HANCOCK JOHN CAPITAL SERIES
485APOS, 2000-02-29
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                                                               FILE NO.  2-29502
                                                               FILE NO. 811-1677
================================================================================

                       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. 54          (X)
                          REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER
                       THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940        (X)
                                Amendment No. 33                 (X)
                                   ---------
                          JOHN HANCOCK CAPITAL SERIES
               (Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Charter)
                             101 Huntington Avenue
                        Boston, Massachusetts 02199-7603
              (Address of Principal Executive Offices) (Zip Code)
                 Registrant's Telephone Number, (617) 375-1700
                                   ---------
                                 SUSAN S. NEWTON
                          Vice President and Secretary
                          John Hancock Advisers, Inc.
                             101 Huntington Avenue
                          Boston, Massachusetts 02199
                    (Name and Address of Agent for Service)
                                   ---------
                 APPROXIMATE DATE OF PROPOSED PUBLIC OFFERING:

It is proposed that this filing will become effective:
( ) immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b) of Rule 485
( ) On (date) pursuant to paragraph (b) of Rule 485
( ) 75 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a) of Rule 485
(X) on May 1, 2000 pursuant to paragraph (a) of Rule 485

If appropriate, check the following box:

[]  This  post-effective  amendment  designates  a  new  effective  date  for  a
previously filed post-effective admendment.



<PAGE>

                                                                    John Hancock
                                                                    Equity Funds


                                                                      Prospectus
                                                                     May 1, 2000


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

                                                                   Balanced Fund
                                                                Core Equity Fund
                                                                Core Growth Fund
                                                                 Core Value Fund
                                                           Large Cap Growth Fund
                                                            Large Cap Value Fund
                                                             Mid Cap Growth Fund
                                                           Small Cap Growth Fund
                                                            Small Cap Value Fund
                                                        Sovereign Investors Fund

As with all mutual funds, the Securities and Exchange Commission has not
approved or disapproved these funds or determined whether the information in
this prospectus is adequate and accurate. Anyone who indicates otherwise is
committing a federal crime.

                                      [LOGO] John Hancock Funds
                                             A Global Investment Management Firm

<PAGE>

Contents
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

A fund-by-fund summary         Balanced Fund                                  4
of goals, strategies, risks,
performance and expenses.      Core Equity Fund                               6

                               Core Growth Fund                               8

                               Core Value Fund                               10

                               Large Cap Growth Fund                         12

                               Large Cap Value Fund                          14

                               Mid Cap Growth Fund                           16

                               Small Cap Growth Fund                         18

                               Small Cap Value Fund                          20

                               Sovereign Investors Fund                      22

Policies and instructions for  Your account
opening, maintaining and       Choosing a share class                        24
closing an account in any      How sales charges are calculated              24
equity fund.                   Sales charge reductions and waivers           25
                               Opening an account                            26
                               Buying shares                                 27
                               Selling shares                                28
                               Transaction policies                          30
                               Dividends and account policies                30
                               Additional investor services                  31

Further information on the     Fund details
equity funds.                  Business structure                            32
                               Financial highlights                          33

                               For more information                  back cover


<PAGE>

Overview
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

FUND INFORMATION KEY

Concise fund-by-fund descriptions begin on the next page. Each description
provides the following information:

[Clip Art] Goal and strategy The fund's particular investment goals and the
strategies it intends to use in pursuing those goals.

[Clip Art] Main risks The major risk factors associated with the fund.

[Clip Art] Past performance The fund's total return, measured year-by-year and
over time.

[Clip Art] Your expenses The overall costs borne by an investor in the fund,
including sales charges and annual expenses.

JOHN HANCOCK EQUITY FUNDS

These funds seek long-term growth by investing primarily in common stocks.
However, the Balanced Fund also makes significant investments in fixed-income
securities. Each fund has its own strategy and its own risk profile.

WHO MAY WANT TO INVEST

These funds may be appropriate for investors who:

o  have longer time horizons

o  want to diversify their portfolios

o  are seeking funds for the equity portion of an asset allocation portfolio

o  are investing for retirement or other goals that are many years in the future

Equity funds may NOT be appropriate if you:

o  are investing with a shorter time horizon in mind

o  are uncomfortable with an investment that may go up and down in value

RISKS OF MUTUAL FUNDS

Mutual funds are not bank deposits and are not insured or guaranteed by the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or any other government agency. Because
you could lose money by investing in these funds, be sure to read all risk
disclosure carefully before investing.

THE MANAGEMENT TEAM


All John Hancock equity funds are managed by John Hancock Advisers, Inc. Founded
in 1968, John Hancock Advisers is a wholly owned subsidiary of John Hancock
Financial Services, Inc. and manages more than $30 billion in assets.



                                                                               3
<PAGE>

Balanced Fund

GOAL AND STRATEGY

[Clip Art] The fund seeks current income, long-term growth of capital and income
and preservation of capital. To pursue these goals, the fund allocates its
investments among a diversified mix of debt and equity securities. At least 25%
of assets will be invested in senior debt securities.


At least 75% of the fund's stock investments are "dividend performers" --
companies whose dividend payments have increased steadily for ten years. In
managing the fund's stock portfolio, the managers use fundamental financial
analysis to identify individual companies with high-quality income statements,
substantial cash reserves and identifiable catalysts for growth, which may be
new products or benefits from industrywide growth. The managers generally visit
companies to evaluate the strength and consistency of their management strategy.
Finally, the managers look for stocks that are reasonably priced relative to
their earnings and industry. Historically, companies that meet these criteria
have tended to have large or medium market capitalizations.


The fund's debt securities are used to enhance current income and provide some
added stability. The fund's investments in bonds of any maturity are primarily
investment-grade (rated BBB or above and their unrated equivalents). However, up
to 20% of assets may be in junk bonds rated as low as C and their unrated
equivalents.


Although the fund invests primarily in U.S. securities, it may invest up to 35%
of assets in foreign securities. The fund may also make limited use of certain
derivatives (investments whose value is based on indices, securities or
currencies).

In abnormal market conditions, the fund may temporarily invest extensively in
investment-grade short- term securities. In these and other cases, the fund
might not achieve its goal.

================================================================================

PORTFOLIO MANAGERS

John F. Snyder, III
- ---------------------------------------
Executive vice president of adviser
Joined team in 1994
Joined adviser in 1991
Began business career in 1971

Barry H. Evans, CFA
- ---------------------------------------
Senior vice president of adviser
Joined team in 1996
Joined adviser in 1986
Began business career in 1986

Peter M. Schofield, CFA
- ---------------------------------------
Vice president of adviser
Joined team in 1996
Joined adviser in 1996
Began business career in 1984


PAST PERFORMANCE

[Clip Art] The graph shows how the fund's total return has varied from year to
year, while the table shows performance over time (along with a broad-based
market index for reference). This information may help provide an indication of
the fund's risks. The average annual figures reflect sales charges; the
year-by-year and index figures do not, and would be lower if they did. All
figures assume dividend reinvestment. Past performance does not indicate future
results.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A year-by-year total returns -- calendar years
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                          1993    1994    1995     1996    1997    1998    1999
                         11.38%  -3.51%  24.23%   12.13%  20.79%  14.01%   3.89%


1999 total return as of March 31: xx%  Best quarter: Q4 '98, 11.38% Worst
quarter: Q3 '99, -4.89%


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average annual total returns -- for periods ending 12/31/99
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                         Life of        Life of
                             1 year        5 year        Class A        Class B
Class A - began 10/5/92      -1.30%        13.61%        10.67%         --
Class B - began 10/5/92      -1.83%        13.77%        --             10.70%
Class C - began 5/1/99       --            --            --             --
Index                        21.03%        28.54%        21.83%         21.83%

Index: Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index, an unmanaged index of 500 stocks.


4
<PAGE>

MAIN RISKS

[Clip Art] The value of your investment will go up and down in response to stock
and bond market movements.


The fund's management strategy has a significant influence on fund performance.
Large- or medium- capitalization stocks as a group could fall out of favor with
the market, causing the fund to underperform investments that focus on
small-capitalization stocks. In addition, if the managers' security selection
strategies do not perform as expected, the fund could underperform its peers or
lose money.

To the extent that the fund makes investments with additional risks, these risks
could increase volatility or reduce performance:

o  Certain derivatives could produce disproportionate losses.
o  In a down market, higher risk securities and derivatives could become harder
   to value or to sell at a fair price.
o  Any bonds held by the fund could be downgraded in credit quality or go into
   default. In addition, bond prices generally fall when interest rates rise;
   this risk is greater for longer maturity bonds. Junk bond prices can fall on
   bad news about the issuer, an industry or the economy in general.
o  Foreign investments carry additional risks, including potentially unfavorable
   currency exchange rates, inadequate or inaccurate financial information and
   social or political instability.

The fund may trade securities actively, which could increase its transaction
costs (thus lowering performance) and increase your taxable distributions.

================================================================================

YOUR EXPENSES

[Clip Art] Transaction expenses are charged directly to your account. Operating
expenses are paid from the fund's assets, and therefore are paid by shareholders
indirectly.


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shareholder transaction expenses(1)           Class A      Class B      Class C
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Maximum sales charge (load) on purchases
as a % of purchase price                      5.00%        none         1.00%
Maximum deferred sales charge (load)
as a % of purchase or sale price,
whichever is less                             none(2)      5.00%        1.00%

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual operating expenses                     Class A      Class B      Class C
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Management fee                                0.60%        0.60%        0.60%
Distribution and service (12b-1) fees         0.30%        1.00%        1.00%
Other expenses                                0.32%        0.32%        0.32%
Total fund operating expenses                 1.22%        1.92%        1.92%

The hypothetical example below shows what your expenses would be if you invested
$10,000 over the time frames indicated, assuming you reinvested all
distributions and that the average annual return was 5%. The example is for
comparison only, and does not represent the fund's actual expenses and returns,
either past or future.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Expenses                         Year 1       Year 3       Year 5       Year 10
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A                          $618         $868         $1,137       $1,903
Class B - with redemption        $695         $903         $1,237       $2,061
        - without redemption     $195         $603         $1,037       $2,061
Class C - with redemption        $295         $603         $1,037       $2,243
        - without redemption     $195         $603         $1,037       $2,243

(1)   A $4.00 fee may be charged for wire redemptions.
(2)   Except for investments of $1 million or more; see "How sales charges are
      calculated."


FUND CODES

Class A
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            SVBAX
CUSIP             47803P104
Newspaper         BalA
SEC number        811-0560
JH fund number    36

Class B
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            SVBBX
CUSIP             47803P203
Newspaper         BalB
SEC number        811-0560
JH fund number    136

Class C
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker           --
CUSIP             47803P708
Newspaper        --
SEC number        811-0560
JH fund number    536


                                                                               5
<PAGE>

Core Equity Fund

GOAL AND STRATEGY


[Clip Art] The fund seeks above-average total return (capital appreciation plus
income). To pursue this goal, the fund normally invests at least 65% of assets
in a diversified portfolio of equities which are primarily large-capitalization
stocks. The portfolio's risk profile is similar to that of the S&P 500 Index.


The managers select from a menu of stocks of approximately 550 companies that
evolves over time. Approximately 70% to 80% of these companies also are included
in the S&P 500 Index. The subadviser's investment research team is organized by
industry and tracks these companies to develop earnings estimates and five-year
projections for growth. A series of proprietary computer models use this
in-house research to rank the stocks according to their combination of:

o  value, meaning they appear to be underpriced
o  momentum, meaning they show potential for strong growth


This process, together with a risk/ return analysis against the S&P 500 Index,
results in a portfolio of approximately 100 to 130 of the stocks from the top
60% of the menu. The fund generally sells stocks that fall into the bottom 20%
of the menu.


In normal market conditions, the fund is almost entirely invested in stocks. The
fund may invest in dollar-denominated foreign securities and make limited use of
certain derivatives (investments whose value is based on indices or securities).

In abnormal market conditions, the fund may temporarily invest more than 35% of
assets in investment-grade short-term securities. In these and other cases, the
fund might not achieve its goal.


The fund may trade securities actively, which could increase its transaction
costs (thus lowering performance) and increase your taxable distributions.


================================================================================

SUBADVISER

Independence Investment
Associates, Inc.
- ---------------------------------------
Team responsible for day-to-day
investment management

A subsidiary of John Hancock Financial
Services, Inc.

Founded in 1982

Supervised by the adviser

PAST PERFORMANCE

[Clip Art] The graph shows how the fund's total return has varied from year to
year, while the table shows performance over time (along with a broad-based
market index for reference). This information may help provide an indication of
the fund's risks. The average annual figures reflect sales charges; the
year-by-year and index figures do not, and would be lower if they did. All
figures assume dividend reinvestment. Past performance does not indicate future
results.


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A year-by-year total returns -- calendar years
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                  1992    1993    1994    1995     1996    1997    1998    1999
                  9.01%  16.12%  -2.14%  37.20%   21.24%  29.19%  28.84%  12.37%


1999 total return as of March 31: xx% Best quarter: Q4 '98, 24.17% Worst
quarter: Q3 '98, -12.75%


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average annual total returns -- for periods ending 12/31/99
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                 Life of    Life of     Life of
                         1 year      5 year      Class A    Class B     Class C
Class A - began 6/10/91  6.74%       24.21%      17.50%     --          --
Class B - began 9/7/95   6.59%       --          --         22.07%      --
Class C - began 5/1/98   10.59%      --          --         --          12.74%
Index                    21.03%      28.54%      19.80%     26.58%      19.84%

Index: Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index, an unmanaged index of 500 stocks.


6
<PAGE>

MAIN RISKS

[Clip Art] The value of your investment will go up and down in response to stock
market movements.

Large-capitalization stocks as a group could fall out of favor with the market,
causing the fund to underperform funds that focus on small- or
medium-capitalization stocks.


The fund's management strategy has a significant influence on fund performance.
If the investment research team's earnings estimates or projections turn out to
be inaccurate, or if the proprietary computer models do not perform as expected,
the fund could underperform its peers or lose money.

To the extent that the fund makes investments with additional risks, those risks
could increase volatility or reduce performance:


o  Certain derivatives could produce disproportionate losses.
o  In a down market, higher-risk securities and derivatives could become harder
   to value or to sell at a fair price.
o  Foreign investments carry additional risks, including potentially inadequate
   or inaccurate financial information and social or political instability.


================================================================================

YOUR EXPENSES

[Clip Art] Transaction expenses are charged directly to your account. Operating
expenses are paid from the fund's assets, and therefore are paid by shareholders
indirectly.


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shareholder transaction expenses(1)           Class A      Class B      Class C
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Maximum sales charge (load) on purchases
as a % of purchase price                      5.00%        none         1.00%


Maximum deferred sales charge (load)
as a % of purchase or sale price,
whichever is less                             none(2)      5.00%        1.00%

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual operating expenses                     Class A      Class B      Class C
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Management fee                                0.75%        0.75%        0.75%
Distribution and service (12b-1) fees         0.30%        1.00%        1.00%
Other expenses                                0.34%        0.34%        0.34%
Total fund operating expenses                 1.39%        2.09%        2.09%

The hypothetical example below shows what your expenses would be if you invested
$10,000 over the time frames indicated, assuming you reinvested all
distributions and that the average annual return was 5%. The example is for
comparison only, and does not represent the fund's actual expenses and returns,
either past or future.


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Expenses                         Year 1       Year 3       Year 5       Year 10
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A                          $633         $913         $1,213       $2,065
Class B - with redemption        $710         $949         $1,314       $2,222
        - without redemption     $210         $649         $1,114       $2,222
Class C - with redemption        $407         $743         $1,203       $2,478
        - without redemption     $308         $743         $1,203       $2,478

(1)   A $4.00 fee may be charged for wire redemptions.
(2)   Except for investments of $1 million or more; see "How sales charges are
      calculated."


FUND CODES

Class A
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            JHDCX
CUSIP             409902707
Newspaper         CoreEqA
SEC number        811-1677
JH fund number    25

Class B
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            JHIDX
CUSIP             409902806
Newspaper         CoreEqB
SEC number        811-1677
JH fund number    125

Class C
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            JHCEX
CUSIP             409902863
Newspaper         CoreEqC
SEC number        811-1677
JH fund number    525


                                                                               7
<PAGE>

Core Growth Fund

GOAL AND STRATEGY

[Clip Art] The fund seeks above-average total return. To pursue this goal, the
fund invests in a diversified portfolio of primarily large-capitalization stocks
and emphasizes stocks of companies with relatively high potential long-term
earnings growth. The portfolio's risk profile is substantially similar to that
of the Russell 1000 Growth Index.

The managers select from a menu of stocks of approximately 550 companies that
evolves over time. Approximately 40% to 50% of these companies also are included
in the Russell 1000 Growth Index. The subadviser's investment research team is
organized by industry and tracks these companies to develop earnings estimates
and five-year projections for growth. A series of proprietary computer models
use this in-house research to rank the stocks according to their combination of:

o  value, meaning they appear to be underpriced
o  momentum, meaning they show potential for strong growth


This process, together with a risk/return analysis against the Russell 1000
Growth Index, results in a portfolio of approximately 100 to 130 of the stocks
from the top 60% of the menu. The fund generally sells stocks that fall into the
bottom 20% of the menu.


In normal market conditions, the fund is almost entirely invested in stocks. The
fund may, however, invest in certain other types of equity securities, including
dollar-denominated foreign securities.

In abnormal market conditions, the fund may temporarily invest more than 35% of
assets in investment-grade short-term securities. In these and other cases, the
fund might not achieve its goal.


The fund may trade securities actively, which could increase its transaction
costs (thus lowering performance) and increase your taxable distributions.


================================================================================

SUBADVISER

Independence Investment
Associates, Inc.
- ---------------------------------------
Team responsible for day-to-day
investment management

A subsidiary of John Hancock Financial
Services, Inc.

Founded in 1982

Supervised by the adviser


PAST PERFORMANCE

[Clip Art] The graph shows how the fund's total return has varied from year to
year, while the table shows performance over time (along with a broad-based
market index for reference). This information may help provide an indication of
the fund's risks. The year-by-year and average annual figures are for Class I
shares, which are offered in a separate prospectus. Annual returns should be
substantially similar since all classes invest in the same portfolio. However,
Class I shares' average annual figures do not reflect sales charges or 12b-1
fees which were imposed beginning July 1, 1999 for Class A, B and C shares.
Year-by-year, average annual and index figures do not reflect these charges and
would be lower if they did. All figures assume dividend reinvestment. Past
performance does not indicate future results.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class I year-by-year total returns -- calendar years
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                   1996    1997    1998    1999
                                                  20.52%  36.22%  37.94%  20.00%


1999 total return as of March 31: x.xx% Best quarter: Q4 '98, 27.44% Worst
quarter: Q3 '98, -12.00%


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average annual total returns -- for periods ending 12/31/99
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                         Life of
                                                       1 year            Class I
Class I - began 10/2/95                                20.00%            27.96%
Class A - began 7/1/99                                 --                --
Class B - began 7/1/99                                 --                --
Class C - began 7/1/99                                 --                --
Index                                                  33.16%            30.53%

Index: Russell 1000 Growth Index, an unmanaged index of growth stocks in the
Russell 1000 Index of the 1,000 largest-capitalization U.S. stocks.


8
<PAGE>

MAIN RISKS

[Clip Art] The value of your investment will go up and down in response to stock
market movements.

Large-capitalization stocks as a group could fall out of favor with the market,
causing the fund to underperform funds that focus on small- or
medium-capitalization stocks. Similarly, growth stocks could underperform value
stocks.


The fund's management strategy has a significant influence on fund performance.
If the investment research team's earnings estimates or projections turn out to
be inaccurate, or if the proprietary computer models do not perform as expected,
the fund could underperform its peers or lose money.

To the extent that the fund makes investments with additional risks, those risks
could increase volatility or reduce performance:


o  Foreign investments carry additional risks, including potentially inadequate
   or inaccurate financial information and social or political instability.


================================================================================

YOUR EXPENSES

[Clip Art] Transaction expenses are charged directly to your account. Operating
expenses are paid from the fund's assets, and therefore are paid by shareholders
indirectly. Class A expense figures below show the expenses for the past year
adjusted to reflect any changes.


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shareholder transaction expenses(1)                 Class A   Class B   Class C
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Maximum sales charge (load) on purchases
as a % of purchase price                            5.00%     none      1.00%


Maximum deferred sales charge (load)
(as a % of purchase or sales price,
whichever is less)                                  none(2)   5.00%     1.00%

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual operating expenses                           Class A   Class B   Class C
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Management fee                                      0.80%     0.80%     0.80%
Distribution and service (12b-1) fees               0.30%     1.00%     1.00%
Other expenses                                      1.18%     1.18%     1.18%
Total fund operating expenses                       2.28%     2.98%     2.98%
Expense reimbursement (at least until 7/1/00)       1.03%     1.03%     1.03%
Net annual operating expenses                       1.25%     1.95%     1.95%

The hypothetical example below shows what your expenses would be after the
expense reimbursement (first year only) if you invested $10,000 over the time
frames indicated, assuming you reinvested all distributions and that the average
annual return was 5%. The example is for comparison only, and does not represent
the fund's actual expenses and returns, either past or future.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Expenses                         Year 1       Year 3       Year 5       Year 10
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A                          $621         $1,152       $1,708       $3,218
Class B - with redemption        $698         $1,196       $1,817       $3,368
        - without redemption     $198         $  896       $1,617       $3,368
Class C - with redemption        $298         $  896       $1,617       $3,529
        - without redemption     $198         $  896       $1,617       $3,529

(1)   A $4.00 fee may be charged for wire redemptions.
(2)   Except for investments of $1 million or more; see "How sales charges are
      calculated."

FUND CODES

Class A
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            JACGX
CUSIP             410132849
Newspaper         CoreGrA
SEC number        811-8852
JH fund number    79

Class B
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            JBCGX
CUSIP             410132831
Newspaper         CoreGrB
SEC number        811-8852
JH fund number    179

Class C
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            --
CUSIP             410132823
Newspaper         --
SEC number        811-8852
JH fund number    579


                                                                               9
<PAGE>

Core Value Fund

GOAL AND STRATEGY

[Clip Art] The fund seeks above-average total return. To pursue this goal, the
fund invests in a diversified portfolio of primarily large-capitalization stocks
and emphasizes relatively undervalued stocks and high dividend yields. The
portfolio's risk profile is substantially similar to that of the Russell 1000
Value Index.

The managers select from a menu of stocks of approximately 550 companies that
evolves over time. Approximately 50% to 60% of these companies also are included
in the Russell 1000 Value Index. The subadviser's investment research team is
organized by industry and tracks these companies to develop earnings estimates
and five-year projections for growth. A series of proprietary computer models
use this in-house research to rank the stocks according to their combination of:

o  value, meaning they appear to be underpriced
o  momentum, meaning they show potential for strong growth


This process, together with a risk/return analysis against the Russell 1000
Value Index, results in a portfolio of approximately 100 to 130 of the stocks
from the top 60% of the menu. The fund generally sells stocks that fall into the
bottom 20% of the menu.


In normal market conditions, the fund is almost entirely invested in stocks. The
fund may, however, invest in certain other types of equity securities, including
dollar-denominated foreign securities.

In abnormal market conditions, the fund may temporarily invest more than 35% of
assets in investment-grade short-term securities. In these and other cases, the
fund might not achieve its goal.


The fund may trade securities actively, which could increase its transaction
costs (thus lowering performance) and increase your taxable distributions.


================================================================================

SUBADVISER

Independence Investment
Associates, Inc.
- ---------------------------------------
Team responsible for day-to-day
investment management

A subsidiary of John Hancock Financial
Services, Inc.

Founded in 1982

Supervised by the adviser


PAST PERFORMANCE

[Clip Art] The graph shows how the fund's total return has varied from year to
year, while the table shows performance over time (along with a broad-based
market index for reference). This information may help provide an indication of
the fund's risks. Class A average annual figures reflect sales charges.
Year-by-year and index figures do not reflect these charges and would be lower
if they did. In addition, 12b-1 fees will be imposed beginning July 1, 2000 for
Class A shares and would result in lower returns if reflected in these figures.
All figures assume dividend reinvestment. Past performance does not indicate
future results.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A year-by-year total returns -- calendar years
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                   1996    1997    1998    1999
                                                  20.66%  30.63%  18.79%   4.65%


1999 total return as of March 31: x.xx% Best quarter: Q4 '98, 18.79% Worst
quarter: Q3 '98, -13.99%


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average annual total returns -- for periods ending 12/31/99
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                         Life of
                                                            1 year       Class A
Class A - began 10/2/95                                     -0.60%       17.80%
Class B - began 7/1/99                                      --           --
Class C - began 7/1/99                                      --           --
Index                                                       7.35%        20.09%

Index: Russell 1000 Value Index, an unmanaged index of value stocks in the
Russell 1000 Index of the 1,000 largest-capitalization U.S. stocks.


10
<PAGE>

MAIN RISKS

[Clip Art] The value of your investment will go up and down in response to stock
market movements.

Large-capitalization stocks as a group could fall out of favor with the market,
causing the fund to underperform funds that focus on small- or
medium-capitalization stocks. Similarly, value stocks could underperform growth
stocks.


The fund's management strategy has a significant influence on fund performance.
If the investment research team's earnings estimates or projections turn out to
be inaccurate, or if the proprietary computer models do not perform as expected,
the fund could underperform its peers or lose money.

To the extent that the fund makes investments with additional risks, those risks
could increase volatility or reduce performance:


o  Foreign investments carry additional risks, including potentially inadequate
   or inaccurate financial information and social or political instability.

================================================================================

YOUR EXPENSES

[Clip Art] Transaction expenses are charged directly to your account. Operating
expenses are paid from the fund's assets, and therefore are paid by shareholders
indirectly. Class A expense figures below show the expenses for the past year,
adjusted to reflect any changes.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shareholder transaction expenses(1)                 Class A   Class B   Class C
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Maximum sales charge (load) on purchases
as a % of purchase price                            5.00%     none      1.00%


Maximum deferred sales charge (load)
(as a % of purchase or sales price,
whichever is less)                                  none(2)   5.00%     1.00%

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual operating expenses                           Class A   Class B   Class C
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Management fee                                      0.80%     0.80%     0.80%
Distribution and service (12b-1) fees               0.30%     1.00%     1.00%
Other expenses                                      1.08%     1.08%     1.08%
Total fund operating expenses                       2.18%     2.88%     2.88%
Distribution and service (12b-1) fee
reduction (until 7/1/00)                            0.30%     --        --
Expense reimbursement (at least until 7/1/00)       0.93%     0.93%     0.93%
Net annual operating expenses                       0.95%     1.95%     1.95%

The hypothetical example below shows what your expenses would be after the fee
reduction and expense reimbursement (first year only) if you invested $10,000
over the time frames indicated, assuming you reinvested all distributions and
that the average annual return was 5%. The example is for comparison only, and
does not represent the fund's actual expenses and returns, either past or
future.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Expenses                         Year 1       Year 3       Year 5       Year 10
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A                          $592         $1,105       $1,643       $3,109
Class B - with redemption        $698         $1,176       $1,777       $3,281
        - without redemption     $198         $  876       $1,577       $3,281
Class C - with redemption        $298         $  876       $1,577       $3,443
        - without redemption     $198         $  876       $1,577       $3,443

(1)   A $4.00 fee may be charged for wire redemptions.
(2)   Except for investments of $1 million or more; see "How sales charges are
      calculated."


FUND CODES

Class A
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            JHIVX
CUSIP             410132807
Newspaper         --
SEC number        811-8852
JH fund number    88

Class B
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            --
CUSIP             410132815
Newspaper         --
SEC number        811-8852
JH fund number    188

Class C
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            --
CUSIP             410132799
Newspaper         --
SEC number        811-8852
JH fund number    588


                                                                              11
<PAGE>

Large Cap Growth Fund


GOAL AND STRATEGY

[Clip Art] The fund seeks long-term capital appreciation. To pursue this goal,
the fund normally invests at least 65% of assets in stocks of
large-capitalization companies (companies in the capitalization range of the S&P
500 Index, which was $369 million to $503.86 billion as of January 31, 2000).

In choosing individual stocks, the managers use fundamental financial analysis
to identify companies with:

o  strong cash flows
o  secure market franchises
o  sales growth that outpaces their industries

The fund generally invests in 30 to 60 U.S. companies that are diversified
across sectors. The fund has tended to emphasize, or overweight, certain sectors
such as health care, technology or consumer goods. These weightings may change
in the future.

The management team uses various means to assess the depth and stability of
companies' senior management, including interviews and company visits. The fund
favors companies for which the managers project an above average growth rate.

The fund may invest in preferred stocks and other types of equities, and may
invest up to 15% of assets in foreign securities. The fund may also make limited
use of certain derivatives (investments whose value is based on indices,
securities or currencies).

In abnormal market conditions, the fund may temporarily invest extensively in
investment-grade short-term securities. In these and other cases, the fund might
not achieve its goal.

The fund may trade securities actively, which could increase its transaction
costs (thus lowering performance) and increase your taxable distributions.

================================================================================

PORTFOLIO MANAGER

Team responsible for day-to-day
investment management

PAST PERFORMANCE

[Clip Art] The graph shows how the fund's total return has varied from year to
year, while the table shows performance over time (along with a broad-based
market index for reference). This information may help provide an indication of
the fund's risks. The average annual figures reflect sales charges; the
year-by-year and index figures do not, and would be lower if they did. All
figures assume dividend reinvestment. Past performance does not indicate future
results.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A year-by-year total returns -- calendar years
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 1990    1991     1992    1993    1994    1995     1996    1997    1998    1999
- -8.34%  41.68%    6.06%  13.03%  -7.50%  27.17%   20.40%  16.70%  26.42%  20.52%


1999 total return as of March 31: xx% Best quarter: Q4 '98, 22.38% Worst
quarter: Q3 '90, -18.75%


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average annual total returns -- for periods ending 12/31/99
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                             Life of    Life of
                            1 year     5 year     10 year    Class B    Class C
Class A                     14.48%     20.93%     14.02%     --         --
Class B - began 1/3/94      14.73%     21.11%     --         16.08%     --
Class C - began 6/1/98      18.69%     --         --         --         23.26%
Index                       21.03%     28.54%     18.19%     23.55%     22.32%

Index: Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index, an unmanaged index of 500 stocks.


12
<PAGE>

MAIN RISKS

[Clip Art] The value of your investment will go up and down in response to stock
market movements.

The fund's management strategy has a significant influence on fund performance.
Large-capitalization stocks as a group could fall out of favor with the market,
causing the fund to underperform investments that focus on small- or
medium-capitalization stocks. Similarly, growth stocks could underperform value
stocks. To the extent the fund invests in a given industry, its performance will
be hurt if that industry performs poorly. In addition, if the managers' security
selection strategies do not perform as expected, the fund could underperform its
peers or lose money.

To the extent that the fund makes investments with additional risks, these risks
could increase volatility or reduce performance:

o  Certain derivatives could produce disproportionate losses.
o  In a down market, higher risk securities and derivatives could become harder
   to value or to sell at a fair price.
o  Foreign investments carry additional risks, including potentially unfavorable
   currency exchange rates, inadequate or inaccurate financial information and
   social or political instability.

================================================================================

YOUR EXPENSES

[Clip Art] Transaction expenses are charged directly to your account. Operating
expenses are paid from the fund's assets, and therefore are paid by shareholders
indirectly.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shareholder transaction expenses(1)           Class A      Class B      Class C
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Maximum sales charge (load) on purchases
as a % of purchase price                      5.00%        none         1.00%


Maximum deferred sales charge (load)
as a % of purchase or sale price,
whichever is less                             none(2)      5.00%        1.00%

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual operating expenses                     Class A      Class B      Class C
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Management fee                                0.75%        0.75%        0.75%
Distribution and service (12b-1) fees         0.30%        1.00%        1.00%
Other expenses                                0.30%        0.30%        0.30%
Total fund operating expenses                 1.35%        2.05%        2.05%

The hypothetical example below shows what your expenses would be if you invested
$10,000 over the time frames indicated, assuming you reinvested all
distributions and that the average annual return was 5%. The example is for
comparison only, and does not represent the fund's actual expenses and returns,
either past or future.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Expenses                         Year 1       Year 3       Year 5       Year 10
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A                          $631         $906         $1,202       $2,043
Class B - with redemption        $708         $943         $1,303       $2,200
        - without redemption     $208         $643         $1,103       $2,200
Class C - with redemption        $308         $643         $1,103       $2,379
        - without redemption     $208         $643         $1,103       $2,379

(1)   A $4.00 fee may be charged for wire redemptions.
(2)   Except for investments of $1 million or more; see "How sales charges are
      calculated."


FUND CODES

Class A
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            JHNGX
CUSIP             409906302
Newspaper         LpCpGrA
SEC number        811-4630
JH fund number    20

Class B
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            JHGBX
CUSIP             409906401
Newspaper         LpCpGrB
SEC number        811-4630
JH fund number    120

Class C
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            --
CUSIP             409906849
Newspaper         --
SEC number        811-4630
JH fund number    520


                                                                              13
<PAGE>

Large Cap Value Fund

GOAL AND STRATEGY

[Clip Art] The fund seeks the highest total return (capital appreciation plus
current income) that is consistent with reasonable safety of capital. To pursue
this goal, the fund invests in a diversified portfolio of stocks, bonds and
money market securities. Although the fund may concentrate in any of these asset
classes, under normal circumstances it invests primarily in stocks.

In managing the portfolio, the manager emphasizes a value-oriented approach to
individual stock selection. With the aid of proprietary financial models, the
management team looks for companies that are selling at what appear to be
substantial discounts to their long-term intrinsic and "franchise" values. These
companies often have identifiable catalysts for growth, such as new products,
business reorganizations or mergers.

The fund manages risk by typically holding between 50 and 150 large companies
that are diversified across industry sectors. The management team also uses
fundamental financial analysis to identify individual companies with substantial
cash flows, reliable revenue streams, superior competitive positions and strong
management.

The fund may attempt to take advantage of short-term market volatility by
investing in corporate restructurings or pending acquisitions.

In selecting bonds of any maturity, the manager looks for the most favorable
risk/return ratios. The fund may invest up to 15% of net assets in junk bonds
rated as low as CC/Ca and their unrated equivalents.

The fund may invest up to 25% of assets in foreign securities (35% during
adverse U.S. market conditions). The fund may also make limited use of certain
derivatives (investments whose value is based on indices, securities or
currencies).

In abnormal market conditions, the fund may temporarily invest extensively in
investment-grade short-term securities. In these and other cases, the fund might
not achieve its goal.

================================================================================


PORTFOLIO MANAGER


Timothy E. Keefe, CFA
- ---------------------------------------

Senior vice president of adviser
Joined team in 1996
Joined adviser in 1996
Began business career in 1987



PAST PERFORMANCE

[Clip Art] The graph shows how the fund's total return has varied from year to
year, while the table shows performance over time (along with a broad-based
market index for reference). This information may help provide an indication of
the fund's risks. The average annual figures reflect sales charges; the
year-by-year and index figures do not, and would be lower if they did. All
figures assume dividend reinvestment. Past performance does not indicate future
results.


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A year-by-year total returns -- calendar years
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 1990    1991     1992    1993    1994    1995     1996    1997    1998    1999
- -0.44%  32.29%    6.02%   9.74%  -8.49%  36.74%   22.21%  36.71%  15.94%  37.89%


1999 total return as of March 31: xx% Best quarter: Q4 '99, 31.65% Worst
quarter: Q3 '98, -12.94%


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average annual total returns -- for periods ending 12/31/99
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                             Life of    Life of
                            1 year     5 year     10 year    Class B    Class C
Class A                     30.99%     28.25%     17.15%     --         --
Class B - began 8/22/91     31.95%     28.49%     --         18.21%     --
Class C - began 5/1/98      35.94%     --         --         --         21.33%
Index                       21.03%     28.54%     18.19%     19.73%     19.84%

Index: Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index, an unmanaged index of 500 stocks.


14
<PAGE>

MAIN RISKS

[Clip Art] The value of your investment will go up and down in response to stock
and bond market movements.

The fund's management strategy has a significant influence on fund performance.
Large-capitalization stocks as a group could fall out of favor with the market,
causing the fund to underperform investments that focus on small- or
medium-capitalization stocks. Similarly, value stocks could underperform growth
stocks. In addition, if the manager's securities selection strategies do not
perform as expected, the fund could underperform its peers or lose money.

To the extent that the fund makes investments with additional risks, those risks
could increase volatility or reduce performance:


o  Certain derivatives could produce disproportionate losses.
o  In a down market, higher-risk securities and derivatives could become harder
   to value or to sell at a fair price.
o  Foreign investments carry additional risks, including potentially unfavorable
   currency exchange rates, inadequate or inaccurate financial information and
   social or political instability.
o  Any bonds held by the fund could be downgraded in credit rating or go into
   default. Bond prices generally fall when interest rates rise and longer
   maturity will increase volatility. Junk bond prices can fall on bad news
   about the economy, an industry or a company.

The fund may trade securities actively, which could increase its transaction
costs (thus lowering performance) and increase your taxable distributions.

================================================================================

YOUR EXPENSES

[Clip Art] Transaction expenses are charged directly to your account. Operating
expenses are paid from the fund's assets, and therefore are paid by shareholders
indirectly.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shareholder transaction expenses(1)           Class A      Class B      Class C
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Maximum sales charge (load) on purchases
as a % of purchase price                      5.00%        none         1.00%


Maximum deferred s ales charge (load)
as a % of purchase or sale price,
whichever is less                             none(2)      5.00%        1.00%

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual operating expenses                     Class A      Class B      Class C
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Management fee                                0.625%       0.625%       0.625%
Distribution and service (12b-1) fees          0.25%        1.00%        1.00%
Other expenses                                0.295%       0.295%       0.295%
Total fund operating expenses                  1.17%        1.92%        1.92%

The hypothetical example below shows what your expenses would be if you invested
$10,000 over the time frames indicated, assuming you reinvested all
distributions and that the average annual return was 5%. The example is for
comparison only, and does not represent the fund's actual expenses and returns,
either past or future.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Expenses                         Year 1       Year 3       Year 5       Year 10
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A                          $613         $853         $1,111       $1,849
Class B - with redemption        $695         $903         $1,237       $2,048
        - without redemption     $195         $603         $1,037       $2,048
Class C - with redemption        $295         $603         $1,037       $2,243
        - without redemption     $195         $603         $1,037       $2,243


(1)   A $4.00 fee may be charged for wire redemptions.
(2)   Except for investments of $1 million or more; see "How sales charges are
      calculated."


FUND CODES

Class A
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            TAGRX
CUSIP             41013P103
Newspaper         LgCpVIA
SEC number        811-0560
JH fund number    50

Class B
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            TSGWX
CUSIP             41013P202
Newspaper         LgCpVIB
SEC number        811-0560
JH fund number    150

Class C
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            JHLVX
CUSIP             41013P301
Newspaper         LgCpVIC
SEC number        811-0560
JH fund number    550


                                                                              15
<PAGE>

Mid Cap Growth Fund


GOAL AND STRATEGY

[Clip Art] The fund seeks long-term capital appreciation. To pursue this goal,
the fund normally invests at least 80% of assets in stocks of
medium-capitalization companies (companies in the capitalization range of the
Russell Midcap Growth Index, which was $230 million to $46.13 billion as of
January 31, 2000).

The manager conducts fundamental financial analysis to identify companies with
above average earnings growth.

In choosing individual securities, the manager looks for companies with growth
stemming from a combination of gains in market share and increasing operating
efficiency. Before investing, the manager identifies a specific catalyst for
growth, such as a new product, business reorganization or merger.

The management team generally maintains personal contact with the senior
management of the companies the fund invests in.

The manager considers broad economic trends, demographic factors, technological
changes, consolidation trends and legislative initiatives.

The fund generally invests in more than 100 companies. The fund may not invest
more than 5% of assets in any one security.

The fund may invest up to 10% of assets in foreign securities. The fund may also
make limited use of certain derivatives (investments whose value is based on
indices or currencies).

In abnormal conditions, the fund may temporarily invest in U.S. government
securities with maturities of up to three years and more than 10% of assets in
cash or cash equivalents. In these and other cases, the fund might not achieve
its goal.

The fund may trade securities actively, which could increase its transaction
costs (thus lowering performance) and increase your taxable distributions.

================================================================================

PORTFOLIO MANAGER

Barbara C. Friedman, CFA
- ---------------------------------------

Senior vice president of adviser
Joined team in 1998
Joined adviser in 1998
Began business career in 1973


PAST PERFORMANCE

[Clip Art] The graph shows how the fund's total return has varied from year to
year, while the table shows performance over time (along with broad-based market
indices for reference). This information may help provide an indication of the
fund's risks. The average annual figures reflect sales charges; the year-by-year
and index figures do not, and would be lower if they did. All figures assume
dividend reinvestment. Past performance does not indicate future results.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A year-by-year total returns -- calendar years
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                  1994    1995     1996    1997    1998    1999
                                 -8.76%  34.24%   29.05%   2.37%   6.53%  58.17%


1999 total return as of March 31: xx% Best quarter: Q4 '98, 22.66% Worst
quarter: Q3 '98, -21.36%


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average annual total returns -- for periods ending 12/31/99
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                 Life of     Life of    Life of
                           1 year     5 year     Class A     Class B    Class C
Class A - began 11/1/93    50.24%     23.19%     16.58%      --         --
Class B - began 11/1/93    52.21%     23.44%     --          16.75%     --
Class C - began 6/1/98     56.11%     --         --          --         34.27%
Index 1                    21.03%     28.54%     23.07%      23.07%     22.32%
Index 2                    18.23%     21.86%     17.21%      17.21%     36.63%

Index 1: Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index, an unmanaged index of 500 stocks.
Index 2: Russell Midcap Growth Index, an unmanaged index containing those stocks
from the Russell Midcap Index with a greater-than-average growth orientation.


16
<PAGE>

MAIN RISKS

[Clip Art] The value of your investment will go up and down in response to stock
market movements.

The fund's management strategy has a significant influence on fund performance.
Medium-capitalization stocks tend to be more volatile than stocks of larger
companies, and as a group could fall out of favor with the market, causing the
fund to underperform investments that focus either on small- or on
large-capitalization stocks. Similarly, growth stocks could underperform value
stocks. To the extent the fund invests in a given industry, its performance will
be hurt if that industry performs poorly. In addition, if the manager's security
selection strategies do not perform as expected, the fund could underperform its
peers or lose money.

To the extent that the fund makes investments with additional risks, these risks
could increase volatility or reduce performance:

o  Certain derivatives could produce disproportionate losses.
o  In a down market, higher risk securities and derivatives could become harder
   to value or to sell at a fair price.
o  Foreign investments carry additional risks, including potentially unfavorable
   currency exchange rates, inadequate or inaccurate financial information and
   social or political instability.

================================================================================

YOUR EXPENSES

[Clip Art] Transaction expenses are charged directly to your account. Operating
expenses are paid from the fund's assets, and therefore are paid by shareholders
indirectly.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shareholder transaction expenses(1)           Class A      Class B      Class C
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Maximum sales charge (load) on purchases
as a % of purchase price                      5.00%        none         1.00%


Maximum deferred sales charge (load)
as a % of purchase or sale price,
whichever is less                             none(2)      5.00%        1.00%

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual operating expenses                     Class A      Class B      Class C
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Management fee                                0.80%        0.80%        0.80%
Distribution and service (12b-1) fees         0.30%        1.00%        1.00%
Other expenses                                0.50%        0.50%        0.50%
Total fund operating expenses                 1.60%        2.30%        2.30%

The hypothetical example below shows what your expenses would be if you invested
$10,000 over the time frames indicated, assuming you reinvested all
distributions and that the average annual return was 5%. The example is for
comparison only, and does not represent the fund's actual expenses and returns,
either past or future.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Expenses                         Year 1       Year 3       Year 5       Year 10
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A                          $655         $  980       $1,327       $2,305
Class B - with redemption        $733         $1,018       $1,430       $2,461
        - without redemption     $233         $  718       $1,230       $2,461
Class C - with redemption        $333         $  718       $1,230       $2,636
        - without redemption     $233         $  718       $1,230       $2,636

(1)   A $4.00 fee may be charged for wire redemptions.
(2)   Except for investments of $1 million or more; see "How sales charges are
      calculated."


FUND CODES

Class A
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            SPOAX
CUSIP             409906807
Newspaper         MdCpGrA
SEC number        811-4630
JH fund number    39

Class B
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            SPOBX
CUSIP             409906880
Newspaper         MdCpGrB
SEC number        811-4630
JH fund number    139

Class C
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            --
CUSIP             409906823
Newspaper         --
SEC number        811-4630
JH fund number    539


                                                                              17
<PAGE>


Small Cap Growth Fund

GOAL AND STRATEGY

[Clip Art] The fund seeks long-term capital appreciation. To pursue this goal,
the fund normally invests at least 80% of assets in stocks of
small-capitalization companies (companies in the capitalization range of the
Russell 2000 Growth Index, which was $34 million to $10.71 billion as of January
31, 2000).

The managers look for companies in the emerging growth phase of development that
are not yet widely recognized. The fund also may invest in established companies
that, because of new management, products or opportunities, offer the
possibility of accelerating earnings.

To manage risk, the fund typically invests in 150 to 220 companies across many
industries, and does not invest more than 5% of assets in any one company.

In choosing individual securities, the managers use fundamental financial
analysis to identify rapidly growing companies. The managers favor companies
that dominate their market niches or are poised to become market leaders. They
look for strong senior management teams and coherent business strategies. They
generally maintain personal contact with the senior management of the companies
the fund invests in.

The fund may invest in preferred stocks and other types of equities, and may
invest up to 10% of assets in foreign securities. The fund may also make limited
use of certain derivatives (investments whose value is based on indices or
currencies).

In abnormal conditions, the fund may temporarily invest in U.S. government
securities with maturities of up to three years and more than 10% of assets in
cash and cash equivalents. In these and other cases, the fund might not achieve
its goal.

The fund may trade securities actively, which could increase its transaction
costs (thus lowering performance) and increase your taxable distributions.

================================================================================

PORTFOLIO MANAGERS

Bernice S. Behar, CFA
- ---------------------------------------

Senior vice president of adviser
Joined team in 1996
Joined adviser in 1991
Began business career in 1986

Laura J. Allen, CFA
- ---------------------------------------
Senior vice president of adviser
Joined team in 1998
Joined adviser in 1998
Began business career in 1981

Anurag Pandit, CFA
- ---------------------------------------
Vice president of adviser
Joined team in 1996
Joined adviser in 1996
Began business career in 1984


PAST PERFORMANCE

[Clip Art] The graph shows how the fund's total return has varied from year to
year, while the table shows performance over time (along with broad-based market
indices for reference). This information may help provide an indication of the
fund's risks. The average annual figures reflect sales charges; the year-by-year
and index figures do not, and would be lower if they did. All figures assume
dividend reinvestment. Past performance does not indicate future results.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B year-by-year total returns -- calendar years
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 1990    1991     1992    1993    1994    1995     1996    1997    1998    1999
- -1.15%  58.82%   12.13%  11.82%  -1.49%  42.13%   12.95%  14.45%  11.65%  63.62%


1999 total return as of March 31: xx% Best quarter: Q4 '99, 43.58% Worst
quarter: Q3 '90, -23.09%


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average annual total returns -- for periods ending 12/31/99
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                             Life of    Life of
                            1 year     5 year     10 year    Class A    Class C
Class A - began 8/22/91     56.65%     27.03%     --         20.50%     --
Class B                     58.62%     27.25%     20.60%     --         --
Class C - began 6/1/98      62.59%     --         --         --         45.00%
Index 1                     21.26%     16.69%     13.40%     15.19%     7.92%
Index 2                     43.09%     18.99%     13.51%     14.65%     22.94%

Index 1: Russell 2000 Index, an unmanaged index of 2,000 U.S.
small-capitalization stocks.

Index 2: Russell 2000 Growth Index, an unmanaged index containing those stocks
from the Russell 2000 Index with a greater-than-average growth orientation.


18
<PAGE>

MAIN RISKS

[Clip Art] The value of your investment will go up and down in response to stock
market movements.

The fund's management strategy has a significant influence on fund performance.
Small-capitalization stocks as a group could fall out of favor with the market,
causing the fund to underperform investments that focus on medium- or large-
capitalization stocks. Similarly, growth stocks could underperform value stocks.
To the extent the fund invests in a given industry, its performance will be hurt
if that industry performs poorly. In addition, if the managers' security
selection strategies do not perform as expected, the fund could underperform its
peers or lose money.

Stocks of smaller companies are more volatile than stocks of larger companies.
Many smaller companies have short track records, narrow product lines or niche
markets, making them highly vulnerable to isolated business setbacks.

To the extent that the fund makes investments with additional risks, these risks
could increase volatility or reduce performance:

o  Certain derivatives could produce disproportionate losses.
o  In a down market, higher risk securities and derivatives could become harder
   to value or to sell at a fair price; this risk could also affect
   small-capitalization stocks, especially those with low trading volumes.
o  Foreign investments carry additional risks, including potentially unfavorable
   currency exchange rates, inadequate or inaccurate financial information and
   social or political instability.

================================================================================

YOUR EXPENSES

[Clip Art] Transaction expenses are charged directly to your account. Operating
expenses are paid from the fund's assets, and therefore are paid by shareholders
indirectly.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shareholder transaction expenses(1)           Class A      Class B      Class C
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Maximum sales charge (load) on purchases
as a % of purchase price                      5.00%        none         1.00%


Maximum deferred s ales charge (load)
as a % of purchase or sale price,
whichever is less                             none(2)      5.00%        1.00%

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual operating expenses                     Class A      Class B      Class C
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Management fee                                0.75%        0.75%        0.75%
Distribution and service (12b-1) fees         0.25%        1.00%        1.00%
Other expenses                                0.34%        0.34%        0.34%
Total fund operating expenses                 1.34%        2.09%        2.09%

The hypothetical example below shows what your expenses would be if you invested
$10,000 over the time frames indicated, assuming you reinvested all
distributions and that the average annual return was 5%. The example is for
comparison only, and does not represent the fund's actual expenses and returns,
either past or future.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Expenses                         Year 1       Year 3       Year 5       Year 10
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A                          $630         $903         $1,197       $2,032
Class B - with redemption        $712         $955         $1,324       $2,229
        - without redemption     $212         $655         $1,124       $2,229
Class C - with redemption        $312         $655         $1,124       $2,421
        - without redemption     $212         $655         $1,124       $2,421

(1)   A $4.00 fee may be charged for wire redemptions.
(2)   Except for investments of $1 million or more; see "How sales charges are
      calculated."


FUND CODES

Class A
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            TAEMX
CUSIP             478032105
Newspaper         SmCpGrA
SEC number        811-3392
JH fund number    60

Class B
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            TSEGX
CUSIP             478032204
Newspaper         SmCpGrB
SEC number        811-3392
JH fund number    160

Class C
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            --
CUSIP             478032501
Newspaper         --
SEC number        811-3392
JH fund number    560


                                                                              19
<PAGE>

Small Cap Value Fund

GOAL AND STRATEGY


[Clip Art] The fund seeks capital appreciation. To pursue this goal, the fund
normally invests at least 80% of assets in stocks of small-capitalization
companies (companies in the capitalization range of the Russell 2000 Index,
which was $34 million to $10.71 billion as of January 31, 2000).


In managing the portfolio, the manager emphasizes a value-oriented approach to
individual stock selection. With the aid of proprietary financial models, the
management team looks for U.S. and foreign companies that are selling at what
appear to be substantial discounts to their long-term value. These companies
often have identifiable catalysts for growth, such as new products, business
reorganizations or mergers.


The management team uses fundamental financial analysis of individual companies
to identify those with substantial cash flows, reliable revenue streams and
strong competitive positions. The strength of companies' management teams is
also a key selection factor. The fund diversifies across industry sectors. The
fund may not invest more than 5% of assets in any one security.

The fund may invest up to 15% of assets in a basket of foreign securities or in
bonds of any maturity rated as low as CC/Ca and their unrated equivalents (bonds
below BBB/Baa are considered junk bonds). The fund may make limited use of
certain derivatives (investments whose value is based on indices or currencies).


Under normal conditions, the fund may not invest more than 10% of assets in cash
or cash equivalents.

In abnormal market conditions, the fund may temporarily invest extensively in
investment-grade short-term securities. In these and other cases, the fund might
not achieve its goal.


The fund may trade securities actively, which could increase its transaction
costs (thus lowering performance) and increase your taxable distributions.


================================================================================

PORTFOLIO MANAGER


Timothy E. Keefe, CFA
- ---------------------------------------
Senior vice president of adviser
Joined team in 1996
Joined adviser in 1996
Began business career in 1987



PAST PERFORMANCE


[Clip Art] The graph shows how the fund's total return has varied from year to
year, while the table shows performance over time (along with a broad-based
market index for reference). This information may help provide an indication of
the fund's risks. The average annual figures reflect sales charges; the
year-by-year and index figures do not, and would be lower if they did. All
figures assume dividend reinvestment. Past performance does not indicate future
results.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A year-by-year total returns -- calendar years
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                  1994    1995     1996    1997    1998    1999
                                  7.81%  20.26%   12.91%  25.25%  -2.10%  98.25%


1999 total return as of March 31: xx% Best quarter: Q4 '99, 47.75% Worst
quarter: Q3 '98, -21.43%


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average annual total returns -- for periods ending 12/31/99
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                  Life to    Life to    Life to
                            1 year     5 year     Class A    Class B    Class C
Class A - began 1/3/94      88.27%     25.69%     22.54%     --         --
Class B - began 1/3/94      92.03%     25.90%     --         22.67%     --
Class C - began 5/1/98      95.94%     --         --         --         39.67%
Index                       21.26%     16.69%     13.39%     13.39%     4.00%

Index: Russell 2000 Index, an unmanaged index of 2,000 U.S. small-capitalization
stocks.


20
<PAGE>

MAIN RISKS

[Clip Art] The value of your investment will go up and down in response to stock
market movements.

The fund's management strategy has a significant influence on fund performance.
Small-capitalization stocks as a group could fall out of favor with the market,
causing the fund to underperform investments that focus on medium- or
large-capitalization stocks. Similarly, value stocks could underperform growth
stocks. To the extent the fund invests in a given industry, its performance will
be hurt if that industry performs poorly. In addition, if the manager's security
selection strategies do not perform as expected, the fund could underperform its
peers or lose money.

Stocks of smaller companies are more volatile than stocks of larger companies.
Many smaller companies have short track records, narrow product lines or niche
markets, making them highly vulnerable to isolated business setbacks.

To the extent that the fund makes investments with additional risks, these risks
could increase volatility or reduce performance:

o  Certain derivatives could produce disproportionate losses.
o  In a down market, higher risk securities and derivatives could become harder
   to value or to sell at a fair price; this risk could also affect
   small-capitalization stocks, especially those with low trading volumes.
o  Foreign investments carry additional risks, including potentially unfavorable
   currency exchange rates, inadequate or inaccurate financial information and
   social or political instability.
o  Any bonds held by the fund could be downgraded in credit quality or go into
   default. In addition, bond prices generally fall when interest rates rise;
   this risk is greater for longer maturity bonds. Junk bond prices can fall on
   bad news about the issuer, an industry or the economy in general.

================================================================================

YOUR EXPENSES

[Clip Art] Transaction expenses are charged directly to your account. Operating
expenses are paid from the fund's assets, and therefore are paid by shareholders
indirectly.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shareholder transaction expenses(1)           Class A      Class B      Class C
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Maximum sales charge (load) on purchases
as a % of purchase price                      5.00%        none         1.00%


Maximum deferred sales charge (load)
as a % of purchase or sale price,
whichever is less                             none(2)      5.00%        1.00%

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual operating expenses                     Class A      Class B      Class C
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Management fee                                0.70%        0.70%        0.70%
Distribution and service (12b-1) fees         0.30%        1.00%        1.00%
Other expenses                                0.54%        0.54%        0.54%
Total fund operating expenses                 1.54%        2.24%        2.24%

The hypothetical example below shows what your expenses would be if you invested
$10,000 over the time frames indicated, assuming you reinvested all
distributions and that the average annual return was 5%. The example is for
comparison only, and does not represent the fund's actual expenses and returns,
either past or future.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Expenses                         Year 1       Year 3       Year 5       Year 10
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A                          $649         $  962       $1,297       $2,243
Class B - with redemption        $727         $1,000       $1,400       $2,399
        - without redemption     $227         $  700       $1,200       $2,399
Class C - with redemption        $327         $  700       $1,200       $2,575
        - without redemption     $227         $  700       $1,200       $2,575

(1)   A $4.00 fee may be charged for wire redemptions.
(2)   Except for investments of $1 million or more; see "How sales charges are
      calculated."


FUND CODES

Class A
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            SPVAX
CUSIP             409905700
Newspaper         SmCpVlA
SEC number        811-3999
JH fund number    37

Class B
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            SPVBX
CUSIP             409905809
Newspaper         SmCpVlB
SEC number        811-3999
JH fund number    137

Class C
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            --
CUSIP             409905882
Newspaper         --
SEC number        811-3999
JH fund number    537


                                                                              21
<PAGE>

Sovereign Investors Fund

GOAL AND STRATEGY


[Clip Art] The fund seeks long-term growth of capital and income without
assuming undue market risks. To pursue this goal, the fund normally invests at
least 80% of stocks in a diversified portfolio of companies with market
capitalizations within the range of the Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index. On
Xxxxx x, 2000, that range was $xxx million to xxx billion.


All of the fund's stock investments are "dividend performers" -- companies whose
dividend payments have increased steadily for ten years. The managers use
fundamental financial analysis to identify individual companies with
high-quality income statements, substantial cash reserves and identifiable
catalysts for growth, which may be new products or benefits from industrywide
growth. The managers generally visit companies to evaluate the strength and
consistency of their management strategy. Finally, the managers look for stocks
that are reasonably priced relative to their earnings and industry.
Historically, companies that meet these criteria have tended to have large or
medium capitalizations.


The fund may not invest more than 5% of assets in any one security. The fund may
invest in bonds of any maturity, with up to 5% of assets in junk bonds rated as
low as C and their unrated equivalents.


The fund typically invests in U.S. companies but may invest in
dollar-denominated foreign securities. It may also make limited use of certain
derivatives (investments whose value is based on indices).


Under normal conditions, the fund may not invest more than 10% of assets in cash
or cash equivalents.


In abnormal market conditions, the fund may temporarily invest extensively in
investment-grade short-term securities. In these and other cases, the fund might
not achieve its goal.


The fund may trade securities actively, which could increase its transaction
costs (thus lowering performance) and increase your taxable distributions.


================================================================================

PORTFOLIO MANAGERS


John F. Snyder, III
- ---------------------------------------
Executive vice president of adviser
Joined team in 1983
Joined adviser in 1991
Began business career in 1971

Barry H. Evans, CFA
- ---------------------------------------
Senior vice president of adviser
Joined team in 1996
Joined adviser in 1986
Began business career in 1986

Peter M. Schofield, CFA
- ---------------------------------------
Vice president of adviser
Joined team in 1996
Joined adviser in 1996
Began business career in 1984


PAST PERFORMANCE

[Clip Art] The graph shows how the fund's total return has varied from year to
year, while the table shows performance over time (along with a broad-based
market index for reference). This information may help provide an indication of
the fund's risks. The average annual figures reflect sales charges; the
year-by-year and index figures do not, and would be lower if they did. All
figures assume dividend reinvestment. Past performance does not indicate future
results.


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A year-by-year total returns -- calendar years
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 1990    1991     1992    1993    1994    1995     1996    1997    1998    1999
 4.38%  30.48%    7.23%   5.71%  -1.85%  29.15%   17.57%  29.14%  15.62%   5.91%


1999 total return as of March 31: xx% Best quarter: Q4 '98, 15.55% Worst
quarter: Q3 '90, -9.03%


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average annual total returns -- for periods ending 12/31/99
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                             Life of    Life of
                           1 year      5 year     10 year    Class B    Class C
Class A                    0.60%       17.93%     13.23%     --         --
Class B - began 1/3/94     0.20%       18.06%     --         14.55%     --
Class C - began 5/1/98     4.17%       --         --         --         6.24%
Index                      21.03%      28.54%     18.19%     23.55%     19.84%

Index: Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index, an unmanaged index of 500 stocks.


22
<PAGE>

MAIN RISKS

[Clip Art] The value of your investment will go up and down in response to stock
and bond market movements.


The fund's management strategy has a significant influence on fund performance.
Large- or medium-capitalization stocks as a group could fall out of favor with
the market, causing the fund to underperform funds that focus on
small-capitalization stocks. In addition, if the managers' securities selection
strategies do not perform as expected, the fund could under-perform its peers
or lose money.

To the extent that the fund makes investments with additional risks, those risks
could increase volatility or reduce performance:

o  Certain derivatives could produce disproportionate losses.
o  In a down market, higher-risk securities and derivatives could become harder
   to value or to sell at a fair price.
o  Foreign investments carry additional risks, including inadequate or
   inaccurate financial information and social or political instability.
o  Any bonds held by the fund could be downgraded in credit rating or go into
   default. Bond prices generally fall when interest rates rise and longer
   maturity will increase volatility. Junk bond prices can fall on bad news
   about the economy, an industry or a company.

Investments in the fund are not bank deposits and are not insured or guaranteed
by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or any other government agency. You
could lose money by investing in this fund.


================================================================================

YOUR EXPENSES

[Clip Art] Transaction expenses are charged directly to your account. Operating
expenses are paid from the fund's assets, and therefore are paid by shareholders
indirectly.


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shareholder transaction expenses(1)           Class A      Class B      Class C
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Maximum sales charge (load) on purchases
as a % of purchase price                      5.00%        none         1.00%


Maximum deferred sales charge (load)
as a % of purchase or sale price,
whichever is less                             none(2)      5.00%        1.00%

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual operating expenses                     Class A      Class B      Class C
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Management fee                                0.54%        0.54%        0.54%
Distribution and service (12b-1) fees         0.30%        1.00%        1.00%
Other expenses                                0.21%        0.21%        0.21%
Total fund operating expenses                 1.05%        1.75%        1.75%

The hypothetical example below shows what your expenses would be if you invested
$10,000 over the time frames indicated, assuming you reinvested all
distributions and that the average annual return was 5%. The example is for
comparison only, and does not represent the fund's actual expenses and returns,
either past or future.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Expenses                         Year 1       Year 3       Year 5       Year 10
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A                          $602         $817         $1,050       $1,718
Class B - with redemption        $678         $851         $1,149       $1,878
        - without redemption     $178         $551         $  949       $1,878
Class C - with redemption        $278         $551         $  949       $2,062
        - without redemption     $178         $551         $  949       $2,062

(1)   A $4.00 fee may be charged for wire redemptions.
(2)   Except for investments of $1 million or more; see "How sales charges are
      calculated."


FUND CODES

Class A
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            SOVIX
CUSIP             47803P302
Newspaper         SvInvA
SEC number        811-0560
JH fund number    29

Class B
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            SOVBX
CUSIP             47803P401
Newspaper         SvInvB
SEC number        811-0560
JH fund number    129

Class C
- ---------------------------------------
Ticker            SOVCX
CUSIP             47803P609
Newspaper         --
SEC number        811-0560
JH fund number    529


                                                                              23
<PAGE>

Your account

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CHOOSING A SHARE CLASS

Each share class has its own cost structure, including a Rule 12b-1 plan that
allows it to pay fees for the sale, distribution and service of its shares. Your
financial representative can help you decide which share class is best for you.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------


o  Front-end sales charges, as described at right.


o  Distribution and service (12b-1) fees of 0.30% (0.25% for Large Cap Value and
   Small Cap Growth).

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
o  No front-end sales charge; all your money goes to work for you right away.

o  Distribution and service (12b-1) fees of 1.00%.

o  A deferred sales charge, as described on following page.

o  Automatic conversion to Class A shares after eight years, thus reducing
   future annual expenses.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class C
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------


o  Front-end sales charge, as described at right.


o  Distribution and service (12b-1) fees of 1.00%.

o  A 1.00% contingent deferred sales charge on shares sold within one year of
   purchase.

o  No automatic conversion to Class A shares, so annual expenses continue at the
   Class C level throughout the life of your investment.

For actual past expenses of each share class, see the fund-by-fund information
earlier in this prospectus.

Because 12b-1 fees are paid on an ongoing basis, they may cost share-holders
more than other types of sales charges.

Investors purchasing $1 million or more of Class B or Class C shares may want to
consider the lower operating expenses of Class A shares.

Sovereign Investors Fund offers Class Y shares, which have their own expense
structure and are available to financial institutions only. Call Signature
Services for more information (see back cover of this prospectus).

Your broker or agent may charge you a fee to effect transactions in fund shares.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
HOW SALES CHARGES ARE CALCULATED

Class A and Class C Sales charges are as follows:

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A sales charges
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                            As a % of       As a % of your
Your investment             offering price  investment
Up to $49,999               5.00%           5.26%
$50,000 - $99,999           4.50%           4.71%
$100,000 - $249,999         3.50%           3.63%
$250,000 - $499,999         2.50%           2.56%
$500,000 - $999,999         2.00%           2.04%
$1,000,000 and over         See below


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class C sales charges
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                         As a % of           As a % of your
Your investment                          offering price      investment

All purchases                            1.00%               1.01%


Investments of $1 million or more Class A shares are available with no front-end
sales charge. However, there is a contingent deferred sales charge (CDSC) on any
shares sold within one year of purchase, as follows:

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CDSC on $1 million+ investments
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                            CDSC on shares
Your investment                             being sold
First $1M - $4,999,999                      1.00%
Next $1 - $5M above that                    0.50%
Next $1 or more above that                  0.25%

For purposes of this CDSC, all purchases made during a calendar month are
counted as having been made on the first day of that month.

The CDSC is based on the lesser of the original purchase cost or the current
market value of the shares being sold, and is not charged on shares you acquired
by reinvesting your dividends. To keep your CDSC as low as possible, each time
you place a request to sell shares we will first sell any shares in your account
that are not subject to a CDSC.


24  YOUR ACCOUNT
<PAGE>


Class B Shares are offered at their net asset value per share, without any
initial sales charge.

Class B and Class C  Shares of Class B and Class C may be charged a CDSC on
shares you sell within a certain time after you bought them, as described in the
tables below. There is no CDSC on shares acquired through reinvestment of
dividends. The CDSC is based on the original purchase cost or the current market
value of the shares being sold, whichever is less. The CDSCs are as follows:


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B deferred charges
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                         CDSC on shares
Years after purchase                     being sold
1st year                                 5.00%
2nd year                                 4.00%
3rd or 4th year                          3.00%
5th year                                 2.00%
6th year                                 1.00%
After 6th year                           none

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class C deferred charges
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Years after purchase                     CDSC
1st year                                 1.00%
After 1st year                           none

For purposes of these CDSCs, all purchases made during a calendar month are
counted as having been made on the first day of that month.

CDSC calculations are based on the number of shares involved, not on the value
of your account. To keep your CDSC as low as possible, each time you place a
request to sell shares we will first sell any shares in your account that carry
no CDSC. If there are not enough of these to meet your request, we will sell
those shares that have the lowest CDSC.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SALES CHARGE REDUCTIONS AND WAIVERS

Reducing your Class A sales charges There are several ways you can combine
multiple purchases of Class A shares of John Hancock funds to take advantage of
the breakpoints in the sales charge schedule. The first three ways can be
combined in any manner.

o  Accumulation Privilege -- lets you add the value of any Class A shares you
   already own to the amount of your next Class A investment for purposes of
   calculating the sales charge. Retirement plans investing $1 million in Class
   B shares may add that value to Class A purchases to calculate charges.
o  Letter of Intention -- lets you purchase Class A shares of a fund over a
   13-month period and receive the same sales charge as if all shares had been
   purchased at once.
o  Combination Privilege -- lets you combine Class A shares of multiple funds
   for purposes of calculating the sales charge.

To utilize: complete the appropriate section of your application, or contact
your financial representative or Signature Services, or consult the SAI (see the
back cover of this prospectus).

Group Investment Program A group may be treated as a single purchaser under the
accumulation and combination privileges. Each investor has an individual
account, but the group's investments are lumped together for sales charge
purposes, making the investors potentially eligible for reduced sales charges.
There is no charge or obligation to invest (although initial investments must
total at least $250), and individual investors may close their accounts at any
time.

To utilize: contact your financial representative or Signature Services to find
out how to qualify, or consult the SAI (see the back cover of this prospectus).

CDSC waivers As long as Signature Services is notified at the time you sell, the
CDSC for each share class will generally be waived in the following cases:

o  to make payments through certain systematic withdrawal plans
o  to make certain distributions from a retirement plan
o  because of shareholder death or disability

To utilize: if you think you may be eligible for a CDSC waiver, contact your
financial representative or Signature Services, or consult the SAI (see the back
cover of this prospectus).


                                                                YOUR ACCOUNT  25
<PAGE>

Reinstatement privilege If you sell shares of a John Hancock fund, you may
reinvest some or all of the proceeds in the same share class of any John Hancock
fund within 120 days without a sales charge, as long as Signature Services is
notified before you reinvest. If you paid a CDSC when you sold your shares, you
will be credited with the amount of the CDSC. All accounts involved must have
the same registration.

To utilize: contact your financial representative or Signature Services.

Waivers for certain investors Class A shares may be offered without front-end
sales charges or CDSCs to various individuals and institutions, including:

o  selling brokers and their employees and sales representatives
o  financial representatives utilizing fund shares in fee-based investment
   products under signed agreement with John Hancock Funds
o  fund trustees and other individuals who are affiliated with these or other
   John Hancock funds
o  individuals transferring assets from an employee benefit plan into a John
   Hancock fund
o  certain John Hancock insurance contract holders (one-year CDSC usually
   applies)
o  participants in certain retirement plans with at least 100 eligible employees
   (one-year CDSC applies)


Class C shares may be offered without front-end sales charges to various
individuals and institutions, including:

o certain retirement plans
o existing Class C shareholders as of May 1, 2000


To utilize: if you think you may be eligible for a sales charge waiver, contact
Signature Services or consult the SAI (see the back cover of this prospectus).

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPENING AN ACCOUNT

1  Read this prospectus carefully.

2  Determine how much you want to invest. The minimum initial investments for
   the John Hancock funds are as follows:

   o   non-retirement account: $1,000
   o   retirement account: $250
   o   group investments: $250
   o   Monthly Automatic Accumulation Plan (MAAP): $25 to open; you must invest
       at least $25 a month
   o   fee-based clients of selling brokers who have placed at least $2 billion
       in John Hancock funds: $250

3  Complete the appropriate parts of the account application, carefully
   following the instructions. You must submit additional documentation when
   opening trust, corporate or power of attorney accounts. You must notify your
   financial representative or Signature Services if this information changes.
   For more details, please contact your financial representative or call
   Signature Services at 1-800-225-5291.

4  Complete the appropriate parts of the account privileges application. By
   applying for privileges now, you can avoid the delay and inconvenience of
   having to file an additional application if you want to add privileges later.

5  Make your initial investment using the table on the next page. You and your
   financial representative can initiate any purchase, exchange or sale of
   shares.


26  YOUR ACCOUNT
<PAGE>

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Buying shares
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            Opening an account           Adding to an account

By check

[Clip Art]  o Make out a check for the   o Make out a check for the investment
              investment amount,           amount payable to "John Hancock
              payable to "John Hancock     Signature Services, Inc."
              Signature Services,
              Inc."                      o Fill out the detachable investment
                                           slip from an account statement. If no
            o Deliver the check and        slip is available, include a note
              your completed               specifying the fund name, your share
              application to your          class, your account number and the
              financial                    name(s) in which the account is
              representative, or mail      registered.
              them to Signature
              Services (address          o Deliver the check and your investment
              below).                      slip or note to your financial
                                           representative, or mail them to
                                           Signature Services (address below).

By exchange

[Clip Art]  o Call your financial        o Log on to www.jhfunds.com to process
              representative or            exchanges between funds.
              Signature Services to
              request an exchange.       o Call EASI-Line for automated service
                                           24 hours a day using your touch tone
                                           phone at 1-800-338-8080.

                                         o Call your financial representative or
                                           Signature Services to request an
                                           exchange.

By wire

[Clip Art]  o Deliver your completed     o Instruct your bank to wire the amount
              application to your          of your investment to:
              financial                       First Signature Bank & Trust
              representative, or mail         Account # 900000260
              it to Signature                 Routing # 211475000
              Services.
                                         Specify the fund name, your share
            o Obtain your account        class, your account number and the
              number by calling your     name(s) in which the account is
              financial representative   registered. Your bank may charge a fee
              or Signature Services.     to wire funds.

            o Instruct your bank to
              wire the amount of your
              investment to:
                First Signature Bank &
                Trust
                Account # 900000260
                Routing # 211475000

            Specify the fund name,
            your choice of share
            class, the new account
            number and the name(s) in
            which the account is
            registered. Your bank may
            charge a fee to wire
            funds.


By Internet

[Clip Art]  See "By exchange" and "By    o Verify that your bank or credit union
            wire."                         is a member of the Automated Clearing
                                           House (ACH) system.

                                         o Complete the "Bank Information"
                                           section on your account application.

                                         o Log on to www.jhfunds.com to initiate
                                           purchases using your authorized bank
                                           account.


By phone

[Clip Art]  See "By exchange" and "By    o Verify that your bank or credit union
            wire."                         is a member of the Automated Clearing
                                           House (ACH) system.

                                         o Complete the "Bank Information"
                                           section on your account application.

                                         o Call EASI-Line for automated service
                                           24 hours a day using your touch tone
                                           phone at 1-800-338-8080.

                                         o Call your financial representative or
                                           Signature Services between 8 A.M. and
                                           4 P.M. Eastern Time on most business
                                           days.

- ----------------------------------------
Address:
John Hancock Signature Services, Inc.
1 John Hancock Way, Suite 1000
Boston, MA 02217-1000

Phone Number: 1-800-225-5291

Or contact your financial representative
for instructions and assistance.
- ----------------------------------------

To open or add to an account using the Monthly Automatic Accumulation Program,
see "Additional investor services."


                                                                 YOUR ACCOUNT 27
<PAGE>

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Selling shares
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            Designed for                 To sell some or all of your shares

By letter

[Clip Art]  o Accounts of any type.      o Write a letter of instruction or
                                           complete a stock power indicating the
            o Sales of any amount.         fund name, your share class, your
                                           account number, the name(s) in which
                                           the account is registered and the
                                           dollar value or number of shares you
                                           wish to sell.

                                         o Include all signatures and any
                                           additional documents that may be
                                           required (see next page).

                                         o Mail the materials to Signature
                                           Services.

                                         o A check will be mailed to the name(s)
                                           and address in which the account is
                                           registered, or otherwise according to
                                           your letter of instruction.


By Internet

[Clip Art]  o Most accounts.             o Log on to www.jhfunds.com to initiate
                                           redemptions from your funds.
            o Sales of up to $100,000.

By phone

[Clip Art]  o Most accounts.             o Call EASI-Line for automated service
                                           24 hours a day using your touch tone
            o Sales of up to $100,000.     phone at 1-800-338-8080.

                                         o Call your financial representative or
                                           Signature Services between 8 A.M. and
                                           4 P.M. Eastern Time on most business
                                           days.


By wire or electronic funds transfer (EFT)

[Clip Art]  o Requests by letter to      o To verify that the Internet or
              sell any amount.             telephone redemption privilege is in
                                           place on an account, or to request
            o Requests by internet or      the form to add it to an existing
              phone to sell up to          account, call Signature Services.
              $100,000.
                                         o Amounts of $1,000 or more will be
                                           wired on the next business day. A $4
                                           fee will be deducted from your
                                           account.

                                         o Amounts of less than $1,000 may be
                                           sent by EFT or by check. Funds from
                                           EFT transactions are generally
                                           available by the second business day.
                                           Your bank may charge a fee for this
                                           service.

By exchange

[Clip Art]  o Accounts of any type.      o Obtain a current prospectus for the
                                           fund into which you are exchanging by
            o Sales of any amount.         Internet or by calling your financial
                                           representative or Signature Services.

                                         o Log on to www.jhfunds.com to process
                                           exchanges between your funds.

                                         o Call EASI-Line for automated service
                                           24 hours a day using your touch tone
                                           phone at 1-800-338-8080.

                                         o Call your financial representative or
                                           Signature Services to request an
                                           exchange.

To sell shares through a systematic withdrawal plan, see "Additional investor
services."


28  YOUR ACCOUNT
<PAGE>

Selling shares in writing In certain circumstances, you will need to make your
request to sell shares in writing. You may need to include additional items with
your request unless they were previously provided to Signature Services and are
still accurate. These items are shown in the table below. You may also need to
include a signature guarantee, which protects you against fraudulent orders. You
will need a signature guarantee if:

o  your address of record has changed within the past 30 days
o  you are selling more than $100,000 worth of shares
o  you are requesting payment other than by a check mailed to the address of
   record and payable to the registered owner(s)

You will need to obtain your signature guarantee from
a member of the Signature Guarantee Medallion Program. Most brokers and
securities dealers are members of this program. A notary public CANNOT provide a
signature guarantee.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Seller                                    Requirements for written requests
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                      [Clip Art]

Owners of individual, joint or            o Letter of instruction.
UGMA/UTMA accounts (custodial accounts
for minors).                              o On the letter, the signatures of all
                                            persons authorized to sign for the
                                            account, exactly as the account is
                                            registered.

                                          o Signature guarantee if applicable
                                            (see above).

Owners of corporate, sole                 o Letter of instruction.
proprietorship, general partner or
association accounts.                     o Corporate business/organization
                                            resolution, certified within the
                                            past 12 months, or a John Hancock
                                            Funds business/ organization
                                            certification form.

                                          o On the letter and the resolution,
                                            the signature of the person(s)
                                            authorized to sign for the account.

                                          o Signature guarantee if applicable
                                            (see above).

Owners or trustees of trust accounts.     o Letter of instruction.

                                          o On the letter, the signature(s) of
                                            the trustee(s).

                                          o Copy of the trust document certified
                                            within the past 12 months or a John
                                            Hancock Funds trust certification
                                            form.

                                          o Signature guarantee if applicable
                                            (see above).

Joint tenancy shareholders with rights    o Letter of instruction signed by
of survivorship whose co-tenants are        surviving tenant.
deceased.
                                          o Copy of death certificate.

                                          o Signature guarantee if applicable
                                            (see above).

Executors of shareholder estates.         o Letter of instruction signed by
                                            executor.

                                          o Copy of order appointing executor,
                                            certified within the past 12 months.

                                          o Signature guarantee if applicable
                                            (see above).

Administrators, conservators,             o Call 1-800-225-5291 for
guardians and other sellers or account      instructions.
types not listed above.

- ----------------------------------------
Address:
John Hancock Signature Services, Inc.
1 John Hancock Way, Suite 1000
Boston, MA 02217-1000

Phone Number: 1-800-225-5291

Or contact your financial representative
for instructions and assistance.
- ----------------------------------------


                                                                YOUR ACCOUNT  29
<PAGE>

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSACTION POLICIES

Valuation of shares The net asset value per share (NAV) for each fund and class
is determined each business day at the close of regular trading on the New York
Stock Exchange (typically 4 P.M. Eastern Time). The funds use market prices in
valuing portfolio securities, but may use fair-value estimates if reliable
market prices are unavailable. The funds may also value securities at fair value
if the value of these securities has been materially affected by events
occurring after the close of a foreign market. Foreign stock or other portfolio
securities held by the funds may trade on U.S. holidays and weekends, even
though the funds' shares will not be priced on those days. This may change a
fund's NAV on days when you cannot buy or sell shares.

Buy and sell prices When you buy shares, you pay the NAV plus any applicable
sales charges, as described earlier. When you sell shares, you receive the NAV
minus any applicable deferred sales charges.

Execution of requests Each fund is open on those days when the New York Stock
Exchange is open, typically Monday through Friday. Buy and sell requests are
executed at the next NAV to be calculated after Signature Services receives your
request in good order.


At times of peak activity, it may be difficult to place requests by phone.
During these times, consider using EASI-Line, accessing www.jhfunds.com, or
sending your request in writing.


In unusual circumstances, any fund may temporarily suspend the processing of
sell requests, or may postpone payment of proceeds for up to three business days
or longer, as allowed by federal securities laws.

Telephone transactions For your protection, telephone requests may be recorded
in order to verify their accuracy. Also for your protection, telephone
redemption transactions are not permitted on accounts whose names or addresses
have changed within the past 30 days. Proceeds from telephone transactions can
only be mailed to the address of record.

Exchanges You may exchange shares of one John Hancock fund for shares of the
same class of any other, generally without paying any additional sales charges.
The registration for both accounts involved must be identical. Class B and Class
C shares will continue to age from the original date and will retain the same
CDSC rate. However, if the new fund's CDSC rate is higher, then the rate will
increase. A CDSC rate that has increased will drop again with a future exchange
into a fund with a lower rate.

To protect the interests of other investors in the fund, a fund may cancel the
exchange privileges of any parties that, in the opinion of the fund, are using
market timing strategies or making more than seven exchanges per owner or
controlling party per calendar year. A fund may also refuse any exchange order.
A fund may change or cancel its exchange policies at any time, upon 60 days'
notice to its shareholders.

Certificated shares Most shares are electronically recorded. If you wish to have
certificates for your shares, please write to Signature Services. Certificated
shares can only be sold by returning the certificates to Signature Services,
along with a letter of instruction or a stock power and a signature guarantee.

Sales in advance of purchase payments When you place a request to sell shares
for which the purchase money has not yet been collected, the request will be
executed in a timely fashion, but the fund will not release the proceeds to you
until your purchase payment clears. This may take up to ten business days after
the purchase.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DIVIDENDS AND ACCOUNT POLICIES

Account statements In general, you will receive account statements as follows:

o  after every transaction (except a dividend reinvestment) that affects your
   account balance
o  after any changes of name or address of the registered owner(s)
o  in all other circumstances, every quarter

Every year you should also receive, if applicable, a Form 1099 tax information
statement, mailed by January 31.


Dividends The funds generally distribute most or all of their net earnings in
the form of dividends. Any capital gains are distributed annually. Balanced and
Sovereign Investors funds typically pay income dividends quarterly. Core Value
typically pays income dividends annually. The other funds do not usually pay
income dividends. Most of these dividends are from capital gains.


Dividend reinvestments Most investors have their dividends reinvested in
additional shares of the same fund and class. If you choose this option, or if
you do not indicate any choice, your dividends will be reinvested on the
dividend record date. Alternatively, you can choose to have a check for your
dividends mailed to


30  YOUR ACCOUNT
<PAGE>

you. However, if the check is not deliverable, your dividends will be
reinvested.

Taxability of dividends Dividends you receive from a fund, whether reinvested or
taken as cash, are generally considered taxable. Dividends from a fund's
short-term capital gains are taxable as ordinary income. Dividends from a fund's
long-term capital gains are taxable at a lower rate. Whether gains are
short-term or long-term depends on the fund's holding period. Some dividends
paid in January may be taxable as if they had been paid the previous December.

The Form 1099 that is mailed to you every January details your dividends and
their federal tax category, although you should verify your tax liability with
your tax professional.

Taxability of transactions Any time you sell or exchange shares, it is
considered a taxable event for you. Depending on the purchase price and the sale
price of the shares you sell or exchange, you may have a gain or a loss on the
transaction. You are responsible for any tax liabilities generated by your
transactions.

Small accounts (non-retirement only) If you draw down a non-retirement account
so that its total value is less than $1,000, you may be asked to purchase more
shares within 30 days. If you do not take action, your fund may close out your
account and mail you the proceeds. Alternatively, Signature Services may charge
you $10 a year to maintain your account. You will not be charged a CDSC if your
account is closed for this reason, and your account will not be closed if its
drop in value is due to fund performance or the effects of sales charges.

Year 2000 compliance The adviser and the funds' service providers are taking
steps to address any year 2000-related computer problems. However, there is some
risk that these problems could disrupt the issuers in which the funds invest,
the funds' operations or financial markets generally.

ADDITIONAL INVESTOR SERVICES

Monthly Automatic Accumulation Program (MAAP) MAAP lets you set up regular
investments from your paycheck or bank account to the John Hancock fund(s) of
your choice. You determine the frequency and amount of your investments, and you
can terminate your program at any time. To establish:

o  Complete the appropriate parts of your account application.
o  If you are using MAAP to open an account, make out a check ($25 minimum) for
   your first investment amount payable to "John Hancock Signature Services,
   Inc." Deliver your check and application to your financial representative or
   Signature Services.

Systematic withdrawal plan This plan may be used for routine bill payments or
periodic withdrawals from your account. To establish:

o  Make sure you have at least $5,000 worth of shares in your account.
o  Make sure you are not planning to invest more money in this account (buying
   shares during a period when you are also selling shares of the same fund is
   not advantageous to you, because of sales charges).
o  Specify the payee(s). The payee may be yourself or any other party, and there
   is no limit to the number of payees you may have, as long as they are all on
   the same payment schedule.
o  Determine the schedule: monthly, quarterly, semi-annually, annually or in
   certain selected months.
o  Fill out the relevant part of the account application. To add a systematic
   withdrawal plan to an existing account, contact your financial representative
   or Signature Services.

Retirement plans John Hancock Funds offers a range of retirement plans,
including traditional, Roth and Education IRAs, SIMPLE plans, SEPs, 401(k) plans
and other pension and profit-sharing plans. Using these plans, you can invest in
any John Hancock fund (except tax-free income funds) with a low minimum
investment of $250 or, for some group plans, no minimum investment at all. To
find out more, call Signature Services at 1-800-225-5291.


                                                                 YOUR ACCOUNT 31
<PAGE>

Fund details

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
BUSINESS STRUCTURE

The diagram below shows the basic business structure used by the John Hancock
equity funds. Each fund's board of trustees oversees the fund's business
activities and retains the services of the various firms that carry out the
fund's operations.


The trustees of the Balanced, Core Growth, Core Value, Large Cap Value, Mid Cap
Growth and Small Cap Growth funds have the power to change these funds'
respective investment goals without shareholder approval.


Management fees The management fees paid to the investment adviser by the John
Hancock equity funds last fiscal year are as follows:

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fund                                       % of net assets
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Balanced                                   0.60%
Core Equity                                0.74%
Core Growth                                0.00%
Core Value                                 0.00%
Large Cap Growth                           0.75%
Large Cap Value                            0.625%
Mid Cap Growth                             0.80%
Small Cap Growth                           0.75%
Small Cap Value                            0.70%
Sovereign Investors                        0.54%


              ---------------------------------------------------
                                  Shareholders
              ---------------------------------------------------

  Distribution and
shareholder services

              ---------------------------------------------------
                          Financial services firms and
                             their representatives

                     Advise current and prospective share-
                    holders on their fund investments, often
                  in the context of an overall financial plan.
              ---------------------------------------------------

              ---------------------------------------------------
                             Principal distributor

                            John Hancock Funds, Inc.

                    Markets the funds and distributes shares
                   through selling brokers, financial planners
                       and other financial representatives
              ---------------------------------------------------

              ---------------------------------------------------
                                 Transfer agent

                      John Hancock Signature Services, Inc.

                Handles shareholder services, including record-
               keeping and statements, distribution of dividends
                    and processing of buy and sell requests.
              ---------------------------------------------------

              ---------------------------------------------------
                                   Subadviser

                            Independence Investment
                                Associates, Inc.
                                53 State Street
                                Boston, MA 02109

                               Provides portfolio
                             management to certain
                                     funds.
              ---------------------------------------------------

              ---------------------------------------------------
                               Investment adviser

                          John Hancock Advisers, Inc.
                             101 Huntington Avenue
                             Boston, MA 02199-7603

                        Manages the funds' business and
                             investment activities
              ---------------------------------------------------

              ---------------------------------------------------
                                   Custodian

                           Investors Bank & Trust Co.

                      Holds the funds' assets, settles all
                     portfolio trades and collects most of
                        the valuation data required for
                          calculating each fund's NAV.
              ---------------------------------------------------

                                                                        Asset
                                                                      management

              ---------------------------------------------------
                                    Trustees

                         Oversee the funds' activities.
              ---------------------------------------------------


32  FUND DETAILS
<PAGE>

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS

These tables detail the performance of each fund's share classes, including
total return information showing how much an investment in the fund has
increased or decreased each year.

Balanced Fund

Figures audited by ___________________.


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A - period ended:                                               12/95        12/96          12/97          12/98     12/99
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                    <C>          <C>            <C>            <C>       <C>
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                  $9.84       $11.75         $12.27         $13.33
Net investment income (loss)                                           0.44(1)      0.41(1)        0.37(1)        0.36(1)
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments                 1.91         0.99           2.14           1.47
Total from investment operations                                       2.35         1.40           2.51           1.83
Less distributions:
  Dividends from net investment income                                (0.44)       (0.41)         (0.37)         (0.36)
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold               --        (0.47)         (1.08)         (0.74)
  Total distributions                                                 (0.44)       (0.88)         (1.45)         (1.10)
Net asset value, end of period                                       $11.75       $12.27         $13.33         $14.06
Total investment return at net asset value(2) (%)                     24.23        12.13          20.79          14.01
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                         69,811       71,242         84,264         97,072
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                            1.27         1.29           1.22           1.21
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)        3.99         3.33           2.77           2.61
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                              45           80            115             83


- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B - period ended:                                               12/95        12/96          12/97          12/98       12/99
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                    <C>          <C>           <C>            <C>          <C>
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                $ $9.84       $11.74         $12.27         $13.33
Net investment income (loss)                                           0.36(1)      0.32(1)        0.28(1)        0.27(1)
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments                 1.90         1.01           2.14           1.46
Total from investment operations                                       2.26         1.33           2.42           1.73
Less distributions:
  Dividends from net investment income                                (0.36)       (0.33)         (0.28)         (0.26)
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold               --        (0.47)         (1.08)         (0.74)
  Total distributions                                                 (0.36)       (0.80)         (1.36)         (1.00)
Net asset value, end of period                                       $11.74       $12.27         $13.33         $14.06
Total investment return at net asset value(2) (%)                     23.30        11.46          19.96          13.23
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                        787,827       90,855        101,249        115,682
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                            1.96         1.99           1.91           1.88
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)        3.31         2.63           2.08           1.93
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                              45           80            115             83

(1)   Based on the average of the shares outstanding at the end of each month.
(2)   Assumes dividend reinvestment and does not reflect the effect of sales
      charges.


                                                                 FUND DETAILS 33
<PAGE>

Core Equity Fund

Figures audited by _____________________________.

- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A - period ended:                                             5/94     5/95      5/96     12/96(1)    12/97      12/98   12/99
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                               <C>     <C>        <C>       <C>         <C>       <C>
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                              $12.16   $12.68    $14.41    $17.98      $19.42     $23.93
Net investment income (loss)(2)                                     0.28     0.32      0.20      0.13        0.10       0.05
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments              0.52     1.77      3.88      1.72        5.55       6.81
Total from investment operations                                    0.80     2.09      4.08      1.85        5.65       6.86
Less distributions:
  Dividends from net investment income                             (0.23)   (0.28)    (0.22)    (0.14)      (0.04)        --
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold         (0.05)   (0.08)    (0.29)    (0.27)      (1.10)     (0.65)
  Total distributions                                              (0.28)   (0.36)    (0.51)    (0.41)      (1.14)     (0.65)
Net asset value, end of period                                    $12.68   $14.41    $17.98    $19.42      $23.93     $30.14
Total investment return at net asset value(3) (%)                   6.60    16.98     29.12     10.33(4)    29.19      28.84
Total adjusted investment return at net asset value(3,5) (%)        6.15    16.94     28.47     10.08(4)    29.17         --
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                      66,612  101,418    14,878    31,013      92,204    200,962
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                         0.70     0.70      0.94      1.30(6)     1.42       1.39
Ratio of adjusted expenses to average net assets(7) (%)             1.15     0.74      1.59      1.73(6)     1.44         --
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)     2.20     2.43      1.55      1.16(6)     0.45       0.17
Ratio of adjusted net investment income (loss) to average
net assets(7) (%)                                                   1.75     2.39      0.90      0.73(6)     0.43         --
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                           43       71       157        35          62         50
Fee reduction per share(2) ($)                                      0.06    0.005      0.08      0.05        0.00(8)      --


- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B - period ended:                                                           5/96(9)    12/96(1)       12/97       12/98  12/99
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                             <C>         <C>           <C>         <C>
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                            $15.25      $17.96         $19.41      $23.80
Net investment income (loss)(2)                                                   0.09        0.05          (0.06)      (0.14)
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments                            2.71        1.72           5.56        6.74
Total from investment operations                                                  2.80        1.77           5.50        6.60
Less distributions:
  Dividends from net investment income                                           (0.09)      (0.05)         (0.01)         --
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold                          --       (0.27)         (1.10)      (0.65)
  Total distributions                                                            (0.09)      (0.32)         (1.11)      (0.65)
Net asset value, end of period                                                  $17.96      $19.41         $23.80      $29.75
Total investment return at net asset value(3) (%)                                18.46(4)     9.83(4)       28.39       27.90
Total adjusted investment return at net asset value(3,5) (%)                     17.59(4)     9.58(4)       28.37          --
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                                    15,125      42,461        134,939     347,045
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                                       2.00(6)     2.00(6)        2.12        2.09
Ratio of adjusted expenses to average net assets(7) (%)                           3.21(6)     2.43(6)        2.14          --
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)                   0.78(6)     0.45(6)       (0.25)      (0.53)
Ratio of adjusted net investment income (loss) to average net assets(7) (%)      (0.43)(6)    0.02(6)       (0.27)         --
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                                        157          35             62          50
Fee reduction per share(2) ($)                                                    0.13        0.05           0.00(8)       --


34  FUND DETAILS
<PAGE>

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class C -  period ended:                                         12/98(9)  12/99
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                            $27.81
Net investment income (loss)(2)                                  (0.09)
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments            2.68
Total from investment operations                                  2.59
Less distributions:
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold       (0.65)
Net asset value, end of period                                  $29.75
Total investment return at net asset value(3) (%)                 9.46(4)
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                     6,901
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                       2.12(6)
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)  (0.53)(6)
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                         50

(1)   Effective December 31, 1996, the fiscal year end changed from May 31 to
      December 31.
(2)   Based on the average of the shares outstanding at the end of each month.
(3)   Assumes dividend reinvestment and does not reflect the effect of sales
      charges.
(4)   Not annualized.
(5)   An estimated total return calculation that does not take into
      consideration fee reductions by the adviser during the periods shown.
(6)   Annualized.
(7)   Unreimbursed, without fee reduction.
(8)   Less than $0.01 per share.
(9)   Class B shares began operations on September 7, 1995. Class C shares began
      operations on May 1, 1998.


                                                                FUND DETAILS  35
<PAGE>

Core Growth Fund

Figures audited by ________________________.

- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class I - period ended:                                                              2/96(1)       2/97        2/98         2/99
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                                <C>           <C>         <C>          <C>
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                                $8.50         $9.29      $11.01       $14.88
Net investment income (loss)(2)                                                      0.03          0.05        0.04         0.01
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments                               0.81          2.16        4.34         3.40
Total from investment operations                                                     0.84          2.21        4.38         3.41
Less distributions:
  Dividends from net investment income                                              (0.03)        (0.04)      (0.03)       (0.02)
  Distributions in excess of net investment income                                     --            --          --        (0.00)(3)
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold                          (0.02)        (0.45)      (0.48)       (0.62)
  Total distributions                                                               (0.05)        (0.49)      (0.51)       (0.64)
Net asset value, end of period                                                      $9.29        $11.01      $14.88       $17.65
Total investment return at net asset value(4) (%)                                    9.94(5)      24.19       40.52        22.92
Total adjusted investment return at net asset value(4,6) (%)                        (5.63)(5)     17.40       37.95        21.89
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                                          549           883       4,605        7,855
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                                          0.95(7)       0.95        0.95         0.95
Ratio of adjusted expenses to average net assets(8,9) (%)                           38.57(7)       7.74        3.52         1.98
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)                      0.91(7)       0.49        0.34         0.06
Ratio of adjusted net investment income (loss) to average net assets(8,9) (%)      (36.71)(7)     (6.30)      (2.23)       (0.97)
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                                            21           142          91           54
Fee reduction per share(2) ($)                                                       1.36          0.68        0.33         0.17

(1)   Began operations on October 2, 1995.
(2)   Based on the average of the shares outstanding at the end of each month.
(3)   Less than $0.01 per share.
(4)   Total investment return assumes dividend reinvestment.
(5)   Not annualized.
(6)   An estimated total return calculation, which does not take into
      consideration fee reductions by the adviser during the periods shown.
(7)   Annualized.
(8)   Unreimbursed, without fee reduction.
(9)   Adjusted expenses as a percentage of average net assets are expected to
      decrease and adjusted net income as a percentage of average net assets is
      expected to increase as the net assets of the fund grow.


36  FUND DETAILS
<PAGE>

Core Value Fund

The financial information presented is for periods prior to reclassification as
Class A shares on July 1, 1999.

Figures audited by ______________________.

- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A - period ended:                                                              2/96(1)         2/97         2/98         2/99
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                                <C>             <C>          <C>          <C>
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                                $8.50           $9.47       $10.88       $13.93
Net investment income (loss)(2)                                                      0.10            0.23         0.21         0.15
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments                               0.96            1.77         3.33         1.23
Total from investment operations                                                     1.06            2.00         3.54         1.38
Less distributions:
  Dividends from net investment income                                              (0.09)          (0.19)       (0.13)       (0.18)
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold                             --           (0.40)       (0.36)       (2.77)
  Total distributions                                                               (0.09)          (0.59)       (0.49)       (2.95)
Net asset value, end of period                                                      $9.47          $10.88       $13.93       $12.36
Total investment return at net asset value(3) (%)                                   12.52(4)        21.36        32.97         9.87
Total adjusted investment return at net asset value(3,5) (%)                        (1.18)(4)       15.92        32.02         8.94
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                                          682           1,323        7,747        6,685
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                                          0.95(6)         0.95         0.95         0.95
Ratio of adjusted expenses to average net assets(7,8) (%)                           34.06(6)         6.39         1.90         1.88
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)                      2.81(6)         2.26         1.60         1.03
Ratio of adjusted net investment income (loss) to average net assets(7,8) (%)      (30.30)(6)       (3.18)        0.65         0.10
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                                            12              66          119           61
Fee reduction per share(2) ($)                                                       1.22            0.55         0.12         0.13

(1)   Began operations on October 2, 1995.
(2)   Based on the average of the shares outstanding at the end of each month.
(3)   Total investment return assumes dividend reinvestment.
(4)   Not annualized.
(5)   An estimated total return calculation, which does not take into
      consideration fee reductions by the adviser during the periods shown.
(6)   Annualized.
(7)   Unreimbursed, without fee reduction.
(8)   Adjusted expenses as a percentage of average net assets are expected to
      decrease and adjusted net income as a percentage of average net assets is
      expected to increase as the net assets of the fund grow.


                                                                 FUND DETAILS 37
<PAGE>

Large Cap Growth Fund

Figures audited by ____________________.

- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A - period ended:                                              12/94        12/95         10/96(1)     10/97        10/98
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                <C>          <C>           <C>          <C>          <C>
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                $17.40       $15.89        $19.51       $23.28       $24.37
Net investment income (loss)                                         (0.10)       (0.09)(2)     (0.13)(2)    (0.12)(2)    (0.11)(2)
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments               (1.21)        4.40          3.90         3.49         2.17
Total from investment operations                                     (1.31)        4.31          3.77         3.37         2.06
Less distributions:
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold           (0.20)       (0.69)           --        (2.28)       (4.16)
Net asset value, end of period                                      $15.89       $19.51        $23.28       $24.37       $22.27
Total investment return at net asset value(3) (%)                    (7.50)       27.17         19.32(4)     16.05         9.80
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                       146,466      241,700       279,425      303,067      381,591
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                           1.65         1.48          1.48(5)      1.44         1.40
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)      (0.64)       (0.46)        (0.73)(5)    (0.51)       (0.50)
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                             52           68(7)         59          133          153(7)


- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A - period ended:                                               10/99
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                 $22.27
Net investment income (loss)                                          (0.17)(2)
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments                 5.65
Total from investment operations                                       5.48
Less distributions:
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold            (2.71)
Net asset value, end of period                                       $25.04
Total investment return at net asset value(3) (%)                     27.58
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                        484,196
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                            1.35(6)
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)       (0.70)
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                             183


- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B - period ended:                                              12/94(8)     12/95         10/96(1)     10/97        10/98
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                 <C>          <C>           <C>          <C>         <C>
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                $17.16       $15.83        $19.25       $22.83       $23.70
Net investment income (loss)(2)                                      (0.20)       (0.26)        (0.26)       (0.27)       (0.25)
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments               (0.93)        4.37          3.84         3.42         2.09
Total from investment operations                                     (1.13)        4.11          3.58         3.15         1.84
Less distributions:
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold           (0.20)       (0.69)           --        (2.28)       (4.16)
Net asset value, end of period                                      $15.83       $19.25        $22.83       $23.70       $21.38
Total investment return at net asset value(3) (%)                    (6.56)(4)    26.01         18.60(4)     15.33         9.04
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                         3,807       15,913        25,474       36,430      217,448
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                           2.38(5)      2.31          2.18(5)      2.13         2.08
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)      (1.25)(5)    (1.39)        (1.42)(5)    (1.20)       (1.16)
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                             52           68(7)         59          133          153(7)


- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B - period ended:                                               10/99
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                 $21.38
Net investment income (loss)(2)                                       (0.31)
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments                 5.38
Total from investment operations                                       5.07
Less distributions:
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold            (2.71)
Net asset value, end of period                                       $23.74
Total investment return at net asset value(3) (%)                     26.70
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                        312,046
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                            2.02(6)
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)       (1.37)
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                             183

- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class C -  period ended:                                              10/98(8)      10/99
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                  <C>           <C>
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                 $21.43        $21.37
Net investment income (loss)(2)                                       (0.10)        (0.31)
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments                 0.04          5.38
Total from investment operations                                      (0.06)         5.07
Less distributions:
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold               --         (2.71)
Net asset value, end of period                                       $21.37        $23.73
Total investment return at net asset value(3) (%)                     (0.28)(4)     26.72
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                            152         1,457
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                            2.10(5)       2.05(6)
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)       (1.14)(5)     (1.36)
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                             153(7)        183

(1)   Effective October 31, 1996, the fiscal year end changed from December 31
      to October 31.
(2)   Based on the average of the shares outstanding at the end of each month.
(3)   Assumes dividend reinvestment and does not reflect the effect of sales
      charges.
(4)   Not annualized.
(5)   Annualized.
(6)   Expense ratios do not include interest expense due to bank loans, which
      amounted to less than 0.01%.
(7)   Excludes merger activity.
(8)   Class B and Class C shares began operations on January 3, 1994 and June 1,
      1998, respectively.


38 FUND DETAILS
<PAGE>

Large Cap Value Fund

Figures audited by ___________________.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A - period ended:                                                          8/94         8/95(1)      8/96        12/96(2)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                           <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                           $12.08       $11.42       $13.38       $15.07
Net investment income (loss)(3)                                                  0.32         0.21         0.19         0.05
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments,
financial futures contracts and foreign currency transactions                   (0.61)        1.95         1.84         2.15
Total from investment operations                                                (0.29)        2.16         2.03         2.20
Less distributions:
  Distributions from net investment income                                      (0.37)       (0.20)       (0.19)       (0.08)
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold                         --           --        (0.15)       (1.57)
  Total distributions                                                           (0.37)       (0.20)       (0.34)       (1.65)
Net asset value, end of period                                                 $11.42       $13.38       $15.07       $15.62
Total investment return at net asset value(4) (%)                               (2.39)       19.22        15.33        14.53(5)
Total adjusted investment return at net asset value(4) (%)                         --           --           --           --
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                                  121,160      130,183      139,548      163,154
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                                      1.31         1.30         1.17         1.22(6)
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)                  2.82         1.82         1.28         0.85(6)
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                                       195           99           74           26


- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A - period ended:                                                         12/97           12/98       12/99
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                           <C>             <C>            <C>


Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                           $15.62          $19.32
Net investment income (loss)(3)                                                  0.12            0.16
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments,
financial futures contracts and foreign currency transactions                    5.57            2.85
Total from investment operations                                                 5.69            3.01
Less distributions:
  Distributions from net investment income                                      (0.07)          (0.14)
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold                      (1.92)          (0.93)
  Total distributions                                                           (1.99)          (1.07)
Net asset value, end of period                                                 $19.32          $21.26
Total investment return at net asset value(4) (%)                               36.71           15.94
Total adjusted investment return at net asset value(4) (%)                         --           15.92
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                                  303,313         421,218
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                                      1.12            1.16(7)
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)                  0.65            0.79(7)
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                                       102(8)           64


- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B - period ended:                                                          8/94         8/95(1)      8/96        12/96(2)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                           <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                           $12.10       $11.44       $13.41       $15.10
Net investment income (loss)(3)                                                  0.24         0.13         0.08         0.01
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments,
financial futures contracts and foreign currency transactions                   (0.61)        1.96         1.85         2.14
Total from investment operations                                                (0.37)        2.09         1.93         2.15
Less distributions:
  Distributions from net investment income                                      (0.29)       (0.12)       (0.09)       (0.02)
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold                         --           --        (0.15)       (1.57)
  Total distributions                                                           (0.29)       (0.12)       (0.24)       (1.59)
Net asset value, end of period                                                 $11.44       $13.41       $15.10       $15.66
Total investment return at net asset value(4) (%)                               (3.11)       18.41        14.49        14.15(5)
Total adjusted investment return at net asset value(4) (%)                         --           --           --           --
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                                  114,025      114,723      125,781      146,399
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                                      2.06         2.03         1.90         1.98(6)
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)                  2.07         1.09         0.55         0.10(6)
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                                       195           99           74           26


- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B - period ended:                                                         12/97           12/98        12/99
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                           <C>             <C>             <C>


Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                           $15.66          $19.31
Net investment income (loss)(3)                                                 (0.02)           0.01
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments,
financial futures contracts and foreign currency transactions                    5.60            2.84
Total from investment operations                                                 5.58            2.85
Less distributions:
  Distributions from net investment income                                      (0.01)          (0.03)
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold                      (1.92)          (0.93)
  Total distributions                                                           (1.93)          (0.96)
Net asset value, end of period                                                 $19.31          $21.20
Total investment return at net asset value(4) (%)                               35.80           15.05
Total adjusted investment return at net asset value(4) (%)                         --           15.03
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                                  340,334         547,945
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                                      1.87            1.91(7)
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)                 (0.10)           0.05(7)
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                                       102(8)           64


                                                                 FUND DETAILS 39
<PAGE>

Large Cap Value Fund continued


- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class C - period ended:                                              12/98(9)        12/99
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                $22.03
Net investment income (loss)(3)                                       0.03
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments,
financial futures contracts and foreign currency transactions         0.09
Total from investment operations                                      0.12
Less distributions:
  Distributions from net investment income                           (0.02)
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold           (0.93)
  Total distributions                                                (0.95)
Net asset value, end of period                                      $21.20
Total investment return at net asset value(4) (%)                     0.83(5)
Total adjusted investment return at net asset value(4) (%)            0.82(5)
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                         4,711
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                           1.92(6,7)
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)       0.28(6,7)
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                             64

(1)   On December 22, 1994, John Hancock Advisers, Inc. became the investment
      adviser of the fund.
(2)   Effective December 31, 1996, the fiscal year end changed from August 31 to
      December 31.
(3)   Based on the average of the shares outstanding at the end of each month.
(4)   Assumes dividend reinvestment and does not reflect the effect of sales
      charges.
(5)   Not annualized.
(6)   Annualized.
(7)   Reflects voluntary management fee reduction in effect during the year
      ended December 31, 1998. As a result of such fee reductions, expenses of
      Class A, Class B and Class C shares of the fund reflect reductions of less
      than $0.01 per share. Absent such reductions the ratio of expenses to
      average net assets would have been 1.18%, 1.93% and 1.94% for Class A,
      Class B and Class C shares, respectively, and the ratio of net investment
      income to average net assets would have been 0.77%, 0.03% and 0.26% for
      Class A, Class B and Class C shares, respectively.
(8)   Portfolio turnover rate excludes merger activity.
(9)   Class C shares began operations on May 1, 1998.


40 FUND DETAILS
<PAGE>

Mid Cap Growth Fund

Figures audited by ____________________________.


- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A - period ended:                                               10/95        10/96        10/97        10/98        10/99
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                 <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                  $7.93        $9.32       $10.92       $11.40        $9.11
Net investment income (loss)(1)                                       (0.07)       (0.11)       (0.06)       (0.09)       (0.12)
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments                 1.46         3.34         1.00        (0.89)        3.86
Total from investment operations                                       1.39         3.23         0.94        (0.98)        3.74
Less distributions:
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold               --        (1.63)       (0.46)       (1.31)          --
Net asset value, end of period                                        $9.32       $10.92       $11.40        $9.11       $12.85
Total investment return at net asset value(2) (%)                     17.53        36.15         8.79        (9.40)       41.05
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                        101,562      156,578      141,997      101,138      112,082
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                            1.59         1.59         1.59         1.59         1.60
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)       (0.87)       (1.00)       (0.57)       (0.86)       (1.14)
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                             155          240          317          168          153


- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B - period ended:                                               10/95        10/96        10/97        10/98        10/99
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                 <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                  $7.87        $9.19       $10.67       $11.03        $8.72
Net investment income (loss)(1)                                       (0.13)       (0.18)       (0.13)       (0.15)       (0.18)
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments                 1.45         3.29         0.95        (0.85)        3.68
Total from investment operations                                       1.32         3.11         0.82        (1.00)        3.50
Less distributions:
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold               --        (1.63)       (0.46)       (1.31)          --
Net asset value, end of period                                        $9.19       $10.67       $11.03        $8.72       $12.22
Total investment return at net asset value(2) (%)                     16.77        35.34         7.84        (9.97)       40.14
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                        137,363      238,901      204,812      134,188      145,816
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                            2.30         2.29         2.28         2.27         2.23
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)       (1.55)       (1.70)       (1.25)       (1.54)       (1.77)
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                             155          240          317          168          153


- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class C - period ended:                                                                                      10/98(3)     10/99
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                                                         <C>          <C>
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                                                         $9.99        $8.72
Net investment income (loss)(1)                                                                              (0.06)       (0.19)
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments                                                       (1.21)        3.68
Total from investment operations                                                                             (1.27)        3.49
Net asset value, end of period                                                                               $8.72       $12.21
Total investment return at net asset value(2) (%)                                                           (12.71)(4)    40.02
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                                                                   100          276
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                                                                   2.29(5)      2.30
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)                                              (1.66)(5)    (1.82)
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                                                                    168          153

(1)   Based on the average of the shares outstanding at the end of each month.
(2)   Assumes dividend reinvestment and does not reflect the effect of sales
      charges.
(3)   Class C shares began operations on June 1, 1998.
(4)   Not annualized.
(5)   Annualized.


                                                                 FUND DETAILS 41
<PAGE>

Small Cap Growth Fund

Figures audited by __________________.

- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A(1) - period ended:                                           10/95(2)    10/96       10/97          10/98          10/99
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                <C>         <C>         <C>            <C>            <C>
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                 $6.71       $9.02      $10.22         $12.35          $8.41
Net investment income (loss)(3)                                      (0.07)      (0.09)      (0.07)         (0.08)         (0.12)
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments                2.38        1.29        2.41          (1.34)          4.59
Total from investment operations                                      2.31        1.20        2.34          (1.42)          4.47
Less distributions:
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold              --          --       (0.21)         (2.52)         (0.23)
Net asset value, end of period                                       $9.02      $10.22      $12.35          $8.41         $12.65
Total investment return at net asset value(4) (%)                    34.56       13.27       23.35         (14.14)         54.41
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                       179,481     218,497     209,384        179,700        266,886
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                           1.38        1.32        1.29(5)        1.36(5)        1.34(5)
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)      (0.83)      (0.86)      (0.57)         (1.02)         (1.17)
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                             23          44          96            103           1.04

- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B(1) - period ended:                                           10/95(2)    10/96       10/97          10/98          10/99
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                <C>         <C>         <C>            <C>            <C>
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                 $6.51       $8.70       $9.78         $11.72          $7.81
Net investment income (loss)(3)                                      (0.11)      (0.15)      (0.14)         (0.15)         (0.18)
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments                2.30        1.23        2.29          (1.24)          4.24
Total from investment operations                                      2.19        1.08        2.15          (1.39)          4.06
Less distributions:
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold              --          --       (0.21)         (2.52)         (0.23)
Net asset value, end of period                                       $8.70       $9.78      $11.72          $7.81         $11.64
Total investment return at net asset value(4) (%)                    33.60       12.48       22.44         (14.80)         53.31
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                       393,478     451,268     472,594        361,992        478,468
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                           2.11        2.05        2.02(5)        2.07(5)        2.03(5)
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)      (1.55)      (1.59)      (1.30)         (1.73)         (1.87)
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                             23          44          96            103            104

- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class C - period ended:                                                                                     10/98(6)       10/99
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                                                        <C>            <C>
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                                                        $8.96          $7.81
Net investment income (loss)(3)                                                                             (0.03)         (0.19)
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments                                                      (1.12)          4.23
Total from investment operations                                                                            (1.15)          4.04
Less distributions:
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold                                                     --          (0.23)
Net asset value, end of period                                                                              $7.81         $11.62
Total investment return at net asset value(4) (%)                                                          (12.83)(7)      53.05
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                                                                  468          3,866
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                                                                  2.11(5,8)      2.09(5)
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)                                             (1.86)(8)      (1.94)
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                                                                   103            104

(1)   All per share amounts and net asset values have been restated to reflect
      the four-for-one stock split effective May 1, 1998.
(2)   On December 22, 1994, John Hancock Advisers, Inc. became the investment
      adviser of the fund.
(3)   Based on the average of the shares outstanding at the end of each month.
(4)   Assumes dividend reinvestment and does not reflect the effect of sales
      charges.
(5)   Expense ratios do not include interest expense due to bank loans, which
      amounted to less than $0.01 per share.
(6)   Class C shares began operations on June 1, 1998.
(7)   Not annualized.
(8)   Annualized.


42  FUND DETAILS
<PAGE>

Small Cap Value Fund

Figures audited by ____________________.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A - period ended:                                                12/94(1)         12/95         12/96         12/97
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                    <C>             <C>           <C>           <C>
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                   $8.50            $8.99        $10.39        $10.32
Net investment income (loss)(3)                                         0.18             0.21          0.14          0.06
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments                  0.48             1.60          1.17          2.52
Total from investment operations                                        0.66             1.81          1.31          2.58
Less distributions:
  Dividends from net investment income                                 (0.17)           (0.20)        (0.14)        (0.03)
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold                --            (0.21)        (1.24)        (0.60)
  Total distributions                                                  (0.17)           (0.41)        (1.38)        (0.63)
Net asset value, end of period                                         $8.99           $10.39        $10.32        $12.27
Total investment return at net asset value(4) (%)                       7.81(5)         20.26         12.91         25.25
Total adjusted investment return at net asset value(4,6) (%)            7.30(5)         19.39         12.20         24.65
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                           4,420           12,845        15,853        20,961
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                             0.99(7)          0.98          0.99          0.99
Ratio of adjusted expenses to average net assets(8) (%)                 4.98(7)          1.85          1.70          1.59
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)         2.10(7)          2.04          1.31          0.47
Ratio of adjusted net investment income (loss) to
average net assets(8) (%)                                              (1.89)(7)         1.17          0.60         (0.13)
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                              0.3                9            72           140
Fee reduction per share(3) ($)                                          0.34             0.09          0.08          0.07


- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A - period ended:                                                     10/98(2)         10/99
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                        <C>              <C>
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                       $12.27           $10.82
Net investment income (loss)(3)                                              0.02            (0.09)
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments                      (1.47)            6.67
Total from investment operations                                            (1.45)            6.58
Less distributions:
  Dividends from net investment income                                         --               --
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold                     --            (0.13)
  Total distributions                                                          --            (0.13)
Net asset value, end of period                                             $10.82           $17.27
Total investment return at net asset value(4) (%)                          (11.82)(5)        61.39
Total adjusted investment return at net asset value(4,6) (%)               (12.33)(5)        61.24
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                               22,528           51,746
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                                  1.01(7)          1.39
Ratio of adjusted expenses to average net assets(8) (%)                      1.62(7)          1.54
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)              0.25(7)         (0.67)
Ratio of adjusted net investment income (loss) to
average net assets(8) (%)                                                   (0.36)(7)        (0.82)
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                                    69              140
Fee reduction per share(3) ($)                                               0.06             0.02


- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B -  period ended:                                               12/94(1)         12/95         12/96         12/97
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                    <C>             <C>           <C>           <C>
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                   $8.50            $9.00        $10.38        $10.31
Net investment income (loss)(3)                                         0.13             0.12          0.07         (0.03)
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments                  0.48             1.59          1.17          2.53
Total from investment operations                                        0.61             1.71          1.24          2.50
Less distributions:
  Dividends from net investment income                                 (0.11)           (0.12)        (0.07)           --
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold                --            (0.21)        (1.24)        (0.60)
  Total distributions                                                  (0.11)           (0.33)        (1.31)        (0.60)
Net asset value, end of period                                         $9.00           $10.38        $10.31        $12.21
Total investment return at net asset value(4) (%)                       7.15(5)         19.11         12.14         24.41
Total adjusted investment return at net asset value(4,6) (%)            6.64(5)         18.24         11.43         23.81
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                           3,296           16,994        22,097        35,033
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                             1.72(7)          1.73          1.69          1.69
Ratio of adjusted expenses to average net assets(8) (%)                 5.71(7)          2.60          2.40          2.29
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)         1.53(7)          1.21          0.62         (0.24)
Ratio of adjusted net investment income (loss) to
average net assets(8) (%)                                              (2.46)(7)         0.34         (0.09)        (0.84)
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                              0.3                9            72           140
Fee reduction per share(3) ($)                                          0.34             0.09          0.08          0.07

- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B -  period ended:                                                   10/98(2)         10/99
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                       <C>              <C>
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                      $12.21           $10.71
Net investment income (loss)(3)                                            (0.04)           (0.18)
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments                     (1.46)            6.58
Total from investment operations                                           (1.50)            6.40
Less distributions:
  Dividends from net investment income                                        --               --
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold                    --            (0.13)
  Total distributions                                                         --            (0.13)
Net asset value, end of period                                            $10.71           $16.98
Total investment return at net asset value(4) (%)                         (12.29)(5)        60.33
Total adjusted investment return at net asset value(4,6) (%)              (12.80)(5)        60.18
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                              30,637           75,103
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                                 1.71(7)          2.06
Ratio of adjusted expenses to average net assets(8) (%)                     2.32(7)          2.21
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)            (0.45)(7)        (1.34)
Ratio of adjusted net investment income (loss) to
average net assets(8) (%)                                                  (1.06)(7)        (1.49)
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                                   69              140
Fee reduction per share(3) ($)                                              0.06             0.02


                                                                 FUND DETAILS 43
<PAGE>

Small Cap Value Fund continued


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class C -  period ended:                                                          10/98(1)      10/99
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                              <C>           <C>
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                             $13.39        $10.71
Net investment income (loss)(3)                                                   (0.03)        (0.19)
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments                            (2.65)         6.58
Total from investment operations                                                  (2.68)         6.39
Less distributions:
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold                           --         (0.13)
Net asset value, end of period                                                   $10.71        $16.97
Total investment return at net asset value(4) (%)                                (20.01)(5)     60.24
Total adjusted investment return at net asset value(4,6) (%)                     (20.32)(5)     60.09
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                                       $422        $3,774
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                                        1.71(7)       2.09
Ratio of adjusted expenses to average net assets(8) (%)                            2.32(7)       2.29
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)                   (0.54)(7)     (1.43)
Ratio of adjusted net investment income (loss) to average net assets(8) (%)       (1.15)(7)     (1.58)
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                                          69           140
Fee reduction per share(3) ($)                                                     0.04          0.02

(1)   Class A and Class B shares began operations on January 3, 1994. Class C
      shares began operations on May 1, 1998.
(2)   Effective October 31, 1998, the fiscal year end changed from December 31
      to October 31.
(3)   Based on the average of the shares outstanding at the end of each month.
(4)   Assumes dividend reinvestment and does not reflect the effect of sales
      charges.
(5)   Not annualized.
(6)   An estimated total return calculation that does not take into
      consideration fee reductions by the adviser during the periods shown.
(7)   Annualized.
(8)   Unreimbursed, without fee reduction.


44 FUND DETAILS
<PAGE>

Sovereign Investors Fund

Figures audited by Ernst & Young LLP.


- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A - period ended:                                                12/95       12/96        12/97         12/98        12/99
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                <C>         <C>          <C>           <C>              <C>
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                  $14.24      $17.87       $19.48        $22.41
Net investment income (loss)                                            0.40        0.36(1)      0.32(1)       0.31(1)
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments                  3.71        2.77         5.31          3.11
Total from investment operations                                        4.11        3.13         5.63          3.42
Less distributions:
  Dividends from net investment income                                 (0.40)      (0.36)       (0.32)        (0.31)
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold             (0.08)      (1.16)       (2.38)        (1.29)
  Total distributions                                                  (0.48)      (1.52)       (2.70)        (1.60)
Net asset value, end of period                                        $17.87      $19.48       $22.41        $24.23
Total investment return at net asset value(2) (%)                      29.15       17.57        29.14         15.62
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                       1,280,321   1,429,523    1,748,490     1,884,460
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                             1.14        1.13         1.06          1.03
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)         2.45        1.86         1.44          1.33
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                               46          59           62            51

- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B -  period ended:                                                12/95       12/96        12/97         12/98      12/99
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                   <C>         <C>          <C>           <C>           <C>
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                   $14.24      $17.86       $19.46        $22.38
Net investment income (loss)(1)                                          0.27        0.21         0.16          0.14
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments                   3.71        2.77         5.29          3.11
Total from investment operations                                         3.98        2.98         5.45          3.25
Less distributions:
  Dividends from net investment income                                  (0.28)      (0.22)       (0.15)        (0.14)
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold              (0.08)      (1.16)       (2.38)        (1.29)
  Total distributions                                                   (0.36)      (1.38)       (2.53)        (1.43)
Net asset value, end of period                                         $17.86      $19.46       $22.38        $24.20
Total investment return at net asset value(2) (%)                       28.16       16.67        28.14         14.79
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                          257,781     406,523      610,976       790,277
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                              1.90        1.91         1.83          1.79
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)          1.65        1.10         0.67          0.58
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                                46          59           62            51

- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class C -  period ended:                                               12/98(3)    12/99
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Per share operating performance
Net asset value, beginning of period                                  $24.43
Net investment income (loss)(1)                                         0.13
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments                  1.07
Total from investment operations                                        1.20
Less distributions:
  Distributions from net investment income                             (0.12)
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments sold             (1.29)
  Total distributions                                                  (1.41)
Net asset value, end of period                                        $24.22
Total investment return at net asset value(2) (%)                       5.18(4)
Ratios and supplemental data
Net assets, end of period (000s omitted) ($)                           4,627
Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)                             1.67(5)
Ratio of net investment income to average net assets (%)                0.84(5)
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                               51

(1)   Based on the average of the shares outstanding at the end of each month.
(2)   Assumes dividend reinvestment and does not reflect the effect of sales
      charges.
(3)   Class B shares began operations on January 3, 1994. Class C shares began
      operations on May 1, 1998.
(4)   Not annualized.
(5)   Annualized.
</TABLE>


                                                                 FUND DETAILS 45
<PAGE>



<PAGE>



<PAGE>

For more information
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Two documents are available that offer further information on John Hancock
equity funds:

Annual/Semiannual Report to Shareholders

Includes financial statements, a discussion of the market conditions and
investment strategies that significantly affected performance, as well as the
auditors' report (in annual report only).

Statement of Additional Information (SAI)

The SAI contains more detailed information on all aspects of the funds. The
current annual report is included in the SAI.

A current SAI has been filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission and is
incorporated by reference into (is legally a part of) this prospectus.

To request a free copy of the current annual/semiannual report or the SAI,
please contact John Hancock:

By mail:
John Hancock Signature Services, Inc.
1 John Hancock Way, Suite 1000
Boston, MA 02217-1000

By phone: 1-800-225-5291

By EASI-Line: 1-800-338-8080

By TDD: 1-800-544-6713

On the Internet: www.jhfunds.com

Or you may view or obtain these documents from the SEC:


In person: at the SEC's Public Reference Room in Washington, DC. For access to
the Reference Room call 1-202-942-8090

By mail: Public Reference Section Securities and Exchange Commission Washington,
DC 20549-0102 (duplicating fee required)

By electronic request:
[email protected]
(duplicating fee required)


On the Internet: www.sec.gov

[LOGO] John Hancock Funds                               John Hancock Funds, Inc.
       A Global Investment Management Firm              101 Huntington Avenue
                                                        Boston MA 02199-7603

(C)2000 John Hancock Funds, Inc.
EQTPN  5/00





<PAGE>


                          JOHN HANCOCK CORE EQUITY FUND

                       Class A, Class B and Class C Shares
                       Statement of Additional Information

                                   May 1, 2000


This Statement of Additional Information provides information about John Hancock
Core Equity Fund (the "Fund"), in addition to the information that is contained
in the combined Equity Funds' current Prospectus (the "Prospectus"). The Fund is
a diversified series of John Hancock Capital Series (the "Trust").


This Statement of Additional Information is not a prospectus. It should be read
in conjunction with the Prospectus, a copy of which can be obtained free of
charge by writing or telephoning:

                      John Hancock Signature Services, Inc.
                         1 John Hancock Way, Suite 1000
                              Boston, MA 02217-1000
                                1-(800)-225-5291

                                TABLE OF CONTENTS

                                                                            Page

Organization of the Fund.................................................    2
Investment Objective and Policies........................................    2
Investment Restrictions..................................................   10
Those Responsible for Management.........................................   12
Investment Advisory and Other Services...................................   20
Distribution Contracts...................................................   23
Sales Compensation.......................................................   25
Net Asset Value..........................................................   27
Initial Sales Charge on Class A and Class C Shares.......................   28
Deferred Sales Charge on Class B and Class C Shares......................   30
Special Redemptions......................................................   35
Additional Services and Programs.........................................   35
Purchase and Recemptions Through Third Parties...........................   37
Description of the Fund's Shares.........................................   37
Tax Status...............................................................   39
Calculation of Performance ..............................................   43
Brokerage Allocation.....................................................   44
Transfer Agent Services..................................................   47
Custody of Portfolio.....................................................   47
Independent Auditors.....................................................   47
Appendix A - Description of Investment Ratings...........................  A-1
Appendix B - Description of Bond Ratings.................................  B-1
Financial Statements.....................................................  F-1



                                       1
<PAGE>


ORGANIZATION OF THE FUND

The Fund is a series of the Trust,  an open-end  investment  management  company
organized as a Massachusetts  business trust under the laws of The  Commonwealth
of Massachusetts.


John Hancock Advisers, Inc. (the "Adviser") is the Fund's investment adviser.
The Adviser is an indirect, wholly-owned subsidiary of John Hancock Life
Insurance Company (formerly John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company) (the
"Life Company"), a Massachusetts life insurance company chartered in 1862 with
national headquarters at John Hancock Place, Boston, Massachusetts. The Life
Company is wholly owned by John Hancock Financial Services, Inc., a Delaware
corporation organized in February, 2000.


On June 3,  1996,  the Fund  changed  its name  from John  Hancock  Independence
Diversified Core Equity Fund to John Hancock  Independence Equity Fund. Prior to
May 1, 1999, the Fund was called John Hancock Independence Equity Fund.

The Fund has one sub-adviser: Independent Investment Associates, Inc. ("IIA" or
"Sub-Adviser") which is a subsidiary of the Life Company.

INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE AND POLICIES


The following information supplements the discussion of the Fund's investment
objective and policies discussed in the Prospectus. Appendix A contains further
information describing investment risk. The investment objective of the Fund is
fundamental and may only be changed by the Trustees with shareholder approval.
There is no assurance that the Fund will achieve its investment objective.


The  investment  objective of the Fund is to seek  above-average  total  return,
consisting  of capital  appreciation  and income.  The Fund will  diversify  its
investments  to  create a  portfolio  with a risk  profile  and  characteristics
similar to the  Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index.  Consequently,  the Fund will
invest in a number of industry  groups without  concentration  in any particular
industry.  The Fund's  investments will be subject to the market fluctuation and
risks  inherent in all  securities.  Under normal  market  conditions,  the Fund
invests principally (at least 65% of its assets) in common stocks.


Ratings as Investment Criteria. In general, the ratings of Moody's Investors
Service, Inc. ("Moody's") and Standard & Poor's Ratings Group ("S&P") represent
the opinions of these agencies as to the quality of the securities which they
rate. It should be emphasized, however, that such ratings are relative and
subjective and are not absolute standards of quality. These ratings will be used
by the Fund as initial criteria for the selection of debt securities. Among the
factors which will be considered are the long-term ability of the issuer to pay
principal and interest and general economic trends. Appendix B contains further
information concerning the ratings of Moody's and S&P and their significance.


Subsequent to its purchase by the Fund,  an issue of securities  may cease to be
rated or its rating may be reduced  below the minimum  required  for purchase by
the Fund. Neither of these events will require the sale of the securities by the
Fund.

Fixed Income Securities. Under normal market conditions, the Fund may invest in
fixed income securities (including debt securities and preferred stocks) that
are rated Baa or better by Moody's or BBB or better by S&P or, if unrated,
determined to be of comparable quality by the Adviser and the Sub-Adviser
("investment grade debt securities"). The value of fixed income securities
varies inversely with changes in the prevailing levels of interest rates. In
addition, debt securities rated BBB or Baa and unrated debt securities of
comparable quality are considered medium grade obligations and have speculative
characteristics. Adverse changes in economic conditions or other circumstances
are more likely to lead to weakened capacity to make principal and interest
payment than in the case of higher grade obligations.

                                       2
<PAGE>


For temporary defensive purposes, the Fund may invest up to 100% of its assets
in investment grade debt securities of any type or maturity.

Investment  in  Foreign  Securities.  The Fund may invest in the  securities  of
foreign  issuers in the form of sponsored and  unsponsored  American  Depository
Receipts  ("ADRs") and U.S.  dollar-denominated  securities  of foreign  issuers
traded  on U.S.  exchanges.  ADRs  (sponsored  and  unsponsored)  are  receipts,
typically  issued  by  U.S.  banks,   which  evidence  ownership  of  underlying
securities issued by a foreign  corporation.  ADRs are publicly traded on a U.S.
stock  exchange or in the  over-the-counter  market.  An  investment  in foreign
securities  including  ADRs may be affected by changes in currency  rates and in
exchange control regulations.  Issuers of unsponsored ADRs are not contractually
obligated to disclose material information including financial  information,  in
the United States and,  therefore,  there may not be a correlation  between such
information and the market value of the unsponsored ADR.  Foreign  companies may
not be subject to accounting standards or government  supervision  comparable to
U.S.  companies,  and there is often less publicly  available  information about
their  operations.  Foreign  companies  may also be  affected  by  political  or
financial inability abroad.  These risk considerations may be intensified in the
case of  investments  in ADRs of foreign  companies that are located in emerging
market countries.  ADRs of companies located in these countries may have limited
marketability and may be subject to more abrupt or erratic price movements.

Repurchase Agreements.  In a repurchase agreement the Fund buys a security for a
relatively short period (usually not more than 7 days) subject to the obligation
to sell it back to the issuer at a fixed time and price,  plus accrued interest.
The Fund will enter into  repurchase  agreements  only with member  banks of the
Federal Reserve System and with "primary dealers" in U.S. Government securities.
The Adviser will continuously  monitor the  creditworthiness of the parties with
whom the Fund enters into repurchase agreements.


The Fund has established a procedure providing that the securities serving as
collateral for each repurchase agreement must be delivered to the Fund's
custodian either physically or in book-entry form and that the collateral must
be marked to market daily to ensure that each repurchase agreement is fully
collateralized at all times. In the event of bankruptcy or other default by a
seller of a repurchase agreement, the Fund could experience delays in
liquidating the underlying securities and during the period in which the Fund
seeks to enforce its rights thereto, possible subnormal levels of income, lack
of access to income during this period, and the expense of enforcing its rights.


Reverse Repurchase Agreements. The Fund may also enter into reverse repurchase
agreements which involve the sale of U.S. Government securities held in its
portfolio to a bank with an agreement that the Fund will buy back the securities
at a fixed future date at a fixed price plus an agreed amount of "interest"
which may be reflected in the repurchase price. Reverse repurchase agreements
are considered to be borrowings by the Fund. Reverse repurchase agreements
involve the risk that the market value of securities purchased by the Fund with
proceeds of the transaction may decline below the repurchase price of the
securities sold by the Fund which it is obligated to repurchase. The Fund will
also continue to be subject to the risk of a decline in the market value of the

                                       3
<PAGE>


securities sold under the agreements because it will require those securities
upon effecting their repurchase. To minimize various risks associated with
reverse repurchase agreements, the Fund will establish and maintain a separate
account consisting of liquid securities, of any type or maturity, in an amount
at least equal to the repurchase prices of the securities (plus any accrued
interest thereon) under such agreements. In addition, the Fund will not enter
into reverse repurchase agreements or borrow money, except from banks as a
temporary measure for extraordinary emergency purposes in amounts not to exceed
33 1/3% of the value of the Fund's total assets (including the amount borrowed)
taken at market value. The Fund will not leverage to attempt to increase income.
The Fund will not purchase securities while outstanding borrowings exceed 5% of
the Fund's total assets. The Fund will enter into reverse repurchase agreements
only with federally insured banks or savings and loan associations which are
approved in advance as being creditworthy by the Trustees. Under procedures
established by the Trustees, the Adviser will monitor the creditworthiness of
the banks involved.


Restricted Securities. The Fund may purchase securities that are not registered
("restricted securities") under the Securities Act of 1933 ("1933 Act"),
including commercial paper issued in reliance on Section 4(2) of the 1933 Act
and securities offered and sold to "qualified institutional buyers" under Rule
144A under the 1933 Act. The Fund will not invest more than 15% of its net
assets in illiquid investments. If the Trustees determine, based upon a
continuing review of the trading markets for specific Section 4(2) paper or Rule
144A securities, that they are liquid, they will not be subject to the 15% limit
on illiquid investments. The Trustees have adopted guidelines and delegate to
the Adviser the daily function of determining the monitoring and liquidity of
restricted securities. The Trustees, however, will retain sufficient oversight
and be ultimately responsible for the determinations. The Trustees will
carefully monitor the Fund's investments in these securities, focusing on such
important factors, among others, as valuation, liquidity and availability of
information. This investment practice could have the effect of increasing the
level of illiquidity in the Fund if qualified institutional buyers become for a
time uninterested in purchasing these restricted securities.


Options on Securities  and Securities  Indices.  The Fund may purchase and write
(sell)  call and put  options  on  securities  in which it may  invest or on any
securities  index based on securities in which it may invest.  These options may
be  listed  on  national  domestic   securities   exchanges  or  traded  in  the
over-the-counter  market.  The Fund may write  covered put and call  options and
purchase put and call options to enhance total return,  as a substitute  for the
purchase or sale of securities,  or to protect against  declines in the value of
portfolio  securities  and against  increases  in the cost of  securities  to be
acquired.

Writing Covered Options. A call option on securities written by the Fund
obligates the Fund to sell specified securities to the holder of the option at a
specified price if the option is exercised at any time before the expiration
date. A put option on securities written by the Fund obligates the Fund to
purchase specified securities from the option holder at a specified price if the
option is exercised at any time before the expiration date. Options on
securities indices are similar to options on securities, except that the
exercise of securities index options requires cash settlement payments and does
not involve the actual purchase or sale of securities. In addition, securities
index options are designed to reflect price fluctuations in a group of
securities or segment of the securities market rather than price fluctuations in
a single security. Writing covered call options may deprive the Fund of the
opportunity to profit from an increase in the market price of the securities in
its portfolio. Writing covered put options may deprive the Fund of the
opportunity to profit from a decrease in the market price of the securities to
be acquired for its portfolio.

                                       4
<PAGE>


All call and put options written by the Fund are covered.  A written call option
or put option may be covered by (i) maintaining  cash or liquid  securities in a
segregated  account with a value at least equal to the Fund's  obligation  under
the option,  (ii) entering into an offsetting  forward  commitment  and/or (iii)
purchasing  an  offsetting  option or any other option  which,  by virtue of its
exercise  price or  otherwise,  reduces  the Fund's net  exposure on its written
option  position.  A written call option on securities  is typically  covered by
maintaining  the  securities  that are  subject  to the  option in a  segregated
account.  The Fund may  cover  call  options  on a  securities  index by  owning
securities  whose  price  changes  are  expected  to be  similar to those of the
underlying index.

The Fund may  terminate  its  obligations  under an exchange  traded call or put
option by purchasing an option identical to the one it has written.  Obligations
under  over-the-counter  options  may be  terminated  only by  entering  into an
offsetting  transaction with the counterparty to such option. Such purchases are
referred to as "closing purchase transactions."

Purchasing Options. The Fund would normally purchase call options in
anticipation of an increase, or put options in anticipation of a decrease
("protective puts") in the market value of securities of the type in which it
may invest. The Fund may also sell call and put options to close out its
purchased options.

The purchase of a call option would  entitle the Fund, in return for the premium
paid, to purchase  specified  securities at a specified  price during the option
period.  The Fund  would  ordinarily  realize a gain on the  purchase  of a call
option if, during the option period,  the value of such securities  exceeded the
sum of the exercise price, the premium paid and transaction costs; otherwise the
Fund would realize either no gain or a loss on the purchase of the call option.

The purchase of a put option would entitle the Fund, in exchange for the premium
paid,  to sell  specified  securities  at a  specified  price  during the option
period. The purchase of protective puts is designed to offset or hedge against a
decline in the market value of the Fund's portfolio securities.  Put options may
also be purchased by the Fund for the purpose of affirmatively benefiting from a
decline  in the  price of  securities  which it does  not  own.  The Fund  would
ordinarily  realize  a gain if,  during  the  option  period,  the  value of the
underlying  securities  decreased below the exercise price sufficiently to cover
the premium and  transaction  costs;  otherwise the Fund would realize either no
gain or a loss on the  purchase  of the put  option.  Gains  and  losses  on the
purchase of put options may be offset by countervailing  changes in the value of
the Fund's portfolio securities.

The Fund's options  transactions  will be subject to limitations  established by
each of the exchanges, boards of trade or other trading facilities on which such
options are traded.  These  limitations  govern the maximum number of options in
each class which may be written or  purchased  by a single  investor or group of
investors  acting in concert,  regardless  of whether the options are written or
purchased on the same or different  exchanges,  boards of trade or other trading
facilities or are held or written in one or more accounts or through one or more
brokers. Thus, the number of options which the Fund may write or purchase may be
affected by options written or purchased by other investment advisory clients of
the Adviser. An exchange, board of trade or other trading facility may order the
liquidation  of  positions  found to be in  excess of these  limits,  and it may
impose certain other sanctions.

Risks Associated with Options Transactions. There is no assurance that a liquid
secondary market on a domestic or foreign options exchange will exist for any
particular exchange-traded option or at any particular time. If the Fund is
unable to effect a closing purchase transaction with respect to covered options
it has written, the Fund will not be able to sell the underlying securities or
dispose of assets held in a segregated account until the options expire or are
exercised. Similarly, if the Fund is unable to effect a closing sale transaction
with respect to options it has purchased, it would have to exercise the options
in order to realize any profit and will incur transaction costs upon the
purchase or sale of underlying securities.

                                       5
<PAGE>


Reasons for the absence of a liquid  secondary market on an exchange include the
following:  (i) there may be insufficient  trading  interest in certain options;
(ii)  restrictions  may be imposed by an  exchange  on opening  transactions  or
closing  transactions  or  both;  (iii)  trading  halts,  suspensions  or  other
restrictions  may be imposed  with  respect to  particular  classes or series of
options;   (iv)  unusual  or  unforeseen   circumstances  may  interrupt  normal
operations  on an  exchange;  (v) the  facilities  of an exchange or the Options
Clearing  Corporation may not at all times be adequate to handle current trading
volume;  or (vi) one or more  exchanges  could,  for economic or other  reasons,
decide or be compelled at some future date to discontinue the trading of options
(or a particular class or series of options). If trading were discontinued,  the
secondary  market on that exchange (or in that class or series of options) would
cease to exist.  However,  outstanding  options on that  exchange  that had been
issued  by the  Options  Clearing  Corporation  as a result  of  trades  on that
exchange would continue to be exercisable in accordance with their terms.

The Fund's  ability to terminate  over-the-counter  options is more limited than
with  exchange-traded  options  and may  involve  the risk  that  broker-dealers
participating  in such  transactions  will not fulfill  their  obligations.  The
Adviser  will  determine  the  liquidity  of  each  over-the-counter  option  in
accordance with guidelines adopted by the Trustees.

The  writing  and  purchase of options is a highly  specialized  activity  which
involves  investment  techniques and risks different from those  associated with
ordinary  portfolio  securities  transactions.  The  successful  use of  options
depends in part on the Adviser's  ability to predict  future price  fluctuations
and, for hedging transactions, the degree of correlation between the options and
securities markets.


Futures Contracts and Options on Futures Contracts. To seek to increase total
return or hedge against changes in interest rates or securities prices, the Fund
may purchase and sell various kinds of futures contracts and purchase and write
call and put options on these futures contracts. The Fund may also enter into
closing purchase and sale transactions with respect to any of these contracts
and options. The futures contracts may be based on various securities,
securities indices and any other financial instruments and indices. All futures
contracts entered into by the Fund are traded on U.S. exchanges or boards of
trade that are licensed, regulated or approved by the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission ("CFTC").


Futures Contracts. A futures contract may generally be described as an agreement
between  two parties to buy and sell  particular  financial  instruments  for an
agreed price during a designated  month (or to deliver the final cash settlement
price,  in the case of a contract  relating to an index or otherwise not calling
for physical delivery at the end of trading in the contract).

Positions taken in the futures markets are not normally held to maturity but are
instead liquidated through offsetting transactions which may result in a profit
or a loss. While futures contracts on securities will usually be liquidated in
this manner, the Fund may instead make, or take, delivery of the underlying
securities whenever it appears economically advantageous to do so. A clearing
corporation associated with the exchange on which futures contracts are traded
guarantees that, if still open, the sale or purchase will be performed on the
settlement date.

                                       6
<PAGE>


Hedging  and Other  Strategies.  Hedging is an attempt  to  establish  with more
certainty than would otherwise be possible the effective price or rate of return
on portfolio  securities or securities  that the Fund proposes to acquire.  When
securities  prices  are  falling,  the Fund can seek to offset a decline  in the
value of its current portfolio securities through the sale of futures contracts.
When  securities  prices are rising,  the Fund,  through the purchase of futures
contracts,  can  attempt to secure  better  rates or prices  than might later be
available in the market when it effects anticipated purchases.

The Fund may,  for  example,  take a "short"  position in the futures  market by
selling futures contracts in an attempt to hedge against an anticipated  decline
in market prices that would adversely  affect the value of the Fund's  portfolio
securities. Such futures contracts may include contracts for the future delivery
of securities  held by the Fund or securities  with  characteristics  similar to
those of the Fund's portfolio securities.

If, in the opinion of the Adviser,  there is a sufficient  degree of correlation
between price trends for the Fund's portfolio  securities and futures  contracts
based on other financial  instruments,  securities indices or other indices, the
Fund may also enter into such futures contracts as part of its hedging strategy.
Although under some  circumstances  prices of securities in the Fund's portfolio
may be more or less volatile than prices of such futures contracts,  the Adviser
will  attempt to  estimate  the extent of this  volatility  difference  based on
historical patterns and compensate for any differential by having the Fund enter
into a greater or lesser number of futures contracts or by attempting to achieve
only a partial  hedge  against  price  changes  affecting  the Fund's  portfolio
securities.

When a short hedging  position is successful,  any  depreciation in the value of
portfolio  securities will be substantially  offset by appreciation in the value
of the futures position.  On the other hand, any  unanticipated  appreciation in
the value of the Fund's portfolio  securities would be substantially offset by a
decline in the value of the futures position.

On other  occasions,  the Fund may take a "long" position by purchasing  futures
contracts.  This  would be done,  for  example,  when the Fund  anticipates  the
subsequent purchase of particular securities when it has the necessary cash, but
expects the prices then available in the applicable  market to be less favorable
than prices that are currently  available.  The Fund may also  purchase  futures
contracts  as  a  substitute  for  transactions  in  securities,  to  alter  the
investment  characteristics  of portfolio  securities or to gain or increase its
exposure to a particular securities market.

Options on Futures Contracts. The Fund may purchase and write options on futures
for the same purposes as its transactions in futures contracts.  The purchase of
put and call options on futures  contracts will give the Fund the right (but not
the obligation) for a specified price to sell or to purchase,  respectively, the
underlying  futures  contract  at any time  during  the  option  period.  As the
purchaser  of an option on a futures  contract,  the Fund obtains the benefit of
the futures position if prices move in a favorable direction but limits its risk
of loss in the event of an unfavorable price movement to the loss of the premium
and transaction costs.

The writing of a call option on a futures contract generates a premium which may
partially offset a decline in the value of the Fund's assets. By writing a call
option, the Fund becomes obligated, in exchange for the premium (upon exercise
of the option) to sell a futures contract if the option is exercised, which may
have a value higher than the exercise price. Conversely, the writing of a put
option on a futures contract generates a premium which may partially offset an
increase in the price of securities that the Fund intends to purchase. However,
the Fund becomes obligated (upon exercise of the option) to purchase a futures
contract if the option is exercised, which may have a value lower than the
exercise price. The loss incurred by the Fund in writing options on futures is
potentially unlimited and may exceed the amount of the premium received.

                                       7
<PAGE>


The  holder or writer of an option  on a  futures  contract  may  terminate  its
position by selling or purchasing an offsetting option of the same series. There
is no guarantee  that such  closing  transactions  can be  effected.  The Fund's
ability to establish  and close out positions on such options will be subject to
the development and maintenance of a liquid market.

Other  Considerations.  The Fund will  engage in  futures  and  related  options
transactions  either for bona fide hedging purposes or to seek to increase total
return as  permitted by the CFTC.  To the extent that the Fund is using  futures
and related  options for hedging  purposes,  futures  contracts  will be sold to
protect  against a  decline  in the  price of  securities  that the Fund owns or
futures  contracts  will be purchased to protect the Fund against an increase in
the price of securities it intends to purchase. The Fund will determine that the
price  fluctuations  in the futures  contracts  and options on futures  used for
hedging purposes are substantially  related to price  fluctuations in securities
held by the Fund or securities or instruments  which it expects to purchase.  As
evidence  of its hedging  intent,  the Fund  expects  that on 75% or more of the
occasions on which it takes a long  futures or option  position  (involving  the
purchase of futures contracts),  the Fund will have purchased, or will be in the
process of  purchasing,  equivalent  amounts of related  securities  in the cash
market at the time when the futures or option  position is closed out.  However,
in particular cases, when it is economically advantageous for the Fund to do so,
a long futures  position may be terminated  or an option may expire  without the
corresponding purchase of securities or other assets.

To the  extent  that the Fund  engages  in  nonhedging  transactions  in futures
contracts  and options on futures,  the  aggregate  initial  margin and premiums
required to establish these  nonhedging  positions will not exceed 5% of the net
asset  value of the Fund's  portfolio,  after  taking  into  account  unrealized
profits and losses on any such  positions and excluding the amount by which such
options were in-the-money at the time of purchase.

Transactions  in futures  contracts  and  options on futures  involve  brokerage
costs,  require  margin  deposits  and,  in the case of  contracts  and  options
obligating  the Fund to purchase  securities,  require  the Fund to  establish a
segregated account consisting of cash or liquid securities in an amount equal to
the underlying value of such contracts and options.

While  transactions  in futures  contracts  and  options  on futures  may reduce
certain risks,  these  transactions  themselves  entail certain other risks. For
example,  unanticipated changes in interest rates,  securities prices may result
in a poorer overall performance for the Fund than if it had not entered into any
futures contracts or options transactions.

Perfect correlation between the Fund's futures positions and portfolio positions
will be impossible to achieve. In the event of an imperfect  correlation between
a futures  position and a portfolio  position which is intended to be protected,
the desired  protection  may not be obtained and the Fund may be exposed to risk
of loss.

Some futures contracts or options on futures may become illiquid under adverse
market conditions. In addition, during periods of market volatility, a commodity
exchange may suspend or limit trading in a futures contract or related option,
which may make the instrument temporarily illiquid and difficult to price.
Commodity exchanges may also establish daily limits on the amount that the price
of a futures contract or related option can vary from the previous day's
settlement price. Once the daily limit is reached, no trades may be made that
day at a price beyond the limit. This may prevent the Fund from closing out
positions and limiting its losses.

                                       8
<PAGE>


Lending  of  Securities.  The Fund may lend  portfolio  securities  to  brokers,
dealers and financial institutions if the loan is collateralized by cash or U.S.
Government securities according to applicable regulatory requirements.  The Fund
may reinvest  any cash  collateral  in  short-term  securities  and money market
funds.  When the  Fund  lends  portfolio  securities,  there is a risk  that the
borrower may fail to return the  securities  involved in the  transaction.  As a
result, the Fund may incur a loss or, in the event of the borrower's bankruptcy,
the Fund may be delayed in or prevented from liquidating the collateral. It is a
fundamental  policy of the Fund not to lend portfolio  securities having a total
value exceeding 33 1/3% of its total assets.

Rights  and  Warrants.  The Fund may  purchase  warrants  and  rights  which are
securities  permitting,  but  not  obligating,  their  holder  to  purchase  the
underlying  securities at a predetermined price subject to the Fund's Investment
Restrictions.  Generally,  warrants and stock purchase  rights do not carry with
them the right to receive  dividends or exercise  voting  rights with respect to
the underlying securities, and they do not represent any rights in the assets of
the issuer.  As a result, an investment in warrants and rights may be considered
to entail greater  investment risk than certain other types of  investments.  In
addition,  the value of warrant and rights does not necessarily  change with the
value of the underlying securities, and they cease to have value if they are not
exercised  on or prior to their  expiration  date.  Investment  in warrants  and
rights increases the potential profit or loss to be realized from the investment
of a given  amount of the Fund's  assets as  compared  with  investing  the same
amount in the underlying stock.

Short Sales.  The Fund may engage in short sales  "against the box".  In a short
sale against the box,  the Fund agrees to sell at a future date a security  that
it either  contemporaneously  owns or has the right to acquire at no extra cost.
If the price of the  security  has  declined at the time the Fund is required to
deliver the security, the Fund will benefit from the difference in the price. If
the price of the  security has  increased,  the Fund will be required to pay the
difference.

Forward Commitment and When-Issued Securities.  The Fund may purchase securities
on a when-issued or forward commitment basis. "When-issued" refers to securities
whose terms are available and for which a market exists, but which have not been
issued.  The Fund will  engage  in  when-issued  transactions  with  respect  to
securities  purchased for its portfolio in order to obtain what is considered to
be an  advantageous  price  and  yield  at  the  time  of the  transaction.  For
when-issued  transactions,  no payment is made until  delivery  is due,  often a
month or more after the purchase. In a forward commitment transaction,  the Fund
contracts  to  purchase  securities  for a fixed  price at a future  date beyond
customary settlement time.

When the Fund engages in forward  commitment and  when-issued  transactions,  it
relies on the seller to consummate the transaction. The failure of the issuer or
seller to  consummate  the  transaction  may  result in the  Fund's  losing  the
opportunity  to obtain a price  and yield  considered  to be  advantageous.  The
purchase  of  securities  on a  when-issued  or  forward  commitment  basis also
involves a risk of loss if the value of the  security to be  purchased  declines
prior to the settlement date.

On the date the Fund enters into an agreement to purchase securities on a
when-issued or forward commitment basis, the Fund will segregate in a separate
account cash or liquid securities, of any type or maturity, equal in value to
the Fund's commitment. These assets will be valued daily at market, and
additional cash or securities will be segregated in a separate account to the
extent that the total value of the assets in the account declines below the
amount of the when-issued commitments. Alternatively, the Fund may enter into
offsetting contracts for the forward sale of other securities that it owns.

                                       9
<PAGE>


Short-Term Trading and Portfolio Turnover. Short-term trading means the purchase
and subsequent sale of a security after it has been held for a relatively  brief
period of time.  The Fund may engage in short-term  trading in response to stock
market  conditions,  changes  in  interest  rates or other  economic  trends and
developments  or to take advantage of yield  disparities  between  various fixed
income  securities  in  order  to  realize  capital  gains  or  improve  income.
Short-term trading may have the effect of increasing  portfolio turnover rate. A
high rate of  portfolio  turnover  (100% or  greater)  involves  correspondingly
greater brokerage  expenses.  The Fund's portfolio turnover rate is set forth in
the table under the caption "Financial Highlights" in the Prospectus.

INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS

Fundamental Investment Restrictions.  The following investment restrictions will
not be changed  without the  approval  of a majority  of the Fund's  outstanding
voting  securities  which,  as used in the  Prospectus  and  this  Statement  of
Additional  Information,  means the approval by the lesser of (1) the holders of
67% or more of the Fund's  shares  represented  at a meeting if more than 50% of
the Fund's  outstanding shares are present in person or by proxy at that meeting
or (2) more than 50% of the Fund's outstanding shares.

The Fund may not:

(1)      Issue senior securities, except as permitted by paragraphs (2), (6) and
         (7) below. For purposes of this restriction,  the issuance of shares of
         beneficial interest in multiple classes or series, the purchase or sale
         of options,  futures  contracts,  forward  commitments  and  repurchase
         agreements  entered  into in  accordance  with  the  Fund's  investment
         policies,  and the  pledge,  mortgage  or  hypothecation  of the Fund's
         assets within the meaning of paragraph (3) below,  are not deemed to be
         senior securities.

(2)      Borrow   money,   except  from  banks  as  a   temporary   measure  for
         extraordinary  emergency  purposes  in amounts not to exceed 33 1/3% of
         the value of the Fund's total assets  (including  the amount  borrowed)
         taken at  market  value.  The Fund  will not  leverage  to  attempt  to
         increase   income.   The  Fund  will  not  purchase   securities  while
         outstanding borrowings exceed 5% of the Fund's total assets.

(3)      Pledge,   mortgage  or  hypothecate   its  assets,   except  to  secure
         indebtedness  permitted  by  paragraph  (2) above and then only if such
         pledging,  mortgaging or  hypothecating  does not exceed 33 1/3% of the
         Fund's total assets taken at market value.

(4)      Act as an underwriter, except to the extent that in connection with the
         disposition  of portfolio  securities,  the Fund may be deemed to be an
         underwriter for purposes of the 1933 Act.

(5)      Purchase or sell real estate or any interest  therein,  except that the
         Fund may invest in  securities  of corporate or  governmental  entities
         secured by real estate or  marketable  interests  therein or securities
         issued by companies that invest in real estate or interests therein.

                                       10
<PAGE>


(6)      Make loans,  except that the Fund (1) may lend portfolio  securities in
         accordance  with the Fund's  investment  policies  up to 33 1/3% of the
         Fund's total assets taken at market  value,  (2) enter into  repurchase
         agreements,  and (3)  purchase all or a portion of an issue of publicly
         distributed debt securities,  bank loan participation  interests,  bank
         certificates  of deposit,  bankers'  acceptances,  debentures  or other
         securities,  whether  or not the  purchase  is made  upon the  original
         issuance of the securities.

(7)      Invest in commodities or in commodity  contracts or in puts,  calls, or
         combinations of both, except options on securities,  securities indices
         and currency,  futures contracts on securities,  securities indices and
         currency and options on such futures, forward foreign currency exchange
         contracts,  forward commitments,  securities index put or call warrants
         and repurchase  agreements  entered into in accordance  with the Fund's
         investment policies.

(8)      Purchase the securities of issuers  conducting their principal activity
         in the same industry if, immediately after such purchase,  the value of
         its  investments  in such industry would exceed 25% of its total assets
         taken at market value at the time of such  investment.  This limitation
         does not apply to investments in obligations of the U.S.
         Government or any of its agencies or instrumentalities.

(9)      Purchase securities of an issuer (other than the U.S. Government, its
         agencies or instrumentalities), if

                  (a) such purchase would cause more than 5% of the Fund's total
                  assets taken at market value to be invested in the  securities
                  of such issuer, or

                  (b) such purchase would at the time result in more than 10% of
                  the outstanding voting securities of such issuer being held by
                  the Fund.

In  connection  with the lending of portfolio  securities  under  paragraph  (6)
above,  such  loans  must at all times be fully  collateralized  and the  Fund's
custodian must take  possession of the collateral  either  physically or in book
entry form.
Securities used as collateral must be marked to market daily.

Non-Fundamental Investment Restrictions. The following restrictions are
designated as non-fundamental and may be changed by the Trustees without
shareholder approval.

The Fund may not:

(a)      Participate  on a joint or  joint-and-several  basis in any  securities
         trading  account.  The "bunching" of orders for the sale or purchase of
         marketable   portfolio   securities   with  other  accounts  under  the
         management  of the Adviser or  Sub-Adviser  to save  commissions  or to
         average prices among them is not deemed to result in a joint securities
         trading account.

(b)      Purchase securities on margin or make short sales, except in connection
         with arbitrage  transactions  or unless,  by virtue of its ownership of
         other  securities,   the  Fund  has  the  right  to  obtain  securities
         equivalent in kind and amount to the securities  sold and, if the right
         is conditional, the sale is made upon the same conditions,  except that
         the Fund may obtain such short-term credits as may be necessary for the
         clearance of purchases and sales of securities.

                                       11
<PAGE>


(c)      Purchase a security if, as a result, (i) more than 10% of the
         Fund's total assets would be invested in the securities of other
         investment companies, (ii) the Fund would hold more than 3% of the
         total outstanding voting securities of any one investment company, or
         (iii) more than 5% of the Fund's total assets would be invested in the
         securities of any one investment company. These limitations do not
         apply to (a) the investment of cash collateral, received by the Fund in
         connection with lending the Fund's portfolio securities, in the
         securities of open- end investment companies or (b) the purchase of
         shares of any investment company in connection with a merger,
         consolidation, reorganization or purchase of substantially all of the
         assets of another investment company. Subject to the above percentage
         limitations, the Fund may, in connection with the John Hancock Group of
         Funds Deferred Compensation Plan for Independent Trustees/ Directors,
         purchase securities of other investment companies within the John
         Hancock Group of Funds.

(d)      Invests more than 15% of its net assets in illiquid securities.

If a percentage  restriction on investment or utilization of assets as set forth
above  is  adhered  to at the time an  investment  is made,  a later  change  in
percentage  resulting from changes in the value of the Fund's assets will not be
considered a violation of the restriction.

THOSE RESPONSIBLE FOR MANAGEMENT

The  business  of the Fund is  managed  by the  Trustees  of the Trust who elect
officers who are responsible  for the day-to-day  operations of the Fund and who
execute  policies  formulated  by the  Trustees.  Several  of the  officers  and
Trustees of the Trust are also Officers or Directors of the Adviser, or Officers
or Directors of the Fund's  principal  distributor,  John  Hancock  Funds,  Inc.
("John Hancock Funds").


                                       12
<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                         Positions Held                         Principal Occupation(s)
Name and Address                         With the Company                       During the Past Five Years
- ----------------                         ----------------                       --------------------------
     <S>                                        <C>                                         <C>

Stephen L. Brown*                        Trustee and Chairman (1, 2)            Chairman and Chief Executive Officer,
John Hancock Place                                                              John Hancock Life Insurance Company;
P.O. Box 111                                                                    Chairman and Director, John Hancock
Boston, MA 02117                                                                Advisers, Inc. (The Adviser), John
July 1937                                                                       Hancock Funds, Inc. (John Hancock
                                                                                Funds), The Berkeley Financial
                                                                                Group, Inc. (The Berkeley Group);
                                                                                Director, John Hancock
                                                                                Subsidiaries, Inc.; John Hancock
                                                                                Insurance Agency, Inc.; (Insurance
                                                                                Agency), (until June 1999); Federal
                                                                                Reserve Bank of Boston (until March
                                                                                1999); John Hancock Signature
                                                                                Services, Inc. (Signature Services)
                                                                                (until January 1997) ; Trustee,
                                                                                John Hancock Asset Management
                                                                                (until March 1997).


Maureen R. Ford *                        Trustee, Vice Chairman and Chief       President, Broker/Dealer Distributor,
101 Huntington Avenue                    Executive Officer                      John Hancock Life Insurance Company;
Boston, MA 02199                                                                Vice Chairman, Director and Chief
April 1955                                                                      Executive Officer, the Advisers, The
                                                                                Berkeley Group, John Hancock Funds;
                                                                                Chairman, Director and President,
                                                                                Insurance Agency, Inc.; Chairman,
                                                                                Director and Chief Executive
                                                                                Officer, Sovereign Asset Management
                                                                                Corporation (SAMCorp.); Senior Vice
                                                                                President, MassMutual Insurance Co.
                                                                                (until 1999); Senior Vice
                                                                                President, Connecticut Mutual
                                                                                Insurance Co. (until 1999); Vice
                                                                                President, Integrated Resources
                                                                                (until 1989).


- -------------------
*    Trustee may be deemed to be an "interested person" of the Fund as defined
     in the Investment Company Act of 1940.
(1)  Member of the Executive Committee.  The Executive Committee may generally
     exercise most of the powers of the Board of Trustees.
(2)  A member of the Investment Committee of the Adviser.


                                       13
<PAGE>


                                         Positions Held                         Principal Occupation(s)
Name and Address                         With the Company                       During the Past Five Years
- ----------------                         ----------------                       --------------------------
     <S>                                        <C>                                         <C>

Dennis S. Aronowitz                      Trustee                                Professor of Law, Emeritus, Boston
1216 Falls Boulevard                                                            University School of Law (as of
Fort Lauderdale, FL  33327                                                      1996); Director, Brookline Bankcorp.
June 1931

Richard P. Chapman, Jr.                  Trustee (1)                            Chairman, President, and Chief
160 Washington Street                                                           Executive Officer, Brookline
Brookline, MA  02147                                                            Bankcorp. (lending); Director,
February 1935                                                                   Lumber Insurance Companies (fire and
                                                                                casualty insurance); Trustee,
                                                                                Northeastern University (education);
                                                                                Director, Depositors Insurance Fund,
                                                                                Inc. (insurance).

William J. Cosgrove                      Trustee                                Vice President, Senior Banker and
20 Buttonwood Place                                                             Senior Credit Officer, Citibank,
Saddle River, NJ  07458                                                         N.A. (retired September 1991);
January 1933                                                                    Executive Vice President, Citadel
                                                                                Group Representatives, Inc.;
                                                                                Trustee, the Hudson City Savings
                                                                                Bank (since 1995).

- -------------------
*    Trustee may be deemed to be an "interested person" of the Fund as defined
     in the Investment Company Act of 1940.
(1)  Member of the Executive Committee.  The Executive Committee may generally
     exercise most of the powers of the Board of Trustees.
(2)  A member of the Investment Committee of the Adviser.


                                       14
<PAGE>


                                         Positions Held                         Principal Occupation(s)
Name and Address                         With the Company                       During the Past Five Years
- ----------------                         ----------------                       --------------------------
     <S>                                        <C>                                         <C>

Leland O. Erdahl                         Trustee                                Director of Uranium Resources
8046 Mackenzie Court                                                            Corporation, Hecla Mining Company,
Las Vegas, NV  89129                                                            Canyon Resources Corporation and
December 1928                                                                   Apollo Gold, Inc.; Director Original
                                                                                Sixteen to One Mines, Inc. (until
                                                                                1999); Management Consultant (from
                                                                                1984-1987 and 1991-1998); Director,
                                                                                Freeport-McMoran Copper & Gold, Inc.
                                                                                (until 1997); Vice President, Chief
                                                                                Financial Officer and Director of
                                                                                Amax Gold, Inc. (until 1998).

Richard A. Farrell                        Trustee                               President of Farrell, Healer & Co.,
The Venture Capital Fund of New England                                         (venture capital management firm)
160 Federal Street                                                              (since 1980);  Prior to 1980,
23rd Floor                                                                      headed the venture capital group at
Boston, MA  02110                                                               Bank of Boston Corporation.
November 1932

Gail D. Fosler                            Trustee                               Senior Vice President and Chief
3054 So. Abingdon Street                                                        Economist, The Conference Board
Arlington, VA  22206                                                            (non-profit economic and business
December 1947                                                                   research); Director, Unisys Corp.;
                                                                                and H.B. Fuller Company.  Director,
                                                                                National Bureau of Economic
                                                                                Research (academic).

William F. Glavin                         Trustee                               President Emeritus, Babson College
120 Paget Court - John's Island                                                 (as of 1997); Vice Chairman, Xerox
Vero Beach, FL 32963                                                            Corporation (until June 1989);
March 1932                                                                      Director, Caldor Inc., Reebok, Inc.
                                                                                (since 1994) and Inco Ltd.

- -------------------
*    Trustee may be deemed to be an "interested person" of the Fund as defined
     in the Investment Company Act of 1940.
(1)  Member of the Executive Committee.  The Executive Committee may generally
     exercise most of the powers of the Board of Trustees.
(2)  A member of the Investment Committee of the Adviser.


                                       15
<PAGE>


                                         Positions Held                         Principal Occupation(s)
Name and Address                         With the Company                       During the Past Five Years
- ----------------                         ----------------                       --------------------------
     <S>                                        <C>                                         <C>

Anne C. Hodsdon *                         Trustee and President (1,2)           President, Chief Operating Officer
101 Huntington Avenue                                                           and Director, the Adviser, The
Boston, MA  02199                                                               Berkeley Group; Director and
April 1953                                                                      President, NM Capital and SAMCorp.;
                                                                                Director, John Hancock Funds,
                                                                                Advisers International, and John
                                                                                Hancock Advisers International
                                                                                (Ireland) Ltd.; Executive Vice
                                                                                President, the Adviser (until
                                                                                1994); Director, Insurance Agency,
                                                                                Inc. (until June 1999); Director,
                                                                                Signature Services (until January
                                                                                1997).


Dr. John A. Moore                         Trustee                               President and Chief Executive
Institute for Evaluating Health Risks                                           Officer, Institute for Evaluating
1629 K Street NW                                                                Health Risks, (nonprofit
Suite 402                                                                       institution) (since September 1989).
Washington, DC  20006-1602
February 1939

Patti McGill Peterson                     Trustee                               Executive Director, Council for
Council For International Exchange of                                           International Exchange of Scholars
Scholars                                                                        (since January 1998), Vice
3007 Tilden Street, N.W.                                                        President, Institute of
Washington, D.C.  20008                                                         International Education (since
May 1943                                                                        January 1998); Senior Fellow,
                                                                                Cornell Institute of Public
                                                                                Affairs, Cornell University (until
                                                                                December 1997); President Emerita
                                                                                of Wells College and St. Lawrence
                                                                                University; Director, Niagara
                                                                                Mohawk Power Corporation (electric
                                                                                utility).



- -------------------
*    Trustee may be deemed to be an "interested person" of the Fund as defined
     in the Investment Company Act of 1940.
(1)  Member of the Executive Committee.  The Executive Committee may generally
     exercise most of the powers of the Board of Trustees.
(2)  A member of the Investment Committee of the Adviser.


                                       16
<PAGE>


                                         Positions Held                         Principal Occupation(s)
Name and Address                         With the Company                       During the Past Five Years
- ----------------                         ----------------                       --------------------------
     <S>                                        <C>                                         <C>

John W. Pratt                             Trustee                               Professor of Business Administration
2 Gray Gardens East                                                             Emeritus, Harvard University
Cambridge, MA  02138                                                            Graduate School of Business
September 1931                                                                  Administration (as of June 1998).

Richard S. Scipione *                    Trustee (1)                            General Counsel, John Hancock Life
John Hancock Place                                                              Insurance Company; Director, the
P.O. Box 111                                                                    Adviser, John Hancock Funds,
Boston, MA  02117                                                               Signator Investors, Inc., John
August 1937                                                                     Hancock Subsidiaries, Inc.,
                                                                                SAMCorp., NM Capital, The Berkeley
                                                                                Group, JH Networking Insurance
                                                                                Agency, Inc.; Insurance Agency, Inc.
                                                                                (until June 1999), Signature
                                                                                Services (until January 1997).

Osbert M. Hood                           Executive Vice President and Chief     Executive Vice President and  Chief
101 Huntington Avenue                    Financial Officer                      Financial Officer, each of the John
Boston, MA  02199                                                               Hancock Funds; Executive Vice
August 1952                                                                     President, Treasurer and Chief
                                                                                Financial Officer of the Adviser,
                                                                                the Berkeley Group, John Hancock
                                                                                Funds, SAMCorp. And NM Capital;
                                                                                Senior Vice President, Chief
                                                                                Financial Officer and Treasurer,
                                                                                Signature Services; Director
                                                                                IndoCam Japan Limited; Vice
                                                                                President and Chief Financial
                                                                                Officer, John Hancock Life
                                                                                Insurance Company, Retail Sector
                                                                                (until 1997).



- -------------------
*    Trustee may be deemed to be an "interested person" of the Fund as defined
     in the Investment Company Act of 1940.
(1)  Member of the Executive Committee.  The Executive Committee may generally
     exercise most of the powers of the Board of Trustees.
(2)  A member of the Investment Committee of the Adviser.


                                       17
<PAGE>


                                         Positions Held                         Principal Occupation(s)
Name and Address                         With the Company                       During the Past Five Years
- ----------------                         ----------------                       --------------------------
     <S>                                        <C>                                         <C>

Thomas H. Connors                        Vice President and Compliance Officer  Vice President and Compliance
101 Huntington Avenue                                                           Officer, the Adviser; Vice
Boston, MA 02199                                                                President, John Hancock Funds, Inc.
September 1959

Susan S. Newton                          Vice President, Secretary and Chief    Vice President, Chief Legal Officer
101 Huntington Avenue                    Legal Officer                          and Secretary, the Adviser; John
Boston, MA  02199                                                               Hancock Funds, Signature Services,
March 1950                                                                      The Berkeley Group, NM Capital and
                                                                                SAMCorp..

James J. Stokowski                       Vice President, Treasurer and Chief    Vice President, the Adviser.
101 Huntington Avenue                    Accounting Officer
Boston, MA  02199
November 1946

- -------------------
*    Trustee may be deemed to be an "interested person" of the Fund as defined
     in the Investment Company Act of 1940.
(1)  Member of the Executive Committee.  The Executive Committee may generally
     exercise most of the powers of the Board of Trustees.
(2)  A member of the Investment Committee of the Adviser.
</TABLE>


                                       18
<PAGE>


The following table provides information  regarding the compensation paid by the
Fund and the other investment  companies in the John Hancock Fund Complex to the
Independent  Trustees for their services.  Messrs.  Brown,  and Scipione and Ms.
Ford and Ms. Hodsdon,  each a non-Independent  Trustee, and each of the officers
of the Fund are interested persons of the Adviser are compensated by the Adviser
and receive no compensation from the Fund for their services.

                          Aggregate          Total Compensation From the
                          Compensation       Fund and John Hancock Fund
Independent Trustees      From the Fund(1)   Complex to Trustees(2)
- --------------------      ----------------   ----------------------

Dennis S. Aronowitz          $                           $75,250
Richard P. Chapman, Jr+                                   75,250
William J. Cosgrove+                                      72,250
Douglas M. Costle(3)                                      56,000
Leland O. Erdahl                                          72,350
Richard A. Farrell                                        75,250
Gail D. Fosler                                            72,250
William F. Glavin+                                        68,100
Dr. John A. Moore+                                        72,350
Patti McGill Peterson                                     75,350
John W. Pratt                                             72,250
                                                        --------
Total                        $                          $786,650
                             -

(1) Compensation is for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1999.

(2) Total compensation paid by the John Hancock Funds Complex to the Independent
Trustees is as of December  31,  1999.  As of this date,  there were  sixty-five
funds in the John  Hancock  Fund  Complex  of  which  each of these  Independent
Trustees serving thirty-one funds.

(3) Effective December 31, 1999, Mr. Costle resigned as Trustee of the Complex.

(+) As of  December  31,  1999,  the  value of the  aggregate  accrued  deferred
compensation  amount from all funds in the John  Hancock  Funds  Complex for Mr.
Chapman was $112,162, Mr. Cosgrove was $224,553, Mr. Glavin was $342,213 and for
Dr.  Moore  was   $283,877under   the  John  Hancock  Group  of  Funds  Deferred
Compensation Plan for Independent Trustees.


All of the  officers  listed  are  officers  or  employees  of  the  Adviser  or
affiliated  companies.  Some of the  Trustees  and officers may also be officers
and/or directors and/or Trustees of one or more of the other funds for which the
Adviser serves as investment adviser.


                                       19
<PAGE>



As of April 1, 2000  officers and  Trustees of the Fund as a group  beneficially
owned less than 1% of the  outstanding  shares of the Fund. As of that date, the
following shareholders beneficially owned 5% or more of the shares of the Fund:

                                                           Percentage of Total
Name and Address of                                        Outstanding Shares of
Shareholders                       Class of Shares         the Class of the Fund
- ------------                       ---------------         ---------------------






























INVESTMENT ADVISORY AND OTHER SERVICES

The Adviser, located at 101 Huntington Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts 02199-7603,
was  organized in 1968 and more than $30 billion in assets under  management  in
its  capacity  as  investment  adviser  to the Fund and other  funds in the John
Hancock  group of funds as well as  institutional  accounts.  The  Adviser is an
affiliate  of the  Life  Company,  one  of the  most  recognized  and  respected
financial institutions in the nation. With total assets under management of more
than $100  billion,  the Life Company is one of the ten largest  life  insurance
companies in the United States, and carries a high rating from Standard & Poor's
and A. M. Best.  Founded in 1862, the Life Company has been serving  clients for
over 130 years.

                                       20
<PAGE>


The Sub-Adviser, IIA, located at 53 State Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109,
was organized in 1982 and currently manages over $38 billion in assets for
primarily institutional clients. The Sub-Advise r is a wholly-owned indirect
subsidiary of the Life Company.

The Fund has entered into an  investment  management  contract  with the Adviser
(the  "Advisory  Agreement")  which was  approved  by the  Fund's  shareholders.
Pursuant  to the  Advisory  Agreement,  the  Adviser,  in  conjunction  with the
Sub-Adviser  will: (a) furnish  continuously an investment  program for the Fund
and determine,  subject to the overall  supervision  and review of the Trustees,
which investments  should be purchased,  held, sold or exchanged and (b) provide
supervision  over all aspects of the Fund's  operations  except  those which are
delegated to a custodian, transfer agent or other agent.

The Adviser has entered into a Sub-Advisory Agreement with the Sub-Adviser under
which the  Sub-Adviser,  subject to the review of the  Trustees  and the overall
supervision  of  the  Adviser,   is  responsible  for  managing  the  investment
operations  of the  Fund  and  the  composition  of  the  Fund's  portfolio  and
furnishing the Fund with advice and recommendations with respect to investments,
investment policies and the purchase and sale of securities.


The Fund bears all costs of its  organization  and operation,  including but not
limited to  expenses  of  preparing,  printing  and  mailing  all  shareholders'
reports,  notices,  prospectuses,  proxy  statements  and reports to  regulatory
agencies;  expenses relating to the issuance,  registration and qualification of
shares;   government  fees;   interest   charges;   expenses  of  furnishing  to
shareholders  their account  statements;  taxes;  expenses of redeeming  shares;
brokerage  and  other  expenses   connected  with  the  execution  of  portfolio
securities  transactions;  expenses pursuant to the Fund's plan of distribution;
fees and expenses of custodians  including  those for keeping books and accounts
maintaining a committed  line of credit and  calculating  the net asset value of
shares;  fees and expenses of transfer  agents and dividend  disbursing  agents;
legal, accounting,  financial, management, tax and auditing fees and expenses of
the Fund (including an allocable portion of the cost of the Adviser's  employees
rendering such services to the Fund; the  compensation  and expenses of Trustees
who are not  otherwise  affiliated  with the Trust,  the Adviser or any of their
affiliates;  expenses of Trustees' and shareholders' meetings; trade association
memberships; insurance premiums; and any extraordinary expenses.

As compensation for its services under the Advisory Agreement, the Fund pays the
Adviser  monthly a fee based on a stated  percentage of the average of the daily
net assets of the Fund as follows:

         Net Asset Value                                      Annual Rate
         ---------------                                      -----------

         First $750,000,000                                      0.75%
         Amount over $750,000,000                                0.70%

From time to time, the Adviser may reduce its fee or make other  arrangements to
limit the Fund's expenses to a specified percentage of average daily net assets.
The Adviser  retains the right to reimpose a fee and recover any other  payments
to the extent that, at the end of any fiscal year,  the Fund's  annual  expenses
fall below this limit.

Securities held by the Fund may also be held by other funds or investment
advisory clients for which the Adviser, the Sub-Adviser or their respective
affiliates provide investment advice. Because of different investment objectives
or other factors, a particular security may be bought for one or more funds or
clients when one or more are selling the same security. If opportunities for
purchase or sale of securities by the Adviser or Sub-Adviser for the Fund or for
other funds or clients for which the Adviser or Sub-Adviser renders investment

                                       21
<PAGE>


advice arise for consideration at or about the same time, transactions in such
securities will be made, insofar as feasible, for the respective funds or
clients in a manner deemed equitable to all of them. To the extent that
transactions on behalf of more than one client of the Adviser, the Sub-Adviser
or their respective affiliates may increase the demand for securities being
purchased or the supply of securities being sold, there may be an adverse effect
on price.

Pursuant to the Advisory Agreement and Sub-Advisory  Agreement,  the Adviser and
Sub-Adviser  are not liable for any error of  judgment  or mistake of law or for
any loss  suffered  by the Fund in  connection  with the  matters to which their
respective Agreements relates, except a loss resulting from willful misfeasance,
bad faith or gross  negligence on the part of the Adviser or  Sub-Adviser in the
performance of their duties or from their reckless  disregard of the obligations
and duties under the applicable Agreements.

Under the Advisory  Agreement,  the Fund may use the name "John  Hancock" or any
name derived from or similar to it only for so long as the Advisory Agreement or
any extension,  renewal or amendment  thereof remains in effect. If the Advisory
Agreement is no longer in effect,  the Fund (to the extent that it lawfully can)
will cease to use such name or any other name  indicating  that it is advised by
or otherwise  connected with the Adviser.  In addition,  the Adviser or the Life
Company may grant the  nonexclusive  right to use the name "John Hancock" or any
similar name to any other  corporation  or entity,  including but not limited to
any investment  company of which the Life Company or any subsidiary or affiliate
thereof or any successor to the business of any subsidiary or affiliate  thereof
shall be the investment adviser.

Under the Sub-Advisory  Agreement,  the Fund may use the name  "Independence" or
any name  derived  from or  similar  to it only for so long as the  Sub-Advisory
Agreement or any extension,  renewal or amendment  thereof remains in effect. If
the Sub-Advisory  Agreement is no longer in effect, the Fund (to the extent that
it lawfully can) will cease to use such name or any other name  indicating  that
it is advised by or otherwise connected with the Sub-Adviser.  In addition,  the
Sub-Adviser or the Life Company may grant the nonexclusive right to use the name
"Independence" or any similar name to any other corporation or entity, including
but not  limited  to any  investment  company  of which the  Sub-Adviser  or any
subsidiary  or  affiliate  thereof  or  any  successor  to the  business  of any
subsidiary or affiliate thereof shall be the investment adviser.

The continuation of the Advisory Agreement was approved by all Trustees. The
Advisory Agreement and Sub-Advisory Agreement discussed below, will continue in
effect from year to year, provided that its continuance is approved annually
both by (i) by the holders of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of
the Trust or by the Trustees, and (ii) by a majority of the Trustees who are not
parties to the Agreement or "interested persons" of any such parties. Both
agreements may be terminated on 60 days written notice by any party or by a vote
of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the Fund and will
terminate automatically if it is assigned. The Sub-Advisory Agreement terminates
automatically upon the termination of the Advisory Agreement.


As provided in the Sub-Advisory  Agreement,  the Adviser (not the Fund) pays the
Sub-Adviser  a  quarterly  subadvisory  fee at  the  annual  rate  of 55% of the
management  fee paid by the Fund to the Adviser for the preceding  three months.
For the fiscal years ended  December 31, 1997,  1998 and 1999,  the  Sub-Adviser
received Sub-Advisory fees from the Adviser of $595,570, $1,501,717 and $ .

For the fiscal  years ended  December  31, 1997,  the Adviser  received  fees of
$1,192,014,  $ and $ ,  respectively.  For the fisscal  year ended  December 31,
1997, 1998 and 1999, the Adviser received fees of $1,161,340, $2,732,174 and $ ,
respectively.

                                       22
<PAGE>


Accounting and Legal Services Agreement.  The Trust, on behalf of the Fund, is a
party to an Accounting and Legal Services  Agreement with the Adviser.  Pursuant
to this agreement,  the Adviser  provides the Fund with certain tax,  accounting
and legal services. For the fiscal years ended December 31, 1997, 1998 and 1999,
the Fund  paid the  Adviser  $28,710,  $57,322  and $ for  services  under  this
Agreement.


In order to avoid conflicts with portfolio  trades for the Fund, the Adviser and
the Fund have adopted extensive  restrictions on personal  securities trading by
personnel of the Adviser and its  affiliates.  Some of these  restrictions  are:
pre-clearance  for all  personal  trades  and a ban on the  purchase  of initial
public offerings,  as well as contributions to specified charities of profits on
securities held for less than 91 days. These  restrictions are a continuation of
the basic  principle  that the interests of the Fund and its  shareholders  come
first.

DISTRIBUTION CONTRACTS


The Fund has a  Distribution  Agreement  with  John  Hancock  Funds.  Under  the
agreement,  John  Hancock  Funds is  obligated  to use its best  efforts to sell
shares of each class of the Fund.  Shares of the Fund are also sold by  selected
broker-dealers  (the "Selling  Brokers")  which have entered into selling agency
agreements  with John Hancock  Funds.  These Selling  Brokers are  authorized to
designate  other  intermediaries  to receive  purchase and redemption  orders on
behalf of the Fund.  John Hancock Funds  accepts  orders for the purchase of the
shares of the Fund  which  are  continually  offered  at net  asset  value  next
determined,  plus any applicable  sales charge,  if any. In connection  with the
sale  of  Funds  shares,   John  Hancock  Funds  and  Selling   Brokers  receive
compensation from a sales charge imposed,  in the case of Class A shares, at the
time of sale.  In the case of Class B or Class C  shares,  the  broker  receives
compensation  immediately  but John Hancock Funds is  compensated  on a deferred
basis.

Total  underwriting  commissions  for sales of the Fund's Class A shares for the
fiscal years ended December 31, 1997, 1998 and 1999 were $842,977,  $189,710 and
$ ,  respectively.  Of such amounts  $134,403,  $1,365,233 and $ , respectively,
retained by John Hancock Funds.  The remainder of the  underwriting  commissions
were reallowed to dealers.

The Fund's Trustees adopted Distribution Plans with respect to each class of
shares (the "Plans") pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the Investment Company Act of
1940. Under the Plans, the Fund will pay distribution and service fees at an
aggregate annual rate of up to 0.30% for Class A shares and 1.00% for Class B
and Class C shares of the Fund's average daily net assets attributable to shares
of that class. However, the service fees will not exceed 0.25% of the Fund's
average daily net assets attributable to each class of shares. The distribution
fees will be used to reimburse John Hancock Funds for its distribution expenses,
including but not limited to: (i) initial and ongoing sales compensation to
Selling Brokers and others (including affiliates of John Hancock Funds) engaged
in the sale of Fund shares; (ii) marketing, promotional and overhead expenses
incurred in connection with the distribution of Fund shares; and (iii) with
respect to Class B and Class C shares only, interest expenses on unreimbursed
distribution expenses. The service fees will be used to compensate Selling
Brokers and others for providing personal and account maintenance services to
shareholders. In the event that John Hancock Funds is not fully reimbursed for

                                       23
<PAGE>

payments or expenses it incurs under the Class A Plan, these expenses will not
be carried beyond twelve months from the date they were incurred. Unreimbursed
expenses under the Class B and Class C Plans will be carried forward together
with interest on the balance of these unreimbursed expenses. The Fund does not
treat unreimbursed expenses under the Class B and Class C Plans as a liability
of the Fund because the Trustees may terminate the Class B and /or Class C Plans
at any time with no additional liability for these expenses to the shareholders
of the Fund. For the fiscal year ended December 31, 1999 an aggregate of $ of
distribution expenses or % of the average net assets of the Fund's Class B
shares was not reimbursed or recovered by John Hancock Funds through the receipt
of deferred sales charges or Rule 12b-1 fees in prior periods. For the fiscal
year December 31, 1999, an aggregate of $ of distribution expenses or % of the
average net assets of the Fund's Class C shares was not reimbursed or recovered
by John Hancock Funds through the receipt of deferred sales charges or Rule
12b-1 fees in prior periods.




The Plans and all amendments were approved by the Trustees, including a majority
of the  Trustees  who are not  interested  persons  of the  Fund and who have no
direct or  indirect  financial  interest  in the  operation  of the  Plans  (the
"Independent  Trustees"),  by votes  cast in person at  meetings  called for the
purpose of voting on these Plans.

Pursuant to the Plans, at least quarterly,  John Hancock Funds provides the Fund
with a written report of the amounts expended under the Plan and the purpose for
which these  expenditures  were made.  The Trustees  review  these  reports on a
quarterly basis to determine their continued appropriateness.


The Plans provide that they will continue in effect only so long as their
continuance is approved at least annually by a majority of both the Trustees and
the Independent Trustees. The Plans provide that they may be terminated without
penalty (a) by a vote of a majority of the Independent Trustees, (b) by a vote
of a majority of the Fund's outstanding shares of the applicable class in each
case upon 60 days' written notice to John Hancock Funds, and (c) automatically
in the event of assignment. The Plans further provide that they may not be
amended to increase the maximum amount of the fees for the services described
therein without the approval of a majority of the outstanding shares of the
class of the Fund which has voting rights with respect to the Plan. Each Plan
provides that no material amendment to the Plan will be effective unless it is
approved by a majority vote of the Trustees and the Independent Trustees of the
Fund. The holders of Class A, Class B and Class C shares have exclusive voting
rights with respect to the Plan applicable to their respective class of shares.
In adopting the Plans, the Trustees concluded that, in their judgment, there is
a reasonable likelihood that the Plans will benefit the holders of the
applicable class of shares of the Fund.


Amounts paid to the John  Hancock  Funds by any class of shares of the Fund will
not be used to pay the  expenses  incurred  with  respect to any other  class of
shares of the Fund; provided, however, that expenses attributable to the Fund as
a whole will be  allocated,  to the extent  permitted  by law,  according to the
formula based upon gross sales dollars  and/or  average daily net assets of each
such class,  as may be  approved  from time to time by vote of a majority of the
Trustees.  From time to time,  the Fund may  participate  in joint  distribution
activities  with other Funds and the costs of those  activities will be borne by
each Fund in  proportion  to the relative  net asset value of the  participating
Funds.


During the fiscal year ended  December  31,  1999,  the Funds paid John  Hancock
Funds the following  amounts of expenses in connection  with their  services for
the Fund.

                                       24
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                       Expense Items
                                                       -------------

                                          Printing and
                                          Mailing of                             Expenses of       Interest Carrying
                                          Prospectus to      Compensation to     John Hancock      or Other Finance
                         Advertising      New Shareholders   Selling Brokers     Funds             Charges
                         -----------      ----------------   ---------------     -----             -------
<S>                         <C>                  <C>               <C>            <C>               <C>

Class A Shares           $                $                  $                   $                 $
Class B Shares           $                $                  $                   $                 $
Class C Shares           $                $                  $                   $                 $


SALES COMPENSATION

As part of their business  strategies,  the Fund, along with John Hancock Funds,
pays compensation to financial services firms that sell the Fund's shares. These
firms  typically  pass along a portion of this  compensation  to your  financial
representative.

Compensation  payments  originate from two sources:  from sales charges and from
12b-1 fees that are paid out of the Fund's  assets.  The sales charges and 12b-1
fees  paid  by  investors  are  detailed  in  the   prospectus   and  under  the
"Distribution  Contracts"  in this  Statement  of  Additional  Information.  The
portions of these  expenses that are reallowed to financial  services  firms are
shown on the next page.

Whenever  you make an  investment  in the  Fund,  the  financial  services  firm
receives either a reallowance from the initial sales charge or a commission,  as
described  below.  The firm also  receives the first year's  service fee at this
time.  Beginning with the second year after an investment is made, the financial
services firm receives an annual  service fee of 0.25% of its total eligible net
assets. This fee is paid quarterly in arrears by the Fund.


Financial  services firms selling large amounts of fund shares may receive extra
compensation.  This  compensation,  which John Hancock Funds pays out of its own
resources,  may  include  asset  retention  fees as well  as  reimbursement  for
marketing expenses.


                                       25
<PAGE>



                                                          Maximum
                                 Sales charge             Reallowance             First year               Maximum
                                 paid by investors        or commission           service fee              total compensation (1)
Class A Investments              (% of offering price)    (% of offering price)   (% of net investment)    (% of offering price)
- -------------------              ---------------------    ---------------------   ---------------------    ---------------------
       <S>                               <C>                       <C>                   <C>                       <C>

Up to $49,999                    5.00%                    4.01%                   0.25%                    4.25%
$50,000 - $99,999                4.50%                    3.51%                   0.25%                    3.75%
$100,000 - $249,999              3.50%                    2.61%                   0.25%                    2.85%
$250,000 - $499,999              2.50%                    1.86%                   0.25%                    2.10%
$500,000 - $999,999              2.00%                    1.36%                   0.25%                    1.60%

Regular investments of
$1 million or more
- ------------------

First $1M - $4,999,999           --                       0.75%                   0.25%                    1.00%
Next $1 - $5M above that         --                       0.25%                   0.25%                    0.50% (2)
Next $1 or more above that       --                       0.00%                   0.25%                    0.25% (2)

Retirement investments of
Class A shares of
$1 million or more*
- -------------------

First $1M - $24,999,999                                   0.75%                   0.25%                    1.00%
Next $25M -$49,999,999                                    0.25%                   0.25%                    0.50%
Next $1 or more above that                                0.00%                   0.25%                    0.25%

                                                          Maximum
                                                          Reallowance             First year               Maximum
                                                          or commission           service fee              total compensation
Class B Investments                                       (% of offering price)   (% of net investment)    (% of offering price)
- -------------------                                       ---------------------   ---------------------    ---------------------


All amounts                                               3.75%                   0.25%                    4.00%

                                                          Maximum
                                                          Reallowance             First year               Maximum
                                                          or commission           service fee              total compensation
Class C Investments                                       (% of offering price)   (% of net investment)    (% of offering price)
- -------------------                                       ---------------------   ---------------------    ---------------------
Amounts purchase
at NAV                           --                       0.75%                   0.25%                    1.00%
All other amounts                1.00%                    1.75%                   0.25%                    2.00%
</TABLE>

(1)   Reallowance/commission   percentages   and  service  fee  percentages  are
calculated   from  different   amounts,   and  therefore  may  not  equal  total
compensation percentages if combined using simple addition.

(2) For Group  Investment  Programs sales,  the maximum total  compensation  for
investments  of $1 million or more is 1.00% of the offering price (one year CDSC
of 1.00% applies for each sale).

(3) After first year subsequent service fees are paid quarterly in arrears.

                                       26
<PAGE>


(4) Includes new investments  aggregated with investments  since the last annual
reset.  John  Hancock  Funds  may  take  recent   redemtpions  into  account  in
determining if an investment qualifies as a new investment.

CDSC  revenues  collected by John Hancock  Funds may be used to pay  commissions
when there is no initial sales charge.

*Retirement  investments  only.  These include  traditional,  Roth and Education
IRAs, SIMPLE IRAs, SIMPLE 401(k),  Rollover IRA, TSA, 457, 403(b), 401(k), Money
Purchase  Pension  Plan,  profit-sharing  plan  and  other  retirement  plans as
described in the Internal Revenue Code.


NET ASSET VALUE

For purposes of  calculating  the net asset value ("NAV") of the Fund's  shares,
the following procedures are utilized wherever applicable.

Debt investment  securities are valued on the basis of valuations furnished by a
principal  market maker or a pricing  service,  both of which generally  utilize
electronic  data  processing  techniques  to  determine  valuations  for  normal
institutional  size trading units of debt securities  without exclusive reliance
upon quoted prices.

Equity  securities  traded on a  principal  exchange or NASDAQ  National  Market
Issues  are  generally  valued  at last  sale  price  on the  day of  valuation.
Securities  in the  aforementioned  category for which no sales are reported and
other  securities  traded  over-the-counter  are  generally  valued  at the last
available bid price.

Short-term debt investments  which have a remaining  maturity of 60 days or less
are generally  valued at amortized  cost which  approximates  market  value.  If
market  quotations are not readily available or if in the opinion of the Adviser
any  quotation or price is not  representative  of true market  value,  the fair
value  of the  security  may be  determined  in good  faith in  accordance  with
procedures approved by the Trustees.

Foreign securities are valued on the basis of quotations from the primary market
in which  they are  traded.  Any  assets or  liabilities  expressed  in terms of
foreign  currencies are translated into U.S. dollars by the custodian bank based
on London currency exchange quotations as of 5:00 p.m., London time (12:00 noon,
New York time) on the date of any determination of the Fund's NAV. If quotations
are not  readily  available,  or the value has been  materially  affected by the
events  occurring after the closing of a foreign market,  assets are valued by a
method that the Trustees believe accurately reflects fair value.

The NAV of each Fund and class is  determined  each business day at the close of
regular  trading on the New York Stock  Exchange  (typically  4:00 p.m.  Eastern
Time)  by  dividing  the a  class's  net  assets  by  the  number  of it  shares
outstanding. On any day an international market is closed and the New York Stock
Exchange is open, any foreign securities will be valued at the prior day's close
with the current day's  exchange  rate.  Trading of foreign  securities may take
place on  Saturdays  and U.S.  business  holidays on which the Fund's NAV is not
calculated.  Consequently, the Fund's portfolio securities may trade and the NAV
of the Fund's redeemable securities may be significantly affected on days when a
shareholder has no access to the Fund.

                                       27
<PAGE>




INITIAL SALES CHARGE ON CLASS A AND CLASS C SHARES


Shares of the Fund are  offered at a price equal to their net asset value plus a
sales charge which, at the option of the purchaser, may be imposed either at the
time of purchase (the  "initial  sales charge  alternative")  or on a contingent
deferred basis (the "deferred  sales charge  alternative").  Share  certificates
will not be issued unless requested by the shareholder in writing, and then only
be issued for full shares.  The Trustees  reserve the right to change or waive a
Fund's  minimum  investment  requirements  and to reject  any order to  purchase
shares (including purchase by exchange) when in the judgment of the Adviser such
rejection is in the Fund's best interest.


The sales charges applicable to purchases of Class A and Class C shares of the
Fund are described in the Prospectus. Methods of obtaining reduced sales charges
referred to generally in the Prospectus are described in detail below. In
calculating the sales charge applicable to current purchases of Class A shares
of the Fund, the investor is entitled to cumulate current purchases with the
greater of the current value (at offering price) of the Class A shares of the
Fund, or if John Hancock Signature Services, Inc. ("Signature Services") is
notified by the investor's dealer or the investor at the time of the purchase,
the cost of the Class A shares owned.


Without Sales Charge.  Class A shares may be offered  without a front-end  sales
charge or contingent  deferred sales charges ("CDSC") to various individuals and
institutions as follows:

o        A Trustee or officer of the Trust; a Director or officer of the Adviser
         and  its   affiliates   or   Selling   Brokers;   employees   or  sales
         representatives of any of the foregoing; retired officers, employees or
         Directors of any of the  foregoing;  a member of the  immediate  family
         (spouse, children, grandparents, grandchildren, mother, father, sister,
         brother,  mother-in-law,  father-in-law,  daughter-in-law,  son-in-law,
         niece,  nephew and same sex domestic  partner) of any of the foregoing;
         or any fund,  pension,  profit  sharing or other  benefit  plan for the
         individuals described above.

o        A  broker,   dealer,   financial  planner,   consultant  or  registered
         investment  advisor that has entered into a signed  agreement with John
         Hancock  Funds  providing  specifically  for the use of fund  shares in
         fee-based  investment  products or  services  made  available  to their
         clients.

o        A former  participant  in an employee  benefit  plan with John  Hancock
         funds,  when he or she withdraws from his or her plan and transfers any
         or all of his or her plan distributions directly to the Fund.

o        A member of a class action lawsuit against insurance companies who is
         investing settlement proceeds.

o        Retirement plans participating in Merrill Lynch servicing programs, if
         the Plan has more than $3 million in assets or 500 eligible employees
         at the date the Plan Sponsor signs the Merrill Lynch Recordkeeping
         Service Agreement. See your Merrill Lynch financial consultant for
         further information.

o        Retirement plans investing through the PruArray Program sponsored by
         Prudential Securities.

                                       28
<PAGE>


o        Pension plans transferring  assets from a John Hancock variable annuity
         contract to the Fund pursuant to an exemptive  application  approved by
         the Securities and Exchange Commission.

o        Existing  full  service  clients  of the Life  Company  who were  group
         annuity  contract  holders as of  September  1, 1994,  and  participant
         directed  retirement plans with at least 100 eligible  employees at the
         inception of the Fund  account.  Each of these  investors  may purchase
         Class A shares with no initial sales charge. However, for each Fund, if
         the shares are redeemed  within 12 months after the end of the calendar
         year in which the  purchase  was made,  a CDSC will be  imposed  at the
         following rate:

         Amount Invested                                           CDSC RATE
         ---------------                                           ---------

         $1 to $4,999,000                                              1.00%
         Next $5 million to $9,999,999                                 0.50%
         Amounts of $10 million and over                               0.25%


Class C shares may be offerred without a front-end sales charge to:

o         retirement plans for which John Hancock Signature Services
          performs employer sponsored plan recordkeeping services. (These
          types of plans include 401(k), money purchase pension, profit
          sharing and SIMPLE 401k.)

o         shareholders of the Fund as of May 1, 2000.

Class A and Class C shares may also be purchased without an initial sales charge
in  connection  with certain  liquidation,  merger or  acquisition  transactions
involving other investment companies or personal holding companies.


Combination  Privilege.  In calculating the sales charge applicable to purchases
of Class A shares  made at one time,  the  purchases  will be combined to reduce
sales charges if made by (a) an individual, his or her spouse and their children
under the age of 21, purchasing  securities for his or their own account,  (b) a
trustee or other  fiduciary  purchasing for a single trust,  estate or fiduciary
account and (c) groups  which  qualify  for the Group  Investment  Program  (see
below). A company's (not an individual's) qualified and non-qualified retirement
plan  investments can be combined to take advantage of this  privilege.  Further
information about combined purchases, including certain restrictions on combined
group  purchases,  is available  from Signature  Services or a Selling  Broker's
representative.

Accumulation Privilege.  Investors (including investors combining purchases) who
are  already  Class A  shareholders  may also  obtain the benefit of the reduced
sales charge by taking into account not only the amount being  invested but also
the investor's purchase price or current value of the Class A shares of all John
Hancock  funds which carry a sales charge  already held by such person.  Class A
shares  of John  Hancock  money  market  funds  will  only be  eligible  for the
accumulation privilege if the investor has previously paid a sales charge on the
amount of those shares. Retirement plan investors may include the value of Class
B shares if Class B shares held are greater  than $1 million.  Retirement  plans
must notify  Signature  Services to utilize.  A company's (not an  individual's)
qualified and non-qualified  retirement plan investments can be combined to take
advantage of this privilege.

                                       29
<PAGE>


Group Investment Program. Under the Combination and Accumulation Privileges, all
members of a group may combine their  individual  purchases of Class A shares to
potentially  qualify for breakpoints in the sales charge schedule.  This feature
is  provided  to any  group  which (1) has been in  existence  for more than six
months,  (2) has a  legitimate  purpose  other than the  purchase of mutual fund
shares at a discount for its members,  (3) utilizes salary  deduction or similar
group methods of payment, and (4) agrees to allow sales materials of the fund in
its mailings to members at a reduced or no cost to John Hancock Funds.

Letter of Intention.  Reduced sales charges are also  applicable to  investments
made  pursuant  to a Letter  of  Intention  (the  "LOI"),  which  should be read
carefully  prior to its  execution by an  investor.  The Fund offers two options
regarding  the  specified  period  for  making  investments  under the LOI.  All
investors have the option of making their investments over a specified period of
thirteen (13) months. Investors who are using the Fund as a funding medium for a
retirement plan, however,  may opt to make the necessary  investments called for
by the LOI over a forty-eight (48) month period.  These retirement plans include
traditional,  Roth and Education IRAs, SEP, SARSEP,  401(k),  403(b)  (including
TSAs),  SIMPLE IRA, SIMPLE (401(k),  Money purchase pension,  Profit Sharing and
Section 457 plans. An individual's  non-qualified and qualified  retirement plan
investments  cannot  be  combined  to  satisfy  an LOI  of 48  months.  Such  an
investment   (including   accumulations   and  combinations  but  not  including
reinvested dividends) must aggregate $50,000 or more during the specified period
from the date of the LOI or from a date within  ninety (90) days prior  thereto,
upon written request to Signature  Services.  The sales charge applicable to all
amounts  invested under the LOI is computed as if the aggregate  amount intended
to be invested had been invested  immediately.  If such aggregate  amount is not
actually  invested,  the  difference  in the sales charge  actually paid and the
sales  charge  payable had the LOI not been in effect is due from the  investor.
However,  for the purchases actually made within the specified period (either 13
or 48 months)  the sales  charge  applicable  will not be higher than that which
would have applied  (including  accumulations and combinations) had the LOI been
for the amount actually invested.

The LOI  authorizes  Signature  Services  to hold in escrow  sufficient  Class A
shares  (approximately  5% of the  aggregate) to make up any difference in sales
charges on the amount intended to be invested and the amount actually  invested,
until such investment is completed  within the specified  period,  at which time
the escrow shares will be released. If the total investment specified in the LOI
is not  completed,  the Class A shares  held in escrow may be  redeemed  and the
proceeds used as required to pay such sales charge as may be due. By signing the
LOI, the investor authorizes  Signature Services to act as his  attorney-in-fact
to redeem any escrowed Class A shares and adjust the sales charge, if necessary.
A LOI does not constitute a binding commitment by an investor to purchase, or by
the Fund to sell,  any  additional  Class A shares and may be  terminated at any
time.

DEFERRED SALES CHARGE ON CLASS B AND CLASS C SHARES

Investments  in Class B and Class C shares are  purchased at net asset value per
share without the imposition of an initial sales charge so the Fund will receive
the full amount of the purchase payment.


Contingent Deferred Sales Charge. Class B and Class C shares which are redeemed
within six years or one year of purchase, respectively will be subject to a CDSC
at the rates set forth in the Prospectus as a percentage of the dollar amount
subject to the CDSC. The charge will be assessed on an amount equal to the
lesser of the current market value or the original purchase cost of the Class B
or Class C shares being redeemed. No CDSC will be imposed on increases in
account value above the initial purchase price or on shares derived from
reinvestment of dividends or capital gains distributions.


                                       30
<PAGE>


Class B shares are not available to full-service  retirement plans  administered
by  Signature  Services  or the Life  Company  that had more  than 100  eligible
employees at the inception of the Fund account.

The amount of the CDSC, if any, will vary  depending on the number of years from
the  time of  payment  for the  purchase  of Class B  shares  until  the time of
redemption  of such  shares.  Solely for purposes of  determining  the number of
years from the time of any payment for the  purchase of both Class B and Class C
shares,  all payments  during a month will be aggregated and deemed to have been
made on the first day of the month.


In determining whether a CDSC applies to a redemption, the calculation will be
determined in a manner that results in the lowest possible rate being charged.
It will be assumed that your redemption comes first from shares you have held
beyond the six-year CDSC redemption period for Class B or one year CDSC
redemption period for Class C or those you acquired through dividend and capital
gain reinvestment, and next from the shares you have held the longest during the
six-year period for Class B shares. For this purpose, the amount of any increase
in a share's value above its initial purchase price is not subject to a CDSC.
Thus, when a share that has appreciated in value is redeemed during the CDSC
period, a CDSC is assessed only on its initial purchase price.


When requesting a redemption for a specific dollar amount please indicate if you
require the proceeds to equal the dollar  amount  requested.  If not  indicated,
only the  specified  dollar  amount will be redeemed  from your  account and the
proceeds will be less any applicable CDSC.

Example:

You have purchased 100 shares at $10 per share. The second year after your
purchase, your investment's net asset value per share has increased by $2 to
$12, and you have gained 10 additional shares through dividend reinvestment. If
you redeem 50 shares at this time your CDSC will be calculated as follows:

  oProceeds of 50 shares redeemed at $12 per shares (50 x 12)          $600.00
  o*Minus Appreciation ($12 - $10) x 100 shares                        (200.00)
  o Minus proceeds of 10 shares not subject to
    CDSC (dividend reinvestment)                                       (120.00)
                                                                       -------
  oAmount subject to CDSC                                              $280.00


  *The appreciation is based on all 100 shares in the account not just
   the shares being redeemed.


Proceeds from the CDSC are paid to John Hancock Funds and are used in whole or
in part by John Hancock Funds to defray its expenses related to providing
distribution-related services to the Fund in connection with the sale of the
Class B and Class C shares, such as the payment of compensation to select
Selling Brokers for selling Class B and Class C shares. The combination of the
CDSC and the distribution and service fees facilitates the ability of the Fund
to sell the Class B and Class C shares without a sales charge being deducted at
the time of the purchase.

                                       31
<PAGE>


Waiver  of  Contingent  Deferred  Sales  Charge.  The  CDSC  will be  waived  on
redemptions of Class B and Class C shares and of Class A shares that are subject
to a CDSC, unless indicated otherwise, in the circumstances defined below:

For all account types:

*        Redemptions made pursuant to the Fund's right to liquidate your accoun
         if you own shares worth less than $1,000.

*        Redemptions  made  under  certain  liquidation,  merger or  acquisition
         transactions  involving other investment  companies or personal holding
         companies.

*        Redemptions due to death or disability. (Does not apply to trust
         accounts unless trust is being dissolved.)

*        Redemptions made under the Reinstatement  Privilege,  as described in
         "Sales Charge Reductions and Waivers" of the Prospectus.

*        Redemptions  of Class B (but not Class C) shares  made under a periodic
         withdrawal plan or redemptions for fees charged by planners or advisors
         for advisory services, as long as your annual redemptions do not exceed
         12% of your account value, including reinvested dividends,  at the time
         you established  your periodic  withdrawal plan and 12% of the value of
         subsequent  investments (less  redemptions) in that account at the time
         you notify Signature  Services.  (Please note that this waiver does not
         apply to periodic  withdrawal  plan  redemptions  of Class A or Class C
         shares that are subject to a CDSC).

*        Redemptions by Retirement plans participating in Merrill Lynch
         servicing programs, if the Plan has less than $3 million in assets or
         500 eligible employees at the date the Plan Sponsor signs the Merrill
         Lynch Recordkeeping Service Agreement. See your Merrill Lynch financial
         consultant for further information.


*        Redemptions of Class A shares by retirement plans that invested through
         the PruArray Program sponsored by Prudential Securities.


*        Redemptions  of Class A shares  made after one year from the  inception
         date of a  retirement  plan at John  Hancock for which John  Hancock is
         recordkeeper.


For Retirement  Accounts (such as traditional,  Roth and Education IRAs,  SIMPLE
IRAs,  SIMPLE 401(k),  Rollover IRA, TSA, 457,  403(b),  401(k),  Money Purchase
Pension Plan,  Profit-Sharing  Plan and other plans as described in the Internal
Revenue Code) unless otherwise noted.

*        Redemptions made to effect mandatory or life expectancy distributions
         under the Internal Revenue Code.

*        Returns of excess contributions made to these plans.

*        Redemptions   made  to  effect   distributions   to   participants   or
         beneficiaries from employer  sponsored  retirement plans under sections
         401(a) (such as Money Purchase Pension Plans and  Profit-Sharing/401(k)
         Plans),  457 and 408 (SEPs and  SIMPLE  IRAs) of the  Internal  Revenue
         Code.

                                       32
<PAGE>


*        Redemptions from certain IRA and retirement plans that purchased shares
         prior to October 1, 1992 and certain IRA accounts that purchased shares
         prior to May 15, 1995.

Please see matrix for some examples.






                                       33
<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

         <S>                   <C>              <C>                <C>             <C>                 <C>

- ----------------------- ----------------- ----------------- ---------------- ----------------- ----------------
Type of                 401 (a) Plan      403 (b)           457              IRA, IRA          Non-retirement
Distribution            (401 (k), MPP,                                       Rollover
                        PSP) 457 & 408
                        (SEPs & Simple
                        IRAs)
- ----------------------- ----------------- ----------------- ---------------- ----------------- ----------------
Death or Disability     Waived            Waived            Waived           Waived            Waived
- ----------------------- ----------------- ----------------- ---------------- ----------------- ----------------
Over 70 1/2             Waived            Waived            Waived           Waived for        12% of account
                                                                             mandatory         value annually
                                                                             distributions     in periodic
                                                                             or 12% of         payments
                                                                             account value
                                                                             annually in
                                                                             periodic
                                                                             payments.
- ----------------------- ----------------- ----------------- ---------------- ----------------- ----------------
Between 59 1/2          Waived            Waived            Waived           Waived for Life   12% of account
and 70 1/2                                                                   Expectancy or     value annually
                                                                             12% of account    in periodic
                                                                             value annually    payments
                                                                             in periodic
                                                                             payments.
- ----------------------- ----------------- ----------------- ---------------- ----------------- ----------------
Under 59 1/2            Waived for        Waived for        Waived for       Waived for        12% of account
(Class B only)          annuity           annuity           annuity          annuity           value annually
                        payments (72t)    payments (72t)    payments (72t)   payments (72t)    in periodic
                        or 12% of         or 12% of         or 12% of        or 12% of         payments
                        account value     account value     account value    account value
                        annually in       annually in       annually in      annually in
                        periodic          periodic          periodic         periodic
                        payments.         payments.         payments.        payments.
- ----------------------- ----------------- ----------------- ---------------- ----------------- ----------------
Loans                   Waived            Waived            N/A              N/A               N/A
- ----------------------- ----------------- ----------------- ---------------- ----------------- ----------------
Termination of Plan     Not Waived        Not Waived        Not Waived       Not Waived        N/A
- ----------------------- ----------------- ----------------- ---------------- ----------------- ----------------
Hardships               Waived            Waived            Waived           N/A               N/A
- ----------------------- ----------------- ----------------- ---------------- ----------------- ----------------
Qualified Domestic      Waived            Waived            Waived           N/A               N/A
Relations Orders
- ----------------------- ----------------- ----------------- ---------------- ----------------- ----------------
Termination of          Waived            Waived            Waived           N/A               N/A
Employment Before
Normal Retirement Age
- ----------------------- ----------------- ----------------- ---------------- ----------------- ----------------
Return of Excess        Waived            Waived            Waived           Waived            N/A
- ----------------------- ----------------- ----------------- ---------------- ----------------- ----------------
</TABLE>


                                       34
<PAGE>


If you qualify for a CDSC waiver under one of these situations,  you must notify
Signature  Services  at the time you make your  redemption.  The waiver  will be
granted  once  Signature  Services  has  confirmed  that you are entitled to the
waiver.

SPECIAL REDEMPTIONS


Although it would not normally do so, the Fund has the right to pay the
redemption price of shares of the Fund in whole or in part in portfolio
securities as prescribed by the Trustees. When the shareholder sells portfolio
securities received in this fashion, the shareholder will incur a brokerage
charge. Any such securities would be valued for the purposes of making such
payment at the same value as used in determining net asset value. The Fund has
elected to be governed by Rule 18f-1 under the Investment Company Act. Under
that rule, the Fund must redeem its shares for cash except to the extent that
the redemption payments to any shareholder during any 90-day period would exceed
the lesser of $250,000 or 1% of the Fund's net asset value at the beginning of
such period.


ADDITIONAL SERVICES AND PROGRAMS

Exchange Privilege.  The Fund permits exchanges of shares of any class of a Fund
for shares of the same class in any other John Hancock fund offering that class.


Exchanges between funds with shares that are not subject to a CDSC are based on
their respective net asset values. No sales charge or transaction charge is
imposed. Shares of the Fund which are subject to a CDSC may be exchanged into
shares of any of the other John Hancock funds that are subject to a CDSC without
incurring the CDSC; however, the shares acquired in an exchange will be subject
to the CDSC schedule of the shares acquired if and when such shares are redeemed
(except that shares exchanged into John Hancock 500 Index Fund and John Hancock
Intermediate Government Fund will retain the exchanged fund's CDSC schedule).
For purposes of computing the CDSC payable upon redemption of shares acquired in
an exchange, the holding period of the original shares is added to the holding
period of the shares acquired in an exchange.

If a shareholder exchanges Class B shares purchased prior to January 1, 1994 for
Class B shares of any other John Hancock fund, the acquired shares will continue
to be subject to the CDSC schedule that was in effect when the exchanged shares
were purchased.


The Fund  reserves the right to require that  previously  exchanged  shares (and
reinvested  dividends)  be in the  Fund  for 90 days  before  a  shareholder  is
permitted a new exchange.

The Fund may  refuse  any  exchange  order.  The Fund may  change or cancel  its
exchange policies at any time, upon 60 days' notice to its shareholders.

An exchange of shares is treated as a  redemption  of shares of one fund and the
purchase of shares of another for Federal  Income Tax purposes.  An exchange may
result in a taxable gain or loss. See "TAX STATUS".

Systematic Withdrawal Plan. The Fund permits the establishment of a Systematic
Withdrawal Plan. Payments under this plan represent proceeds arising from the
redemption of the Fund shares. Since the redemption price of the Fund shares may
be more or less than the shareholder's cost, depending upon the market value of
the securities owned by the Fund at the time of redemption, the distribution of
cash pursuant to this plan may result in realization of gain or loss for
purposes of Federal, state and local income taxes. The maintenance of a
Systematic Withdrawal Plan concurrently with purchases of additional shares of

                                       35
<PAGE>


the Fund could be disadvantageous to a shareholder because of the initial sales
charge payable on such purchases of Class A shares and the CDSC imposed on
redemptions of Class B and Class C shares and because redemptions are taxable
events. Therefore, a shareholder should not purchase shares at the same time
that a Systematic Withdrawal Plan is in effect. The Fund reserves the right to
modify or discontinue the Systematic Withdrawal Plan of any shareholder on 30
days' prior written notice to such shareholder, or to discontinue the
availability of such plan in the future. The shareholder may terminate the plan
at any time by giving proper notice to Signature Services.

Monthly Automatic Accumulation Program ("MAAP"). The program is explained in the
Prospectus. The program, as it relates to automatic investment checks, is
subject to the following conditions:

The investments will be drawn on or about the day of the month indicated.

The privilege of making investments through the MAAP may be revoked by Signature
Services  without  prior  notice  if  any  investment  is  not  honored  by  the
shareholder's  bank.  The  bank  shall  be under no  obligation  to  notify  the
shareholder as to the nonpayment of any checks.

The program may be discontinued by the shareholder  either by calling  Signature
Services or upon written notice to Signature Services which is received at least
five (5) business days prior to the due date of any investment.

Reinstatement or Reinvestment Privilege. If Signature Services is notified prior
to reinvestment, a shareholder who has redeemed Fund shares may, within 120 days
after the date of  redemption,  reinvest  without  payment of a sales charge any
part of the  redemption  proceeds  in  shares  of the same  class of the Fund or
another John Hancock fund, subject to the minimum investment limit of that fund.
The proceeds  from the  redemption  of Class A shares may be  reinvested  at net
asset value  without  paying a sales  charge in Class A shares of the Fund or in
Class A shares of any John Hancock fund. If a CDSC was paid upon a redemption, a
shareholder may reinvest the proceeds from this redemption at net asset value in
additional  shares  of the  class  from  which  the  redemption  was  made.  The
shareholder's  account will be credited with the amount of any CDSC charged upon
the prior redemption and the new shares will continue to be subject to the CDSC.
The  holding  period of the  shares  acquired  through  reinvestment  will,  for
purposes of computing the CDSC payable upon a subsequent redemption, include the
holding period of the redeemed shares.

To protect the interests of other investors in the Fund, the Fund may cancel the
reinvestment  privilege  of any parties  that,  in the opinion of the Fund,  are
using market timing  strategies or making more than seven exchanges per owner or
controlling  party per calendar year. Also, the Fund may refuse any reinvestment
request.

The Fund may change or cancel its reinvestment policies at any time.

A redemption or exchange of Fund shares is a taxable transaction for Federal
income tax purposes even if the reinvestment privilege is exercised, and any
gain or loss realized by a shareholder on the redemption or other disposition of
Fund shares will be treated for tax purposes as described under the caption "TAX
STATUS."

                                       36
<PAGE>


Retirement plans participating in Merrill Lynch's servicing programs:

Class A shares  are  available  at net asset  value for plans with $3 million in
plan assets or 500 eligible  employees  at the date the Plan  Sponsor  signs the
Merrill Lynch Recordkeeping Service Agreement.  If the plan does not meet either
of these limits, Class A shares are not available.

For  participating  retirement  plans  investing in Class B shares,  shares will
convert  to Class A shares  after  eight  years,  or sooner if the plan  attains
assets of $5 million (by means of a CDSC-free  redemption/purchase  at net asset
value).

PURCHASES AND REDEMPTIONS THROUGH THIRD PARTIES


Shares of the Fund may be purchased or redeemed through certain  broker-dealers.
Brokers  may charge for their  services  or place  limitations  on the extent to
which  you may use the  services  of the  Fund.  The Fund will be deemed to have
received  a  purchase  or  redemption  order when an  authorized  broker,  or if
applicable,  a broker's authorized designee,  receives the order. If a broker is
an  agent  or  designee  of the  Fund,  orders  are  processed  at the NAV  next
calculated  after the broker  receives the order.  The broker must segregate any
orders it  receives  after the close of  regular  trading  on the New York Stock
Exchange  and  transmit  those  orders  to the  Fund for  execution  at NAV next
determined.  Some brokers that maintain nominee accounts with the Fund for their
clients charge an annual fee on the average net assets held in such accounts for
accounting,  servicing,  and distribution  services they provide with respect to
the underlying Fund shares. The Adviser,  the Fund, and John Hancock Funds, Inc.
(the Fund's principal distributor), share in the expense of these fees.

DESCRIPTION OF THE FUND'S SHARES

The Trustees of the Trust are  responsible for the management and supervision of
the Fund.  The  Declaration  of Trust permits the Trustees to issue an unlimited
number of full and fractional shares of beneficial  interest of the Fund without
par value.  Under the  Declaration of Trust,  the Trustees have the authority to
create and classify shares of beneficial interest in separate series and classes
without  further  action by  shareholders.  As of the date of this  Statement of
Additional  Information,  the  Trustees  have  authorized  shares  of the  Fund.
Additional series may be added in the future.  The Trustees have also authorized
the  issuance  of three  classes of shares of the Fund,  designated  as Class A,
Class B and Class C.


The shares of each class of the Fund represent an equal  proportionate  interest
in the aggregate net assets  attributable to that class of the Fund.  Holders of
each Class of shares have certain exclusive voting rights on matters relating to
their respective  distribution plans. The different classes of the Fund may bear
different  expenses  relating  to  the  cost  of  holding  shareholder  meetings
necessitated by the exclusive voting rights of any class of shares.

Dividends paid by the Fund, if any, with respect to each class of shares will be
calculated in the same manner, at the same time and on the same day and will be
in the same amount, except for differences resulting from the facts that (i) the
distribution and service fees relating to each class will be borne exclusively
by that class, (ii) Class B and Class C shares will pay higher distribution and
service fees than Class A shares and (iii) each class of shares will bear any
class expenses properly allocable to that class of shares, subject to the
conditions the Internal Revenue Service imposes with respect to the
multiple-class structures. Similarly, the net asset value per share may vary
depending on which class of shares are purchased. No interest will be paid on
uncashed dividend or redemption checks.

                                       37
<PAGE>


In the event of  liquidation,  shareholders  of each class are entitled to share
pro rata in the net  assets  of the Fund  available  for  distribution  to these
shareholders.  Shares  entitle their  holders to one vote per share,  are freely
transferable  and have no preemptive,  subscription or conversion  rights.  When
issued, shares are fully paid and non-assessable, except as set forth below.

Unless  otherwise  required by the Investment  Company Act or the Declaration of
Trust,  the Fund has no intention of holding  annual  meetings of  shareholders.
Fund  shareholders  may  remove a Trustee  by the  affirmative  vote of at least
two-thirds of the Trust's  outstanding  shares and the Trustees  shall  promptly
call a meeting for such purpose when requested to do so in writing by the record
holders  of  not  less  than  10%  of  the  outstanding  shares  of  the  Trust.
Shareholders   may,  under  certain   circumstances,   communicate   with  other
shareholders in connection  with  requesting a special meeting of  shareholders.
However,  at any time that less than a majority of the Trustees  holding  office
were elected by the  shareholders,  the Trustees will call a special  meeting of
shareholders for the purpose of electing Trustees.

Under Massachusetts law,  shareholders of a Massachusetts  business trust could,
under certain  circumstances,  be held personally liable for acts or obligations
of the Trust.  However,  the Declaration of Trust contains an express disclaimer
of  shareholder  liability  for acts,  obligations  or affairs of the Fund.  The
Declaration of Trust also provides for  indemnification out of the Fund's assets
for all losses and expenses of any shareholder held personally  liable by reason
of being or having been a  shareholder.  The  Declaration of Trust also provides
that no series of the Trust  shall be liable  for the  liabilities  of any other
series.  Furthermore, no fund included in this Fund's prospectus shall be liable
for the  liabilities  of any other John  Hancock  fund.  Liability  is therefore
limited to  circumstances  in which the Fund itself  would be unable to meet its
obligations, and the possibility of this occurrence is remote.

The Fund reserves the right to reject any  application  which conflicts with the
Fund's  internal  policies or the  policies of any  regulatory  authority.  John
Hancock Funds does not accept  starter,  credit card or third party checks.  All
checks  returned by the post office as  undeliverable  will be reinvested at net
asset  value in the fund or funds from which a  redemption  was made or dividend
paid. Information provided on the account application may be used by the Fund to
verify the accuracy of the  information or for  background or financial  history
purposes.  A joint account will be administered as a joint tenancy with right of
survivorship,  unless the joint owners notify Signature  Services of a different
intent.  A shareholder's  account is governed by the laws of The Commonwealth of
Massachusetts. For telephone transactions, the transfer agent will take measures
to verify the identity of the caller,  such as asking for name,  account number,
Social Security or other taxpayer ID number and other relevant  information.  If
appropriate  measures are taken,  the transfer agent is not  responsible for any
loss that may occur to any account due to an  unauthorized  telephone call. Also
for your protection  telephone  transactions are not permitted on accounts whose
names or addresses have changed within the past 30 days. Proceeds from telephone
transactions can only be mailed to the address of record.

Selling activities for the Fund may not take place outside the U.S. except with
U.S. military bases, APO addresses and U.S. diplomats. Brokers of record on
Non-U.S. investors' accounts with foreign mailing addresses are required to
certify that all sales activities have occurred, and in the future will occur,
only in the U.S. A foreign corporation may purchase shares of the Fund only if
it has a U.S. mailing address.


                                       38
<PAGE>



TAX STATUS


The Fund is treated as a separate entity for accounting and tax purposes, has
qualified and elected to be treated as a "regulated investment company" under
Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code"), and
intends to continue to qualify for each taxable year. As such and by complying
with the applicable provisions of the Code regarding the sources of its income,
the timing of its distributions and the diversification of its assets, the Fund
will not be subject to Federal income tax on its taxable income (including net
realized capital gains) which is distributed to shareholders in accordance with
the timing requirements of the Code.


The Fund will be subject  to a 4%  nondeductible  Federal  excise tax on certain
amounts not distributed (and not treated as having been distributed) on a timely
basis in accordance  with annual  minimum  distribution  requirements.  The Fund
intends under normal  circumstances  to seek to avoid or minimize  liability for
this tax by satisfying such distribution requirements.

Distributions  from the  Fund's  current or  accumulated  earnings  and  profits
("E&P") will be taxable  under the Code for investors who are subject to tax. If
these  distributions  are  paid  from the  Fund's  "investment  company  taxable
income," they will be taxable as ordinary income;  and if they are paid from the
Fund's "net capital gain," they will be taxable as long-term  capital gain. (Net
capital  gain is the  excess  (if any) of net  long-term  capital  gain over net
short-term  capital loss, and investment  company  taxable income is all taxable
income  and  capital  gains,  other  than those  gains and  losses  included  in
computing  net capital gain,  after  reduction by  deductible  expenses.).  Some
distributions  may be paid in January but may be taxable to  shareholders  as if
they had been  received on December 31 of the previous  year.  The tax treatment
described above will apply without regard to whether  distributions are received
in cash or reinvested in additional shares of the Fund.

Distributions,  if any,  in excess of E&P will  constitute  a return of  capital
under the Code, which will first reduce an investor's  federal tax basis in Fund
shares and then, to the extent such basis is exceeded,  will generally give rise
to capital gains.  Shareholders who have chosen automatic  reinvestment of their
distributions  will have a federal tax basis in each share received  pursuant to
such a  reinvestment  equal to the amount of cash they would have  received  had
they  elected  to receive  the  distribution  in cash,  divided by the number of
shares received in the reinvestment.

If the Fund invests in stock (including an option to acquire stock such as is
inherent in a convertible bond) of certain foreign corporations that receive at
least 75% of their annual gross income from passive sources (such as interest,
dividends, certain rents and royalties or capital gain) or hold at least 50% of
their assets in investments producing such passive income ("passive foreign
investment companies"), the Fund could be subject to Federal income tax and
additional interest charges on "excess distributions" received from such
companies or gain from the sale of stock in such companies, even if all income
or gain actually received by the Fund is timely distributed to its shareholders.
The Fund would not be able to pass through to its shareholders any credit or
deduction for such a tax. An election may be available to ameliorate these
adverse tax consequences, but could require the Fund to recognize taxable income
or gain without the concurrent receipt of cash. These investments could also
result in the treatment of associated capital gains as ordinary income. The Fund
may limit and/or manage its holdings in passive foreign investment companies to
minimize its tax liability or maximize its return from these investments.

                                       39
<PAGE>


The Fund may be  subject  to  withholding  and other  taxes  imposed  by foreign
countries  with  respect  to its  investments  in foreign  securities.  Some tax
conventions  between  certain  countries  and the  United  States  may reduce or
eliminate  such  taxes.  The Fund does not  expect to qualify to pass such taxes
through  to its  shareholders,  who  consequently  will not take such taxes into
account on their own tax  returns.  However,  the Fund will deduct such taxes in
determining the amount it has available for distribution to shareholders.

The amount of the Fund's net realized  capital gains,  if any, in any given year
will vary depending upon the Adviser's current  investment  strategy and whether
the  Adviser  believes  it to be in the best  interest of the Fund to dispose of
portfolio securities and /or engage in options,  futures or forward transactions
will generate capital gains. At the time of an investor's  purchase of shares of
the Fund, a portion of the  purchase  price is often  attributed  to realized or
unrealized  appreciation in the Fund's portfolio or undistributed taxable income
of the Fund.  Consequently,  subsequent  distributions from such appreciation or
income  may be  taxable  to such  investor  even if the net  asset  value of the
investor's  shares  is,  as a result  of the  distributions,  reduced  below the
investor's cost for such shares,  and the distributions (or portions thereof) in
reality represent a return of a portion of the purchase price.

Upon a redemption or other  disposition of shares  (including by exercise of the
exchange privilege) in a transaction that is treated as a sale for tax purposes,
a shareholder will ordinarily  realize a taxable gain or loss depending upon the
amount of the proceeds and the investor's basis in his shares. Such gain or loss
will be treated as capital gain or loss if the shares are capital  assets in the
shareholder's  hands and will be long-term  or  short-term,  depending  upon the
shareholder's tax holding period for the shares and subject to the special rules
described below. A sales charge paid in purchasing  shares of the Fund cannot be
taken into account for purposes of determining gain or loss on the redemption or
exchange of such shares within 90 days after their purchase to the extent shares
of the Fund or another  John  Hancock  fund are  subsequently  acquired  without
payment of a sales charge pursuant to the  reinvestment  or exchange  privilege.
This  disregarded  charge will result in an  increase in the  shareholder's  tax
basis  in the  shares  subsequently  acquired.  Also,  any  loss  realized  on a
redemption or exchange may be  disallowed  to the extent the shares  disposed of
are replaced with other shares of the Fund within a period of 61 days  beginning
30 days  before and ending 30 days after the  shares are  disposed  of,  such as
pursuant to an election to reinvest  dividends in additional  shares.  In such a
case,  the  basis  of the  shares  acquired  will be  adjusted  to  reflect  the
disallowed  loss.  Any loss  realized  upon the  redemption of shares with a tax
holding period of six months or less will be treated as a long-term capital loss
to the extent of any amounts treated as distributions of long-term  capital gain
with respect to such shares.  Shareholders should consult their own tax advisers
regarding their particular  circumstances to determine  whether a disposition of
Fund shares is properly treated as a sale for tax purposes, as is assumed in the
foregoing discussion.

Although its present intention is to distribute, at least annually, all net
capital gain, if any, the Fund reserves the right to retain and reinvest all or
any portion of the excess, as computed for Federal income tax purposes, of net
long-term capital gain over net short-term capital loss in any year. The Fund
will not in any event distribute net long-term capital gains realized in any
year to the extent that a capital loss is carried forward from prior years
against such gain. To the extent such excess was retained and not exhausted by
the carryforward of prior years' capital losses, it would be subject to Federal
income tax in the hands of the Fund. Upon proper designation of this amount by
the Fund, each shareholder would be treated for Federal income tax purposes as
if the Fund had distributed to him on the last day of its taxable year his pro

                                       40
<PAGE>


rata share of such excess, and he had paid his pro rata share of the taxes paid
by the Fund and reinvested the remainder in the Fund. Accordingly, each
shareholder would (a) include his pro rata share of such excess as long-term
capital gain income in his tax return for his taxable year in which the last day
of the Fund's taxable year falls, (b) be entitled either to a tax credit on his
return for, or to a refund of, his pro rata share of the taxes paid by the Fund,
and (c) be entitled to increase the adjusted tax basis for his shares in the
Fund by the difference between his pro rata share of such excess and his pro
rata share of such taxes.

For Federal  income tax  purposes,  the Fund is permitted to carry forward a net
capital loss in any year to offset net capital gains,  if any,  during the eight
years following the year of the loss. To the extent subsequent net capital gains
are offset by such losses, they would not result in Federal income tax liability
to  the  Fund  and,  as  noted  above,  would  not be  distributed  as  such  to
shareholders.  Presently,  there  are no  realized  capital  loss  carryforwards
available to offset future net realized capital gains.

For purposes of the  dividends-received  deduction  available  to  corporations,
dividends  received by the Fund,  if any,  from U.S.  domestic  corporations  in
respect of the stock of such  corporations  held by the Fund,  for U.S.  Federal
income  tax  purposes,  for at least  46 days  (91  days in the case of  certain
preferred  stock)  during a prescribed  period  extending  before and after each
dividend and distributed  and properly  designated by the Fund may be treated as
qualifying  dividends.  Corporate  shareholders  must  meet the  holding  period
requirements  stated  above with  respect  to their  shares of the Fund for each
dividend in order to qualify for the  deduction  and, if they have any debt that
is deemed under the Code directly  attributable to Fund shares,  may be denied a
portion of the dividends  received  deduction.  The entire qualifying  dividend,
including the  otherwise-deductible  amount, will be included in determining the
excess (if any) of a corporate  shareholder's adjusted current earnings over its
alternative  minimum taxable income,  which may increase its alternative minimum
tax liability.  Additionally,  any corporate  shareholder should consult its tax
adviser  regarding the possibility  that its basis in its shares may be reduced,
for Federal income tax purposes, by reason of "extraordinary dividends" received
with respect to the shares and, to the extent such basis would be reduced  below
zero, that current recognition of income would be required.

The Fund is required to accrue income on any debt securities that have more than
a de minimis amount of original issue discount (or debt securities acquired at a
market  discount,  if the Fund  elects  to  include  market  discount  in income
currently) prior to the receipt of the corresponding  cash payment.  The mark to
market or  constructive  sale  rules  applicable  to certain  options,  futures,
forwards,  short  sales or other  transactions  and forward  contracts  may also
require the Fund to recognize  income or gain  without a  concurrent  receipt of
cash.  Additionally,  some  countries  restrict  repatriation  which may make it
difficult  or  impossible  for the  Fund to  obtain  cash  corresponding  to its
earnings or assets in those  countries.  However,  the Fund must  distribute  to
shareholders for each taxable year  substantially  all of its net income and net
capital  gains,  including  such  income  or gain,  to  qualify  as a  regulated
investment  company and avoid  liability  for any federal  income or excise tax.
Therefore,  the Fund may  have to  dispose  of its  portfolio  securities  under
disadvantageous  circumstances  to generate cash, or may have to leverage itself
by borrowing the cash, to satisfy these distribution requirements.

A state income (and possibly local income and/or intangible property) tax
exemption is generally available to the extent (if any) the Fund's distributions
are derived from interest on (or, in the case of intangible property taxes, the
value of its assets is attributable to) certain U.S. Government obligations,
provided in some states that certain thresholds for holdings of such obligations
and/or reporting requirements are satisfied. The Fund will not seek to satisfy
any threshold or reporting requirements that may apply in particular taxing
jurisdictions, although the Fund may in its sole discretion provide relevant
information to shareholders.

                                       41
<PAGE>


The Fund will be required to report to the Internal  Revenue Service (the "IRS")
all taxable  distributions to  shareholders,  as well as gross proceeds from the
redemption  or exchange  of Fund  shares,  except in the case of certain  exempt
recipients,  i.e.,  corporations  and certain other investors  distributions  to
which are exempt from the information  reporting  provisions of the Code.  Under
the backup withholding  provisions of Code Section 3406 and applicable  Treasury
regulations,  all such reportable  distributions  and proceeds may be subject to
backup  withholding  of  federal  income  tax at the  rate of 31% in the case of
non-exempt shareholders who fail to furnish the Fund with their correct taxpayer
identification number and certain  certifications  required by the IRS or if the
IRS or a broker  notifies the Fund that the number  furnished by the shareholder
is  incorrect  or that the  shareholder  is subject to backup  withholding  as a
result of failure to report  interest or dividend  income.  A Fund may refuse to
accept an application that does not contain any required taxpayer identification
number or  certification  that the number  provided  is  correct.  If the backup
withholding  provisions are  applicable,  any such  distributions  and proceeds,
whether taken in cash or  reinvested  in shares,  will be reduced by the amounts
required  to be  withheld.  Any  amounts  withheld  may be  credited  against  a
shareholder's U.S. federal income tax liability.  Investors should consult their
tax advisers about the applicability of the backup withholding provisions.

Different tax treatment, including penalties on certain excess contributions and
deferrals, certain pre-retirement and post-retirement  distributions and certain
prohibited  transactions,  is  accorded  to  accounts  maintained  as  qualified
retirement  plans.  Shareholders  should  consult  their tax  advisers  for more
information.

Limitations imposed by the Code on regulated  investment companies like the Fund
may  restrict  the Fund's  ability to enter into  options and  futures,  foreign
currency positions and foreign currency forward contracts.

The  foregoing  discussion  relates  solely to U.S.  Federal  income  tax law as
applicable to U.S. persons (i.e.,  U.S.  citizens or residents and U.S. domestic
corporations,  partnerships,  trusts or estates)  subject to tax under such law.
The discussion does not address special tax rules applicable to certain types of
investors,  such as  tax-exempt  entities,  insurance  companies  and  financial
institutions.  Dividends,  capital gain  distributions and ownership of or gains
realized on the  redemption  (including  an  exchange) of shares of the Fund may
also be subject to state and local taxes.  Shareholders should consult their own
tax advisers as to the Federal,  state or local tax consequences of ownership of
shares  of, and  receipt of  distributions  from,  the Fund in their  particular
circumstances.


Non-U.S. investors not engaged in a U.S. trade or business with which their Fund
investment is effectively connected will be subject to U.S. Federal income tax
treatment that is different from that described above. These investors may be
subject to non- resident alien withholding tax at the rate of 30% (or a lower
rate under an applicable tax treaty) on amounts treated as ordinary dividends
from the Fund and, unless an effective IRS Form W-8, Form W-8BEN or authorized
withholding certificate is on file, to 31% backup withholding on certain other
payments from the Fund. Non-U.S. investors should consult their tax advisers
regarding such treatment and the application of foreign taxes to an investment
in the Fund.


The Fund is not subject to  Massachusetts  corporate  excise or franchise taxes.
The Fund  anticipates  that  provided  that the Fund  qualifies  as a  regulated
investment  company  under the Code,  it will  also not be  required  to pay any
Massachusetts income tax.

                                       42
<PAGE>


CALCULATION OF PERFORMANCE


The average  annual total return on Class A shares of the Fund for the 1 year, 5
year and from  commencement  of  perations on June 10, 1991 to December 31, 1999
was %, % and %, respectively.  The average annual total return on Class B shares
of the Fund  for the 1 year  period  and  from  commencement  of  operations  on
September  7, 1995 to December 31, 1999 was % and %,  respectively.  The average
annual  total  return  on  Class C  shares  of the  Fund  from  commencement  of
operations on May 1, 1998 to December 31, 1999 was %.


Total return is computed by finding the average annual compounded rate of return
over the  one-year,  five year and  life-of-fund  periods  that would equate the
initial  amount  invested  to  the  ending  redeemable  value  according  to the
following formula:


     n ______
T = \ / ERV/P - 1


Where:

P=       a hypothetical initial investment of $1,000.
T=       average annual total return.
n=       number of years.
ERV=     ending redeemable value of a hypothetical $1,000 investment made at the
         beginning of the 1 year, 5 year and life-of-fund periods.

Because each class has its own sales charge and fee structure,  the classes have
different  performance  results.  In the case of each  class,  this  calculation
assumes the maximum  sales charge is included in the initial  investment  or the
CDSC is applied at the end of the period, respectively. This calculation assumes
that all dividends and  distributions  are  reinvested at net asset value on the
reinvestment dates during the period.  The "distribution  rate" is determined by
annualizing the result of dividing the declared dividends of the Fund during the
period stated by the maximum offering price or net asset value at the end of the
period.  Excluding the Fund's sales charge from the distribution rate produces a
higher rate.

In addition to average  annual total returns,  the Fund may quote  unaveraged or
cumulative total returns  reflecting the simple change in value of an investment
over a stated period.  Cumulative total returns may be quoted as a percentage or
as a dollar amount, and may be calculated for a single  investment,  a series of
investments, and/or a series of redemptions, over any time period. Total returns
may be quoted with or without  taking the Fund's  sales charge on Class A shares
or the CDSC on Class B or Class C shares  into  account.  Excluding  the  Fund's
sales  charge on Class A shares and the CDSC on Class B or Class C shares from a
total return calculation produces a higher total return figure.

The Fund may advertise yield, where appropriate. The Fund's yield is computed by
dividing net investment  income per share  determined for a 30-day period by the
maximum  offering  price per share  (which  includes the full sales  charge,  if
applicable) on the last day of the period,  according to the following  standard
formula:

                                       43
<PAGE>



                                                   6
                      Yield = 2 ( [ ( a - b ) + 1 ] - 1 )
                                      -----
                                       cd


Where:

a =      dividends and interest earned during the period.
b =      net expenses accrued during the period.
c =      the average daily number of fund shares outstanding during the period
         that would be entitled to receive dividends.
d =      the maximum offering price per share on the last day of the period (NAV
         where applicable).

From time to time,  in reports  and  promotional  literature,  the Fund's  total
return  and/or  yield will be compared to indices of mutual funds such as Lipper
Analytical  Services,  Inc.'s  "Lipper-Mutual  Performance  Analysis," a monthly
publication which tracks net assets,  total return, and yield on mutual funds in
the United States. Ibottson and Associates, CDA Weisenberger and F.C. Towers are
also used for comparison purposes, as well as the Russell and Wilshire Indices.


Performance rankings and ratings reported periodically in, and excerpts from,
national financial publications such as MONEY MAGAZINE, FORBES, BUSINESS WEEK,
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, MICROPAL, INC., MORNINGSTAR, STANGER'S and BARRON'S may
also be utilized. The Fund's promotional and sales literature may make reference
to the Fund's "beta". Beta is a reflection of the market related risk of the
Fund by showing how responsive the Fund is to the market.


The performance of the Fund is not fixed or guaranteed.  Performance  quotations
should not be considered to be  representations  of  performance of the Fund for
any period in the  future.  The  performance  of the Fund is a function  of many
factors  including  its  earnings,  expenses and number of  outstanding  shares.
Fluctuating  market  conditions;  purchases,  sales and  maturities of portfolio
securities;  sales and redemptions of shares of beneficial interest; and changes
in  operating  expenses  are all examples of items that can increase or decrease
the Fund's performance.

BROKERAGE ALLOCATION

Decisions  concerning  the  purchase and sale of  portfolio  securities  and the
allocation of brokerage commissions are made by the Sub-Adviser,  or the Adviser
pursuant to recommendations made by an investment  committee,  which consists of
officers and directors of the Adviser and officers and Trustees of the Trust who
are interested persons of the Fund. Orders for purchases and sales of securities
are placed in a manner,  which, in the opinion of the officers of the Fund, will
offer the best  price and  market for the  execution  of each such  transaction.
Purchases from underwriters of portfolio  securities may include a commission or
commissions paid by the issuer and  transactions  with dealers serving as market
maker reflect a "spread." Debt  securities  are generally  traded on a net basis
through  dealers  acting for their own account as principals and not as brokers;
no brokerage commissions are payable on such transactions.

                                       44
<PAGE>


In the U.S. Government  securities market,  securities are generally traded on a
"net" basis with  dealers  acting as principal  for their own account  without a
stated commission,  although the price of the security usually includes a profit
to the  dealer.  On  occasion,  certain  money  market  instruments  and  agency
securities  may be  purchased  directly  from  the  issuer,  in  which  case  no
commissions  or  premiums  are paid.  In other  countries,  both debt and equity
securities  are traded on exchanges at fixed  commission  rates.  Commissions on
foreign  transactions are generally higher than the negotiated  commission rates
available  in the U.S.  There  is  generally  less  government  supervision  and
regulation of foreign stock exchanges and broker-dealers than in the U.S.

The Fund's  primary  policy is to execute all  purchases  and sales of portfolio
instruments  at the  most  favorable  prices  consistent  with  best  execution,
considering all of the costs of the transaction including brokerage commissions.
The policy  governs the selection of brokers and dealers and the market in which
a transaction is executed.  Consistent with the foregoing  primary  policy,  the
Rules of Fair Practice of the National  Association of Securities Dealers,  Inc.
and  such  other  policies  as the  Trustees  may  determine,  the  Adviser  and
Sub-Adviser  may  consider  sales  of  shares  of the  Fund as a  factor  in the
selection of broker-dealers to execute the Fund's portfolio transactions.


To the extent consistent with the foregoing, the Fund will be governed in the
selection of brokers and dealers, and the negotiation of brokerage commission
rates and dealer spreads, by the reliability and quality of the services,
including primarily the availability and value of research information and, to a
lesser extent, statistical assistance furnished to the Adviser and Sub-Adviser
of the Fund. It is not possible to place a dollar value on information and
services to be received from brokers and dealers, since it is only supplementary
to the research efforts of the Adviser and Sub-Adviser. The receipt of research
information is not expected to reduce significantly the expenses of the Adviser
and Sub-Adviser. The research information and statistical assistance furnished
by brokers and dealers may benefit the Life Company or other advisory clients of
the Adviser, and, conversely, brokerage commissions and spreads paid by other
advisory clients of the Adviser may result in research information and
statistical assistance beneficial to the Fund. Similarly, research information
and assistance provided to the Sub-Adviser by brokers and dealers may benefit
other advisory clients or affiliates of the Sub-Adviser, and, conversely,
brokerage commissions and spreads paid by other advisory clients of the
Sub-Adviser may result in research information and statistical assistance
beneficial to the Fund. The Fund will make no commitment to allocate portfolio
transactions upon any prescribed basis. While the Adviser, in conjunction with
the Sub-Adviser, will be primarily responsible for the allocation of the Fund's
brokerage business, the policies and practices of the Adviser in this regard
must be consistent with the foregoing and will at all times be subject to review
by the Trustees. For the years ended December 31, 1997, 1998 and 1999, the Fund
paid negotiated brokerage commission in the amount of $222,400, $447,997 and $ ,
respectively.

As permitted by Section 28(e) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the Fund
may pay to a broker which provides brokerage and research services to the Fund
an amount of disclosed commission in excess of the commission which another
broker would have charged for effecting that transaction. This practice is
subject to a good faith determination by the Trustees that such price is
reasonable in light of the services provided and to such policies as the
Trustees may adopt from time to time. During the fiscal year ended December 31,
1999, the Fund directed no commissions to compensate brokers for research
services such as industry and company reviews and evaluations of the securities


                                       45
<PAGE>


The Adviser's indirect parent, the Life Company, is the indirect sole
shareholder of shareholder Signator Investors, Inc., a broker-dealer (until
January 1, 1999, the John Hancock Distributors, Inc.) ("Signator" or "Affiliated
Broker"). Pursuant to procedures determined by the Trustees and consistent with
the above policy of obtaining best net results the Fund may execute portfolio
transaction with or through Affiliated Broker. During the year ended December
31, 1997, 1998 and 1999, the Fund did not execute any portfolio transactions
with Affiliated Broker.


Signator  may act as  broker  for the Fund on  exchange  transactions,  subject,
however,  to the general  policy of the Fund set forth above and the  procedures
adopted by the Trustees pursuant to the Investment Company Act. Commissions paid
to an  Affiliated  Broker  must be at least as  favorable  as  those  which  the
Trustees believe to be contemporaneously  charged by other brokers in connection
with comparable  transactions  involving  similar  securities being purchased or
sold. A transaction  would not be placed with an  Affiliated  Broker if the Fund
would have to pay a commission rate less favorable than the Affiliated  Broker's
contemporaneous  charges for comparable transactions for its other most favored,
but unaffiliated,  customers except for accounts for which the Affiliated Broker
acts as clearing  broker for another  brokerage  firm,  and any customers of the
Affiliated  Broker not comparable to the Fund as determined by a majority of the
Trustees who are not interested  persons (as defined in the  Investment  Company
Act) of the Fund, the Adviser, the Sub-Adviser or the Affiliated Broker. Because
the Adviser, which is affiliated with the Affiliated Broker, and the Sub-Adviser
have, as investment  advisers to the Fund, the obligation to provide  investment
management services,  which includes elements of research and related investment
skills,  such  research  and related  skills will not be used by the  Affiliated
Broker  as a basis  for  negotiating  commissions  at a rate  higher  than  that
determined in accordance with the above criteria.


Other investment advisory clients advised by the Adviser may also invest in the
same securities as the Fund. When these clients buy or sell the same securities
at substantially the same time, the Adviser may average the transactions as to
price and allocate the amount of available investments in a manner which the
Adviser believes to be equitable to each client, including the Fund. Because of
this, client accounts in a particular style may sometimes not sell or acquire
securities as quickly or at the same prices as they might if each were managed
and traded individually.

For purchases of equity securities, when a complete order is not filled, a
partial allocation will be made to each account pro rata based on the order
size. For high demand issues (for example, initial public offerings), shares
will be allocated pro rata by account size as well as on the basis of account
objective, account size ( a small account's allocation may be increased to
provide it with a meaningful position), and the account's other holdings. In
addition, an account's allocation may be increased if that account's portfolio
manager was responsible for generating the investment idea or the portfolio
manager intends to buy more shares in the secondary market. For fixed income
accounts, generally securities will be allocated when appropriate among accounts
based on account size, except if the accounts have different objectives or if an
account is too small to get a meaningful allocation. For new issues, when a
complete order is not filled, a partial allocation will be made to each account
pro rata based on the order size. However, if a partial allocation is too small
to be meaningful, it may be reallocated based on such factors as account
objectives, duration benchmarks and credit and sector exposure. In some
instances, this investment procedure may adversely affect the price paid or
received by the Fund or the size of the position obtainable for it. On the other
hand, to the extent permitted by law, the Adviser may aggregate securities to be
sold or purchased for the Fund with those to be sold or purchased for other
clients managed by it in order to obtain best execution.


                                       46
<PAGE>


TRANSFER AGENT SERVICES

John Hancock Signature  Services,  Inc., 1 John Hancock Way, Suite 1000, Boston,
Massachusetts  02217-1000,  a  wholly-owned  indirect  subsidiary  of  the  Life
Company,  is the transfer and dividend  paying agent for the Fund. The Fund pays
Signature Services an annual fee of $19.00 for each Class A shareholder  account
and  $21.50  for each Class B  shareholder  account  and $20.50 for each Class C
shareholder account. The Fund also pays certain  out-of-pocket  expenses.  These
expenses are  aggregated  and charged to the Fund allocated to each class on the
basis of their relative net asset value.

CUSTODY OF PORTFOLIO

Portfolio  securities  of the Fund are held  pursuant to a  custodian  agreement
between the Fund and  Investors  Bank & Trust  Company,  200  Clarendon  Street,
Boston,  Massachusetts  02116. Under the custodian  agreement,  Investors Bank &
Trust Company performs custody, portfolio and fund accounting services.

INDEPENDENT AUDITORS


The independent accountants of the Fund are ________________________  audits and
renders an opinion on the Fund's annual financial statements and reviews the
Fund's annual Federal income tax return.





                                       47
<PAGE>


APPENDIX-A

MORE ABOUT RISK

A fund's risk profile is largely defined by the fund's principal  securities and
investment  practices.  You may find the most concise  description of the fund's
risk profile in the prospectus.

A fund is permitted to utilize -- within limits established by the trustees --
certain other securities and investment practices that have higher risks and
opportunities associated with them. To the extent that the fund utilizes these
securities or practices, its overall performance may be affected, either
positively or negatively. On the following pages are brief definitions of
certain associated risks with them, with examples of related securities and
investment practices included in brackets. See the "Investment Objectives and
Policies" and "Investment Restrictions" sections of this Statement of Additional
Information for a description of this Fund's investment policies. The fund
follows certain policies that may reduce these risks.

As with any mutual fund, there is no guarantee that the fund will earn income or
show a positive total return over any period of time -- days, months or years.

 TYPES OF INVESTMENT RISK

Correlation risk The risk that changes in the value of a hedging instrument will
not match those of the asset being hedged  (hedging is the use of one investment
to offset the  effects of another  investment).  (e.g.  short  sales,  financial
futures and options; securities and index options, currency contracts).

Credit risk The risk that the issuer of a  security,  or the  counterparty  to a
contract,  will  default  or  otherwise  become  unable  to  honor  a  financial
obligation.   (e.g.  Borrowing;   reverse  repurchase   agreements,   repurchase
agreements, securities lending,  non-investment-grade debt securities, financial
futures and options; securities and index options).

Currency risk The risk that fluctuations in the exchange rates between the U.S.
dollar and foreign currencies may negatively affect an investment. (e.g. Foreign
securities, financial futures and options; securities and index options,
currency contracts).

Extension  risk The risk that an unexpected  rise in interest  rates will extend
the life of a  mortgage-backed  security  beyond the expected  prepayment  time,
typically reducing the security's value.

Information risk The risk that key information about a security or market is
inaccurate or unavailable. (e.g. non-investment-grade debt securities, foreign
securities).

Interest rate risk The risk of market losses attributable to changes in interest
rates. With fixed-rate  securities,  a rise in interest rates typically causes a
fall in values,  while a fall in rates typically causes a rise in values.  (e.g.
Non investment-grade debt securities,  financial futures and options; securities
and index options).

Leverage risk  Associated  with securities or practices (such as borrowing) that
multiply  small index or market  movements  into large  changes in value.  (e.g.
Borrowing;  reverse repurchase agreements,  short-sales,  when-issued securities
and forward  commitments;  financial  futures and options;  securities and index
options, currency contracts).

                                      A-1
<PAGE>


o   Hedged  When a  derivative  (a  security  whose  value is  based on  another
    security or index) is used as a hedge against an opposite  position that the
    fund  also  holds,   any  loss  generated  by  the   derivative   should  be
    substantially  offset by gains on the  hedged  investment,  and vice  versa.
    While  hedging  can  reduce  or  eliminate  losses,  it can also  reduce  or
    eliminate gains.

o   Speculative To the extent that a derivative is not used as a hedge, the fund
    is directly  exposed to the risks of that  derivative.  Gains or losses from
    speculative  positions in a derivative may be substantially greater than the
    derivative's original cost.

Liquidity  risk The risk that certain  securities may be difficult or impossible
to sell at the time and the price that the seller would like. (e.g. short sales,
non-investment-grade  debt  securities;   restricted  and  illiquid  securities,
financial   futures  and  options;   securities  and  index  options,   currency
contracts).

Management risk The risk that a strategy used by a fund's management may fail to
produce the intended result. Common to all mutual funds.

Market risk The risk that the market  value of a security  may move up and down,
sometimes  rapidly  and  unpredictably.  Common to all  stocks and bonds and the
mutual  funds  that  invest in them.  (e.g.  Short  sales,  short-term  trading,
when-issued securities and forward commitments, non-investment-grade securities,
foreign securities, financial futures and options; securities and index options,
restricted and illiquid securities).

Natural event risk The risk of losses attributable to natural disasters, crop
failures and similar events. (e.g. Foreign securities).

Opportunity  risk The risk of missing out on an investment  opportunity  because
the assets  necessary to take  advantage of it are tied up in less  advantageous
investments. (e.g. Short sales, when -issued securities and forward commitments,
financial   futures  and  options;   securities  and  index  options,   currency
contracts).

Political risk The risk of losses directly attributable to government or
political actions of any sort. (e.g. Foreign securities)

Prepayment risk The risk that unanticipated prepayments may occur during periods
of falling interest rates, reducing the value of mortgage-backed securities.

Valuation  risk The risk that a fund has valued  certain of its  securities at a
higher  price  than  it can  sell  them  for.  (e.g.  Non-investment-grade  debt
securities, restricted and illiquid securities).



                                      A-2
<PAGE>


APPENDIX B - Description of Bond Ratings

RATINGS

Bonds.

Standard & Poor's Bond Ratings

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

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

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

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

To provide more detailed  indications of credit  quality,  the ratings AA to BBB
may be  modified  by the  addition  of a plus or  minus  sign  to show  relative
standing within the major rating categories.

A provisional rating,  indicated by "p" following a rating, is sometimes used by
Standard & Poor's.  It assumes the  successful  completion  of the project being
financed by the issuance of the bonds being rated and indicates  that payment of
debt service  requirements is largely or entirely  dependent upon the successful
and timely  completion of the project.  This rating,  however,  while addressing
credit quality subsequent to completion,  makes no comment on the likelihood of,
or the risk of default upon failure of, such completion.

Moody's Bond Ratings

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.  Generally speaking, the safety of
obligations of this class is so absolute that with the  occasional  exception of
oversupply in a few specific instances,  characteristically,  their market value
is affected solely by money market fluctuations.

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  fluctuation 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.  The market
value of Aa bonds is virtually immune to all but money market  influences,  with
the occasional exception of oversupply in a few specific instances.

                                      B-1
<PAGE>


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. Such bonds lack outstanding  investment  characteristics  and in
fact have speculative characteristics as well.

Rating symbols may include numerical modifiers 1, 2 or 3. The numerical modifier
1 indicates that the security  ranks at the high end, 2 in the mid-range,  and 3
nearer the low end, of the generic  category.  These modifiers of rating symbols
Aa, A and Baa are to give  investors a more precise  indication of relative debt
quality in each of the historically defined categories.

Conditional  ratings,  indicated by "Con", are sometimes given when the security
for the bond depends upon the completion of some act or the  fulfillment of some
condition.  Such  bonds,  are given a  conditional  rating  that  denotes  their
probably  credit  statute upon  completion  of that act or  fulfillment  of that
condition.

Rating symbols may include numerical modifiers 1, 2 or 3. The numerical modifier
1 indicates that the security  ranks at the high end, 2 in the mid-range,  and 3
nearer  the low  end,  of the  generic  category.  These  modifiers  are to give
investors a more  precise  indication  of relative  debt  quality in each of the
historically defined categories.



                                      B-2
<PAGE>



FINANCIAL STATEMENTS















                                      F-1




<PAGE>



                           JOHN HANCOCK CAPITAL SERIES

                                     PART C.


OTHER INFORMATION

Item. 23.  Exhibits:

The  exhibits to this  Registration  Statement  are listed in the Exhibit  Index
hereto and are incorporated herein by reference.

Item 24.   Persons Controlled by or under Common Control with Registrant.

No person is directly or indirectly  controlled by or under common  control with
Registrant.

Item. 25.  Indemnification.

Indemnification  provisions  relating to the  Registrant's  Trustees,  officers,
employees  and agents is set forth in Article  VII of the  Registrant's  By Laws
included as Exhibit 2 herein.

Under Section 12 of the Distribution Agreement,  John Hancock Funds, Inc. ("John
Hancock  Funds")  has  agreed to  indemnify  the  Registrant  and its  Trustees,
officers and controlling  persons against claims arising out of certain acts and
statements of John Hancock Funds.

Section 9(a) of the By-Laws of John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance  Company ("the
Insurance  Company")  provides,  in effect,  that the  Insurance  Company  will,
subject to  limitations  of law,  indemnify  each  present and former  director,
officer and employee of the Insurance Company who serves as a Trustee or officer
of the Registrant at the direction or request of the Insurance  Company  against
litigation  expenses and liabilities  incurred while acting as such, except that
such indemnification does not cover any expense or liability incurred or imposed
in  connection  with  any  matter  as to which  such  person  shall  be  finally
adjudicated  not to have acted in good faith in the  reasonable  belief that his
action was in the best interests of the Insurance Company. In addition,  no such
person  will be  indemnified  by the  Insurance  Company in respect of any final
adjudication  unless  such  settlement  shall have been  approved as in the best
interests of the Insurance Company either by vote of the Board of Directors at a
meeting  composed of directors who have no interest in the outcome of such vote,
or by vote of the policyholders. The Insurance Company may pay expenses incurred
in  defending an action or claim in advance of its final  disposition,  but only
upon receipt of an undertaking  by the person  indemnified to repay such payment
if he should be determined not to be entitled to indemnification.

Article IX of the respective By-Laws of John Hancock Funds and John Hancock
Advisers, Inc. ("the Adviser") provide as follows:

"Section  9.01.  Indemnity.  Any person made or threatened to be made a party to
any action,  suit or proceeding,  whether  civil,  criminal,  administrative  or
investigative,  by reason  of the fact  that he is or was at any time  since the
inception  of the  Corporation  a  director,  officer,  employee or agent of the
Corporation  or is or was at any time  since the  inception  of the  Corporation
serving at the request of the  Corporation as a director,  officer,  employee or
agent  of  another  corporation,  partnership,  joint  venture,  trust  or other
enterprise,  shall be indemnified by the Corporation against expenses (including
attorney's fees),  judgments,  fines and amounts paid in settlement actually and
reasonably incurred by him in connection with such action, suit or proceeding if
he acted in good faith and the  liability  was not  incurred  by reason of gross
negligence  or reckless  disregard of the duties  involved in the conduct of his
office, and expenses in connection therewith may be advanced by the Corporation,
all to the full extent authorized by the law."


<PAGE>



"Section 9.02. Not Exclusive; Survival of Rights: The indemnification provided
by Section 9.01 shall not be deemed exclusive of any other right to which those
indemnified may be entitled, and shall continue as to a person who has ceased to
be a director, officer, employee or agent and shall inure to the benefit of the
heirs, executors and administrators of such a person."

Insofar as indemnification for liabilities under the Securities Act of 1933 (the
"Act") may be permitted to Trustees, officers and controlling persons of the
Registrant pursuant to the Registrant's Declaration of Trust and By-Laws of John
Hancock Funds, the Adviser, or the Insurance Company or otherwise, the
Registrant has been advised that in the opinion of the Securities and Exchange
Commission such indemnification is against policy as expressed in the Act and
is, therefore, unenforceable. In the event that a claim for indemnification
against such liabilities (other than the payment by the Registrant in the
successful defense of any action, suit or proceeding) is asserted by such
Trustee, officer or controlling person in connection with the securities being
registered, the Registrant will, unless in the opinion of its counsel the matter
has been settled by controlling precedent, submit to a court of appropriate
jurisdiction the question whether indemnification by it is against public policy
as expressed in the Act and will be governed by the final adjudication of such
issue.

Item 26.  Business and Other Connections of Investment Advisers.

For  information  as to the  business,  profession,  vocation or employment of a
substantial  nature  of each  of the  officers  and  Directors  of the  Adviser,
reference is made to Form ADV (801-8124) filed under the Investment Advisers Act
of 1940, which is incorporated herein by reference.

Item 27.  Principal Underwriters.

(a) John Hancock Funds acts as principal underwriter for the Registrant and also
serves as principal underwriter or distributor of shares for John Hancock Cash
Reserve, Inc., John Hancock Bond Trust, John Hancock Current Interest, John
Hancock Series Trust, John Hancock Tax-Free Bond Trust, John Hancock California
Tax-Free Income Fund, John Hancock Capital Series, John Hancock Bond Fund, John
Hancock Tax-Exempt Series, John Hancock Strategic Series, John Hancock World
Fund, John Hancock Investment Trust, John Hancock Institutional Series Trust,
John Hancock Investment Trust II and John Hancock Investment Trust III.

(b) The  following  table lists,  for each  director and officer of John Hancock
Funds, the information indicated.


                                      C-2
<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


          Name and Principal               Positions and Offices                   Positions and Offices
          ------------------               ---------------------                   ---------------------
           Business Address                   with Underwriter                       with Registrant
           ----------------                   ----------------                       ---------------
                 <S>                                <C>                                     <C>


Stephen L. Brown                            Director and Chairman                   Trustee and Chairman
John Hancock Place
P.O. Box 111
Boston, Massachusetts

Maureen R. Ford                         Director, Vice Chairman and            Trustee, Vice Chairman and
101 Huntington Avenue                   Chief Executive Officer                Chief Executive Officer
Boston, Massachusetts

Anne C. Hodsdon                         Director, Executive Vice President     Trustee, President, Chief Investment
101 Huntington Avenue                                                             and Chief Operating Officer
Boston, Massachusetts

Robert H. Watts                              Director, Executive Vice                      None
John Hancock Place                        President and Chief Compliance
P.O. Box 111                                         Officer
Boston, Massachusetts

Osbert M. Hood                            Executive Vice President, Chief        Executive Vice President
101 Huntington Avenue                    Financial Officer and Treasurer        and Chief Financial Officer
Boston, Massachusetts

David A. King                                        Director                              None
380 Stuart Street
Boston, Massachusetts

Richard O. Hansen                             Senior Vice President                        None
101 Huntington Avenue
Boston, Massachusetts



                                      C-3
<PAGE>




          Name and Principal               Positions and Offices                   Positions and Offices
          ------------------               ---------------------                   ---------------------
           Business Address                   with Underwriter                       with Registrant
           ----------------                   ----------------                       ---------------
                 <S>                                <C>                                     <C>

Susan S. Newton                                   Vice President             Vice President and Secretary
101 Huntington Avenue
Boston, Massachusetts

Thomas E. Moloney                                   Director                             None
John Hancock Place
P.O. Box 111
Boston, Massachusetts

Jeanne M. Livermore                                 Director                             None
John Hancock Place
P.O. Box 111
Boston, Massachusetts

Richard S. Scipione                                 Director                            Trustee
John Hancock Place
P.O. Box 111
Boston, Massachusetts

John M. DeCiccio                                    Director                             None
John Hancock Place
P.O. Box 111
Boston, Massachusetts


                                      C-4
<PAGE>



          Name and Principal               Positions and Offices                   Positions and Offices
          ------------------               ---------------------                   ---------------------
           Business Address                   with Underwriter                       with Registrant
           ----------------                   ----------------                       ---------------
                 <S>                                <C>                                     <C>

Foster L. Aborn                                     Director                              None
John Hancock Place
P.O. Box 111
Boston, Massachusetts

David D'Alessandro                                  Director                              None
John Hancock Place
P.O. Box 111
Boston, Massachusetts

William C. Fletcher                                 Director                              None
53 State Street
Boston, Massachusetts

James V. Bowhers                                    President                             None
101 Huntington Avenue
Boston, Massachusetts

Kathleen M. Graveline                         Senior Vice President                       None
P.O. Box 111
Boston, Massachusetts

Keith F. Hartstein                            Senior Vice President                       None
101 Huntington Avenue
Boston, Massachusetts

Peter Mawn                                    Senior Vice President                       None
101 Huntington Avenue
Boston, Massachusetts

J. William Bennintende                           Vice President                           None
101 Huntington Avenue
Boston, Massachusetts

Renee Humphrey                                   Vice President                           None
101 Huntington Avenue
Boston, Massachusetts


                                      C-5
<PAGE>



          Name and Principal            Positions and Offices                    Positions and Offices
          ------------------            ---------------------                    ---------------------
           Business Address                With Underwriter                        with Registrant
           ----------------                ----------------                        ---------------

Karen F. Walsh                                   Vice President                           None
101 Huntington Avenue
Boston, Massachusetts

Gary Cronin                                      Vice President                           None
101 Huntington Avenue
Boston, Massachusetts

Kristine Pancare                                 Vice President                           None
101 Huntington Avenue
Boston, Massachusetts


         (c)      None.

Item 28. Location of Accounts and Records.

         The  Registrant  maintains the records  required to be maintained by it
         under Rules 31a-1 (a),  31a-a(b),  and  31a-2(a)  under the  Investment
         Company  Act  of  1940  at  its  principal  executive  offices  at  101
         Huntington Avenue,  Boston Massachusetts  02199-7603.  Certain records,
         including  records  relating  to  Registrant's   shareholders  and  the
         physical  possession of its securities,  may be maintained  pursuant to
         Rule  31a-3 at the main  office  of  Registrant's  Transfer  Agent  and
         Custodian.

Item 29.  Management Services.

                Not applicable.

Item 30.  Undertakings.

                Not applicable


                                      C-6
<PAGE>




                                   SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933 and the Investment
Company Act of 1940, the Registrant has duly caused this Registration Statement
to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereto duly authorized, in the
City of Boston, and The Commonwealth of Massachusetts on the 29th day of
February, 2000.

                                           JOHN HANCOCK CAPITAL SERIES

                                    By: *  /s/Stephen L. Brown
                                           --------------------------
                                           Stephen L. Brown
                                           Chairman

         Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this
Registration Statement has been signed below by the following persons in the
capacities and on the dates indicated.

     Signature                              Title                     Date
     ---------                              -----                     ----


         *                       Chairman and Chief Executive     February 29, 2000
- -------------------------        Officer (Principal Executive
Stephen L. Brown                 Officer)

         *
- -------------------------        Trustee, Vice Chairman and
Maureen R. Ford                  Chief Executive Officer

         *
- -------------------------        Executive Vice President and
Osbert M. Hood                   Chief Financial Officer


/s/James J. Stokowski            Vice President, Treasurer
- ---------------------            (Principal Accounting Officer)
James J. Stokowski

_________*_________              Trustee
Dennis S. Aronowitz

_________*_____________          Trustee
Richard P. Chapman, Jr.

_________*_________              Trustee
William J. Cosgrove

_________*______                 Trustee
Leland O. Erdahl


                                      C-7
<PAGE>




_______*_________                Trustee
Richard A. Farrell

_______*______                   Trustee
Gail D. Fosler

________*_______________         Trustee
William F. Glavin

________*_______________         Trustee
Anne C. Hodsdon

________*________________        Trustee
John A. Moore

________*________________        Trustee
Patti McGill Peterson

_________*_______________        Trustee
Richard S. Scipione


By:      /s/Susan S. Newton                                   February 29, 2000
         ------------------
         Susan S. Newton,
         Attorney-in-Fact, under
         Powers of Attorney
         January 1, 1999 and
         March 17, 1999.


<PAGE>


                           John Hancock Capital Series

                                INDEX TO EXHIBITS


99.(a)   Articles of Incorporation.  Amended and Restated Declaration of Trust
         dated June 8, 1999.+

99.(a).1 Establishment and  Designation of Class A shares and Class B Shares of
         Beneficial Interest of Registrant dated August 27, 1996.***

99.(a).2 Establishment and Designation of Class C Shares of Beneficial Interest
         for Registrant dated March 10, 1998.****

99.(a).3 Instrument Amending  manner of acting by written consent dated
         December 3, 1996.****

99.(a).4 Instrument Changing Name of Series of Shares of the Trust effective
         May 1, 1999.*****

99.(a).5 Instrument Fixing the Number of Trustees and Appointing Individual to
         Fill Vacancy dated December 7, 1999.+

99.(b)   By-Laws.  Amended and Restated By-Laws dated December 3, 1996.***

99.(c)   Instruments Defining Rights of Securities Holders.  See exhibits
         99.(a) and 99.(b).

99.(d)   Investment Advisory Contracts.  Investment Advisory Agreement between
         Registrant and John Hancock Advisers, Inc. dated August 30, 1996.****

99.(d).1 Sub-Investment Advisory Contract between Registrant and John Hancock
         Advisers, Inc. dated August 30, 1996***

99.(e)   Underwriting Contracts.  Distribution Agreement between John Hancock
         Funds, Inc. (formerly named John Hancock Broker Distribution Services,
         Inc. and the Registrant dated August 1, 1991.*

99.(e).1 Amendment  No.1 to  Distribution  Agreement  with  Registrant and John
         Hancock Broker Distribution  Services,  Inc.*

99.(e).2 Form of Soliciting Dealer Agreement between John Hancock Funds, Inc.
         and Selected Dealers.****

99.(e).3 Form of Financial Institution Sales and Service Agreement between John
         Hancock Funds, Inc. and the John Hancock  funds.*

99.(e)4  Amendment to Distribution  Agreement between Registrant and John
         Hancock Funds, Inc. dated August 30, 1996.***

99.(f)   Bonus or Profit Sharing Contracts.  Not Applicable.

99.(g)   Custodian Agreements.  Amended and Restated Master Custodian Agreement
         between John Hancock Mutual Funds and Investors Bank and Trust Company
         dated March 9, 1999.*****

99.(h)   Other Material Contracts.  Amended and Restated Master Transfer Agency
         and Service Agreement between John Hancock  funds and John Hancock
         Signature Services, Inc. dated June 1, 1998.****

99.(h).1 Accounting and Legal Services Agreement between John Hancock Advisers,
         Inc. and Registrant as of January 1 1996.**

99.(i)   Legal Opinion.+

99.(j)   Other Opinions. Auditors Consent.+

99.(k)   Omitted Financial Statements.  Not Applicable.

99.(l)   Initial Capital Agreements.  Not Applicable.

99.(m)   Rule 12b-1 Plans.  Class And Class B  Distribution Plan between
         Registrant and John Hancock Funds, Inc. dated August 30, 1996.***

99.(m).1 Class C Distribution Plan between Registrant and John Hancock Funds,
         Inc. dated May 1, 1998.****

99.(n)   Financial Data Schedule.  Not Applicable.

99.(o)   Rule  18f-3  Plan.  John  Hancock  Funds  Class A,  Class B and Class C
         amended and  restated  Multiple  Class Plan  pursuant to Rule 18f-3 for
         Registrant dated May 1, 1998.****


                                      C-9
<PAGE>



*        Previously filed electronically with Registration Statement and/or
         post-effective amendment no. 44 file nos. 811-1677 and 2-29502 on
         April 26, 1995, accession number 0000950146-95-000180.

**       Previously filed electronically with Registration Statement and/or
         post-effective amendment no. 47 file nos.  811-1677 and 2-29502 on
         June 14, 1996, accession number 000101521-96-000007.

***      Previously filed electronically with Registration Statement and/or
         post-effective amendment no. 48 file nos.  811-1677 and 2-92502 on
         February 27, 1997, accession number 000101521-97-000229.

****     Previously filed electronically with Registration Statement and/or
         post-effective amendment no. 52 file nos. 811-1677 and 2-92502 on
         February 22, 1999, accession number 0001010521-99-000135.

*****    Previously filed electronically with Registration Statement and/or
         post-effective amendment no. 53 file nos. 811-1677 and 2-92502 on
         April 27, 1999, accession number 0001010521-99-000195.


+ Filed herewith
</TABLE>


                              AMENDED AND RESTATED
                              DECLARATION OF TRUST
                                       OF
                           JOHN HANCOCK CAPITAL SERIES
                              101 Huntington Avenue
                              Boston, Massachusetts
                                   02199-7603

                               Dated June 8, 1999


<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

               <S>                          <C>

                                Table of Contents


                                                                                                 Page

ARTICLE I - NAME AND DEFINITIONS.....................................................................1
Section 1.1.  Name...................................................................................1
Section 1.2.  Definitions............................................................................1

ARTICLE II - TRUSTEES................................................................................3
Section 2.1.  General Powers.........................................................................3
Section 2.2.  Investments............................................................................4
Section 2.3.  Legal Title............................................................................6
Section 2.4.  Issuance and Repurchase of Shares......................................................6
Section 2.5.  Delegation; Committees.................................................................6
Section 2.6.  Collection and Payment.................................................................6
Section 2.7.  Expenses...............................................................................6
Section 2.8.  Manner of Acting; By-laws..............................................................6
Section 2.9.  Miscellaneous Powers...................................................................7
Section 2.10.  Principal Transactions................................................................7
Section 2.11.  Litigation............................................................................8
Section 2.12.  Number of Trustees....................................................................8
Section 2.13.  Election and Term.....................................................................8
Section 2.14.  Resignation and Removal...............................................................8
Section 2.15.  Vacancies.............................................................................8
Section 2.16.  Delegation of Power to Other Trustees.................................................9

ARTICLE III - CONTRACTS..............................................................................9
Section 3.1.  Distribution Contract..................................................................9
Section 3.2.  Advisory or Management Contract........................................................9
Section 3.3.  Administration Agreement...............................................................10
Section 3.4.  Service Agreement......................................................................10
Section 3.5.  Transfer Agent.........................................................................10
Section 3.6.  Custodian..............................................................................10
Section 3.7.  Affiliations of Trustees or Officers, Etc..............................................11
Section 3.8.  Compliance with 1940 Act...............................................................11

ARTICLE IV - LIMITATIONS OF LIABILITY OF SHAREHOLDERS,
TRUSTEES AND OTHERS..................................................................................11
Section 4.1.  No Personal Liability of Shareholders, Trustees, Etc...................................11
Section 4.2.  Non-Liability of Trustees, Etc.........................................................12
Section 4.3.  Mandatory Indemnification..............................................................12
Section 4.4.  No Bond Required of Trustees...........................................................14
Section 4.5.  No Duty of Investigation; Notice in Trust Instruments, Etc.............................14
Section 4.6.  Reliance on Experts, Etc...............................................................14

ARTICLE V - SHARES OF BENEFICIAL INTEREST............................................................15
Section 5.1.  Beneficial Interest....................................................................15
Section 5.2.  Rights of Shareholders.................................................................15
Section 5.3.  Trust Only.............................................................................15
Section 5.4.  Issuance of Shares.....................................................................15
Section 5.5.  Register of Shares.....................................................................16
Section 5.6.  Transfer of Shares.....................................................................16
Section 5.7.  Notices................................................................................16
Section 5.8.  Treasury Shares........................................................................16
Section 5.9.  Voting Powers..........................................................................16
Section 5.10.  Meetings of Shareholders..............................................................17
Section 5.11.  Series or Class Designation...........................................................17
Section 5.12.  Assent to Declaration of Trust........................................................20

<PAGE>


ARTICLE VI - REDEMPTION AND REPURCHASE OF SHARES.....................................................20
Section 6.1.  Redemption of Shares...................................................................20
Section 6.2.  Price..................................................................................21
Section 6.3.  Payment................................................................................21
Section 6.4.  Effect of Suspension of Determination of Net Asset Value...............................21
Section 6.5.  Repurchase by Agreement................................................................21
Section 6.6.  Redemption of Shareholder's Interest...................................................21
Section 6.7.  Redemption of Shares in Order to Qualify as Regulated Investment Company;
Disclosure of Holding................................................................................22
Section 6.8.  Reductions in Number of Outstanding Shares Pursuant to Net
          Asset Value Formula........................................................................22
Section 6.9.  Suspension of Right of Redemption......................................................22

ARTICLE VII - DETERMINATION OF NET ASSET VALUE, NET INCOME AND
DISTRIBUTIONS........................................................................................23
Section 7.1.  Net Asset Value........................................................................23
Section 7.2.  Distributions to Shareholders..........................................................23
Section 7.3.  Determination of Net Income; Constant Net Asset Value; Reduction
         of Outstanding Shares.......................................................................24
Section 7.4.  Power to Modify Foregoing Procedures...................................................25

ARTICLE VIII - DURATION; TERMINATION OF TRUST OR A SERIES OR CLASS;
AMENDMENT; MERGERS, ETC..............................................................................25
Section 8.1.  Duration...............................................................................25
Section 8.2.  Termination of the Trust or a Series or a Class........................................25
Section 8.3.  Amendment Procedure....................................................................26
Section 8.4.  Merger, Consolidation and Sale of Assets...............................................27
Section 8.5.  Incorporation..........................................................................27

ARTICLE IX - REPORTS TO SHAREHOLDERS.................................................................28
ARTICLE X - MISCELLANEOUS............................................................................28
Section 10.1.  Execution and Filing..................................................................28
Section 10.2.  Governing Law.........................................................................28
Section 10.3.  Counterparts..........................................................................28
Section 10.4.  Reliance by Third Parties.............................................................29
Section 10.5.  Provisions in Conflict with Law or Regulations........................................29




<PAGE>


                              Amended and Restated
                              Declaration of Trust

                                       of

                           John Hancock Capital Series
                               Dated June 8, 1999



         DECLARATION OF TRUST made this 8th day of June, 1999 by the undersigned
(together  with all other persons from time to time duly elected,  qualified and
serving as Trustees in accordance with the provisions of Article II hereof,  the
"Trustees");

         WHEREAS,  pursuant  to an amended  and  restated  declaration  of trust
executed and delivered on February 28, 1992 (the  "Original  Declaration"),  the
Trustees  established  a trust  for the  investment  and  reinvestment  of funds
contributed thereto;

         WHEREAS,  the  Trustees  divided the  beneficial  interest in the trust
assets into transferable shares of beneficial interest, as provided therein;

         WHEREAS,  the Trustees declared that all money and property contributed
to the trust established thereunder be held and managed in trust for the benefit
of the holders,  from time to time, of the shares of beneficial  interest issued
thereunder and subject to the provisions thereof;

         WHEREAS, the Trustees desire to amend and restate the Original Declaration;

         NOW,  THEREFORE,  in  consideration  of the foregoing  premises and the
agreements  contained herein, the undersigned,  being a majority of the Trustees
of the trust, hereby amend and restate the Original Declaration as follows:



                                    ARTICLE I

                              NAME AND DEFINITIONS

         Section 1.1. Name. The name of the trust created hereby is "John
Hancock Capital Series" (the "Trust").

         Section 1.2. Definitions. Wherever they are used herein, the following
terms have the following respective meanings:

         (a) "Administrator" means the party, other than the Trust, to the
contract described in Section 3.3 hereof.

                                       1
<PAGE>


         (b) "By-laws" means the By-laws referred to in Section 2.8 hereof, as
amended from time to time.


         (c) "Class"  means any division of shares within a Series in accordance
with the provisions of Article V.

         (d) The terms  "Commission"  and "Interested  Person" have the meanings
given them in the 1940 Act. Except as such term may be otherwise  defined by the
Trustees in conjunction with the establishment of any Series,  the term "vote of
a majority  of the  Outstanding  Shares  entitled  to vote"  shall have the same
meaning as is assigned to the term "vote of a majority of the outstanding voting
securities" in the 1940 Act.

         (e)  "Custodian"  means any Person other than the Trust who has custody
of any Trust Property as required by Section 17(f) of the 1940 Act, but does not
include a system  for the  central  handling  of  securities  described  in said
Section 17(f).

         (f) "Declaration"  means this Declaration of Trust as amended from time
to time.  Reference in this  Declaration  of Trust to  "Declaration,"  "hereof,"
"herein," and "hereunder"  shall be deemed to refer to this  Declaration  rather
than exclusively to the article or section in which such words appear.

         (g) "Distributor" means the party, other than the Trust, to the
contract described in Section 3.1 hereof.

         (h) "Fund" or "Funds" individually or collectively,  means the separate
Series of the Trust, together with the assets and liabilities assigned thereto.

         (i) "Fundamental  Restrictions"  means the investment  restrictions set
forth in the Prospectus and Statement of Additional  Information  for any Series
and designated as fundamental restrictions therein with respect to such Series.

         (j)  "His"  shall  include  the  feminine  and  neuter,  as well as the
masculine, genders.

         (k) "Investment  Adviser" means the party, other than the Trust, to the
contract described in Section 3.2 hereof.

         (l) The "1940 Act" means the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended
from time to time.

         (m)   "Person"   means   and   includes   individuals,    corporations,
partnerships,  trusts, associations,  joint ventures and other entities, whether
or not legal entities,  and governments and agencies and political  subdivisions
thereof.

         (n)  "Prospectus"  means the  Prospectuses and Statements of Additional
Information  included  in the  Registration  Statement  of the  Trust  under the
Securities  Act of 1933,  as amended,  as such  Prospectuses  and  Statements of
Additional  Information  may be  amended  or  supplemented  and  filed  with the
Commission from time to time.

                                       2
<PAGE>


         (o) "Series"  individually or collectively means the separately managed
component(s)  of the Trust (or, if the Trust shall have only one such component,
then that one) as may be  established  and  designated  from time to time by the
Trustees pursuant to Section 5.11 hereof.

         (p) "Shareholder" means a record owner of Outstanding Shares.

         (q) "Shares" means the equal proportionate units of interest into which
the  beneficial  interest  in the  Trust  shall be  divided  from  time to time,
including the Shares of any and all Series or of any Class within any Series (as
the context may require) which may be established by the Trustees,  and includes
fractions of Shares as well as whole  Shares.  "Outstanding"  Shares means those
Shares shown from time to time on the books of the Trust or its  Transfer  Agent
as then issued and  outstanding,  but shall not include  Shares  which have been
redeemed  or  repurchased  by the  Trust  and  which are at the time held in the
treasury of the Trust.

         (r)  "Transfer  Agent"  means  any  Person  other  than the  Trust  who
maintains  the  Shareholder   records  of  the  Trust,   such  as  the  list  of
Shareholders, the number of Shares credited to each account, and the like.

         (s)      "Trust" means John Hancock Capital Series.

         (t) "Trustees" means the persons who have signed this  Declaration,  so
long as they shall continue in office in accordance  with the terms hereof,  and
all  other  persons  who now  serve  or may from  time to time be duly  elected,
qualified and serving as Trustees in accordance  with the  provisions of Article
II hereof, and reference herein to a Trustee or the Trustees shall refer to such
person or persons in this capacity or their capacities as trustees hereunder.

         (u) "Trust  Property"  means any and all  property,  real or  personal,
tangible  or  intangible,  which is owned or held by or for the  account  of the
Trust or the  Trustees,  including  any and all  assets of or  allocated  to any
Series or Class, as the context may require.


                                   ARTICLE II

                                    TRUSTEES

         Section 2.1. General Powers. The Trustees shall have exclusive and
absolute control over the Trust Property and over the business of the Trust to
the same extent as if the Trustees were the sole owners of the Trust Property
and business in their own right, but with such powers of delegation as may be
permitted by this Declaration. The Trustees shall have power to conduct the
business of the Trust and carry on its operations in any and all of its branches
and maintain offices both within and without The Commonwealth of Massachusetts,
in any and all states of the United States of America, in the District of
Columbia, and in any and all commonwealths, territories, dependencies, colonies,
possessions, agencies or instrumentalities of the United States of America and
of foreign governments, and to do all such other things and execute all such
instruments as they deem necessary, proper or desirable in order to promote the
interests of the Trust although such things are not herein specifically
mentioned. Any determination as to what is in the interests of the Trust made by
the Trustees in good faith shall be conclusive. In construing the provisions of
this Declaration, the presumption shall be in favor of a grant of power to the
Trustees.

                                       3
<PAGE>


         The  enumeration of any specific power herein shall not be construed as
limiting  the  aforesaid  powers.  Such powers of the  Trustees may be exercised
without order of or resort to any court.

         Section 2.2.  Investments.  The Trustees shall have the power:

         (a) To operate as and carry on the business of an  investment  company,
and exercise all the powers  necessary  and  appropriate  to the conduct of such
operations.

         (b)  To  invest  in,  hold  for  investment,   or  reinvest  in,  cash;
securities,   including  common,  preferred  and  preference  stocks;  warrants;
subscription  rights;  profit-sharing  interests or participations and all other
contracts for or evidence of equity interests;  bonds,  debentures,  bills, time
notes and all other  evidences of  indebtedness;  negotiable  or  non-negotiable
instruments;   government   securities,   including  securities  of  any  state,
municipality  or other political  subdivision  thereof,  or any  governmental or
quasi-governmental  agency  or  instrumentality;  and money  market  instruments
including  bank  certificates  of  deposit,  finance  paper,  commercial  paper,
bankers' acceptances and all kinds of repurchase agreements, of any corporation,
company,  trust,  association,  firm  or  other  business  organization  however
established,  and  of  any  country,  state,  municipality  or  other  political
subdivision,    or   any   governmental   or   quasi-governmental    agency   or
instrumentality;  any other security,  instrument or contract the acquisition or
execution of which is not  prohibited by any  Fundamental  Restriction;  and the
Trustees  shall be deemed  to have the  foregoing  powers  with  respect  to any
additional  securities  in which the Trust may  invest  should  the  Fundamental
Restrictions be amended.

         (c) To acquire (by purchase,  subscription  or otherwise),  to hold, to
trade in and deal in, to acquire any rights or options to  purchase or sell,  to
sell or  otherwise  dispose  of, to lend and to pledge any such  securities,  to
enter into repurchase agreements, reverse repurchase agreements, firm commitment
agreements, forward foreign currency exchange contracts, interest rate, mortgage
or currency swaps, and interest rate caps,  floors and collars,  to purchase and
sell options on securities,  indices, currency, swaps or other financial assets,
futures  contracts and options on futures  contracts of all  descriptions and to
engage  in  all  types  of  hedging,   risk  management  or  income  enhancement
transactions.

         (d) To exercise  all rights,  powers and  privileges  of  ownership  or
interest  in all  securities  and  repurchase  agreements  included in the Trust
Property,  including  the right to vote thereon and  otherwise  act with respect
thereto and to do all acts for the  preservation,  protection,  improvement  and
enhancement in value of all such securities and repurchase agreements.

                                       4
<PAGE>


         (e) To acquire (by  purchase,  lease or  otherwise)  and to hold,  use,
maintain,  develop and dispose of (by sale or otherwise)  any property,  real or
personal, including cash or foreign currency, and any interest therein.

         (f) To  borrow  money  and in this  connection  issue  notes  or  other
evidence  of  indebtedness;  to secure  borrowings  by  mortgaging,  pledging or
otherwise subjecting as security the Trust Property; and to endorse,  guarantee,
or undertake the performance of any obligation or engagement of any other Person
and to lend Trust Property.

         (g) To aid by  further  investment  any  corporation,  company,  trust,
association  or firm,  any obligation of or interest in which is included in the
Trust  Property  or in the  affairs  of which the  Trustees  have any  direct or
indirect  interest;  to do all acts and things  designed to  protect,  preserve,
improve or enhance the value of such obligation or interest; and to guarantee or
become surety on any or all of the contracts,  stocks, bonds, notes,  debentures
and other obligations of any such corporation,  company,  trust,  association or
firm.

         (h) To enter into a plan of  distribution  and any  related  agreements
whereby  the Trust may finance  directly or  indirectly  any  activity  which is
primarily intended to result in the distribution and/or servicing of Shares.

         (i)  To  adopt  on  behalf  of  the  Trust  or any  Series  thereof  an
alternative  purchase  plan  providing  for the issuance of multiple  Classes of
Shares (as authorized herein at Section 5.11).

         (j) In general to carry on any other  business  in  connection  with or
incidental to any of the foregoing powers, to do everything necessary,  suitable
or proper for the  accomplishment of any purpose or the attainment of any object
or the  furtherance  of any power  hereinbefore  set forth,  either  alone or in
association  with  others,  and to do every  other  act or thing  incidental  or
appurtenant  to or arising out of or connected  with the  aforesaid  business or
purposes, objects or powers.

         The foregoing  clauses  shall be construed  both as objects and powers,
and the foregoing  enumeration of specific  powers shall not be held to limit or
restrict in any manner the general powers of the Trustees.

         Notwithstanding  any other  provision  herein,  the Trustees shall have
full power in their  discretion  as  contemplated  in Section  8.5,  without any
requirement  of  approval  by  Shareholders,  to invest part or all of the Trust
Property (or part or all of the assets of any Series),  or to dispose of part or
all of the  Trust  Property  (or part or all of the  assets of any  Series)  and
invest the proceeds of such  disposition,  in  securities  issued by one or more
other  investment  companies  registered  under  the 1940  Act.  Any such  other
investment  company may (but need not) be a trust  (formed under the laws of any
state) which is classified as a partnership  or  corporation  for federal income
tax purposes.

         The Trustees shall not be limited to investing in obligations  maturing
before the possible  termination of the Trust, nor shall the Trustees be limited
by any law limiting the investments which may be made by fiduciaries.

                                       5
<PAGE>


         Section 2.3.  Legal Title.  Legal title to all the Trust Property shall
be vested in the Trustees as joint tenants  except that the Trustees  shall have
power to cause legal title to any Trust Property to be held by or in the name of
one or more of the  Trustees,  or in the name of the Trust or any  Series of the
Trust,  or in the name of any other  Person  as  nominee,  on such  terms as the
Trustees  may  determine,  provided  that the  interest of the Trust  therein is
deemed appropriately protected. The right, title and interest of the Trustees in
the Trust  Property  and the  Property  of each  Series of the Trust  shall vest
automatically  in each  Person  who may  hereafter  become a  Trustee.  Upon the
termination of the term of office, resignation, removal or death of a Trustee he
shall  automatically  cease to have any right,  title or  interest in any of the
Trust Property,  and the right,  title and interest of such Trustee in the Trust
Property shall vest  automatically in the remaining  Trustees.  Such vesting and
cessation of title shall be effective whether or not conveyancing documents have
been executed and delivered.

         Section 2.4. Issuance and Repurchase of Shares. The Trustees shall have
the power to issue, sell, repurchase,  redeem,  retire,  cancel,  acquire, hold,
resell, reissue, dispose of, transfer, and otherwise deal in Shares and, subject
to the provisions  set forth in Articles VI and VII and Section 5.11 hereof,  to
apply  to  any  such  repurchase,   redemption,   retirement,   cancellation  or
acquisition  of Shares any funds or property  of the Trust or of the  particular
Series with respect to which such Shares are issued,  whether capital or surplus
or otherwise,  to the full extent now or hereafter  permitted by the laws of The
Commonwealth of Massachusetts governing business corporations.

         Section 2.5.  Delegation;  Committees.  The Trustees  shall have power,
consistent with their continuing  exclusive authority over the management of the
Trust and the Trust  Property,  to  delegate  from time to time to such of their
number or to officers, employees or agents of the Trust the doing of such things
and the  execution  of such  instruments  either in the name of the Trust or any
Series of the Trust or the names of the  Trustees or  otherwise  as the Trustees
may deem  expedient,  to the same extent as such  delegation is permitted by the
1940 Act.

         Section 2.6.  Collection and Payment.  The Trustees shall have power to
collect  all  property  due to the Trust;  to pay all claims,  including  taxes,
against the Trust  Property;  to  prosecute,  defend,  compromise or abandon any
claims  relating to the Trust  Property;  to  foreclose  any  security  interest
securing any obligations,  by virtue of which any property is owed to the Trust;
and to enter into releases, agreements and other instruments.

         Section 2.7.  Expenses.  The Trustees shall have the power to incur and
pay  any  expenses  which  in the  opinion  of the  Trustees  are  necessary  or
incidental  to carry out any of the  purposes  of this  Declaration,  and to pay
reasonable  compensation  from the funds of the Trust to themselves as Trustees.
The Trustees shall fix the compensation of all officers, employees and Trustees.

         Section 2.8. Manner of Acting;  By-laws.  Except as otherwise  provided
herein or in the By-laws, any action to be taken by the Trustees may be taken by
a majority  of the  Trustees  present at a meeting of  Trustees,  including  any
meeting   held  by  means  of  a   conference   telephone   circuit  or  similar
communications  equipment  by means of which all  persons  participating  in the
meeting  can hear each other,  or by written  consents of a majority of Trustees
then in office.  The  Trustees  may adopt  By-laws  not  inconsistent  with this
Declaration  to provide  for the  conduct of the  business  of the Trust and may
amend or repeal  such  By-laws to the extent  such power is not  reserved to the
Shareholders.

                                       6
<PAGE>


         Notwithstanding  the  foregoing  provisions  of this Section 2.8 and in
addition to such provisions or any other provision of this Declaration or of the
By-laws,  the Trustees may by resolution appoint a committee  consisting of less
than the  whole  number of  Trustees  then in  office,  which  committee  may be
empowered to act for and bind the Trustees and the Trust, as if the acts of such
committee were the acts of all the Trustees then in office,  with respect to the
institution,  prosecution, dismissal, settlement, review or investigation of any
action,  suit or  proceeding  which shall be pending or threatened to be brought
before any court, administrative agency or other adjudicatory body.

         Section 2.9.  Miscellaneous  Powers.  The Trustees shall have the power
to: (a) employ or contract with such Persons as the Trustees may deem  desirable
for the  transaction  of the  business of the Trust or any Series  thereof;  (b)
enter  into  joint  ventures,   partnerships  and  any  other   combinations  or
associations;  (c) remove  Trustees,  fill vacancies in, add to or subtract from
their  number,  elect and remove such  officers and appoint and  terminate  such
agents or employees  as they  consider  appropriate,  and appoint from their own
number, and terminate, any one or more committees which may exercise some or all
of the power and  authority of the Trustees as the Trustees may  determine;  (d)
purchase,  and pay for out of Trust Property or the property of the  appropriate
Series of the Trust,  insurance  policies insuring the  Shareholders,  Trustees,
officers, employees, agents, investment advisers, administrators,  distributors,
selected  dealers or  independent  contractors  of the Trust  against all claims
arising by reason of holding any such  position or by reason of any action taken
or  omitted by any such  Person in such  capacity,  whether or not  constituting
negligence,  or whether or not the Trust would have the power to indemnify  such
Person against such  liability;  (e) establish  pension,  profit-sharing,  share
purchase,  and other  retirement,  incentive and benefit plans for any Trustees,
officers, employees and agents of the Trust; (f) to the extent permitted by law,
indemnify  any person with whom the Trust or any Series  thereof  has  dealings,
including the Investment Adviser, Administrator, Distributor, Transfer Agent and
selected dealers, to such extent as the Trustees shall determine;  (g) guarantee
indebtedness or contractual  obligations of others; (h) determine and change the
fiscal year and taxable  year of the Trust or any Series  thereof and the method
by which  its or their  accounts  shall  be kept;  and (i)  adopt a seal for the
Trust,  but the  absence  of such seal  shall not  impair  the  validity  of any
instrument executed on behalf of the Trust.

         Section  2.10.  Principal  Transactions.  Except for  transactions  not
permitted by the 1940 Act or rules and regulations adopted, or orders issued, by
the  Commission  thereunder,  the Trustees may, on behalf of the Trust,  buy any
securities  from or sell any  securities  to, or lend any assets of the Trust or
any Series  thereof to any  Trustee or officer of the Trust or any firm of which
any such Trustee or officer is a member  acting as  principal,  or have any such
dealings with the Investment Adviser,  Distributor or Transfer Agent or with any
Interested  Person of such Person;  and the Trust or a Series thereof may employ
any such  Person,  or firm or  company  in which  such  Person is an  Interested
Person, as broker, legal counsel, registrar, transfer agent, dividend disbursing
agent or custodian upon customary terms.

                                       7
<PAGE>


         Section 2.11.  Litigation.  The Trustees shall have the power to engage
in and to prosecute,  defend, compromise,  abandon, or adjust by arbitration, or
otherwise,  any  actions,  suits,  proceedings,  disputes,  claims,  and demands
relating to the Trust,  and out of the assets of the Trust or any Series thereof
to pay or to satisfy  any  debts,  claims or  expenses  incurred  in  connection
therewith,  including those of litigation,  and such power shall include without
limitation the power of the Trustees or any appropriate  committee  thereof,  in
the  exercise  of their or its good faith  business  judgment,  to  dismiss  any
action, suit, proceeding,  dispute,  claim, or demand,  derivative or otherwise,
brought by any person,  including a  Shareholder  in its own name or the name of
the  Trust,  whether  or not  the  Trust  or any of the  Trustees  may be  named
individually  therein or the subject  matter arises by reason of business for or
on behalf of the Trust.

         Section 2.12.  Number of Trustees.  The initial  Trustees  shall be the
persons signing this Declaration. The number of Trustees shall be such number as
shall  be  fixed  from  time to time by  vote  of a  majority  of the  Trustees,
provided,  however,  that the number of Trustees  shall in no event be less than
one (1).

         Section 2.13.  Election and Term.  Except for the Trustees named herein
or appointed to fill vacancies pursuant to Section 2.15 hereof, the Trustees may
succeed  themselves and shall be elected by the Shareholders  owning of record a
plurality of the Shares voting at a meeting of  Shareholders  on a date fixed by
the  Trustees.  Except in the event of  resignations  or  removals  pursuant  to
Section 2.14 hereof, each Trustee shall hold office until such time as less than
a majority of the Trustees holding office has been elected by  Shareholders.  In
such event the Trustees  then in office shall call a  Shareholders'  meeting for
the election of Trustees.  Except for the foregoing circumstances,  the Trustees
shall continue to hold office and may appoint successor Trustees.

         Section 2.14. Resignation and Removal. Any Trustee may resign his trust
(without the need for any prior or  subsequent  accounting)  by an instrument in
writing signed by him and delivered to the other  Trustees and such  resignation
shall be effective upon such delivery, or at a later date according to the terms
of the  instrument.  Any of the Trustees may be removed  (provided the aggregate
number of Trustees after such removal shall not be less than one) with cause, by
the action of two-thirds of the remaining Trustees or by action of two-thirds of
the   outstanding   Shares  of  the  Trust  (for  purposes  of  determining  the
circumstances  and procedures  under which any such removal by the  Shareholders
may  take  place,  the  provisions  of  Section  16(c)  of the  1940 Act (or any
successor  provisions)  shall be  applicable  to the same extent as if the Trust
were subject to the provisions of that Section). Upon the resignation or removal
of a Trustee,  or his  otherwise  ceasing to be a Trustee,  he shall execute and
deliver such  documents as the remaining  Trustees shall require for the purpose
of conveying to the Trust or the remaining  Trustees any Trust  Property held in
the name of the resigning or removed  Trustee.  Upon the  incapacity or death of
any Trustee,  his legal  representative  shall execute and deliver on his behalf
such  documents  as the  remaining  Trustees  shall  require as  provided in the
preceding sentence.

         Section 2.15. Vacancies. The term of office of a Trustee shall
terminate and a vacancy shall occur in the event of his death, retirement,
resignation, removal, bankruptcy, adjudicated incompetence or other incapacity
to perform the duties of the office of a Trustee. No such vacancy shall operate
to annul the Declaration or to revoke any existing agency created pursuant to
the terms of the Declaration. In the case of an existing vacancy, including a

                                       8
<PAGE>


vacancy existing by reason of an increase in the number of Trustees, subject to
the provisions of Section 16(a) of the 1940 Act, the remaining Trustees shall
fill such vacancy by the appointment of such other person as they in their
discretion shall see fit, made by vote of a majority of the Trustees then in
office. Any such appointment shall not become effective, however, until the
person named in the vote approving the appointment shall have accepted in
writing such appointment and agreed in writing to be bound by the terms of the
Declaration. An appointment of a Trustee may be made in anticipation of a
vacancy to occur at a later date by reason of retirement, resignation or
increase in the number of Trustees, provided that such appointment shall not
become effective prior to such retirement, resignation or increase in the number
of Trustees. Whenever a vacancy in the number of Trustees shall occur, until
such vacancy is filled as provided in this Section 2.15, the Trustees in office,
regardless of their number, shall have all the powers granted to the Trustees
and shall discharge all the duties imposed upon the Trustees by the Declaration.
The vote by a majority of the Trustees in office, fixing the number of Trustees
shall be conclusive evidence of the existence of such vacancy.

         Section 2.16.  Delegation of Power to Other Trustees.  Any Trustee may,
by power of  attorney,  delegate  his power for a period not  exceeding  six (6)
months at any one time to any other  Trustee or  Trustees;  provided  that in no
case shall fewer than two (2) Trustees personally exercise the powers granted to
the  Trustees  under  this  Declaration  except  as herein  otherwise  expressly
provided.


                                   ARTICLE III

                                    CONTRACTS

         Section  3.1.  Distribution   Contract.   The  Trustees  may  in  their
discretion  from  time  to  time  enter  into  an  exclusive  or   non-exclusive
distribution  contract or contracts  providing for the sale of the Shares to net
the  Trust or the  applicable  Series  of the  Trust  not less  than the  amount
provided  for in Section  7.1 of Article VII hereof,  whereby the  Trustees  may
either  agree to sell the Shares to the other  party to the  contract or appoint
such other party as their sales agent for the Shares, and in either case on such
terms and  conditions,  if any, as may be  prescribed  in the By-laws,  and such
further terms and conditions as the Trustees may in their  discretion  determine
not inconsistent with the provisions of this Article III or of the By-laws;  and
such  contract may also provide for the  repurchase  of the Shares by such other
party as agent of the Trustees.

         Section 3.2. Advisory or Management Contract. The Trustees may in their
discretion from time to time enter into one or more investment advisory or
management contracts or, if the Trustees establish multiple Series, separate
investment advisory or management contracts with respect to one or more Series
whereby the other party or parties to any such contracts shall undertake to
furnish the Trust or such Series management, investment advisory,
administration, accounting, legal, statistical and research facilities and
services, promotional or marketing activities, and such other facilities and

                                       9
<PAGE>


services, if any, as the Trustees shall from time to time consider desirable and
all upon such terms and conditions as the Trustees may in their discretion
determine. Notwithstanding any provisions of the Declaration, the Trustees may
authorize the Investment Advisers, or any of them, under any such contracts
(subject to such general or specific instructions as the Trustees may from time
to time adopt) to effect purchases, sales, loans or exchanges of portfolio
securities and other investments of the Trust on behalf of the Trustees or may
authorize any officer, employee or Trustee to effect such purchases, sales,
loans or exchanges pursuant to recommendations of such Investment Advisers, or
any of them (and all without further action by the Trustees). Any such
purchases, sales, loans and exchanges shall be deemed to have been authorized by
all of the Trustees. The Trustees may, in their sole discretion, call a meeting
of Shareholders in order to submit to a vote of Shareholders at such meeting the
approval or continuance of any such investment advisory or management contract.
If the Shareholders of any one or more of the Series of the Trust should fail to
approve any such investment advisory or management contract, the Investment
Adviser may nonetheless serve as Investment Adviser with respect to any Series
whose Shareholders approve such contract.

         Section  3.3.  Administration  Agreement.  The  Trustees  may in  their
discretion from time to time enter into an  administration  agreement or, if the
Trustees   establish  multiple  Series  or  Classes,   separate   administration
agreements with respect to each Series or Class, whereby the other party to such
agreement  shall  undertake to manage the business  affairs of the Trust or of a
Series or Class  thereof and  furnish  the Trust or a Series or a Class  thereof
with office  facilities,  and shall be  responsible  for the ordinary  clerical,
bookkeeping  and  recordkeeping  services at such office  facilities,  and other
facilities  and services,  if any, and all upon such terms and conditions as the
Trustees may in their discretion determine.

         Section 3.4.  Service  Agreement.  The Trustees may in their discretion
from time to time  enter into  Service  Agreements  with  respect to one or more
Series or Classes thereof  whereby the other parties to such Service  Agreements
will provide  administration  and/or support services pursuant to administration
plans and service plans,  and all upon such terms and conditions as the Trustees
in their discretion may determine.

         Section 3.5.  Transfer Agent. The Trustees may in their discretion from
time to time enter  into a transfer  agency  and  shareholder  service  contract
whereby the other party to such  contract  shall  undertake to furnish  transfer
agency and shareholder services to the Trust. The contract shall have such terms
and  conditions  as  the  Trustees  may  in  their   discretion   determine  not
inconsistent with the Declaration.  Such services may be provided by one or more
Persons.

         Section 3.6.  Custodian.  The Trustees may appoint or otherwise  engage
one or more banks or trust companies,  each having an aggregate capital, surplus
and undivided  profits (as shown in its last  published  report) of at least two
million dollars  ($2,000,000) to serve as Custodian with authority as its agent,
but subject to such restrictions, limitations and other requirements, if any, as
may be  contained in the By-laws of the Trust.  The Trustees may also  authorize
the Custodian to employ one or more sub-custodians, including such foreign banks
and securities depositories as meet the requirements of applicable provisions of
the 1940 Act, and upon such terms and  conditions  as may be agreed upon between
the Custodian and such sub-custodian, to hold securities and other assets of the
Trust  and to  perform  the acts  and  services  of the  Custodian,  subject  to
applicable provisions of law and resolutions adopted by the Trustees.

                                       10
<PAGE>


         Section 3.7.  Affiliations of Trustees or Officers, Etc.  The fact that:

                   (i) any of the  Shareholders,  Trustees  or  officers  of the
         Trust  or any  Series  thereof  is a  shareholder,  director,  officer,
         partner, trustee,  employee,  manager, adviser or distributor of or for
         any partnership,  corporation, trust, association or other organization
         or of or for any parent or affiliate of any organization,  with which a
         contract of the  character  described in Sections  3.1, 3.2, 3.3 or 3.4
         above or for services as Custodian,  Transfer Agent or disbursing agent
         or for providing accounting, legal and printing services or for related
         services  may have  been or may  hereafter  be  made,  or that any such
         organization,  or any parent or affiliate thereof,  is a Shareholder of
         or has an interest in the Trust, or that

                  (ii) any partnership, corporation, trust, association or other
         organization  with  which a  contract  of the  character  described  in
         Sections  3.1,  3.2,  3.3 or 3.4 above or for  services  as  Custodian,
         Transfer  Agent or  disbursing  agent or for related  services may have
         been  or may  hereafter  be  made  also  has  any  one or  more of such
         contracts with one or more other  partnerships,  corporations,  trusts,
         associations  or  other   organizations,   or  has  other  business  or
         interests,  shall not  affect  the  validity  of any such  contract  or
         disqualify any Shareholder, Trustee or officer of the Trust from voting
         upon or executing the same or create any liability or accountability to
         the Trust or its Shareholders.

         Section  3.8.  Compliance  with 1940 Act.  Any  contract  entered  into
pursuant  to  Sections  3.1 or 3.2 shall be  consistent  with and subject to the
requirements  of Section 15 of the 1940 Act (including any amendment  thereof or
other  applicable  Act  of  Congress  hereafter  enacted),  as  modified  by any
applicable order or orders of the Commission, with respect to its continuance in
effect,  its  termination and the method of  authorization  and approval of such
contract or renewal thereof.


                                   ARTICLE IV

                    LIMITATIONS OF LIABILITY OF SHAREHOLDERS,
                               TRUSTEES AND OTHERS

         Section 4.1. No Personal Liability of Shareholders, Trustees, Etc. No
Shareholder shall be subject to any personal liability whatsoever to any Person
in connection with Trust Property or the acts, obligations or affairs of the
Trust or any Series thereof. No Trustee, officer, employee or agent of the Trust
or any Series thereof shall be subject to any personal liability whatsoever to

                                       11
<PAGE>


any Person, other than to the Trust or its Shareholders, in connection with
Trust Property or the affairs of the Trust, except to the extent arising from
bad faith, willful misfeasance, gross negligence or reckless disregard of his
duties with respect to such Person; and all such Persons shall look solely to
the Trust Property, or to the Property of one or more specific Series of the
Trust if the claim arises from the conduct of such Trustee, officer, employee or
agent with respect to only such Series, for satisfaction of claims of any nature
arising in connection with the affairs of the Trust. If any Shareholder,
Trustee, officer, employee, or agent, as such, of the Trust or any Series
thereof, is made a party to any suit or proceeding to enforce any such liability
of the Trust or any Series thereof, he shall not, on account thereof, be held to
any personal liability. The Trust shall indemnify and hold each Shareholder
harmless from and against all claims and liabilities, to which such Shareholder
may become subject by reason of his being or having been a Shareholder, and
shall reimburse such Shareholder or former Shareholder (or his or her heirs,
executors, administrators or other legal representatives or in the case of a
corporation or other entity, its corporate or other general successor) out of
the Trust Property for all legal and other expenses reasonably incurred by him
in connection with any such claim or liability. The indemnification and
reimbursement required by the preceding sentence shall be made only out of
assets of the one or more Series whose Shares were held by said Shareholder at
the time the act or event occurred which gave rise to the claim against or
liability of said Shareholder. The rights accruing to a Shareholder under this
Section 4.1 shall not impair any other right to which such Shareholder may be
lawfully entitled, nor shall anything herein contained restrict the right of the
Trust or any Series thereof to indemnify or reimburse a Shareholder in any
appropriate situation even though not specifically provided herein.

         Section  4.2.  Non-Liability  of  Trustees,  Etc. No Trustee,  officer,
employee  or agent of the  Trust or any  Series  thereof  shall be liable to the
Trust, its Shareholders,  or to any Shareholder,  Trustee, officer, employee, or
agent thereof for any action or failure to act (including without limitation the
failure to compel in any way any former or acting  Trustee to redress any breach
of trust) except for his own bad faith, willful misfeasance, gross negligence or
reckless disregard of the duties involved in the conduct of his office.

         Section 4.3. Mandatory Indemnification. (a) Subject to the exceptions
and limitations contained in paragraph (b) below:

                   (i) every  person who is, or has been,  a  Trustee,  officer,
         employee or agent of the Trust  (including any individual who serves at
         its  request  as  director,  officer,  partner,  trustee or the like of
         another  organization  in which it has any  interest as a  shareholder,
         creditor or otherwise)  shall be indemnified by the Trust, or by one or
         more Series  thereof if the claim  arises from his or her conduct  with
         respect to only such  Series,  to the fullest  extent  permitted by law
         against all liability and against all expenses  reasonably  incurred or
         paid by him in connection with any claim, action, suit or proceeding in
         which he  becomes  involved  as a party or  otherwise  by virtue of his
         being or having been a Trustee or officer and against  amounts  paid or
         incurred by him in the settlement thereof;

                  (ii) the words  "claim,"  "action,"  "suit,"  or  "proceeding"
         shall  apply  to all  claims,  actions,  suits or  proceedings  (civil,
         criminal, or other, including appeals),  actual or threatened;  and the
         words  "liability" and "expenses"  shall include,  without  limitation,
         attorneys' fees, costs, judgments,  amounts paid in settlement,  fines,
         penalties and other liabilities.

         (b) No  indemnification  shall be  provided  hereunder  to a Trustee or
officer:

                                       12
<PAGE>


                   (i) against any liability to the Trust,  a Series  thereof or
         the  Shareholders by reason of willful  misfeasance,  bad faith,  gross
         negligence or reckless  disregard of the duties involved in the conduct
         of his office;

                  (ii) with respect to any matter as to which he shall have been
         finally  adjudicated  not to have acted in good faith in the reasonable
         belief  that his  action  was in the best  interest  of the  Trust or a
         Series thereof;

                 (iii) in the event of a  settlement  or other  disposition  not
         involving  a  final  adjudication  as  provided  in  paragraph  (b)(ii)
         resulting in a payment by a Trustee or officer, unless there has been a
         determination  that such  Trustee or officer  did not engage in willful
         misfeasance,  bad faith,  gross negligence or reckless disregard of the
         duties involved in the conduct of his office:

                           (A) by the court or other body approving the
                      settlement or other disposition;

                           (B) based  upon a review of readily  available  facts
                      (as opposed to a full trial-type inquiry) by (x) vote of a
                      majority  of the  Non-interested  Trustees  acting  on the
                      matter  (provided  that a majority  of the  Non-interested
                      Trustees  then in office act on the matter) or (y) written
                      opinion of independent legal counsel; or

                           (C) by a vote of a majority of the Shares outstanding
                      and entitled to vote (excluding  Shares owned of record or
                      beneficially by such individual).

         (c) The  rights  of  indemnification  herein  provided  may be  insured
against by  policies  maintained  by the Trust,  shall be  severable,  shall not
affect any other  rights to which any Trustee or officer may now or hereafter be
entitled,  shall  continue  as to a person who has ceased to be such  Trustee or
officer and shall inure to the benefit of the heirs,  executors,  administrators
and assigns of such a person.  Nothing  contained herein shall affect any rights
to  indemnification  to which personnel of the Trust or any Series thereof other
than Trustees and officers may be entitled by contract or otherwise under law.

         (d) Expenses of preparation and presentation of a defense to any claim,
action,  suit or proceeding of the character  described in paragraph (a) of this
Section  4.3 may be  advanced  by the Trust or a Series  thereof  prior to final
disposition  thereof  upon  receipt  of an  undertaking  by or on  behalf of the
recipient  to repay such amount if it is  ultimately  determined  that he is not
entitled to indemnification under this Section 4.3, provided that either:

                   (i) such  undertaking  is  secured  by a surety  bond or some
         other appropriate  security provided by the recipient,  or the Trust or
         Series thereof shall be insured  against losses arising out of any such
         advances; or

                  (ii) a majority of the  Non-interested  Trustees acting on the
         matter (provided that a majority of the Non-interested  Trustees act on
         the matter) or an independent  legal counsel in a written opinion shall
         determine,  based upon a review of readily  available facts (as opposed
         to a full trial-type inquiry), that there is reason to believe that the
         recipient ultimately will be found entitled to indemnification.

                                       13
<PAGE>


         As used in this Section 4.3, a "Non-interested  Trustee" is one who (i)
is not an  "Interested  Person"  of the  Trust  (including  anyone  who has been
exempted from being an "Interested  Person" by any rule,  regulation or order of
the  Commission),  and  (ii)  is not  involved  in the  claim,  action,  suit or
proceeding.

         Section 4.4. No Bond Required of Trustees. No Trustee shall be
obligated to give any bond or other security for the performance of any of his
duties hereunder.

         Section  4.5. No Duty of  Investigation;  Notice in Trust  Instruments,
Etc. No  purchaser,  lender,  transfer  agent or other  Person  dealing with the
Trustees  or any  officer,  employee  or agent of the Trust or a Series  thereof
shall be bound to make any inquiry  concerning  the validity of any  transaction
purporting to be made by the Trustees or by said  officer,  employee or agent or
be liable for the application of money or property paid, loaned, or delivered to
or on the order of the  Trustees or of said  officer,  employee or agent.  Every
obligation,  contract,  instrument,  certificate,  Share,  other security of the
Trust  or a  Series  thereof  or  undertaking,  and  every  other  act or  thing
whatsoever executed in connection with the Trust shall be conclusively  presumed
to have been executed or done by the executors thereof only in their capacity as
Trustees under this  Declaration or in their capacity as officers,  employees or
agents of the Trust or a Series  thereof.  Every written  obligation,  contract,
instrument,  certificate, Share, other security of the Trust or a Series thereof
or  undertaking  made or  issued by the  Trustees  may  recite  that the same is
executed  or  made  by  them  not  individually,   but  as  Trustees  under  the
Declaration, and that the obligations of the Trust or a Series thereof under any
such  instrument  are not  binding  upon  any of the  Trustees  or  Shareholders
individually,  but bind only the Trust  Property  or the Trust  Property  of the
applicable  Series,  and may  contain any  further  recital  which they may deem
appropriate,  but the  omission  of such  recital  shall not operate to bind the
Trustees  individually.  The Trustees shall at all times maintain  insurance for
the  protection of the Trust  Property or the Trust  Property of the  applicable
Series,  its  Shareholders,  Trustees,  officers,  employees  and agents in such
amount as the Trustees shall deem adequate to cover possible tort liability, and
such  other  insurance  as the  Trustees  in  their  sole  judgment  shall  deem
advisable.

         Section  4.6.  Reliance  on  Experts,  Etc.  Each  Trustee,  officer or
employee  of the Trust or a Series  thereof  shall,  in the  performance  of his
duties,  be fully and completely  justified and protected with regard to any act
or any failure to act  resulting  from  reliance in good faith upon the books of
account or other  records of the Trust or a Series  thereof,  upon an opinion of
counsel,  or upon  reports  made to the Trust or a Series  thereof by any of its
officers or employees  or by the  Investment  Adviser,  the  Administrator,  the
Distributor, Transfer Agent, selected dealers, accountants,  appraisers or other
experts or consultants  selected with reasonable care by the Trustees,  officers
or employees of the Trust, regardless of whether such counsel or expert may also
be a Trustee.


                                       14
<PAGE>



                                    ARTICLE V

                          SHARES OF BENEFICIAL INTEREST

         Section 5.1.  Beneficial  Interest.  The interest of the  beneficiaries
hereunder  shall be divided  into  transferable  Shares of  beneficial  interest
without par value. The number of such Shares of beneficial  interest  authorized
hereunder is unlimited.  The Trustees shall have the exclusive authority without
the  requirement of Shareholder  approval to establish and designate one or more
Series of shares and one or more Classes  thereof as the Trustees deem necessary
or desirable.  Each Share of any Series shall  represent an equal  proportionate
Share in the assets of that Series with each other Share in that Series. Subject
to the  provisions of Section 5.11 hereof,  the Trustees may also  authorize the
creation of  additional  Series of Shares (the proceeds of which may be invested
in separate,  independently managed portfolios) and additional Classes of Shares
within any Series. All Shares issued hereunder  including,  without  limitation,
Shares  issued in  connection  with a  dividend  in Shares or a split in Shares,
shall be fully paid and nonassessable.

         Section  5.2.  Rights  of  Shareholders.  The  ownership  of the  Trust
Property of every description and the right to conduct any business hereinbefore
described are vested  exclusively in the Trustees,  and the  Shareholders  shall
have no interest therein other than the beneficial  interest  conferred by their
Shares,  and they shall have no right to call for any  partition  or division of
any property,  profits,  rights or interests of the Trust nor can they be called
upon to share or assume any losses of the Trust or suffer an  assessment  of any
kind by virtue of their  ownership  of  Shares.  The  Shares  shall be  personal
property giving only the rights specifically set forth in this Declaration.  The
Shares  shall not  entitle  the  holder to  preference,  preemptive,  appraisal,
conversion or exchange rights, except as the Trustees may determine with respect
to any Series or Class of Shares.

         Section 5.3.  Trust Only. It is the intention of the Trustees to create
only the  relationship of Trustee and beneficiary  between the Trustees and each
Shareholder from time to time. It is not the intention of the Trustees to create
a  general   partnership,   limited   partnership,   joint  stock   association,
corporation,  bailment  or any form of legal  relationship  other  than a trust.
Nothing  in  this   Declaration   of  Trust  shall  be  construed  to  make  the
Shareholders,  either by themselves or with the Trustees, partners or members of
a joint stock association.

         Section 5.4. Issuance of Shares.  The Trustees in their discretion may,
from time to time without a vote of the Shareholders,  issue Shares, in addition
to the then issued and  outstanding  Shares and Shares held in the treasury,  to
such party or parties and for such amount and type of  consideration,  including
cash or  property,  at such time or times and on such terms as the  Trustees may
deem best,  except  that only  Shares  previously  contracted  to be sold may be
issued during any period when the right of  redemption is suspended  pursuant to
Section 6.9 hereof,  and may in such manner acquire other assets  (including the
acquisition  of assets  subject to, and in connection  with the  assumption  of,
liabilities)  and  businesses.  In connection  with any issuance of Shares,  the
Trustees  may issue  fractional  Shares and  Shares  held in the  treasury.  The
Trustees  may from time to time divide or combine the Shares of the Trust or, if
the Shares be divided into Series or Classes, of any Series or any Class thereof
of the Trust,  into a greater or lesser  number  without  thereby  changing  the
proportionate  beneficial  interests  in  the  Trust  or in the  Trust  Property
allocated or belonging  to such Series or Class.  Contributions  to the Trust or
Series  thereof may be accepted  for,  and Shares  shall be redeemed  as,  whole
Shares and/or 1/1000ths of a Share or integral multiples thereof.

                                       15
<PAGE>


         Section  5.5.  Register  of  Shares.  A  register  shall be kept at the
principal  office of the Trust or an office of the  Transfer  Agent  which shall
contain the names and  addresses  of the  Shareholders  and the number of Shares
held by them respectively and a record of all transfers  thereof.  Such register
shall be  conclusive  as to who are the  holders  of the Shares and who shall be
entitled to receive dividends or distributions or otherwise to exercise or enjoy
the rights of Shareholders.  No Shareholder shall be entitled to receive payment
of any  dividend or  distribution,  nor to have notice  given to him as provided
herein or in the By-laws,  until he has given his address to the Transfer  Agent
or such other  officer or agent of the Trustees as shall keep the said  register
for entry thereon.  It is not contemplated  that certificates will be issued for
the Shares;  however,  the  Trustees,  in their  discretion,  may  authorize the
issuance of share certificates and promulgate  appropriate rules and regulations
as to their use.

         Section 5.6.  Transfer of Shares.  Shares shall be  transferable on the
records of the Trust only by the record holder thereof or by his agent thereunto
duly authorized in writing,  upon delivery to the Trustees or the Transfer Agent
of a duly executed  instrument  of transfer,  together with such evidence of the
genuineness of each such execution and authorization and of other matters as may
reasonably be required. Upon such delivery the transfer shall be recorded on the
register of the Trust.  Until such  record is made,  the  Shareholder  of record
shall be deemed to be the holder of such Shares for all purposes  hereunder  and
neither the  Trustees  nor any  transfer  agent or  registrar  nor any  officer,
employee or agent of the Trust  shall be affected by any notice of the  proposed
transfer.

         Any person becoming entitled to any Shares in consequence of the death,
bankruptcy,  or  incompetence of any  Shareholder,  or otherwise by operation of
law,  shall be recorded  on the  register of Shares as the holder of such Shares
upon production of the proper  evidence  thereof to the Trustees or the Transfer
Agent,  but until such record is made, the Shareholder of record shall be deemed
to be the holder of such  Shares for all  purposes  hereunder  and  neither  the
Trustees  nor any Transfer  Agent or  registrar  nor any officer or agent of the
Trust shall be affected by any notice of such death, bankruptcy or incompetence,
or other operation of law.

         Section 5.7. Notices.  Any and all notices to which any Shareholder may
be entitled and any and all communications  shall be deemed duly served or given
if mailed,  postage prepaid,  addressed to any Shareholder of record at his last
known address as recorded on the register of the Trust.

         Section 5.8. Treasury Shares.  Shares held in the treasury shall, until
resold  pursuant to Section 5.4, not confer any voting  rights on the  Trustees,
nor shall  such  Shares be  entitled  to any  dividends  or other  distributions
declared with respect to the Shares.

         Section 5.9. Voting Powers. The Shareholders shall have power to vote
only (i) for the election of Trustees as provided in Section 2.13; (ii) with
respect to any investment advisory contract entered into pursuant to Section
3.2; (iii) with respect to termination of the Trust or a Series or Class thereof
as provided in Section 8.2; (iv) with respect to any amendment of this
Declaration to the limited extent and as provided in Section 8.3; (v) with
respect to a merger, consolidation or sale of assets as provided in Section 8.4;

                                       16
<PAGE>


(vi) with respect to incorporation of the Trust to the extent and as provided in
Section 8.5; (vii) to the same extent as the stockholders of a Massachusetts
business corporation as to whether or not a court action, proceeding or claim
should or should not be brought or maintained derivatively or as a class action
on behalf of the Trust or a Series thereof or the Shareholders of either; (viii)
with respect to any plan adopted pursuant to Rule 12b-1 (or any successor rule)
under the 1940 Act, and related matters; and (ix) with respect to such
additional matters relating to the Trust as may be required by this Declaration,
the By-laws or any registration of the Trust as an investment company under the
1940 Act with the Commission (or any successor agency) or as the Trustees may
consider necessary or desirable. As determined by the Trustees without the vote
or consent of shareholders, on any matter submitted to a vote of Shareholders
either (i) each whole Share shall be entitled to one vote as to any matter on
which it is entitled to vote and each fractional Share shall be entitled to a
proportionate fractional vote or (ii) each dollar of net asset value (number of
Shares owned times net asset value per share of such Series or Class, as
applicable) shall be entitled to one vote on any matter on which such Shares are
entitled to vote and each fractional dollar amount shall be entitled to a
proportionate fractional vote. The Trustees may, in conjunction with the
establishment of any further Series or any Classes of Shares, establish
conditions under which the several Series or Classes of Shares shall have
separate voting rights or no voting rights. There shall be no cumulative voting
in the election of Trustees. Until Shares are issued, the Trustees may exercise
all rights of Shareholders and may take any action required by law, this
Declaration or the By-laws to be taken by Shareholders. The By-laws may include
further provisions for Shareholders' votes and meetings and related matters.

         Section 5.10.  Meetings of Shareholders.  No annual or regular meetings
of Shareholders are required.  Special meetings of the  Shareholders,  including
meetings  involving  only the holders of Shares of one or more but less than all
Series or  Classes  thereof,  may be called at any time by the  Chairman  of the
Board, President, or any Vice-President of the Trust, and shall be called by the
President or the  Secretary at the request,  in writing or by  resolution,  of a
majority of the Trustees,  or at the written request of the holder or holders of
ten percent (10%) or more of the total number of Outstanding Shares of the Trust
entitled to vote at such  meeting.  Meetings of the  Shareholders  of any Series
shall be called by the President or the Secretary at the written  request of the
holder  or  holders  of ten  percent  (10%)  or  more  of the  total  number  of
Outstanding Shares of such Series of the Trust entitled to vote at such meeting.
Any such request shall state the purpose of the proposed meeting.

         Section 5.11.  Series or Class  Designation.  (a) Without  limiting the
authority of the Trustees  set forth in Section 5.1 to establish  and  designate
any further  Series or Classes,  the Trustees  hereby  establish  the  following
Series,  each of which consists of Class A Shares,  Class B Shares,  and Class C
Shares: John Hancock Core Equity Fund (the "Existing Series").

         (b) The Shares of the Existing Series and Class thereof herein
established and designated and any Shares of any further Series and Classes
thereof that may from time to time be established and designated by the Trustees
shall be established and designated, and the variations in the relative rights
and preferences as between the different Series shall be fixed and determined,
by the Trustees (unless the Trustees otherwise determine with respect to further

                                       17
<PAGE>


Series or Classes at the time of establishing and designating the same);
provided, that all Shares shall be identical except that there may be variations
so fixed and determined between different Series or Classes thereof as to
investment objective, policies and restrictions, purchase price, payment
obligations, distribution expenses, right of redemption, special and relative
rights as to dividends and on liquidation, conversion rights, exchange rights,
and conditions under which the several Series or Classes shall have separate
voting rights, all of which are subject to the limitations set forth below. All
references to Shares in this Declaration shall be deemed to be Shares of any or
all Series or Classes as the context may require.

         (c) As to any  Existing  Series  and  Classes  herein  established  and
designated  and any  further  division  of Shares of the Trust  into  additional
Series or Classes, the following provisions shall be applicable:

                   (i) The number of authorized  Shares and the number of Shares
of each  Series or Class  thereof  that may be issued  shall be  unlimited.  The
Trustees may classify or reclassify any unissued Shares or any Shares previously
issued and  reacquired  of any Series or Class into one or more Series or one or
more Classes  that may be  established  and  designated  from time to time.  The
Trustees  may hold as  treasury  shares  (of the same or some  other  Series  or
Class),  reissue for such consideration and on such terms as they may determine,
or cancel  any Shares of any  Series or Class  reacquired  by the Trust at their
discretion from time to time.

                  (ii) All consideration  received by the Trust for the issue or
sale of Shares of a  particular  Series or Class,  together  with all  assets in
which such  consideration  is invested  or  reinvested,  all  income,  earnings,
profits,  and proceeds  thereof,  including any proceeds  derived from the sale,
exchange or liquidation of such assets,  and any funds or payments  derived from
any  reinvestment  of such  proceeds  in  whatever  form the same may be,  shall
irrevocably  belong to that Series for all purposes,  subject only to the rights
of  creditors  of such  Series  and  except  as may  otherwise  be  required  by
applicable  tax laws,  and shall be so recorded upon the books of account of the
Trust. In the event that there are any assets,  income,  earnings,  profits, and
proceeds  thereof,  funds,  or payments  which are not readily  identifiable  as
belonging to any particular  Series,  the Trustees shall allocate them among any
one or more of the Series  established  and designated from time to time in such
manner  and on such  basis as they,  in their  sole  discretion,  deem  fair and
equitable.  Each such allocation by the Trustees shall be conclusive and binding
upon the Shareholders of all Series for all purposes. No holder of Shares of any
Series shall have any claim on or right to any assets  allocated or belonging to
any other Series.

         (iii) The assets belonging to each particular Series shall be charged
with the liabilities of the Trust in respect of that Series or the appropriate
Class or Classes thereof and all expenses, costs, charges and reserves
attributable to that Series or Class or Classes thereof, and any general
liabilities, expenses, costs, charges or reserves of the Trust which are not
readily identifiable as belonging to any particular Series shall be allocated
and charged by the Trustees to and among any one or more of the Series

                                       18
<PAGE>


established and designated from time to time in such manner and on such basis as
the Trustees in their sole discretion deem fair and equitable. Each allocation
of liabilities, expenses, costs, charges and reserves by the Trustees shall be
conclusive and binding upon the Shareholders of all Series and Classes for all
purposes. The Trustees shall have full discretion, to the extent not
inconsistent with the 1940 Act, to determine which items are capital; and each
such determination and allocation shall be conclusive and binding upon the
Shareholders. The assets of a particular Series of the Trust shall under no
circumstances be charged with liabilities attributable to any other Series or
Class thereof of the Trust. All persons extending credit to, or contracting with
or having any claim against a particular Series or Class of the Trust shall look
only to the assets of that particular Series for payment of such credit,
contract or claim.

                  (iv)  The  power of the  Trustees  to pay  dividends  and make
distributions shall be governed by Section 7.2 of this Declaration. With respect
to any Series or Class,  dividends and  distributions  on Shares of a particular
Series or Class may be paid with such  frequency as the Trustees may  determine,
which  may  be  daily  or  otherwise,  pursuant  to  a  standing  resolution  or
resolutions  adopted  only  once or with  such  frequency  as the  Trustees  may
determine,  to the holders of Shares of that  Series or Class,  from such of the
income and capital gains, accrued or realized, from the assets belonging to that
Series,  as the Trustees may determine,  after  providing for actual and accrued
liabilities  belonging to that Series or Class. All dividends and  distributions
on Shares of a particular  Series or Class shall be distributed  pro rata to the
Shareholders  of that Series or Class in  proportion  to the number of Shares of
that Series or Class held by such Shareholders at the time of record established
for the payment of such dividends or distribution.

                   (v) Each  Share of a Series of the Trust  shall  represent  a
beneficial interest in the net assets of such Series. Each holder of Shares of a
Series or Class  thereof  shall be  entitled  to  receive  his pro rata share of
distributions  of income and capital  gains made with  respect to such Series or
Class net of expenses.  Upon  redemption  of his Shares or  indemnification  for
liabilities  incurred by reason of his being or having been a  Shareholder  of a
Series or Class,  such  Shareholder  shall be paid  solely  out of the funds and
property of such  Series of the Trust.  Upon  liquidation  or  termination  of a
Series or Class  thereof  of the  Trust,  Shareholders  of such  Series or Class
thereof  shall be entitled to receive a pro rata share of the net assets of such
Series. A Shareholder of a particular  Series of the Trust shall not be entitled
to  participate in a derivative or class action on behalf of any other Series or
the Shareholders of any other Series of the Trust.

         (vi) On each matter submitted to a vote of Shareholders, all Shares of
all Series and Classes shall vote as a single class; provided, however, that (1)
as to any matter with respect to which a separate vote of any Series or Class is
required by the 1940 Act or is required by attributes applicable to any Series
or Class or is required by any Rule 12b-1 plan, such requirements as to a
separate vote by that Series or Class shall apply, (2) to the extent that a
matter referred to in clause (1) above, affects more than one Class or Series
and the interests of each such Class or Series in the matter are identical,
then, subject to clause (3) below, the Shares of all such affected Classes or
Series shall vote as a single Class; (3) as to any matter which does not affect
the interests of a particular Series or Class, only the holders of Shares of the
one or more affected Series or Classes shall be entitled to vote; and (4) the
provisions of the following sentence shall apply. On any matter that pertains to
any particular Class of a particular Series or to any Class expenses with
respect to any Series which matter may be submitted to a vote of Shareholders,
only Shares of the affected Class or that Series, as the case may be, shall be
entitled to vote except that: (i) to the extent said matter affects Shares of

                                       19
<PAGE>


another Class or Series, such other Shares shall also be entitled to vote, and
in such cases Shares of the affected Class, as the case may be, of such Series
shall be voted in the aggregate together with such other Shares; and (ii) to the
extent that said matter does not affect Shares of a particular Class of such
Series, said Shares shall not be entitled to vote (except where otherwise
required by law or permitted by the Trustees acting in their sole discretion)
even though the matter is submitted to a vote of the Shareholders of any other
Class or Series.

                 (vii)  Except as  otherwise  provided  in this  Article  V, the
Trustees  shall  have the  power to  determine  the  designations,  preferences,
privileges,  payment obligations,  limitations and rights,  including voting and
dividend rights, of each Class and Series of Shares.  Subject to compliance with
the  requirements  of the 1940 Act,  the  Trustees  shall have the  authority to
provide  that the  holders of Shares of any Series or Class shall have the right
to convert or exchange  said Shares into Shares of one or more Series or Classes
of Shares in accordance with such requirements, conditions and procedures as may
be established by the Trustees.

                (viii)  The  establishment  and  designation  of any  Series  or
Classes of Shares  shall be  effective  upon the  execution by a majority of the
then Trustees of an instrument  setting forth such establishment and designation
and the  relative  rights  and  preferences  of such  Series or  Classes,  or as
otherwise  provided  in such  instrument.  At any time that  there are no Shares
outstanding  of any  particular  Series  or  Class  previously  established  and
designated,  the Trustees may by an  instrument  executed by a majority of their
number  abolish  that  Series or Class  and the  establishment  and  designation
thereof. Each instrument referred to in this section shall have the status of an
amendment to this Declaration.

         Section 5.12.  Assent to Declaration of Trust.  Every  Shareholder,  by
virtue of having become a Shareholder,  shall be held to have expressly assented
and agreed to the terms hereof and to have become a party hereto.


                                   ARTICLE VI

                       REDEMPTION AND REPURCHASE OF SHARES

         Section 6.1. Redemption of Shares. (a) All Shares of the Trust shall be
redeemable,  at the  redemption  price  determined in the manner set out in this
Declaration.  Redeemed  or  repurchased  Shares may be resold by the Trust.  The
Trust may  require  any  Shareholder  to pay a sales  charge to the  Trust,  the
underwriter,  or any other person  designated by the Trustees upon redemption or
repurchase  of  Shares  in such  amount  and upon  such  conditions  as shall be
determined from time to time by the Trustees.

         (b) The Trust  shall  redeem  the  Shares of the Trust or any Series or
Class  thereof  at the price  determined  as  hereinafter  set  forth,  upon the
appropriately verified written application of the record holder thereof (or upon
such other form of request as the  Trustees  may  determine)  at such  office or
agency as may be designated  from time to time for that purpose by the Trustees.
The  Trustees  may  from  time  to  time  specify  additional  conditions,   not
inconsistent  with the 1940  Act,  regarding  the  redemption  of  Shares in the
Trust's then effective Prospectus.

                                       20
<PAGE>


         Section 6.2. Price.  Shares shall be redeemed at a price based on their
net asset value determined as set forth in Section 7.1 hereof as of such time as
the Trustees shall have theretofore prescribed by resolution.  In the absence of
such resolution,  the redemption price of Shares deposited shall be based on the
net asset  value of such  Shares  next  determined  as set forth in Section  7.1
hereof after receipt of such application.  The amount of any contingent deferred
sales charge or redemption fee payable upon redemption of Shares may be deducted
from the proceeds of such redemption.

         Section 6.3. Payment.  Payment of the redemption price of Shares of the
Trust or any Series or Class thereof shall be made in cash or in property to the
Shareholder at such time and in the manner,  not inconsistent  with the 1940 Act
or other  applicable  laws, as may be specified from time to time in the Trust's
then effective Prospectus(es),  subject to the provisions of Section 6.4 hereof.
Notwithstanding  the foregoing,  the Trustees may withhold from such  redemption
proceeds any amount arising (i) from a liability of the redeeming Shareholder to
the  Trust or (ii) in  connection  with any  Federal  or state  tax  withholding
requirements.

         Section 6.4. Effect of Suspension of  Determination of Net Asset Value.
If,  pursuant to Section 6.9 hereof,  the Trustees shall declare a suspension of
the  determination  of net asset value with respect to Shares of the Trust or of
any Series or Class thereof,  the rights of  Shareholders  (including  those who
shall have applied for  redemption  pursuant to Section 6.1 hereof but who shall
not yet have received payment) to have Shares redeemed and paid for by the Trust
or a Series or Class thereof shall be suspended  until the  termination  of such
suspension is declared. Any record holder who shall have his redemption right so
suspended may,  during the period of such  suspension,  by  appropriate  written
notice of revocation at the office or agency where  application was made, revoke
any application  for redemption not honored and withdraw any Share  certificates
on deposit.  The redemption  price of Shares for which  redemption  applications
have not been revoked  shall be based on the net asset value of such Shares next
determined as set forth in Section 7.1 after the termination of such suspension,
and payment  shall be made  within  seven (7) days after the date upon which the
application  was made plus the period  after such  application  during which the
determination of net asset value was suspended.

         Section 6.5.  Repurchase by Agreement.  The Trust may repurchase Shares
directly,  or through  the  Distributor  or  another  agent  designated  for the
purpose,  by agreement  with the owner  thereof at a price not exceeding the net
asset value per share determined as of the time when the purchase or contract of
purchase  is made or the net  asset  value  as of any  time  which  may be later
determined pursuant to Section 7.1 hereof,  provided payment is not made for the
Shares prior to the time as of which such net asset value is determined.

         Section 6.6.  Redemption of Shareholder's  Interest.  The Trustees,  in
their sole discretion, may cause the Trust to redeem all of the Shares of one or
more Series or Class thereof held by any Shareholder if the value of such Shares
held by such  Shareholder is less than the minimum amount  established from time
to time by the Trustees.

                                       21
<PAGE>


         Section  6.7.  Redemption  of Shares in Order to Qualify  as  Regulated
Investment  Company;  Disclosure of Holding.  (a) If the Trustees  shall, at any
time and in good faith,  be of the opinion that direct or indirect  ownership of
Shares or other  securities of the Trust has or may become  concentrated  in any
Person to an extent which would  disqualify the Trust or any Series of the Trust
as a regulated  investment company under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, then
the Trustees shall have the power by lot or other means deemed equitable by them
(i) to call for redemption by any such Person a number,  or principal amount, of
Shares or other securities of the Trust or any Series of the Trust sufficient to
maintain or bring the direct or indirect ownership of Shares or other securities
of the Trust or any Series of the Trust into  conformity  with the  requirements
for such  qualification  and (ii) to refuse to transfer or issue Shares or other
securities  of the  Trust  or  any  Series  of the  Trust  to any  Person  whose
acquisition of the Shares or other  securities of the Trust or any Series of the
Trust in question would result in such disqualification. The redemption shall be
effected at the redemption price and in the manner provided in Section 6.1.

         (b) The  holders  of  Shares  or other  securities  of the Trust or any
Series of the Trust shall upon demand  disclose to the  Trustees in writing such
information  with  respect to direct and  indirect  ownership of Shares or other
securities  of the  Trust  or any  Series  of the  Trust  as the  Trustees  deem
necessary to comply with the provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended, or to comply with the requirements of any other taxing authority.

         Section 6.8. Reductions in Number of Outstanding Shares Pursuant to Net
Asset Value Formula.  The Trust may also reduce the number of outstanding Shares
of the Trust or of any Series of the Trust pursuant to the provisions of Section
7.3.

         Section 6.9. Suspension of Right of Redemption. The Trust may declare a
suspension  of the  right of  redemption  or  postpone  the date of  payment  or
redemption for the whole or any part of any period (i) during which the New York
Stock Exchange is closed other than customary weekend and holiday closings, (ii)
during which trading on the New York Stock Exchange is restricted,  (iii) during
which an emergency exists as a result of which disposal by the Trust or a Series
thereof of securities  owned by it is not  reasonably  practicable  or it is not
reasonably practicable for the Trust or a Series thereof fairly to determine the
value of its net assets, or (iv) during any other period when the Commission may
for the protection of  Shareholders  of the Trust by order permit  suspension of
the right of redemption or  postponement  of the date of payment or  redemption;
provided that applicable rules and regulations of the Commission shall govern as
to whether the conditions prescribed in clauses (ii), (iii), or (iv) exist. Such
suspension  shall take  effect at such time as the Trust  shall  specify but not
later  than the  close of  business  on the  business  day  next  following  the
declaration of suspension,  and thereafter there shall be no right of redemption
or payment on redemption until the Trust shall declare the suspension at an end,
except  that the  suspension  shall  terminate  in any event on the first day on
which said stock exchange shall have reopened or the period specified in (ii) or
(iii) shall have  expired  (as to which in the absence of an official  ruling by
the Commission, the determination of the Trust shall be conclusive). In the case
of a suspension of the right of redemption,  a Shareholder  may either  withdraw
his  request  for  redemption  or receive  payment  based on the net asset value
existing after the termination of the suspension.

                                       22
<PAGE>



                                   ARTICLE VII

                        DETERMINATION OF NET ASSET VALUE,
                          NET INCOME AND DISTRIBUTIONS

         Section 7.1. Net Asset Value.  The net asset value of each  outstanding
Share of the Trust or of each Series or Class  thereof  shall be  determined  on
such days and at such time or times as the Trustees may determine.  The value of
the assets of the Trust or any Series thereof may be determined (i) by a pricing
service  which  utilizes   electronic   pricing   techniques  based  on  general
institutional trading, (ii) by appraisal of the securities owned by the Trust or
any Series of the Trust,  (iii) in certain cases,  at amortized cost, or (iv) by
such  other  method  as shall be  deemed  to  reflect  the fair  value  thereof,
determined  in good faith by or under the  direction of the  Trustees.  From the
total value of said assets, there shall be deducted all indebtedness,  interest,
taxes, payable or accrued, including estimated taxes on unrealized book profits,
expenses  and  management  charges  accrued to the  appraisal  date,  net income
determined and declared as a  distribution  and all other items in the nature of
liabilities  which shall be deemed  appropriate,  as incurred by or allocated to
the Trust or any Series or Class of the Trust.  The resulting amount which shall
represent  the total net assets of the Trust or Series or Class thereof shall be
divided  by the  number  of  Shares  of the  Trust or  Series  or Class  thereof
outstanding  at the time and the quotient so obtained  shall be deemed to be the
net asset value of the Shares of the Trust or Series or Class  thereof.  The net
asset value of the Shares  shall be  determined  at least once on each  business
day, as of the close of regular  trading on the New York Stock Exchange or as of
such other time or times as the Trustees shall determine.  The power and duty to
make the daily  calculations  may be delegated by the Trustees to the Investment
Adviser,  the  Administrator,  the  Custodian,  the Transfer Agent or such other
Person as the Trustees by resolution may determine. The Trustees may suspend the
daily  determination of net asset value to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act.
It shall not be a violation of any provision of this  Declaration  if Shares are
sold,  redeemed or  repurchased  by the Trust at a price other than one based on
net  asset  value if the net  asset  value  is  affected  by one or more  errors
inadvertently made in the pricing of portfolio securities or in accruing income,
expenses or liabilities.

         Section 7.2. Distributions to Shareholders. (a) The Trustees shall from
time to time distribute ratably among the Shareholders of the Trust or of a
Series or Class thereof such proportion of the net profits, surplus (including
paid-in surplus), capital, or assets of the Trust or such Series held by the
Trustees as they may deem proper. Such distributions may be made in cash or
property (including without limitation any type of obligations of the Trust or
Series or Class or any assets thereof), and the Trustees may distribute ratably
among the Shareholders of the Trust or Series or Class thereof additional Shares
of the Trust or Series or Class thereof issuable hereunder in such manner, at
such times, and on such terms as the Trustees may deem proper. Such
distributions may be among the Shareholders of the Trust or Series or Class
thereof at the time of declaring a distribution or among the Shareholders of the
Trust or Series or Class thereof at such other date or time or dates or times as
the Trustees shall determine. The Trustees may in their discretion determine
that, solely for the purposes of such distributions, Outstanding Shares shall
exclude Shares for which orders have been placed subsequent to a specified time
on the date the distribution is declared or on the next preceding day if the
distribution is declared as of a day on which Boston banks are not open for

                                       23
<PAGE>


business, all as described in the then effective Prospectus under the Securities
Act of 1933. The Trustees may always retain from the net profits such amount as
they may deem necessary to pay the debts or expenses of the Trust or a Series or
Class thereof or to meet obligations of the Trust or a Series or Class thereof,
or as they may deem desirable to use in the conduct of its affairs or to retain
for future requirements or extensions of the business. The Trustees may adopt
and offer to Shareholders such dividend reinvestment plans, cash dividend payout
plans or related plans as the Trustees shall deem appropriate. The Trustees may
in their discretion determine that an account administration fee or other
similar charge may be deducted directly from the income and other distributions
paid on Shares to a Shareholder's account in each Series or Class.

         (b)  Inasmuch  as the  computation  of net income and gains for Federal
income tax  purposes  may vary from the  computation  thereof on the books,  the
above  provisions  shall be  interpreted to give the Trustees the power in their
discretion  to  distribute  for any fiscal  year as  ordinary  dividends  and as
capital gains  distributions,  respectively,  additional  amounts  sufficient to
enable the Trust or a Series or Class  thereof to avoid or reduce  liability for
taxes.

         Section 7.3. Determination of Net Income; Constant Net Asset Value;
Reduction of Outstanding Shares. Subject to Section 5.11 hereof, the net income
of the Series and Classes thereof of the Trust shall be determined in such
manner as the Trustees shall provide by resolution. Expenses of the Trust or of
a Series or Class thereof, including the advisory or management fee, shall be
accrued each day. Each Class shall bear only expenses relating to its Shares and
an allocable share of Series expenses in accordance with such policies as may be
established by the Trustees from time to time and as are not inconsistent with
the provisions of this Declaration or of any applicable document filed by the
Trust with the Commission or of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.
Such net income may be determined by or under the direction of the Trustees as
of the close of regular trading on the New York Stock Exchange on each day on
which such market is open or as of such other time or times as the Trustees
shall determine, and, except as provided herein, all the net income of any
Series or Class, as so determined, may be declared as a dividend on the
Outstanding Shares of such Series or Class. If, for any reason, the net income
of any Series or Class determined at any time is a negative amount, or for any
other reason, the Trustees shall have the power with respect to such Series or
Class (i) to offset each Shareholder's pro rata share of such negative amount
from the accrued dividend account of such Shareholder, or (ii) to reduce the
number of Outstanding Shares of such Series or Class by reducing the number of
Shares in the account of such Shareholder by that number of full and fractional
Shares which represents the amount of such excess negative net income, or (iii)
to cause to be recorded on the books of the Trust an asset account in the amount
of such negative net income, which account may be reduced by the amount,
provided that the same shall thereupon become the property of the Trust with
respect to such Series or Class and shall not be paid to any Shareholder, of
dividends declared thereafter upon the Outstanding Shares of such Series or
Class on the day such negative net income is experienced, until such asset
account is reduced to zero. The Trustees shall have full discretion to determine
whether any cash or property received shall be treated as income or as principal
and whether any item of expense shall be charged to the income or the principal
account, and their determination made in good faith shall be conclusive upon the
Shareholders. In the case of stock dividends received, the Trustees shall have
full discretion to determine, in the light of the particular circumstances, how
much if any of the value thereof shall be treated as income, the balance, if
any, to be treated as principal.

                                       24
<PAGE>



         Section 7.4. Power to Modify Foregoing Procedures.  Notwithstanding any
of the  foregoing  provisions  of this  Article VII, but subject to Section 5.11
hereof,  the Trustees may prescribe,  in their absolute  discretion,  such other
bases and times for  determining  the per Share net asset value of the Shares of
the Trust or a Series or Class thereof or net income of the Trust or a Series or
Class thereof,  or the declaration and payment of dividends and distributions as
they may deem  necessary or desirable.  Without  limiting the  generality of the
foregoing,  the Trustees may  establish  several  Series or Classes of Shares in
accordance with Section 5.11, and declare  dividends  thereon in accordance with
Section 5.11(d)(iv).


                                  ARTICLE VIII

              DURATION; TERMINATION OF TRUST OR A SERIES OR CLASS;
                            AMENDMENT; MERGERS, ETC.

         Section 8.1. Duration. The Trust shall continue without limitation of
time but subject to the provisions of this Article VIII.

         Section 8.2. Termination of the Trust or a Series or a Class. The Trust
or any Series or Class thereof may be terminated by (i) the affirmative  vote of
the holders of not less than  two-thirds of the  Outstanding  Shares entitled to
vote and  present in person or by proxy at any  meeting of  Shareholders  of the
Trust or the  appropriate  Series or Class  thereof,  (ii) by an  instrument  or
instruments  in  writing  without a  meeting,  consented  to by the  holders  of
two-thirds of the Outstanding  Shares of the Trust or a Series or Class thereof;
provided,  however,  that, if such  termination  as described in clauses (i) and
(ii) is recommended by the Trustees,  the vote or written consent of the holders
of a  majority  of the  Outstanding  Shares  of the  Trust or a Series  or Class
thereof entitled to vote shall be sufficient  authorization,  or (iii) notice to
Shareholders  by means of an instrument  in writing  signed by a majority of the
Trustees,  stating  that a majority  of the  Trustees  has  determined  that the
continuation  of the  Trust or a Series  or a Class  thereof  is not in the best
interest of such Series or a Class, the Trust or their  respective  shareholders
as a result of factors or events adversely  affecting the ability of such Series
or a  Class  or  the  Trust  to  conduct  its  business  and  operations  in  an
economically  viable  manner.  Such  factors and events may include (but are not
limited  to) the  inability  of a Series or Class or the Trust to  maintain  its
assets at an  appropriate  size,  changes in laws or  regulations  governing the
Series  or Class or the  Trust or  affecting  assets  of the type in which  such
Series or Class or the Trust invests or economic developments or trends having a
significant adverse impact on the business or operations of such Series or Class
or the Trust. Upon the termination of the Trust or the Series or Class,

                   (i) The Trust,  Series or Class  shall  carry on no  business
         except for the purpose of winding up its affairs.

                                       25
<PAGE>


                  (ii) The Trustees  shall proceed to wind up the affairs of the
         Trust, Series or Class and all of the powers of the Trustees under this
         Declaration  shall continue  until the affairs of the Trust,  Series or
         Class  shall  have been  wound up,  including  the power to  fulfill or
         discharge  the  contracts  of the Trust,  Series or Class,  collect its
         assets, sell, convey, assign,  exchange,  transfer or otherwise dispose
         of all or any part of the remaining  Trust  Property or Trust  Property
         allocated  or  belonging to such Series or Class to one or more persons
         at public or private sale for consideration  which may consist in whole
         or in part of cash, securities or other property of any kind, discharge
         or pay its liabilities,  and do all other acts appropriate to liquidate
         its business; provided that any sale, conveyance, assignment, exchange,
         transfer or other  disposition  of all or  substantially  all the Trust
         Property or Trust  Property  allocated  or  belonging to such Series or
         Class that requires Shareholder approval in accordance with Section 8.4
         hereof shall receive the approval so required.

                 (iii) After paying or  adequately  providing for the payment of
         all  liabilities,  and upon receipt of such releases,  indemnities  and
         refunding  agreements as they deem necessary for their protection,  the
         Trustees may distribute  the remaining  Trust Property or the remaining
         property  of the  terminated  Series  or  Class,  in cash or in kind or
         partly each, among the Shareholders of the Trust or the Series or Class
         according to their respective rights.

         (b) After termination of the Trust, Series or Class and distribution to
the  Shareholders as herein  provided,  a majority of the Trustees shall execute
and lodge  among  the  records  of the  Trust  and file  with the  Office of the
Secretary of The  Commonwealth of Massachusetts an instrument in writing setting
forth  the  fact of  such  termination,  and the  Trustees  shall  thereupon  be
discharged from all further  liabilities and duties with respect to the Trust or
the terminated Series or Class, and the rights and interests of all Shareholders
of the Trust or the terminated Series or Class shall thereupon cease.

         Section 8.3. Amendment  Procedure.  (a) This Declaration may be amended
by a vote of the holders of a majority of the Shares outstanding and entitled to
vote or by any instrument in writing, without a meeting, signed by a majority of
the  Trustees  and  consented  to by the  holders  of a  majority  of the Shares
outstanding and entitled to vote.

         (b) This Declaration may be amended by a vote of a majority of
Trustees, without approval or consent of the Shareholders, except that no
amendment can be made by the Trustees to impair any voting or other rights of
shareholders prescribed by Federal or state law. Without limiting the foregoing,
the Trustees may amend this Declaration without the approval or consent of
Shareholders (i) to change the name of the Trust or any Series, (ii) to add to
their duties or obligations or surrender any rights or powers granted to them
herein; (iii) to cure any ambiguity, to correct or supplement any provision
herein which may be inconsistent with any other provision herein or to make any
other provisions with respect to matters or questions arising under this
Declaration which will not be inconsistent with the provisions of this
Declaration; and (iv) to eliminate or modify any provision of this Declaration
which (a) incorporates, memorializes or sets forth an existing requirement
imposed by or under any Federal or state statute or any rule, regulation or
interpretation thereof or thereunder or (b) any rule, regulation, interpretation
or guideline of any Federal or state agency, now or hereafter in effect,
including without limitation, requirements set forth in the 1940 Act and the
rules and regulations thereunder (and interpretations thereof), to the extent
any change in applicable law liberalizes, eliminates or modifies any such
requirements, but the Trustees shall not be liable for failure to do so.

                                       26
<PAGE>


         (c) The Trustees may also amend this  Declaration  without the approval
or consent of Shareholders if they deem it necessary to conform this Declaration
to the  requirements  of applicable  Federal or state laws or regulations or the
requirements  of the  regulated  investment  company  provisions of the Internal
Revenue  Code of 1986,  as amended,  or if requested or required to do so by any
Federal agency or by a state Blue Sky commissioner or similar official,  but the
Trustees shall not be liable for failing so to do.

         (d) Nothing contained in this Declaration shall permit the amendment of
this  Declaration  to  impair  the  exemption  from  personal  liability  of the
Shareholders, Trustees, officers, employees and agents of the Trust or to permit
assessments upon Shareholders.

         (e) A certificate signed by a majority of the Trustees setting forth an
amendment  and  reciting  that it was duly  adopted  by the  Trustees  or by the
Shareholders as aforesaid or a copy of the Declaration, as amended, and executed
by a majority of the Trustees,  shall be conclusive  evidence of such  amendment
when lodged among the records of the Trust.

         Section 8.4. Merger, Consolidation and Sale of Assets. The Trust or any
Series may merge or consolidate into any other corporation,  association,  trust
or other organization or may sell, lease or exchange all or substantially all of
the Trust  Property or Trust  Property  allocated  or  belonging to such Series,
including  its  good  will,   upon  such  terms  and  conditions  and  for  such
consideration  when and as authorized at any meeting of Shareholders  called for
the purpose by the  affirmative  vote of the holders of two-thirds of the Shares
of the Trust or such  Series  outstanding  and  entitled  to vote and present in
person  or by  proxy  at a  meeting  of  Shareholders,  or by an  instrument  or
instruments  in  writing  without a  meeting,  consented  to by the  holders  of
two-thirds of the Shares of the Trust or such Series;  provided,  however, that,
if such merger,  consolidation,  sale,  lease or exchange is  recommended by the
Trustees,  the vote or  written  consent of the  holders  of a  majority  of the
Outstanding  Shares  of the  Trust  or such  Series  entitled  to vote  shall be
sufficient  authorization;  and any such merger,  consolidation,  sale, lease or
exchange  shall be deemed for all purposes to have been  accomplished  under and
pursuant to Massachusetts law.

         Section 8.5. Incorporation. The Trustees may cause to be organized or
assist in organizing a corporation or corporations under the laws of any
jurisdiction or any other trust, partnership, association or other organization
to take over all or any portion of the Trust Property or the Trust Property
allocated or belonging to such Series or to carry on any business in which the
Trust shall directly or indirectly have any interest, and to sell, convey and
transfer all or any portion of the Trust Property or the Trust Property
allocated or belonging to such Series to any such corporation, trust,
association or organization in exchange for the shares or securities thereof or
otherwise, and to lend money to, subscribe for the shares or securities of, and
enter into any contracts with any such corporation, trust, partnership,

                                       27
<PAGE>


association or organization, or any corporation, partnership, trust, association
or organization in which the Trust or such Series holds or is about to acquire
shares or any other interest. The Trustees may also cause a merger or
consolidation between the Trust or any successor thereto and any such
corporation, trust, partnership, association or other organization if and to the
extent permitted by law, as provided under the law then in effect. Nothing
contained herein shall be construed as requiring approval of Shareholders for
the Trustees to organize or assist in organizing one or more corporations,
trusts, partnerships, associations or other organizations and selling, conveying
or transferring all or a portion of the Trust Property to such organization or
entities.

                                   ARTICLE IX

                             REPORTS TO SHAREHOLDERS

         The Trustees shall at least semi-annually submit to the Shareholders of
each  Series a written  financial  report of the  transactions  of the Trust and
Series thereof,  including financial statements which shall at least annually be
certified by independent public accountants.

                                    ARTICLE X

                                  MISCELLANEOUS

         Section 10.1.  Execution and Filing. This Declaration and any amendment
hereto  shall be filed in the office of the  Secretary  of The  Commonwealth  of
Massachusetts  and in such  other  places as may be  required  under the laws of
Massachusetts  and may also be filed or  recorded  in such  other  places as the
Trustees deem  appropriate.  Each  amendment so filed shall be  accompanied by a
certificate  signed and  acknowledged  by a Trustee stating that such action was
duly taken in a manner  provided  herein,  and  unless  such  amendment  or such
certificate sets forth some later time for the  effectiveness of such amendment,
such amendment  shall be effective upon its execution.  A restated  Declaration,
integrating  into a single  instrument all of the provisions of the  Declaration
which are then in effect and  operative,  may be executed from time to time by a
majority of the Trustees and filed with the  Secretary  of The  Commonwealth  of
Massachusetts.  A restated  Declaration  shall,  upon  execution,  be conclusive
evidence of all amendments  contained  therein and may thereafter be referred to
in lieu of the original Declaration and the various amendments thereto.

         Section  10.2.  Governing  Law.  This  Declaration  is  executed by the
Trustees and delivered in The Commonwealth of  Massachusetts  and with reference
to the  laws  thereof,  and the  rights  of all  parties  and the  validity  and
construction  of every  provision  hereof  shall  be  subject  to and  construed
according to the laws of said Commonwealth.

         Section 10.3.  Counterparts.  This  Declaration  may be  simultaneously
executed  in  several  counterparts,  each of  which  shall be  deemed  to be an
original,  and such  counterparts,  together,  shall constitute one and the same
instrument,   which  shall  be  sufficiently  evidenced  by  any  such  original
counterpart.

                                       28
<PAGE>


         Section 10.4. Reliance by Third Parties. Any certificate executed by an
individual  who,  according to the records of the Trust  appears to be a Trustee
hereunder,  certifying  (a) the number or identity of Trustees or  Shareholders,
(b) the due authorization of the execution of any instrument or writing, (c) the
form of any vote passed at a meeting of Trustees or  Shareholders,  (d) the fact
that the number of Trustees or Shareholders  present at any meeting or executing
any written instrument  satisfies the requirements of this Declaration,  (e) the
form of any By-laws  adopted by or the identity of any  officers  elected by the
Trustees,  or (f) the  existence of any fact or facts which in any manner relate
to the affairs of the Trust,  shall be conclusive  evidence as to the matters so
certified in favor of any Person dealing with the Trustees and their successors.

         Section 10.5.  Provisions in Conflict with Law or Regulations.  (a) The
provisions  of  this  Declaration  are  severable,  and  if the  Trustees  shall
determine,  with  the  advice  of  counsel,  that any of such  provisions  is in
conflict with the 1940 Act, the regulated  investment  company provisions of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986 or with other applicable laws and regulations, the
conflicting  provision shall be deemed never to have  constituted a part of this
Declaration;  provided, however, that such determination shall not affect any of
the remaining  provisions of this  Declaration or render invalid or improper any
action taken or omitted prior to such determination.

         (b) If any  provision  of this  Declaration  shall be held  invalid  or
unenforceable in any  jurisdiction,  such invalidity or  unenforceability  shall
attach only to such provision in such  jurisdiction  and shall not in any manner
affect such provision in any other  jurisdiction  or any other provision of this
Declaration in any jurisdiction.

         IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the undersigned have executed this instrument as of
the 8th of June, 1999.

                                             /s/Edward J. Boudreau, Jr.
                                             --------------------------
                                             Edward J. Boudreau, Jr.
                                             as Trustee and not individually,
                                             34 Swan Road
                                             Winchester, Massachusetts 01890

                                             /s/Dennis S. Aronowitz
                                             ----------------------
                                             Dennis S. Aronowitz
                                             as Trustee and not individually,
                                             1216 Falls Boulevard
                                             Fort Lauderdale, Florida  33327


                                       29
<PAGE>


                                     /s/Stephen L. Brown
                                     -------------------
                                     Stephen L. Brown
                                     as Trustee and not individually,
                                     180 Beacon Street, Apt. 14G
                                     Boston, MA   02116



                                     /s/Richard P. Chapman, Jr.
                                     --------------------------
                                     Richard P. Chapman, Jr.
                                     as Trustee and not individually,
                                     107 Upland Road
                                     Brookline, Massachusetts  02146



                                     /s/William J. Cosgrove
                                     ----------------------
                                     William J. Cosgrove
                                     as Trustee and not individually,
                                     20 Buttonwood Place
                                     Saddle River, New Jersey  07458


                                     -------------------------------
                                     Douglas M. Costle
                                     as Trustee and not individually,
                                     RR2 Box 480
                                     Woodstock, Vermont  05091



                                     /s/Leland O. Erdahl
                                     -------------------
                                     Leland O. Erdahl
                                     as Trustee and not individually,
                                     8046 MacKenzie Court
                                     Las Vegas, Nevada  89129



                                     /s/Richard A. Farrell
                                     ---------------------
                                     Richard A. Farrell
                                     as Trustee and not individually,
                                     50 Beacon Street
                                     Marblehead, Massachusetts  01945

                                       30
<PAGE>



                                              /s/Gail D. Fosler
                                              -----------------
                                              Gail D. Fosler
                                              as Trustee and not individually,
                                              3054 So. Abingdon Street
                                              Arlington, VA   22206



                                              ------------------------------------
                                              William F. Glavin
                                              as Trustee and not individually,
                                              120 Paget Court
                                              Vero Beach, Florida   32963



                                              /s/Anne C. Hodsdon
                                              ------------------
                                              Anne C. Hodsdon
                                              as Trustee and not individually,
                                              135 Woodland Road
                                              Hampton, New Hampshire 03842




                                              /s/Dr. John A. Moore
                                              --------------------
                                              Dr. John A. Moore
                                              as Trustee and not individually,
                                              P.O. Box 474
                                              Wicomico, Virginia  22579



                                              /s/Patti McGill Peterson
                                              ------------------------
                                              Patti McGill Peterson
                                              as Trustee and not individually,
                                              P.O. Box 34
                                              King Ferry, NY 13081

                                       31
<PAGE>



                                             /s/John W. Pratt
                                             ----------------
                                             John W. Pratt
                                             as Trustee and not individually,
                                             2 Gray Gardens East
                                             Cambridge, Massachusetts  02138



                                             /s/Richard S. Scipione
                                             ----------------------
                                             Richard S. Scipione
                                             as Trustee and not individually,
                                             4 Sentinel Road
                                             Hingham, Massachusetts 02043


                        THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS



SUFFOLK COUNTY, MASSACHUSETTS

                                                                    June 8, 1999

         Then personally appeared the above-named persons, Edward J. Boudreau,
Jr., Dennis S. Aronowitz, Stephen L. Brown, Richard P. Chapman, Jr., William J.
Cosgrove, Leland O. Erdahl, Richard A. Farrell, Gail D. Fosler, Anne C. Hodsdon,
John A. Moore, Patti McGill Peterson, John W. Pratt, and Richard S. Scipione,
who acknowledged the foregoing instrument to be his free act and deed.

                                               Before me,



                                               /s/Ann Marie White
                                               ------------------
                                               Notary Public

My commission expires:  10/20/00





s:\funds\captlsr\dectrust

                                       32
</TABLE>


                           JOHN HANCOCK CAPITAL SERIES



                  Instrument Fixing the Number of Trustees and
                      Appointing Individual to Fill Vacancy

         The undersigned, constituting a majority of the Trustees of John
Hancock Capital Series, a Massachusetts business trust (the "Trust), acting
pursuant to Section 2.12 of the Amended and Restated Declaration of Trust dated
June 8, 1999, as amended from time to time (the "Declaration of Trust"), do
hereby:

(a)      fix the number of Trustees at sixteen (16);

(b)      appoint  Maureen  R. Ford to fill the  vacancy  thereby  created,  such
         appointment to become effective upon Ms. Ford accepting in writing such
         appointment and agreeing to be bound by the terms of the Declaration of
         Trust.

         IN WITNESS WHEREOF,  the undersigned have executed this instrument this
7th day of December, 1999.



/s/Dennis S. Aronowitz                                  /s/Gail D. Fosler
- ----------------------                                  -----------------
Dennis S. Aronowitz                                     Gail D. Fosler

/s/Edward J. Boudreau, Jr.                              /s/William F. Glavin
- --------------------------                              --------------------
Edward J. Boudreau, Jr.                                 William F. Glavin

                                                        /s/Anne C. Hodsdon
- ------------------------                                ------------------
Stephen L. Brown                                        Anne C. Hodsdon

/s/Richard P. Chapman, Jr.                              /s/John A. Moore
- --------------------------                              ----------------
Richard P. Chapman, Jr.                                 John A. Moore

/s/William J. Cosgrove                                  /s/Patti McGill Peterson
- ----------------------                                  ------------------------
William J. Cosgrove                                     Patti McGill Peterson

- ------------------------                                ------------------------
Douglas M. Costle                                       John W. Pratt

                                                        /s/Richard S. Scipione
- ------------------------                                ----------------------
Leland O. Erdahl                                        Richard S. Scipione

/s/Richard A. Farrell
- ---------------------
Richard A. Farrell



<PAGE>



         The Declaration of Trust, a copy of which, together with all amendments
thereto, is on file in the office of the Secretary of State of The Commonwealth
of Massachusetts, provides that no Trustee, officer, employee or agent of the
Trust or any Series thereof shall be subject to any personal liability
whatsoever to any Person, other than to the Trust or its shareholders, in
connection with Trust Property or the affairs of the Trust, save only that
arising from bad faith, willful misfeasance, gross negligence or reckless
disregard of his/her duties with respect to such Person; and all such Persons
shall look solely to the Trust Property, or to the Trust Property of one or more
specific Series of the Trust if the claim arises from the conduct of such
Trustee, officer, employee or agent with respect to only such Series, for
satisfaction of claims of any nature arising in connection with the affairs of
the Trust.


COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS )
                              )ss
COUNTY OF SUFFOLK             )

         Then personally appeared the above-named Dennis S. Aronowitz, Edward J.
Boudreau, Jr., Richard P. Chapman, Jr., William J. Cosgrove, Richard A. Farrell,
Gail D. Fosler, William F. Glavin, Anne C. Hodsdon, John A. Moore, Patti McGill
Peterson, and Richard S. Scipione, who acknowledged the foregoing instrument to
be his or her free act and deed, before me, this 7th day of December, 1999.

                                          /s/Ann Marie White
                                          ------------------
                                          Notary Public

                                          My Commission Expires: 10/20/00



                                February 29, 2000



John Hancock Capital Series
101 Huntington Avenue
Boston, MA 02199

RE:              John Hancock Capital Series (the "Trust")
                    John Hancock Core Equity Fund
                 File Nos. 2-29502; 811-1677 (0000045291)


Ladies and Gentlemen:

In connection with the filing of Post Effective Amendment No. 54 under the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Amendment No. 33 under the Investment
Company Act of 1940, as amended, for John Hancock Capital Series it is the
opinion of the undersigned that the Trust's shares when sold will be legally
issued, fully paid and nonassessable.

In connection with this opinion it should be noted that each Fund is an entity
of the type generally known as a "Massachusetts business trust." The Trust has
been duly organized and is validly existing under the laws of the Commonwealth
of Massachusetts. Under Massachusetts law, shareholders of a Massachusetts
business trust may be held personally liable for the obligations of the Trust.
However, the Trust's Declaration of Trust disclaims shareholder liability for
obligations of the Trust and indemnifies the shareholders of a Fund, with this
indemnification to be paid solely out of the assets of that Fund. Therefore, the
shareholder's risk is limited to circumstances in which the assets of a Fund are
insufficient to meet the obligations asserted against that Fund's assets.


                                   Sincerely,


                                   /s/Alfred Ouellette
                                   -------------------
                                   Alfred Ouellette
                                   Assistant Secretary




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