ratio of expenses to average
     net assets ...............           0.82%         0.74%         0.73%
Ratio of net investment income
     to average net assets ....          14.89%        13.72%        12.81%
Portfolio turnover rate .......          30.43%        52.00%        87.75%
</TABLE>

   *On July 31, 1995, Fund shares outstanding were designated Class A shares.
  **Total return calculated without taking into account the sales load deducted
on an initial purchase.

Class Y
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                              For the
                                                              For the fiscal year              period
                                                              ended September 30,           from 1/4/96*
                                                              --------------------             through
                                             1998                      1997                    9/30/96
                                           ------                    ------                   --------
<S>                                       <C>                       <C>                       <C>  
Per-share Data
Net asset value,
   beginning of period.........              $4.42                   $4.14                     $4.15
                                            -----                     -----                     -----
Income from investment
   operations:
   Net investment
      income .......................       0.37                      0.37                      0.21
   Net realized and
      unrealized gain (loss)
      on investments................      (0.30)                     0.28                     (0.01)
                                            -----                     -----                     -----
Total from investment
   operations.......................       0.07                      0.65                      0.20
                                            -----                     -----                     -----
Less dividends declared
   from net investment
   income...........................      (0.37)                    (0.37)                    (0.21)
                                            -----                     -----                     -----
Net asset value,
   end of period....................      $4.12                     $4.42                     $4.14
                                            =====                     =====                     =====
Ratios/Supplemental Data
Total return .......................       1.38%                    16.38%                     5.00%
Net assets, end of
   period (in
   millions) .......................           $2                        $2                        $2
Ratio of expenses
   to average net
   assets...........................       0.79%                     0.77%                     0.77%**
Ratio of net
   investment income
   to average net
   assets...........................       8.43%                     8.69%                     8.83%**
Portfolio
   turnover rate....................      58.85%                    64.38%                    55.64%**
</TABLE>

 *Commencement of operations.
**Annualized.


<PAGE>



Your Account

Choosing a Share Class

This Prospectus offers two classes of shares of the Fund: Class A and Class Y.
Each class has its own sales charge, if any, and expense structure. You should
choose the class for which you are eligible and that seems best for you, which
usually depends on how much you plan to invest and how long you plan to hold
your shares. Class A shares are available for both individual and institutional
investors. Class Y shares are designed for institutional investors and others
investing through certain intermediaries, as described below. All of your future
investments in the Fund will be made in the class you select when you open your
account, unless you inform the Fund otherwise, in writing, when you make the
future investment.

Class A shares are subject to a sales charge when you buy them, based on the
amount of your investment, according to the table below. Class A shares pay an
annual 12b-1 fee of up to 0.25% of average Class A net assets. The ongoing
expenses of this class are higher than those for Class Y.

                                          Sales
                         Sales           Charge
                        Charge             as
                          as             Approx.
                        Percent          Percent
                          of               of
Size of                Offering          Amount
Purchase                 Price          Invested
- --------               --------          -------
Under
     $100,000            5.75%            6.10%

$100,000
     to less
     than
     $200,000            4.75             4.99

$200,000
     to less
     than
     $300,000            3.50             3.63

$300,000
     to less
     than
     $500,000            2.50             2.56

$500,000
     to less
     than
     $1,000,000          1.50             1.52

$1,000,000
     to less
     than
     $2,000,000          1.00             1.01

$2,000,000
     and over            0.00             0.00

Sales Charge Reductions and Waivers

Lower sales charges are available by:

o     Combining additional purchases of Class A shares of any of the funds in
      the United Group, except shares of United Cash Management, Inc. unless
      acquired by exchange for Class A shares on which a sales charge was paid
      (or as a dividend or distribution on such acquired shares), with the NAV
      of Class A shares already held ("rights of accumulation");

o     Grouping all purchases of Class A shares made during a thirteen-month
      period ("Statement of Intention"); and 

o     Grouping purchases by certain related persons.

Additional information and applicable forms are available from Waddell & Reed
financial advisors.

Waivers for Certain Investors

      Class A shares may be purchased at NAV by:

      o     The Directors and officers of the Fund, employees of Waddell & Reed,
            Inc., employees of their affiliates, financial advisors of Waddell &
            Reed, Inc. and the spouse, children, parents, children's spouses and
            spouse's parents of each;

      o     Certain retirement plans and certain trusts for these persons; and 

      o     A 401(k) plan or a 457 plan having 100 or more eligible employees.

You will find more information in the SAI about sales charge reductions and
waivers.

Class Y shares are not subject to a sales charge or annual 12b-1 fees and thus
may cost you less than if you had bought Class A shares. Class Y shares are only
available for purchase by:

      o     participants of employee benefit plans established under section
            403(b) or section 457, or qualified under section 401, including
            401(k) plans, of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
            "Code"), when the plan has 100 or more eligible employees and holds
            the shares in an omnibus account on the Fund's records;

      o     banks, trust institutions, investment fund administrators and other
            third parties investing for their own accounts or for the accounts
            of their customers where such investments for customer accounts are
            held in an omnibus account on the Fund's records;

      o     government entities or authorities and corporations whose investment
            within the first twelve months after initial investment is $10
            million or more; and

      o     certain retirement plans and trusts for employees and account
            representatives of Waddell & Reed, Inc. and its affiliates.

The different ways to set up (register) your account are listed below.


                           Ways to Set Up Your Account

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

Individual or Joint Tenants
For your general investment needs

Individual accounts are owned by one person. Joint accounts have two or more
owners (tenants).

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

Business or Organization
For investment needs of corporations, associations, partnerships, institutions
or other groups

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

Retirement
To shelter your retirement savings from taxes


Retirement plans allow individuals to shelter investment income and capital
gains from current taxes. In addition, contributions to these accounts (other
than Roth IRAs and Education IRAs) may be tax deductible.

o    Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) allow an individual under 70 1/2,
     with earned income to invest up to $2,000 per tax year. The maximum annual
     contribution for an investor and his or her spouse is $4,000 ($2,000 for
     each spouse) or, if less, the couple's combined earned income for the
     taxable year.

o    Rollover IRAs retain special tax advantages for certain distributions from
     employer-sponsored retirement plans.

o    Roth IRAs allow certain individuals to make non-deductible contributions up
     to $2,000 per year. Withdrawals of earnings may be tax-free if the account
     is at least five years old and certain other requirements are met.

o    Education IRAs are established for the benefit of a minor, with
     non-deductible contributions, and permit tax-free withdrawals to pay the
     higher education expenses of the beneficiary.

o    Simplified Employee Pension Plans (SEP - IRAs) provide small business
     owners or those with self-employed income (and their eligible employees)
     with many of the same advantages as a Keogh Plan, but with fewer
     administrative requirements.

o    Savings Incentive Match Plans for Employees (SIMPLE Plans) can be
     established by small employers to contribute to their employees' retirement
     accounts and involve fewer administrative requirements than 401(k) or other
     qualified plans generally.

o    Keogh Plans allow self-employed individuals to make tax-deductible
     contributions for themselves up to 25% of their annual earned income, with
     a maximum of $30,000 per year.

o    401(k) Programs allow employees of corporations and non-governmental
     tax-exempt organizations of all sizes to contribute a percentage of their
     wages on a tax-deferred basis. These accounts need to be established by the
     administrator or trustee of the plan.

o    403(b) Custodial Accounts are available to employees of public school
     systems or certain types of charitable organizations.

o    457 Accounts allow employees of state and local governments and certain
     charitable organizations to contribute a portion of their compensation on a
     tax-deferred basis.

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

Gifts or Transfers to a Minor
To invest for a child's education or other future needs

These custodial accounts provide a way to give money to a child and obtain tax
benefits. An individual can give up to $10,000 a year per child free of Federal
transfer tax consequences. Depending on state laws, you can set up a custodial
account under the Uniform Gifts to Minors Act ("UGMA") or the Uniform Transfers
to Minors Act ("UTMA").

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

Trust
For money being invested by a trust

The trust must be established before an account can be opened, or you may use a
trust form made available by Waddell & Reed. Contact your Waddell & Reed account
representative for the form.

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


Buying Shares

         You may buy shares of the Fund through Waddell & Reed, Inc. and its
financial advisors. To open your account you must complete and sign an
application. Your Waddell & Reed financial advisor can help you with any
questions you might have.

         To purchase Class Y shares by wire, you must first obtain an account
number by calling 1-800-366-5465, then mail a completed application to Waddell &
Reed, Inc., P. O. Box 29217, Shawnee Mission, Kansas 66201-9217, or fax it to
913-236-5044. Instruct your bank to wire the amount you wish to invest to UMB
Bank, n.a., ABA Number 101000695, W&R Underwriter Account Number 0007978, FBO
Customer Name and Account Number.

         To purchase Class Y shares by check, make your check payable to Waddell
& Reed, Inc. Mail the check, along with your completed application, to Waddell &
Reed, Inc., P.O. Box 29217, Shawnee Mission, Kansas 66201-9217.

          You may also buy Class Y shares of the Fund indirectly through certain
broker-dealers, banks and other third parties, some of which may charge you a
fee. These firms may have additional requirements to buy Class Y shares.

         The price to buy a share of the Fund, called the offering price, is
calculated every business day.

         The offering price of a share (price to buy one share of a particular
class) is the net asset value ("NAV") per share of that class, plus for Class A
shares, the sales charge shown in the table above.

In the calculation of the Fund's NAV:

o    The securities in the Fund's portfolio that are listed or traded on an
     exchange are valued primarily using market prices.

o    Bonds are generally valued according to prices quoted by an independent
     pricing service.

o    Short-term debt securities are valued at amortized cost, which approximates
     market value.

o    Other investment assets for which market prices are unavailable are valued
     at their fair value by or at the direction of the Board of Directors.



         The Fund is open for business each day the New York Stock Exchange
("NYSE") is open. The Fund normally calculates the NAVs of its shares as of the
close of business of the NYSE, normally 4 p.m. Eastern time, except that an
option or futures contract held by the Fund may be priced at the close of the
regular session of any other securities or commodities exchange on which that
instrument is traded.

         The Fund may invest in securities listed on foreign exchanges which may
trade on Saturdays or on U.S. national business holidays when the NYSE is
closed. Consequently, the NAV of Fund shares may be significantly affected on
days when the Fund does not price its shares and when you are not able to
purchase or redeem the Fund's shares. Similarly, if an event materially
affecting the value of foreign investments or foreign currency exchange rates
occurs prior to the close of business of the NYSE but after the time their
values are otherwise determined, such investments or exchange rates may be
valued at their fair value as determined in good faith by or under the direction
of the Board of Directors.

         When you place an order to buy shares, your order will be processed at
the next offering price calculated after your order is received and accepted.
Note the following:

o    Orders are accepted only at the home office of Waddell & Reed, Inc.

o    All of your purchases must be made in U.S. dollars.

o    If you buy shares by check, and then sell those shares by any method other
     than by exchange to another fund in the United Group, the payment may be
     delayed for up to ten days to ensure that your previous investment has
     cleared.

o    The Fund does not issue certificates representing Class Y shares of the
     Fund.

o    If you purchase Class Y shares of the Fund from certain broker-dealers,
     banks or other authorized third parties, the Fund will be deemed to have
     received your purchase order when that third party (or its designee) has
     received your order. Your order will receive the Class Y offering price
     next calculated after the order has been received in proper form by the
     authorized third party (or its designee). You should consult that firm to
     determine the time by which it must receive your order for you to purchase
     shares of the Fund at that day's price.

         When you sign your account application, you will be asked to certify
that your Social Security or other taxpayer identification number is correct and
whether you are subject to backup withholding for failing to report income to
the Internal Revenue Service.

         Waddell & Reed, Inc. reserves the right to reject any purchase orders,
including purchases by exchange, and it and the Fund reserve the right to
discontinue offering Fund shares for purchase.


         For Class A shares, the Fund has adopted a Distribution and Service
Plan ("Plan") pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the Investment Company Act of 1940.
Under the Plan, the Fund may pay Waddell & Reed, Inc. a fee of up to 0.25%, on
an annual basis, of the average daily net assets of the Class A shares. This fee
is to reimburse Waddell & Reed, Inc. for the cost of distributing the Fund's
Class A shares, providing services to Class A shareholders or maintaining Class
A shareholder accounts. Because the Plan fees are paid out of the Class A assets
on an on-going basis, over time these fees will increase the cost of your
investment and may cost you more than paying other types of sales charges.


Minimum Investments

For Class A:

To Open an Account    $500

For certain exchanges $100

For certain retirement accounts and accounts opened with Automatic Investment
 Service     $50

For certain retirement accounts and accounts opened through payroll deductions 
for or by employees of WRIMCO, Waddell & Reed, Inc. and
their affiliates       $25

To Add to an Account

For certain exchanges $100

For Automatic Investment Service                 $25

For Class Y:

To Open an Account

For a government entity or authority or for a corporation:  $10 million
              (within
              first
              twelve
              months)

For other investors:    Any amount

To Add to an Account

Any amount


Adding to Your Account

         Subject to the minimums described under "Minimum Investments," you can
make additional investments of any amount at any time.

         To add to your account, make your check payable to Waddell & Reed, Inc.
Mail the check along with:

o    the detachable form that accompanies the confirmation of a prior purchase
     by you or your year-to-date statement; or

o    a letter stating your account number, the account registration and that you
     wish to purchase Class A or Class Y shares of the Fund.

         Mail to Waddell & Reed, Inc. at the address printed on your
confirmation or year-to-date statement.

         To add to your Class Y account by wire: Instruct your bank to wire the
amount you wish to invest, along with the account number and registration, to
UMB Bank, n.a., ABA Number 101000695, W&R Underwriter Account Number 0007978,
FBO Customer Name and Account Number.

         To add to your Class A or Class Y account by mail: Make your check
payable to Waddell & Reed, Inc. Mail the check along with a letter stating your
account number, the account registration and that you wish to purchase Class A
or Class Y shares of the Fund to:

                              Waddell & Reed, Inc.
                                 P. O. Box 29217
                       Shawnee Mission, Kansas 66201-9217

         If you purchase Class Y shares from certain broker-dealers, banks or
other authorized third parties, additional purchases may be made through those
firms.


Selling Shares

         You can arrange to take money out of your Fund account at any time by
selling (redeeming) some or all of your shares.

         The redemption price (price to sell one share of a particular class) is
the NAV per share of that class.

         To sell shares by written request: complete an Account Service Request
form, available from your Waddell & Reed financial advisor, or write a letter of
instruction with:

o    the name on the account registration;

o    the Fund's name;

o    the Fund account number;

o    the dollar amount or number, and the class, of shares to be redeemed; and 

o    any other applicable requirements listed in the table below.

         Deliver the form or your letter to your Waddell & Reed financial
advisor, or mail it to:

                              Waddell & Reed, Inc.
                                 P. O. Box 29217
                             Shawnee Mission, Kansas
                                   66201-9217

         Unless otherwise instructed, Waddell & Reed will send a check to the
address on the account.

         To sell Class Y shares by telephone or fax: If you have elected this
method in your application or by subsequent authorization, call 1-800-366-5465
or fax your request to 913-236-5044 and give your instructions to redeem Class Y
shares and make payment by wire to your pre-designated bank account or by check
to you at the address on the account.

         When you place an order to sell shares, your shares will be sold at the
next NAV calculated after receipt of a written request for redemption in good
order by Waddell & Reed, Inc. at its home office. Note the following:

o    If more than one person owns the shares, each owner must sign the written
     request.

o    If you hold a certificate, it must be properly endorsed and sent to the
     Fund.

o    If you recently purchased the shares by check, the Fund may delay payment
     of redemption proceeds. You may arrange for the bank upon which the
     purchase check was drawn to provide to the Fund telephone or written
     assurance that the check has cleared and been honored. If you do not
     payment of the redemption proceeds on these shares will be delayed until
     the earlier of 10 days or the date the Fund can verify that your purchase
     check has cleared and been honored.

o    Redemptions may be suspended or payment dates postponed on days when the
     NYSE is closed (other than weekends or holidays), when trading on the NYSE
     is restricted, or as permitted by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

o    Payment is normally made in cash, although under extraordinary conditions
     redemptions may be made in portfolio securities.

o    If you purchased Class Y shares from certain broker-dealers, banks or other
     authorized third parties, you may sell those shares through those firms,
     some of which may charge you a fee and may have additional requirements to
     sell Fund shares. The Fund will be deemed to have received your order to
     sell Class Y shares when that firm (or its designee) has received your
     order. Your order will receive the Class Y NAV next calculated after the
     order has been received in proper form by the authorized firm (or its
     designee). You should consult that firm to determine the time by which it
     must receive your order for you to sell Class Y shares at that day's price.

                     Special Requirements for Selling Shares

Account Type                                           Special Requirements
Individual or Joint Tenant                    The written instructions must be
                                              signed by all persons required to
                                              sign for transactions, exactly as
                                              their names appear on the account.
Sole Proprietorship                           The written instructions must be
                                              signed by the individual owner of
                                              the business.
UGMA, UTMA                                    The custodian must sign the
                                              written instructions indicating
                                              capacity as custodian.
Retirement Account                            The written instructions
                                              must be signed by a properly
                                              authorized person.
Trust                                         The trustee must sign the written
                                              instructions indicating capacity
                                              as trustee. If the trustee's name
                                              is not in the account
                                              registration, provide a currently
                                              certified copy of the trust
                                              document.
Business or Organization                      At least one person authorized by
                                              corporate resolution to act on the
                                              account must sign the written
                                              instructions.
Conservator, Guardian or Other Fiduciary      The written instructions must be
                                              signed by the person properly
                                              authorized by court order to act
                                              in the particular fiduciary
                                              capacity.

         The Fund may require a signature guarantee in certain situations such
as:

o    a redemption request made by a corporation, partnership or fiduciary;

o    a redemption request made by someone other than the owner of record; or

o    the check is made payable to someone other than the owner of record.

         This requirement is intended to protect you and Waddell & Reed from
fraud. You can obtain a signature guarantee from most banks and securities
dealers, but not from a notary public.

         The Fund reserves the right to redeem at NAV all your Fund shares if
their aggregate NAV is less than $500. The Fund will give you notice and a
60-day opportunity to purchase a sufficient number of additional shares to bring
the aggregate NAV of your shares to $500.

         You may reinvest, without charge, all or part of the amount of Class A
shares you redeemed by sending to the Fund the amount you want to reinvest. The
reinvested amounts must be received by the Fund within thirty days after the
date of your redemption. You may do this only once with Class A shares of the
Fund.

         Payments of principal and interest on loans made pursuant to Waddell &
Reed's 401(k) prototype plan may be reinvested, without payment of a sales
charge, in Class A shares of any United Group fund in which the plan may invest.


Telephone Transactions -- Class Y

         The Fund and its agents will not be liable for following instructions
communicated by telephone that they reasonably believe to be genuine. The Fund
will employ reasonable procedures to confirm that instructions communicated by
telephone are genuine. If the Fund fails to do so, the Fund may be liable for
losses due to unauthorized or fraudulent instructions. Current procedures
relating to instructions communicated by telephone include tape recording
instructions, requiring personal identification and providing written
confirmations of transactions effected pursuant to such instructions.


Shareholder Services

         Waddell & Reed provides a variety of services to help you manage your
account.

Personal Service

         Your local Waddell & Reed financial advisor is available to provide
personal service. Additionally, one toll-free call, 1-800-366-5465, connects you
to a Customer Service Representative or TeleWaddell, our automated customer
telephone service. During normal business hours, our Customer Service staff is
available to answer your questions or update your account records. At almost any
time of the day or night, you may access TeleWaddell from a touch-tone phone to:

o    obtain information about your accounts;

o    obtain price information about other funds in the United Group; or

o    request duplicate statements.

Reports

         Statements and reports sent to you include the following:

o    confirmation statements (after every purchase, other than those purchases
     made through Automatic Investment Service, and after every exchange,
     transfer or redemption)

o    year-to-date statements (quarterly)

o    annual and semiannual reports (every six months)

         To reduce expenses, only one copy of the most recent annual and
semiannual reports will be mailed to your household, even if you have more than
one account with the Fund. Call the telephone number listed above for Customer
Service if you need copies of annual or semiannual reports or account
information.

Exchanges

         You may sell your shares and buy shares of the same class of other
funds in the United Group. As well, exchanging Class Y shareholders may buy
Class A shares of United Cash Management, Inc. You may exchange only into funds
that are legally permitted for sale in your state of residence. Note that
exchanges out of the Fund may have tax consequences for you. Before exchanging
into a fund, read its prospectus.

         The Fund reserves the right to terminate or modify these exchange
privileges at any time, upon notice in certain instances.

Automatic Transactions for Class A Shareholders

         Flexible withdrawal service lets you set up ongoing monthly, quarterly,
semiannual or annual redemptions from your account.

         Regular Investment Plans allow you to transfer money into your Fund
account automatically. While Regular Investment Plans do not guarantee a profit
and will not protect you against loss in a declining market, they can be an
excellent way to invest for retirement, a home, educational expenses, and other
long-term financial goals.

         Certain restrictions and fees imposed by the plan custodian may also
apply for retirement accounts. Speak with your Waddell & Reed financial advisor
for more information.

                            Regular Investment Plans

Automatic Investment Service
To move money from your bank account to an existing Class A Fund account

                  Minimum           Frequency
                  $25               Monthly

Funds Plus Service
To move money from United Cash Management, Inc. to the Fund whether in the same
or a different Class A account

                  Minimum           Frequency
                  $100              Monthly


Distributions and Taxes

Distributions

         The Fund distributes substantially all of its net investment income and
net capital gains to shareholders each year. Dividends are distributed monthly
from the Fund's net investment income, which includes accrued interest, earned
original issue discount, earned market discount, dividends and other income
earned on portfolio assets less expenses.

         Net capital gains (and any net realized gains from foreign currency
transactions) ordinarily are distributed in December.

         Distribution Options. When you open an account, specify on your
application how you want to receive your distributions. The Fund offers three
options:

1.     Share Payment Option. Your dividends, capital gains and other
       distributions with respect to a class will be automatically paid in
       additional shares of the same class of the Fund. If you do not indicate a
       choice on your application, you will be assigned this option.

2.     Income-Earned Option. Your capital gains and other distributions with
       respect to a class will be automatically paid in shares of the same
       class, but you will be sent a check for each dividend distribution,
       however, if the dividend distribution is less than ten dollars, the
       distribution will be automatically paid in additional shares of the same
       class of the Fund.

3.     Cash Option. You will be sent a check for your dividends, capital gains
       and other distributions if the total distribution is ten dollars or
       greater. If the distribution total is less than ten dollars, the total
       distribution will be automatically paid in additional shares of the same
       class of the Fund.

         For retirement accounts, all distributions are automatically paid in
Fund shares.

Taxes

         As with any investment, you should consider how your investment in the
Fund will be taxed. If your account is not a tax-deferred retirement account,
you should be aware of the following tax implications:

         Taxes on distributions. Dividends from the Fund's investment company
taxable income generally are taxable to you as ordinary income whether received
in cash or paid in additional Fund shares. Distributions of the Fund's net
capital gains, when designated as such, are taxable to you as long-term capital
gains, whether received in cash or paid in additional Fund shares and regardless
of the length of time you have owned your shares. For Federal income tax
purposes, your long-term capital gains (if you are a noncorporate shareholder of
the Fund) may be taxable at different rates depending on how long the Fund held
the assets generating the gains, but generally are taxed at a maximum rate of
20%.

         The Fund notifies you after each calendar year-end as to the amounts of
dividends and other distributions paid (or deemed paid) to you for that year.

         A portion of the dividends paid by the Fund, whether received in cash
or paid in additional Fund shares, may be eligible for the dividends-received
deduction allowed to corporations. The eligible portion may not exceed the
aggregate dividends received by the Fund from U.S. corporations. However,
dividends received by a corporate shareholder and deducted by it pursuant to the
dividends-received deduction are subject indirectly to the Federal alternative
minimum tax.

         Withholding. The Fund must withhold 31% of all dividends, capital gains
distributions and redemption proceeds payable to individuals and certain other
noncorporate shareholders who do not furnish the Fund with a correct taxpayer
identification number. Withholding at that rate from dividends and capital gains
distributions also is required for such shareholders who otherwise are subject
to backup withholding.

         Taxes on transactions. Your redemption of Fund shares will result in
taxable gain or loss to you, depending on whether the redemption proceeds are
more or less than what you paid for the redeemed shares (which normally includes
any sales charge paid). An exchange of Fund shares for shares of any other fund
in the United Group generally will have similar tax consequences. However,
special rules apply when you dispose of Class A Fund shares through a redemption
or exchange within ninety days after your purchase and then reacquire Class A
Fund shares or acquire Class A shares of another fund in the United Group
without paying a sales charge due to the thirty-day reinvestment privilege or
exchange privilege. See "Your Account." In these cases, any gain on the
disposition of the original Class A Fund shares would be increased, or loss
decreased, by the amount of the sales charge you paid when those shares were
acquired, and that amount will increase the adjusted basis of the shares
subsequently acquired. In addition, if you purchase Fund shares within thirty
days before or after redeeming other Fund shares (regardless of class) at a
loss, part or all of that loss will not be deductible and will increase the
basis of the newly purchased shares.

         State and local income taxes. The portion of the dividends paid by the
Fund attributable to interest earned on its U.S. Government securities generally
is not subject to state and local income taxes, although distributions by the
Fund to its shareholders of net realized gains on the disposition of those
securities are fully subject to those taxes. You should consult your tax adviser
to determine the taxability of dividends and other distributions by the Fund in
your state and locality.

         The foregoing is only a summary of some of the important Federal tax
considerations generally affecting the Fund and its shareholders; you will find
more information in the SAI. There may be other Federal, state or local tax
considerations applicable to a particular investor. You are urged to consult
your own tax adviser.


<PAGE>



The Management of the Fund


Portfolio Management

         The Fund is managed by WRIMCO, subject to the authority of the Fund's
Board of Directors. WRIMCO provides investment advice to the Fund and supervises
the Fund's investments. WRIMCO and its predecessors have served as investment
manager to each of the registered investment companies in the United Group of
Mutual Funds, Waddell & Reed Funds, Inc. and Target/United Funds, Inc. since
1940 or the inception of the company, whichever was later. WRIMCO is located at
6300 Lamar Avenue, P.O. Box 29217, Shawnee Mission, Kansas 66201-9217.

         Louise D. Rieke is primarily responsible for the management of the
portfolio of the Fund. Ms. Rieke has held her Fund responsibilities since
January 1990. She is Vice President of WRIMCO, Vice President of the Fund and
Vice President of other investment companies for which WRIMCO serves as
investment manager. From November 1985 to March 1998, Ms. Rieke was Vice
President of, and a portfolio manager for, Waddell & Reed Asset Management
Company, a former affiliate of WRIMCO. Ms. Rieke has served as the portfolio
manager for investment companies managed by WRIMCO and its predecessor since
July 1986 and has been an employee of such since May 1971.

         Other members of WRIMCO's investment management department provide
input on market outlook, economic conditions, investment research and other
considerations relating to the Fund's investments.


Management Fee

         Like all mutual funds, the Fund pays fees related to its daily
operations. Expenses paid out of the Fund's assets are reflected in its share
price or dividends; they are neither billed directly to shareholders nor
deducted from shareholder accounts.

         The Fund pays a management fee to WRIMCO for providing investment
advice and supervising its investments. The Fund also pays other expenses, which
are explained in the SAI.

The management fee is payable by the Fund at the annual rates of: 0.625% of net
assets up to $500 million; 0.60% of net assets over $500 million and up to $1
billion; 0.55% of net assets over $1 billion and up to $1.5 billion; and 0.50%
of net assets over $1.5 billion. Prior to July 1, 1999, the management fee of
the Fund was calculated by adding a group fee to a specific fee. It was accrued
and paid to WRIMCO daily. The specific fee was computed on the Fund's net asset
value as of the close of business each day at the annual rate of .15 of 1% of
its net assets. The group fee was a pro rata participation determined on the
basis of the combined net asset values of all the funds in the United Group at
the annual rates shown in the following table and then allocated pro rata to the
Fund based on the its relative net assets 

Group Fee Rate

     Annual
Group Net                         Group
Asset Level                     Fee Rate
(all dollars                    For Each
in millions)                      Level
- ------------                    ---------

From $0
     to $750                    .51 of 1%

From $750
     to $1,500                  .49 of 1%

From $1,500
     to $2,250                  .47 of 1%

From $2,250
     to $3,000                  .45 of 1%

From $3,000
     to $3,750                  .43 of 1%

From $3,750
     to $7,500                  .40 of 1%

From $7,500
     to $12,000                 .38 of 1%

Over $12,000                    .36 of 1%

         Management fees for the fiscal year ended March 31, 1999 were 0.% of
the Fund's average net assets.


<PAGE>



United High Income Fund, Inc.

Custodian                                      Underwriter
     UMB Bank, n.a.                                 Waddell & Reed, Inc.
     Kansas City, Missouri                          6300 Lamar Avenue
                                                    P. O. Box 29217
Legal Counsel                                       Shawnee Mission, Kansas
     Kirkpatrick & Lockhart LLP                         66201-9217
     1800 Massachusetts Avenue, N. W.               (913) 236-2000
     Washington, D. C.  20036                       (800) 366-5465

Independent Auditors                           Shareholder Servicing Agent
     Deloitte & Touche LLP                          Waddell & Reed
     1010 Grand Avenue                                  Services Company
     Kansas City, Missouri                          6300 Lamar Avenue
         64106-2232                                 P. O. Box 29217
                                                    Shawnee Mission, Kansas
Investment Manager                                      66201-9217
     Waddell & Reed Investment                      (913) 236-2000
         Management Company                         (800) 366-5465
     6300 Lamar Avenue
     P. O. Box 29217                           Accounting Services Agent
     Shawnee Mission, Kansas                        Waddell & Reed
         66201-9217                                     Services Company
     (913) 236-2000                                 6300 Lamar Avenue
     (800) 366-5465                                 P. O. Box 29217
                                                    Shawnee Mission, Kansas
                                                       66201-9217
                                                    (913) 236-2000
                                                    (800) 366-5465




<PAGE>



United High Income Fund, Inc.
PROSPECTUS
June 30, 1999


You can get more information about the Fund in--

o    its Statement of Additional Information (SAI) dated June 30, 1999, which
     contains detailed information about the Fund, particularly its investment
     policies and practices. You may not be aware of important information about
     the Fund unless you read both the Prospectus and the SAI. The current SAI
     is on file with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and it is
     incorporated into this Prospectus by reference (that is, the SAI is legally
     part of the Prospectus).

o    its Annual and Semiannual Reports to Shareholders, which detail the Fund's
     actual investments and include financial statements as of the close of the
     particular annual or semiannual period. The annual report also contains a
     discussion of the market conditions and investment strategies that
     significantly affected the Fund's performance during the year covered by
     the report.

To request a copy of the current SAI or copies of the Fund's most recent Annual
and Semiannual reports, without charge, or for other inquiries, contact the Fund
or Waddell & Reed, Inc. at the address and telephone number below. Copies of the
SAI, Annual and Semiannual reports may also be requested at [email protected]

Information about the Fund (including its current SAI and most recent Annual and
Semiannual Reports) is available from the SEC's web site at http://www.sec.gov
and from the SEC's Public Reference Room in Washington, D.C. You can find out
about the operation of the Public Reference Room and applicable copying charges
by calling 1-800-SEC-0330.

The Fund's SEC file number is:  811-2907.

WADDELL & REED, INC.
6300 Lamar Avenue
P. O. Box 29217
Shawnee Mission, Kansas 66201-9217
913-236-2000
800-366-5465



printed on recycled paper                                     NUP2009(6-99)



- --------
    
<PAGE>

                          UNITED HIGH INCOME FUND, INC.

                                6300 Lamar Avenue

                                 P. O. Box 29217

                       Shawnee Mission, Kansas 66201-9217

                                                   (913) 236-2000
                                                   (800) 366-5465

   
                                  June 30, 1999
    



                       STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION


   
        This Statement of Additional Information (the "SAI") is not a
prospectus. Investors should read this SAI in conjunction with the prospectus
("Prospectus") for the Class A shares and the Class Y shares of United High
Income Fund, Inc. (the "Fund") dated June 30, 1999, which may be obtained from
the Fund or its underwriter, Waddell & Reed, Inc., at the address or telephone
number shown above.
    


                                TABLE OF CONTENTS

        Performance Information ..........................................   2

   
        Investment Strategies, Policies and Practices.....................   4
    

        Investment Management and Other Services .........................  31

        Purchase, Redemption and Pricing of Shares .......................  36

        Directors and Officers ...........................................  52

        Payments to Shareholders .........................................  58

        Taxes ............................................................  59

        Portfolio Transactions and Brokerage .............................  62

        Other Information ................................................  64

        Financial Statements .............................................  66

   
        Appendix A .......................................................
    

<PAGE>



   
        United High Income Fund, Inc. is a mutual fund; an investment that pools
shareholders' money and invests it toward a specified goal. In technical terms,
the Fund is an open-end, diversified management company organized as a Maryland
corporation on January 11, 1979.
    


                             PERFORMANCE INFORMATION

        Waddell & Reed, Inc., the Fund's underwriter, or the Fund may, from time
to time, publish the Fund's total return information, yield information and/or
performance information in advertisements and sales materials.


Total Return

   
        The total return is the overall change in the value of an investment
over a given period of time. An average annual total return quotation is
computed by finding the average annual compounded rates of return over the one-,
five-, and ten-year periods that would equate the initial amount invested to the
ending redeemable value. Standardized total return information is calculated by
assuming an initial $1,000 investment and, for Class A shares, deducting the
maximum sales load of 5.75%. All dividends and distributions are assumed to be
reinvested in shares of the applicable class at net asset value for the class as
of the day the dividend or distribution is paid. No sales load is charged on
reinvested dividends or distributions on Class A shares. The formula used to
calculate the total return for a particular class of the Fund is:
    

              n
      P(1 + T)  = ERV

     Where :  P = $1,000 initial payment
              T = Average annual total return
              n = Number of years
            ERV = Ending redeemable value of the $1,000 investment 
                  for the periods shown.

        Non-standardized performance information may also be presented. For
example, the Fund may also compute total return for its Class A shares without
deduction of the sales load in which case the same formula noted above will be
used but the entire amount of the $1,000 initial payment will be assumed to have
been invested. If the sales charge applicable to Class A shares were reflected,
it would reduce the performance quoted for that class.

   
        The average annual total return quotations for Class A shares as of
March 31, 1999, which is the most recent balance sheet included in this SAI, for
the periods shown were as follows:
    
<PAGE>
                                                      With         Without
                                                   Sales Load     Sales Load
                                                    Deducted       Deducted
   
One-year period from April 1, 1998 to
    March 31, 1999:                                    %              %

Five-year period from April 1, 1994 to
    March 31, 1999:                                    %              %

Ten-year period from April 1, 1989 to
    March 31, 1999:                                    %              %
    
        Prior to July 31, 1995, the Fund offered only one class of shares to the
public. Shares outstanding on that date were designated as Class A shares. Since
that date, Class Y shares of the Fund have been available to certain
institutional investors.
   
        The average annual total return quotations for Class Y shares as of
March 31, 1999, which is the most recent balance sheet included in this SAI, for
the period shown were as follows:

One year period from April 1, 1998 to
    March 31, 1999                                                     %
    
Period from January 4, 1996* to
   
    March 31, 1999:                                                    %
    
*Date of inception.

        The Fund may also quote unaveraged or cumulative total return for a
class which reflects the change in value of an investment in that class over a
stated period of time. Cumulative total returns will be calculated according to
the formula indicated above but without averaging the rate for the number of
years in the period.

Yield
   
        Yield refers to the income generated by an investment in the Fund over a
given period of time. A yield quoted for a class of the Fund is computed by
dividing the net investment income per share of that class earned during the
period for which the yield is shown by the maximum offering price per share of
that class on the last day of that period according to the following formula:
    
                                                   6
                         Yield = 2((((a - b)/cd)+1) -1)
<PAGE>

Where, with respect to a particular class of the Fund:
           a = dividends and interest earned during the period.
           b = expenses accrued for the period (net of reimbursements).
           c = the average daily number of shares of the class outstanding
               during the period that were entitled to receive dividends.
           d = the maximum offering price per share of the class on the last day
               of the period.
   
        The yield for Class A shares of the Fund computed according to the
formula for the 30-day period ended on March 31, 1999, the date of the most
recent balance sheet included in this SAI, is %. The yield for Class Y shares of
the Fund computed according to the formula for the 30-day period ended on March
31, 1999, the date of the most recent balance sheet included in this SAI, is %.
    
        Change in yields primarily reflect different interest rates received by
the Fund as its portfolio securities change. Yield is also affected by portfolio
quality, portfolio maturity, type of securities held and operating expenses of
the applicable class.

Performance Rankings

   
        Waddell & Reed, Inc. or the Fund also may from time to time publish in
advertisements or sales material performance rankings as published by recognized
independent mutual fund statistical services such as Lipper Analytical Services,
Inc., or by publications of general interest such as Forbes, Money, The Wall
Street Journal, Business Week, Barron's, Fortune or Morningstar Mutual Fund
Values. Each class of the Fund may also compare its performance to that of other
selected mutual funds or selected recognized market indicators such as the
Standard & Poor's 500 Composite Stock Price Index and the Dow Jones Industrial
Average. Performance information may be quoted numerically or presented in a
table, graph or other illustration. In connection with a ranking, the Fund may
provide additional information, such as the particular category to which it
related, the number of funds in the category, the criteria upon which the
ranking is based, and the effect of sales charges, fee waivers and/or expense
reimbursements.
    

        All performance information that the Fund advertises or includes in
sales material is historical in nature and is not intended to represent or
guarantee future results. The value of the Fund's shares when redeemed may be
more or less than their original cost.
<PAGE>
   
                  INVESTMENT STRATEGIES, POLICIES AND PRACTICES

        This SAI supplements the information contained in the Prospectus and
contains more detailed information about the investment strategies and policies
the Fund's investment manager, Waddell & Reed Investment Management Company
("WRIMCO"), may employ and the types of instruments in which the Fund may
invest, in pursuit of the Fund's goal. A summary of the risks associated with
these instrument types and investment practices is included as well.

        WRIMCO might not buy all of these instruments or use all of these
techniques, or use them to the full extent permitted by the Fund's investment
policies and restrictions. WRIMCO buys an instrument or uses a technique only if
it believes that doing so will help the Fund achieve its goal. See "Investment
Restrictions" for a listing of the fundamental and non-fundamental (e.g.,
operating) investment restrictions and policies of the Fund.
    

Securities - General
   
The Fund may invest in securities including common stock, preferred stock and
debt securities. Although common stocks and other equity securities have a
history of long-term growth in value, their prices tend to fluctuate in the
short term, particularly those of smaller companies. The Fund may invest in
preferred stock that is rated by an established rating service or, if unrated,
judged by WRIMCO to be of equivalent quality. Debt securities have varying
levels of sensitivity to changes in interest rates and varying degrees of
quality. As a general matter, however, when interest rates rise, the values of
fixed-rate securities fall and, conversely, when interest rates fall, the values
of fixed-rate debt rise. Similarly, long-term bonds are generally more sensitive
to interest rate changes than shorter-term bonds.

        Lower quality debt securities (commonly called "junk bonds") are
considered to be speculative and involve greater risk of default or price
changes due to changes in the issuer's creditworthiness. The market prices of
these securities may fluctuate more than high-quality securities and may decline
significantly in periods of general economic difficulty. The market for
lower-rated debt securities may be thinner and less active than that for
higher-rated debt securities, which can adversely affect the prices at which the
former are sold. Adverse publicity and changing investor perceptions may
decrease the values and liquidity of lower-rated debt securities, especially in
a thinly traded market. Valuation becomes more difficult and judgment plays a
greater role in valuing lower-rated debt securities than with respect to
securities for which more external sources of quotations and last sale
information are available. Since the risk of default is higher for lower-rated
debt securities, WRIMCO's research and credit analysis are an especially
important part of managing securities of this type held by the Fund. WRIMCO
continuously monitors the issuers of lower-rated debt securities in the Fund's
portfolio in an attempt to determine if the issuers will have sufficient cash
flow and profits to meet required principal and interest payments. The Fund may
choose, at its expense or in conjunction with others, to pursue litigation or
otherwise exercise its rights as a security holder to seek to protect the
interests of security holders if it determines this to be in the best interest
of the Fund's shareholders.

        The Fund may invest in debt securities rated in any rating category of
the established rating services, including securities rated in the lowest
category (such as those rated D by S&P and C by MIS). Debt securities rated D by
S&P or C by MIS are in payment default or are regarded as having extremely poor
prospects of ever attaining any real investment standing. Debt securities rated
at least BBB by S&P or Baa by MIS are considered to be investment grade debt
securities. Securities rated BBB or Baa may have speculative characteristics. In
addition, the Fund will treat unrated securities judged by WRIMCO to be of
equivalent quality to a rated security having that rating.

        While credit ratings are only one factor WRIMCO relies on in evaluating
high-yield debt securities, certain risks are associated with credit ratings.
Credit ratings evaluate the safety of principal and interest payments, not
market value risk. Credit ratings for individual securities may change from time
to time, and the Fund may retain a portfolio security whose rating has been
changed.
    

        The Fund may purchase debt securities whose principal amount at maturity
is dependent upon the performance of a specified equity security. The issuer of
such debt securities, typically an investment banking firm, is unaffiliated with
the issuer of the equity security to whose performance the debt security is
linked. Equity-linked debt securities differ from ordinary debt securities in
that the principal amount received at maturity is not fixed, but is based on the
price of the linked equity security at the time the debt security matures. The
performance of equity-linked debt securities depends primarily on the
performance of the linked equity security and may also be influenced by interest
rate changes. In addition, although the debt securities are typically adjusted
for diluting events such as stock splits, stock dividends and certain other
events affecting the market value of the linked equity security, the debt
securities are not adjusted for subsequent issuances of the linked equity
security for cash. Such an issuance could adversely affect the price of the debt
security. In addition to the equity risk relating to the linked equity security,
such debt securities are also subject to credit risk with regard to the issuer
of the debt security. In general, however, such debt securities are less
volatile than the equity securities to which they are linked.

   
        The Fund may invest in convertible securities. A convertible security is
a bond, debenture, note, preferred stock or other security that may be converted
into or exchanged for a prescribed amount of common stock of the same or
different issuer within a particular period of time at a specified price or
formula. Convertible securities generally have higher yields than common stocks
of the same or similar issuers, but lower yields than comparable nonconvertible
securities, are less subject to fluctuation in the value that the underlying
stock because they have fixed income characteristics, and provide the potential
for capital appreciation if the market price of the underlying common stock
increases.

        The value of a convertible security is influenced by changes in interest
rates, with investment value declining as interest rates increase and increasing
as interest rates decline. The credit standing of the issuer and other factors
also may have an effect on the convertible security's investment value.
    

        The Fund may also invest in a type of convertible preferred stock that
pays a cumulative, fixed dividend that is senior to, and expected to be in
excess of, the dividends paid on the common stock of the issuer. At the
mandatory conversion date, the preferred stock is converted into not more than
one share of the issuer's common stock at the "call price" that was established
at the time the preferred stock was issued. If the price per share of the
related common stock on the mandatory conversion date is less than the call
price, the holder of the preferred stock will nonetheless receive only one share
of common stock for each share of preferred stock (plus cash in the amount of
any accrued but unpaid dividends). At any time prior to the mandatory conversion
date, the issuer may redeem the preferred stock upon issuing to the holder a
number of shares of common stock equal to the call price of the preferred stock
in effect on the date of redemption divided by the market value of the common
stock, with such market value typically determined one or two trading days prior
to the date notice of redemption is given. The issuer must also pay the holder
of the preferred stock cash in an amount equal to any accrued but unpaid
dividends on the preferred stock. This convertible preferred stock is subject to
the same market risk as the common stock of the issuer, except to the extent
that such risk is mitigated by the higher dividend paid on the preferred stock.
The opportunity for equity appreciation afforded by an investment in such
convertible preferred stock, however, is limited, because in the event the
market value of the issuer's common stock increases to or above the call price
of the preferred stock, the issuer may (and would be expected to) call the
preferred stock for redemption at the call price. This convertible preferred
stock is also subject to credit risk with regard to the ability of the issuer to
pay the dividend established upon issuance of the preferred stock. Generally,
convertible preferred stock is less volatile than the related common stock of
the issuer.

Specific Securities and Investment Practices

    Common Stocks

        As a fundamental policy, the Fund will not purchase, or otherwise
voluntarily acquire, any common stocks unless, after such purchase or
acquisition, not more than 20% of the value of its total assets would be
invested in common stocks. This 20% limit includes common stocks acquired on
conversion of convertible securities, on exercise of warrants or call options,
or in any other voluntary manner. It does not include premiums paid or received
in connection with put or call options, or the amount of any margin deposits as
to options or futures contracts. If the Fund is invested up to 20% in common
stocks, it may still purchase or sell futures and options relating to common
stocks. The common stocks that the Fund purchases will be selected to try to
achieve either a combination of the Fund's primary and secondary goals, in which
case they will be dividend-paying, or its secondary goal, in which case they may
not be dividend-paying; however, the Fund does not intend to invest more than
10% of its total assets in non-dividend-paying common stocks.

    U.S. Government Securities

   
        Securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government or its agencies
or instrumentalities ("U.S. Government securities") are high quality debt
instruments issued or guaranteed as to principal or interest by the U.S.
Treasury or an agency or instrumentality of the U.S. Government. These
securities include Treasury Bills (which mature within one year of the date they
are issued), Treasury Notes (which have maturities of one to ten years) and
Treasury Bonds (which generally have maturities of more than 10 years). All such
Treasury securities are backed by the full faith and credit of the United
States.
    

        U.S. Government agencies and instrumentalities that issue or guarantee
securities include, but are not limited to, the Federal Housing Administration,
Fannie Mae (formerly, the Federal National Mortgage Association), Farmers Home
Administration, Export-Import Bank of the United States, Small Business
Administration, Government National Mortgage Association ("Ginnie Mae"), General
Services Administration, Central Bank for Cooperatives, Federal Home Loan Banks,
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation ("Freddie Mac"), Farm Credit Banks,
Maritime Administration, the Tennessee Valley Authority, the Resolution Funding
Corporation and the Student Loan Marketing Association.

        Securities issued or guaranteed by U.S. Government agencies and
instrumentalities are not always supported by the full faith and credit of the
United States. Some, such as securities issued by the Federal Home Loan Banks,
are backed by the right of the agency or instrumentality to borrow from the
Treasury. Others, such as securities issued by Fannie Mae, are supported only by
the credit of the instrumentality and by a pool of mortgage assets. If the
securities are not backed by the full faith and credit of the United States, the
owner of the securities must look principally to the agency issuing the
obligation for repayment and may not be able to assert a claim against the
United States in the event that the agency or instrumentality does not meet its
commitment.

   
        U.S. Government securities may include mortgage-backed securities issued
by U.S. Government agencies or instrumentalities including, but not limited to,
Ginnie Mae, Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. These mortgage-backed securities include
pass-through securities, participation certificates and collateralized mortgage
obligations. See "Mortgage-Backed and Asset-Backed Securities." Timely payment
of principal and interest on Ginnie Mae pass-throughs is guaranteed by the full
faith and credit of the United States. Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae are both
instrumentalities of the U.S. Government, but their obligations are not backed
by the full faith and credit of the United States. It is possible that the
availability and the marketability (i.e., liquidity) of the securities discussed
in this section could be adversely affected by actions of the U.S. Government to
tighten the availability of its credit.

    Money Market Instruments

        Money market instruments are high-quality, short-term debt instruments
that present minimal credit risk. They may include U.S. Government securities,
commercial paper and other short-term corporate obligations, and certificates of
deposit and other financial institution obligations. These instruments may carry
fixed or variable interest rates.
    

    Zero Coupon Securities

   
        Zero coupon securities are debt obligations that do not entitle the
holder to any periodic payment of interest prior to maturity or that specify a
future date when the securities begin to pay current interest; instead, they are
sold at a deep discount from their face value and are redeemed at face value
when they mature. Because zero coupon securities do not pay current income,
their prices can be very volatile when interest rates change and generally are
subject to greater price fluctuations in response to changing interest rates
than prices of comparable maturities that make current distributions of interest
in cash.

        The Fund may invest in zero coupon securities that are "stripped" U.S.
Treasury notes and bonds, zero coupon bonds of corporate issuers and other
securities that are issued with original issue discount ("OID"). The Federal tax
law requires that a holder of a security with OID accrue a ratable portion of
the OID on the security as income each year, even though the holder may receive
no interest payment on the security during the year. Accordingly, although the
Fund will receive no payments on its zero coupon securities prior to their
maturity or disposition, it will have current income attributable to those
securities and includable in the dividends paid to its shareholders. Those
dividends will be paid from the Fund's cash assets or by liquidation of
portfolio securities, if necessary, at a time when the Fund otherwise might not
have done so.
    

        A broker-dealer creates a derivative zero by separating the interest and
principal components of a U.S. Treasury security and selling them as two
individual securities. CATS (Certificates of Accrual on Treasury Securities),
TIGRs (Treasury Investment Growth Receipts), and TRs (Treasury Receipts) are
examples of derivative zeros.

        The Federal Reserve Bank creates STRIPS (Separate Trading of Registered
Interest and Principal of Securities) by separating the interest and principal
components of an outstanding U.S. Treasury security and selling them as
individual securities. Bonds issued by the Resolution Funding Corporation
(REFCORP) and the Financing Corporation (FICO) can also be separated in this
fashion. Original issue zeros are zero coupon securities originally issued by
the U.S. Government, a government agency or a corporation in zero coupon form.

    Mortgage-Backed and Asset-Backed Securities

   
        Mortgage-Backed Securities. Mortgage-backed securities represent direct
or indirect participations in, or are secured by and payable from, mortgage
loans secured by real property and include single- and multi-class pass-through
securities and collateralized mortgage obligations. Multi-class pass-through
securities and collateralized mortgage obligations are collectively referred to
in this SAI as "CMOs." Some CMOs are directly supported by other CMOs, which in
turn are supported by mortgage pools. Investors typically receive payments out
of the interest and principal on the underlying mortgages. The portions of the
payments that investors receive, as well as the priority of their rights to
receive payments, are determined by the specific terms of the CMO class.
    

        The U.S. Government mortgage-backed securities in which the Fund may
invest include mortgage-backed securities issued or guaranteed as to the payment
of principal and interest (but not as to market value) by Ginnie Mae, Fannie
Mae, or Freddie Mac. Other mortgage-backed securities are issued by private
issuers, generally originators of and investors in mortgage loans, including
savings associations, mortgage bankers, commercial banks, investment bankers and
special purpose entities. Payments of principal and interest (but not the market
value) of such private mortgage-backed securities may be supported by pools of
mortgage loans or other mortgage-backed securities that are guaranteed, directly
or indirectly, by the U.S. Government or one of its agencies or
instrumentalities, or they may be issued without any government guarantee of the
underlying mortgage assets but with some form of non-government credit
enhancement. These credit enhancements do not protect investors from changes in
market value.

   
        The Fund may purchase mortgage-backed securities issued by both
government and non-government entities such as banks, mortgage lenders, or other
financial institutions. Other types of mortgage-backed securities will likely be
developed in the future, and the Fund may invest in them if WRIMCO determines
they are consistent with the Fund's goals and investment policies.
    

        Stripped Mortgage-Backed Securities. Stripped mortgage-backed securities
are created when a U.S. Government agency or a financial institution separates
the interest and principal components of a mortgage-backed security and sells
them as individual securities. The holder of the "principal-only" security
("PO") receives the principal payments made by the underlying mortgage-backed
security, while the holder of the "interest-only" security ("IO") receives
interest payments from the same underlying security.

   
        For example, interest-only ("IO") classes are entitled to receive all or
a portion of the interest, but none (or only a nominal amount) of the principal
payments, from the underlying mortgage assets. If the mortgage assets underlying
an IO experience greater than anticipated principal prepayments, then the total
amount of interest allocable to the IO class, and therefore the yield to
investors, generally will be reduced. In some instances, an investor in an IO
may fail to recoup all of the investor's initial investment, even if the
security is government guaranteed or considered to be of the highest quality.
Conversely, principal-only ("PO") classes are entitled to receive all or a
portion of the principal payments, but none of the interest, from the underlying
mortgage assets. PO classes are purchased at substantial discounts from par, and
the yield to investors will be reduced if principal payments are slower than
expected. IOs, POs and other CMOs involve special risks, and evaluating them
requires special knowledge.
    

        Asset-Backed Securities. Asset-backed securities have structural
characteristics similar to mortgage-backed securities, as discussed above.
However, the underlying assets are not first lien mortgage loans or interests
therein, but include assets such as motor vehicle installment sales contracts,
other installment sale contracts, home equity loans, leases of various types of
real and personal property and receivables from revolving credit (credit card)
agreements. Such assets are securitized through the use of trusts or special
purpose corporations. Payments or distributions of principal and interest may be
guaranteed up to a certain amount and for a certain time period by a letter of
credit or pool insurance policy issued by a financial institution unaffiliated
with the issuer, or other credit enhancements may be present. The value of
asset-backed securities may also depend on the creditworthiness of the servicing
agent for the loan pool, the originator of the loans, or the financial
institution providing the credit enhancement.

        Special Characteristics of Mortgage-Backed and Asset-Backed Securities.
The yield characteristics of mortgage- and asset-backed securities differ from
those of traditional debt securities. Among the major differences are that
interest and principal payments are made more frequently, usually monthly, and
that principal may be prepaid at any time because the underlying mortgage loans
or other obligations generally may be prepaid at any time. Prepayments on a pool
of mortgage loans are influenced by a variety of economic, geographic, social
and other factors, including changes in mortgagors' housing needs, job
transfers, unemployment, mortgagors' net equity in the mortgaged properties and
servicing decisions. Generally, however, prepayments on fixed-rate mortgage
loans will increase during a period of falling interest rates and decrease
during a period of rising interest rates. Similar factors apply to prepayments
on asset-backed securities, but the receivables underlying asset-backed
securities generally are of a shorter maturity and thus are likely to experience
substantial prepayments. Such securities, however, often provide that for a
specified time period the issuers will replace receivables in the pool that are
repaid with comparable obligations. If the issuer is unable to do so, repayment
of principal on the asset-backed securities may commence at an earlier date.

        The rate of interest on mortgage-backed securities is lower than the
interest rates paid on the mortgages included in the underlying pool due to the
annual fees paid to the servicer of the mortgage pool for passing through
monthly payments to certificateholders and to any guarantor, and due to any
yield retained by the issuer. Actual yield to the holder may vary from the
coupon rate, even if adjustable, if the mortgage-backed securities are purchased
or traded in the secondary market at a premium or discount. In addition, there
is normally some delay between the time the issuer receives mortgage payments
from the servicer and the time the issuer makes the payments on the
mortgage-backed securities, and this delay reduces the effective yield to the
holder of such securities.

   
        Yields on pass-through securities are typically quoted by investment
dealers and vendors based on the maturity of the underlying instruments and the
associated average life assumption. The average life of pass-through pools
varies with the maturities of the underlying mortgage loans. A pool's term may
be shortened by unscheduled or early payments of principal on the underlying
mortgages. Because prepayment rates of individual pools vary widely, it is not
possible to predict accurately the average life of a particular pool. In the
past, a common industry practice has been to assume that prepayments on pools of
fixed-rate 30-year mortgages would result in a 12-year average life for the
pool. At present, mortgage pools, particularly those with loans with other
maturities or different characteristics, are priced on an assumption of average
life determined for each pool. In periods of declining interest rates, the rate
of prepayment tends to increase, thereby shortening the actual average life of a
pool of mortgage-related securities. Conversely, in periods of rising interest
rates, the rate of prepayment tends to decrease, thereby lengthening the actual
average life of the pool. Changes in the rate or "speed" of these payments can
cause the value of the mortgage backed securities to fluctuate rapidly. However,
these effects may not be present, or may differ in degree, if the mortgage loans
in the pools have adjustable interest rates or other special payment terms, such
as a prepayment charge. Actual prepayment experience may cause the yield of
mortgage-backed securities to differ from the assumed average life yield.

        The market for privately issued mortgage-backed and asset-backed
securities is smaller and less liquid than the market for U.S. Government
mortgage-backed securities. CMO classes may be specifically structured in a
manner that provides any of a wide variety of investment characteristics, such
as yield, effective maturity and interest rate sensitivity. As market conditions
change, however, and especially during periods of rapid or unanticipated changes
in market interest rates, the attractiveness of some CMO classes and the ability
of the structure to provide the anticipated investment characteristics may be
reduced. These changes can result in volatility in the market value and in some
instances reduced liquidity, of the CMO class.
    

    Variable or Floating Rate Instruments

        Variable or floating rate instruments (including notes purchased
directly from issuers) bear variable or floating interest rates and may carry
rights that permit holders to demand payment of the unpaid principal balance
plus accrued interest from the issuers or certain financial intermediaries on
dates prior to their stated maturities. Floating rate securities have interest
rates that change whenever there is a change in a designated base rate while
variable rate instruments provide for a specified periodic adjustment in the
interest rate. These formulas are designed to result in a market value for the
instrument that approximates its par value.

   
    Foreign Securities and Currencies

        The Fund may invest in the securities of foreign issuers, including
depositary receipts. In general, depositary receipts are securities convertible
into and evidencing ownership of securities of foreign corporate issuers,
although depositary receipts may not necessarily be denominated in the same
currency as the securities into which they may be converted. American depositary
receipts, in registered form, are dollar-denominated receipts typically issued
by a U.S. bank or trust company evidencing ownership of the underlying
securities. International depositary receipts and European depositary receipts,
in bearer form, are foreign receipts evidencing a similar arrangement and are
designed for use by non-U.S. investors and traders in non-U.S. markets. Global
depositary receipts are more recently developed receipts designed to facilitate
the trading of securities of foreign issuers by U.S. and non-U.S. investors and
traders.

        WRIMCO believes that there are investment opportunities as well as risks
in investing in foreign securities. Individual foreign economies may differ
favorably or unfavorably from the U.S. economy or each other in such matters as
gross national product, rate of inflation, capital reinvestment, resource
self-sufficiency and balance of payments position. Individual foreign companies
may also differ favorably or unfavorably from domestic companies in the same
industry. Foreign currencies may be stronger or weaker than the U.S. dollar or
than each other. Thus, the value of securities denominated in or indexed to
foreign currencies, and of dividends and interest from such securities, can
change significantly when foreign currencies strengthen or weaken relative to
the U.S. dollar. WRIMCO believes that the Fund's ability to invest a substantial
portion of its assets abroad might enable it to take advantage of these
differences and strengths where they are favorable.

        However, foreign securities and foreign currencies involve additional
significant risks, apart from the risks inherent in U.S. investments. Foreign
securities markets generally have less trading volume and less liquidity than
U.S. markets, and prices on some foreign markets can be highly volatile. Many
foreign countries lack uniform accounting and disclosure standards comparable to
those applicable to U.S. companies, and it may be more difficult to obtain
reliable information regarding an issuer's financial conditions and operations.
In addition, the costs of foreign investing, including withholding taxes,
brokerage commissions and custodial costs, are generally higher than for U.S.
investments.

        Foreign markets may offer less protection to investors than U.S.
markets. Foreign issuers, brokers and securities markets may be subject to less
government supervision. Foreign security trading practices, including those
involving the release of assets in advance of payment, may involve increased
risks in the event of a failed trade or the insolvency of a broker-dealer, and
may involve substantial delays. It may also be difficult to enforce legal rights
in foreign countries.

        Investing abroad also involves different political and economic risks.
Foreign investments may be affected by actions of foreign governments adverse to
the interests of U.S. investors, including the possibility of expropriation or
nationalization of assets, confiscatory taxation, restrictions on U.S.
investment or on the ability to repatriate assets or convert currency into U.S.
dollars, or other government intervention. There may be greater possibility of
default by foreign governments or government-sponsored enterprises. Investments
in foreign countries also involve a risk of local political, economic, or social
instability, military action or unrest, or adverse diplomatic developments.
These is no assurance that WRIMCO will be able to anticipate these potential
events or counter their effects.

        The considerations noted above generally are intensified in developing
countries. A developing country is a nation that, in WRIMCO's opinion, is likely
to experience long-term gross domestic product growth above that expected to
occur in the United States, the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, Japan
and Canada. Developing countries may have relatively unstable governments,
economies based on only a few industries and securities markets that trade a
small number of securities.

        Certain foreign securities impose restrictions on transfer within the
United States or to U.S. persons. Although securities subject to transfer
restrictions may be marketable abroad, they may be less liquid than foreign
securities of the same class that are not subject to such restrictions.

        The Fund may purchase and sell foreign currency and invest in foreign
currency deposits, and may enter into forward currency contracts, as described
in this SAI. The Fund may incur a transaction charge in connection with the
exchange of currency. Currency conversion involves dealer spreads and other
costs, although commissions are not usually charged. See "Options, Futures and
Other Strategies - Forward Currency Contracts" below.
    

    Restricted Securities

   
        Restricted securities are securities that are subject to legal or
contractual restrictions or resale. However, restricted securities generally can
be sold in privately negotiated transactions, pursuant to an exemption from
registration under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or in a registered
public offering. 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 it decides to seek registration and the time the Fund may be
permitted to sell a security 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 prevailed when it decided to seek
registration of the security.

        There are risks associated with investment in restricted securities in
that there can be no assurance of a ready market for resale. Also, the
contractual restrictions on resale might prevent the Fund from reselling the
securities at a time when such sale would be desirable. Restricted securities in
which the Fund seeks to invest need not be listed or admitted to trading on a
foreign or domestic exchange and may be less liquid than listed securities.
Certain restricted securities, e.g., Rule 144A securities, may be determined to
be liquid in accordance with guidelines adopted by the Board of Directors. See
"Illiquid Investments" below.
    

    Lending Securities

   
        Securities loans may be made on a short-term or long-term basis for the
purpose of increasing the Fund's income. If the Fund lends securities, the
borrower pays the Fund an amount equal to the dividends or interest on the
securities that the Fund would have received if it had not lent the securities.
The Fund also receives additional compensation. The Fund makes loans of its
securities only to parties deemed by WRIMCO to be creditworthy.

        Any securities loans that the Fund makes must be collateralized in
accordance with applicable regulatory requirements (the "Guidelines"). Under the
present Guidelines, the collateral must consist of cash, U.S. Government
securities or bank letters of credit, at least equal in value to the market
value of the securities lent on each day that the loan is outstanding. If the
market value of the lent securities exceeds the value of the collateral, the
borrower must add more collateral so that it at least equals the market value of
the securities lent. If the market value of the securities decreases, the
borrower is entitled to return of the excess collateral.

        There are two methods of receiving compensation for making loans. The
first is to receive a negotiated loan fee from the borrower. This method is
available for all three types of collateral. The second method, which is not
available when letters of credit are used as collateral, is for the Fund to
receive interest on the investment of the cash collateral or to receive interest
on the U.S. Government securities used as collateral. Part of the interest 
received in either case may be shared with the borrower.
    

        The letters of credit that the Fund may accept as collateral are
agreements by banks (other than the borrowers of the Fund's securities), entered
into at the request of the borrower and for its account and risk, under which
the banks are obligated to pay to the Fund, while the letter is in effect,
amounts demanded by the Fund if the demand meets the terms of the letter. The
Fund's right to make this demand secures the borrower's obligations to it. The
terms of any such letters and the creditworthiness of the banks providing them
(which might include the Fund's custodian bank) must be satisfactory to the
Fund. Under the Fund's current securities lending procedures, the Fund may lend
securities only to broker-dealers and financial institutions deemed creditworthy
by WRIMCO. The Fund will make loans only under rules of the NYSE, which
presently require the borrower to give the securities back to the Fund within
five business days after the Fund gives notice to do so. If the Fund loses its
voting rights on securities loaned, it will have the securities returned to it
in time to vote them if a material event affecting the investment is to be voted
on. The Fund may pay reasonable finder's, administrative and custodian fees in
connection with loans of securities.

        There may be risks of delay in receiving additional collateral from the
borrower if the market value of the securities loaned goes up, risks of delay in
recovering the securities loaned or even loss of rights in the collateral should
the borrower of the securities fail financially.

        Some, but not all, of these rules are necessary to meet requirements of
certain laws relating to securities loans. These rules will not be changed
unless the change is permitted under these requirements. These requirements do
not cover the present rules, which may be changed without shareholder vote, as
to (i) whom securities may be loaned, (ii) the investment of cash collateral, or
(iii) voting rights.

    Repurchase Agreements

        The Fund may purchase securities subject to repurchase agreements. The
Fund will not enter into a repurchase transaction that will cause more than 10%
of its net assets to be invested in illiquid investments, which include
repurchase agreements not terminable within seven days. See "Illiquid
Investments." A repurchase agreement is an instrument under which the Fund
purchases a security and the seller (normally a commercial bank or
broker-dealer) agrees, at the time of purchase, that it will repurchase the
security at a specified time and price. The amount by which the resale price is
greater than the purchase price reflects an agreed-upon market interest rate
effective for the period of the agreement. The return on the securities subject
to the repurchase agreement may be more or less than the return on the
repurchase agreement.

        The majority of the repurchase agreements in which the Fund would engage
are overnight transactions, and the delivery pursuant to the resale typically
will occur within one to five days of the purchase. The primary risk is that the
Fund may suffer a loss if the seller fails to pay the agreed-upon amount on the
delivery date and that amount is greater than the resale price of the underlying
securities and other collateral held by the Fund. In the event of bankruptcy or
other default by the seller, there may be possible delays and expenses in
liquidating the underlying securities or other collateral, decline in their
value and loss of interest. The return on such collateral may be more or less
than that from the repurchase agreement. The Fund's repurchase agreements will
be structured so as to fully collateralize the loans. In other words, the value
of the underlying securities, which will be held by the Fund's custodian bank or
by a third party that qualifies as a custodian under Section 17(f) of the
Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "1940 Act"), is and, during the
entire term of the agreement, will remain at least equal to the value of the
loan, including the accrued interest earned thereon. Repurchase agreements are
entered into only with those entities approved by WRIMCO on the basis of
criteria established by the Board of Directors.

    When-Issued and Delayed-Delivery Transactions

   
        The Fund may purchase any securities in which it may invest on a
when-issued or delayed-delivery basis or sell them on a delayed-delivery basis.
In either case, payment and delivery for the securities take place at a future
date. The securities so purchased or sold by the Fund are subject to market
fluctuation; their value may be less or more when delivered than the purchase
price paid or received. When purchasing securities on a when issued or
delayed-delivery basis, the Fund assumes the rights and risks of ownership,
including the risk of price and yield fluctuations. No interest accrues to the
Fund until delivery and payment is completed. When the Fund makes a commitment
to purchase securities on a when-issued or delayed-delivery basis, it will
record the transaction and thereafter reflect the value of the securities in
determining its net asset value per share. When the Fund sells a security on a
delayed-delivery basis, the Fund does not participate in further gains or losses
with respect to the security. When the Fund makes a commitment to sell
securities on a delayed basis, it will record the transaction and thereafter
value the securities at the sales price in determining the Fund's net asset
value per share. If the other party to a delayed-delivery transaction fails to
deliver or pay for the securities, the Fund could miss a favorable price or
yield opportunity, or could suffer a loss.
    

        Ordinarily the Fund purchases securities on a when-issued or
delayed-delivery basis with the intention of actually taking delivery of the
securities. However, before the securities are delivered to the Fund and before
it has paid for them (the "settlement date"), the Fund could sell the securities
if WRIMCO decided it was advisable to do so for investment reasons. The Fund
will hold aside or segregate cash or liquid assets, other than those purchased
on a when-issued or delayed-delivery basis, at least equal to the amount it will
have to pay on the settlement date; these other securities may, however, be sold
at or before the settlement date to pay the purchase price of the when-issued or
delayed-delivery securities.

   
    Investment Company Securities

        The Fund may purchase securities of closed-end investment companies. As
a shareholder in an investment company, the Fund would bear its pro rata share
of that investment company's expenses, which could result in duplication of
certain fees, including management and administrative fees.
    

    Illiquid Investments

   
         Illiquid investments are investments that cannot be sold or otherwise
disposed of in the ordinary course of business within seven days at
approximately the price at which they are valued. Investments currently
considered to be illiquid include:
    

      (i)   repurchase agreements not terminable within seven days;
     (ii)   restricted securities not determined to be liquid pursuant to
            guidelines established by the Fund's Board of Directors;
    (iii)   securities for which market quotations are not readily available;
   
     (iv)   bank deposits, unless they are payable at principal amount plus
            accrued interest on demand or within seven days after demand;
    
     (iv)   securities involved in swap, cap, collar and floor transactions;
      (v)   non-government stripped fixed-rate mortgage-backed securities; and
     (vi)   over-the-counter ("OTC") options and their underlying collateral.

        The assets used as cover for OTC options written by the Fund will be
considered illiquid unless the OTC options are sold to qualified dealers who
agree that the Fund may repurchase any OTC option it writes at a maximum price
to be calculated by a formula set forth in the option agreement. The cover for
an OTC option written subject to this procedure would be considered illiquid
only to the extent that the maximum repurchase price under the formula exceeds
the intrinsic value of the option.

   
        If through a change in values, net assets, or other circumstances, the
Fund were in a position where more than 10% of its net assets were invested in
illiquid securities, it would seek to take appropriate steps to protect
liquidity.
    

    Indexed Securities

   
         The Fund may purchase securities the value of which varies in relation
to the value of other securities, securities indices, currencies, precious
metals or other commodities, or other financial indicators, subject to its
operating policy regarding derivative instruments. Indexed securities typically,
but not always, are debt securities or deposits whose value at maturity or
coupon rate is determined by reference to a specific instrument or statistic.
The performance of indexed securities depends to a great extent on the
performance of the security, currency or other instrument to which they are
indexed and may also be influenced by interest rate changes in the United States
and abroad. At the same time, indexed securities are subject to the credit risks
associated with the issuer of the security and their values may decline
substantially if the issuer's creditworthiness deteriorates. Indexed securities
may be more volatile than the underlying investments. Gold-indexed securities,
for example, typically provide for a maturity value that depends on the price of
gold, resulting in a security whose price tends to rise and fall together with
gold prices. Currency-indexed securities typically are short-term to
intermediate-term debt securities whose maturity values or interest rates are
determined by reference to the values of one or more specified foreign
currencies, and may offer higher yields than U.S. dollar-denominated securities
of equivalent issuers. Currency-indexed securities may be positively or
negatively indexed; that is, their maturity value may increase when the
specified currency value increases, resulting in a security that performs
similarly to a foreign-denominated instrument, or their maturity value may
decline when foreign currencies increase, resulting in a security whose price
characteristics are similar to a put on the underlying currency.
Currency-indexed securities may also have prices that depend on the values of a
number of different foreign currencies relative to each other.
    

         Recent issuers of indexed securities have included banks, corporations,
and certain U.S. Government agencies. Certain indexed securities that are not
traded on an established market may be deemed illiquid.

    Warrants and Rights

        Warrants are options to purchase equity securities at specific prices
valid for a specific period of time. Their prices do not necessarily move
parallel to the prices of the underlying securities. Rights are similar to
warrants, but normally have a short duration and are distributed directly by the
issuer to its shareholders. Rights and warrants have no voting rights, receive
no dividends and have no rights with respect to the assets of the issuer.
Warrants and rights are highly volatile and, therefore, more susceptible to a
sharp decline in value than the underlying security might be. They are also
generally less liquid than an investment in the underlying shares.

    Real Estate

        The Fund has an operating policy, which may be changed without
shareholder approval, which provides that the Fund may not invest in real estate
or any non-liquid interest in real estate trusts. The Fund may, however, buy
obligations or instruments which it may otherwise buy even though the issuer
invests in real estate or interests in real estate.

    Options, Futures and Other Strategies

   
        General. WRIMCO may use certain options, futures contracts (sometimes
referred to as "futures"), options on futures contracts, forward currency
contracts, swaps, caps, collars, floors, indexed securities and other derivative
instruments (collectively, "Financial Instruments") to attempt to enhance income
or yield or to attempt to hedge the Fund's investments. The strategies described
below may be used in an attempt to manage the Fund's foreign currency exposure
as well as other risks of the Fund's investments that can affect fluctuation in
its net asset value.
    

        Generally, the Fund may purchase and sell any type of Financial
Instrument. However, as an operating policy, the Fund will only purchase or sell
a particular Financial Instrument if the Fund is authorized to invest in the
type of asset by which the return on, or value of, the Financial Instrument is
primarily measured. Since the Fund is authorized to invest in foreign
securities, it may purchase and sell foreign currency derivatives.

        Hedging strategies can be broadly categorized as "short hedges" and
"long hedges." A short hedge is a purchase or sale of a Financial Instrument
intended partially or fully to offset potential declines in the value of one or
more investments held in the Fund's portfolio. Thus, in a short hedge, the Fund
takes a position in a Financial Instrument whose price is expected to move in
the opposite direction of the price of the investment being hedged.

        Conversely, a long hedge is a purchase or sale of a Financial Instrument
intended partially or fully to offset potential increases in the acquisition
cost of one or more investments that the Fund intends to acquire. Thus, in a
long hedge, the Fund takes a position in a Financial Instrument whose price is
expected to move in the same direction as the price of the prospective
investment being hedged. A long hedge is sometimes referred to as an
anticipatory hedge. In an anticipatory hedge transaction, the Fund does not own
a corresponding security and, therefore, the transaction does not relate to a
security the Fund owns. Rather, it relates to a security that the Fund intends
to acquire. If the Fund does not complete the hedge by purchasing the security
it anticipated purchasing, the effect on the Fund's portfolio is the same as if
the transaction were entered into for speculative purposes.

        Financial Instruments on securities generally are used to attempt to
hedge against price movements in one or more particular securities positions
that the Fund owns or intends to acquire. Financial Instruments on indices, in
contrast, generally are used to attempt to hedge against price movements in
market sectors in which the Fund has invested or expects to invest. Financial
Instruments on debt securities may be used to hedge either individual securities
or broad debt market sectors.

      The use of Financial Instruments is subject to applicable regulations of
the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC"), the several exchanges upon
which they are traded and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (the "CFTC").
In addition, the Fund's ability to use Financial Instruments will be limited by
tax considerations. See "Taxes."

   
        In addition to the instruments, strategies and risks described below,
WRIMCO expects to discover additional opportunities in connection with Financial
Instruments and other similar or related techniques. These new opportunities may
become available as WRIMCO develops new techniques, as regulatory authorities
broaden the range of permitted transactions and as new Financial Instruments or
other techniques are developed. WRIMCO may utilize these opportunities to the
extent that they are consistent with the Fund's goals and permitted by the
Fund's investment limitations and applicable regulatory authorities. The Fund
might not use any of these strategies, and there can be no assurance that any
strategy used will succeed. The Fund's Prospectus or SAI will be supplemented to
the extent that new products or techniques involve materially different risks
than those described below or in the Prospectus.

        Special Risks. The use of Financial Instruments involves special
considerations and risks, certain of which are described below. In general these
techniques may increase the volatility of the Fund and may involve a small
investment of cash relative to the magnitude of the risk assumed. Risks
pertaining to particular Financial Instruments are described in the sections
that follow.

        (1) Successful use of most Financial Instruments depends upon WRIMCO's
ability to predict movements of the overall securities, currency and interest
rate markets, which requires different skills than predicting changes in the
prices of individual securities. There can be no assurance that any particular
strategy will succeed, and use of Financial Instruments could result in a loss,
regardless of whether the intent was to reduce risk or increase return.
    

        (2) There might be imperfect correlation, or even no correlation,
between price movements of a Financial Instrument and price movements of the
investments being hedged. For example, if the value of a Financial Instrument
used in a short hedge increased by less than the decline in value of the hedged
investment, the hedge would not be fully successful. Such a lack of correlation
might occur due to factors unrelated to the value of the investments being
hedged, such as speculative or other pressures on the markets in which Financial
Instruments are traded. The effectiveness of hedges using Financial Instruments
on indices will depend on the degree of correlation between price movements in
the index and price movements in the securities being hedged.

        Because there are a limited number of types of exchange-traded options
and futures contracts, it is likely that the standardized contracts available
will not match the Fund's current or anticipated investments exactly. The Fund
may invest in options and futures contracts based on securities with different
issuers, maturities, or other characteristics from the securities in which it
typically invests, which involves a risk that the options or futures position
will not track the performance of the Fund's other investments.

        Options and futures prices can also diverge from the prices of their
underlying instruments, even if the underlying instruments match the Fund's
investments well. Options and futures prices are affected by such factors as
current and anticipated short-term interest rates, changes in volatility of the
underlying instrument, and the time remaining until expiration of the contract,
which may not affect security prices the same way. Imperfect correlation may
also result from differing levels of demand in the options and futures markets
and the securities markets, from structural differences in how options and
futures and securities are traded, or from imposition of daily price fluctuation
limits or trading halts. The Fund may purchase or sell options and futures
contracts with a greater or lesser value than the securities it wishes to hedge
or intends to purchase in order to attempt to compensate for differences in
volatility between the contract and the securities, although this may not be
successful in all cases. If price changes in the Fund's options or futures
positions are poorly correlated with its other investments, the positions may
fail to produce anticipated gains or result in losses that are not offset by
gains in other investments.

        (3) If successful, the above-discussed strategies can reduce risk of
loss by wholly or partially offsetting the negative effect of unfavorable price
movements. However, such strategies can also reduce opportunity for gain by
offsetting the positive effect of favorable price movements. For example, if the
Fund entered into a short hedge because WRIMCO projected a decline in the price
of a security in the Fund's portfolio, and the price of that security increased
instead, the gain from that increase might be wholly or partially offset by a
decline in the price of the Financial Instrument. Moreover, if the price of the
Financial Instrument declined by more than the increase in the price of the
security, the Fund could suffer a loss. In either such case, the Fund would have
been in a better position had it not attempted to hedge at all.

        (4) As described below, the Fund might be required to maintain assets as
"cover," maintain segregated accounts or make margin payments when it takes
positions in Financial Instruments involving obligations to third parties (i.e.,
Financial Instruments other than purchased options). If the Fund were unable to
close out its positions in such Financial Instruments, it might be required to
continue to maintain such assets or accounts or make such payments until the
position expired or matured. These requirements might impair the Fund's ability
to sell a portfolio security or make an investment at a time when it would
otherwise be favorable to do so, or require that the Fund sell a portfolio
security at a disadvantageous time.

   
        (5) The Fund's ability to close out a position in a Financial Instrument
prior to expiration or maturity depends on the existence of a liquid secondary
market or, in the absence of such a market, the ability and willingness of the
other party to the transaction ("counterparty") to enter into a transaction
closing out the position. Therefore, there is no assurance that any position can
be closed out at a time and price that is favorable to the Fund.
    

        Cover. Transactions using Financial Instruments, other than purchased
options, expose the Fund to an obligation to another party. The Fund will not
enter into any such transactions unless it owns either (1) an offsetting
("covered") position in securities, currencies or other options, futures
contracts or forward contracts, or (2) cash and liquid assets with a value,
marked-to-market daily, sufficient to cover its potential obligations to the
extent not covered as provided in (1) above. The Fund will comply with SEC
guidelines regarding cover for these instruments and will, if the guidelines so
require, set aside cash or liquid assets in an account with its custodian in the
prescribed amount as determined daily.

        Assets used as cover or held in an account cannot be sold while the
position in the corresponding Financial Instrument is open, unless they are
replaced with other appropriate assets. As a result, the commitment of a large
portion of the Fund's assets to cover or accounts could impede portfolio
management or the Fund's ability to meet redemption requests or other current
obligations.

   
        Options. A call option gives the purchaser the right to buy, and
obligates the writer to sell, the underlying investment at the agreed-upon price
during the option period. A put option gives the purchaser the right to sell,
and obligates the writer to buy, the underlying investment at the agreed-upon
price during the option period. Purchasers of options pay an amount, known as a
premium, to the option writer in exchange for the right under the option
contract.
    

        The purchase of call options can serve as a long hedge, and the purchase
of put options can serve as a short hedge. Writing put or call options can
enable the Fund to enhance income or yield by reason of the premiums paid by the
purchasers of such options. However, if the market price of the security
underlying a put option declines to less than the exercise price of the option,
minus the premium received, the Fund would expect to suffer a loss.

        Writing call options can serve as a limited short hedge, because
declines in the value of the hedged investment would be offset to the extent of
the premium received for writing the option. However, if the security or
currency appreciates to a price higher than the exercise price of the call
option, it can be expected that the option will be exercised and the Fund will
be obligated to sell the security or currency at less than its market value. If
the call option is an OTC option, the securities or other assets used as cover
would be considered illiquid to the extent described under "Illiquid
Investments."

        Writing put options can serve as a limited long hedge because increases
in the value of the hedged investment would be offset to the extent of the
premium received for writing the option. However, if the security or currency
depreciates to a price lower than the exercise price of the put option, it can
be expected that the put option will be exercised and the Fund will be obligated
to purchase the security or currency at more than its market value. If the put
option is an OTC option, the securities or other assets used as cover would be
considered illiquid to the extent described under "Illiquid Investments."

        The value of an option position will reflect, among other things, the
current market value of the underlying investment, the time remaining until
expiration, the relationship of the exercise price to the market price of the
underlying investment, the historical price volatility of the underlying
investment and general market conditions. Options that expire unexercised have
no value.

        The Fund may effectively terminate its right or obligation under an
option by entering into a closing transaction. For example, the Fund may
terminate its obligation under a call or put option that it had written by
purchasing an identical call or put option; this is known as a closing purchase
transaction. Conversely, the Fund may terminate a position in a put or call
option it had purchased by writing an identical put or call option; this is
known as a closing sale transaction. Closing transactions permit the Fund to
realize profits or limit losses on an option position prior to its exercise or
expiration.

        A type of put that the Fund may purchase is an "optional delivery
standby commitment," which is entered into by parties selling debt securities to
the Fund. An optional delivery standby commitment gives the Fund the right to
sell the security back to the seller on specified terms. This right is provided
as an inducement to purchase the security.

   
        Risks of Options on Securities. Options offer large amounts of leverage,
which will result in the Fund's net asset value being more sensitive to changes
in the value of the related instrument. The Fund may purchase or write both
exchange-traded and OTC options. Exchange markets for options on debt securities
exist, but these instruments are primarily traded on the OTC market.
Exchange-traded options in the United States are issued by a clearing
organization affiliated with the exchange on which the option is listed that, in
effect, guarantees completion of every exchange-traded option transaction. In
contrast, OTC options are contracts between the Fund and its counterparty
(usually a securities dealer or a bank) with no clearing organization guarantee.
Thus, when the Fund purchases an OTC option, it relies on the counterparty from
whom it purchased the option to make or take delivery of the underlying
investment upon exercise of the option. Failure by the counterparty to do so
would result in the loss of any premium paid by the Fund as well as the loss of
any expected benefit of the transaction.
    

        The Fund's ability to establish and close out positions in
exchange-listed options depends on the existence of a liquid market. However,
there can be no assurance that such a market will exist at any particular time.
Closing transactions can be made for OTC options only by negotiating directly
with the counterparty, or by a transaction in the secondary market if any such
market exists. There can be no assurance that the Fund will in fact be able to
close out an OTC option position at a favorable price prior to expiration. In
the event of insolvency of the counterparty, the Fund might be unable to close
out an OTC option position at any time prior to its expiration.

        If the Fund were unable to effect a closing transaction for an option it
had purchased, it would have to exercise the option to realize any profit. The
inability to enter into a closing purchase transaction for a covered call option
written by the Fund could cause material losses because the Fund would be unable
to sell the investment used as cover for the written option until the option
expires or is exercised.

        Options on Indices. Puts and calls on indices are similar to puts and
calls on securities or futures contracts except that all settlements are in cash
and gain or loss depends on changes in the index in question rather than on
price movements in individual securities or futures contracts. When the Fund
writes a call on an index, it receives a premium and agrees that, prior to the
expiration date, the purchaser of the call, upon exercise of the call, will
receive from the Fund an amount of cash if the closing level of the index upon
which the call is based is greater than the exercise price of the call. The
amount of cash is equal to the difference between the closing price of the index
and the exercise price of the call times a specified multiple (the
"multiplier"), which determines the total dollar value for each point of such
difference. When the Fund buys a call on an index, it pays a premium and has the
same rights as to such call as are indicated above. When the Fund buys a put on
an index, it pays a premium and has the right, prior to the expiration date, to
require the seller of the put, upon the Fund's exercise of the put, to deliver
to the Fund an amount of cash if the closing level of the index upon which the
put is based is less than the exercise price of the put, which amount of cash is
determined by the multiplier, as described above for calls. When the Fund writes
a put on an index, it receives a premium and the purchaser of the put has the
right, prior to the expiration date, to require the Fund to deliver to it an
amount of cash equal to the difference between the closing level of the index
and the exercise price times the multiplier if the closing level is less than
the exercise price.

        Risks of Options on Indices. The risks of investment in options on
indices may be greater than options on securities. Because index options are
settled in cash, when the Fund writes a call on an index it cannot provide in
advance for its potential settlement obligations by acquiring and holding the
underlying securities. The Fund can offset some of the risk of writing a call
index option by holding a diversified portfolio of securities similar to those
on which the underlying index is based. However, the Fund cannot, as a practical
matter, acquire and hold a portfolio containing exactly the same securities as
underlie the index and, as a result, bears a risk that the value of the
securities held will vary from the value of the index.

        Even if the Fund could assemble a portfolio that exactly reproduced the
composition of the underlying index, it still would not be fully covered from a
risk standpoint because of the "timing risk" inherent in writing index options.
When an index option is exercised, the amount of cash that the holder is
entitled to receive is determined by the difference between the exercise price
and the closing index level on the date when the option is exercised. As with
other kinds of options, the Fund as the call writer will not learn that the Fund
has been assigned until the next business day at the earliest. The time lag
between exercise and notice of assignment poses no risk for the writer of a
covered call on a specific underlying security, such as common stock, because
there the writer's obligation is to deliver the underlying security, not to pay
its value as of a fixed time in the past. So long as the writer already owns the
underlying security, it can satisfy its settlement obligations by simply
delivering it, and the risk that its value may have declined since the exercise
date is borne by the exercising holder. In contrast, even if the writer of an
index call holds securities that exactly match the composition of the underlying
index, it will not be able to satisfy its assignment obligations by delivering
those securities against payment of the exercise price. Instead, it will be
required to pay cash in an amount based on the closing index value on the
exercise date. By the time it learns that it has been assigned, the index may
have declined, with a corresponding decline in the value of its portfolio. This
"timing risk" is an inherent limitation on the ability of index call writers to
cover their risk exposure by holding securities positions.

        If the Fund has purchased an index option and exercises it before the
closing index value for that day is available, it runs the risk that the level
of the underlying index may subsequently change. If such a change causes the
exercised option to fall out-of-the-money, the Fund will be required to pay the
difference between the closing index value and the exercise price of the option
(times the applicable multiplier) to the assigned writer.

        OTC Options. Unlike exchange-traded options, which are standardized with
respect to the underlying instrument, expiration date, contract size and strike
price, the terms of OTC options (options not traded on exchanges) generally are
established through negotiation with the other party to the option contract.
While this type of arrangement allows the Fund great flexibility to tailor the
option to its needs, OTC options generally involve greater risk than
exchange-traded options, which are guaranteed by the clearing organization of
the exchanges where they are traded.

        Generally, OTC foreign currency options used by the Fund are
European-style options. This means that the option is only exercisable
immediately prior to its expiration. This is in contrast to American-style
options, which are exercisable at any time prior to the expiration date of the
option.

        Futures Contracts and Options on Futures Contracts. The purchase of
futures or call options on futures can serve as a long hedge, and the sale of
futures or the purchase of put options on futures can serve as a short hedge.
Writing call options on futures contracts can serve as a limited short hedge,
using a strategy similar to that used for writing call options on securities or
indices. Similarly, writing put options on futures contracts can serve as a
limited long hedge. Futures contracts and options on futures contracts can also
be purchased and sold to attempt to enhance income or yield.

        In addition, futures strategies can be used to manage the average
duration of the Fund's fixed-income portfolio. If WRIMCO wishes to shorten the
average duration of the Fund's fixed-income portfolio, the Fund may sell a debt
futures contract or a call option thereon, or purchase a put option on that
futures contract. If WRIMCO wishes to lengthen the average duration of the
Fund's fixed-income portfolio, the Fund may buy a debt futures contract or a
call option thereon, or sell a put option thereon.

        No price is paid upon entering into a futures contract. Instead, at the
inception of a futures contract the Fund is required to deposit "initial margin"
in an amount generally equal to 10% or less of the contract value. Margin must
also be deposited when writing a call or put option on a futures contract, in
accordance with applicable exchange rules. Unlike margin in securities
transactions, initial margin on futures contracts does not represent a
borrowing, but rather is in the nature of a performance bond or good-faith
deposit that is returned to the Fund at the termination of the transaction if
all contractual obligations have been satisfied. Under certain circumstances,
such as periods of high volatility, the Fund may be required by an exchange to
increase the level of its initial margin payment, and initial margin
requirements might be increased generally in the future by regulatory action.

        Subsequent "variation margin" payments are made to and from the futures
broker daily as the value of the futures position varies, a process known as
"marking-to-market." Variation margin does not involve borrowing, but rather
represents a daily settlement of the Fund's obligations to or from a futures
broker. When the Fund purchases an option on a future, the premium paid plus
transaction costs is all that is at risk. In contrast, when the Fund purchases
or sells a futures contract or writes a call or put option thereon, it is
subject to daily variation margin calls that could be substantial in the event
of adverse price movements. If the Fund has insufficient cash to meet daily
variation margin requirements, it might need to sell securities at a time when
such sales are disadvantageous.

        Purchasers and sellers of futures contracts and options on futures can
enter into offsetting closing transactions, similar to closing transactions in
options, by selling or purchasing, respectively, an instrument identical to the
instrument purchased or sold. Positions in futures and options on futures may be
closed only on an exchange or board of trade that provides a secondary market.
However, there can be no assurance that a liquid secondary market will exist for
a particular contract at a particular time. In such event, it may not be
possible to close a futures contract or options position.

        Under certain circumstances, futures exchanges may establish daily
limits on the amount that the price of a futures contract or an option on a
futures contract can vary from the previous day's settlement price; once that
limit is reached, no trades may be made that day at a price beyond the limit.
Daily price limits do not limit potential losses because prices could move to
the daily limit for several consecutive days with little or no trading, thereby
preventing liquidation of unfavorable positions.

        If the Fund were unable to liquidate a futures contract or an option on
a futures position due to the absence of a liquid secondary market or the
imposition of price limits, it could incur substantial losses. The Fund would
continue to be subject to market risk with respect to the position. In addition,
except in the case of purchased options, the Fund would continue to be required
to make daily variation margin payments and might be required to maintain the
position being hedged by the futures contract or option or to maintain cash or
liquid assets in an account.

        Risks of Futures Contracts and Options Thereon. The ordinary spreads
between prices in the cash and futures markets (including the options on futures
market), due to the differences in the natures of those markets, are subject to
the following factors, which may create distortions. First, all participants in
the futures market are subject to margin deposit and maintenance requirements.
Rather than meeting additional margin deposit requirements, investors may close
future contracts through offsetting transactions, which could distort the normal
relationship between the cash and futures markets. Second, the liquidity of the
futures market depends on participants entering into offsetting transactions
rather than making or taking delivery. To the extent participants decide to make
or take delivery, liquidity in the futures market could be reduced, thus
producing distortion. Third, from the point of view of speculators, the deposit
requirements in the futures market are less onerous than margin requirements in
the securities market. Therefore, increased participation by speculators in the
futures market may cause temporary price distortions. Due to the possibility of
distortion, a correct forecast of general interest rate, currency exchange rate
or stock market trends by WRIMCO may still not result in a successful
transaction. WRIMCO may be incorrect in its expectations as to the extent of
various interest rate, currency exchange rate or stock market movements or the
time span within which the movements take place.

        Index Futures. The risk of imperfect correlation between movements in
the price of an index futures and movements in the price of the securities that
are the subject of the hedge increases as the composition of the Fund's
portfolio diverges from the securities included in the applicable index. The
price of the index futures may move more than or less than the price of the
securities being hedged. If the price of the index futures moves less than the
price of the securities that are the subject of the hedge, the hedge will not be
fully effective but, if the price of the securities being hedged has moved in an
unfavorable direction, the Fund would be in a better position than if it had not
hedged at all. If the price of the securities being hedged has moved in a
favorable direction, this advantage will be partially offset by the futures
contract. If the price of the futures contract moves more than the price of the
securities, the Fund will experience either a loss or a gain on the futures
contract that will not be completely offset by movements in the price of the
securities that are the subject of the hedge. To compensate for the imperfect
correlation of movements in the price of the securities being hedged and
movements in the price of the index futures, the Fund may buy or sell index
futures in a greater dollar amount than the dollar amount of the securities
being hedged if the historical volatility of the prices of such securities being
hedged is more than the historical volatility of the prices of the securities
included in the index. It is also possible that, where the Fund has sold index
futures contracts to hedge against decline in the market, the market may advance
and the value of the securities held in the portfolio may decline. If this
occurred, the Fund would lose money on the futures contracts and also experience
a decline in value of its portfolio securities. However, while this could occur
for a very brief period or to a very small degree, over time the value of a
diversified portfolio of securities will tend to move in the same direction as
the market indices on which the futures contracts are based.

        Where index futures are purchased to hedge against a possible increase
in the price of securities before the Fund is able to invest in them in an
orderly fashion, it is possible that the market may decline instead. If the Fund
then concludes not to invest in them at that time because of concern as to
possible further market decline or for other reasons, it will realize a loss on
the futures contracts that is not offset by a reduction in the price of the
common stocks it had anticipated purchasing.

        To the extent that the Fund enters into futures contracts, options on
futures contracts and options on foreign currencies traded on a CFTC-regulated
exchange, in each case other than for bona fide hedging purposes (as defined by
the CFTC), the aggregate initial margin and premiums required to establish those
positions (excluding the amount by which options are "in-the-money" at the time
of purchase) will not exceed 5% of the liquidation value of the Fund's
portfolio, after taking into account unrealized profits and unrealized losses on
any contracts the Fund has entered into. (In general, a call option on a futures
contract is "in-the-money" if the value of the underlying futures contract
exceeds the strike, i.e., exercise, price of the call; a put option on a futures
contract is "in-the-money" if the value of the underlying futures contract is
exceeded by the strike price of the put.) This policy does not limit to 5% the
percentage of the Fund's assets that are at risk in futures contracts, options
on futures contracts and currency options.

        Foreign Currency Hedging Strategies--Special Considerations. The Fund
may use options and futures contracts on foreign currencies, as described above,
and forward currency contracts, as described below, to attempt to hedge against
movements in the values of the foreign currencies in which the Fund's securities
are denominated or to attempt to enhance income or yield. Currency hedges can
protect against price movements in a security that the Fund owns or intends to
acquire that are attributable to changes in the value of the currency in which
it is denominated. Such hedges do not, however, protect against price movements
in the securities that are attributable to other causes.

        The Fund might seek to hedge against changes in the value of a
particular currency when no Financial Instruments on that currency are available
or such Financial Instruments are more expensive than certain other Financial
Instruments. In such cases, the Fund may seek to hedge against price movements
in that currency by entering into transactions using Financial Instruments on
another currency or a basket of currencies, the values of which WRIMCO believes
will have a high degree of positive correlation to the value of the currency
being hedged. The risk that movements in the price of the Financial Instrument
will not correlate perfectly with movements in the price of the currency subject
to the hedging transaction is magnified when this strategy is used.

        The value of Financial Instruments on foreign currencies depends on the
value of the underlying currency relative to the U.S. dollar. Because foreign
currency transactions occurring in the interbank market might involve
substantially larger amounts than those involved in the use of such Financial
Instruments, the Fund could be disadvantaged by having to deal in the odd lot
market (generally consisting of transactions of less than $1 million) for the
underlying foreign currencies at prices that are less favorable than for round
lots.

        There is no systematic reporting of last sale information for foreign
currencies or any regulatory requirement that quotations available through
dealers or other market sources be firm or revised on a timely basis. Quotation
information generally is representative of very large transactions in the
interbank market and thus might not reflect odd-lot transactions where rates
might be less favorable. The interbank market in foreign currencies is a global,
round-the-clock market. To the extent the U.S. options or futures markets are
closed while the markets for the underlying currencies remain open, significant
price and rate movements might take place in the underlying markets that cannot
be reflected in the markets for the Financial Instruments until they reopen.

        Settlement of transactions involving foreign currencies might be
required to take place within the country issuing the underlying currency. Thus,
the Fund might be required to accept or make delivery of the underlying foreign
currency in accordance with any U.S. or foreign regulations regarding the
maintenance of foreign banking arrangements by U.S. residents and might be
required to pay any fees, taxes and charges associated with such delivery
assessed in the issuing country.

        Forward Currency Contracts. The Fund may enter into forward currency
contracts to purchase or sell foreign currencies for a fixed amount of U.S.
dollars or another foreign currency. A forward currency contract involves an
obligation to purchase or sell a specific currency at a future date, which may
be any fixed number of days (term) from the date of the forward currency
contract agreed upon by the parties, at a price set at the time of the forward
currency contract. These forward currency contracts are traded directly between
currency traders (usually large commercial banks) and their customers.

        Such transactions may serve as long hedges; for example, the Fund may
purchase a forward currency contract to lock in the U.S. dollar price of a
security denominated in a foreign currency that the Fund intends to acquire.
Forward currency contract transactions may also serve as short hedges; for
example, the Fund may sell a forward currency contract to lock in the U.S.
dollar equivalent of the proceeds from the anticipated sale of a security,
dividend or interest payment denominated in a foreign currency.

        The Fund may also use forward currency contracts to hedge against a
decline in the value of existing investments denominated in foreign currency.
For example, if the Fund owned securities denominated in pounds sterling, it
could enter into a forward currency contract to sell pounds sterling in return
for U.S. dollars to hedge against possible declines in the pound's value. Such a
hedge, sometimes referred to as a "position hedge," would tend to offset both
positive and negative currency fluctuations, but would not offset changes in
security values caused by other factors. The Fund could also hedge the position
by selling another currency expected to perform similarly to the pound sterling,
for example, by entering into a forward currency contract to sell Deutsche Marks
or European Currency Units in return for U.S. dollars. This type of hedge,
sometimes referred to as a "proxy hedge," could offer advantages in terms of
cost, yield, or efficiency, but generally would not hedge currency exposure as
effectively as a simple hedge into U.S. dollars. Proxy hedges may result in
losses if the currency used to hedge does not perform similarly to the currency
in which the hedged securities are denominated.

        The Fund also may use forward currency contracts to attempt to enhance
income or yield. The Fund could use forward currency contracts to increase its
exposure to foreign currencies that WRIMCO believes might rise in value relative
to the U.S. dollar, or shift its exposure to foreign currency fluctuations from
one country to another. For example, if the Fund owned securities denominated in
a foreign currency and WRIMCO believed that currency would decline relative to
another currency, it might enter into a forward currency contract to sell an
appropriate amount of the first foreign currency, with payment to be made in the
second foreign currency.

        The cost to the Fund of engaging in forward currency contracts varies
with factors such as the currency involved, the length of the contract period
and the market conditions then prevailing. Because forward currency contracts
are usually entered into on a principal basis, no fees or commissions are
involved. When the Fund enters into a forward currency contract, it relies on
the counterparty to make or take delivery of the underlying currency at the
maturity of the contract. Failure by the counterparty to do so would result in
the loss of any expected benefit of the transaction.

        As is the case with futures contracts, purchasers and sellers of forward
currency contracts can enter into offsetting closing transactions, similar to
closing transactions on futures contracts, by selling or purchasing,
respectively, an instrument identical to the instrument purchased or sold.
Secondary markets generally do not exist for forward currency contracts, with
the result that closing transactions generally can be made for forward currency
contracts only by negotiating directly with the counterparty. Thus, there can be
no assurance that the Fund will in fact be able to close out a forward currency
contract at a favorable price prior to maturity. In addition, in the event of
insolvency of the counterparty, the Fund might be unable to close out a forward
currency contract at any time prior to maturity. In either event, the Fund would
continue to be subject to market risk with respect to the position, and would
continue to be required to maintain a position in securities denominated in the
foreign currency or to maintain cash or liquid assets in an account.

        The precise matching of forward currency contract amounts and the value
of the securities involved generally will not be possible because the value of
such securities, measured in the foreign currency, will change after the forward
currency contract has been established. Thus, the Fund might need to purchase or
sell foreign currencies in the spot (cash) market to the extent such foreign
currencies are not covered by forward currency contracts. The projection of
short-term currency market movements is extremely difficult, and the successful
execution of a short-term hedging strategy is highly uncertain.

        Normally, consideration of the prospect for currency parities will be
incorporated into the longer term investment decisions made with regard to
overall diversification strategies. However, WRIMCO believes that it is
important to have the flexibility to enter into such forward currency contracts
when it determines that the best interests of the Fund will be served.

   
        Successful use of forward currency contracts depends on WRIMCO's skill
in analyzing and predicting currency values. Forward currency contracts may
substantially change the Fund's exposure to changes in currency exchange rates
and could result in losses to the Fund if currencies do not perform as WRIMCO
anticipates. There is no assurance that WRIMCO's use of forward currency
contracts will be advantageous to the Fund or that WRIMCO will hedge at an
appropriate time.
    

        Combined Positions. The Fund may purchase and write options in
combination with each other, or in combination with futures or forward
contracts, to adjust the risk and return characteristics of its overall
position. For example, the Fund may purchase a put option and write a call
option on the same underlying instrument, in order to construct a combined
position whose risk and return characteristics are similar to selling a futures
contract. Another possible combined position would involve writing a call option
at one strike price and buying a call option at a lower price, in order to
reduce the risk of the written call option in the event of a substantial price
increase. Because combined options positions involve multiple trades, they
result in higher transaction costs and may be more difficult to open and close
out.

        Turnover. The Fund's options and futures activities may affect its
turnover rate and brokerage commission payments. The exercise of calls or puts
written by the Fund, and the sale or purchase of futures contracts, may cause it
to sell or purchase related investments, thus increasing its turnover rate. Once
the Fund has received an exercise notice on an option it has written, it cannot
effect a closing transaction in order to terminate its obligation under the
option and must deliver or receive the underlying securities at the exercise
price. The exercise of puts purchased by the Fund may also cause the sale of
related investments, also increasing turnover; although such exercise is within
the Fund's control, holding a protective put might cause it to sell the related
investments for reasons that would not exist in the absence of the put. The Fund
will pay a brokerage commission each time it buys or sells a put or call or
purchases or sells a futures contract. Such commissions may be higher than those
that would apply to direct purchases or sales.

   
        Swaps, Caps, Collars and Floors. The Fund may enter into swaps, caps,
collars and floors to preserve a return or a spread on a particular investment
or portion of its portfolio, to protect against any increase in the price of
securities the Fund anticipates purchasing at a later date or to attempt to
enhance yield. Swaps involve the exchange by the Fund with another party of
their respective commitments to pay or receive cash flows, e.g., an exchange of
floating rate payments for fixed-rate payments. The purchase of a cap entitles
the purchaser, to the extent that a specified index exceeds a predetermined
value, to receive payments on a notional principal amount from the party selling
the cap. The purchase of a floor entitles the purchaser, to the extent that a
specified index falls below a predetermined value, to receive payments on a
notional principal amount from the party selling the floor. A collar combines
elements of buying a cap and selling a floor.

        Swap agreements, including caps, collars and floors, can be individually
negotiated and structured to include exposure to a variety of different types of
investments or market factors. Depending on their structure, swap agreements may
increase or decrease the overall volatility of the Fund's investments and its
share price and yield because, and to the extent, these agreements affect the
Fund's exposure to long- or short-term interest rates (in the United States or
abroad), foreign currency values, mortgage-backed security values, corporate
borrowing rates, or other factors such as security prices or inflation rates.
    

        Swap agreements will tend to shift the Fund's investment exposure from
one type of investment to another. For example, if the Fund agrees to exchange
payments in U.S. dollars for payments in foreign currency, the swap agreement
would tend to decrease the Fund's exposure to U.S. interest rates and increase
its exposure to foreign currency and interest rates. Caps and floors have an
effect similar to buying or writing options.

   
        The creditworthiness of firms with which the Fund enters into swaps,
caps or floors will be monitored by WRIMCO in accordance with procedures adopted
by the Fund's Board of Directors. If a firm's creditworthiness declines, the
value of the agreement would be likely to decline, potentially resulting in
losses. If a default occurs by the other party to such transaction, the Fund
will have contractual remedies pursuant to the agreements related to the
transaction.

        The net amount of the excess, if any, of the Fund's obligations over its
entitlements with respect to each swap will be accrued on a daily basis and an
amount of cash or liquid assets having an aggregate net asset value at least
equal to the accrued excess will be maintained in an account with the Fund's
custodian that satisfies the requirements of the 1940 Act. The Fund will also
establish and maintain such account with respect to its total obligations under
any swaps that are not entered into on a net basis and with respect to any caps
or floors that are written by the Fund. WRIMCO and the Fund believe that such
obligations do not constitute senior securities under the 1940 Act and,
accordingly, will not treat them as being subject to the Fund's borrowing
restrictions. The Fund understands that the position of the SEC is that assets
involved in swap transactions are illiquid and are, therefore, subject to the
limitations on investing in illiquid securities.


Investment Restrictions and Limitations

        Certain of the Fund's investment restrictions and other limitations are
described in this SAI. The following are the Fund's fundamental investment
limitations set forth in their entirety, which, like the Fund's goal, cannot be
changed without shareholder approval. For this purpose, shareholder approval
means the approval, at a meeting of Fund shareholders, by the lesser of (1) the
holders of 67% or more of the Fund's shares represented at the meeting, if more
than 50% of the Fund's outstanding shares are present in person or by proxy or
(2) more than 50% of the Fund's outstanding shares. The Fund may not:
    

        (i)    Purchase or sell physical commodities; however, this policy shall
               not prevent the Fund from purchasing and selling foreign
               currency, futures contracts, options, forward contracts, swaps,
               caps, collars, floors and other financial instruments; or invest
               in minerals-related programs or leases;

      (ii)     With respect to 75% of its total assets, purchase securities of
               any one issuer (other than cash items and "Government securities"
               as defined in the 1940 Act), if immediately after and as a result
               of such purchase, (a) the value of the holdings of the Fund in
               the securities of such issuer exceeds 5% of the value of the
               Fund's total assets, or (b) the Fund owns more than 10% of the
               outstanding voting securities of such issuer; or buy the
               securities of companies in any one industry if more than 25% of
               the Fund's total assets would then be in companies in that
               industry;

     (iii)     Buy shares of other investment companies that redeem their
               shares. The Fund can buy shares of investment companies that do
               not redeem their shares if it does so in a regular transaction in
               the open market and then does not have more than one tenth (i.e.,
               10%) of its total assets in these shares. The Fund may also buy
               these shares as part of a merger or consolidation;

      (iv)     Invest for the purpose of exercising control or management of 
               other companies;

       (v)     Participate on a joint, or a joint and several, basis in any 
               trading account in any securities;

      (vi)     Sell securities short (unless it owns or has the right to obtain
               securities equivalent in kind and amount to the securities sold
               short) or buy securities on margin; except that (1) this policy
               does not prevent the Fund from entering into short positions in
               foreign currency, futures contracts, options, forward contracts,
               swaps, caps, collars, floors and other financial instruments, (2)
               the Fund may obtain such short-term credits as are necessary for
               the clearance of transactions, and (3) the Fund may make margin
               payments in connection with futures contracts, options, forward
               contracts, swaps, caps, collars, floors and other financial
               instruments;

     (vii)     Engage in the underwriting of securities, except to the extent it
               may be deemed to be an underwriter in connection with the sale of
               restricted securities;

   
    (viii)     Borrow for investment purposes, that is, to purchase securities.
               The Fund may borrow money from banks, as a temporary measure or
               for extraordinary or emergency purposes but only up to 5% of its
               total assets;
    

   
      (ix)     Make loans other than certain limited types of loans; the Fund
               may buy debt securities and other obligations consistent with its
               goals and its other investment policies and restrictions. The
               Fund may also enter into repurchase agreements (see "Repurchase
               Agreements" above) and lend its portfolio securities to the
               extent allowed, and in accordance with the requirements, under
               the 1940 Act;

       (x)     Issue senior securities; or

      (xi)     Purchase, or otherwise voluntarily acquire, any common stocks if,
               as a result, more than 20% of its total assets would consist of
               common stock.

        The following investment restrictions are not fundamental and may be
changed by the Board of Directors without shareholder approval:

       (i)     At least 80% of the Fund's total assets normally will be 
               invested to seek a high level of current income.

      (ii)     The Fund does not intend to invest more than 10% of its assets 
               in non-dividend-paying common stocks.

     (iii)     The Fund will not invest more than 25% of its total assets in
               securities issued by the government of any one foreign country.

      (iv)     The Fund may not purchase a security if, as a result, more than
               10% of its net assets would consist of illiquid securities.

       (v)     The Fund does not intend to invest more than 5% of its assets in
               the securities of investment companies that do not redeem their
               shares.

        An investment policy or limitation that states a maximum percentage of
the Fund's assets that may be so invested or prescribes quality standards is
typically applied immediately after, and based on, the Fund's acquisition of an
asset. Accordingly, a subsequent change in the asset's value, net assets, or
other circumstances will not be considered when determining whether the
investment complies with the Fund's investment policies and limitations.
    


Portfolio Turnover

        A portfolio turnover rate is, in general, the percentage computed by
taking the lesser of purchases or sales of portfolio securities for a year and
dividing it by the monthly average of the market value of such securities during
the year, excluding certain short-term securities. The Fund's turnover rate may
vary greatly from year to year as well as within a particular year and may be
affected by cash requirements for the redemption of its shares.

   
        The Fund's portfolio turnover rate for the fiscal years ended March 31,
1999 and 1998 was  % and 63.40%, respectively.
    

<PAGE>

                    INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT AND OTHER SERVICES


The Management Agreement

        The Fund has an Investment Management Agreement (the "Management
Agreement") with Waddell & Reed, Inc. On January 8, 1992, subject to the
authority of the Fund's Board of Directors, Waddell & Reed, Inc. assigned the
Management Agreement and all related investment management duties (and related
professional staff) to WRIMCO, a wholly owned subsidiary of Waddell & Reed, Inc.
Under the Management Agreement, WRIMCO is employed to supervise the investments
of the Fund and provide investment advice to the Fund. The address of WRIMCO and
Waddell & Reed, Inc. is 6300 Lamar Avenue, P.O. Box 29217, Shawnee Mission,
Kansas 66201-9217. Waddell & Reed, Inc. is the Fund's underwriter.

        The Management Agreement permits Waddell & Reed, Inc. or an affiliate of
Waddell & Reed, Inc. to enter into a separate agreement for transfer agency
services ("Shareholder Servicing Agreement") and a separate agreement for
accounting services ("Accounting Services Agreement") with the Fund. The
Management Agreement contains detailed provisions as to the matters to be
considered by the Fund's Board of Directors prior to approving any Shareholder
Servicing Agreement or Accounting Services Agreement.


   
Waddell & Reed Financial, Inc.

        WRIMCO is a wholly owned subsidiary of Waddell & Reed, Inc. Waddell &
Reed, Inc. is a wholly owned subsidiary of Waddell & Reed Financial Services,
Inc., a holding company. Waddell & Reed Financial Services, Inc. is a wholly
owned subsidiary of Waddell & Reed Financial, Inc., a publicly held company. The
address of these companies is 6300 Lamar Avenue, P.O. Box 29217, Shawnee
Mission, Kansas 66201-9217.

        Waddell & Reed, Inc. and its predecessors served as investment manager
to each of the registered investment companies in the United Group of Mutual
Funds, except United Asset Strategy Fund, Inc., since 1940 or the company's
inception date, whichever was later, and to Target/United Funds, Inc. since that
fund's inception, until January 8, 1992 when it assigned its duties as
investment manager for these funds (and the related professional staff) to
WRIMCO. WRIMCO has also served as investment manager for Waddell & Reed Funds,
Inc. since its inception in September 1992 and United Asset Strategy Fund, Inc.
since it commenced operations in March 1995. Waddell & Reed, Inc. serves as
principal underwriter for the investment companies in the United Group of Mutual
Funds and Waddell & Reed Funds, Inc. and acts as principal underwriter and
distributor for variable life insurance and variable annuity policies issued by
United Investors Life Insurance Company for which Target/United Funds, Inc. is
the underlying investment vehicle.
    


Shareholder Services

        Under the Shareholder Servicing Agreement entered into between the Fund
and Waddell & Reed Services Company (the "Agent"), a subsidiary of Waddell &
Reed, Inc., the Agent performs shareholder servicing functions, including the
maintenance of shareholder accounts, the issuance, transfer and redemption of
shares, distribution of dividends and payment of redemptions, the furnishing of
related information to the Fund and handling of shareholder inquiries. A new
Shareholder Servicing Agreement, or amendments to the existing one, may be
approved by the Fund's Board of Directors without shareholder approval.


Accounting Services

        Under the Accounting Services Agreement entered into between the Fund
and the Agent, the Agent provides the Fund with bookkeeping and accounting
services and assistance, including maintenance of the Fund's records, pricing of
the Fund's shares, and preparation of prospectuses for existing shareholders,
proxy statements and certain reports. A new Accounting Services Agreement, or
amendments to an existing one, may be approved by the Fund's Board of Directors
without shareholder approval.


Payments by the Fund for Management, Accounting and Shareholder Services

   
        Under the Management Agreement, for WRIMCO's management services, the
Fund pays WRIMCO a fee as described in the Prospectus. The management fees paid
by the Fund to WRIMCO during the Fund's fiscal years ended March 31, 1999, 1998
and 1997 were $ , $5,773,843 and $5,445,319, respectively.
    

        For purposes of calculating the daily fee the Fund does not include
money owed to it by Waddell & Reed, Inc. for shares which it has sold but not
yet paid the Fund. The Fund accrues and pays this fee daily.

        Under the Shareholder Servicing Agreement, for the Class A shares, the
Fund pays the Agent a monthly fee of $1.3125 for each shareholder account that
was in existence at any time during the prior month, plus $0.30 for each account
on which a dividend or distribution, of cash or shares, had a record date in
that month. For Class Y shares, the Fund pays the Agent a monthly fee equal to
one-twelfth of .15 of 1% of the average daily net assets of that class for the
preceding month. The Fund also pays certain out-of-pocket expenses of the Agent,
including long distance telephone communications costs, microfilm and storage
costs for certain documents, forms, printing and mailing costs, and costs of
legal and special services not provided by Waddell & Reed, Inc., WRIMCO or the
Agent.

        Under the Accounting Services Agreement, the Fund pays the Agent a
monthly fee of one-twelfth of the annual fee shown in the following table.

                           Accounting Services Fee

                  Average                                      
              Net Asset Level                   Annual Fee
         (all dollars in millions)          Rate for Each Level
         -------------------------          -------------------

       From $    0 to $   10                  $      0
       From $   10 to $   25                  $ 10,000
       From $   25 to $   50                  $ 20,000
       From $   50 to $  100                  $ 30,000
       From $  100 to $  200                  $ 40,000
       From $  200 to $  350                  $ 50,000
       From $  350 to $  550                  $ 60,000
       From $  550 to $  750                  $ 70,000
       From $  750 to $1,000                  $ 85,000
            $1,000 and Over                   $100,000

   
        Fees paid to the Agent for the fiscal years ended March 31, 1999, 1998
and 1997 were $ , $98,750 and $88,750, respectively.
    

        Since the Fund pays a management fee for investment supervision and an
accounting services fee for accounting services as discussed above, WRIMCO and
the Agent, respectively, pay all of their own expenses in providing these
services. Amounts paid by the Fund under the Shareholder Servicing Agreement are
described above. Waddell & Reed, Inc. and affiliates pay the Fund's Directors
and officers who are affiliated with WRIMCO and its affiliates. The Fund pays
the fees and expenses of the Fund's other Directors.

   
        Waddell & Reed, Inc., under an agreement separate from the Management
Agreement, Shareholder Servicing Agreement and Accounting Services Agreement,
acts as the Fund's underwriter, i.e., sells its shares on a continuous basis.
Waddell & Reed, Inc. is not required to sell any particular number of shares and
thus sells shares only for purchase orders received. Under this agreement,
Waddell & Reed, Inc. pays the costs of sales literature, including the costs of
shareholder reports used as sales literature, and the costs of printing the
prospectus furnished to it by the Fund. The aggregate dollar amounts of
underwriting commissions for Class A shares for the fiscal years ended March 31,
1999, 1998 and 1997 were $ , $2,719,457 and $2,037,706, respectively, and the
amounts retained by Waddell & Reed, Inc. were $ , $1,147,748 and $876,800,
respectively.

        No portion of the sales charge is reallowed to dealers. A major portion
of the sales charge for Class A shares is paid to financial advisors and
managers of Waddell & Reed, Inc. Waddell & Reed, Inc. may compensate its
financial advisors as to purchases for which there is no sales charge.
    

        The Fund pays all of its other expenses. These include the costs of
materials sent to shareholders, audit and outside legal fees, taxes, brokerage
commissions, interest, insurance premiums, custodian fees, fees payable by the
Fund under Federal or other securities laws and to the Investment Company
Institute and nonrecurring and extraordinary expenses, including litigation and
indemnification relating to litigation.

        Under a Distribution and Service Plan for Class A shares (the "Plan")
adopted by the Fund pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act, the Fund may pay
Waddell & Reed, Inc., the principal underwriter for the Fund, a fee not to
exceed .25% of the Fund's average annual net assets attributable to Class A
shares, paid monthly, to reimburse Waddell & Reed, Inc. for its costs and
expenses in connection with the distribution of the Class A shares, and service
and/or maintenance of Class A shareholder accounts.

   
        Waddell & Reed, Inc. offers the Fund's shares through its registered
representatives and sales managers (sales force) unless it elects, which is not
currently contemplated for Class A shares, to make distribution of shares also
through other broker-dealers. In distributing shares through its sales force,
Waddell & Reed, Inc. will pay commissions and incentives to the sales force at
or about the time of sale and will incur other expenses including costs for
prospectuses, sales literature, advertisements, sales office maintenance,
processing of orders and general overhead with respect to its efforts to
distribute the Fund's shares. The Plan permits Waddell & Reed, Inc. to receive
reimbursement for these Class A-related distribution activities through the
distribution fee, subject to the limit contained in the Plan. 

      The Plan also permits Waddell & Reed, Inc. to be reimbursed for amounts it
expends in compensating, training and supporting registered financial advisors,
sales managers and/or other appropriate personnel in providing personal services
to Class A shareholders of the Fund and/or maintaining Class A shareholder
accounts; increasing services provided to Class A shareholders of the Fund by
office personnel located at field sales offices; engaging in other activities
useful in providing personal service to Class A shareholders of the Fund and/or
maintenance of Class A shareholder accounts; and in compensating broker-dealers
who may regularly sell Class A shares of the Fund, and other third parties, for
providing shareholder services and/or maintaining shareholder accounts with
respect to Class A shares. Distribution and service fees in the amount of $ were
paid (or accrued) by the Fund with respect to Class A shares for the fiscal year
ended March 31, 1999. To the extent that Waddell & Reed, Inc. incurs expenses
for which reimbursement may be made under the Plan that relate to distribution
activities also involving another fund in the United Group of Funds or Waddell &
Reed Funds, Inc., Waddell & Reed, Inc. typically determines the amount
attributable to the Fund's expenses under the Plan on the basis of a combination
of the respective classes' relative net assets and number of shareholder
accounts.

        The only Directors or interested persons, as defined in the 1940 Act, of
the Fund who have a direct or indirect financial interest in the operation of
the Plan are the officers and Directors who are also officers of either Waddell
& Reed, Inc. or its affiliate(s) or who are shareholders of Waddell & Reed
Financial, Inc., the indirect parent company of Waddell & Reed, Inc. The Plan is
anticipated to benefit the Fund and its Class A shareholders through Waddell &
Reed, Inc.'s activities not only to distribute the Class A shares of the Fund
but also to provide personal services to Class A shareholders and thereby
promote the maintenance of their accounts with the Fund. The Fund anticipates
that Class A shareholders may benefit to the extent that Waddell & Reed's
activities are successful in increasing the assets of the Fund, through
increased sales or reduced redemptions, or a combination of these, and reducing
a Class A shareholder's share of Fund and Class A expenses. Increased Fund
assets may also provide greater resources with which to pursue the goal of the
Fund. Further, continuing sales of Class A shares may also reduce the likelihood
that it will be necessary to liquidate portfolio securities, in amounts or at
times that may be disadvantageous to the Fund, to meet redemption demands. In
addition, the Fund anticipates that the revenues from the Plan will provide
Waddell & Reed, Inc. with greater resources to make the financial commitments
necessary to continue to improve the quality and level of services to the Fund
and Class A shareholders. The Plan was approved by the Fund's Board of
Directors, including the Directors who are not interested persons of the Fund
and who have no direct or indirect financial interest in the operations of the
Plan or any agreement referred to in the Plan (hereafter, the "Plan Directors").
The Plan was also approved by the affected shareholders of the Fund.
    

        Among other things, the Plan provides that (i) Waddell & Reed, Inc. will
provide to the Directors of the Fund at least quarterly, and the Directors will
review, a report of amounts expended under the Plan and the purposes for which
such expenditures were made, (ii) the Plan will continue in effect only so long
as it is approved at least annually, and any material amendments thereto will be
effective only if approved, by the Directors including the Plan Directors acting
in person at a meeting called for that purpose, (iii) amounts to be paid by the
Fund under the Plan may not be materially increased without the vote of the
holders of a majority of the outstanding Class A shares of the Fund, and (iv)
while the Plan remains in effect, the selection and nomination of the Directors
who are Plan Directors will be committed to the discretion of the Plan
Directors.


Custodial and Auditing Services

        The Fund's Custodian is UMB Bank, n.a., Kansas City, Missouri. In
general, the Custodian is responsible for holding the Fund's cash and
securities. Deloitte & Touche LLP, Kansas City, Missouri, the Fund's independent
auditors, audits the Fund's financial statements.


                   PURCHASE, REDEMPTION AND PRICING OF SHARES


Determination of Offering Price

        The net asset value of each class of the shares of the Fund is the value
of the assets of that class, less the liabilities of that class, divided by the
total number of outstanding shares of that class.

   
        Class A shares of the Fund are sold at their next determined net asset
value plus the sales charge described in the Prospectus. The sales charge is
paid to Waddell & Reed, Inc., the Fund's underwriter. The price makeup as of
March 31, 1999 was as follows:
    

    Net asset value per Class A share (Class A net assets divided by Class A
       shares outstanding) ....................................... $
    Add: selling commission (5.75% of offering
       price) ....................................................  .
                                                                   -----
    Maximum offering price per Class A share
       (Class A net asset value divided by 94.25%) ................$
                                                                   =====

        The offering price of a Class A share is its net asset value next
determined following acceptance of a purchase order plus the sales charge. The
offering price of a Class Y share is its net asset value next determined
following acceptance of a purchase order. The number of shares you receive for
your purchase depends on the next offering price after Waddell & Reed, Inc.
receives and accepts your order at its principal business office at the address
shown on the cover of this SAI. You will be sent a confirmation after your
purchase which will indicate how many shares you have purchased. Shares are
normally issued for cash only.

        Waddell & Reed, Inc. need not accept any purchase order, and it or the
Fund may determine to discontinue offering Fund shares for purchase.

        The net asset value and offering price per share are ordinarily computed
daily on each day that the NYSE is open for trading as of the later of the close
of the regular session of the NYSE or the close of the regular session of any
domestic securities or commodities exchange on which an option or future held by
the Fund is traded. The NYSE annually announces the days on which it will not be
open for trading. The most recent announcement indicates that the NYSE will not
be open on the following days: New Year's Day, Martin Luther King, Jr. Day,
Presidents' Day, Good Friday, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day,
Thanksgiving Day and Christmas Day. However, it is possible that the NYSE may
close on other days. The net asset value will change every business day, since
the value of the assets and the number of shares outstanding change every day.

        The securities in the portfolio of the Fund, except as otherwise noted,
that are listed or traded on a stock exchange are valued on the basis of the
last sale on that day or, lacking any sales, at a price that is the mean between
the closing bid and asked prices. Other securities that are traded
over-the-counter are priced using the Nasdaq Stock Market, which provides
information on bid and asked prices quoted by major dealers in such stocks.
Bonds, other than convertible bonds, are valued using a third-party pricing
system. Convertible bonds are valued using this pricing system only on days when
there is no sale reported. Short-term debt securities and other assets are
valued at amortized cost, which approximates market. When market quotations are
not readily available, securities and other assets are valued at fair value as
determined in good faith under procedures established by and under the general
supervision and responsibility of the Board of Directors.

        Options and futures contracts purchased and held by the Fund are valued
at the last sales price thereof on the securities or commodities exchanges on
which they are traded, or, if there are no transactions, at the mean between bid
and asked prices. Ordinarily, the close of the regular session for options
trading on national securities exchanges is 4:10 p.m. Eastern time and the close
of the regular session of commodities exchanges is 4:15 p.m. Eastern time.
Futures contracts will be valued by reference to established futures exchanges.
The value of a futures contract purchased by the Fund will be either the closing
purchase price of the contract or the bid price. Conversely, the value of a
futures contract sold by the Fund will be either the closing price or the asked
price.

        When the Fund writes a put or call, an amount equal to the premium
received is included in the Fund's Statement of Assets and Liabilities as an
asset, and an equivalent deferred credit is included in the liability section.
The deferred credit is "marked-to-market" (that is, treated as sold for its fair
market value) to reflect the current market value of the put or call. If a call
the Fund wrote is exercised, the proceeds received on the sale of the related
investment are increased by the amount of the premium the Fund received. If the
Fund exercised a call it purchased, the amount paid to purchase the related
investment is increased by the amount of the premium paid. If a put written by
the Fund is exercised, the amount that the Fund pays to purchase the related
investment is decreased by the amount of the premium it received. If the Fund
exercises a put it purchased, the amount received from the sale of the related
investment is reduced by the amount of the premium it paid. If a put or call
written by the Fund expires, it has a gain in the amount of the premium; if it
enters into a closing purchase transaction, it will have a gain or loss
depending on whether the premium was more or less than the cost of the closing
transaction.

        Foreign currency exchange rates are generally determined prior to the
close of trading of the regular session of the NYSE. Occasionally events
affecting the value of foreign investments and such exchange rates occur between
the time at which they are determined and the close of the regular session of
trading on the NYSE, which events will not be reflected in a computation of the
Fund's net asset value on that day. If events materially affecting the value of
such investments or currency exchange rates occur during such time period,
investments will be valued at their fair value as determined in good faith by or
under the direction of the Board of Directors. The foreign currency exchange
transactions of the Fund conducted on a spot (i.e., cash) basis are valued at
the spot rate for purchasing or selling currency prevailing on the foreign
exchange market. This rate under normal market conditions differs from the
prevailing exchange rate in an amount generally less than one-tenth of one
percent due to the costs of converting from one currency to another.

        Optional delivery standby commitments are valued at fair value under the
general supervision and responsibility of the Fund's Board of Directors. They
are accounted for in the same manner as exchange-listed puts.


Minimum Initial and Subsequent Investments

        For Class A shares, initial investments must be at least $500 with the
exceptions described in this paragraph. A $100 minimum initial investment
pertains to certain exchanges of shares from another fund in the United Group. A
$50 minimum initial investment pertains to purchases for certain retirement plan
accounts and to accounts for which an investor has arranged, at the time of
initial investment, to make subsequent purchases for the account by having
regular monthly withdrawals of $25 or more made from a bank account. A $50
minimum initial investment also pertains to accounts for which an investor has
arranged, at the time of initial investment, to make subsequent purchases for
the account by having regular monthly withdrawals of $25 or more made from a
bank account. A minimum initial investment of $25 is applicable to purchases
made through payroll deduction for or by employees of WRIMCO, Waddell & Reed,
Inc., their affiliates, or certain retirement plan accounts. Except with respect
to certain exchanges and automatic withdrawals from a bank account, a
shareholder may make subsequent investments of any amount. See "Exchanges for
Shares of Other Funds in the United Group."

        For Class Y shares, investments by government entities or authorities or
by corporations must total at least $10 million within the first twelve months
after initial investment. There is no initial investment minimum for other Class
Y investors.


Reduced Sales Charges (Applicable to Class A Shares Only)

    Account Grouping

        Large purchases of Class A shares are subject to lower sales charges.
The schedule of sales charges appears in the Prospectus for Class A shares. For
the purpose of taking advantage of the lower sales charges available for large
purchases, a purchase in any of categories 1 through 7 listed below made by an
individual or deemed to be made by an individual may be grouped with purchases
in any other of these categories:

1.      Purchases by an individual for his or her own account (includes
        purchases under the United Funds Revocable Trust Form);

2.      Purchases by that individual's spouse purchasing for his or her own
        account (includes United Funds Revocable Trust Form of spouse);

3.      Purchases by that individual or his or her spouse in their joint 
        account;

4.      Purchases by that individual or his or her spouse for the account of 
        their child under age 21;

5.      Purchase by any custodian for the child of that individual or spouse in
        a Uniform Gift to Minors Act ("UGMA") or Uniform Transfers to Minors Act
        ("UTMA") account;
   
6.      Purchases by that individual or his or her spouse for his or her
        Individual Retirement Account ("IRA"), salary reduction plan account
        under Section 457 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
        "Code"), provided that such purchases are subject to a sales charge (see
        "Net Asset Value Purchases"), tax sheltered annuity account ("TSA") or
        Keogh plan account, provided that the individual and spouse are the only
        participants in the Keogh plan; and
    
7.      Purchases by a trustee under a trust where that individual or his or her
        spouse is the settlor (the person who establishes the trust).

        Examples:

        A.     Grandmother opens an UGMA account for grandson A; Grandmother has
               an account in her own name; A's father has an account in his own
               name; the UGMA account may be grouped with A's father's account
               but may not be grouped with Grandmother's account;

        B.     H establishes a trust naming his children as beneficiaries and
               appointing himself and his bank as co-trustees; a purchase made
               in the trust account is eligible for grouping with an IRA account
               of W, H's wife;

        C.     H's will provides for the establishment of a trust for the
               benefit of his minor children upon H's death; his bank is named
               as trustee; upon H's death, an account is established in the name
               of the bank, as trustee; a purchase in the account may be grouped
               with an account held by H's wife in her own name.

        D.     X establishes a trust naming herself as trustee and R, her son,
               as successor trustee and R and S as beneficiaries; upon X's
               death, the account is transferred to R as trustee; a purchase in
               the account may not be grouped with R's individual account. If
               X's spouse, Y, was successor trustee, this purchase could be
               grouped with Y's individual account.

        All purchases of Class A shares made for a participant in a
multi-participant Keogh plan may be grouped only with other purchases made under
the same plan; a multi-participant Keogh plan is defined as a plan in which
there is more than one participant where one or more of the participants is
other than the spouse of the owner/employer.

Example A:     H has established a Keogh plan; he and his wife W are the
               only participants in the plan; they may group their purchases
               made under the plan with any purchases in categories 1 through
               7 above.

Example B:     H has established a Keogh plan; his wife, W, is a
               participant and they have hired one or more employees who also
               become participants in the plan; H and W may not combine any
               purchases made under the plan with any purchases in categories
               1 through 7 above; however, all purchases made under the plan
               for H, W or any other employee will be combined.

   
        All purchases of Class A shares made under a "qualified" employee
benefit plan of an incorporated business will be grouped. A "qualified" employee
benefit plan is established pursuant to Section 401 of the Code. All qualified
employee benefit plans of any one employer or affiliated employers will also be
grouped. An affiliate is defined as an employer that directly, or indirectly,
controls or is controlled by or is under control with another employer. All
qualified employee benefit plans of an employer who is a franchisor and those of
its franchisee(s) may also be grouped.
    

Example:       Corporation X sets up a defined benefit plan; its subsidiary, 
               Corporation Y, sets up a 401(k) plan; all contributions made 
               under both plans will be grouped.

        All purchases of Class A shares made under a simplified employee pension
plan ("SEP"), payroll deduction plan or similar arrangement adopted by an
employer or affiliated employers (as defined above) may be grouped provided that
the employer elects to have all such purchases grouped at the time the plan is
set up. If the employer does not make such an election, the purchases made by
individual employees under the plan may be grouped with the other accounts of
the individual employees described above in "Account Grouping."

        Account grouping as described above is available under the following
circumstances.

    One-time Purchases

        A one-time purchase of Class A shares in accounts eligible for grouping
may be combined for purposes of determining the availability of a reduced sales
charge. In order for an eligible purchase to be grouped, the investor must
advise Waddell & Reed, Inc. at the time the purchase is made that it is eligible
for grouping and identify the accounts with which it may be grouped.

 Example:      H and W open an account in the Fund and invest $75,000; at the
               same time, H's parents open up three UGMA accounts for H and W's
               three minor children and invest $10,000 in each child's name; the
               combined purchase of $105,000 of Class A shares is subject to a
               reduced sales load of 4.75% provided that Waddell & Reed, Inc. is
               advised that the purchases are entitled to grouping.

    Rights of Accumulation

        If Class A shares are held in any account and an additional purchase is
made in that account or in any account eligible for grouping with that account,
the additional purchase is combined with the net asset value of the existing
account as of the date the new purchase is accepted by Waddell & Reed, Inc. for
the purpose of determining the availability of a reduced sales charge.

 Example:      H is a current Class A shareholder who invested in the Fund three
               years ago. His account has a net asset value of $80,000. His
               wife, W, now wishes to invest $20,000 in Class A shares of the
               Fund. W's purchase will be combined with H's existing account and
               will be entitled to a reduced sales charge of 4.75%. H's original
               purchase was subject to a full sales charge and the reduced
               charge does not apply retroactively to that purchase.

        In order to be entitled to rights of accumulation, the purchaser must
inform Waddell & Reed, Inc. that the purchaser is entitled to a reduced charge
and provide Waddell & Reed, Inc. with the name and number of the existing
account with which the purchase may be combined.

        If a purchaser holds shares which have been purchased under a
contractual plan, the shares held under such plan may be combined with the
additional purchase only if the contractual plan has been completed.

    Statement of Intention

        The benefit of a reduced sales charge for larger purchases of Class A
shares is also available under a Statement of Intention. By signing a Statement
of Intention form, which is available from Waddell & Reed, Inc., the purchaser
indicates an intention to invest, over a 13-month period, a dollar amount which
is sufficient to qualify for a reduced sales charge. The 13-month period begins
on the date the first purchase made under the Statement of Intention is accepted
by Waddell & Reed, Inc. Each purchase made from time to time under the Statement
of Intention is treated as if the purchaser were buying at one time the total
amount which he or she intends to invest. The sales charge applicable to all
purchases of Class A shares made under the terms of the Statement of Intention
will be the sales charge in effect on the beginning date of the 13-month period.

        In determining the amount which the purchaser must invest in order to
qualify for a reduced sales charge under a Statement of Intention, the
investor's Rights of Accumulation (see above) will be taken into account; that
is, Class A shares already held in the same account in which the purchase is
being made or in any account eligible for grouping with that account, as
described above, will be included.

 Example:      H signs a Statement of Intention indicating his intent to invest
               in his own name a dollar amount sufficient to entitle him to
               purchase Class A shares at the sales charge applicable to a
               purchase of $100,000. H has an IRA account and the Class A shares
               held under the IRA in the Fund have a net asset value as of the
               date the Statement of Intention is accepted by Waddell & Reed,
               Inc. of $15,000; H's wife, W, has an account in her own name
               invested in another fund in the United Group which charges the
               same sales load as the Fund, with a net asset value as of the
               date of acceptance of the Statement of $10,000; H needs to invest
               $75,000 in Class A shares over the 13-month period in order to
               qualify for the reduced sales load applicable to a purchase of
               $100,000.

        A copy of the Statement of Intention signed by a purchaser will be
returned to the purchaser after it is accepted by Waddell & Reed, Inc. and will
set forth the dollar amount of Class A shares which must be purchased within the
13-month period in order to qualify for the reduced sales charge.

        If a purchaser holds shares which have been purchased under a
contractual plan, the shares held under the plan will be taken into account in
determining the amount which must be invested under the Statement of Intention
only if the contractual plan has been completed.

        The minimum initial investment under a Statement of Intention is 5% of
the dollar amount which must be invested under the Statement of Intention. An
amount equal to 5% of the purchase required under the Statement of Intention
will be held "in escrow." If a purchaser does not, during the period covered by
the Statement of Intention, invest the amount required to qualify for the
reduced sales charge under the terms of the Statement of Intention, he or she
will be responsible for payment of the sales charge applicable to the amount
actually invested. The additional sales charge owed on purchases of Class A
shares made under a Statement of Intention which is not completed will be
collected by redeeming part of the shares purchased under the Statement of
Intention and held "in escrow" unless the purchaser makes payment of this amount
to Waddell & Reed, Inc. within 20 days of Waddell & Reed, Inc.'s request for
payment.

        If the actual amount invested is higher than the amount an investor
intends to invest, and is large enough to qualify for a sales charge lower than
that available under the Statement of Intention, the lower sales charge will
apply.

        A Statement of Intention does not bind the purchaser to buy, or Waddell
& Reed, Inc. to sell, the shares covered by the Statement of Intention.

        With respect to Statements of Intention for $2,000,000 or purchases
otherwise qualifying for no sales charge under the terms of the Statement of
Intention, the initial investment must be at least $200,000, and the value of
any shares redeemed during the 13-month period which were acquired under the
Statement of Intention will be deducted in computing the aggregate purchases
under the Statement of Intention.

        Statements of Intention are not available for purchases made under an
SEP where the employer has elected to have all purchases under the SEP grouped.

    Other Funds in the United Group

   
        Reduced sales charges for larger purchases of Class A shares apply to
purchases of any of the Class A shares of any of the funds in the United Group
subject to a sales charge. A purchase of Class A shares, or Class A shares held,
in any of the funds in the United Group subject to a sales charge will be
treated as an investment in the Fund in determining the applicable sales charge.
For these purposes, Class A shares of United Cash Management, Inc. that were
acquired by exchange of another United Group fund's Class A shares on which a
sales charge was paid, plus the shares paid as dividends on those acquired
shares, are also taken into account.
    

Net Asset Value Purchases of Class A Shares

   
        As stated in the Prospectus, Class A shares of the Fund may be purchased
at net asset value by the Directors and officers of the Fund, employees of
Waddell & Reed, Inc., employees of their affiliates, financial advisors of
Waddell & Reed, Inc. and the spouse, children, parents, children's spouses and
spouse's parents of each such Director, officer, employee and financial advisor.
"Child" includes stepchild; "parent" includes stepparent. Purchases of Class A
shares in an IRA sponsored by Waddell & Reed, Inc. established for any of these
eligible purchasers may also be at net asset value. Purchases in any tax
qualified retirement plan under which the eligible purchaser is the sole
participant may also be made at net asset value. Trusts under which the grantor
and the trustee or a co-trustee are each an eligible purchaser are also eligible
for net asset value purchases of Class A shares. "Employees" includes retired
employees. A retired employee is an individual separated from service from
Waddell & Reed, Inc. or affiliated companies with a vested interest in any
Employee Benefit Plan sponsored by Waddell & Reed, Inc. or its affiliated
companies. "Employees" also includes individuals who, on November 6, 1998, were
employees (including retired employees) of a company that on that date was an
affiliate of Waddell & Reed, Inc. "Financial advisors" includes retired
financial advisors. A "retired financial advisor" is any financial advisor who
was, at the time of separation from service from Waddell & Reed, Inc., a Senior
Financial Advisor. A custodian under the UGMA or UTMA purchasing for the child
or grandchild of any employee or financial advisor may purchase Class A shares
at net asset value whether or not the custodian himself is an eligible
purchaser.
    

        Purchases of Class A shares in a 401(k) plan having 100 or more eligible
employees and purchases of Class A shares in a 457 plan having 100 or more
eligible employees may be made at net asset value.

   
        Shares may also be issued at NAV in a merger, acquisition or exchange
offer made pursuant to a plan of reorganization to which the Fund is a party.
    


Reasons for Differences in Public Offering Price of Class A Shares

        As described herein and in the Prospectus for Class A shares, there are
a number of instances in which the Fund's Class A shares are sold or issued on a
basis other than the maximum public offering price, that is, the net asset value
plus the highest sales charge. Some of these relate to lower or eliminated sales
charges for larger purchases of Class A shares, whether made at one time or over
a period of time as under a Statement of Intention or right of accumulation. See
the table of sales charges in the Prospectus. The reasons for these quantity
discounts are, in general, that (i) they are traditional and have long been
permitted in the industry and are therefore necessary to meet competition as to
sales of shares of other funds having such discounts, (ii) certain quantity
discounts are required by rules of the National Association of Securities
Dealers, Inc. (as are elimination of sales charges on the reinvestment of
dividends and distributions), and (iii) they are designed to avoid an unduly
large dollar amount of sales charge on substantial purchases in view of reduced
selling expenses. Quantity discounts are made available to certain related
persons for reasons of family unity and to provide a benefit to tax-exempt plans
and organizations.

        The reasons for the other instances in which there are reduced or
eliminated sales charges for Class A shares are as follows. Exchanges at net
asset value are permitted because a sales charge has already been paid on the
shares exchanged. Sales of Class A shares without sales charge are permitted to
Directors, officers and certain others due to reduced or eliminated selling
expenses and since such sales may aid in the development of a sound employee
organization, encourage incentive, responsibility and interest in the United
Group and an identification with its aims and policies. Limited reinvestments of
redemptions of Class A shares at no sales charge are permitted to attempt to
protect against mistaken or not fully informed redemption decisions. Class A
shares may be issued at no sales charge in plans of reorganization due to
reduced or eliminated sales expenses and since, in some cases, such issuance is
exempted by the 1940 Act from the otherwise applicable restrictions as to what
sales charge must be imposed. In no case in which there is a reduced or
eliminated sales charge are the interests of existing Class A shareholders
adversely affected since, in each case, the Fund receives the net asset value
per share of all shares sold or issued.


Flexible Withdrawal Service for Class A Shareholders

        If you qualify, you may arrange to receive through the Flexible
Withdrawal Service (the "Service") regular monthly, quarterly, semiannual or
annual payments by redeeming on an ongoing basis Class A shares that you own of
the Fund or of any of the funds in the United Group. It would be a disadvantage
to an investor to make additional purchases of shares while a withdrawal program
is in effect because it would result in duplication of sales charges. Applicable
forms to start the Service are available through Waddell & Reed, Inc.

        To qualify for the Service, you must have invested at least $10,000 in
Class A shares which you still own of any of the funds in the United Group; or,
you must own Class A shares having a value of at least $10,000. The value for
this purpose is the value at the offering price.

        You can choose to have your shares redeemed to receive:

        1.  a monthly, quarterly, semiannual or annual payment of $50 or more;

        2. a monthly payment, which will change each month, equal to one-twelfth
of a percentage of the value of the shares in the account (you select the
percentage); or

        3. a monthly or quarterly payment, which will change each month or
quarter, by redeeming a fixed number of shares (at least five shares).

        Shares are redeemed on the 20th day of the month in which the payment is
to be made, or on the prior business day if the 20th is not a business day.
Payments are made within five days of the redemption.

        Retirement plan accounts may be subject to a fee imposed by the plan
custodian for use of its service.

        If you have a share certificate for the shares you want to make
available for the Service, you must enclose the certificate with the form
initiating the Service.

        The dividends and distributions on shares you have made available for
the Service are paid in additional Class A shares. All payments under the
Service are made by redeeming Class A shares, which may involve a gain or loss
for tax purposes. To the extent that payments under the Service exceed dividends
and distributions, the number of Class A shares you own will decrease. When all
of the shares in your account are redeemed, you will not receive any further
payments. Thus, the payments are not an annuity or an income or return on your
investment.

        You may, at any time, change the manner in which you have chosen to have
shares redeemed to any of the other choices originally available to you. You may
at any time, redeem part or all of the shares in your account; if you redeem all
of the shares, the Service is terminated. The Fund can also terminate the
Service by notifying you in writing.

        After the end of each calendar year, information on shares redeemed will
be sent to you to assist you in completing your Federal income tax return.


Exchanges for Shares of Other Funds in the United Group

    Class A Share Exchanges

        Once a sales charge has been paid on shares of a fund in the United
Group, these shares and any shares added to them from dividends or distributions
paid in shares may be freely exchanged for corresponding shares of another fund
in the United Group. The shares you exchange must be worth at least $100 or you
must already own shares of the fund in the United Group into which you want to
exchange.

        You may exchange corresponding shares you own in another fund in the
United Group for Class A shares of the Fund without charge if (i) a sales charge
was paid on these shares, or (ii) the shares were received in exchange for
shares for which a sales charge was paid, or (iii) the shares were acquired from
reinvestment of dividends and distributions paid on such shares. There may have
been one or more such exchanges so long as a sales charge was paid on the shares
originally purchased. Also, shares acquired without a sales charge because the
purchase was $2 million or more will be treated the same as shares on which a
sales charge was paid.

        United Municipal Bond Fund, Inc., United Government Securities Fund,
Inc. and United Municipal High Income Fund, Inc. shares are the exceptions and
special rules apply. Class A shares of these funds may be exchanged for Class A
shares of the Fund only if (i) you received those shares as a result of one or
more exchanges of shares on which a sales charge was originally paid, or (ii)
the shares have been held from the date of the original purchase for at least
six months.

        Subject to the above rules regarding sales charges, you may have a
specific dollar amount of Class A shares of United Cash Management, Inc.
automatically exchanged each month into Class A shares of the Fund or any other
fund in the United Group. The shares of United Cash Management, Inc. which you
designate for automatic exchange must be worth at least $100 or you must own
Class A shares of the fund in the United Group into which you want to exchange.
The minimum value of shares which you may designate for automatic exchange is
$100, which may be allocated among the Class A shares of different funds in the
United Group so long as each fund receives a value of at least $25. Minimum
initial investment and minimum balance requirements apply to such automatic
exchange service.

        You may redeem your Class A shares of the Fund and use the proceeds to
purchase Class Y shares of the Fund if you meet the criteria for purchasing
Class Y shares.

    Class Y Share Exchanges

        Class Y shares of a Fund may be exchanged for Class Y shares of any
other fund in the United Group or for Class A shares of United Cash Management,
Inc.

    General Exchange Information

        When you exchange shares, the total shares you receive will have the
same aggregate net asset value as the total shares you exchange. The relative
values are those next figured after your exchange request is received in good
order.

        These exchange rights and other exchange rights concerning the other
funds in the United Group can in most instances be eliminated or modified at any
time and any such exchange may not be accepted.


Retirement Plans

        As described in the Prospectus for Class A shares, your account may be
set up as a funding vehicle for a retirement plan. For individual taxpayers
meeting certain requirements, Waddell & Reed, Inc. offers model or prototype
documents for the following retirement plans. All of these plans involve
investment in shares of the Fund (or shares of certain other funds in the United
Group).

        Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs). Investors having earned income
may set up a plan that is commonly called an IRA. Under a traditional IRA, an
investor can contribute each year up to 100% of his or her earned income, up to
an annual maximum of $2,000 (provided the investor has not reached age 70 1/2).
For a married couple, the annual maximum is $4,000 ($2,000 for each spouse) or,
if less, the couple's combined earned income for the taxable year even if one
spouse had no earned income. Generally, the contributions are deductible unless
the investor (or, if married, either spouse) is an active participant in a
qualified retirement plan or if, notwithstanding that the investor or one or
both spouses so participate, their adjusted gross income does not exceed certain
levels. However, a married investor who is not an active participant, files
jointly with his or her spouse and whose combined adjusted gross income does not
exceed $150,000 is not affected by the spouse's active participant status.

        An investor may also use a traditional IRA to receive a rollover
contribution that is either (a) a direct rollover distribution from an
employer's plan or (b) a rollover of an eligible distribution paid to the
investor from an employer's plan or another IRA. To the extent a rollover
contribution is made to a traditional IRA, the distribution will not be subject
to Federal income tax until distributed from the IRA. A direct rollover
generally applies to any distribution from an employer's plan (including a
custodial account under Section 403(b)(7) of the Code, but not an IRA) other
than certain periodic payments, required minimum distributions and other
specified distributions. In a direct rollover, the eligible rollover
distribution is paid directly to the IRA, not to the investor. If, instead, an
investor receives payment of an eligible rollover distribution, all or a portion
of that distribution generally may be rolled over to an IRA within 60 days after
receipt of the distribution. Because mandatory Federal income tax withholding
applies to any eligible rollover distribution which is not paid in a direct
rollover, investors should consult their tax advisers or pension consultants as
to the applicable tax rules. If you already have an IRA, you may have the assets
in that IRA transferred directly to an IRA offered by Waddell & Reed, Inc.

   
        Roth IRAs. Investors whose adjusted gross income (or combined adjusted
gross income, if married) does not exceed certain levels may establish and
contribute up to $2,000 per tax year to a Roth IRA. In addition, for an investor
whose adjusted gross income does not exceed $100,000 (and who is not a married
person filing a separate return), certain distributions from traditional IRAs
may be rolled over to a Roth IRA and any of the investor's traditional IRAs may
be converted into a Roth IRA; these rollover distributions and conversions are,
however, subject to Federal income tax.

        Contributions to a Roth IRA are not deductible; however, earnings
accumulate tax-free in the Roth IRA, and withdrawals of earnings are not subject
to Federal income tax if the account has been held for at least five years and
the account holder has reached age 59 1/2 (or certain other conditions apply).
    

        Education IRAs. Although not technically for retirement savings,
Education IRAs provide a vehicle for saving for a child's higher education. An
Education IRA may be established for the benefit of any minor, and any person
whose adjusted gross income does not exceed certain levels may contribute to an
Education IRA, provided that no more than $500 may be contributed for any year
to Education IRAs for the same beneficiary. Contributions are not deductible and
may not be made after the beneficiary reaches age 18; however, earnings
accumulate tax-free, and withdrawals are not subject to tax if used to pay the
qualified higher education expenses of the beneficiary (or a member of his or
her family).

        Simplified Employee Pension (SEP) plans. Employers can make
contributions to SEP-IRAs established for employees. An employer may contribute
up to 15% of compensation or $24,000, whichever is less, per year for each
employee.

        Savings Incentive Match Plans for Employees (SIMPLE Plans). An employer
with 100 or fewer employees who does not sponsor another active retirement plan
may sponsor a SIMPLE to contribute to its employees' retirement accounts. A
SIMPLE plan can be funded by either an IRA or a 401(k) plan. In general, an
employer can choose to match employee contributions dollar-for-dollar (up to 3%
of an employee's compensation) or may contribute to all eligible employees 2% of
their compensation, whether or not they defer salary to their retirement plans.
SIMPLE plans involve fewer administrative requirements than 401(k) or other
qualified plans generally.

   
        Keogh Plans. Keogh plans, which are available to self-employed
individuals, are defined contribution plans that may be either a money purchase
plan or a profit-sharing plan. As a general rule, an investor under a defined
contribution Keogh plan can contribute each year up to 25% of his or her annual
earned income, with an annual maximum of $30,000.
    

        457 Plans. If an investor is an employee of a state or local government
or of certain types of charitable organizations, he or she may be able to enter
into a deferred compensation arrangement in accordance with Section 457 of the
Code.

        TSAs - Custodial Accounts and Title I Plans. If an investor is an
employee of a public school system or of certain types of charitable
organizations, he or she may be able to enter into a deferred compensation
arrangement through a custodian account under Section 403(b) of the Code. Some
organizations have adopted Title I plans, which are funded by employer
contributions in addition to employee deferrals.

        401(k) Plans. With a 401(k) plan, employees can make tax-deferred
contributions into a plan to which the employer may also contribute, usually on
a matching basis. An employee may defer each year up to 25% of compensation,
subject to certain annual maximums, which may be increased each year based on
cost-of-living adjustments.

        More detailed information about these arrangements and applicable forms
are available from Waddell & Reed, Inc. These plans may involve complex tax
questions as to premature distributions and other matters. Investors should
consult their tax adviser or pension consultant.


Redemptions

        The Prospectus gives information as to redemption procedures. Redemption
payments are made within seven days unless delayed because of emergency
conditions determined by the SEC, when the NYSE is closed other than for
weekends or holidays, or when trading on the NYSE is restricted. Payment is made
in cash, although under extraordinary conditions redemptions may be made in
portfolio securities. Payment for redemption of shares of the Fund may be made
in portfolio securities when the Fund's Board of Directors determines that
conditions exist making cash payments undesirable. Securities used for payment
of redemptions are valued at the value used in figuring net asset value. There
would be brokerage costs to the redeeming shareholder in selling such
securities. The Fund, however, has elected to be governed by Rule 18f-1 under
the 1940 Act, pursuant to which it is obligated to redeem shares solely in cash
up to the lesser of $250,000 or 1% of its net asset value during any 90-day
period for any one shareholder.


Reinvestment Privilege

        The Prospectus for Class A shares discusses the reinvestment privilege
for Class A shares under which, if you redeem your Class A shares and then
decide it was not a good idea, you may reinvest. If Class A shares of the Fund
are then being offered, you can put all or part of your redemption payment back
into Class A shares of the Fund without any sales charge at the net asset value
next determined after you have returned the amount. Your written request to do
this must be received within 30 days after your redemption request was received.
You can do this only once as to Class A shares of the Fund. You do not use up
this privilege by redeeming Class A shares to invest the proceeds at net asset
value in a Keogh plan or an IRA.


Mandatory Redemption of Certain Small Accounts

        The Fund has the right to compel the redemption of shares held under any
account or any plan if the aggregate net asset value of such shares (taken at
cost or value as the Board of Directors may determine) is less than $500. The
Board of Directors has no intent to compel redemptions in the foreseeable
future. If it should elect to compel redemptions, shareholders who are affected
will receive prior written notice and will be permitted 60 days to bring their
accounts up to the minimum before this redemption is processed.


                             DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS

   
        The day-to-day affairs of the Fund are handled by outside organizations
selected by the Board of Directors. The Board of Directors has responsibility
for establishing broad corporate policies for the Fund and for overseeing
overall performance of the selected experts. It has the benefit of advice and
reports from independent counsel and independent auditors. The majority of the
Directors is not affiliated with Waddell & Reed, Inc.

        The principal occupation during at least the past five years of each
Director and officer is given below. Each of the persons listed through and
including Mr. Vogel is a member of the Fund's Board of Directors. The other
persons are officers but not members of the Board of Directors. For purposes of
this section, the term "Fund Complex" includes each of the registered investment
companies in the United Group of Mutual Funds, Waddell & Reed Funds, Inc. and
Target/United Funds, Inc. Each of the Fund's Directors is also a Director of
each of the other funds in the Fund Complex and each of its officers is also an
officer of one or more of the funds in the Fund Complex.

KEITH A. TUCKER*
        Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Fund and each of the other
funds in the Fund Complex; Chairman of the Board of Directors, Chief Executive
Officer, Principal Financial Officer and Director of Waddell & Reed Financial,
Inc.; President, Chairman of the Board of Directors and Chief Executive Officer
of Waddell & Reed Financial Services, Inc.; Chairman of the Board of Directors
of WRIMCO, Waddell & Reed, Inc. and Waddell & Reed Services Company; formerly,
President of the Fund and each of the other funds in the Fund Complex; formerly,
Chairman of the Board of Directors of Waddell & Reed Asset Management Company, a
former affiliate of Waddell & Reed Financial, Inc. Date of birth: February 11,
1945.

JAMES M. CONCANNON
950 Docking Road
Topeka, Kansas  66615
        Dean and Professor of Law, Washburn University School of Law; Director,
AmVestors CBO II Inc. Date of brth: October 2, 1947.

JOHN A. DILLINGHAM
4040 Northwest Claymont Drive
Kansas City, Missouri  64116
        President, JoDill Corp., an agricultural company; President and Director
of Dillingham Enterprises Inc.; formerly, Director and consultant, McDougal
Construction Company; formerly, Instructor at Central Missouri State University;
formerly, Member of the Board of Police Commissioners, Kansas City, Missouri;
formerly, Senior Vice President-Sales and Marketing, Garney Companies, Inc., a
specialty utility contractor. Date of birth: January 9, 1939.

DAVID P. GARDNER
525 Middlefield Road, Suite 200
Menlo Park, California 94025
        President of Hewlett Foundation and Chairman of George S. and Delores
Dori Eccles Foundation. Director of First Security Corp., a bank holding
company, and Director of Fluor Corp., a company with interests in coal. Date of
birth: March 24, 1933.

LINDA K. GRAVES*
1 South West Cedar Crest Road
Topeka, Kansas  66606
        First Lady of Kansas. Partner, Levy and Craig, P.C., a law firm. Date of
birth: July 29, 1953.

JOSEPH HARROZ, JR.
125 South Creekdale Drive
Norman, Oklahoma 73072
        General Counsel of the Board of Regents and Adjunct Professor of Law at
the University of Oklahoma College of Law; formerly, Vice President for
Executive Affairs of the University of Oklahoma; formerly, an Attorney with
Crowe & Dunlevy, a law firm. Date of birth: January 17, 1967.

JOHN F. HAYES
20 West 2nd Avenue
P. O. Box 2977
Hutchinson, Kansas  67504-2977
        Director of Central Bank and Trust; Director of Central Financial
Corporation; Director of Central Properties, Inc.; Chairman of the Board of
Directors, Gilliland & Hayes, P.A., a law firm; formerly, President, Gilliland &
Hayes, P.A. Date of birth: December 11, 1919.

ROBERT L. HECHLER*
        President and Principal Financial Officer of the Fund and each of the
other funds in the Fund Complex; Executive Vice President, Chief Operating
Officer and Director of Waddell & Reed Financial, Inc.; Vice President, Chief
Operating Officer, Director and Treasurer of Waddell & Reed Financial Services,
Inc.; Executive Vice President, Principal Financial Officer, Director and
Treasurer of WRIMCO; President, Chief Executive Officer, Principal Financial
Officer, Director and Treasurer of Waddell & Reed, Inc.; President, Director and
Treasurer of Waddell & Reed Services Company; formerly, Vice President of the
Fund and each of the other funds in the Fund Complex; formerly, Director and
Treasurer of Waddell & Reed Asset Management Company, a former affiliate of
Waddell & Reed Financial, Inc. Date of birth: November 12, 1936.

HENRY J. HERRMANN*
        Vice President of the Fund and each of the other funds in the Fund
Complex; President, Chief Investment Officer, Treasurer and Director of Waddell
& Reed Financial, Inc.; Vice President, Chief Investment Officer and Director of
Waddell & Reed Financial Services, Inc.; Director of Waddell & Reed, Inc.;
President, Chief Executive Officer, Chief Investment Officer and Director of
WRIMCO; formerly, President, Chief Executive Officer, Chief Investment Officer
and Director of Waddell & Reed Asset Management Company, a former affiliate of
Waddell & Reed Financial, Inc. Date of birth: December 8, 1942.

GLENDON E. JOHNSON
13635 Deering Bay Drive
Unit 284
Miami, Florida  33158
        Retired; formerly, Director and Chief Executive Officer of John Alden
Financial Corporation and subsidiaries. Date of birth: February 19, 1924.

WILLIAM T. MORGAN*
928 Glorietta Blvd.
Coronado, California  92118
        Retired; formerly, Chairman of the Board of Directors and President of
the Fund and each fund in the Fund Complex then in existence. (Mr. Morgan
retired as Chairman of the Board of Directors and President of the funds in the
Fund Complex then in existence on April 30, 1993); formerly, President, Director
and Chief Executive Officer of WRIMCO and Waddell & Reed, Inc.; formerly,
Chairman of the Board of Directors of Waddell & Reed Services Company. Date of
birth: April 27, 1928.

RONALD C. REIMER
2601 Verona Road
Mission Hills, Kansas 66208
        Retired. Co-founder and teacher at Servant Leadership School of Kansas
City; Director of Network Rehabilitation Services; formerly, Employment
Counselor and Director of McCue-Parker Center. Date of birth: August 3, 1934.

FRANK J. ROSS, JR.*
700 West 47th Street
Kansas City, Missouri  64112
        Shareholder, Polsinelli, White, Vardeman & Shalton, a law firm. Date of
birth: April 9, 1953.

ELEANOR B. SCHWARTZ
5100 Rockhill Road
Kansas City, Missouri  64113
        Professor of Business Administration, University of Missouri-Kansas
City; formerly, Chancellor, University of Missouri-Kansas City. Date of birth:
January 1, 1937.

FREDERICK VOGEL III
1805 West Bradley Road
Milwaukee, Wisconsin  53217
        Retired.  Date of birth:  August 7, 1935.

Helge K. Lee
        Vice President, Secretary and General Counsel of the Fund and each of
the other funds in the Fund Complex; Secretary and General Counsel of Waddell &
Reed Financial, Inc.; Vice President, Secretary, General Counsel and Director of
Waddell & Reed Financial Services, Inc.; Senior Vice President, Secretary and
General Counsel of WRIMCO and Waddell & Reed, Inc.; Senior Vice President,
Secretary, General Counsel and Director of Waddell & Reed Services Company;
formerly, Executive Vice President, Secretary and Chief Compliance Officer of
LGT Asset Management, Inc. and affiliates; formerly, Senior Vice President,
General Counsel and Secretary of Strong Capital Management, Inc. and affiliates.
Date of birth: March 30, 1946.

Theodore W. Howard
        Vice President, Treasurer and Principal Accounting Officer of the Fund
and each of the other funds in the Fund Complex; Vice President of Waddell &
Reed Services Company. Date of birth: July 18, 1942.
    

John M. Holliday
        Vice President of the Fund and eight other funds in the Fund Complex;
Senior Vice President of WRIMCO; formerly, Senior Vice President of Waddell &
Reed Asset Management Company. Date of birth: June 11, 1935.

Louise D. Rieke
        Vice President of the Fund and two other funds in the Fund Complex; Vice
President of WRIMCO; formerly, Vice President of Waddell & Reed Asset Management
Company. Date of birth: April 24, 1949.

        The address of each person is 6300 Lamar Avenue, P.O. Box 29217, Shawnee
Mission, Kansas 66201-9217 unless a different address is given.

   
        The Directors who may be deemed to be "interested persons" as defined in
the 1940 Act of the Fund's underwriter, Waddell & Reed, Inc., or of WRIMCO are
indicated as such by an asterisk.

        The Board of Directors has created an honorary position of Director
Emeritus, which position a Director may elect after resignation from the Board
provided the Director has attained the age of 70 and has served as a Director of
the funds in the United Group for a total of at least five years. A Director
Emeritus receives fees in recognition of his or her past services whether or not
services are rendered in his or her capacity as Director Emeritus, but has no
authority or responsibility with respect to management of the Fund. Messrs.
Henry L. Bellmon, Jay B. Dillingham, Doyle Patterson, Ronald K. Richey and Paul
S. Wise retired as Directors of the Fund and of each of the funds in the Fund
Complex and elected a position as Director Emeritus.

        The funds in the United Group, Target/United Funds, Inc. and Waddell &
Reed Funds, Inc. pay to each Director a total of $48,000 per year, plus $2,500
for each meeting of the Board of Directors attended plus reimbursement of
expenses of attending such meeting and $500 for each committee meeting attended
which is not in conjunction with a Board of Directors meeting, other than
Directors who are affiliates of Waddell & Reed, Inc. The fees to the Directors
who receive them are divided among the funds in the United Group, Target/United
Funds, Inc. and Waddell & Reed Funds, Inc. based on their relative size.

        During the Fund's fiscal year ended March 31, 1999, the Fund's Directors
received the following fees for service as a director:
    

                               Compensation Table

                                                               Total
                                        Aggregate          Compensation
                                      Compensation           From Fund
                                          From               and Fund
Director                                  Fund               Complex*
- --------                              ------------         ------------

   
Robert L. Hechler
Henry J. Herrmann
Keith A. Tucker                               0                     0
James M. Concannon
John A. Dillingham
David P. Gardner
Linda K. Graves
Joseph Harroz, Jr.
John F. Hayes
Glendon E. Johnson
William T. Morgan
Ronald C. Reimer
Frank J. Ross, Jr.
Eleanor B. Schwartz
Frederick Vogel III
    

*No pension or retirement benefits have been accrued as a part of Fund expenses.

   
        Mr. Gardner was elected as a Director on August 18, 1998. Messrs.
Harroz, Hechler, Herrmann and Reimer were elected as Directors on November 18,
1998. The officers are paid by WRIMCO or its affiliates.
    


Shareholdings

   
        As of May 31, 1999, all of the Fund's Directors and officers as a group
owned less than 1% of the outstanding shares of the Fund. The following table
sets forth information with respect to the Fund, as of May 31, 1999, regarding
the beneficial ownership of the classes of the Fund's shares.

                                                 Shares owned
Name and Address                                 Beneficially
of Beneficial Owner                Class         or of Record        Percent
- -------------------                -----         ------------        -------

Fiduciary Trust Co NH Tr            Class Y                                %
CMPP Okanogan Cnty Hosp Dist 3
FBO Unallocated Assets
Qualified Plan
PO Box 793
Omak WA   98841

Waddell & Reed                      Class Y
    Financial, Inc.
Savings & Investment Plan
6300 Lamar Avenue
Overland Park KS 66201

Torchmark Corporation               Class Y
Savings & Investment Plan
2001 Third Avenue South
Birmingham AL 35202
    

                            PAYMENTS TO SHAREHOLDERS


General

        There are three sources for the payments the Fund makes to you as a
shareholder of a class of shares of the Fund, other than payments when you
redeem your shares. The first source is net investment income, which is derived
from the dividends, interest and earned discount on the securities the Fund
holds, less expenses (which will vary by class). The second source is net
realized capital gains, which are derived from the proceeds received from the
Fund's sale of securities at a price higher than the Fund's tax basis (usually
cost) in such securities, less losses from sales of securities at a price lower
than the Fund's basis therein these gains can be either long-term or short-term,
depending on how long the Fund has owned the securities before it sells them.
The third source is net realized gains from foreign currency transactions. The
payments made to shareholders from net investment income, net short-term capital
gains and net realized gains from certain foreign currency transactions are
called dividends.

   
        The Fund pays distributions from net capital gains (the excess of net
long-term capital gains over net short-term capital losses). It may or may not
have such gain, depending on whether or not securities are sold and at what
price. If the Fund has net realized capital gains, it will pay distributions
once each year, in the latter part of the fourth calendar quarter, except to the
extent it has net capital losses carried over from a prior year or years to
offset the gains.
    


Choices You Have on Your Dividends and Distributions

   
        On your application form, you can give instructions that (i) you want
cash for your dividends and distributions, however, a total dividend and/or
distribution amount less than ten dollars will be automatically paid in shares
of the Fund of the same class as that with respect to which they were paid (ii)
you want your dividends and distributions paid in shares of the same class as
that with respect to which they were paid, or (iii) you want cash for your
dividends, however, a total dividend amount less than ten dollars will be
automatically paid in shares of the Fund of the same class as that with respect
to which it was paid and want your distributions paid in shares of the Fund of
the same class as that with respect to which they were paid. You can change your
instructions at any time. If you give no instructions, your dividends and
distributions will be paid in shares of the Fund of the same class as that with
respect to which they were paid. All payments in shares are at net asset value
without any sales charge. The net asset value used for this purpose is that
computed as of the record date for the dividend or distribution, although this
could be changed by the Board of Directors.
    

        Even if you get dividends and distributions on Class A shares in cash,
you can thereafter reinvest them (or distributions only) in Class A shares of
the Fund at net asset value (i.e., no sales charge) next determined after
receipt by Waddell & Reed, Inc. of the amount clearly identified as a
reinvestment. The reinvestment must be within 45 days after the payment.


                                      TAXES


General

   
        The Fund has qualified for treatment as a regulated investment company
("RIC") under the Code, so that it is relieved of Federal income tax on that
part of its investment company taxable income (consisting generally of taxable
net investment income, net short-term capital gains and net gains from certain
foreign currency transactions) that is distributed to its shareholders. To
continue to qualify as a RIC, the Fund must distribute to its shareholders for
each taxable year at least 90% of the sum of its investment company taxable
income ("Distribution Requirement") and must meet several additional
requirements. These requirements include the following: (1) the Fund must derive
at least 90% of its gross income each taxable year from dividends, interest,
payments with respect to securities loans and gains from the sale or other
disposition of securities or foreign currencies, or other income (including
gains from options, futures contracts or forward contracts) derived with respect
to its business of investing in securities or those currencies ("Income
Requirement"); (2) at the close of each quarter of the Fund's taxable year, at
least 50% of the value of its total assets must be represented by cash and cash
items, U.S. Government securities, securities of other RICs and other securities
that are limited, in respect of any one issuer, to an amount that does not
exceed 5% of the value of the Fund's total assets and that does not represent
more than 10% of the issuer's outstanding voting securities ("50%
Diversification Requirement"); and (3) at the close of each quarter of the
Fund's taxable year, not more than 25% of the value of its total assets may be
invested in securities (other than U.S. Government securities or the securities
of other RICs) of any one issuer.
    

        Dividends and distributions declared by the Fund in October, November or
December of any year and payable to its shareholders of record on a date in any
of those months are deemed to have been paid by the Fund and received by you on
December 31 of that year if they are paid by the Fund during the following
January. Accordingly, those dividends and distributions will be taxed to the
shareholders for the year in which that December 31 falls.

        If Fund shares are sold at a loss after being held for six months or
less, the loss will be treated as long-term, instead of short-term, capital loss
to the extent of any distributions received on those shares. Investors also
should be aware that if shares are purchased shortly before the record date for
a dividend or distribution, the investor will receive some portion of the
purchase price back as a taxable dividend or distribution.

        The Fund will be subject to a nondeductible 4% excise tax ("Excise Tax")
to the extent it fails to distribute by the end of any calendar year
substantially all of its ordinary income for that year and capital gains net
income for the one-year period ending on October 31 of that year, plus certain
other amounts. It is the Fund's policy to pay sufficient dividends and
distributions each year to avoid imposition of the Excise Tax. The Code permits
the Fund to defer into the next calendar year net capital losses incurred
between November 1 and the end of the current calendar year.


Income from Foreign Securities

   
        Dividends and interest received, and gains realized, by the Fund may be
subject to income, withholding or other taxes imposed by foreign countries and
U.S. possessions ("foreign taxes") that would reduce the yield and/or total
return on its securities. Tax conventions between certain countries and the
United States may reduce or eliminate foreign taxes, however, and many foreign
countries do not impose taxes on capital gains in respect of investments by
foreign investors.
    


Foreign Currency Gains and Losses

        Gains or losses (1) from the disposition of foreign currencies, (2) from
the disposition of a debt security denominated in a foreign currency that are
attributable to fluctuations in the value of the foreign currency between the
date of acquisition of the security and the date of disposition, and (3) that
are attributable to fluctuations in exchange rates that occur between the time
the Fund accrues interest, dividends or other receivables or accrues expenses or
other liabilities denominated in a foreign currency and the time the Fund
actually collects the receivables or pays the liabilities, generally are treated
as ordinary income or loss. These gains or losses, referred to under the Code as
"section 988" gains or losses, may increase or decrease the amount of the Fund's
investment company taxable income to be distributed to its shareholders.


Income from Options, Futures and Forward Currency Contracts and Foreign
Currencies

        The use of hedging and option income strategies, such as writing
(selling) and purchasing options and futures contracts and entering into forward
currency contracts involves complex rules that will determine for income tax
purposes the amount, character and timing of recognition of the gains and losses
the Fund realizes in connection therewith. Gains from the disposition of foreign
currencies (except certain gains that may be excluded by future regulations),
and gains from options, futures contracts and forward currency contracts derived
by the Fund with respect to its business of investing in securities or foreign
currencies, will qualify as permissible income under the Income Requirement.

        Any income the Fund earns from writing options is treated as short-term
capital gain. If the Fund enters into a closing purchase transaction, it will
have a short-term capital gain or loss based on the difference between the
premium it received for the option it wrote and the premium it paid for the
option it bought. If an option written by the Fund expires without being
exercised, the premium it receives also will be a short-term capital gain. If
such an option is exercised and the Fund thus sells the securities subject to
the option, the premium the Fund receives will be added to the exercise price to
determine the gain or loss on the sale.

   
        Certain options, futures contracts and forward currency contracts in
which the Fund may invest may be "section 1256 contracts." Section 1256
contracts held by the Fund at the end of its taxable year, other than contracts
subject to a "mixed straddle" election made by the Fund, are "marked-to-market"
(that is, treated as sold at that time for their fair market value) for Federal
income tax purposes, with the result that unrealized gains or losses are treated
as though they were realized. Sixty percent of any net gain or loss recognized
on these deemed sales, and 60% of any net realized gain or loss from any actual
sales of section 1256 contracts, are treated as long-term capital gains or
losses, and the balance are treated as short-term capital gains or losses. That
60% portion will qualify for the 20% (10% for taxpayers in the 15% marginal tax
bracket) maximum tax rate on net capital gains enacted by the Taxpayer Relief
Act of 1997. Section 1256 contracts also may be marked-to-market for purposes of
the Excise Tax and other purposes. The Fund may need to distribute any
mark-to-market gains to its shareholders to satisfy the Distribution Requirement
and/or avoid imposition of the Excise Tax, even though it may not have closed
the transactions and received cash to pay the distributions.
    

        Code section 1092 (dealing with straddles) may also affect the taxation
of options and futures contracts in which the Fund may invest. Section 1092
defines a "straddle" as offsetting positions with respect to personal property;
for these purposes, options and futures contracts are personal property. Section
1092 generally provides that any loss from the disposition of a position in a
straddle may be deducted only to the extent the loss exceeds the unrealized gain
on the offsetting position(s) of the straddle. The regulations under section
1092 also provide certain "wash sale" rules that apply to transactions where a
position is sold at a loss and a new offsetting position is acquired within a
prescribed period, and "short sale" rules applicable to straddles. If the Fund
makes certain elections, the amount, character and timing of the recognition of
gains and losses from the affected straddle positions will be determined under
rules that vary according to the elections made. Because only a few of the
regulations implementing the straddle rules have been promulgated, the tax
consequences of straddle transactions to the Fund are not entirely clear.

        If the Fund has an "appreciated financial position" -- generally, an
interest (including an interest through an option, futures or forward currency
contract or short sale) with respect to any stock, debt instrument (other than
"straight debt") or partnership interest the fair market value of which exceeds
its adjusted basis -and enters into a "constructive sale" of the same or
substantially similar property, the Fund will be treated as having made an
actual sale thereof, with the result that gain will be recognized at that time.
A constructive sale generally consists of a short sale, an offsetting notional
principal contract or futures or forward currency contract entered into by the
Fund or a related person with respect to the same or substantially similar
property. In addition, if the appreciated financial position is itself a short
sale or such a contract, acquisition of the underlying property or substantially
similar property will be deemed a constructive sale.


Zero Coupon and Payment-in-Kind Securities

        The Fund may acquire zero coupon or other securities issued with OID. As
the holder of those securities, the Fund must include in its income the original
issue discount that accrues on the securities during the taxable year, even if
the Fund receives no corresponding payment on the securities during the year.
Similarly, the Fund must include in its gross income securities it receives as
"interest" on payment-in-kind securities. Because the Fund annually must
distribute substantially all of its investment company taxable income, including
any accrued OID and other non-cash income, in order to satisfy the Distribution
Requirement and to avoid imposition of the Excise Tax, it may be required in a
particular year to distribute as a dividend an amount that is greater than the
total amount of cash it actually receives. Those distributions will be made from
the Fund's cash assets or from the proceeds of sales of portfolio securities, if
necessary. The Fund may realize capital gains or losses from those sales, which
would increase or decrease its investment company taxable income and/or net
capital gains.


                      PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS AND BROKERAGE

   
        One of the duties undertaken by WRIMCO pursuant to the Management
Agreement is to arrange the purchase and sale of securities for the portfolio of
the Fund. Transactions in securities other than those for which an exchange is
the primary market are generally done with dealers acting as principals or
market makers. Brokerage commissions are paid primarily for effecting
transactions in securities traded on an exchange and otherwise only if it
appears likely that a better price or execution can be obtained. The individual
who manages the Fund may manage other advisory accounts with similar investment
objectives. It can be anticipated that the manager will frequently place
concurrent orders for all or most accounts for which the manager has
responsibility or WRIMCO may otherwise combine orders for the Fund with those of
other funds in the United Group, Target/United Funds, Inc. and Waddell & Reed
Funds, Inc. or other accounts for which it has investment discretion.
Transactions effected pursuant to such combined orders are averaged as to price
and allocated in accordance with the purchase or sale orders actually placed for
each fund or advisory account, except where the combined order is not filled
completely. In this case, WRIMCO will ordinarily allocate the transaction pro
rata based on the orders placed. Sharing in large transactions could affect the
price the Fund pays or receives or the amount it buys or sells. However,
sometimes a better negotiated commission is available through combined orders.

        To effect the portfolio transactions of the Fund, WRIMCO is authorized
to engage broker-dealers ("brokers") which, in its best judgment based on all
relevant factors, will implement the policy of the Fund to seek "best execution"
(prompt and reliable execution at the best price obtainable) for reasonable and
competitive commissions. WRIMCO need not seek competitive commission bidding but
is expected to minimize the commissions paid to the extent consistent with the
interests and policies of the Fund. Subject to review by the Board of Directors,
such policies include the selection of brokers which provide execution and/or
research services and other services, including pricing or quotation services
directly or through others ("research and brokerage services") considered by
WRIMCO to be useful or desirable for its investment management of the Fund
and/or the other funds and accounts over which WRIMCO has investment discretion.

        Research and brokerage services are, in general, defined by reference to
Section 28(e) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 as including (i) advice,
either directly or through publications or writings, as to the value of
securities, the advisability of investing in, purchasing or selling securities
and the availability of securities and purchasers or sellers; (ii) furnishing
analyses and reports; or (iii) effecting securities transactions and performing
functions incidental thereto (such as clearance, settlement and custody).
"Investment discretion" is, in general, defined as having authorization to
determine what securities shall be purchased or sold for an account, or making
those decisions even though someone else has responsibility.

        The commissions paid to brokers that provide such research and/or
brokerage services may be higher than another qualified broker would charge for
effecting comparable transactions if a good faith determination is made by
WRIMCO that the commission is reasonable in relation to the research or
brokerage services provided. Subject to the foregoing considerations, WRIMCO may
also consider sales of Fund shares as a factor in the selection of
broker-dealers to execute portfolio transactions. No allocation of brokerage or
principal business is made to provide any other benefits to WRIMCO.
    

        The investment research provided by a particular broker may be useful
only to one or more of the other advisory accounts of WRIMCO, and investment
research received for the commissions of those other accounts may be useful both
to the Fund and one or more of such other accounts. To the extent that
electronic or other products provided by such brokers to assist WRIMCO in making
investment management decisions are used for administration or other
non-research purposes, a reasonable allocation of the cost of the product
attributable to its non-research use is made by WRIMCO.

        Such investment research, which may be supplied by a third party at the
request of a broker, includes information on particular companies and industries
as well as market, economic or institutional activity areas. It serves to
broaden the scope and supplement the research activities of WRIMCO; serves to
make available additional views for consideration and comparisons; and enables
WRIMCO to obtain market information on the price of securities held in the
Fund's portfolio or being considered for purchase.

   
        The Fund may also use its brokerage to pay for pricing or quotation
services to value securities. During the Fund's fiscal years ended March 31,
1999, 1998 and 1997, it paid brokerage commissions of $ , $30,213 and $28,192,
respectively. These figures do not include principal transactions or spreads or
concessions on principal transactions, i.e., those in which the Fund sells
securities to a broker-dealer firm or buys from a broker-dealer firm securities
owned by it.

        During the Fund's fiscal year ended March 31, 1999, the transactions,
other than principal transactions, which were directed to broker-dealers who
provided research as well as execution totaled $ on which $ in brokerage
commissions were paid. These transactions were allocated to these broker-dealers
by the internal allocation procedures described above.
    

        The Fund, WRIMCO and Waddell & Reed, Inc. have adopted a Code of Ethics
which imposes restrictions on the personal investment activities of their
employees, officers and interested directors.


                                OTHER INFORMATION


The Shares of the Fund

   
        The Fund offers two classes of shares: Class A and Class Y. Each class
represents an interest in the same assets of the Fund and differ as follows:
each class of shares has exclusive voting rights on matters pertaining to
matters appropriately limited to that class; Class A shares are subject to an
initial sales charge and to an ongoing distribution and/or service fee and Class
Y shares, which are designated for institutional investors, have no sales charge
nor ongoing distribution and/or service fee; each class may bear differing
amounts of certain class-specific expenses; and each class has a separate
exchange privilege. The Fund does not anticipate that there will be any
conflicts between the interests of holders of the different classes of shares of
the Fund by virtue of those classes. On an ongoing basis, the Board of Directors
will consider whether any such conflict exists and, if so, take appropriate
action. Each share of the Fund is entitled to equal voting, dividend,
liquidation and redemption rights, except that due to the differing expenses
borne by the two classes, dividends and liquidation proceeds of Class A shares
are expected to be lower than for Class Y shares of the Fund. Each fractional
share of a class has the same rights, in proportion, as a full share of that
class. Shares are fully paid and nonassessable when purchased.

        The Fund does not hold annual meetings of shareholders; however, certain
significant corporate matters, such as the approval of a new investment advisory
agreement or a change in fundamental investment policy, which require
shareholder approval will be presented to shareholders at a meeting called by
the Board of Directors for such purpose.

        Special meetings of shareholders may be called for any purpose upon
receipt by the Fund of a request in writing signed by shareholders holding not
less than 25% of all shares entitled to vote at such meeting, provided certain
conditions stated in the bylaws are met. There will normally be no meeting of
the shareholders for the purpose of electing directors until such time as less
than a majority of directors holding office have been elected by shareholders,
at time which the directors then in office will call a shareholders' meeting for
the election of directors. To the extent that Section 16(c) of the 1940 Act
applies to the Fund, the directors are required to call a meeting of
shareholders for the purpose of voting upon the question of removal of any
director when requested in writing to do so by the shareholders of record of not
less than 10% of the Fund's outstanding shares.

        Each share (regardless of class) has one vote. All shares of the Fund
vote together as a single class, except as to any matter for which a separate
vote of any class is required by the 1940 Act, and except as to any matter which
affects the interests of one or more particular classes, in which case only the
shareholders of the affected classes are entitled to vote, each as a separate
class.
    

<PAGE>
   
APPENDIX A

        The following are descriptions of some of the ratings of securities
which the Fund may use. The Fund may also use ratings provided by other
nationally recognized statistical rating organizations in determining the
securities eligible for investment.


DESCRIPTION OF BOND RATINGS

        Standard & Poor's, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. An S&P
corporate bond rating is a current assessment of the creditworthiness of an
obligor with respect to a specific obligation. This assessment of
creditworthiness may take into consideration obligors such as guarantors,
insurers or lessees.

        The debt rating is not a recommendation to purchase, sell or hold a
security, inasmuch as it does not comment as to market price or suitability for
a particular investor.

        The ratings are based on current information furnished to S&P by the
issuer or obtained by S&P from other sources it considers reliable. S&P does not
perform an 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
based on other circumstances.

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

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

2.      Nature of and provisions of the obligation;

3.      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 S&P. Capacity
to pay interest and repay principal is extremely strong.

        AA -- Debt rated AA also qualifies as high quality debt. Capacity to pay
interest and repay principal is very strong, and debt rated AA differs from AAA
issues only in a 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 as
having predominantly speculative characteristics 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 exposures
to adverse conditions.

        BB -- Debt rated 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 indefinable 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.

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

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

        Plus (+) or Minus (-) -- To provide more detailed indications of credit
quality, 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 rating categories.

        NR -- Indicates that no public rating has been requested, that there is
insufficient information on which to base a rating, or that S&P does not rate a
particular type of obligation as a matter of policy.

        Debt Obligations of issuers outside the United States and its
territories are rated on the same basis as domestic corporate and municipal
issues. The ratings measure the creditworthiness of the obligor but do not take
into account currency exchange and related uncertainties.

        Bond Investment Quality Standards: Under present commercial bank
regulations issued by the Comptroller of the Currency, bonds rated in the top
four categories (AAA, AA, A, BBB, commonly known as "investment grade" ratings)
are generally regarded as eligible for bank investment. In addition, the laws of
various states governing legal investments may impose certain rating or other
standards for obligations eligible for investment by savings banks, trust
companies, insurance companies and fiduciaries generally.

        Moody's Investors Service, Inc. A brief description of the applicable
MIS rating symbols and their meanings follows:

        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 edge." 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 or fluctuations of
protective elements may be of greater amplitude or there may be other elements
present which make the long-term risks appear somewhat larger than in 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 sometime 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. Some bonds lack outstanding investment
characteristics and in fact have speculative characteristics as well.

        NOTE: Bonds within the above categories which possess the strongest
investment attributes are designated by the symbol "1" following the rating.

        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 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.


Description of preferred stock ratings

        Standard & Poor's, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. An S&P
preferred stock rating is an assessment of the capacity and willingness of an
issuer to pay preferred stock dividends and any applicable sinking fund
obligations. A preferred stock rating differs from a bond rating inasmuch as it
is assigned to an equity issue, which issue is intrinsically different from, and
subordinated to, a debt issue. Therefore, to reflect this difference, the
preferred stock rating symbol will normally not be higher than the debt rating
symbol assigned to, or that would be assigned to, the senior debt of the same
issuer.

        The preferred stock ratings are based on the following considerations:

1.      Likelihood of payment - capacity and willingness of the issuer to meet
        the timely payment of preferred stock dividends and any applicable
        sinking fund requirements in accordance with the terms of the
        obligation;

2.      Nature of, and provisions of, the issue;

3.      Relative position of the issue in the event of bankruptcy,
        reorganization, or other arrangement under the laws of bankruptcy and
        other laws affecting creditors' rights.

        AAA -- This is the highest rating that may be assigned by S&P to a
preferred stock issue and indicates an extremely strong capacity to pay the
preferred stock obligations.

        AA -- A preferred stock issue rated AA also qualifies as a high-quality
fixed income security. The capacity to pay preferred stock obligations is very
strong, although not as overwhelming as for issues rated AAA.

        A -- An issue rated A is backed by a sound capacity to pay the preferred
stock obligations, although it is somewhat more susceptible to the adverse
effects of changes in circumstances and economic conditions.

        BBB -- An issue rated BBB is regarded as backed by an adequate capacity
to pay the preferred stock obligations. Whereas it normally exhibits adequate
protection parameters, adverse economic conditions or changing circumstances are
more likely to lead to a weakened capacity to make payments for a preferred
stock in this category than for issues in the 'A' category.

        BB, B, CCC -- Preferred stock rated BB, B, and CCC are regarded, on
balance, as predominantly speculative with respect to the issuer's capacity to
pay preferred stock obligations. BB indicates the lowest degree of speculation
and CCC the highest degree of speculation. While such issues will likely have
some quality and protective characteristics, these are outweighed by large
uncertainties or major risk exposures to adverse conditions.

        CC -- The rating CC is reserved for a preferred stock issue in arrears
on dividends or sinking fund payments but that is currently paying.

        C -- A preferred stock rated C is a non-paying issue.

        D -- A preferred stock rated D is a non-paying issue with the issuer in
default on debt instruments.

        NR -- This indicates that no rating has been requested, that there is
insufficient information on which to base a rating, or that S&P does not rate a
particular type of obligation as a matter of policy.

        Plus (+) or minus (-) -- To provide more detailed indications of
preferred stock quality, the rating from AA to CCC may be modified by the
addition of a plus or minus sign to show relative standing within the major
rating categories.

        A preferred stock rating is not a recommendation to purchase, sell or
hold a security inasmuch as it does not comment as to market price or
suitability for a particular investor. The ratings are based on current
information furnished to S&P by the issuer or obtained by S&P from other sources
it considers reliable. S&P does not perform an 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 based on other circumstances.

        Moody's Investors Service, Inc. Because of the fundamental differences
between preferred stocks and bonds, a variation of MIS' familiar bond rating
symbols is used in the quality ranking of preferred stock. The symbols are
designed to avoid comparison with bond quality in absolute terms. It should
always be borne in mind that preferred stock occupies a junior position to bonds
within a particular capital structure and that these securities are rated within
the universe of preferred stocks.

        Note: MIS applies numerical modifiers 1, 2 and 3 in each rating
classification; 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.

        Preferred stock rating symbols and their definitions are as follows:

        aaa -- An issue which is rated aaa is considered to be a top-quality
preferred stock. This rating indicates good asset protection and the least risk
of dividend impairment within the universe of preferred stocks.

        aa -- An issue which is rated aa is considered a high-grade preferred
stock. This rating indicates that there is a reasonable assurance the earnings
and asset protection will remain relatively well-maintained in the foreseeable
future.

        a -- An issue which is rated a is considered to be an upper-medium grade
preferred stock. While risks are judged to be somewhat greater than in the aaa
and aa classification, earnings and asset protection are, nevertheless, expected
to be maintained at adequate levels.

        baa -- An issue which is rated baa is considered to be a medium-grade
preferred stock, neither highly protected nor poorly secured. Earnings and asset
protection appear adequate at present but may be questionable over any great
length of time.

        ba -- An issue which is rated ba is considered to have speculative
elements and its future cannot be considered well assured. Earnings and asset
protection may be very moderate and not well safeguarded during adverse periods.
Uncertainty of position characterizes preferred stocks in this class.

        b -- An issue which is rated b generally lacks the characteristics of a
desirable investment. Assurance of dividend payments and maintenance of other
terms of the issue over any long period of time may be small.

        caa -- An issue which is rated caa is likely to be in arrears on
dividend payments. This rating designation does not purport to indicate the
future status of payments.

        ca -- An issue which is rated ca is speculative in a high degree and is
likely to be in arrears on dividends with little likelihood of eventual
payments.

        c -- This is the lowest rated class of preferred or preference stock.
Issues so rated can be regarded as having extremely poor prospects of ever
attaining any real investment standing.
    

<PAGE>
22.     Financial Statements
        ---------------------------------

        (a)    Financial Statements -- United High Income Fund, Inc.

               Included in Part B:
               -------------------

               As of March 31, 1999
                      Statement of Assets and Liabilities

               For the fiscal year ended March 31, 1999
                      Statement of Operations

               For    each of the two years in the period ended March 31, 1999
                      Statement of Changes in Net Assets

               Schedule I -- Investment Securities as of March 31, 1999

               Report of Independent Accountants


<PAGE>


                             REGISTRATION STATEMENT

                                     PART C

                                OTHER INFORMATION

        23.    Exhibits:

               (a)    Articles of Incorporation, as amended, filed June 1, 1995
                      as EX-99.B1-charter to Post-Effective Amendment No. 24 to
                      the Registration Statement on Form N-1A*

                      Articles Supplementary filed June 1, 1995 as
                      EX-99.B1-hiarsup1 to Post-Effective Amendment No. 24 to
                      the Registration Statement on Form N-1A*

                      Articles Supplementary filed June 1, 1995 as
                      EX-99.B1-hiarsup2 to Post-Effective Amendment No. 24 to
                      the Registration Statement on Form N-1A*

               (b)    Bylaws, as amended, filed June 27, 1996 as 
                      EX-99.B2-hibylaw to Post-Effective Amendment No. 25 to
                      the Registration Statement on Form N-1A*

                      Amendment to Bylaws attached hereto as EX-99.B(b)hibylaw2

               (c)    Not applicable

               (d)    Investment Management Agreement, filed June 1, 1995 as
                      EX-99.B5-hiima to Post-Effective Amendment No. 24 to the
                      Registration Statement on Form N-1A*

                      Assignment of the Investment Management, filed June 1,
                      1995 as EX-99.B5-hiassign to Post-Effective Amendment
                      No. 24 to the Registration Statement on Form N-1A*

               (e)    Underwriting Agreement, filed June 1, 1995 as 
                      EX-99.B6-hiua to Post-Effective Amendment No. 24 to the
                      Registration Statement on Form N-1A*

               (f)    Not applicable

               (g)    Custodian Agreement, as amended, attached hereto as
                      EX-99.B(g)-hica

               (h)    Shareholder Servicing Agreement, as amended, attached
                      hereto as EX-99.B(h)-hissa

                      Fund Class A application, as amended, filed May 30, 1997
                      as EX-99.B9-hiappca to Post-Effective Amendment No. 26 to
                      the Registration Statement on Form N-1A*

                      Fund Class Y application, filed June 1, 1995 as
                      EX-99.B9-hiappcy to Post-Effective Amendment No. 24 to the
                      Registration Statement on Form N-1A*

                      Class Y Letter of Understanding, filed June 27, 1996 as
                      EX-99.B9-hilou to Post-Effective Amendment No. 25 to the
                      Registration Statement on Form N-1A*

                      Fund NAV application, filed June 1, 1995 as
                      EX-99.B9-appnav to Post-Effective Amendment No. 24 to the
                      Registration Statement on Form N-1A*

                      Accounting Services Agreement, filed June 1, 1995 as
                      EX-99.B9-hiasa to Post-Effective Amendment No. 24 to the
                      Registration Statement on Form N-1A*

                      Service Agreement filed by EDGAR July 30, 1993 as Exhibit
                      (b)(15) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 16 to the
                      Registration Statement on Form N-1A*

                      Amendment to Service Agreement, as EX-99.B9-hisaa1 to
                      Post-Effective Amendment No. 24 to the Registration
                      Statement on Form N-1A*

                      Amendment to Service Agreement, as EX-99.B9-hisaa2 to
                      Post-Effective Amendment No. 24 to the Registration
                      Statement on Form N-1A*

             (i)      Not Applicable

             (j)      Consent of Deloitte & Touche LLP, Independent Accountants,
                      will be attached as EX-99.B(j)-hiconsnt in the 485(b)
                      filing to be completed on June 28, 1999.

             (k)      Not Applicable

             (l)      Not Applicable

             (m)      Service Plan, filed June 1, 1995 as EX-99.B15-hispca to
                      Post-Effective Amendment No. 24 to the Registration
                      Statement on Form N-1A*

                      Distribution and Service Plan for Class A shares filed
                      June 29, 1998 as EX-99.B15-hidsp to Post-Effective
                      Amendment No. 27 to the Registration Statement on Form
                      N-1A*

             (n)      The applicable Financial Data Schedule will be attached as
                      EX-27.B17-hifds in the 485(b) filing to be completed on
                      June 28, 1999.

             (o)      Multiple Class Plan, filed June 27, 1996 as 
                      EX-99.B18-himcp to Post-Effective Amendment No. 25 to the
                      Registration Statement on Form N-1A*

24.     Persons Controlled by or under common control with Registrant
        -------------------------------------------------------------

     None

25.     Indemnification
        ---------------

        Reference is made to Article SEVENTH paragraph 6(b) through (f) of the
        Articles of Incorporation, as amended, filed June 1, 1995 as
        EX-99.B1-charter to Post-Effective Amendment No. 24 to the Registration
        Statement on Form N-1A*; and to Article IV of the Underwriting
        Agreement, filed June 1, 1995 as EX-99.B6-hiua to Post-Effective
        Amendment No. 24 to the Registration Statement on Form N-1A*, each of
        which provide indemnification. Also refer to Section 2-418 of the
        Maryland General Corporation Law regarding indemnification of directors,
        officers and employees and agents.

26.     Business and Other Connections of Investment Manager
        ----------------------------------------------------

        Waddell & Reed Investment Management Company is the investment manager
        of the Registrant. Under the terms of an Investment Management Agreement
        between Waddell & Reed, Inc. and the Registrant, Waddell & Reed, Inc. is
        to provide investment management services to the Registrant. Waddell &
        Reed, Inc. assigned its investment management duties under this
        agreement to Waddell & Reed Investment Management Company on January 8,
        1992. Waddell & Reed Investment Management Company is a corporation
        which is not engaged in any business other than the provision of
        investment management services to those registered investment companies
        described in Part A and Part B of this Post-Effective Amendment and to
        other investment advisory clients.

        Each director and executive officer of Waddell & Reed Investment
        Management Company has had as his sole business, profession, vocation or
        employment during the past two years only his duties as an executive
        officer and/or employee of Waddell & Reed Investment Management Company
        or its predecessors, except as to persons who are directors and/or
        officers of the Registrant and have served in the capacities shown in
        the Statement of Additional Information of the Registrant. The address
        of the officers is 6300 Lamar Avenue, Shawnee Mission, Kansas
        66202-4200.

        As to each director and officer of Waddell & Reed Investment Management
        Company, reference is made to the Prospectus and SAI of this Registrant.

27.     Principal Underwriter
        ---------------------

        (a)    Waddell & Reed, Inc. is the principal underwriter to the 
               Registrant.It is also the principal underwriter to the following
               investment companies:

               United Funds, Inc.
               United International Growth Fund, Inc.
               United Continental Income Fund, Inc.
               United Vanguard Fund, Inc.
               United Retirement Shares, Inc.
               United Municipal Bond Fund, Inc.
               United New Concepts Fund, Inc.
               United Cash Management, Inc.
               United Government Securities Fund, Inc.
               United Gold & Government Fund, Inc.
               United Municipal High Income Fund, Inc.
               United High Income Fund II, Inc.
               United Asset Strategy Fund, Inc.
               Waddell & Reed Funds, Inc.
               Advantage I
               Advantage II
               Advantage Plus

        (b)    The information contained in the underwriter's application on
               form BD, under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, is herein
               incorporated by reference.

        (c)    No compensation was paid by the Registrant to any principal
               underwriter who is not an affiliated person of the Registrant or
               any affiliated person of such affiliated person.

28.     Location of Accounts and Records
        --------------------------------

        The accounts, books and other documents required to be maintained by
        Registrant pursuant to Section 31(a) of the Investment Company Act and
        rules promulgated thereunder are under the possession of Mr. Robert L.
        Hechler and Ms. Kristen A. Richards, as officers of the Registrant, each
        of whose business address is Post Office Box 29217, Shawnee Mission,
        Kansas 66201-9217.

29.     Management Services
        -------------------

        There is no service contract other than as discussed in Parts A and B of
        this Post-Effective Amendment and listed in response to Items (b)(9) and
        (b)(15) hereof.

30.     Undertakings
        ------------

        Not applicable


- ---------------------------------
*Incorporated herein by reference

<PAGE>

                                POWER OF ATTORNEY

        KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS, That each of the undersigned, UNITED
FUNDS, INC., UNITED INTERNATIONAL GROWTH FUND, INC., UNITED MUNICIPAL BOND FUND,
INC., UNITED VANGUARD FUND, INC., UNITED HIGH INCOME FUND, INC., UNITED CASH
MANAGEMENT, INC., UNITED NEW CONCEPTS FUND, INC., UNITED GOVERNMENT SECURITIES
FUND, INC., UNITED MUNICIPAL HIGH INCOME FUND, INC., UNITED GOLD & GOVERNMENT
FUND, INC., UNITED HIGH INCOME FUND II, INC., UNITED CONTINENTAL INCOME FUND,
INC., UNITED RETIREMENT SHARES, INC., UNITED ASSET STRATEGY FUND, INC.,
TARGET/UNITED FUNDS, INC. AND WADDELL & REED FUNDS, INC. (each hereinafter
called the "Corporation"), and certain directors and officers for the
Corporation, do hereby constitute and appoint KEITH A. TUCKER, ROBERT L.
HECHLER, and KRISTEN A. RICHARDS, and each of them individually, their true and
lawful attorneys and agents to take any and all action and execute any and all
instruments which said attorneys and agents may deem necessary or advisable to
enable each Corporation to comply with the Securities Act of 1933 and/or the
Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, and any rules, regulations, orders
or other requirements of the United States Securities and Exchange Commission
thereunder, in connection with the registration under the Securities Act of 1933
and/or the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, including specifically,
but without limitation of the foregoing, power and authority to sign the names
of each of such directors and officers in his/her behalf as such director or
officer as indicated below opposite his/her signature hereto, to any
Registration Statement and to any amendment or supplement to the Registration
Statement filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission under the Securities
Act of 1933 and/or the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, and to any
instruments or documents filed or to be filed as a part of or in connection with
such Registration Statement or amendment or supplement thereto; and each of the
undersigned hereby ratifies and confirms all that said attorneys and agents
shall do or cause to be done by virtue hereof.

Date:  November 18, 1998               /s/Robert L. Hechler
                                       --------------------------
                                       Robert L. Hechler, President


/s/Keith A. Tucker             Chairman of the Board        November 18, 1998
- -------------------                                         -----------------
Keith A. Tucker


/s/Robert L. Hechler           President, Principal         November 18, 1998
- --------------------           Financial Officer and        ----------------
Robert L. Hechler              Director


/s/Henry J. Herrmann           Vice President and           November 18, 1998
- --------------------           Director                     ----------------
Henry J. Herrmann


/s/Theodore W. Howard          Vice President, Treasurer    November 18, 1998
- --------------------           and Principal Accounting     ----------------
Theodore W. Howard             Officer


/s/James M. Concannon          Director                     November 18, 1998
- --------------------                                        ----------------
James M. Concannon


/s/John A. Dillingham          Director                     November 18, 1998
- --------------------                                        ----------------
John A. Dillingham


/s/David P. Gardner            Director                     November 18, 1998
- -------------------                                         ----------------
David P. Gardner


/s/Linda K. Graves             Director                     November 18, 1998
- --------------------                                        ----------------
Linda K. Graves


/s/Joseph Harroz, Jr.          Director                     November 18, 1998
- --------------------                                        ----------------
Joseph Harroz, Jr.


/s/John F. Hayes               Director                     November 18, 1998
- --------------------                                        ----------------
John F. Hayes


/s/Glendon E. Johnson          Director                     November 18, 1998
- --------------------                                        ----------------
Glendon E. Johnson


/s/William T. Morgan           Director                     November 18, 1998
- --------------------                                        ----------------
William T. Morgan


/s/Ronald C. Reimer            Director                     November 18, 1998
- --------------------                                        ----------------
Ronald C. Reimer


/s/Frank J. Ross               Director                     November 18, 1998
- --------------------                                        ----------------
Frank J. Ross, Jr.


/s/Eleanor B. Schwartz         Director                     November 18, 1998
- --------------------                                        ----------------
Eleanor B. Schwartz


/s/Frederick Vogel III         Director                     November 18, 1998
- --------------------                                        ----------------
Frederick Vogel III



Attest:

/s/Kristen A. Richards
- --------------------------------
Kristen A. Richards
Assistant Secretary

<PAGE>

                                   SIGNATURES

        Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933 and/or the
Investment Company Act of 1940, the Registrant certifies that it meets all of
the requirements for effectiveness of this Post-Effective Amendment pursuant to
Rule 485(a) of the Securities Act of 1933 and the Registrant has duly caused
this Post-Effective Amendment to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned,
thereunto duly authorized, in the City of Overland Park, and State of Kansas, on
the 30th day of April, 1999.

                          UNITED HIGH INCOME FUND, INC.

                                  (Registrant)

                            By /s/ Robert L. Hechler*
                            ------------------------
                          Robert L. Hechler, President

        Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, and/or the
Investment Company Act of 1940, this Post-Effective Amendment has been signed
below by the following persons in the capacities and on the date indicated.

        Signatures           Title
        ----------           -----

/s/Keith A. Tucker*          Chairman of the Board       April 30, 1999
- ----------------------                                   ----------------
Keith A. Tucker


/s/Robert L. Hechler*        President, Principal        April 30, 1999
- ----------------------       Financial Officer and       ----------------
Robert L. Hechler            Director


/s/Henry J. Herrmann*        Vice President and          April 30, 1999
- ----------------------       Director                    ----------------
Henry J. Herrmann


/s/Theodore W. Howard*       Vice President, Treasurer   April 30, 1999
- ----------------------       and Principal Accounting    ----------------
Theodore W. Howard           Officer


/s/James M. Concannon*       Director                    April 30, 1999
- ------------------                                       ----------------
James M. Concannon


/s/John A. Dillingham*       Director                    April 30, 1999
- ------------------                                       ----------------
John A. Dillingham


/s/David P. Gardner*         Director                    April 30, 1999
- ------------------                                       ----------------
David P. Gardner


/s/Linda K. Graves*          Director                    April 30, 1999
- ------------------                                       ----------------
Linda K. Graves


/s/Joseph Harroz, Jr.*       Director                    April 30, 1999
- ------------------                                       ----------------
Joseph Harroz, Jr.


/s/John F. Hayes*            Director                    April 30, 1999
- -------------------                                      ----------------
John F. Hayes


/s/Glendon E. Johnson*       Director                    April 30, 1999
- -------------------                                      ----------------
Glendon E. Johnson


/s/William T. Morgan*        Director                    April 30, 1999
- -------------------                                      ----------------
William T. Morgan


/s/Ronald C. Reimer*         Director                    April 30, 1999
- ------------------                                       ----------------
Ronald C. Reimer


/s/Frank J. Ross, Jr.*       Director                    April 30, 1999
- ------------------                                       ----------------
Frank J. Ross, Jr.


/s/Eleanor B Schwartz*       Director                    April 30, 1999
- -------------------                                      ----------------
Eleanor B. Schwartz


/s/Frederick Vogel III*      Director                    April 30, 1999
- -------------------                                      ----------------
Frederick Vogel III


*By
    Kristen A. Richards
    Attorney-in-Fact

ATTEST:
   David R. Burford
   Assistant Secretary


                                                             EX-99.B(b)hibylaw2

                               AMENDMENT TO BYLAWS


        RESOLVED, That the Bylaws of each of United Funds, Inc., United Asset
Strategy Fund, Inc., United Cash Management, Inc., United Continental Income
Fund, Inc., United Gold & Government Fund, Inc., United Government Securities
Fund, Inc., United High Income Fund, Inc., United High Income Fund II, Inc.,
United International Growth Fund, Inc., United Municipal Bond Fund, Inc., United
Municipal High Income Fund, Inc., United New Concepts Fund, Inc., United
Retirement Shares, Inc., United Vanguard Fund, Inc., Target/United Funds, Inc.
and Waddell & Reed Funds, Inc. are amended by substitution of the following for
the initial paragraph of Article I, Section 7, regarding voting and inspectors;
and, with respect to United Asset Strategy Fund, Inc., United Retirement Shares,
Inc. and Waddell & Reed Funds, Inc., for Article II, Section 2, regarding voting
and proxies:

        At all meetings of the stockholders, every stockholder of record
        entitled to vote thereat shall be entitled to vote either in person or
        by proxy, which term shall include proxies provided by such stockholder,
        or his duly authorized attorney, through written, electronic,
        telephonic, computerized, facsimile, telecommunications, telex or oral
        communication or by any other form of communication, each pursuant to
        such voting procedures and through such systems as are authorized by the
        Board of Directors or one or more executive officers of the Corporation.
        No proxy which is dated or, if otherwise provided as permitted by these
        Bylaws and applicable Maryland law, provided more than three months
        before the meeting at which it is offered shall be accepted, unless such
        proxy shall, on its face, name or, if otherwise provided as permitted by
        these Bylaws and applicable Maryland law, provide a longer period for
        which it is to remain in force.

        I certify that I am Assistant Secretary of each of the following
Corporations, and as such officer, have custody of the minute books of the
Corporations, and that the foregoing resolutions are true and correct
resolutions duly passed by the Board of Directors of each of the following
Corporations at a meeting held on February 10, 1999.

                      United Funds, Inc.
                      United Asset Strategy Fund, Inc.
                      United Cash Management, Inc.
                      United Continental Income Fund, Inc.
                      United Gold & Government Fund, Inc.
                      United Government Securities Fund, Inc.
                      United High Income Fund, Inc.
                      United High Income Fund II, Inc.
                      United International Growth Fund, Inc.
                      United Municipal Bond Fund, Inc.
                      United Municipal High Income Fund, Inc.
                      United New Concepts Fund, Inc.
                      United Retirement Shares, Inc.
                      United Vanguard Fund, Inc.
                      Target/United Funds, Inc.
                      Waddell & Reed Funds, Inc.



                    Kristen A. Richards, Assistant Secretary

Dated this 10th day of February, 1999.



                                                                EX-99.B(g)-hica

                               CUSTODIAN AGREEMENT

                          Dated as of November 26, 1991

                     Amended and Restated as of May 13, 1998

                                     Between

                                 UMB BANK, n.a.

                                       and

                          UNITED HIGH INCOME FUND, INC.


<PAGE>


                                Table of Contents

ARTICLE

I.      Appointment of Custodian

II.     Powers and Duties of Custodian

        2.01   Safekeeping
        2.02   Manner of Holding Securities
        2.03   Purchase of Assets
        2.04   Exchanges of Securities
        2.05   Sales of Securities
        2.06   Depositary Receipts
        2.07   Exercise of Rights, Tender Offers, Etc.
        2.08   Stock Dividends, Rights, Etc.
        2.09   Options
        2.10   Futures Contracts
        2.11   Borrowing
        2.12   Interest Bearing Deposits
        2.13   Foreign Exchange Transactions
        2.14   Securities Loans
        2.15   Collections
        2.16   Dividends, Distributions and Redemptions
        2.17   Proceeds from Shares Sold
        2.18   Proxies, Notices, Etc.
        2.19   Bills and Other Disbursements
        2.20   Nondiscretionary Functions
        2.21   Bank Accounts
        2.22   Deposit of Fund Assets in Securities System
        2.23   Other Transfers
        2.24   Establishment of Segregated Account
        2.25   Custodian's Books and Records
        2.26   Opinion of Fund's Independent
               Certified Public Accountants
        2.27   Reports by Independent Certified Public
               Accountants
        2.28   Overdraft Facility

III.    Proper Instructions, Special Instructions
               and Related Matters
        3.01   Proper Instruction and Special Instructions
        3.02   Authorized Persons
        3.03   Persons Having Access to Assets of the Portfolios
        3.04   Actions of Custodian Based on Proper
               Instructions and Special Instructions

<PAGE>

IV.     Subcustodians

        4.01   Domestic Subcustodians
        4.02   Foreign Sub-Subcustodians and
               Interim Sub-Subcustodians
        4.03   Special Subcustodians
        4.04   Termination of a Subcustodian
        4.05   Certification Regarding Foreign Sub-Subcustodians

V.      Standard of Care, Indemnification

        5.01   Standard of Care
        5.02   Liability of the Custodian for Actions
               of Other Person
        5.03   Indemnification by Fund
        5.04   Investment Limitations
        5.05   Fund's Right to Proceed
        5.06   Indemnification by Custodian
        5.07   Custodian's Right to Proceed

VI.     Compensation

VII.    Termination

VIII.   Defined Terms

IX.     Miscellaneous

        9.01   Execution of Documents, Etc.
        9.02   Representations and Warranties
        9.03   Entire Agreement
        9.04   Waivers and Amendments
        9.05   Interpretation
        9.06   Captions
        9.07   Governing Law
        9.08   Notices
        9.09   Assignment
        9.10   Counterparts
        9.11   Confidentiality; Survival of Obligations

Appendix "B"

<PAGE>

                               CUSTODIAN AGREEMENT

        AGREEMENT made as of the 26th day of November, 1991 between United High
Income Fund, Inc. (the "Fund") and UMB Bank, n.a., formerly, United Missouri
Bank, n.a. (the "Custodian") and as amended and restated as of May 13, 1998.

                                   WITNESSETH

        WHEREAS, the Fund desires to appoint the Custodian as custodian on
behalf of the Fund in accordance with the provisions of the Investment Company
Act of 1940, as amended (the "1940 Act") and the rules and regulations
thereunder, under the terms and conditions set forth in this Agreement, and the
Custodian has agreed so to act as custodian.

        NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the mutual covenants and agreements
herein contained, the parties hereto agree as follows:

                                    ARTICLE I
                            APPOINTMENT OF CUSTODIAN

        Subject to the terms and provisions of this Agreement, the Fund hereby
employs and appoints the Custodian as a custodian of the cash, securities and
other assets owned by the Fund and deposited from time to time with the
Custodian ("Assets"). The Fund shall deliver to the Custodian, or shall cause to
be delivered to the Custodian, Assets during the term of this Agreement. The
Custodian is authorized to act under the terms and conditions of this Agreement
as the Fund's agent and shall be representing the Fund when acting within the
scope of this Agreement. The Custodian hereby accepts such appointment as
custodian and shall perform the duties and responsibilities set forth herein on
the terms and conditions set forth herein.

                                   ARTICLE II
                         POWERS AND DUTIES OF CUSTODIAN

        As custodian, the Custodian shall have and perform the powers and duties
set forth in this Article II. Pursuant to and in accordance with Article IV
hereof, the Custodian may appoint one or more Subcustodians (as hereinafter
defined) to exercise the powers and perform the duties of the Custodian set
forth in this Article II and references to the Custodian in this Article II
shall include any Subcustodian so appointed.

        Section 2.01.    Safekeeping.  The Custodian shall accept delivery of 
and keep safely the Assets in accordance with the terms and conditions hereof 
on behalf of the Fund.

        Section 2.02.    Manner of Holding Securities.

        (a) The Custodian shall at all times hold securities of the Fund either:
(i) by physical possession of the share certificates or other instruments
representing such securities in registered or bearer form; or (ii) in book-entry
form by a Securities System (as hereinafter defined) in accordance with the
provisions of Section 2.22 below.

        (b) The Custodian may at all times hold registered securities of the
Fund in the name of the Fund or the Fund's nominee, or in the nominee name of
the Custodian unless specifically directed by Proper Instructions (as
hereinafter defined) to hold such registered securities in so-called street
name; provided that, in any event, all Assets shall be held in an account of the
Custodian containing only assets of the Fund. Notwithstanding the foregoing,
unless it receives Proper Instructions to the contrary, the Custodian shall
register all securities in the name of the Custodian's nominee as authorized by
the Fund. All securities held directly or indirectly by the Custodian hereunder
shall at all times be identifiable on the records of the Custodian. Except as
otherwise provided herein, the Custodian shall keep the Assets physically
segregated from those of other persons or entities. The Custodian shall execute
and deliver all certificates and documents in connection with registration of
securities as may be required by the applicable provisions of the Internal
Revenue Code, the laws of any State or territory of the United States and the
laws of any jurisdiction in which the securities are held.

        Section 2.03.    Purchase of Assets.

        (a) Security Purchases. Upon receipt of Proper Instructions, the
Custodian shall pay for and receive securities purchased for the account of the
Fund, provided that payment shall be made by Custodian only upon receipt of the
securities: (a) by the Custodian; (b) by a clearing corporation of a national
securities exchange of which the Custodian is a member; or (c) by a Securities
System. Notwithstanding the foregoing, upon receipt of Proper Instructions: (i)
in the case of a repurchase agreement, the Custodian may release funds to a
Securities System prior to the receipt of advice from the Securities System that
the securities underlying such repurchase agreement have been transferred by
book-entry into the Account (as hereinafter defined) maintained with such
Securities System by the Custodian, provided that the Custodian's instructions
to the Securities System require that the Securities System may make payment of
such funds to the other party to the repurchase agreement only upon transfer by
book-entry of the securities underlying the repurchase agreement into the
Account; (ii) in the case of time deposits, call account deposits, currency
deposits and other deposits, foreign exchange transactions, futures contracts or
options, pursuant to Sections 2.09, 2.10, 2.12 and 2.13 hereof, the Custodian
may make payment therefor before receipt of an advice or transaction; and (iii)
in the case of the purchase of securities, the settlement of which occurs
outside of the United States of America, the Custodian may make payment therefor
and receive delivery of such securities in accordance with local custom and
practice generally accepted by Institutional Clients (as hereinafter defined) in
the country in which the settlement occurs, but in all events subject to the
standard of care set forth in Article V hereof. For purposes of this Agreement,
an "Institutional Client" shall mean a major commercial bank, corporation,
insurance company, or substantially similar institution, which, as a substantial
part of its business operations, purchases or sells securities and makes use of
custodial services.

        (b) Other Asset Purchases. Upon receipt of Proper Instructions and
except as otherwise provided herein, the Custodian shall pay for and receive
other Assets for the account of the Fund as provided in Proper Instructions.

        Section 2.04. Exchanges of Securities. Upon receipt of Proper
Instructions, the Custodian shall exchange securities held by it for the account
of the Fund for other securities in connection with any reorganization,
recapitalization, split-up of shares, change of par value, conversion or other
event relating to the securities or the issuer of such securities, and shall
deposit any such securities in accordance with the terms of any reorganization
or protective plan. The Custodian shall, without receiving Proper Instructions:
surrender securities for transfer into the name of the Fund, the Fund's nominee
or the nominee name of the Custodian as permitted by Section 2.02(b); and
surrender securities for a different number of certificates or instruments
representing the same number of shares or same principal amount of indebtedness,
provided that the securities to be issued will be delivered to the Custodian.

        Section 2.05. Sales of Securities. Upon receipt of Proper Instructions,
the Custodian shall make delivery of securities which have been sold for the
account of the Fund, but only against payment therefor in the form of: (a) cash,
certified check, bank cashier's check, bank credit, or bank wire transfer; (b)
credit to the account of the Custodian with a clearing corporation of a national
securities exchange of which the Custodian is a member; or (c) credit to the
Account of the Custodian with a Securities System, in accordance with the
provisions of Section 2.22 hereof. Notwithstanding the foregoing: (i) in the
case of the sale of securities, the settlement of which occurs outside of the
United States of America, such securities shall be delivered and paid for in
accordance with local custom and practice generally accepted by Institutional
Clients in the country in which the settlement occurs, but in all events subject
to the standard of care set forth in Article V hereof; and (ii) in the case of
securities held in physical form, such securities shall be delivered and paid
for in accordance with "street delivery custom" to a broker or its clearing
agent, against delivery to the Custodian of a receipt for such securities,
provided that the Custodian shall have taken reasonable steps to ensure prompt
collection of the payment for, or return of, such securities by the broker or
its clearing agent, and provided further that, subject to the standard of care
set forth in Article V hereof, the Custodian shall not be responsible for the
selection of or the failure or inability to perform of such broker or its
clearing agent.

        Section 2.06. Depositary Receipts. Upon receipt of Proper Instructions,
the Custodian shall surrender securities to the depositary used for such
securities by an issuer of American Depositary Receipts or International
Depositary Receipts (hereinafter referred to, collectively , as "ADRs"), against
a written receipt therefor adequately describing such securities and written
evidence satisfactory to the Custodian that the depositary has acknowledged
receipt of instructions to issue ADRs with respect to such securities in the
name of the Custodian or a nominee of the Custodian, for delivery to the
Custodian at such place as the Custodian may from time to time designate. Upon
receipt of Proper Instructions, the Custodian shall surrender ADRs to the issuer
thereof, against a written receipt therefor adequately describing the ADRs
surrendered and written evidence satisfactory to the Custodian that the issuer
of the ADRs has acknowledged receipt of instructions to cause its depository to
deliver the securities underlying such ADRs to the Custodian.

        Section 2.07. Exercise of Rights, Tender Offers, Etc. Upon receipt of
Proper Instructions, the Custodian shall: (a) deliver warrants, puts, calls,
rights or similar securities to the issuer or trustee thereof (or to the agent
of such issuer or trustee) for the purpose of exercise or sale, provided that
the new securities, cash or other Assets, if any, acquired as a result of such
actions are to be delivered to the Custodian; and (b) deposit securities upon
invitations for tenders thereof, provided that the consideration for such
securities is to be paid or delivered to the Custodian, or the tendered
securities are to be returned to the Custodian. Notwithstanding any provision of
this Agreement to the contrary, the Custodian shall promptly notify the Fund in
writing of (i) any default in payment of funds on securities; (ii) any
securities that have matured, been called or redeemed; and (iii) to the extent
the Custodian has notice which is contained in services to which it normally
subscribes for such purposes, or actual knowledge if not contained in such
services, any other default involving securities; and all announcements of
defaults, bankruptcies, reorganizations, mergers, consolidations,
recapitalizations or rights or privileges to subscribe, convert, exchange, put,
redeem or tender securities held subject to this Agreement. The Custodian shall,
following receipt or knowledge, convey such information to the Fund in a timely
manner based upon the circumstances of each particular case. Whenever any such
rights or privileges exist, the Fund will, in a timely manner based upon the
circumstances of each particular case, provide the Custodian with Proper
Instructions. Absent the Custodian's timely receipt of Proper Instructions, the
Custodian shall not be liable for not taking any action or not exercising such
rights prior to their expiration unless such failure is due to Custodian's
failure to give timely notice to the Fund in accordance with this Section 2.07.

        Section 2.08. Stock Dividends, Rights, Etc. The Custodian shall receive
and collect all stock dividends, rights and other items of like nature and, upon
receipt of Proper Instructions, take action with respect to the same as directed
in such Proper Instructions.

        Section 2.09. Options. Upon receipt of Proper Instructions and in
accordance with the provisions of any agreement between the Custodian, any
registered broker-dealer and, if necessary, the Fund relating to compliance with
the rules of the Options Clearing Corporation (the "OCC") or of any registered
national securities exchange or similar organization(s), the Custodian shall:
(a) receive and retain confirmations or other documents, if any, evidencing the
purchase or writing of an option by the Fund; (b) deposit and maintain in a
segregated account, securities (either physically or by book-entry in a
Securities System), cash or other Assets; and (c) pay, release and/or transfer
such securities, cash or other Assets in accordance with any such agreement and
with notices or other communications evidencing the expiration, termination or
exercise of such options furnished by the OCC, the securities or options
exchange on which such options are traded or such other organization as may be
responsible for handling such option transactions. The Fund and the
broker-dealer shall be responsible for determining the sufficiency of assets
held in any segregated account established in compliance with applicable margin
maintenance requirements and the performance of other terms of any option
contract; provided, however, that the Custodian shall be liable for performance
of its duties under this Agreement and in accordance with Proper Instructions,
and shall be liable for performance of its duties under any other agreement
between the Custodian, any registered broker-dealer and, if necessary, the Fund.
Notwithstanding anything herein to the contrary, if the Fund issues Proper
Instructions to sell a naked option (including stock index options), then as
part of the transaction, the Custodian, the Fund and the broker-dealer shall
have entered into a tri-party agreement, as described above.

        Section 2.10. Futures Contracts. Upon receipt of Proper Instructions, or
pursuant to the provisions of any futures margin procedural agreement among the
Fund, the Custodian and any futures commission merchant (a "Procedural
Agreement"), the Custodian shall: (a) receive and retain confirmations, if any
evidencing the purchase of or sale of a futures contract or an option on a
futures contract by the Fund; (b) deposit and maintain in a segregated account
cash, securities and other Assets designated as initial, maintenance or
variation "margin" deposits intended to secure the Fund's performance of its
obligations under any futures contracts purchased or sold or any options on
futures contracts written by the Fund, in accordance with the provisions of the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission and/or any commodity exchange or contract
market (such as the Chicago Board of Trade), or any similar organization(s),
regarding such margin deposits; and (c) release assets from and/or transfer
assets into such margin accounts only in accordance with any such Procedural
Agreements. The Fund and such futures commission merchant shall be responsible
for determining the sufficiency of assets held in the segregated account in
compliance with applicable margin maintenance requirements and the performance
of any futures contract or option on a futures contract in accordance with its
terms; provided, however, that the Custodian shall be liable for performance of
its duties under this Agreement and in accordance with Proper Instructions, and
shall be liable for performance of its duties under any Procedural Agreement.

        Section 2.11. Borrowing. Upon receipt of Proper Instructions, the
Custodian shall deliver securities of the Fund to lenders or their agents, or
otherwise establish a segregated account as agreed to by the Fund and the
Custodian, as collateral for borrowings effected by the Fund, provided that such
borrowed money is payable by the lender (a) to or upon the Custodian's order, as
Custodian for the Fund, and (b) concurrently with delivery of such securities.

        Section 2.12. Interest Bearing Deposits. Upon receipt of Proper
Instructions directing the Custodian to purchase interest bearing fixed term and
call deposits (hereinafter referred to collectively, as "Interest Bearing
Deposits") for the account of the Fund, the Custodian shall purchase such
Interest Bearing Deposits in the name of the Fund with such banks or trust
companies (including the Custodian, any Subcustodian or any subsidiary or
affiliate of the Custodian) (hereinafter referred to as "Banking Institutions")
and in such amounts as the Fund may direct pursuant to Proper Instructions. Such
Interest Bearing Deposits may be denominated in U.S. Dollars or other
currencies, as the Fund may determine and direct pursuant to Proper
Instructions. The Custodian shall include in its records with respect to the
Assets of the Fund appropriate notation as to the amount and currency of each
such Interest Bearing Deposit, the accepting Banking Institution and all other
appropriate details, and shall retain such forms of advice or receipt evidencing
such account, if any, as may be forwarded to the Custodian by the Banking
Institution. The responsibilities of the Custodian to the Fund for Interest
Bearing Deposits accepted on the Custodian's books in the United States shall be
that of a U.S. bank for a similar deposit. With respect to Interest Bearing
Deposits other than those accepted on the Custodian's books, (a) the Custodian
shall be responsible for the collection of income as set forth in Section 2.15
and the transmission of cash and instructions to and from such accounts; and (b)
the Custodian shall have no duty with respect to the selection of the Banking
Institution or, so long as the Custodian acts in accordance with Proper
Instructions and the terms and conditions of this Agreement, for the failure of
such Banking Institution to pay upon demand. Upon receipt of Proper
Instructions, the Custodian shall take such reasonable actions as the Fund deems
necessary or appropriate to cause each such Interest Bearing Deposit account to
be insured to the maximum extent possible by all applicable deposit insurers
including, without limitation, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

        Section 2.13.    Foreign Exchange Transactions.

        (a) Foreign Exchange Transactions Other than as Principal. Upon receipt
of Proper Instructions, the Custodian shall settle foreign exchange contracts or
options to purchase and sell foreign currencies for spot and future delivery on
behalf of and for the account of the Fund with such currency brokers or Banking
Institutions as the Fund may determine and direct pursuant to Proper
Instructions. The Fund accepts full responsibility for its use of third party
foreign exchange brokers (any dealer other than the Foreign Subcustodian) (as
hereinafter defined) and for execution of said foreign exchange contracts and
understands that the Fund shall be responsible for any and all costs and
interest charges which may be incurred as a result of the failure or delay of
its third party broker to deliver foreign exchange unless such loss, damage, or
expense is caused by, or results from the negligence, misfeasance or misconduct
of the Custodian. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Custodian shall be
responsible for the transmission of cash and instructions to and from the
currency broker or Banking Institution with which the contract or option is
made, the safekeeping of all certificates and other documents and agreements
evidencing or relating to such foreign exchange transactions and the maintenance
of proper records as set forth in Section 2.25. The Custodian shall have no duty
with respect to the selection of the currency brokers or Banking Institutions
with which the Fund deals or, so long as the Custodian acts in accordance with
Proper Instructions, for the failure of such brokers or Banking Institutions to
comply with the terms of any contract or option.

        (b) Foreign Exchange Contracts as Principal. The Custodian shall not be
obligated to enter into foreign exchange transactions as principal. However, if
the Custodian has made available to the Fund its services as a principal in
foreign exchange transactions, upon receipt of Proper Instructions, the
Custodian shall enter into foreign currencies for spot and future delivery on
behalf of and for the account of the Fund with the Custodian as principal. The
Custodian shall be responsible for the selection of the currency brokers or
Banking Institutions and the failure of such currency brokers or Banking
Institutions to comply with the terms of any contract or option.

        (c) Payments. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained herein,
upon receipt of Proper Instructions the Custodian may, in connection with a
foreign exchange contract, make free outgoing payments of cash in the form of
U.S. Dollars or foreign currency prior to receipt of confirmation of such
foreign exchange contract or confirmation that the countervalue currency
completing such contract has been delivered or received.

        Section 2.14. Securities Loans. Upon receipt of Proper Instructions, the
Custodian shall, in connection with loans of securities by the Fund, deliver
securities of the Fund to the borrower thereof and may, except as otherwise
provided below, deliver such securities prior to receipt of the collateral, if
any, for such borrowing; provided that, in cases of loans of securities secured
by cash collateral, the Custodian's instructions to the Securities System shall
require that the Securities System deliver the securities of the Fund to the
borrower thereof only upon receipt of the collateral for such borrowing. The
Custodian shall retain on the Fund's behalf the right to any dividends, interest
or distribution on such loaned securities and any other rights specified in
Proper Instructions. Upon receipt of Proper Instructions and the loaned
securities, the Custodian will release the collateral to the borrower.

        Section 2.15. Collections. The Custodian shall: (a) collect amounts due
and payable to the Fund with respect to portfolio securities and other Assets;
(b) promptly credit to the account of the Fund all income and other payments
relating to portfolio securities and other Assets held by the Custodian
hereunder upon Custodian's receipt of such income or payments or as otherwise
agreed in writing by the Custodian and the Fund; (c) promptly endorse and
deliver any instruments required to effect such collection; and (d) promptly
execute ownership and other certificates and affidavits for all federal, state,
local and foreign tax purposes in connection with receipt of income or other
payments with respect to portfolio securities and other Assets, or in connection
with the transfer of such securities or other Assets; provided, however, that
with respect to portfolio securities registered in so-called street name, or
physical securities with variable interest rates, the Custodian shall use its
best efforts to collect amounts due and payable to the Fund. The Custodian shall
promptly notify the Fund in writing by facsimile transmission or in such other
manner as the Fund and Custodian may agree in writing if any amount payable with
respect to portfolio securities or other Assets is not received by the Custodian
when due. The Custodian shall not be responsible for the collection of amounts
due and payable with respect to portfolio securities or other Assets that are in
default.

        Section 2.16. Dividends, Distributions and Redemptions. To enable the
Fund to pay dividends or other distributions to shareholders of the Fund and to
make payment to shareholders who have requested repurchase or redemption of
their shares of the Fund (collectively, the "Shares"), the Custodian shall
promptly release cash or securities (a) in the case of cash, upon receipt of
Proper Instructions, to one or more Distribution Accounts (as hereinafter
defined) designated by the Fund in such Proper Instructions; or (b) in the case
of securities, upon the receipt of Special Instructions (as hereinafter defined)
to such entity or account designated by the Fund in such Special Instructions.
For purposes of this Agreement, a "Distribution Account" shall mean an account
established at a Banking Institution designated by the Fund in Special
Instructions.

        Section 2.17. Proceeds from Shares Sold. The Custodian shall receive
funds representing cash payments received for Shares issued or sold from time to
time by the Fund, and shall promptly credit such funds to the account of the
Fund. The Custodian shall promptly notify the Fund of Custodian's receipt of
cash in payment for Shares issued by the Fund by facsimile transmission or in
such other manner as the Fund and Custodian may agree in writing. Upon receipt
of Proper Instructions, the Custodian shall: (a) deliver all federal funds
received by the Custodian in payment for Shares in payment for such investments
as may be set forth in such Proper Instructions and at a time agreed upon
between the Custodian and the Fund; and (b) make federal funds available to the
Fund as of specified times agreed upon from time to time by the Fund and the
Custodian, in the amount of checks received in payment for Shares which are
deposited to the accounts of the Fund.

        Section 2.18. Proxies, Notices, Etc. The Custodian shall deliver or
cause to be delivered to the Fund, in the most expeditious manner practicable,
all forms of proxies, all notices of meetings, and any other notices or
announcements affecting or relating to securities owned by the Fund that are
received by the Custodian, any Subcustodian, or any nominee of either of them,
and, upon receipt of Proper Instructions, the Custodian shall execute and
deliver, or cause such Subcustodian or nominee to execute and deliver, such
proxies or other authorizations as may be required. Except as directed pursuant
to Proper Instructions, neither the Custodian nor any Subcustodian or nominee
shall vote upon any such securities, or execute any proxy to vote thereon, or
give any consent or take any other action with respect thereto. The Custodian
will not release the identity of the Fund to an issuer which requests such
information pursuant to the Shareholder Communications Act of 1985, for the
specific purpose of direct communications between such issuer and the Fund
unless the Fund directs the Custodian otherwise in writing.

        Section 2.19.    Bills and Other Disbursements.   Upon receipt of Proper
Instructions, the Custodian shall pay or cause to be paid, all bills, 
statements, or other obligations of the Fund.

        Section 2.20. Nondiscretionary Functions. The Custodian shall attend to
all nondiscretionary details not specifically covered by this Agreement in
accordance with industry standards in connection with the sale, exchange,
substitution, purchase, transfer or other dealings with securities or other
Assets held by the Custodian, except as otherwise directed from time to time
pursuant to Proper Instructions.

        Section 2.21.    Bank Accounts.

        (a) Accounts with the Custodian. The Custodian shall open and operate a
bank account or accounts (hereinafter referred to collectively, as "Bank
Accounts") on the books of the Custodian; provided that such Bank Account(s)
shall be in the name of the Custodian or a nominee thereof, for the account of
the Fund, and shall be subject only to draft or order of the Custodian. The
responsibilities of the Custodian to the Fund for deposits accepted on the
Custodian's books shall be that of a U.S. bank for a similar deposit.

        (b) Deposit Insurance. Upon receipt of Proper Instructions, the
Custodian shall take such action as the Fund deems necessary or appropriate to
cause each deposit account established by the Custodian pursuant to this Section
2.21 to be insured to the maximum extent possible by all applicable deposit
insurers, including, without limitation, the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation.

        Section 2.22. Deposit of Fund Assets in Securities Systems. The
Custodian may deposit and/or maintain domestic securities owned by the Fund in:
(a) The Depository Trust Company; (b) the Participants Trust Company; (c) any
book-entry system as provided in (i) Subpart O of Treasury Circular No. 300, 31
CFR 306.115 (ii) Subpart B of Treasury Circular Public Debt Series No. 27-76, 31
CFR 350.2, or (iii) the book-entry regulations of federal agencies substantially
in the form of 31 CFR 306.115; or (d) any other domestic clearing agency
registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") under Section 17A
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (or as may otherwise be authorized by the
Securities and Exchange Commission to serve in the capacity of depository or
clearing agent for the securities or other assets of investment companies) which
acts as a securities depository; provided, however, that no such deposit or
maintenance of securities may be made except with respect to those agencies and
entities the use of which the Fund has previously approved by Special
Instructions (each of the foregoing being referred to in this Agreement as a
"Securities System"). Use of a Securities System shall be in accordance with
applicable Federal Reserve Board and SEC rules and regulations, if any, and
subject to the following provisions:

        (A) The Custodian or any Subcustodian may deposit and/or maintain
securities held hereunder in a Securities System, provided that such securities
are represented in an account ("Account") of the Custodian in the Securities
System which Account shall not contain any assets of the Custodian other than
assets held as fiduciary, custodian or otherwise for customers.

        (B) The books and records of the Custodian shall at all times identify
those securities belonging to the Fund which are maintained in a Securities
System.

        (C) The Custodian shall pay for securities purchased for the account of
the Fund only upon (i) receipt of advice from the Securities System that such
securities have been transferred to the Account of the Custodian, and (ii) the
making of an entry on the records of the Custodian to reflect such payment and
transfer for the account of the Fund. The Custodian shall transfer securities
sold for the account of the Fund only upon (iii) receipt of advice from the
Securities System that payment for such securities has been transferred to the
Account of the Custodian, and (iv) the making of an entry on the records of the
Custodian to reflect such transfer and payment for the account of the Fund.
Copies of all advices from the Securities System relating to transfers of
securities for the account of the Fund shall identify the Fund, and shall be
maintained for the Fund by the Custodian. The Custodian shall deliver to the
Fund on the next succeeding business day daily transaction reports which shall
include each day's transactions in the Securities System for the account of the
Fund. Such transaction reports shall be delivered to the Fund or any agent
designated by the Fund pursuant to Proper Instructions, by computer or in such
other manner as the Fund and Custodian may agree in writing.

        (D) The Custodian shall, if requested by the Fund pursuant to Proper
Instructions, provide the Fund with all reports obtained by the Custodian or any
Subcustodian with respect to a Securities System's accounting system, internal
accounting control and procedures for safeguarding securities deposited in the
Securities System.

        (E) Upon receipt of Special Instructions, the Custodian shall terminate
the use of any Securities System (except the federal book-entry system) on
behalf of the Fund as promptly as practicable and shall take all actions
reasonably practicable to safeguard the securities of the Fund maintained with
such Securities System.

        Section 2.23. Other Transfers. Upon receipt of Special Instructions, the
Custodian shall make such other dispositions of securities, funds, or other
Assets of the Fund in a manner or for purposes other than as expressly set forth
in this Agreement, provided that the Special Instructions relating to such
disposition shall include a statement of the purposes for which the delivery is
to be made, the amount of funds, Assets and/or securities to be delivered and
the name of the person or persons to whom delivery is to be made, and shall
otherwise comply with the provisions of Sections 3.01 and 3.03 hereof.

        Section 2.24. Establishment of Segregated Account. Upon receipt of
Proper Instructions, the Custodian shall establish and maintain on its books a
segregated account or accounts for and on behalf of the Fund, into which account
or accounts may be transferred cash and/or securities or other Assets of the
Fund, including securities maintained by the Custodian in a Securities System
pursuant to Section 2.22 hereof, said account or accounts to be maintained: (a)
for the purposes set forth in Section 2.09, 2.10 and 2.11 hereof; (b) for the
purposes of compliance by the Fund with the procedures required by Investment
Company Act Release No. 10666, or any subsequent release or releases of the SEC
relating to the maintenance of segregated accounts by registered investment
companies; or (c) for such other purposes as may be set forth, from time to
time, in Special Instructions. The Custodian shall not be responsible for the
determination of the type or amount of Assets to be held in any segregated
account referred to in this Section 2.24.

        Section 2.25. Custodian's Books and Records. The Custodian shall provide
any assistance reasonably requested by the Fund in the preparation of reports to
Fund shareholders and others, audits of accounts, and other ministerial matters
of like nature. The Custodian shall maintain complete and accurate records with
respect to securities and other Assets held for the accounts of the Fund as
required by the rules and regulations of the SEC applicable to investment
companies registered under the 1940 Act, including, but not limited to: (a)
journals or other records of original entry containing a detailed and itemized
daily record of all receipts and deliveries of securities (including certificate
and transaction identification numbers, if any), and all receipts and
disbursements of cash; (b) ledgers or other records reflecting (i) securities in
transfer, (ii) securities in physical possession, (iii) securities borrowed,
loaned or collateralizing obligations of the Fund, (iv) monies borrowed and
monies loaned (together with a record of the collateral therefor and
substitutions of such collateral), and (v) dividends and interest received; and
(c) cancelled checks and bank records relating thereto. The Custodian shall keep
such other books and records of the Fund as the Fund shall reasonably request.
All such books and records maintained by the Custodian shall be maintained in a
form acceptable to the Fund and in compliance with the rules and regulations of
the SEC, including, but not limited to, books and records required to be
maintained by Section 31(a) of the 1940 Act and the rules and regulations from
time to time adopted thereunder. All books and records maintained by the
Custodian pursuant to this Agreement shall at all times be the property of the
Fund and shall be available during normal business hours for inspection and use
by the Fund and its agents, including without limitation, its independent
certified public accountants. Notwithstanding the preceding sentence, the Funds
shall not take any actions or cause the Custodian to take any actions which
would knowingly cause, either directly or indirectly, the Custodian to violate
any applicable laws, regulations or orders. Notwithstanding the provisions of
this Section 2.25, in the event the Fund purchases cash, securities and other
Assets requiring the use of a Domestic Subcustodian or Foreign Sub-Subcustodian,
the Custodian shall be entitled to rely upon and use the books, records and
accountings of the Domestic Subcustodian as its means of accounting to the Fund
for all cash, securities and other Assets deposited with such entities; provided
however, that such books, records and accountings on which the Bank may rely
must be maintained in the United States by such Domestic Subcustodian and,
provided further, that any agreement between the Custodian and such Domestic
Subcustodian must state that the Domestic Subcustodian agrees to make any
records available upon request and preserve, for the periods described in Rule
31a-2 of the 1940 Act, the records required to be maintained by Rule 31a-1 of
the 1940 Act. In no event shall the Custodian be entitled to rely upon and use
books, records and accountings which are maintained outside of the United
States.

        Section 2.26. Opinion of Fund's Independent Certified Public
Accountants. The Custodian shall take all reasonable action as the Fund may
request to obtain from year to year favorable opinions from the Fund's
independent certified public accountants with respect to the Custodian's
activities hereunder in connection with the preparation of the Fund's Form N-1A
and the Fund's Form N-SAR or other periodic reports to the SEC and with respect
to any other requirements of the SEC.

        Section 2.27. Reports by Independent Certified Public Accountants. At
the request of the Fund, the Custodian shall deliver to the Fund a written
report prepared by the Custodian's independent certified public accountants with
respect to the services provided by the Custodian under this Agreement,
including, without limitation, the Custodian's accounting system, internal
accounting control and procedures for safeguarding cash, securities and other
assets, including cash, securities and other assets deposited and/or maintained
in a Securities System or with a Subcustodian. Such report shall be of
sufficient scope and in sufficient detail as may reasonably be required by the
Fund and as may reasonably be obtained by the Custodian.

        Section 2.28. Overdraft Facility. In the event that the Custodian is
directed by Proper Instructions to make any payment or transfer of funds on
behalf of the Fund for which there would be, at the close of business on the
date of such payment or transfer, insufficient funds held by the Custodian on
behalf of the Fund, the Custodian may, in its sole discretion, provide an
overdraft (an "Overdraft") to the Fund in an amount sufficient to allow the
completion of such payment. Any Overdraft provided hereunder: (a) shall be
payable on the next business day, unless otherwise agreed by the Fund and the
Custodian; and (b) shall accrue interest from the date of the Overdraft to the
date of payment in full by the Fund at a rate agreed upon in writing, from time
to time, by the Custodian and the Fund. The purpose of such Overdrafts is to
temporarily finance extraordinary or emergency expenses not reasonably
foreseeable by the Fund. The Custodian shall promptly notify the Fund in writing
("Overdraft Notice") of any Overdraft by facsimile transmission or in such other
manner as the Fund and the Custodian may agree in writing. The Custodian shall
have a right of set-off against all Assets (except for Assets held in a
segregated margin account or otherwise pledged in connection with options or
futures contracts held for the benefit of the Fund and for Assets allocated to
any other Overdraft or loan made hereunder); provided, however, the Custodian
shall promptly notify the Fund in writing of any intent to exercise a right of
set-off against Assets hereunder and shall not exercise any such right of
set-off against Assets hereunder unless and until the Fund has failed to pay
(within ten (10) days after the Fund's receipt of such notice of intent to
exercise a right of set-off), any Overdraft, together with all accrued interest
thereon. Notwithstanding the provisions of any applicable law, including,
without limitation, the Uniform Commercial Code, the only rights or remedies
which the Custodian is entitled to with respect to Overdrafts is the right of
set-off granted herein.

                                   ARTICLE III
                    PROPER INSTRUCTIONS, SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS
                               AND RELATED MATTERS

        Section 3.01.    Proper Instructions and Special Instructions.

        (a) Proper Instructions. As used herein, the term "Proper Instructions"
shall mean: (i) a tested telex, a written (including, without limitation,
facsimile transmission) request, direction, instruction or certification signed
or initialed by or on behalf of the Fund by two or more Authorized Persons (as
hereinafter defined); (ii) a telephonic or other oral communication by one or
more Authorized Persons; or (iii) a communication effected directly between an
electro-mechanical or electronic device or system (including, without
limitation, computers) by or on behalf of the Fund by one or more Authorized
Persons; provided, however, that communications of the types described in
clauses (ii) and (iii) above purporting to be given by an Authorized Person
shall be considered Proper Instructions only if the Custodian reasonably
believes such communications to have been given by an Authorized Person with
respect to the transaction involved. Proper Instructions in the form of oral
communications shall be confirmed by the Fund by tested telex or in writing in
the manner set forth in clause (i) above, but the lack of such confirmation
shall in no way affect any action taken by the Custodian in reliance upon such
oral instructions prior to the Custodian's receipt of such confirmation. The
Fund and the Custodian are hereby authorized to record any and all telephonic or
other oral instructions communicated to the Custodian. Proper Instructions may
relate to specific transactions or to types or classes of transactions, and may
be in the form of standing instructions.

        (b) Special Instructions. As used herein, the term "Special
Instructions" shall mean Proper Instructions countersigned or confirmed in
writing by the Treasurer or any Assistant Treasurer of the Fund or any other
person designated by the Treasurer of the Fund in writing, which
countersignature or confirmation shall be (i) included on the same instrument
containing the Proper Instructions or on a separate instrument relating thereto,
and (ii) delivered by hand, by facsimile transmission or in such other manner as
the Fund and the Custodian agree in writing.

        (c) Address for Proper Instructions and Special Instructions. Proper
Instructions and Special Instructions shall be delivered to the Custodian at the
address and/or telephone, telecopy or telex number agreed upon from time to time
by the Custodian and the Fund.

        Section 3.02. Authorized Persons. Concurrently with the execution of
this Agreement and from time to time thereafter, as appropriate, the Fund shall
deliver to the Custodian, duly certified as appropriate by a Treasurer or
Assistant Treasurer of the Fund, a certificate setting forth: (a) the names,
titles, signatures, and scope of authority of all persons authorized to give
Proper Instructions or any other notice, request, direction, instruction,
certificate or instrument on behalf of the Fund (collectively, the "Authorized
Persons" and individually, an "Authorized Person"); and (b) the names, titles
and signatures of those persons authorized to issue Special Instructions. Such
certificate may be accepted and relied upon by the Custodian as conclusive
evidence of the facts set forth therein and shall be considered to be in full
force and effect until delivery to the Custodian of a similar certificate to the
contrary. Upon delivery of a certificate which deletes or does not include the
name(s) of a person previously authorized to give Proper Instructions or to
issue Special Instructions, such persons shall no longer be considered an
Authorized Person or authorized to issue Special Instructions.

        Section 3.03. Persons Having Access to Assets of the Portfolios.
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in this Agreement, no
Authorized Person, Director, officer, employee or agent of the Fund shall have
physical access to the Assets of the Fund held by the Custodian nor shall the
Custodian deliver any Assets of the Fund to an account of such person; provided,
however, that nothing in this Section 3.03 shall prohibit (a) any Authorized
Person from giving Proper Instructions, or any person authorized to issue
Special Instructions from issuing Special Instructions, so long as such action
does not result in delivery of or access to Assets of the Fund prohibited by
this Section 3.03; or (b) the Fund's independent certified public accountants
from examining or reviewing the Assets of the Fund held by the Custodian. The
Fund will deliver from time to time a written certificate executed by two
Authorized Persons identifying such Authorized Persons, Directors, officers,
employees and agents of the Fund. Notwithstanding the foregoing, to the extent
that the person acting on behalf of the Custodian in making such delivery has
actual knowledge that any person is an Authorized Person, Director, officer,
employee or agent of the Fund, the Custodian will comply with this Section 3.03
as if the name of such Authorized Person, Director, officer, employee or agent
had been contained in a written certificate provided pursuant to this Section
3.03.

        Section 3.04. Actions of Custodian Based on Proper Instructions and
Special Instructions. So long as and to the extent that the Custodian acts in
accordance with (a) Proper Instructions or Special Instructions, as the case may
be, and (b) the terms of this Agreement, the Custodian shall not be responsible
for the title, validity or genuineness of any property, or evidence of title
thereof, received by it or delivered by it pursuant to this Agreement.

                                   ARTICLE IV
                                  SUBCUSTODIANS

        From time to time, in accordance with the relevant provisions of this
Agreement, (i) the Custodian may appoint one or more Domestic Subcustodians and
Special Subcustodians (each, as hereinafter defined) to act on behalf of the
Fund; and (ii) any Domestic Subcustodian so appointed and which has been
designated as a Foreign Custody Manager (as such term is defined in Rule 17f-5
of the 1940 Act) by the Custodian and approved by the Fund's board ("Approved
Foreign Custody Manager") may appoint a Foreign Sub-Subcustodian or Interim
Sub-Subcustodian (as each are hereinafter defined) in accordance with this
Article IV; provided that the Fund's board also has approved the agreement
between the Custodian and the Foreign Custody Manager specifying the Foreign
Custody Manager's duties ("Delegation Agreement"). For purposes of this
Agreement, all Domestic Subcustodians, Special Subcustodians, Foreign
Sub-Subcustodians and Interim Sub-Subcustodians shall be referred to
collectively as "Subcustodians".

        Section 4.01. Domestic Subcustodians. The Custodian may, at any time and
from time to time, appoint any bank as defined in Section 2(a)(5) of the 1940
Act or any trust company or other entity any of which meet requirements of a
custodian under Section 17(f) of the 1940 Act and the rules and regulations
thereunder, to act as agent for the Custodian on behalf of the Fund as a
subcustodian for purposes of holding cash, securities and other Assets of the
Fund and performing other functions of the Custodian within the United States (a
"Domestic Subcustodian"); provided, that, the Custodian shall notify the Fund in
writing of the identity and qualifications of any proposed Domestic Subcustodian
at least sixty (60) days prior to the desired appointment of such Domestic
Subcustodian, and the Fund will notify the Custodian, in writing signed by two
or more Authorized Persons, of approval or disapproval of the appointment of the
proposed Domestic Subcustodian; and provided, further, that the Custodian may
not appoint any such Domestic Subcustodian without such prior written approval
of the Fund by such Authorized Persons. Each such duly approved Domestic
Subcustodian and the countries where, Foreign Sub-Subcustodians and the
securities depositories and clearing agencies through which they may hold
securities and other Assets of the Fund shall be as agreed upon by the parties
hereto in writing, from time to time in accordance with the provisions of
Section 9.04 hereof (the "Subcustodian List").

        Section 4.02.    Foreign Sub-Subcustodians and Interim
Sub-Subcustodians.

        (a) Foreign Sub-Subcustodians. Provided that the Custodian of a Domestic
Subcustodian is an Approved Foreign Custody Manager, the Custodian or any such
Domestic Subcustodian, as applicable, may appoint any (1)(a) "Qualified Foreign
Bank" (as such term is defined in Rule 17f-5) meeting the requirements of an
"Eligible Foreign Custodian" (as such term is defined in Rule 17f-5) or by SEC
order exempt therefrom; (b) majority-owned direct or indirect subsidiary of a
"U.S. bank" (as such term is defined in Rule 17f-5) or bank holding company
meeting the requirements of an Eligible Foreign Custodian or exempt by SEC order
therefrom; or (c) any bank (as such term is defined in Section 2(a)(5) of the
1940 Act) meeting the requirements of a custodian under Section 17(f) of the
1940 Act and the rules and regulations thereunder (each a "Foreign
Sub-Subcustodian") or (2) any "Securities Depository" (as such term is defined
in Rule 17f-5) or clearing agency meeting the requirements of an Eligible
Foreign Custodian or exempt by SEC order therefrom ("Securities Depositories and
Clearing Agencies"), provided that the Foreign Custody Manager's appointments of
such Eligible Foreign Custodians shall at all times be governed by the
Delegation Agreement.

        (b) Interim Sub-Subcustodians. Notwithstanding the foregoing, in the
event that the Fund shall invest in a security or other Asset to be held in a
country in which the Foreign Custody Manager has not appointed an Eligible
Foreign Custodian, the Custodian shall, or shall cause the Domestic Subcustodian
to, promptly notify the Fund in writing by facsimile transmission or in such
other manner as the Fund and Custodian shall agree in writing of the
unavailability of an approved Foreign Sub-Subcustodian in such country; and upon
the receipt of Special Instructions, the Custodian shall, or shall cause the
Domestic Subcustodian to, appoint or approve any Person (as hereinafter defined)
designated by the Fund in such Special Instructions, to hold such security or
other Asset. (Any Person appointed or approved as a sub-subcustodian pursuant to
this Section 4.02(b) is hereinafter referred to as an "Interim
Sub-Subcustodian.")

        Section 4.03. Special Subcustodians. Upon receipt of Special
Instructions, the Custodian shall, on behalf of the Fund, appoint one or more
banks, trust companies or other entities designated in such Special Instructions
to act as a subcustodian for the purpose of (i) effecting third-party repurchase
transactions with banks, brokers, dealers or other entities, (ii) providing
depository and clearing agency services with respect to certain variable rate
demand note securities; and (iii) effecting any other transactions designated by
the Fund in Special Instructions. (Each such designated subcustodian is
hereinafter referred to as a "Special Subcustodian.") Each such duly appointed
Special Subcustodian shall be listed on the Subcustodian List. In connection
with the appointment of any Special Subcustodian, the Custodian shall enter into
a subcustodian agreement with the Special Subcustodian in form and substance
approved by the Fund, provided that such agreement shall in all events comply
with the provisions of the 1940 Act and the rules and regulations thereunder and
the terms and provisions of this Agreement. The Custodian shall not amend any
subcustodian agreement entered into with a Special Subcustodian, or agree to
change or permit any changes thereunder, or waive any rights under such
agreement, except upon prior approval pursuant to Special Instructions.

        Section 4.04. Termination of a Subcustodian. The Custodian shall (i)
cause each Domestic Subcustodian to, and (ii) use its best efforts to cause each
Interim Sub-Subcustodian and Special Subcustodian to, perform all of its
obligations in accordance with the terms and conditions of the subcustodian
agreement between the Custodian and such Domestic Subcustodian and Special
Subcustodian or between the Domestic Subcustodian and a Foreign Sub-Subcustodian
or Interim Sub-Subcustodian. In the event that the Custodian is unable to cause
such subcustodian or sub-subcustodian to fully perform its obligations
thereunder, the Custodian shall promptly notify the Fund in writing and
forthwith, upon the receipt of Special Instructions, terminate or cause the
termination of such Subcustodian or Sub-Subcustodian with respect to the Fund
and, if necessary or desirable, appoint or cause the appointment of a
replacement Subcustodian or Sub-Subcustodian in accordance with the provisions
of this Article IV. In addition to the foregoing, the Custodian (A) may, at any
time in its discretion, upon written notification to the Fund, terminate any
Domestic Subcustodian which is not an approved Foreign Custody Manager, and (B)
shall, upon receipt of Special Instructions, terminate any Special Subcustodian
or Domestic Subcustodian which is an Approved Foreign Custody Manager with
respect to the Fund, in accordance with the termination provisions under the
applicable subcustodian agreement, and (C) shall, upon receipt of Special
Instructions, cause the Domestic Subcustodian to terminate any Foreign
Sub-Subcustodian or Interim Sub-Subcustodian as to its use of such entities with
respect to the Fund, in accordance with the termination provisions under the
applicable sub-subcustodian agreement.

        Section 4.05. Certification Regarding Foreign Sub-Subcustodians. Upon
request of the Fund, the Custodian shall deliver to the Fund a certificate
stating: (i) the identity of each Foreign Sub-Subcustodian then acting on behalf
of the Custodian; (ii) the countries in which and the Securities Depositories
and Clearing Agents through which each such Foreign Sub-Subcustodian is then
holding cash, securities and other Assets of the Fund; and (iii) such other
information as may be requested by the Fund to ensure compliance with rules and
regulations under the 1940 Act.

                                    ARTICLE V
                        STANDARD OF CARE: INDEMNIFICATION

        Section 5.01.    Standard of Care.

        (a) General Standard of Care. The Custodian shall exercise reasonable
care and diligence in carrying out all of its duties and obligations under this
Agreement, and shall be liable to the Fund for all loss, damage and expense
suffered or incurred by the Fund resulting from the failure of the Custodian to
exercise such reasonable care and diligence.

        (b) Actions Prohibited by Applicable Law, Etc. In no event shall the
Custodian incur liability hereunder if the Custodian or any Subcustodian or
Securities System, or any subcustodian, Securities Depository or Clearing Agency
utilized by any such Subcustodian, or any nominee of the Custodian or any
Subcustodian (individually, a "Person") is prevented, forbidden or delayed from
performing, or omits to perform, any act or thing which this Agreement provides
shall be performed or omitted to be performed, by reason of: (i) any provision
of any present or future law or regulation or order of the United States of
America, or any state thereof, or of any foreign country, or political
subdivision thereof or of any court of competent jurisdiction (and the Custodian
nor any other Person shall not be obligated to take any action contrary
thereto); or (ii) any act of God or war or other similar circumstance beyond the
control of the Custodian unless in each case, such delay or nonperformance is
caused by the negligence, misfeasance or misconduct of the Custodian.

        (c) Mitigation by Custodian. Upon the occurrence of any event which
causes or may cause any loss, damage or expense to the Fund, (i) the Custodian
shall, (ii) the Custodian shall cause any applicable Domestic Subcustodian or
Foreign Sub-Subcustodian to, and (iii) the Custodian shall use its best efforts
to cause any applicable Interim Sub-Subcustodian or Special Subcustodian to, use
all commercially reasonable efforts and take all reasonable steps under the
circumstances to mitigate the effects of such event and to avoid continuing harm
to the Fund.

        (d) Advice of Counsel. The Custodian shall be without liability for any
action reasonably taken or omitted in good faith pursuant to the written advise
of (i) counsel for the Fund, or (ii) at the expense of the Custodian, such other
counsel as the Fund and the Custodian may agree upon in writing; provided,
however, with respect to the performance of any action or omission of any action
upon such advice, the Custodian shall be required to conform to the standard of
care set forth in Section 5.01 (a).

        (e) Expenses of the Fund. In addition to the liability of the Custodian
under this Article V, the Custodian shall be liable to the Fund for all
reasonable costs and expenses incurred by the Fund in connection with any claim
by the Fund against the Custodian arising from the obligations of the Custodian
hereunder including, without limitation, all reasonable attorneys' fees and
expenses incurred by the Fund in asserting any such claim, and all expenses
incurred by the Fund in connection with any investigations, lawsuits or
proceedings relating to such claim; provided however, that the Fund has
recovered from the Custodian for such claim.

        (f) Liability for Past Records. The Custodian shall have no liability in
respect of any loss, damage or expense suffered by the Fund, insofar as such
loss, damage or expense arises from the performance of the Custodian in reliance
upon records that were maintained for the Fund by entities other than the
Custodian prior to the Custodian's employment hereunder which the Custodian has
no reason to believe are inaccurate or incomplete after reasonable inquiry.

        Section 5.02.    Liability of the Custodian for Actions of Other
Persons.

        (a) Domestic Subcustodian and Foreign Sub-Subcustodian. The Custodian
shall be liable for the actions or omissions of any Domestic Subcustodian or
Foreign Sub-Subcustodian (excluding any Securities Depository or Clearing Agency
appointed by them) to the same extent as if such actions or omissions were
performed by the Custodian itself. In the event of any loss, damage or expense
suffered or incurred by the Fund caused by or resulting from the actions or
omissions of any Domestic Subcustodian or Foreign Sub-Subcustodian for which the
Custodian would otherwise be liable, the Custodian shall promptly reimburse the
Fund in the amount of any such loss, damage or expense.

        (b) Special Subcustodians, Interim Sub-Subcustodians, Security Systems,
Securities Depositories and Clearing Agencies. The Custodian shall not be liable
to the Fund for any loss, damage or expense suffered or incurred by the Fund
resulting from the actions or omissions of a Special Subcustodian, Interim
Sub-Subcustodian, Securities System, Securities Depository or Clearing Agency
unless such loss, damage or expense is caused by, or results from, the
negligence, misfeasance or misconduct of the Custodian; provided, however, in
the event of any such loss, damage or expense, the Custodian shall take all
reasonable steps to enforce such rights as it may have against such Special
Subcustodian, Interim Sub-Subcustodian, Security System, Securities Depository
or Clearing Agency to protect the interest of the Fund.

        (c) Reimbursement of Expenses. The Fund agrees to reimburse the
Custodian for all reasonable out-of-pocket expenses incurred by the Custodian in
connection with the fulfillment of its obligations under Section 5.01(c) as it
relates to Interim Sub-Subcustodians and Special Subcustodians and 5.02(b);
provided however, that such reimbursement shall not apply to expenses occasioned
by or resulting from the negligence, misfeasance or misconduct of the Custodian.

        Section 5.03.    Indemnification by Fund.

        (a) Indemnification Obligations of Fund. Subject to the limitations set
forth in this Agreement, the Fund agrees to indemnify and hold harmless the
Custodian and its nominees from all loss, damage and expense (including
reasonable attorneys' fees) suffered or incurred by the Custodian or its nominee
caused by or arising from actions taken by the Custodian, its employees or
agents in the performance of its duties and obligations under this Agreement;
provided, however, that such indemnity shall not apply to loss, damage and
expense occasioned by or resulting from the negligence, misfeasance or
misconduct of the Custodian or its nominee. In addition, the Fund agrees to
indemnify any Person against liability incurred by reason of taxes assessed to
such Person resulting from the fact that securities and other property of the
Fund are registered in the name of such Person in accordance with the provisions
of this Agreement; provided, however, that in no event shall such
indemnification be applicable to income, franchise or similar taxes which may be
imposed or assessed against any Person. It is also understood that the Fund
agrees to indemnify and hold harmless the Custodian and its nominee for any loss
arising from a foreign currency transaction or contract, where the loss results
from a Sovereign Risk (as hereinafter defined) or where any Person maintaining
securities, currencies, deposits or other Assets of the Fund in connection with
any such transactions has exercised reasonable care maintaining such property or
in connection with any such transaction involving such Assets. A "Sovereign
Risk" shall mean nationalization, expropriation, devaluation, revaluation,
confiscation, seizure, cancellation, destruction or similar action by any
governmental authority, de facto or de jure; or enactment, promulgation,
imposition or enforcement by any such governmental authority of currency
restrictions, exchange controls, taxes, levies or other charges affecting the
Fund's property; or acts of war, terrorism, insurrection or revolution.

        (b) Notice of Litigation. Right to Prosecute, Etc. The Fund shall not be
liable for indemnification under this Section 5.03 unless a Person shall have
promptly notified the Fund in writing of the commencement of any litigation or
proceeding brought against the Custodian or other Person in respect of which
indemnity may be sought under this Section 5.03. With respect to claims in such
litigation or proceedings for which indemnity by the Fund may be sought and
subject to applicable law and the ruling of any court of competent jurisdiction,
the Fund shall be entitled to participate in any such litigation or proceeding
with counsel of its choice at its own expense in respect of that portion of the
litigation for which the Fund may be subject to an indemnification obligation;
provided, however, a Person shall be entitled to participate in (but not
control) at its own cost and expense, the defense of any such litigation or
proceeding if the Fund has not acknowledged in writing it obligation to
indemnify the Person with respect to such litigation or proceeding. If the Fund
is not permitted to participate or control such litigation or proceeding under
applicable law or by a ruling of a court of competent jurisdiction, or if the
Fund chooses not to so participate, the Custodian or other Person shall not
consent to the entry of any judgment or enter into any settlement in any such
litigation or proceeding without providing the Fund with adequate notice of any
such settlement or judgment, and without the Fund's prior written consent which
consent shall not be unreasonably withheld or delayed. All Persons shall submit
written evidence to the Fund with respect to any cost or expense for which they
are seeking indemnification in such form and detail as the Fund may reasonably
request.

        Section 5.04. Investment Limitations. If the Custodian has otherwise
complied with the terms and conditions of this Agreement in performing its duty
generally, and more particularly in connection with the purchase, sale or
exchange of securities made by or for the Fund, the Custodian shall not be
liable to the Fund and the Fund agrees to indemnify the Custodian and its
nominees, for any loss, damage or expense suffered or incurred by the Custodian
and its nominees arising out of any violation of any investment or other
limitation to which the Fund is subject except for violations of which the
Custodian has actual knowledge. For purposes of this Section 5.04 the term
"actual knowledge" shall mean knowledge gained by the Custodian by means other
than from any prospectus published by the Fund or contained in any filing by the
Fund with the SEC.

        Section 5.05. Fund's Right to Proceed. Notwithstanding anything to the
contrary contained herein, the Fund shall have, at its election upon reasonable
notice to the Custodian, the right to enforce, to the extent permitted by any
applicable agreement and applicable law, the Custodian's rights against any
Subcustodian, Securities System or other Person for loss, damage or expense
caused the Fund by such Subcustodian, Securities System or other Person, which
the Custodian may have as a consequence of any such loss, damage or expense, if
and to the extent that the Fund has not been made whole for any such loss,
expense or damage. If the Custodian makes the Fund whole for any such loss,
expense or damage, the Custodian shall retain the ability to enforce its rights
directly against such Subcustodian, Securities System or other Person. Upon the
Fund's election to enforce any rights of the Custodian under this Section 5.05,
the Fund shall reasonably prosecute all actions and proceedings directly
relating to the rights of the Custodian in respect of the loss, damage or
expense incurred by the Fund; provided that, so long as the Fund has
acknowledged in writing its obligation to indemnify the Custodian under Section
5.03 hereof with respect to such claim, the Fund shall retain the right to
settle, compromise and/or terminate any action or proceeding in respect of the
loss, damage or expense incurred by the Fund without the Custodian's consent and
provided further, that if the Fund has not made an acknowledgement of its
obligation to indemnify, the Fund shall not settle, compromise or terminate any
such action or proceeding without the written consent of the Custodian, which
consent shall not be unreasonably withheld or delayed. The Custodian agrees to
cooperate with the Fund and take all actions reasonably requested by the Fund in
connection with the Fund's enforcement of any rights of the Custodian. Nothing
contained in this Section 5.05 shall be construed as an obligation of the Fund
to enforce the Custodian's rights. The Fund agrees to reimburse the Custodian
for out-of-pocket expenses incurred by it in connection with the fulfillment of
its obligations under this Section 5.05; provided, however, that such
reimbursement shall not apply to expenses occasioned by or resulting from the
negligence, misfeasance or misconduct of the Custodian.

        Section 5.06.    Indemnification by Custodian.

        (a) Indemnification Obligations of Custodian. Subject to the limitations
set forth in this Agreement and in addition to the reimbursement obligations
provided in Section 5.02(a), the Custodian agrees to indemnify and hold harmless
the Fund and its nominees from all loss, damage and expense (including
reasonable attorneys' fees) suffered or incurred by the Fund or its nominee
caused by or arising from the failure of the Custodian, its nominee, employees
or agents to comply with the terms or conditions of this Agreement or arising
out of the negligence, misfeasance or misconduct of the Custodian or its
nominee.

        (b) Notice of Litigation, Right to Prosecute, Etc. The Custodian shall
not be liable for indemnification under this Section 5.06 unless the Fund shall
have promptly notified the Custodian in writing of the commencement of any
litigation or proceeding brought against the Fund in respect of which indemnity
may be sought under this Section 5.06. With respect to claims in such litigation
or proceedings for which indemnity by the Custodian may be sought and subject to
applicable law and the ruling of any court of competent jurisdiction, the
Custodian shall be entitled to participate in any such litigation or proceeding
with counsel of its choice at its own expense in respect of that portion of the
litigation for which the Custodian may be subject to an indemnification
obligation; provided, however, the Fund shall be entitled to participate in (but
not control) at its own cost and expense, the defense of any such litigation or
proceeding if the Custodian has not acknowledged in writing its obligation to
indemnify the Fund with respect to such litigation or proceeding. If the
Custodian is not permitted to participate or control such litigation or
proceeding under applicable law or by a ruling of a court of competent
jurisdiction, or if the Custodian chooses not to so participate, the Fund shall
not consent to the entry of any judgement or enter into any settlement in any
such litigation or proceeding without providing the Custodian with adequate
notice of any such settlement or judgement, and without the Custodian's prior
written consent which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld or delayed. The
Fund shall submit written evidence to the Custodian with respect to any cost or
expense for which it is seeking indemnification in such form and detail as the
Custodian may reasonably request.

        Section 5.07. Custodian's Right to Proceed. Notwithstanding anything to
the contrary contained herein, the Custodian shall have, at its election upon
reasonable notice to the Fund, the right to enforce, to the extent permitted by
any applicable agreement and applicable law, the Fund's rights against any
Subcustodian, Securities System or other Person for loss, damage or expense
caused the Custodian by such Subcustodian, Securities System or other Person,
which the Fund may have as a consequence of any such loss, damage or expense, if
and to the extent that the Custodian has not been made whole for any such loss,
expense or damage. If the Fund makes the Custodian whole for any such loss,
expense or damage, the Fund shall retain the ability to enforce its rights
directly against such Subcustodian, Securities System or other Person. Upon the
Custodian's election to enforce any rights of the Fund under this Section 5.07,
the Custodian shall reasonably prosecute all actions and proceedings directly
relating to the rights of the Fund in respect of the loss, damage and expense
incurred by the Custodian; provided that, so long as the Custodian has
acknowledged in writing its obligation to indemnify the Fund under Section 5.06
hereof with respect to such claim, the Custodian shall retain the right to
settle, compromise and/or terminate any action or proceeding in respect of the
loss, damage or expense incurred by the Custodian without the Fund's consent and
provided further, that if the Custodian has not made an acknowledgement of its
obligation to indemnify, the Custodian shall not settle, compromise or terminate
any such action or proceeding without the written consent of the Fund, which
consent shall not be unreasonably withheld or delayed. The Fund agrees to
cooperate with the Custodian and take all actions reasonably requested by the
Custodian in connection with the Custodian's enforcement of any rights of the
Fund. Nothing contained in this Section 5.07 shall be construed as an obligation
of the Custodian to enforce the Fund's rights. The Custodian agrees to reimburse
the Fund for out-of-pocket expenses incurred by it in connection with the
fulfillment of its obligations under this Section 5.07; provided, however, that
such reimbursement shall not apply to expenses occasioned by or resulting from
the negligence, misfeasance or misconduct of the Fund.

                                   ARTICLE VI
                                  COMPENSATION

        For the initial three year period beginning on the effective date of
this Agreement, the Fund shall compensate the Custodian in the amount and at the
times specified in Appendix "B" attached hereto. Thereafter, the Fund shall
compensate the Custodian in the amount, and at times, as may be agreed upon in
writing, from time to time, by the Custodian and the Fund.

                                   ARTICLE VII
                                   TERMINATION

        This Agreement shall continue in full force and effect until the first
to occur of: (a) termination by the Custodian by an instrument in writing
delivered or mailed (certified mail, return receipt requested) to the Fund, such
termination to take effect not sooner than ninety (90) days after the date of
such delivery or receipt; (b) termination by the Fund by an instrument in
writing delivered or mailed (certified mail, return receipt requested) to the
Custodian, such termination to take effect not sooner than ninety (90) days
after the date of such delivery or receipt; or (c) termination by the Fund by an
instrument in writing delivered to the Custodian, based upon the Fund's
determination that there is reasonable basis to conclude that the Custodian is
insolvent or that the financial condition of the Custodian is deteriorating in
any material respect, in which case termination shall take effect upon the
Custodian's receipt of such notice or at such later time as the Fund shall
designate. In the event of termination pursuant to this Article VII, the Fund
shall make payment of all accrued fees and unreimbursed expenses within a
reasonable time following termination and delivery of a statement to the Fund
setting forth such fees and expenses. The Fund shall identify in any notice of
termination a successor custodian to which the cash, securities and other Assets
of the Fund shall, upon termination of this Agreement, be delivered. In the
event that securities and other Assets remain in the possession of the Custodian
after the date of termination hereof owing to failure of the Fund to appoint a
successor custodian, the Custodian shall be entitled to compensation for its
services in accordance with the fee schedule most recently in effect, for such
period as the Custodian retains possession of such securities and other Assets,
and the provisions of this Agreement relating to the duties and obligations of
the Custodian and the Fund shall remain in full force and effect for such
period. In the event of the appointment of a successor custodian, the cash,
securities and other Assets owned by the Fund and held by the Custodian, any
Subcustodian or nominee shall be delivered, at the terminating party's expense,
to the successor custodian; and the Custodian agrees to cooperate with the Fund
in the execution of documents and performance of other actions necessary or
desirable in order to substitute the successor custodian for the Custodian under
this Agreement.

                                  ARTICLE VIII
                                  DEFINED TERMS

        The following terms are defined in the following sections:

Term                                              Section
Account                                           2.22(A)
ADRs                                              2.06
Approved Foreign Custody Manager                  Article IV
Assets                                            Article I
Authorized Person                                 3.02
Banking Institution                               2.12
Bank Accounts                                     2.21
Clearing Agency                                   4.02(a)
Delegation Agreement                              Article IV
Distribution Account                              2.16
Domestic Subcustodian                             4.01
Eligible Foreign Custodian                        4.02(a)
Foreign Sub-Subcustodian                          4.02(a)
Institutional Client                              2.03
Interest Bearing Deposit                          2.12
Interim Sub-Subcustodian                          4.02(b)
OCC                                               2.09
Overdraft                                         2.28
Overdraft Notice                                  2.28
Person                                            5.01(b)
Procedural Agreement                              2.10
Proper Instruction                                3.01(a)
SEC                                               2.22
Securities Depositories                           4.02(a)
Securities System                                 2.22
Shares                                            2.16
Sovereign Risk                                    5.03(a)
Special Instruction                               3.01(b)
Special Subcustodian                              4.03
Subcustodian                                      Article IV
1940 Act                                          Preamble

                                   ARTICLE IX
                                  MISCELLANEOUS

        Section 9.01.    Execution of Documents, Etc.

        (a) Actions by the Fund. Upon request, the Fund shall execute and
deliver to the Custodian such proxies, powers of attorney or other instruments
as may be reasonable and necessary or desirable in connection with the
performance by the Custodian or any Subcustodian of their respective obligations
under this Agreement or any applicable subcustodian agreement, provided that the
exercise by the Custodian or any Subcustodian of any such rights shall in all
events be in compliance with the terms of this Agreement.

        (b) Actions by Custodian. Upon receipt of Proper Instructions, the
Custodian shall execute and deliver to the Fund or to such other parties as the
Fund may designate in such Proper Instructions, all such documents, instruments
or agreements as may be reasonable and necessary or desirable in order to
effectuate any of the transactions contemplated hereby and designated therein.

        Section 9.02.    Representations and Warranties.

        (a) Representations and Warranties of the Fund. The Fund hereby
represents and warrants that each of the following shall be true, correct and
complete as of the date of execution of this Agreement and, unless notice to the
contrary is provided by the Fund to the Custodian, at all times during the term
of this Agreement: (i) the Fund is duly organized under the laws of its
jurisdiction of organization and is registered as an open-end management
investment company under the 1940 Act or is a series of portfolio of such
entity; and (ii) the execution, delivery and performance by the Fund of this
Agreement are (w) within its power, (x) have been duly authorized by all
necessary action, and (y) will not (A) contribute to or result in a breach of or
default under or conflict with any existing law, order, regulation or ruling of
any governmental or regulatory agency or authority, or (B) violate any provision
of the Fund's corporate charter or other organizational document, or bylaws, or
any amendment thereof or any provision of its most recent Prospectus or
Statement of Additional Information.

        (b) Representations and Warranties of the Custodian. The Custodian
hereby represents and warrants that each of the following shall be true, correct
and complete as of the date of execution of this Agreement and, unless notice to
the contrary is provided by the Custodian to the Fund, at all times during the
term of this Agreement: (i) the Custodian is duly organized under the laws of
its jurisdiction of organization and qualifies to serve as a custodian to
open-end management investment companies under the provisions of the 1940 Act;
and (ii) the execution, delivery and performance by the Custodian of this
Agreement are (w) within its power (x) have been duly authorized by all
necessary action, and (y) will not (A) contribute to or result in a breach of or
default under or conflict with any existing law, order, regulation or ruling of
any governmental or regulatory agency or authority, or (B) violate any provision
of the Custodian's corporate charter, or other organizational document, or
bylaws, or any amendment thereof. The Custodian acknowledges receipt of a copy
of the Fund's most recent Prospectus and Statement of Additional Information.

        Section 9.03. Entire Agreement. This Agreement constitutes the entire
understanding and agreement of the parties hereto with respect to the subject
matter hereof and accordingly, supersedes as of the effective date of this
Agreement any custodian agreement heretofore in effect between the Fund and the
Custodian.

        Section 9.04. Waivers and Amendments. No provisions of this Agreement
may be waived, amended or deleted except by a statement in writing signed by the
party against which enforcement of such waiver, amendment or deletion is sought.

        Section 9.05. Interpretation. In connection with the operation of this
Agreement, the Custodian and the Fund may agree in writing from time to time on
such provisions interpretative of or in addition to the provisions of this
Agreement as may in their joint opinion be consistent with the general tenor of
this Agreement. No interpretative or additional provisions made as provided in
the preceding sentence shall be deemed to be an amendment of this Agreement.

        Section 9.06. Captions. Headings contained in this Agreement, which are
included as convenient references only, shall have no bearing upon the
interpretation of the terms of the Agreement or the obligations of the parties
hereto.

        Section 9.07. Governing Law. This Agreement shall be construed in
accordance with and governed by the laws of the State of Missouri, in each case
without giving effect to principles of conflicts of law.

        Section 9.08. Notices. Except in the case of Proper Instructions or
Special Instructions, and as otherwise provided in this Agreement, notices and
other writings contemplated by this Agreement shall be delivered by hand or by
facsimile transmission or as otherwise agreed to by the Fund and the Custodian
in writing (provided that in the case of delivery by facsimile transmission,
notice shall also be mailed postage prepaid) to the parties at the following
addresses:

        (a)    If to the Fund:

               United High Income Fund, Inc.
               6300 Lamar Avenue
               Overland Park, Kansas  66202
               Attn:  Fund Treasurer
               Telephone:    913-236-2000
               Telefax:      913-236-1595

        (b) If to the Custodian:

               UMB Bank, n.a.
               928 Grand Avenue, 10th Floor
               Kansas City, Missouri  64106
               Attn:  Securities Administration
               Telephone:    816-860-7764
               Telefax:      816-860-4869

or such other address as either party may have designated in writing to the
other party hereto.

        Section 9.09. Assignment. This Agreement shall be binding on and shall
inure to the benefit of the Fund and the Custodian and their respective
successors and assigns, provided that, subject to the provisions of Section 7.01
hereof, neither party hereto may assign this Agreement or any of its rights or
obligations hereunder without the prior written consent of the other party.

        Section 9.10. Counterparts. This Agreement may be executed in any number
of counterparts, each of which shall be deemed an original. This Agreement shall
become effective when one or more counterparts have been signed and delivered by
each of the parties.

        Section 9.11. Confidentiality; Survival of Obligations. The parties
hereto agree that each shall treat confidentially the terms and conditions of
this Agreement and all information provided by each party to the other regarding
its business and operations. All confidential information provided by a party
hereto shall be used by any other party hereto solely for the purpose of
rendering services pursuant to this Agreement and, except as may be required in
carrying out this Agreement, shall not be disclosed to any third party without
the prior consent of such providing party. The foregoing shall not be applicable
to any information that is publicly available when provided or thereafter
becomes publicly available other than through a breach of this Agreement, or
that is required to be disclosed by any bank examiner of the Custodian or any
Subcustodians, any auditor or examiner of the parties hereto, by judicial or
administrative process or otherwise by applicable law or regulation. The
provisions of this Section 9.11 and Section 9.01, 9.07, Section 2.28, Section
3.04, Section 4.05, Section 7.01, Article V and Article VI hereof and any other
rights or obligations incurred or accrued by any party hereto prior to
termination of this Agreement shall survive any termination of this Agreement.

        IN WITNESS WHEREOF, each of the parties has caused this Agreement to be
executed in its name and behalf on the day and year first above written.

UNITED HIGH INCOME FUND, INC.               UMB BANK, n.a.


By:  /s/Sharon K. Pappas                    By:    /s/Ralph Santoro
Name:  Sharon K. Pappas                     Name:  Ralph Santoro

Title:  Vice President                      Title:  Senior Vice President


<PAGE>

                                  APPENDIX "B"
                                       TO
                               CUSTODIAN AGREEMENT
                                     BETWEEN
                          UNITED HIGH INCOME FUND, INC.
                                       AND
                                 UMB BANK, N.A.

                             Dated as of May 1, 1997


        The Fund shall be responsible for providing the Custodian the net asset
levels the Custodian requires to calculate the net asset portion of the
Custodian's fees. Such determinations shall be based upon the average monthly
assets of each Fund and shall specify the level of domestic assets and foreign
assets by country, as appropriate. Domestic assets shall include all assets held
in the United States including but not limited to American Depositary Receipts.
Foreign assets shall include all assets held outside the United States including
but not limited to securities which clear through Euroclear or CEDEL. The
Custodian will provide as soon as practicable after receiving the information
provided by the Fund with respect to the net asset level numbers, a bill for the
Fund, including such reasonable detail in support of each bill as may be
reasonably requested by the Fund. As used in this Appendix "B", "United Funds"
shall mean all funds in the United Group of Funds, TMK/United Funds, Inc. and
Waddell & Reed Funds, Inc.

                          DOMESTIC CUSTODY FEE SCHEDULE

A.      Annual Fee (combining all domestic assets):

        An annual fee to be computed as of month end and payable each month of
        the Fund's fiscal year (after receipt of the bill issued to each Fund
        based upon its portion of domestic assets), at the annual rate of:

        .00005 for the first $5,000,000,000 of the net assets of all the United
        Funds, plus .00004 for any net assets exceeding $5,000,000,000 of the
        assets of all the United Funds.

B.      Portfolio Transaction Fees (billed to each Fund):

        (a) For each portfolio transaction* processed through a
            Depository (DTC, PTC or Fed)                               $ 7.00
        (b) For each portfolio transaction* processed through                
            the New York office (physical settlement)                  $20.00
        (c) For each futures/option contract written                   $25.00
        (d) For each principal/interest paydown                        $ 6.00
        (e) For each interfund note transaction                        $ 5.00

        * A portfolio transaction includes a receive, delivery, maturity, free
        security movement and corporate action.

C.      Earnings Credits:

        Positive earnings credits will be applied on all collected custody and
        cash management balances of each Fund at the Custodian to earn the
        Custodian's daily repurchase agreement rate less reserve requirements
        and FDIC premiums. Negative earnings credits will be charged on all
        uncollected custody and cash management balances of each Fund at the
        Custodian's prime rate less 150 basis points on each day a negative
        balance occurs. Positive and/or negative earnings credits will be
        monitored daily for each Fund and the net positive or negative amount
        for each Fund will be included in the monthly statements. Excess
        positive credits for each Fund will be carried forward indefinitely.

D.      Out-of-Pocket Expenses (passed directly from Special   Subcustodians):

        Includes all charges by any Special Subcustodian to the Custodian as
        Custodian for any Assets held at the Special Subcustodian.

                                              GLOBAL CUSTODY FEE SCHEDULE

A.      Global Fee Schedule:


        Market:                 Annual Asset Fees       Transaction Fees
        ------                  -----------------       ----------------

        Argentina                   .0037                    $85
        Australia                   .0009                    $85
        Austria                     .0011                    $70
        Belgium                     .0011                    $60
        Brazil                      .0035                    $60
        Canada                      .0008                    $35
        Chile                       .0045                    $85
        China                       .0045                    $75
        Czech Republic              .0055                   $135
        Denmark                     .0011                    $60
        Finland                     .0011                    $85
        France                      .0011                    $85
        Germany                     .0008                    $60
        Hong Kong                   .0009                    $85
        Hungary                     .0065                   $210
        India                       .0055                   $135
        Indonesia                   .0009                    $85
        Ireland                     .0011                    $60
        Israel                      .0035                   $160
        Italy                       .0011                    $70
        Japan                       .0008                    $40
        Korea                       .0035                    $60
        Malaysia                    .0009                    $85
        Mexico                      .0016                    $60
        Netherlands                 .0011                    $35
        New Zealand                 .0009                    $85
        Norway                      .0011                    $85
        Peru                        .0070                   $160
        Philippines                 .0035                    $95
        Poland                      .0060                   $110
        Portugal                    .0035                   $145
        Singapore                   .0009                    $85
        Spain                       .0009                    $85
        Sweden                      .0011                    $70
        Switzerland                 .0009                    $85
        Taiwan                      .0035                    $85
        Thailand                    .0009                    $85
        Turkey                      .0045                   $110
        U.K.                        .0011                    $60

Note:   Fee Schedule eliminates sub-custodian asset and transaction-based 
        out-of-pocket expenses.  Other sub-custodian out-of-pocket expenses
        (i.e. Scrip fees, stamp duties, certificate fees, etc.)

B. Out-of-Pocket Expenses (passed directly from Brown Brothers Harriman & Co.):

        Includes, but is not limited to telex, legal, telephones, postage, and
        direct expenses including but not limited to tax reclaim, customized
        systems programming, certificate fees, duties, and registration fees.

<PAGE>

C.      Short-term Dollar Denominated Global Assets
        Eurodollar CDs, Time Deposits:

        (1)    An annual fee to be computed as of month end and payable each
               month of the Fund's fiscal year (after receipt of the bill issued
               to the Fund based upon its portion of short-term dollar
               denominated assets), at the annual rate of:

               .0004 on all short-term dollar denominated assets of the United
               Funds.

        (2)  Portfolio Transaction Fees:

            First Chicago Clearing Centre-Trades with Members      $136.00
            First Chicago Clearing Centre-Trades with Non-members  $153.00
            First Chicago Clearing Centre-Income Collection        $ 64.00

D.      Euroclear Eligible Issues:

        (1)    An annual fee to be computed as of month end and payable each
               month of the Fund's fiscal year (after receipt of the bill issued
               to the Fund based upon its portion of Euroclear issues), at the
               annual rate of:

               2.5 basis points on all United Funds Euroclear assets held in
               account at UMB Bank, n.a.

        (2)    Portfolio Transaction Fees:

               Euroclear                                            $60.00

<PAGE>

                                SUBCUSTODIAN LIST
                         PURSUANT TO CUSTODIAN AGREEMENT
                                     BETWEEN
                          UNITED HIGH INCOME FUND, INC.
                                       AND
                                 UMB BANK, n.a.

                           Dated as of August 31, 1998

        This Subcustodian List relates to the Custodian Agreements between UMB
Bank, n.a. and each of the following funds dated the date specified by the
fund's name, as subsequently amended and restated:

          Fund                                                   Date

United Asset Strategy Fund, Inc.                          February 22, 1995
United Cash Management, Inc.                              November 26, 1991
United Continental Income Fund, Inc.                      November 26, 1991
United Gold & Government Fund, Inc.                       November 26, 1991
United Government Securities Fund, Inc.                   November 26, 1991
United High Income Fund, Inc.                             November 26, 1991
United High Income Fund II, Inc.                          November 26, 1991
United International Growth Fund, Inc.                    November 26, 1991
United Municipal Bond Fund, Inc.                          November 26, 1991
United Municipal High Income Fund, Inc.                   November 26, 1991
United New Concepts Fund, Inc.                            November 26, 1991
United Retirement Shares, Inc.                            November 26, 1991
United Vanguard Fund, Inc.                                November 26, 1991
United Funds, Inc.
   United Bond Fund                                       November 26, 1991
   United Income Fund                                     November 26, 1991
   United Accumulative Fund                               November 26, 1991
   United Science and Technology Fund                     November 26, 1991
Target/United Funds, Inc.*
   High Income Portfolio                                  November 26, 1991
   Money Market Portfolio                                 November 26, 1991
   Bond Portfolio                                         November 26, 1991
   Income Portfolio                                       November 26, 1991
   Growth Portfolio                                       November 26, 1991
   Balanced Portfolio                                     April 29, 1994
   International Portfolio                                April 29, 1994
   Limited-Term Bond Portfolio                            April 29, 1994
   Small Cap Portfolio                                    April 29, 1994
   Asset Strategy Portfolio                               May 1, 1995
   Science and Technology Portfolio                       April 4, 1997
Waddell & Reed Funds, Inc.
   Total Return Fund                                      April 24, 1992
   Municipal Bond Fund                                    April 24, 1992
   Limited-Term Bond Fund                                 April 24, 1992
   International Growth Fund                              April 24, 1992
   Growth Fund                                            April 24, 1992
   Asset Strategy Fund                                    April 20, 1995
   High Income Fund                                       July 31, 1997
   Science and Technology Fund                            July 31, 1997

*Formerly, TMK/United Funds, Inc.

The following is a list of Domestic Subcustodians, Foreign Subcustodian and
Special Subcustodians under the Custodian Agreement as amended:

<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
A.        Domestic Custodians:

          Brown Brothers Harriman & Co.
          United Missouri Trust Company of New York

B.        Foreign Sub-Custodians

        Country       Sub-Custodian                              Depository

        <S>           <C>                                      <C>  
        Argentina     Citibank, n.a.                           CDV; CRYL
        Australia     National Australia Bank Ltd.             AUSTRACLEAR, RITs
        Austria       Creditanstalt Bankverein                 KONTROLLBANK (OEKB)
        Belgium       Banque Bruxelles Lambert                 CIK, BNB
        Brazil        First National Bank of Boston,           BOVESPA, CLC
                      Brazil
        Canada        Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce       CDS; The Bank of Canada
        Chile         Citibank, n.a.                           None
        China         Standard Chartered Bank                  SSCCRC; SSCC
        Czech Republic  Ceskoslovenska Obchodni                CNB; SCP
                          Banka A.S.
        Denmark       Den Danske Bank                          VP
        Finland       Merita                                   Securities Association; Finnish Central
                                                               Securities Depository Ltd.
        France        Banque Indosuez                          SICOVAM; Banque de France
        Germany       Deutsche Bank                            KASSENVEREIN
        Hungary       Citibank, N.A.                           KELER Ltd.
        Hong Kong     HongKong & Shanghai Banking Corp.        HongKong Securities Clearing Company
        India         Citibank, N.A., Mumbai                   National Securities Depository Limited
        Indonesia     Citibank, n.a.                           None
        Ireland       Allied Irish Banks PLC                   Gilt Settlement Office
        Israel        Bank Hapoalim B.M.                       TASE Clearinghouse Ltd.
        Italy         Banca Commerciale Italiana               MONTE TITOLI, Banca D'Italia
        Japan         The Bank of Tokyo, Ltd.                  JASDEC, Bank of Japan
        Korea         Citibank, n.a.                           Korean Securities Depository
                                                               Corporation (KSD)
        Malaysia      Hong Kong Bank Malaysia Berhad           MCD; Bank Negara Malaysia
        Mexico        Citibank Mexico, s.a.                    INDEVAL; Banco De Mexico
        Netherlands   ABN - Amro Bank                          NECIGER; De Nederlandsche Bank
        Norway        Christiana Bank                          VPS
        Peru          Citibank, n.a.                           Caja De Valores (CAVAL)
        Philippines   Citibank, n.a.                           Phillipines Central Depository, Inc.
        Poland        Bank Polska Kasa Opieki S.A.             NPB
        Portugal      Banco Espirito Santo E Comercial         Interbolsa
                      De Lisboa
        Singapore     HongKong & Shanghai Banking Corp.        CDP
        Spain         Banco Santander                          SCLV; Banco De Espana
        Sweden        Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken            VPC
        Switzerland   Union Bank of Switzerland                SEGA
        Taiwan        Standard Chartered Bank, Taipei          TSCD
        Thailand      HongKong & Shanghai Banking Corp.        Share Depository Center (SDC)
        Turkey        Citibank, n.a.                           TvS, Central Bank of Turkey
        United Kingdom  Midland Securities PLC                 CMO; CGO; CrestCo

C.      Special Subcustodians:

        Wilmington Trust Co.
        The Bank of New York, n.a.
        Euroclear
</TABLE>



                                                               EX-99.B(h)-hissa


                         SHAREHOLDER SERVICING AGREEMENT

        THIS AGREEMENT, made as of the 1ST day of November, 1992, by and between
UNITED HIGH INCOME FUND, INC., and Waddell & Reed Services Company (the
"Agent"), as amended and restated as of April 1, 1996,

                                           W I T N E S S E T H :

        WHEREAS, The Company wishes, as applicable, to appoint the Agent or to
continue the appointment of the Agent to be its shareholder servicing agent
upon, and subject to, the terms and provisions of this Agreement;

        NOW THEREFORE, in consideration of the mutual covenants contained in
this Agreement, the parties agree as follows:

        1.     Appointment of Agent as Shareholder Servicing Agent for the 
               Company; Acceptance.

               (1) The Company hereby appoints the Agent to act as Shareholder
Servicing Agent for the Company upon, and subject to, the terms and provisions
of this Agreement.

               (2) The Agent hereby accepts the appointment as Shareholder
Servicing Agent for the Company and agrees to act as such upon, and subject to,
the terms and provisions of this Agreement.

               (3) The Agent may appoint an entity or entities approved by the
Company in writing to perform any portion of Agent's duties hereunder (the
"Subagent").

        2.     Definitions.

               (1)    In this Agreement -

                      (a) The term the "Act" means the Investment Company Act of
1940 as amended fromtime to time;

                      (b) The term "account" means the shares of the Company
registered on the books of the Company in the name of a shareholder under a
particular account registration number and includes shares subject to
instructions by the shareholder with respect to periodic redemptions and/or
reinvestment in additional shares of any dividends payable on said shares;

                      (c) The term "affiliate" of a person shall mean a person
controlling, controlled by, or under common control with that person;

                      (d) The term "Class" shall mean each separate sub-class of
a class of shares of the Company, as may now or in the future exist;

                      (e) The term "Fund" shall mean each separate class of
shares of the Company, as may now or in the future exist;

                      (f) The term "officers' instruction" means an instruction
given on behalf of the Company to the Agent and signed on behalf of the Company
by any one or more persons authorized to do so by the Company's Board of
Directors;

                      (g) The term "prospectus" means the prospectus and
Statement of Additional Information of the applicable Fund or Class from time to
time in effect;

                      (h) The term "shares" means shares including fractional
shares of capital stock of the Company, whether or not such shares are evidenced
by an outstanding stock certificate issued by the Company;

                      (i) The term "shareholder" shall mean the owner of record
of shares of the Company;

                      (j) The term "stock certificate" means a certificate
representing shares in the form then currently in use by the Company.

        3. Duties of the Agent.

               The Agent shall perform such duties as shall be set forth in this
paragraph 3 and in accordance with the practice stated in Exhibit A of this
Agreement or any amendment thereof, any or all of which duties may be delegated
to or performed by one or more Subagents pursuant to Paragraph (3) above.

               (1)    Transfers.

                      Subject to the provisions of this Agreement the Agent 
hereby agrees to perform the following functions as transfer agent for the
Company:

                      (a) Recording the ownership, transfer, exchange and 
cancellation of ownership of shares of the Company on the books of the Company;

                      (b) Causing the issuance, transfer, exchange and
cancellation of stock certificates;

                      (c) Establishing and maintaining records of accounts;

                      (d) Computing and causing to be prepared and mailed or
otherwise delivered to shareholders payment checks and notices of reinvestment
in additional shares of dividends, stock dividends or stock splits declared by
the Company on shares and of redemption proceeds due by the Company on
redemption of shares;

                      (e) Furnishing to shareholders such information as may be
reasonably required by the Company, including appropriate income tax
information;

                      (f) Addressing and mailing to shareholders prospectuses,
annual and semi-annual reports and proxy materials for shareholder meetings
prepared by or on behalf of the Company;

                      (g) Replacing allegedly lost, stolen or destroyed stock
certificates in accordance with and subject to procedures and conditions agreed
upon and set out in officers' instructions;

                      (h) Maintaining such books and records relating to
transactions effected by the Agent pursuant to this Agreement as are required by
the Act, or by rules or regulations thereunder, or by any other applicable
provisions of law, to be maintained by the Company or its transfer agent with
respect to such transactions; preserving, or causing to be preserved, any such
books and records for such periods as may be required by any such law, rule or
regulation; furnishing the Company such information as to such transactions and
at such time as may be reasonably required by it to comply with applicable laws
and regulations;

                      (i) Providing such services and carrying out such
responsibilities on behalf of the Company, or imposed on the Agent as the
Company's transfer agent, not otherwise expressly provided for in this Paragraph
3, as may be required by or be reasonably necessary to comply with any statute,
act, governmental rule, regulation or directive or court order, including,
without limitation, the requirements imposed by the Tax Equity and Fiscal
Responsibility Act of 1982 and the Income and Dividend Tax Compliance Act of
1983 relating to the withholding of tax from distributions to shareholders.

               (2) Correspondence.

                      The Agent agrees to deal with and answer all 
correspondence from or on behalf of shareholders relating to its functions under
this Agreement.

        4. Compensation of the Agent.

               The Company agrees to pay the Agent for its services under this
Agreement in accordance with the schedule as then in effect set forth in Exhibit
B of this Agreement or any amendment thereof. In addition, the Company agrees to
reimburse the Agent for the following "out-of-pocket" expenses of the Agent
within five days after receipt of an itemized statement of such expenses, to the
extent that payment of such expenses has not been or is not to be made directly
by the Company: (i) costs of stationery, appropriate forms, envelopes, checks,
postage, printing (except cost of printing prospectuses, annual and semi-annual
reports and proxy materials) and mailing charges, including returned mail and
proxies, incurred by the Agent with respect to materials and communications sent
to shareholders in carrying out its duties to the Company under this Agreement;
(ii) long distance telephone costs incurred by the Agent for telephone
communications and microfilm and storage costs for transfer agency records and
documents; (iii) costs of all ancillary and supporting services and related
expenses (other than insurance premiums) reasonably required by and provided to
the Agent, other than by its employees or employees of an affiliate, with
respect to functions of the Company being performed by it in its capacity as
Agent hereunder, including legal advice and representation in litigation to the
extent that such payments are permitted under Paragraph 7 of this Agreement and
charges to Agent made by any Subagent; (iv) costs for special reports or
information furnished on request pursuant to this Agreement and not specifically
required by the Agent by Paragraph 3 of this Agreement; and (v) reasonable costs
and expenses incurred by the Agent in connection with the duties of the Agent
described in Paragraph (3)(1)(i). In addition, the Company agrees to promptly
pay over to the Agent any fees or payment of charges it may receive from a
shareholder for services furnished to the shareholder by the Agent.

               Services and operations incident to the sale and distribution of
the Company's shares, including sales communications, confirmations of
investments (not including reinvestment of dividends) and the clearing or
collection of payments will not be for the account or at the expense of the
Company under this Agreement.

        5.     Right of Company to Inspect Records, etc.

               The Company will have the right under this Agreement to perform
on site inspection of records and accounts and to perform audits directly
pertaining to the Company shareholder accounts serviced by the Agent hereunder
at the Agent's or any Subagent's facilities in accordance with reasonable
procedures at the frequency necessary to assure proper administration of the
Agreement. The Agent will cooperate with the Company's auditors or
representatives of appropriate regulatory agencies and furnish all reasonably
requested records and data.

        6.     Insurance.

               The Agent now has the insurance coverage described in Exhibit C,
attached hereto, and the Agent will not take any action to eliminate or decrease
such coverage during the term of this Agreement without receiving the approval
of the Fund in advance of any change, except the Agent, after giving reasonable
notice to the Company, may eliminate or decrease any coverage if the premiums
for such coverage are substantially increased.

        7.     Standard of Care; Indemnification.

               The Agent will at all times exercise due diligence and good faith
in performing its duties hereunder. The Agent will make every reasonable effort
and take all reasonably available measures to assure the adequacy of its
personnel and facilities as well as the accurate performance of all services to
be performed by it hereunder within, at a minimum, the time requirements of any
applicable statutes, rules or regulations or as set forth in the prospectus.

               The Agent shall not be responsible for, and the Company agrees to
indemnify the Agent for any losses, damages or expenses (including reasonable
counsel fees and expenses) (i) resulting from any claim, demand, action or suit
not resulting from the Agent's failure to exercise good faith or due diligence
and arising out of or in connection with the Agent's duties on behalf of the
Company hereunder; (ii) for any delay, error or omission by reason of
circumstances beyond its control, including acts of civil or military authority,
national emergencies, labor difficulties (except with respect to the Agent's
employees), fire, mechanical breakdown beyond its control, flood or catastrophe,
acts of God, insurrection, war, riots, or failure beyond its control of
transportation, communication or power supply; or (iii) for any action taken or
omitted to be taken by the Agent in good faith in reliance on (a) the
authenticity of any instrument or communication reasonably believed by it to be
genuine and to have been properly made and signed or endorsed by an appropriate
person, (b) the accuracy of any records or information provided to it by the
Company, (c) any authorization or instruction contained in any officers'
instruction, or (d) with respect to the functions performed for the Company
listed under Paragraph 3(1) of this Agreement, any advice of counsel approved by
the Company who may be internally employed counsel or outside counsel, in either
case for the Company and/or the Agent.

               In order for the rights to indemnification to apply, it is
understood that if in any case the Company may be asked to indemnify or hold the
Agent harmless, the Company shall be advised of all pertinent facts concerning
the situation in question, and it is further understood that the Agent will use
reasonable care to identify and notify the Company promptly concerning any
situation which presents or appears likely to present a claim for
indemnification against the Company. The Company shall have the option to defend
the Agent against any claim which may be the subject of this indemnification
and, in the event that the Company so elects, it will so notify the Agent and
thereupon the Company shall take over complete defense of the claim and the
Agent shall sustain no further legal or other expenses in such situation for
which the Agent shall seek indemnification under this paragraph. The Agent will
in no case confess any claim or make any compromise in any case in which the
Company will be asked to indemnify the Agent except with the Company's prior
written consent.

        8.     Term of the Agreement; Taking Effect; Amendments.

               This Agreement shall become effective at the start of business on
the date hereof and shall continue, unless terminated as hereinafter provided,
for a period of one year and from year to year thereafter, provided that such
continuance shall be specifically approved as provided below.

               This Agreement shall go into effect, or may be continued, or may
be amended or a new agreement between the Company and the Agent covering the
substance of this Agreement may be entered into only if the terms of this
Agreement, such continuance, the terms of such amendment or the terms of such
new agreement have been approved by the Board of Directors of the Company,
including the vote of a majority of the directors who are not "interested
persons," as defined in the Act, of either party to this Agreement or of Waddell
& Reed Investment Management Company, cast in person at a meeting called for the
purpose of voting on such approval. Such a vote is hereinafter referred to as a
"disinterested director vote."

               Any disinterested director vote shall include a determination
that (i) the Agreement, amendment, new agreement or continuance in question is
in the best interests of the Company and its shareholders; (ii) the services to
be performed under the Agreement, the Agreement as amended, new agreement or
agreement to be continued, are services required for the operation of the
Company; (iii) the Agent can provide services the nature and quality of which
are at least equal to those provided by others offering the same or similar
services; and (iv) the fees for such services are fair and reasonable in the
light of the usual and customary charges made by others for services of the same
nature and quality.

        9.     Termination.

               (1) This Agreement may be terminated by the Agent at any time
without penalty upon giving the Company 120 days' written notice (which notice
may be waived by the Company) and may be terminated by the Company at any time
without penalty upon giving the Agent sixty (60) days' written notice (which
notice may be waived by the Agent), provided that such termination by the
Company shall be directed or approved by the vote of a majority of the Board of
Directors of the Company in office at the time or by the vote of the holders of
a majority (as defined in or under the Act) of the outstanding shares of the
Company.

               (2) On termination, the Agent will deliver to the Company or its
designee all files, documents and records of the Company used, kept or
maintained by the Agent in the performance of its services hereunder, including
such of the Company's records in machine readable form as may be maintained by
the Agent, as well as such summary and/or control data relating thereto used by
or available to the Agent.

               (3) In the event of any termination which involves the
appointment of a new shareholder servicing agent, including the Company's acting
as such on its own behalf, the Company shall have the non-exclusive right to the
use of the data processing programs used by the Agent in connection with the
performance of its duties under this Agreement without charge.

               (4) In addition, on such termination or in preparation therefore,
at the request of the Company and at the Company's expense the Agent shall
provide to the extent that its capabilities then permit such documentation,
personnel and equipment as may be reasonably necessary in order for a new agent
or the Company to fully assume and commence to perform the agency functions
described in this Agreement with a minimum disruption to the Company's
activities.

        10.    Construction; Governing Law.

               The headings used in this Agreement are for convenience only and
shall not be deemed to constitute a part hereof. Whenever the context requires,
words denoting singular shall be read to include the plural. This Agreement and
the rights and obligations of the parties hereunder, shall be construed and
interpreted in accordance with the laws of the State of Kansas, except to the
extent that the laws of the State of Maryland apply with respect to share
transactions.

        11. Representations and Warranties of Agent.

               Agent represents and warrants that it is a corporation duly
organized and existing and in good standing under the laws of the State of
Missouri, that it is duly qualified to carry on its business in the State of
Kansas and wherever its duties require, that it has the power and authority
under laws and by its Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws to enter into this
Shareholder Servicing Agreement and to perform the services contemplated by this
Agreement.

        12.    Entire Agreement.

               This Agreement and the Exhibits annexed hereto constitutes the
entire and complete agreement between the parties hereto relating to the subject
matter hereof, supersedes and merges all prior discussions between the parties
hereto, and may not be modified or amended orally.

               IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties have hereto caused this Agreement
to be duly executed on the day and year first above written.

                          UNITED HIGH INCOME FUND, INC.



                     By:_________________________________
                        Sharon K. Pappas, Vice President

        ATTEST:


        By:____________________________
            Sheryl Strauss, Assistant Secretary


                         WADDELL & REED SERVICES COMPANY


                      By:__________________________________
                          Robert L. Hechler, President

        ATTEST:



        By:___________________________
            Sharon K. Pappas, Secretary

<PAGE>

                                    EXHIBIT A

A.      DUTIES IN SHARE TRANSFERS AND REGISTRATION

        1. The Agent in carrying out its duties shall follow general commercial
practices and the Rules of the Stock Transfer Association, Inc. except as they
may conflict or be inconsistent with the specific provisions of the Company's
Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws, prospectus, applicable Federal and state
laws and regulations and this Agreement.

        2. The Agent shall not require that the signature of the appropriate
person be guaranteed, witnessed or verified in order to effect a redemption,
transfer, exchange or change of address except as may from time to time be
directed by the Company as set forth in an officers' instruction. In the event a
signature guarantee is required by the Company, the Agent shall not inquire as
to the genuineness of the guarantee.

        3. The Agent shall not replace a lost, stolen or misplaced stock
certificate without requiring and being furnished with an open penalty surety
bond protecting the Company and the Agent against loss.

B. The practices, procedures and requirements specified in A above may be
modified, altered, varied or supplemented as from time to time may be mutually
agreed upon by the Company and the Agent and evidenced on behalf of the Company
by an officers' instruction. Any such change shall not be deemed to be an
amendment to the Agreement within the meaning of Paragraph 8 of the Agreement.


<PAGE>



                                    EXHIBIT B
                                  COMPENSATION

Class A Shares

An amount payable on the first day of each month of $1.3125 for each account of
the Company which was in existence during any portion of the immediately
preceding month and, in addition, to pay to the Agent the sum of $0.30 for each
account for which, during such month, a record date was established for payment
of a dividend, in cash or otherwise (which term includes a distribution),
irrespective of whether such dividend was payable in that month or later or was
payable directly or was to be reinvested.

Class Y Shares

An amount payable on the first day of each month equal to 1/12 of .15 of 1% of
the average daily net assets of the Class for the preceding month.


<PAGE>


                                                 EXHIBIT C
                                                        Bond or
Name of Bond                                            Policy No.     Insurer

Investment Company                                      87015198B      ICI
Blanket Bond Form                                                      Mutual
                                                                       Insurance
                                                                       Company
    Fidelity                          $20,400,000
    Audit Expense                          50,000
    On Premises                        20,400,000
    In Transit                         20,400,000
    Forgery or Alteration              20,400,000
    Securities                         20,400,000
    Counterfeit Currency               20,400,000
    Uncollectible Items of
        Deposit                            25,000
    Phone-Initiated Transactions          500,000
    Total Limit                        20,400,000

Directors and Officers/                                 87015198D      ICI
Errors and Omissions Liability                                         Mutual
Insurance Form                                                         Insurance
    Total Limit                       $ 5,000,000                      Company

Blanket Lost Instrument Bond (Mail Loss)                       30S100639551 
   Aetna
                                                                  Life &
                                                                  casualty


Blanket Undertaking Lost Instrument
    Waiver of Probate                              42SUN339806    Hartford
                                                                  Casualty
                                                                  Insurance



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