VOYAGEUR FUNDS INC
485BPOS, 1996-03-20
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     AS FILED WITH THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION ON MARCH 20, 1996
================================================================================
                                                              File Nos. 33-16270
                                                                        811-5267
    


                       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. 20
    
                                     and/or

       REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940 [X]
   
                                Amendment No. 20
    
                        (Check appropriate box or boxes.)

                              VOYAGEUR FUNDS, INC.

               (Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Charter)

        90 SOUTH SEVENTH STREET, SUITE 4400, MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA 55402
               (Address of Principal Executive Offices) (Zip Code)

                                 (612) 376-7000
              (Registrant's Telephone Number, including Area Code)

                                 THOMAS J. ABOOD
        90 SOUTH SEVENTH STREET, SUITE 4400, MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA 55402
                     (Name and Address of Agent for Service)

                                    Copy to:
                           Kathleen L. Prudhomme, Esq.
                              Dorsey & Whitney LLP
                             220 South Sixth Street
                          Minneapolis, Minnesota 55402

 It is proposed that this filing will become effective (check appropriate box):
     immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b) of Rule 485
/X/  on March 20, 1996 pursuant to paragraph (b) of Rule 485
     75 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a) of Rule 485
     on (date) pursuant to paragraph (a) of Rule 485

The  Registrant  has  registered an indefinite  number of shares of common stock
under the  Securities  Act of 1933  pursuant to Rule 24f-2 under the  Investment
Company Act of 1940. A Rule 24f-2 Notice was filed by the  Registrant  on August
29, 1995.

              CROSS REFERENCE SHEET FOR ITEMS REQUIRED BY FORM N-1A

  ITEM NO.
OF FORM N-1A                  CAPTION IN PROSPECTUS
- ------------                  ---------------------

        1                     Cover Page

        2                     Fund Expenses

        3                     Investment Performance

        4                     Investment Objectives and Policies; Risks and
                              Characteristics of Securities and
                              Investment Techniques; General Information

        5                     Management; General Information

        6                     Distributions to Shareholders and Taxes; General 
                              Information

        7                     Purchase of Shares; Management; Determination of 
                              Net Asset Value

        8                     Redemption of Shares

        9                     Not Applicable

                              CAPTION IN STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
                              ----------------------------------------------

       10                     Cover Page

       11                     Table of Contents

       12                     Not Applicable

       13                     Investment Policies and Restrictions

       14                     Directors and Executive Officers

       15                     The Investment Advisers, Sub-Adviser, 
                              Administrative Services, Expenses and Brokerage; 
                              Additional Information

       16                     Directors and Executive Officers; The Investment 
                              Advisers, Sub-Adviser, Administrative Services, 
                              Expenses and Brokerage

       17                     The Investment Advisers, Sub-Adviser, 
                              Administrative Services, Expenses and Brokerage

       18                     Additional Information

       19                     Redemptions; Net Asset Value and Public Offering 
                              Price

       20                     Taxes

       21                     The Investment Advisers, Sub-Adviser, 
                              Administrative Services, Expenses and Brokerage 
                              Underwriter

       22                     Performance Comparisons

       23                     Not Applicable


                              VOYAGEUR FUNDS, INC.
                       90 South Seventh Street, Suite 4400
                          Minneapolis, Minnesota 55402
                                 (612) 376-7000
                                 (800) 553-2143
                        ---------------------------------

                          VFI SHORT DURATION PORTFOLIO
                       VFI INTERMEDIATE DURATION PORTFOLIO
                               VFI CORE PORTFOLIO
                        ---------------------------------


     Voyageur  Financial  Institutions  ("VFI") Short  Duration  Portfolio,  VFI
Intermediate  Duration  Portfolio and VFI Core Portfolio (the "Funds) are series
of Voyageur Funds,  Inc. (the  "Company"),  an open-end mutual fund which offers
its  shares  in  separate  investment  portfolios.   Each  Fund  operates  as  a
diversified mutual fund.

     Marquette Trust Company ("Marquette"),  13100 Wayzata Boulevard, Suite 100,
Minneapolis,  Minnesota 55480,  serves as investment adviser to VFI Intermediate
Duration Portfolio and VFI Core Portfolio.  Marquette has retained Voyageur Fund
Managers,  Inc.  ("VFM") to act as sub-adviser to such Funds.  Cadre  Consulting
Services, Inc. ("Cadre), 905 Marconi Avenue,  Ronkonkoma, New York 11779, serves
as investment adviser to VFI Short Duration Portfolio.

     The investment objective of each Fund is to seek as high a level of current
income as is consistent with  preservation of principal and the average duration
of its respective portfolio  securities.  A detailed description of the types of
securities  in which  each  Fund  may  invest  and of  investment  policies  and
restrictions applicable to each Fund is set forth in this Prospectus. The Funds'
shares are  eligible for purchase by national  banks and federal  credit  unions
under current  applicable  federal law. See "Investment  Objectives and Policies
- --Investments  by  National  Banks  and  Federal  Credit  Unions."  There  is no
assurance that any Fund's investment objective will be achieved.

     The Funds are no-load  which  means that there is no sales  charge when you
buy or redeem shares.

     INVESTORS SHOULD READ AND RETAIN THIS PROSPECTUS FOR FUTURE REFERENCE.  THE
FUNDS' SHARES ARE NOT DEPOSITS OR OBLIGATIONS  OF, OR GUARANTEED OR ENDORSED BY,
ANY BANK AND ARE NOT INSURED OR GUARANTEED BY THE U.S.  GOVERNMENT,  THE FEDERAL
DEPOSIT  INSURANCE  CORPORATION,  THE FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD OR ANY OTHER FEDERAL
AGENCY.  AN INVESTMENT IN ANY OF THE FUNDS INVOLVES  INVESTMENT RISK,  INCLUDING
THE POSSIBLE LOSS OF PRINCIPAL DUE TO FLUCTUATIONS IN THE APPLICABLE  FUND'S NET
ASSET VALUE.

     This  Prospectus  sets  forth  certain  information  about the Funds that a
prospective  investor ought to know before investing.  A Statement of Additional
Information (dated March 20, 1996), as amended from time to time, has been filed
with the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission.  The  Statement  of  Additional
Information is available free of charge by telephone and at the mailing  address
below,  and is incorporated in its entirety by reference into this Prospectus in
accordance with the Commission's rules.


THESE  SECURITIES  HAVE NOT BEEN APPROVED OR  DISAPPROVED  BY THE SECURITIES AND
EXCHANGE  COMMISSION OR ANY STATE  SECURITIES  COMMISSION NOR HAS THE SECURITIES
AND  EXCHANGE  COMMISSION  OR ANY STATE  SECURITIES  COMMISSION  PASSED UPON THE
ACCURACY OR ADEQUACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A
CRIMINAL OFFENSE.

                         Prospectus dated March 20, 1996


                                TABLE OF CONTENTS

                                                                        PAGE

Fund Expenses..........................................................  3

Investment Objectives and Policies.....................................  4

Risks and Characteristics of Securities and Investment Techniques......  5

Investment Restrictions................................................  9

Purchase of Shares.....................................................  9

Redemption of Shares................................................... 11

Exchange Privilege..................................................... 12

Management............................................................. 12

Determination of Net Asset Value....................................... 15

Distributions to Shareholders and Taxes................................ 16

Investment Performance................................................. 17

General Information.................................................... 18


                 SHARES OF THE FUNDS COVERED BY THIS PROSPECTUS
        ARE NOT REGISTERED IN ALL STATES. SHARES THAT ARE NOT REGISTERED
      IN ONE OR MORE STATES ARE NOT BEING OFFERED AND SOLD IN SUCH STATES.


                                  FUND EXPENSES

         Each Fund is offered to investors on a no-load basis, without any sales
commissions or distribution ("12b-1 plan") charges.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
SHAREHOLDER TRANSACTION EXPENSES
<S>                                                                             <C> 
     Sales Load Imposed on Purchases.......................................     None
     Sales Load Imposed on Reinvested Dividends............................     None
     Deferred Sales Load...................................................     None
     Redemption Fees.......................................................     None
     Exchange Fee..........................................................     None
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

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

                                                                                   VFI
                                                             VFI Short        Intermediate          VFI
                                                             Duration           Duration           Core
                                                             Portfolio          Portfolio        Portfolio
<S>                                                       <C>   <C>       <C>     <C>        <C>   <C> 
     Investment Advisory Fees........................           .10%              .35%             .35%
     Other Expenses..................................           .25%              .15%             .15%
         Service Fees................................     .05%            .05%               .05%
         Other.......................................     .20%            .10%               .10%
     Total Operating Expenses........................           .35%              .50%             .50%
</TABLE>

EXAMPLE

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


     1 Year..........................................    $4    $5    $5
     3 Years.........................................    11    16    16

     THE  EXAMPLES   CONTAINED   IN  THE  TABLE  SHOULD  NOT  BE   CONSIDERED  A
REPRESENTATION  OF FUTURE EXPENSES.  ACTUAL EXPENSES MAY BE GREATER OR LESS THAN
THOSE  SHOWN.  The  purpose  of the above Fund  Expenses  table is to assist the
investor in  understanding  the various costs and expenses that investors in the
Funds will bear directly or indirectly.  The Investment  Advisory Fees set forth
in the table reflect the maximum  amount  payable by each Fund,  and may be less
for VFI  Intermediate  Duration  Portfolio and VFI Core  Portfolio to the extent
either such Fund  underperforms  its  benchmark  index.  Under their  Investment
Advisory  Agreements with the Company,  each such Fund's  investment  adviser is
entitled  to  receive  from the  Fund a  monthly  advisory  and  management  fee
equivalent  on an annual  basis to .20% of the average  daily net assets of such
Fund,  subject to a  performance  adjustment  of up to +/-.15%.  The  investment
adviser  for VFI Short  Duration  Portfolio  is  entitled  to  receive a monthly
advisory and management fee equivalent on an annual basis to .10% of the average
daily net assets of such Fund. The advisory fee for VFI Short Duration Portfolio
is not  subject to a  performance  adjustment.  See  "Management  --  Investment
Advisers."  Each Fund also pays a monthly service fee equal, on an annual basis,
to .05% of the Fund's  average  daily net  assets.  Such fee is paid to Voyageur
Fund  Distributors,  Inc. (the  "Underwriter") to compensate the Underwriter for
expenses incurred in connection with the servicing of Fund shareholder accounts.
See "Management -- The Underwriter."

                       INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES AND POLICIES

GENERAL

     The investment objective of each Fund is to seek as high a level of current
income as is consistent with  preservation of principal and the average duration
of its respective portfolio securities. The securities in which the Funds invest
and the investment techniques discussed in this section are described in greater
detail in the  Prospectus  under "Risks and  Characteristics  of Securities  and
Investment Techniques" and in the Statement of Additional Information. VFI Short
Duration  Portfolio  ("Short Duration  Portfolio")  seeks to maintain an average
effective  portfolio  duration  ranging from .5 to 1.5 years,  VFI  Intermediate
Duration  Portfolio  ("Intermediate  Duration  Portfolio")  seeks to maintain an
average effective  portfolio duration ranging from 1.5 to 3.5 years and VFI Core
Portfolio ("Core  Portfolio") seeks to maintain an average  effective  portfolio
duration ranging from 3.5 to 5.5 years.

     Each Fund's investment objective is fundamental, which means that it cannot
be changed  without the vote of a majority  of its  respective  shareholders  as
provided in the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "1940 Act"). The
investment  policies and techniques employed in pursuit of the Funds' objectives
may be changed without shareholder  approval,  unless otherwise noted. There are
risks  in any  investment  program  and  there  is no  assurance  that a  Fund's
investment  objective  will be  achieved.  The value of each Fund's  shares will
fluctuate with changes in the market value of its investments.

INVESTMENT POLICIES AND TECHNIQUES

     Each Fund  seeks to achieve  its  objective  by  investing  exclusively  in
securities  issued or guaranteed by the United States government or its agencies
or instrumentalities  ("U.S.  Government  Securities") and repurchase agreements
fully secured by U.S. Government  Securities.  The U.S. Government Securities in
which  each  Fund  may  invest  include  mortgage-related  securities,  such  as
pass-through  securities,  collateralized mortgage obligations,  and zero coupon
treasury securities. The Funds will not invest, however, in any mortgage-related
securities that are considered "high risk" under the supervisory policies of the
Office of the  Comptroller of the Currency  applicable to national  banks.  Each
Fund may  purchase  securities  on a  when-issued  basis  and  purchase  or sell
securities on a forward  commitment  basis.  See "Risks and  Characteristics  of
Securities and Investment  Techniques" for a description of these securities and
investment techniques and the risks involved in their use.

EFFECTIVE DURATION

     Effective duration estimates the interest rate risk (price volatility) of a
security,  I.E., how much the value of the security is expected to change with a
given change in interest rates. The longer a security's effective duration,  the
more  sensitive  its price is to changes in  interest  rates.  For  example,  if
interest  rates  were to  increase  by 1%,  the  market  value of a bond with an
effective  duration  of five years  would  decrease  by about 5%, with all other
factors being constant.

     It is important to understand  that,  while a valuable  measure,  effective
duration is based on certain assumptions and has several limitations. It is most
useful as a measure of interest  rate risk when interest rate changes are small,
rapid and occur equally across all the different  points of the yield curve.  In
addition,  effective duration is difficult to calculate precisely for bonds with
prepayment options, such as mortgage-backed securities,  because the calculation
requires assumptions about prepayment rates. For example, when interest rates go
down, homeowners may prepay their mortgages at a higher rate than assumed in the
initial  effective  duration  calculation,   thereby  shortening  the  effective
duration  of  the  Fund's  mortgage-backed  securities.   Conversely,  if  rates
increase,  prepayments may decrease to a greater extent than assumed,  extending
the effective  duration of such  securities.  For these  reasons,  the effective
durations  of funds  which  invest a  significant  portion  of their  assets  in
mortgage-backed securities can be greatly affected by changes in interest rates.

TEMPORARY INVESTMENTS
   
     Each Fund may retain cash or invest in short-term money market instruments,
including money market instruments,  when economic or market conditions are such
that the Fund's investment  adviser or sub-adviser  deems a temporary  defensive
position to be appropriate.  To the extent that a Fund invests in another mutual
fund,  its return such  investment  will be reduced by the  operating  expenses,
including  investment advisory and administrative  fees, of such mutual fund. In
addition,  even when a Fund is fully  invested,  normally up to 5% of the Fund's
total assets will be held in short-term money market  securities and cash to pay
redemption  requests and Fund expenses.  Investments in short-term  money market
securities  will be  limited  to U.S.  Government  Securities.  See  "Investment
Policies and Restrictions" in the Statement of Additional Information.
    
INVESTMENTS BY NATIONAL BANKS AND FEDERAL CREDIT UNIONS

     The Funds'  shares are eligible for purchase by national  banks and federal
credit  unions under current  applicable  federal law.  Since the  regulation of
financial  institutions is a rapidly evolving area of law,  however,  it remains
the responsibility of each such institution and its board of directors to insure
that shares of the Funds are permissible investments and proper holdings for the
institution's investment portfolio.

                     RISKS AND CHARACTERISTICS OF SECURITIES
                            AND INVESTMENT TECHNIQUES

         The following describes in greater detail different types of securities
and investment  techniques  used by the Funds,  and discusses  certain  concepts
relevant to the investment policies of the Funds.  Additional  information about
the Funds' investments and investment practices may be found in the Statement of
Additional Information.

GENERAL

     The Funds are subject to interest  rate risk,  which is the potential for a
decline in bond prices due to rising  interest  rates.  In general,  bond prices
vary  inversely  with  interest  rates.  When interest  rates rise,  bond prices
generally  fall.  Conversely,  when interest rates fall,  bond prices  generally
rise. Interest rate risk applies to U.S. Government  Securities as well as other
bonds.  U.S.  Government  Securities  are  guaranteed  only as to the payment of
interest and principal.  The current  market prices for such  securities are not
guaranteed and will fluctuate. In general, shorter term bonds are less sensitive
to interest rate changes,  but longer term bonds  generally offer higher yields.
The Funds also are  subject to  prepayment  risk to the  extent  they  invest in
mortgage-related  securities.   Certain  types  of  investments  and  investment
techniques  that may be used by the  Funds  are  described  in  greater  detail,
including the risks of each, in this section.

U.S. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES

     Each Fund invests in U.S. Government Securities. U.S. Government Securities
are issued or  guaranteed  as to payment of  principal  and interest by the U.S.
Government,  its agencies or  instrumentalities.  THE CURRENT  MARKET PRICES FOR
SUCH  SECURITIES  ARE NOT  GUARANTEED  AND WILL  FLUCTUATE AS WILL THE NET ASSET
VALUE OF THE  FUNDS.  The Funds may  invest  in direct  obligations  of the U.S.
Treasury,  such as U.S.  Treasury bills,  notes and bonds, and in obligations of
U.S. Government agencies or  instrumentalities  in which both national banks and
federal credit unions may invest directly  without  limitation.  These include ,
among  others,  obligations  of Federal  Home Loan Banks,  the Federal  National
Mortgage Association,  the Government National Mortgage Association, the Federal
Home Loan Mortgage  Corporation,  the Financing Corporation and the Student Loan
Marketing Association.

     Obligations of U.S. Government agencies or instrumentalities  are backed in
a variety of ways by the U.S.  Government or its agencies or  instrumentalities.
Some of these  obligations,  such as Government  National  Mortgage  Association
mortgage-backed  securities, are backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S.
Treasury. Others, such as obligations of the Federal Home Loan Banks, are backed
by the right of the issuer to borrow from the Treasury.  Still  others,  such as
those issued by the Federal  National  Mortgage  Association,  are backed by the
discretionary  authority of the U.S.  Government to purchase certain obligations
of the agency or  instrumentality.  Finally,  obligations  of other  agencies or
instrumentalities are backed only by the credit of the agency or instrumentality
issuing the obligations.

MORTGAGE-RELATED SECURITIES

     Mortgage-related  securities are securities  that,  directly or indirectly,
represent  participations  in, or are secured by and payable from, loans secured
by  real  property.  The  current  issuers  or  guarantors  of  mortgage-related
securities in which the Funds may invest are the  Government  National  Mortgage
Association ("GNMA"), the Federal National Mortgage Association ("FNMA") and the
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation ("FHLMC").  Mortgage-related  securities,
as the term is used in this Prospectus,  include government  guaranteed mortgage
pass-through securities,  adjustable rate mortgage securities and collateralized
mortgage  obligations.  The  Funds  will  not  invest  in  any  mortgage-related
securities  other than those issued or guaranteed by the U.S.  government or its
agencies and instrumentalities.

     (a) GUARANTEED MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH SECURITIES.  The government guaranteed
mortgage  pass-through   securities  in  which  each  Fund  may  invest  include
certificates  issued or  guaranteed  by GNMA,  FNMA and FHLMC,  which  represent
interests in underlying  residential mortgage loans. These mortgage pass-through
securities  provide for the pass-through to investors of their pro-rata share of
monthly payments (including any prepayments) made by the individual borrowers on
the  pooled  mortgage  loans,  net of any  fees  paid to the  guarantor  of such
securities and the servicer of the underlying mortgage loans. Each of GNMA, FNMA
and FHLMC guarantee  timely  distributions  of interest to certificate  holders.
GNMA and FNMA  guarantee  timely  distributions  of scheduled  principal.  FHLMC
generally  guarantees  only ultimate  collection of principal of the  underlying
mortgage loans. For a further  description of these securities,  see "Investment
Policies and Restrictions--Government Guaranteed Mortgage-Related Securities" in
the Statement of Additional Information.

     (b)  ADJUSTABLE  RATE  MORTGAGE  SECURITIES.  Each Fund may also  invest in
adjustable rate mortgage  securities  ("ARMS").  ARMS are pass-through  mortgage
securities  collateralized  by mortgages  with interest  rates that are adjusted
from time to time. The  adjustments  usually are determined in accordance with a
predetermined  interest rate index and may be subject to certain  limits.  While
values of ARMS,  like other  fixed-income  securities,  generally vary inversely
with changes in market  interest  rates  (increasing  in value during periods of
declining  interest  rates and  decreasing in value during periods of increasing
interest rates),  the values of ARMS should generally be more resistant to price
swings than other fixed-income  securities because the coupon rates of ARMS move
with  market  interest  rates.  The  adjustable  rate  feature of ARMS will not,
however,  eliminate  fluctuations  in the  prices of ARMS,  particularly  during
periods of extreme  fluctuations  in interest  rates.  ARMS  typically have caps
which limit the maximum  amount by which the  interest  rate may be increased or
decreased  at  periodic  intervals  or over the life of the loan.  To the extent
interest  rates  increase in excess of the caps,  ARMS can be expected to behave
more like  traditional  fixed  income  securities  and to  decline in value to a
greater extent than would be the case in the absence of such caps.  Also,  since
many adjustable rate mortgages only reset on an annual basis, it can be expected
that the prices of ARMS will  fluctuate to the extent that changes in prevailing
interest  rates are not  immediately  reflected in the interest rates payable on
the underlying adjustable rate mortgages.

     (c) COLLATERALIZED  MORTGAGE OBLIGATIONS.  Each Fund may invest, within the
limits  discussed  below,  in  CMOs  (collateralized  mortgage  obligations  and
multiclass  pass-through  securities  unless the context  otherwise  indicates).
Collateralized  mortgage  obligations  are debt  instruments  issued by  special
purpose  entities  which  are  secured  by  pools  of  mortgage  loans  or other
mortgage-related  securities.  Multi-class  pass-through  securities  are equity
interests  in a trust  composed  of  mortgage  loans or  other  mortgage-related
securities.  Payments of principal and interest on underlying collateral provide
the funds to pay debt service on the collateralized  mortgage obligation or make
scheduled  distributions on the multi-class  pass-through security.  CMOs may be
issued by agencies or  instrumentalities  of the U.S.  Government  or by private
organizations.  The Funds  will only  invest in CMO's  issued or  guaranteed  by
agencies or instrumentalities of the U.S. Government.

     In a CMO, a series of bonds or certificates is issued in multiple  classes.
Each class of CMO,  often  referred to as a  "tranche,"  is issued at a specific
coupon rate and has a stated  maturity  or final  distribution  date.  Principal
prepayments  on  collateral  underlying  a  CMO  may  cause  it  to  be  retired
substantially earlier than the stated maturities or final distribution dates.

     The  principal  and interest on the  underlying  mortgages may be allocated
among the several tranches of a CMO in many ways. For example,  certain tranches
may have  variable  or  floating  interest  rates  and  others  may be  stripped
securities  which  provide  only  the  principal  or  interest  feature  of  the
underlying security.  Generally,  the purpose of the allocation of the cash flow
of a CMO to the various  tranches is to obtain a more  predictable  cash flow to
certain of the individual tranches than exists with the underlying collateral of
the CMO.  As a  general  rule,  the more  predictable  the cash flow is on a CMO
tranche,  the lower the anticipated  yield will be on the tranche at the time of
issuance relative to prevailing market yields on mortgage-related securities. As
part of the  process  of  creating  more  predictable  cash flows on most of the
tranches of a CMO, one or more  tranches  generally  must be created that absorb
most of the volatility in the cash flows on the underlying  mortgage loans.  The
yields on these tranches are generally  higher than prevailing  market yields on
mortgage-related  securities  with  similar  maturities.  As  a  result  of  the
uncertainty of the cash flows of these tranches,  the market prices of and yield
of these tranches  generally may be more volatile.  The Funds will not invest in
any tranche of a CMO that would be considered  "high risk" under the supervisory
policies of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency applicable to national
banks. See "Investment Policies and Restrictions" in the Statement of Additional
Information.  For example,  the Funds will not invest in "interest-only" or "IO"
tranches,  "principal  only" or "PO"  tranches,  "inverse  floaters" or "inverse
IOs."

ZERO COUPON SECURITIES

     The Funds may invest in "zero  coupon"  securities  issued or guaranteed by
the United  States  government or its agencies or  instrumentalities.  The Funds
will not invest in any such securities that are "privately  issued" (i.e.,  sold
by a bank or brokerage firm which itself  separates the principal  portions from
the  coupon  portions  of the U.S.  Treasury  bonds and  notes  and  holds  such
instruments  in a custodial or trust  account).  A zero coupon  security pays no
interest to its holder during its life. Its value to an investor consists of the
difference  between  its face  value at the time of  maturity  and the price for
which it was acquired,  which is generally an amount significantly less than its
face value (sometimes  referred to as a "deep discount"  price).  The Funds will
not purchase any zero coupon security with a maturity date that is more than ten
years from the settelement date for the purchase of such security.

     Zero coupon  securities do not entitle the holder to any periodic  payments
of interest prior to maturity.  Accordingly, these securities usually trade at a
deep  discount  from  their  face or par value and will be  subject  to  greater
fluctuations  of market value in response to changing  interest  rates than debt
obligations  of  comparable  maturities  which  make  current  distributions  of
interest.  In certain  circumstances,  a Fund  could fail to recoup its  initial
investment in zero coupon  securities.  Current  federal tax law requires that a
holder of a zero coupon  security  accrue a portion of the discount at which the
security was  purchased as income each year even though such holder  receives no
interest  payments in cash on the security  during the year.  In addition,  as a
registered investment company, a Fund will be required to distribute this income
to  shareholders.   See   "Distributions   to  Shareholders  and  Taxes."  These
distributions  will be made from the Fund's cash assets or, if  necessary,  from
the  proceeds  of  sales of  portfolio  securities.  A Fund  will not be able to
purchase  additional  income  producing  securities  with cash used to make such
distributions,  and the Fund's  current  income  ultimately  may be reduced as a
result.

REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS

     Each  Fund may  enter  into  repurchase  agreements  with  respect  to U.S.
Government Securities. A repurchase agreement involves the purchase by a Fund of
securities  with the  condition  that after a stated period of time the original
seller (a member bank of the Federal  Reserve System or a recognized  securities
dealer)  will buy back the same  securities  ("collateral")  at a  predetermined
price or yield.  Repurchase agreements involve certain risks not associated with
direct  investments  in  securities.  While  collateral  will  at all  times  be
maintained  in an amount  equal to the  repurchase  price  under  the  agreement
(including accrued interest due thereunder),  if a seller were to default on its
repurchase  obligation,  a Fund would suffer a loss to the extent  proceeds from
the sale of collateral  were less than the repurchase  price.  In the event of a
seller's bankruptcy,  a Fund might be delayed in, or prevented from, selling the
collateral  to the  Fund's  benefit.  The Funds  will not  invest in  repurchase
agreements maturing in more than seven days.

REVERSE REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS

     Each Fund may  engage in  "reverse  repurchase  agreements"  with banks and
securities  dealers.  Reverse  repurchase  agreements  are  ordinary  repurchase
agreements  in which the Fund is the seller of,  rather  than the  investor  in,
securities and agrees to repurchase  them at an agreed upon time and price.  Use
of a reverse repurchase  agreement may be preferable to a regular sale and later
repurchase  of the  securities  because  it  avoids  certain  market  risks  and
transactions  costs.  Because  certain  of the  incidents  of  ownership  of the
security are retained by the Fund, reverse repurchase  agreements are considered
a form of borrowing by the Fund from the buyer,  collateralized by the security.
Reverse  repurchase  agreements  will  not be used as a means of  borrowing  for
investment  purposes  but  will be used by a Fund in  order  to meet  redemption
requests  without  immediately  selling  portfolio  securities.   No  more  than
one-third of the total assets of each Fund will be subject to reverse repurchase
agreements.  The Funds will only enter into  fully  covered  reverse  repurchase
agreements.  See "Investment  Policies and  Restrictions  -- Reverse  Repurchase
Agreements" in the Statement of Additional Information.

BORROWING

     Each of the Funds may borrow  money from banks for  temporary  or emergency
purposes in an amount up to  one-third of the value of its total assets in order
to meet redemption  requests  without  immediately  selling any of its portfolio
securities.  If, for any reason,  the current value of their Fund's total assets
falls below an amount equal to three times the amount of its  indebtedness  from
money borrowed,  such Fund will,  within three days,  reduce its indebtedness to
the  extent  necessary.  To do this,  the Fund may have to sell a portion of its
investments at a time when it may be  disadvantageous to do so. Interest paid by
a Fund on borrowed funds would  decrease the net earnings of that Fund.  None of
the Funds will purchase portfolio securities while outstanding borrowings exceed
5% of the value of the Fund's total assets.  Each Fund may  mortgage,  pledge or
hypothecate its assets to secure permitted temporary or emergency borrowing. The
policies set forth in this paragraph are fundamental and may not be changed with
respect to a Fund without the approval of a majority of that Fund's shares.  The
Funds  do  not  consider  fully  covered  reverse  repurchase  agreements  to be
borrowings for purposes of the investment policies set forth in this paragraph.

WHEN-ISSUED SECURITIES

     Each  Fund  may  purchase  securities  on  a  "when-issued"   basis.  In  a
when-issued  purchase,  a Fund  contracts to purchase  securities  in the period
between the announcement of the offering and the issuance of the securities. The
price is fixed at the time the  commitment is made, but delivery and payment for
the securities take place at a later date. The Funds will not accrue income with
respect to when-issued  securities prior to their stated delivery date.  Pending
delivery of the securities,  each Fund maintains in a segregated account cash or
liquid  high-grade debt obligations in an amount sufficient to meet its purchase
commitments.

     The purchase of securities  on a  when-issued  basis exposes a Fund to risk
because the securities may decrease in value prior to their delivery. Purchasing
securities on a when-issued  basis involves the additional  risk that the return
available in the market when the  delivery  takes place will be higher than that
obtained in the transaction  itself.  Placing securities rather than cash in the
segregated  account referred to in the previous  paragraph may have a leveraging
effect on a Fund's net asset value per share; that is, to the extent that a Fund
remains  substantially fully invested in securities at the same time that it has
committed to purchase  securities on a when-issued or forward  commitment basis,
greater  fluctuations  in its net asset value per share may occur than if it had
set aside cash to satisfy its purchase commitments.

SHORT SALES AGAINST-THE-BOX

     The  Funds  may make  short  sales  "against-the-box"  for the  purpose  of
deferring  realization  of gain or loss for federal  income tax purposes and for
the  purpose  of  hedging  against  an  anticipated  decline in the value of the
underlying  securities.  A short sale "against-the-box" is a short sale in which
the  Fund  owns or has  the  right  to  obtain  without  payment  of  additional
consideration an equal amount of the same type of securities sold short.

PORTFOLIO TURNOVER

     Each Fund will use  short-term  trading to benefit  from yield  disparities
among  different  issues of  securities  or otherwise to achieve its  investment
objective.  The  portfolio  turnover  rate is not  expected  to exceed  200% for
Intermediate  Duration  Portfolio and Core Portfolio and 300% for Short Duration
Portfolio.  Portfolio  turnover in excess of 100% is generally  considered to be
high.  Higher portfolio  turnover  involves  correspondingly  greater  brokerage
commissions and other transaction  costs,  which are borne directly by the Fund,
and may increase  short-term  capital gains which are taxable as ordinary income
when distributed to shareholders.  The method of calculating  portfolio turnover
rate is set forth in the Statement of Additional  Information  under "Investment
Policies and Restrictions--Portfolio Turnover."

                             INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS

     Each Fund has adopted certain investment  restrictions in addition to those
set forth  above,  which are set forth in their  entirety  in the  Statement  of
Additional Information. Certain of these restrictions are fundamental and cannot
be changed without shareholder approval. Except for each Fund's policy regarding
borrowing,  if a  percentage  restriction  is  adhered  to  at  the  time  of an
investment, a later increase or decrease in percentage resulting from changes in
values or assets will not constitute a violation of such restriction.

                               PURCHASE OF SHARES

GENERAL

     Shares of each Fund are  purchased  at the net asset  value per share  next
calculated  after receipt of the purchase  order,  without a sales  charge.  The
minimum initial investment in the Funds is $500,000,  in the aggregate,  and the
minimum additional  aggregate  investment is $100,000.  Purchases of Fund shares
will be made in full and  fractional  shares.  In the  interest  of economy  and
convenience,  certificates  for shares will  generally not be issued.  Each Fund
reserves  the right,  in its  absolute  discretion,  to reject any order for the
purchase of its shares.  Shares will be evidenced in book entry form.  The Funds
do not expect to issue share certificates.

     Interest  income  begins to accrue as of the  opening of the New York Stock
Exchange  (the  "Exchange")  on the day that  payment is  received.  The date of
payment  receipt  may differ  from the date of receipt of a purchase  order.  If
payment is made by check, payment is considered received on the day the check is
received if the check is drawn upon a member bank of the Federal  Reserve System
within  the  Ninth  Federal  Reserve  District   (Michigan's   Upper  Peninsula,
Minnesota,  Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota and northwestern Wisconsin).  In
the case of other  checks,  payment  is  considered  received  when the check is
converted into "Federal Funds," i.e.,  monies of member banks within the Federal
Reserve System that are on deposit at a Federal  Reserve Bank,  normally  within
two days after  receipt.  Payments  made by wire  transfer of Federal  Funds are
considered received when the Federal Funds are received.

     An investor who may be interested in having shares  redeemed  shortly after
purchase  should consider making  unconditional  payment by certified  check, by
transmitting  Federal  Funds by wire or other  means  approved in advance by the
Underwriter.  Payment of redemption  proceeds will be delayed up to 15 days from
the purchase date to verify by expeditious  means that the purchase  payment has
been or will be collected.

     Shares of the Funds may be purchased  by opening an account  either by mail
or by phone.

PURCHASES BY MAIL

     To open an  account  by  mail,  complete  the  general  authorization  form
attached  to this  Prospectus  and mail it  along  with a check  payable  to the
appropriate Fund, to Voyageur Fund Distributors,  Inc., 90 South Seventh Street,
Suite 4400, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55402.

PURCHASES BY TELEPHONE

     To open an account by telephone,  call (612)  376-7014 or (800) 545-3863 to
obtain an account number and  instructions.  Information  concerning the account
will be taken over the phone.  The investor must then request a commercial  bank
with which such  investor  has an account  and which is a member of the  Federal
Reserve  System to transmit  Federal  Funds by wire to the  appropriate  Fund as
follows:

              Marquette Bank, N.A.  ABA #091016647
              For credit of Marquette Trust Company as Custodian for: (insert
              applicable Fund name)
              VFI Funds Account No. 2100-206482
              Account Number: (assigned by telephone)

     Information  on how to transmit  Federal  Funds by wire is available at any
national bank or any state bank that is a member of the Federal  Reserve System.
The bank may charge the  shareholder  for the wire transfer.  If the phone order
and  Federal  Funds are  received  before  the  primary  close of trading on the
Exchange (4:00 p.m.  Eastern time), the order will be deemed to become effective
at that time. Otherwise,  the order will be deemed to become effective as of the
primary  close of trading on the  Exchange on the next day the  Exchange is open
for trading. The investor will be required to complete the general authorization
form  attached  to this  Prospectus  and mail it to the  appropriate  Fund after
making the initial telephone purchase.

CONTRIBUTION IN KIND

     For investments in excess of $500,000, the Funds may accept, in whole or in
part,  a payment  in kind of  securities  that are  consistent  with the  Fund's
investment  objectives  and  policies  as payment  for the  Shares.  Each Fund's
investment  adviser will have sole discretion to determine whether the Fund will
accept a payment in kind for the Shares.  Securities  so accepted will be valued
in the same manner as the applicable Fund's securities.

                              REDEMPTION OF SHARES

WRITTEN REDEMPTIONS

     Each Fund will  redeem  its  shares  in cash at the net  asset  value  next
determined  after receipt of a  shareholder's  written request for redemption in
"good  order." "Good order" means that the  redemption  request must be executed
exactly as the shares are registered.  If the redemption proceeds are to be paid
to the registered  holder(s),  a signature guarantee is not normally required. A
signature   guarantee   is  required  in  certain   other   circumstances.   See
"Redemptions" in the Statement of Additional Information.

TELEPHONE REDEMPTIONS

     Shareholders may redeem shares of any Fund by telephoning (612) 376-7014 or
(800) 545-3863.  The applicable section of the authorization form must have been
completed  and filed with the Fund  before the  telephone  request is  received.
Shares will be redeemed  at their net asset  value next  determined  following a
Fund's receipt of the redemption request. The proceeds of the redemption will be
paid to the  shareholder's  address  of  record  by wire  transfer  to the  bank
designated on the authorization form.

     The Funds will  employ  reasonable  procedures  to confirm  that  telephone
requests  are  genuine,  including  requiring  that  payment be made only to the
address of record or the bank account  designated on the authorization  form and
requiring  certain  means of telephonic  identification.  If a Fund follows such
procedures,  it will not be liable for following  instructions  communicated  by
telephone that it reasonably  believes to be genuine.  If a Fund does not employ
such  procedures,  it may be  liable  for  any  losses  due to  unauthorized  or
fraudulent telephone instructions.

     Each Fund reserves the right at any time to suspend or terminate  telephone
redemptions  or to  impose  a fee  for  this  service.  There  is  currently  no
additional  charge  to the  shareholder  for  use of  the  telephone  redemption
procedure.

REDEMPTION IN KIND

     Redemption  proceeds  for  redemption  requests  of $500,000 or more may be
paid,  at the sole option of a Fund,  in whole or in part by a  distribution  in
kind of securities or other assets held by such Fund. The determination of which
of a Fund's assets will be distributed to meet such redemption  requests will be
made by the Fund's  Adviser,  in  consultation  with the redeeming  shareholder.
Securities or other assets so  distributed  will be valued in the same manner as
the  applicable  Fund's  securities.  In order to dispose of such  securities or
other assets,  the redeeming  Shareholder  would most likely be required to bear
transaction costs, if any.

ADDITIONAL REDEMPTION INFORMATION

     Shareholders  who  have  submitted  a  request  to  one of  the  Funds  for
redemption  of their shares will not earn any income on such shares  distributed
by the Fund on the  redemption  date.  If  shares  for  which  payment  has been
collected  are redeemed,  payment must be made within seven days.  Each Fund may
suspend this right of redemption and may postpone payment only when the Exchange
is closed for other than customary weekends or holidays,  or if permitted by the
rules of the Securities and Exchange  Commission  during periods when trading on
the Exchange is restricted or during any emergency which makes it  impracticable
for such Fund to dispose of its  securities or to determine  fairly the value of
its net assets or during any other period  permitted by order of the  Commission
for the protection of investors.

     Each Fund reserves the right and currently  plans to redeem Fund shares and
mail the proceeds to the  shareholder if at any time the value of Fund shares in
the account falls below a specified value,  currently set at $1,000, as a result
of redemptions or exchanges. Shareholders will be notified and will have 60 days
to bring the account up to the required value before any redemption  action will
be taken by a Fund.

                               EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE
   
     Shares of each Fund may be  exchanged  for shares of the other VFI Funds in
minimum  increments of $100,000,  provided that the shares to be acquired in the
exchange are  eligible for sale in the  shareholder's  state of  residence.  The
exchange  will be made on the  basis  of the  relative  net  asset  values  next
determined after receipt of the exchange request.  The Underwriter  reserves the
right,  upon 60 days' prior  notice,  to restrict the frequency of, or otherwise
modify,  condition,  terminate or impose charges upon, exchanges. An exchange is
considered  to be a sale of shares on which the  investor  may realize a capital
gain or loss for  income  tax  purposes.  Exchange  requests  should  be  placed
directly with the Fund by calling (800) 545-3863.
    
                                   MANAGEMENT

DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE FUNDS

     Under the laws of the State of  Minnesota,  the Board of  Directors  of the
Company is responsible  for managing the business and affairs of the Funds.  The
names, addresses,  principal occupations and other affiliations of Directors and
executive  officers of the Company are set forth in the  Statement of Additional
Information.

INVESTMENT ADVISERS

     Marquette and Cadre have been retained under investment advisory agreements
(the  "Advisory  Agreements")  with the Company to act as the Funds'  investment
advisers,  subject to the authority of the Board of Directors. Cadre will act as
investment  adviser  to  Short  Duration  Portfolio  and  Marquette  will act as
investment adviser to Intermediate Duration Portfolio and Core Portfolio.

     Marquette Trust Company,  headquartered in Minneapolis,  Minnesota,  is the
lead Trust company for a $3.5 billion community bank  organization  under common
ownership.  The bank  group  includes  over 40 banks  in ten  different  states.
Marquette provides  investment  management,  custody,  and Trust  administration
services  for over $400 million of assets in  Minnesota,  Wisconsin,  Iowa,  and
South  Dakota.  It has been  providing  Trust  services  for the past 50  years.
Marquette is owned by Marquette Bank Rochester,  which is controlled by Carl and
Eloise Pohlad.

     Cadre Consulting  Services,  Inc. was founded in 1982, and is based in Long
Island, New York. It specializes in investment management,  administration,  and
marketing for governmental entities. It currently provides these services for 21
different  programs covering 10 states,  with 2,500 clients.  Cadre manages $2.2
billion of short term investment assets, and an additional $3.2 billion of fixed
rate/fixed term assets.

     Short Duration  Portfolio pays its investment  adviser a monthly investment
advisory and management fee equivalent on an annual basis to .10% of the average
daily net assets of such Fund. Each of Intermediate  Duration Portfolio and Core
Portfolio  pays  its  investment  adviser  a  monthly  investment  advisory  and
management  fee  equivalent  on an annual basis to .20% of the average daily net
assets  of such  Fund  (the  "Basic  Fee").  The Basic Fee for each such Fund is
subject to adjustment as described below.

     Adjustments to the Basic Fee for Intermediate  Duration  Portfolio and Core
Portfolio are made by comparison of the respective Fund's investment performance
for the applicable  period with the investment  record of a comparison index, as
described  below   (individually  a  "Comparison  Index"  and  collectively  the
"Comparison  Indexes").  A Fund's  Basic Fee for each month may be  increased or
decreased by up to .15% (on an annualized basis) of the Fund's average daily net
assets depending upon the extent by which the Fund's performance varies from its
Comparison  Index  over the  applicable  performance  period.  For  purposes  of
calculation of the performance adjustment, average daily net assets are equal to
the Fund's  average daily net assets during the month for which the  calculation
is being made.

     For each of Intermediate  Duration Portfolio and Core Portfolio,  no change
is made to the Basic Fee to the extent the Fund's  performance falls within .05%
of  the  performance  of the  Fund's  Comparison  Index  during  the  applicable
performance period. If a Fund's performance exceeds that of its Comparison Index
by .06% or more,  the Basic Fee will be  increased by the product of 20% and the
number of basis points by which the Fund's  performance has exceeded that of its
Comparison  Index, up to a maximum increase of .15% (on an annualized basis) for
performance  which exceeds the Comparison  Index by .75% or more. Thus, for Fund
performance  which exceeds the  Comparison  Index by .06%, the Basic Fee will be
increased by .00012% (20% X .06%).  Corresponding  decreases will be made to the
Basic  Fee  to the  extent  the  Fund's  performance  falls  below  that  of its
Comparison  Index  by more  than  .05%,  up to a  maximum  decrease  of .15% for
performance which falls .75% or more below that of the Comparison Index.

     The following table sets forth examples of resulting increases or decreases
to the Basic Fee on an annualized basis given various performance results:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                          ADJUSTMENT
                                                                                         TO BASIC FEE
PERFORMANCE OF FUND RELATIVE TO COMPARISON INDEXES                                       (ANNUALIZED)
- --------------------------------------------------                                       ------------
<S>                                                                                           <C> 
+.75 percentage points or more..........................................................     +.15%
+.50....................................................................................     +.10%
+.25....................................................................................     +.05%
+.05....................................................................................        0%
   0....................................................................................        0%
- -.05....................................................................................        0%
- -.25....................................................................................     -.05%
- -.50....................................................................................     -.10%
- -.75 percentage points or more..........................................................     -.15%
</TABLE>

     The Basic Fee,  plus or minus the  performance  adjustments  calculated  as
described  herein,  is paid  monthly.  The  applicable  performance  period is a
rolling  12-month  period  consisting of the most recent calendar month plus the
immediately  preceding 11 months.  No  adjustments  will be made in the first 12
months the Funds are under management.

     In calculating  the  investment  performance of a Fund as compared with the
investment record of its Comparison Index,  dividends and other distributions of
the Fund and  dividends and other  distributions  made with respect to component
securities of the Comparison Index during the performance  period are treated as
having been  reinvested.  The  investment  performance of the Fund is calculated
based  upon  the  total  return  of the Fund for the  applicable  period,  which
consists of the total net asset  value of the Fund at the end of the  applicable
period,  including  reinvestment  of dividends and  distributions,  less the net
asset value of the Fund at the commencement of the applicable  period divided by
the net asset value of the Fund at the  commencement  of the applicable  period.
Fractions of a percentage  point are rounded to the nearest  whole point (to the
higher whole point if exactly one-half).

     Comparison  Indexes  for the Funds were  chosen  taking  into  account  the
targeted  duration  ranges of the Funds and the types of securities in which the
Funds will invest.

     The performance of VFI Intermediate  Duration Portfolio will be compared to
that of the Lehman Brothers Mutual Fund (1-5 year) U.S.  Government  Index. This
index  currently  has a duration of 2.28 years and  consists of all Treasury and
U.S.  government  agency  issues  maturing in one to five years  (currently  775
issues).  The  performance of VFI Core Portfolio will be compared to that of the
Lehman Brothers Mutual Fund Government/Mortgage  Index. This index currently has
a duration of 4.35 years and consists of all U.S. government,  treasury,  agency
and agency mortgage-backed securities.

SUB-ADVISER

     VFM will act as the Sub-Adviser to VFI Intermediate  Duration Portfolio and
VFI Core  Portfolio.  VFM and the  Underwriter  are each  indirect  wholly-owned
subsidiaries  of  Dougherty  Financial  Group  Inc.  ("DFG"),   which  is  owned
approximately 49% by Michael E. Dougherty, 49% by Pohlad Companies and less than
1% by certain  retirement plans for the benefit of DFG employees.  Mr. Dougherty
co-founded  the  predecessor  of DFG in 1977 and has served as  Chairman  of the
Board and Chief Executive officer of DFG since inception.  Pohlad Companies is a
holding  company  owned in equal  parts by each of James O.  Pohlad,  Robert  C.
Pohlad and  William M.  Pohlad.  VFM's  principal  business  address is 90 South
Seventh Street,  Suite 4400,  Minneapolis,  Minnesota  55402. As of February 29,
1996,  VFM and its  affiliates  served as the manager to six  closed-end and ten
open-end investment  companies  (comprising 29 separate investment  portfolios),
administered numerous private accounts and managed approximately $8.5 billion in
assets.

     The Sub-Advisory  Agreement  between Marquette and VFM provides that VFM is
entitled to a fee paid by Marquette , which is accrued  daily and paid  monthly,
equal  to an  annual  rate of 50% of the  Basic  Fee  plus or  minus  50% of the
performance  fee  adjustment   described  above  under   "Management--Investment
Advisers."

PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT

     All investment decisions for the Funds will be made by a committee,  and no
individual   or   individuals   will  be   primarily   responsible   for  making
recommendations to that committee.

THE UNDERWRITER

     The shares of the Funds are distributed through Voyageur Fund Distributors,
Inc.  (the  "Underwriter")  pursuant  to a  Distribution  Agreement  between the
Underwriter  and  the  Company.  Pursuant  to the  Distribution  Agreement,  the
Underwriter  receives a monthly  service fee from each Fund equal,  on an annual
basis, to .05% of such Fund's average daily net assets.  Such fee is intended to
compensate  the  Underwriter  for  expenses  incurred  in  connection  with  the
servicing of Fund shareholder accounts. Such expenses may include the payment of
compensation  by the  Underwriter  to persons  and  institutions  who respond to
inquiries  of Fund  shareholders  regarding  their  ownership of shares or their
accounts  with the  Funds or who  provide  other  administrative  or  accounting
services not otherwise required to be provided by a Fund's investment adviser or
sub-adviser (if any), the Funds' transfer agent or any other agent of the Funds.

CUSTODIAN

     Marquette serves as the custodian of each Fund's  portfolio  securities and
cash. Marquette receives no additional  compensation for acting as the custodian
of VFI Intermediate  Duration Portfolio and VFI Core Portfolio and a monthly fee
from VFI  Short  Duration  Portfolio  equal on an  annual  basis to .10% of such
Fund's average daily net assets for its services as custodian.

DIVIDEND DISBURSING, TRANSFER, ADMINISTRATIVE AND ACCOUNTING SERVICES AGENT

     VFM acts as each Fund's dividend disbursing,  transfer,  administrative and
accounting  services agent to perform  dividend-paying  functions,  to calculate
each Fund's daily share price,  to maintain  shareholder  records and to perform
certain regulatory  reporting and compliance related services for the Funds. The
fees paid for  these  services  are  based on each  Fund's  assets  and  include
reimbursement  of out-of-pocket  expenses.  VFM receives a monthly fee from each
Fund equal on an annual basis to .10% of each Fund's  average  daily net assets.
See "The Investment Advisers, Sub-Adviser, Administrative Services, Expenses and
Brokerage" in the Statement of Additional Information.

EXPENSES OF THE FUNDS

     Each Fund's expenses include, among others, fees of Directors,  expenses of
Directors'  and  shareholders'   meetings,   insurance  premiums,   expenses  of
redemption  of shares,  expenses  of the issue and sale of shares (to the extent
not otherwise  borne by the  Underwriter),  expenses of printing and mailing and
shareholder  statements,  association  membership  dues,  charges  of the Fund's
custodian  (if any),  bookkeeping,  auditing  and legal  expenses,  the fees and
expenses of registering the Fund and its shares with the Securities and Exchange
Commission and registering or qualifying its shares under state securities laws,
and  expenses  of  preparing  and mailing  prospectuses  and reports to existing
shareholders.  Marquette, Cadre, VFM and the Underwriter reserve the right, from
time to  time,  to  voluntarily  waive  their  fees  in  whole  or  part  and to
voluntarily absorb certain other of the Funds' expenses.

PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS

     No Fund will effect any brokerage  transactions in its portfolio securities
with any broker-dealer  affiliated directly or indirectly with Marquette,  Cadre
or VFM unless such transactions, including the frequency thereof, the receipt of
commissions payable in connection  therewith and the selection of the affiliated
broker-dealer effecting such transactions, are not unfair or unreasonable to the
shareholders of such Fund. It is not  anticipated  that any Fund will effect any
brokerage  transactions  with  any  affiliated   broker-dealer,   including  the
Underwriter, unless such use would be to such Fund's advantage. Marquette, Cadre
and VFM may consider  sales of shares of the Funds as a factor in the  selection
of broker-dealers to execute the Funds' securities transactions.

                        DETERMINATION OF NET ASSET VALUE

     The net asset value of Fund shares is determined once daily, Monday through
Friday,  as of 3:00 p.m.,  Minneapolis time (the regular close of trading on the
Exchange) on each  business day the Exchange is open for trading,  except on (i)
days on which  changes in the value of a Fund's  portfolio  securities  will not
materially  affect the current net asset value of the Fund's  shares,  (ii) days
during which no Fund shares are tendered for redemption and no order to purchase
or sell Fund shares is received by the Fund or (iii) customary national business
holidays on which the Exchange is closed for trading (as of the date hereof, New
Year's Day, President's Day, Good Friday,  Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor
Day, Thanksgiving Day and Christmas Day).

     For each Fund,  the net asset value per share is determined by dividing the
value of the securities,  cash and other assets of the Fund less all liabilities
by the total number of shares  outstanding.  For the purpose of determining  the
aggregate  net assets of a Fund,  cash and  receivables  will be valued at their
face amounts. Interest will be recorded as accrued.

     The  value  of  most  fixed-income  securities  held by the  Funds  will be
provided by an independent pricing service, which determines these valuations at
a time earlier than the close of the Exchange.  Pricing  services  consider such
factors as security  prices,  yields,  maturities,  call  features,  ratings and
developments   relating  to  specific   securities  in  arriving  at  securities
valuations. Occasionally events affecting the value of such securities may occur
between the time  valuations are  determined  and the close of the Exchange.  If
events  materially  affecting  the value of such  securities  occur  during such
period,  or if a Fund's  investment  adviser or  sub-adviser  determines for any
other reason that  valuations  provided by the pricing  service are  inaccurate,
such  securities  will be valued at their fair  value  according  to  procedures
established  in good faith by the  Company's  Board of  Directors.  Fixed-income
securities  for which  prices  are not  available  from an  independent  pricing
service  but  where  an  active  market  exists  will  be  valued  using  market
quotations,  prices  provided by market  makers or  estimates  of market  values
obtained from yield data  relating to  instruments  or  securities  with similar
characteristics  in accordance with procedures  established in good faith by the
Company's Board of Directors. Short-term securities with remaining maturities of
60 days or less are valued at amortized  cost.  In addition,  any  securities or
other assets of a Fund for which market prices are not readily available will be
valued at their fair value in accordance  with  procedures  established  in good
faith by the Company's Board of Directors.

                     DISTRIBUTIONS TO SHAREHOLDERS AND TAXES

     The present policy of each Fund is to declare a  distribution  from the net
investment  income  of the Fund on each day that the Fund is open for  business.
Net investment income consists of interest accrued on portfolio investments of a
Fund,  less  accrued  expenses,  computed  in each case  since  the most  recent
determination of net asset value. Net realized  long-term capital gains, if any,
are distributed at least annually,  after  utilization of any available  capital
loss carryovers.

     Shareholders of each Fund receive  distributions from investment income and
capital gains in additional  shares of the Fund at net asset value,  without any
sales charge, unless they elect otherwise.  The Funds will pay distributions not
reinvested  to the  shareholder  of record  via wire  transfer.  Each Fund sends
monthly statements to its shareholders with details of any reinvested dividends.

FEDERAL INCOME TAXATION

     Each Fund is treated as a separate  entity for federal income tax purposes.
Each Fund  intends to qualify  during its  current  taxable  year as a regulated
investment  company  under the Internal  Revenue  Code of 1986,  as amended (the
"Code").  So long as a Fund so  qualifies,  it will not be  liable  for  federal
income  taxes  to  the  extent  it   distributes   its  taxable  income  to  its
shareholders. The following discussion of the federal income tax consequences of
investing in the Funds is based upon tax laws and  regulations  in effect on the
date  of  this   Prospectus   and  is  subject  to  change  by   legislative  or
administrative action. For additional information,  see "Taxes" in the Statement
of  Additional   Information.   Certain  states  exempt  mutual  fund  dividends
attributable to interest paid on certain U.S. Government  Securities from income
taxation  when  received  by banks that are  shareholders  in the  mutual  fund.
Prospective  investors are advised to consult with their tax advisers concerning
the application of state and local tax laws to investments in and  distributions
by the Funds.  Shareholders will be notified  annually as to the amount,  nature
and federal income tax status of dividends and distributions.

     If shares of any Fund are sold or otherwise  disposed  of, the  shareholder
will realize a capital gain or loss equal to the difference between the purchase
price and the sales price of the shares disposed of, if, as is usually the case,
the shares are a capital asset in the hands of the  shareholder.  If the sale or
other disposition occurs more than one year after the shares were acquired,  the
resulting  capital gain or loss will be  long-term.  A special  provision of the
Code states that, if a Fund's  shares with respect to which a long-term  capital
gain distribution has been made are held for six months or less, any loss on the
sale or other  disposition  of those shares will be a long-term  capital loss to
the extent of such  long-term  capital  gain  distribution,  unless such sale or
other  disposition  is made  pursuant to a plan that  provides  for the periodic
liquidation of an investment in the Fund.

     Distributions by the Funds are generally  taxable to shareholders,  whether
received  in cash or in  additional  shares  of the Fund.  Distributions  from a
Fund's net  investment  income and net  short-term  capital gains are taxable to
shareholders  as  ordinary  income.  Distributions  from  a Fund  designated  as
long-term  capital  gain  distributions  will be taxable to the  shareholder  as
long-term  capital gains  irrespective  of how long the shareholder has held the
shares. Shareholders not subject to federal income taxation will not be taxed on
distributions by the Funds.

                             INVESTMENT PERFORMANCE

     Advertisements  and  other  sales  literature  for the  Funds  may refer to
"yield,"  "average  annual total return,"  "cumulative  total return,"  "current
distribution  rate" and may compare such  performance  quotations with published
indices and  comparable  quotations of other funds.  When a Fund  advertises any
performance information,  it also will advertise its average annual total return
as required by the rules of the  Securities  and Exchange  Commission.  All such
figures are based on historical earnings and performance and are not intended to
be indicative of future performance.  Additionally,  performance information may
not provide a basis for comparison with other  investments or other mutual funds
using a different method of calculating  performance.  The investment  return on
and  principal  value of an investment  in any Fund will  fluctuate,  so that an
investor's shares, when redeemed,  may be worth more or less than their original
cost.

     The  advertised  "yield" of a Fund will be based on a 30-day  period in the
advertisement.  Yield is  calculated by dividing the net  investment  income per
share deemed earned during the period by the maximum offering price per share on
the last day of the period. The result is then "annualized" using a formula that
provides for semi-annual compounding of income.

     The "average annual total return" is the average annual  compounded rate of
return based upon a hypothetical  $1,000 investment made at the beginning of the
advertised period. In calculating average annual total return, the maximum sales
charge is  deducted  from the  hypothetical  investment  and all  dividends  and
distributions are assumed to be reinvested.

     "Cumulative  total  return" is calculated  by  subtracting  a  hypothetical
$1,000  payment to a Fund from the ending  redeemable  value of such payment (at
the end of the relevant advertised  period),  dividing such difference by $1,000
and multiplying the quotient by 100. In calculating ending redeemable value, all
income and capital gain distributions are assumed to be reinvested in additional
Fund shares and the maximum sales charge is deducted.

     Each Fund, from time to time, may also quote a "current  distribution rate"
to  shareholders.  A current  distribution  rate as of a date is  calculated  by
determining  the  amount of  distributions  that  would  have been paid over the
twelve-month  period ending on such date to the holder of one hypothetical  Fund
share purchased at the beginning of such period, and dividing such amount by the
current  maximum  offering  price per share (the net asset  value per Fund share
plus the maximum sales charge).

     In addition to advertising total return and yield,  comparative performance
information  may be used from time to time in  advertising  the  Funds'  shares,
including data from Lipper  Analytical  Services,  Inc.,  Morningstar  and other
entities or organizations  which track the performance of investment  companies.
Performance  information  for each Fund may also be compared  to its  Comparison
Index and to other unmanaged indices. Unmanaged indices generally do not reflect
deductions  for  administrative  and  management  costs and  expenses.  For Fund
performance information and daily net asset value quotations, investors may call
(612) 376-7010 or (800) 525-6584.

     For additional  information regarding comparative  performance  information
and  the  calculation  of  each  Fund's  yield,  average  annual  total  return,
cumulative  total  return  and  current   distribution  rate,  see  "Performance
Comparisons" in the Statement of Additional Information.

                               GENERAL INFORMATION

     Each Fund sends to its shareholders  six-month unaudited and annual audited
financial  statements which include a list of investment  securities held by the
Fund.

     All of the Funds were  established  in 1995,  each as a separate  series of
Voyageur Funds, Inc., a Minnesota corporation incorporated on Apri 15, 1987. The
Articles of  Incorporation  limit the  liability of the Directors to the fullest
extent  permitted  by law. The Articles of  Incorporation  currently  permit the
Directors to issue an  unlimited  number of full and  fractional  shares of four
distinct series,  each of which evidences an interest in a separate portfolio of
investments with its own investment  objective,  policies and restrictions.  The
Articles  of  Incorporation  also  permit  the  Directors,  without  shareholder
approval, to create additional series of shares and to subdivide any series into
various classes of shares with such dividend preferences and other rights as the
Directors may designate.

     Each share of a Fund  represents  an equal  proportionate  interest  in the
assets belonging to the Fund and has identical voting, dividend, liquidation and
other rights.

     Fund shares are freely transferable,  are entitled to dividends as declared
by the Directors, and, in liquidation of a Fund, are entitled to receive the net
assets  of such  Fund.  The  Funds do not  generally  hold  annual  meetings  of
shareholders  and will do so only when required by law.  Shareholders may remove
Directors  from  office by votes  cast in  person  or by proxy at a  meeting  of
shareholders  or by written consent and, in accordance with Section 16(c) of the
1940 Act, the Directors  shall promptly call a meeting of  shareholders  for the
purpose of voting upon the question of removal of any Director when requested to
do so by the record holders of not less than 10% of the outstanding shares.

     Each share of a series has one vote  irrespective of the relative net asset
value of the series' shares. On some issues,  such as the election of Directors,
all shares of the Company  vote  together as one series.  On an issue  affecting
only a particular  series,  the shares of the affected series vote as a separate
series.  An  example  of  such  an  issue  would  be  a  fundamental  investment
restriction pertaining to only one series.

     The assets  received by the Company for the issue or sale of shares of each
series or class thereof, and all income, earnings, profits and proceeds thereof,
subject only to the rights of creditors,  are  allocated to such series,  and in
the case of a class,  allocated to such class,  and  constitute  the  underlying
assets of such series or class.  The  underlying  assets of each series or class
thereof are  required to be  segregated  on the books of account,  and are to be
charged with the expenses in respect to such series or class and with a share of
the general  expenses of the  Company.  Any general  expenses of the Company not
readily  identifiable  as  belonging  to a  particular  series or class shall be
allocated  among the series or classes  thereof,  based  upon the  relative  net
assets of the series or class at the time such expenses were accrued.

     For a further discussion of the above matters, see "Additional Information"
in the Statement of Additional Information.

     NO  PERSON  HAS  BEEN  AUTHORIZED  TO GIVE ANY  INFORMATION  OR TO MAKE ANY
REPRESENTATIONS  OTHER THAN THOSE  CONTAINED IN THIS  PROSPECTUS  (AND/OR IN THE
STATEMENT  OF  ADDITIONAL  INFORMATION  REFERRED  TO ON THE  COVER  PAGE OF THIS
PROSPECTUS), AND, IF GIVEN OR MADE, SUCH INFORMATION OR REPRESENTATIONS MUST NOT
BE  RELIED  UPON AS  HAVING  BEEN  AUTHORIZED  BY THE  FUNDS  OR  VOYAGEUR  FUND
DISTRIBUTORS,  INC. THIS PROSPECTUS DOES NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFER OR SOLICITATION
BY ANYONE IN THE STATE IN WHICH SUCH OFFER OR SOLICITATION IS NOT AUTHORIZED, OR
IN WHICH THE PERSON MAKING SUCH OFFER OR  SOLICITATION IS NOT QUALIFIED TO DO SO
OR TO ANY PERSON TO WHOM IT IS UNLAWFUL TO MAKE SUCH OFFER OR SOLICITATION.

                                     PART B

                              VOYAGEUR FUNDS, INC.

                          VFI SHORT DURATION PORTFOLIO
                       VFI INTERMEDIATE DURATION PORTFOLIO
                               VFI CORE PORTFOLIO


                       STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
                              DATED MARCH 20, 1996


     This Statement of Additional Information is not a prospectus, but should be
read in  conjunction  with the  Prospectus  of the Funds dated March 20, 1996. A
copy of the  Prospectus  or this  Statement  of  Additional  Information  may be
obtained  free of charge by  contacting  the Funds at 90 South  Seventh  Street,
Suite 4400, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55402. Telephone: (612) 376-7000 or Toll Free
(800) 553-2134.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                TABLE OF CONTENTS

                                                                                                            PAGE
<S>                                                                                                           <C>
Investment Policies and Restrictions....................................................................    B-2
Directors and Executive Officers........................................................................    B-7
The Investment Advisers, Sub-Adviser, Administrative Services, Expenses and Brokerage...................    B-9
Net Asset Value and Public Offering Price...............................................................    B-13
Taxes    ...............................................................................................    B-13
Performance Comparisons.................................................................................    B-14
Redemptions.............................................................................................    B-16
Additional Information..................................................................................    B-16
</TABLE>

     No  person  has  been  authorized  to give any  information  or to make any
representations  other than those  contained  in this  Statement  of  Additional
Information or the Prospectus  dated March 20, 1996, and, if given or made, such
information or representations  may not be relied upon as having been authorized
by the Funds.

     This  Statement of Additional  Information  does not constitute an offer to
sell  securities  in any state or  jurisdiction  in which such  offering may not
lawfully be made.  The delivery of this  Statement of Additional  Information at
any time  shall not imply  that  there has been no change in the  affairs of the
Funds since the date hereof.

                      INVESTMENT POLICIES AND RESTRICTIONS

     The investment objectives,  policies and restrictions of Voyageur Financial
Institutions ("VFI") Short Duration Portfolio ("Short Duration Portfolio"),  VFI
Intermediate Duration Portfolio ("Intermediate Duration Portfolio") and VFI Core
Portfolio ("Core  Portfolio")  (collectively,  the "Funds") are set forth in the
Prospectus.  Certain additional  investment  information is set forth below. All
capitalized  terms not defined herein have the same meanings as set forth in the
Prospectus.

GOVERNMENT GUARANTEED MORTGAGE-RELATED SECURITIES

     As set  forth in the  Prospectus,  the  Funds  will  invest  solely in U.S.
Treasury bills, notes and bonds and other securities issued or guaranteed by the
U.S.  Government  or  its  agencies  or  instrumentalities   ("U.S.   Government
Securities")  and  repurchase   agreements  fully  secured  by  U.S.  Government
Securities.  Included in the U.S.  Government  Securities the Funds may purchase
are pass-through  securities and collateralized  mortgage obligations  ("CMOs").
Mortgages backing these securities purchased by the Funds include, among others,
conventional 30-year fixed rate mortgages,  graduated payment mortgages, 15-year
mortgages and adjustable rate  mortgages.  The current issuers and guarantors of
mortgage-related  securities  in which the Funds may invest  are the  Government
National Mortgage Association, the Federal National Mortgage Association and the
Federal Home Loan Mortgage  Association.  A description of the  mortgage-related
securities  in which the  Funds  may  invest  is  contained  in the  Prospectus.
Additional information with respect to these mortgage-related  securities is set
forth below.

     GNMA PASS-THROUGH SECURITIES.  The Government National Mortgage Association
("GNMA") issues mortgage-backed  securities ("GNMA Certificates") which evidence
an undivided  interest in a pool or pools of mortgages.  GNMA  Certificates that
the Funds  purchase are the  "modified  pass-through"  type,  which  entitle the
holder to receive timely  payment of all interest and principal  payments due on
the mortgage  pool,  net of fees paid to the "issuer"  and GNMA,  regardless  of
whether the mortgagor actually makes the payment.

     The National Housing Act authorizes GNMA to guarantee the timely payment of
principal  and interest on securities  backed by a pool of mortgages  insured by
the  Federal  Housing  Administration  ("FHA")  or  guaranteed  by the  Veterans
Administration ("VA"). The GNMA guarantee is backed by the full faith and credit
of the United States.  GNMA is also empowered to borrow without  limitation from
the  U.S.  Treasury  if  necessary  to make  any  payments  required  under  its
guarantee.

     The  average  life of a GNMA  Certificate  is  likely  to be  substantially
shorter than the original  maturity of the mortgages  underlying the securities.
Prepayments  of principal by mortgagors and mortgage  foreclosures  will usually
result in the return of the greater part of principal investment long before the
maturity of the mortgages in the pool.  Foreclosures impose no risk to principal
investment because of the GNMA guarantee, except to the extent that the Fund has
purchased the certificates at a premium in the secondary market.

     FHLMC PASS-THROUGH  SECURITIES.  The Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation
("FHLMC")  was created in 1970 through  enactment of Title III of the  Emergency
Home Finance Act of 1970. Its purpose is to promote  development of a nationwide
secondary market in conventional residential mortgages.

     FHLMC  issues  two  types  of  mortgage  pass-through   securities  ("FHLMC
Certificates"),  mortgage  participation  certificates  ("PCS")  and  guaranteed
mortgage certificates  ("GMCs"). PCS resemble GNMA Certificates in that each PCS
represents a pro rata share of all interest and principal payments made and owed
on the underlying pool.  FHLMC guarantees  timely monthly payment of interest on
PCS and the ultimate payment of principal.

     GMCs also  represent a pro rata interest in a pool of  mortgages.  However,
these instruments pay interest  semiannually and return principal once a year in
guaranteed  minimum  payments.  The expected average life of these securities is
approximately ten years. The FHLMC guarantee is not backed by the full faith and
credit of the United States.

     FNMA PASS-THROUGH  SECURITIES.  The Federal National  Mortgage  Association
("FNMA")  was  established  in 1938 to create a  secondary  market in  mortgages
insured by the FHA.

     FNMA  issues   guaranteed   mortgage   pass-through   certificates   ("FNMA
Certificates" ). FNMA Certificates  resemble GNMA Certificates in that each FNMA
Certificate  represents a pro rata share of all interest and principal  payments
made and owed on the underlying pool. FNMA guarantees timely payment of interest
and principal on FNMA Certificates. The FNMA guarantee is not backed by the full
faith and credit of the United States.

ADJUSTABLE RATE MORTGAGE SECURITIES

     Adjustable   Rate  Mortgage   Securities   ("ARMS")  are   mortgage-related
securities  that,  unlike   fixed-rate   mortgage   securities,   have  periodic
adjustments  in the coupons on the underlying  mortgages.  The interest rates on
ARMS  are  reset  at  periodic  intervals  (generally  one  year or  less) to an
increment  over  some  predetermined  interest  rate  index.  There are two main
categories of indexes: those based on U.S. Treasury securities and those derived
from a calculated  measure such as a cost of funds index or a moving  average of
mortgage  rates.  Commonly  utilized  indexes include the one-year and five-year
constant maturity  Treasury note rates, the three-month  Treasury bill rate, the
180-day Treasury bill rate, rates on longer-term Treasury  securities,  the 11th
District Federal Home Loan Bank Cost of Funds Index, the National Median Cost of
Funds, the one-month or three-month London Interbank Offered Rate ("LIBOR"), the
prime rate of a specific bank, or commercial paper rates. Some indices,  such as
the one-year  constant  maturity  Treasury note rate,  closely mirror changes in
market  interest rate levels.  Others,  such as the 11th District Home Loan Bank
Cost of Funds Index (often related to ARMS issued by FNMA),  tend to lag changes
in market rate  levels and tend to be somewhat  less  volatile.  The  investment
adviser or sub-adviser of a Fund will seek to diversify Fund investments in ARMS
among a variety of indices and reset periods so that such Fund is not at any one
time unduly  exposed to the risk of interest rate  fluctuations.  In selecting a
type of ARMS for  investment,  the investment  adviser or sub-adviser  will also
consider the liquidity of the market for such ARMS.

     The underlying adjustable rate mortgages which back ARMS in which the Funds
invest will  frequently  have caps and floors which limit the maximum  amount by
which the loan rate to the  residential  borrower  may change up or down (1) per
reset or adjustment interval and (2) over the life of the loan. Some residential
adjustable rate mortgage loans restrict periodic adjustments by limiting changes
in the borrower's  monthly  principal and interest payments rather than limiting
interest rate changes.  These payment caps may result in negative  amortization;
i.e., an increase in the balance of the mortgage loan.

     ARMS,  like other  mortgage-related  securities,  differ from  conventional
bonds in that  principal  is paid back over the life of the ARMS  rather than at
maturity.  As a  result,  the  holder  of the ARMS  receives  monthly  scheduled
payments  of  principal  and  interest,  and may receive  unscheduled  principal
payments representing  prepayments on the underlying mortgages.  When the holder
reinvests the payments and any unscheduled prepayments of principal it receives,
it may receive a rate of interest  which is lower than the rate on the  existing
ARMS. For this reason,  ARMS are less effective than longer-term debt securities
as a means of "locking-in" long-term interest rates.

     ARMS,  while having less risk of price  decline  during  periods of rapidly
rising rates than other  investments  of comparable  maturities,  will have less
potential  for  capital   appreciation   due  to  the  likelihood  of  increased
prepayments of mortgages as interest rates decline.  In addition,  to the extent
ARMS are purchased at a premium, mortgage foreclosures and unscheduled principal
prepayments will result in some loss of the holders' principal investment to the
extent of the  premium  paid.  On the other  hand,  if ARMS are  purchased  at a
discount, both a scheduled payment of principal and an unscheduled prepayment of
principal  will  increase  current  and total  returns and will  accelerate  the
recognition of income which,  when distributed to shareholders,  will be taxable
as ordinary income.

HIGH RISK MORTGAGE SECURITIES

     As set forth in the  Prospectus,  no Fund will  invest any of its assets in
mortgage-related  securities  that are considered  "high risk" under  applicable
supervisory  policies of the Office of the  Comptroller  of the  Currency"  (the
"OCC").  After  purchase of a non high-risk  security,  a Fund will determine no
less frequently  than annually that such security  remains outside the high-risk
category.  In OCC Banking Circular 228 (Rev.) (January 10,  1992), the OCC
defined "high-risk mortgage security" as any mortgage derivative product that at
the  time  of  purchase,  or at a  subsequent  testing  date,  meets  any of the
following three tests:

     1.  AVERAGE  LIFE TEST.  The  mortgage  derivative  product has an expected
     weighted average life greater than 10.0 years.

     2. AVERAGE LIFE SENSITIVITY TEST. The expected weighted average life of the
     mortgage derivative product:

          a.   Extends  by more  than  4.0  years,  assuming  an  immediate  and
               sustained  parallel  shift in the  yield  curve of plus 300 basis
               points, or

          b.   Shortens  by more  than 6.0  years,  assuming  an  immediate  and
               sustained  parallel  shift in the yield  curve of minus 300 basis
               points.

     3.  PRICE  SENSITIVITY  TEST.  The  estimated  change  in the  price of the
     mortgage  derivative  product  is more than 17%,  due to an  immediate  and
     sustained  parallel  shift in the  yield  curve of plus or minus  300 basis
     points.

Examples  of  certain  "high-risk  mortgage  securities"  include  "IO" and "PO"
classes  of  stripped  mortgage-backed  securities,  inverse  floating  CMOs and
certain zero coupon Treasury securities.

REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS

     Each of the Funds may invest in repurchase agreements. The Funds' custodian
will hold the securities  underlying any repurchase agreement or such securities
will be part of the Federal  Reserve Book Entry System.  The market value of the
collateral  underlying  the  repurchase  agreement  will be  determined  on each
business day. If at any time the market value of the collateral  falls below the
repurchase price of the repurchase  agreement  (including any accrued interest),
the respective Fund will promptly  receive  additional  collateral (so the total
collateral  is an amount at least  equal to the  repurchase  price plus  accrued
interest).  In entering into repurchase  agreements,  the Funds will comply with
the  standards  set  forth  by the  OCC  with  respect  to bank  investments  in
repurchase  agreements.  Accordingly,  the  Funds  will  enter  into  repurchase
agreements  only with the primary  reporting  dealers that report to the Federal
Reserve  Bank of New York or with  banks that are among the 100  largest  United
States  commercial  banks.  The Board of Directors has  established  procedures,
which are periodically reviewed by the Board, pursuant to which a Fund's adviser
or sub-adviser,  as appropriate,  will monitor the creditworthiness of the banks
and dealers with which the Fund enters into repurchase agreement transactions.

REVERSE REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS

     Each Fund may  engage in  "reverse  repurchase  agreements"  with banks and
securities  dealers.  At the  time  a Fund  enters  into  a  reverse  repurchase
agreement,  cash or U.S. Government Securities having a value sufficient to make
payments for the  securities to be repurchased  will be segregated,  and will be
maintained  throughout the period of the  obligation.  When a Fund enters into a
reverse  repurchase  agreement,  either the securities  purchased with the funds
obtained from the transaction or the securities  collateralizing the transaction
will have a maturity  date not later than the  settlement  date for the  reverse
repurchase transaction.

WHEN-ISSUED AND FORWARD COMMITMENT SECURITIES

     Each of the Funds may purchase  securities offered on a "when-issued" basis
and may purchase or sell securities on a "forward commitment" basis. When a Fund
purchases  securities  on a when-issued  or forward  commitment  basis,  it will
maintain in a segregated  account with its custodian  cash or liquid  high-grade
debt obligations  having an aggregate value equal to the amount of such purchase
commitments until payment is made; a Fund will likewise segregate  securities it
sells on a forward commitment basis.

TEMPORARY INVESTMENTS

     To the  extent  set  forth in the  Prospectus,  the  Funds  may  invest  in
short-term money market  securities that are obligations of the U.S.  Government
and its agencies and  instrumentalities.  Securities issued or guaranteed by the
U.S. Government or its agencies or instrumentalities that mature within 397 days
are considered  money market  securities  for purposes of the Funds'  investment
policies.

INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS

     Each Fund has adopted the following investment restrictions which, together
with the investment  objective of such Fund,  cannot be changed without approval
by holders of a  majority  of the  outstanding  voting  shares of such Fund.  As
defined  in the 1940 Act,  this  means the  lesser of the vote of (a) 67% of the
shares of such Fund at a meeting where more than 50% of the  outstanding  shares
of such  Fund are  present  in  person  or by proxy or (b) more  than 50% of the
outstanding shares of such Fund.

     1.   No Fund will operate in such a manner that it would no longer  qualify
          as a "diversified"  management  investment  company,  as defined under
          Section 5 of 1940 Act. In  connection  therewith,  no Fund will,  with
          respect to 75% of its total  assets,  purchase any  securities  (other
          than  obligations  issued or guaranteed by the U.S.  Government or its
          agencies and  instrumentalities)  if, as a result, more than 5% of the
          Fund's  total  assets  would then be invested in the  securities  of a
          single issuer or if, as a result, the Fund would hold more than 10% of
          the outstanding  voting  securities of any single issuer, or each Fund
          will otherwise  limit its  investments as required in order to qualify
          as a  "diversified"  management  investment  company as defined  under
          Section 5 of the 1940 Act.

     2.   No Fund will  concentrate 25% or more of the value of its total assets
          in any one industry;  provided,  however,  that there is no limitation
          with respect to investments in obligations issued or guaranteed by the
          U.S. Government or its agencies and  instrumentalities  and repurchase
          agreements secured thereby.

     3.   No Fund will make loans,  except through the purchase of  fixed-income
          obligations  in  which  such  Fund  may  invest  consistent  with  its
          investment objective and policies and through repurchase agreements.

     4.   No Fund will  underwrite the securities of other issuers except to the
          extent that,  in  connection  with the  disposition  of its  portfolio
          securities, the Fund may be deemed to be an underwriter.

     5.   No Fund will  borrow  money  (provided  that the Funds may enter  into
          reverse  repurchase  agreements)  except from banks for  temporary  or
          emergency purposes and then only in an amount not exceeding  one-third
          of the  value of such  Fund's  total  assets.  No Fund  will  purchase
          portfolio  securities while  outstanding  borrowings (other than fully
          covered reverse  repurchase  agreements) exceed 5% of the value of the
          Fund's total assets. In order to secure any permitted borrowings under
          this  section,  each Fund may  pledge,  mortgage  or  hypothecate  its
          assets.

     6.   No Fund will issue any senior securities (as defined in the 1940 Act),
          except  as set forth in  investment  restriction  number 5 above,  and
          except to the  extent  that  purchasing  or  selling  securities  on a
          when-issued or forward  commitment basis, or using similar  investment
          strategies may be deemed to constitute issuing a senior security.

     7.   No Fund will invest in commodities,  commodities  futures contracts or
          real estate.

     Each Fund has  adopted  the  following  operating  (i.e.,  non-fundamental)
investment  restrictions  which may be changed by the Board of  Directors at any
time without shareholder approval.

     No Fund will:

     1.   Purchase  the  securities  of any issuer  with less than three  years'
          continuous operation if, as a result, more than 5% of the value of its
          total assets would be invested in securities of such issuers.

     2.   Purchase illiquid securities.

     3.   Purchase  or  retain  securities  of any  issuer if the  officers  and
          directors of the Fund or its  investment  adviser or any  sub-adviser,
          owning  beneficially  more  than 1/2 or 1% of the  securities  of such
          issuer,  together  own  beneficially  more  than 5% or  such  issuer's
          securities.

     4.   Invest in warrants.

     5.   Invest  in  interests  in oil,  gas or other  mineral  exploration  or
          development programs or leases although it may invest in securities of
          issuers which invest in or sponsor such programs.

     6.   Invest  in the  securities  of an  investment  company,  except to the
          extent  permitted  by the 1940  Act and  except  as part of a  merger,
          consolidation or acquisition of assets.

     7.   Purchase  any  securities  on margin  except that each Fund may obtain
          such  short-term  credits as may be  necessary  for the  clearance  of
          purchases and sales of securities.

     8.   Invest for the purpose of exercising  control or management of another
          issuer.

     9.   Make short sales of  securities  or maintain a short  position for the
          account of the Fund unless at all times when a short  position is open
          it owns an equal amount of such securities or owns  securities  which,
          without payment of any further consideration,  are convertible into or
          exchangeable  for securities of the same issue as, and equal in amount
          to, the securities sold short.

     10.  Write, purchase or sell puts, calls or combinations thereof.

     Any  investment   restriction  or  limitation   which  involves  a  maximum
percentage of securities or assets shall not be considered to be violated unless
an  excess  over the  percentage  occurs  immediately  after an  acquisition  of
securities or a utilization of assets and such excess results therefrom.

DIVERSIFICATION

     As  indicated by the first  fundamental  investment  restriction  set forth
above, each Fund operates as a "diversified"  fund. Each Fund intends to conduct
its  operations  so that it will comply  with  diversification  requirements  of
Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code"),  and
qualify as a "regulated  investment company." In order to qualify as a regulated
investment  company,  each Fund must limit its investments so that, at the close
of each quarter of the taxable  year,  with respect to at least 50% of its total
assets,  not more than 5% of its total assets will be invested in the securities
of a single  issuer.  In addition,  the Code  requires that not more than 25% in
value of each Fund's total assets may be invested in the  securities of a single
issuer at the close of each quarter of the taxable year.

PORTFOLIO TURNOVER

     Portfolio  turnover is the ratio of the lesser of annual purchases or sales
of  portfolio  securities  by a Fund to the average  monthly  value of portfolio
securities owned by the Fund, not including  securities maturing in less than 12
months. A 100% portfolio  turnover rate would occur, for example,  if the lesser
of the  value of  purchases  or sales of a  Fund's  portfolio  securities  for a
particular  year  were  equal to the  average  monthly  value  of the  portfolio
securities  owned by the Fund  during  the  year.  Each  Fund  will  dispose  of
securities  without  regard to the time  they  have  been held when such  action
appears  advisable  to the Fund's  investment  adviser or  subadviser.  Frequent
portfolio trades may result in higher transaction and other costs for a Fund.

                        DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

     The Directors and officers of the Company,  their position with the Company
and their principal  occupations during the past five years are set forth below.
In addition to the occupations set forth below,  the directors and officers also
serve as directors and trustees or officers of various  closed-end  and open-end
investment companies managed by the Voyageur Fund Managers, Inc. ("VFM").

                                                 PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION(S) DURING
                                                    PAST FIVE YEARS AND OTHER 
NAME, ADDRESS, AND AGE             POSITION               AFFILIATIONS
- ----------------------             --------       ----------------------------

Clarence G. Frame, 77              Director       Of counsel, Briggs & Morgan 
W-875                                             law firm since 1984.
First National Bank Building
332 Minnesota Street
St. Paul, Minnesota 55101

Richard F. McNamara, 63            Director       Chief Executive Officer of 
7808 Creekridge Circle, #200                      Activar, Inc., a Minneapolis-
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55439                      based holding company consist-
                                                  ing of seventeen companies in 
                                                  industrial plastics, sheet 
                                                  metal, automotive aftermarket,
                                                  construction supply, electron-
                                                  ics and financial  services, 
                                                  since 1966.

Thomas F. Madison*, 60             Director       Vice Chairman-Office of the 
200 South Fifth Street                            CEO, Minnesota Mutual Life 
Suite 2100                                        Insurance Company since 
Minnepolis, Minnesota 55402                       February 1994; President and 
                                                  CEO of MLM Partners, Inc.
                                                  since January 1993; previous-
                                                  ly, President of U.S. WEST 
                                                  Communications-Markets from  
                                                  1988 to 1993; Mr. Madison 
                                                  currently serves on the board 
                                                  of  directors  of Minnesota
                                                  Mutual Life Insurance Company,
                                                  Valmont Industries, Inc.,  
                                                  Eltrax Systems, Inc and vari-
                                                  ous civic and educational
                                                  organizations.

James W. Nelson, 54                Director       Chairman and Chief Executive 
81 South Ninth Street                             Officer of Eberhardt Holding 
Suite 4400                                        Company and its subsidiaries 
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55402                      since 1990.

Robert J. Odegard, 73              Director       Special Assistant to the 
University of Minnesota                           President of the University of
  Foundation                                      Minnesota since 1990.
1300 South Second Street
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55454

John G. Taft, 41                   President      President  (since 1991) and 
90 South Seventh Street                           Director (since 1993) of the
Suite 4400                                        Adviser; Director (since 1993)
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55402                      and Executive Vice President
                                                  (since 1995) of the
                                                  Underwriter; previously,
                                                  President of the Underwriter
                                                  from 1991 to 1995; Management 
                                                  committee member of the 
                                                  Adviser from 1991 to 1993; 
                                                  Managing Director at Piper,  
                                                  Jaffray & Hopwood Incorporated
                                                  in Minneapolis, Minnesota from
                                                  1986 to 1991.

Andrew M. McCullagh, Jr., 47       Executive      Portfolio Manager of the 
90 South Seventh Street            Vice           Adviser since 1990; previous-
Suite 4400                         President      ly, Director of the Adviser 
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55402                      and the Underwriter from 1993
                                                  to 1995.

Jane M. Wyatt, 41                  Executive      Chief Investment Officer 
90 South Seventh Street            Vice           (since 1993) and Portfolio
Suite 4400                         President      Manager (since 1989) of the 
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55402                      Adviser; Director of the
                                                  Adviser and the Underwriter 
                                                  since 1993.

Elizabeth H. Howell,  34           Vice           Portfolio  Manger of the 
90 South Seventh Street            President      Adviser since 1991; previous-
Suite 4400                                        ly, portfolio manager for 
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55402                      Windsor Financial Group, 
                                                  Minneapolis, Minnesota from 
                                                  1988 to 1991.

Steven P. Eldredge,  40            Vice           Portfolio Manager of the
90 South Seventh Street            President      Adviser since 1995; previously
Suite 4400                                        portfolio manager for ABT
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55402                      Mutual Funds from 1989 to 
                                                  1995.

James C. King,  55                 Vice           Portfolio  Manager of the 
90 South Seventh Street            President      Adviser since 1990; previous-
Suite 4400                                        ly, Director of the Adviser 
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55402                      and the Underwriter from 1993
                                                  to 1995.

Kenneth R.  Larsen,  33            Treasurer      Treasurer of the Adviser and 
90 South Seventh Street                           the Underwriter since 1990;  
Suite 4400                                        previously, Chief Financial  
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55402                      Officer (from 1991 to 1995), 
                                                  Director (from 1993 to 1995),
                                                  Secretary (from 1990 to 1993)
                                                  and Controller (from 1988 to
                                                  1990) of the Adviser and the 
                                                  Underwriter.

Thomas J. Abood,  32               Secretary      General  Counsel of the 
90 South Seventh Street                           Adviser and the Underwriter 
Suite 4400                                        since October 1994; previous-
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55402                      ly, associated with the law 
                                                  firm of Skadden, Arps, Slate,
                                                  Meagher & Flom, Chicago, 
                                                  Illinois from 1988 to 1994.

_________________________________
* Denotes a director of the Company who is an interested  person of the Company,
an investment adviser or sub-adviser to a Fund and/or the Underwriter.

     As of March 1, 1996,  the officers and  directors of the Company as a group
did not own any shares of the Funds.

     The Company does not compensate its officers.  Each director (who is not an
employee of VFM or any of its affiliates) receives a total annual fee of $26,000
for serving as a director or trustee for the Funds and each of the  open-end and
closed-end  investment  companies  (the  "Fund  Complex")  for which VFM acts as
investment adviser,  plus a $500 fee for each special in-person meeting attended
by such director. These fees are allocated among each series or fund in the Fund
Complex  based on the  relative  average net asset value of each series or fund.
Currently  the  Fund  Complex  consists  of  10  open-end  investment  companies
comprising  43 series  or funds  and six  closed-end  investment  companies.  In
addition,  each director who is not an employee of VFM or any of its  affiliates
is reimbursed for expenses incurred in connection with attending meetings.

     For the fiscal year ended  December 31,  1995,  the Fund Complex paid total
compensation of $24,500 to each of Messrs. Frame,  McNamara,  Nelson and Odegard
and  $18,500 to Mr.  Madison.  Mr.  Harley  Danforth  received  $10,000  for his
services  as  a  consultant.  The  following  table  sets  forth  the  aggregate
compensation  received  by each  director  from the Funds for the most  recently
ended fiscal year as well as the total  compensation  received by each  director
from the Fund Complex during the calendar year ended December 31, 1995.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                PENSION OR         ESTIMATED
                                                                RETIREMENT          ANNUAL            TOTAL
                                            AGGREGATE        BENEFITS ACCRUED      BENEFITS       COMPENSATION
                                          COMPENSATION          AS PART OF           UPON           FROM FUND
DIRECTOR                                 FROM THE FUNDS*       FUND EXPENSES      RETIREMENT         COMPLEX
- --------                                 ---------------       -------------      ----------         -------
<S>                                          <C>                 <C>                 <C>            <C>    
Clarence G. Frame                            $0                  None                None           $24,500
Richard F. McNamara                          $0                  None                None           $24,500
Thomas F. Madison                            $0                  None                None           $18,500
James W. Nelson                              $0                  None                None           $24,500
Robert J. Odegard                            $0                  None                None           $24,500

* Funds did not have operations in 1995.
</TABLE>

     Voyageur  Fund  Distributors,  Inc.  (the  "Underwriter")  is the principal
distributor of each Fund's  shares.  With regard to the  Underwriter,  Mr. Frank
Tonnemaker  is the  President  and a director,  Mr. Taft and Ms.  Wyatt are each
Executive Vice Presidents and directors and Mr. Larsen is Treasurer.

              THE INVESTMENT ADVISERS, SUB-ADVISER, ADMINISTRATIVE
                        SERVICES, EXPENSES AND BROKERAGE

GENERAL

     Marquette Trust Company  ("Marquette") and Cadre Consulting Services,  Inc.
("Cadre") have been retained under investment advisory agreements (the "Advisory
Agreements")  with the  Company  to act as  investment  advisers  to the  Funds,
subject to the authority of the Board of Directors. Cadre will act as investment
adviser to Short Duration Portfolio and Marquette will act as investment adviser
to Intermediate Duration Portfolio and Core Portfolio.

     Marquette Trust Company is headquartered in Minneapolis,  Minnesota.  It is
the lead Trust  company for a $3.5 billion  community  bank  organization  under
common ownership. The bank group includes over 40 banks in ten different states.
Marquette  Trust Company  provides  investment  management,  custody,  and Trust
administration services for over $400 million of assets in Minnesota, Wisconsin,
Iowa,  and South Dakota.  It has been  providing  Trust services for the past 50
years.

     Cadre Consulting  Services,  Inc. was founded in 1982, and is based in Long
Island, New York. It specializes in investment management,  administration,  and
marketing for governmental entities. It currently provides these services for 21
different  programs covering 10 states,  with 2,500 clients.  Cadre manages $2.2
billion of short term investment assets, and an additional $3.2 billion of fixed
rate/fixed term assets.

INVESTMENT ADVISORY AGREEMENTS

     The  Company,  on behalf  of the  respective  Funds,  has  contracted  with
Marquette and Cadre for investment advice, research and management.  Pursuant to
each  Investment  Advisory  Agreement,  the investment  adviser has the sole and
exclusive  responsibility  for the management of the respective Fund's portfolio
and the making and execution of all  investment  decisions for such Fund subject
to the  objectives  and  investment  policies and  restrictions  of the Fund and
subject to the supervision of the Company's Board of Directors.  However,  under
the  Company's  Investment  Advisory  Agreement  with  Marquette,  Marquette  is
authorized to retain a sub-adviser to assist in furnishing  investment advice to
the  Company.  Marquette  is  responsible  for  monitoring  compliance  by  such
sub-adviser  with the  investment  policies and  restrictions  of the respective
Funds and with such other limitations or directions as the Board of Directors of
the Company may from time to time prescribe.  Each investment adviser furnishes,
at its own expense, office facilities, equipment and personnel for servicing the
investments of the respective Funds.

     Each  Investment  Advisory  Agreement  continues  from year to year only if
approved  annually  (a) by the Board of Directors of the Company or by vote of a
majority of the outstanding  voting securities of each Fund and (b) by vote of a
majority of  Directors  of the  Company  who are not parties to such  Investment
Advisory  Agreement  or  interested  persons (as defined in the 1940 Act) of any
such party, cast in person at a meeting of the Board of Directors called for the
purpose of voting on such approval.  Each Investment  Advisory  Agreement may be
terminated by either party on 60 days' notice to the other party and  terminates
automatically  upon its  assignment.  Each  Investment  Advisory  Agreement also
provides  that  amendments  to the  Agreement may be effected if approved by the
Board of  Directors  of the  Company  (including  a  majority  of the  Company's
disinterested  directors),  unless the 1940 Act requires that any such amendment
must be  submitted  for  approval  by the  shareholders  and that  all  proposed
assignments of such agreement are subject to approval by the Company's  Board of
Directors (unless the 1940 Act otherwise requires shareholder approval thereof).

THE SUB-ADVISER

     Voyageur  Fund  Managers,   Inc.   ("VFM")  acts  as  the   sub-adviser  to
Intermediate  Duration  Portfolio and Core Portfolio  pursuant to a Sub-Advisory
Agreement  with  Marquette.  Under  the  Sub-Advisory  Agreement,  VFM  provides
Intermediate  Duration  Portfolio and Core Portfolio with investment  advice and
portfolio  management.  The  Sub-Advisory  Agreement  requires VFM,  among other
things, to report to Marquette or the Board of Directors regularly at such times
and in such detail as Marquette or the Board of Directors  may from time to time
request in order to permit Marquette and the Board of Directors to determine the
adherence   of  the  Funds  to  their   investment   objectives,   policies  and
restrictions. The Sub-Advisory Agreement also requires VFM to provide all office
space,  personnel and facilities  necessary and incident to VFM's performance of
its services under the Sub-Advisory Agreement.


ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES AGREEMENT

     VFM also acts as each Fund's dividend disbursing, transfer,  administrative
and accounting  services agent pursuant to an Administrative  Services Agreement
(the "Administrative Services Agreement") between VFM and the Company.  Pursuant
to the Administrative  Services  Agreement,  VFM provides each Fund all dividend
disbursing,  transfer agency, administrative and accounting services required by
such Fund including,  without limitation,  the following: (i) the calculation of
net asset value per share  (including  the pricing of each Fund's  portfolio  of
securities)  at such  times and in such  manner as is  specified  in the  Fund's
current  Prospectus  and  Statement  of  Additional  Information,  (ii) upon the
receipt  of funds for the  purchase  of such  Fund's  shares or the  receipt  of
redemption  requests  with  respect  to  such  Fund's  shares  outstanding,  the
calculation  of the number of shares to be purchased or redeemed,  respectively,
(iii) upon such Fund's distribution of dividends,  the calculation of the amount
of such  dividends to be received per share,  the  calculation  of the number of
additional  shares of such Fund to be received by each  shareholder of such Fund
(other than any  shareholder  who has elected to receive such dividends in cash)
and the mailing of payments with respect to such dividends to  shareholders  who
have elected to receive such  dividends in cash,  (iv) the provision of transfer
agency  services,  (v) the creation and maintenance of such records  relating to
the business of such Fund as such Fund may from time to time reasonably request,
(vi) the preparation of tax forms, reports,  notices, proxy statements,  proxies
and other shareholder communications, and the mailing thereof to shareholders of
such Fund, and (vii) the provision of such other dividend  disbursing,  transfer
agency,  administrative  and  accounting  services as such Fund and VFM may from
time to time agree upon. Pursuant to the Administrative Services Agreement,  VFM
also provides such  regulatory  reporting and  compliance  related  services and
tasks for the Company or any Fund as the Company may reasonably request.

     As  compensation  for these  services,  each  Fund  pays VFM a monthly  fee
equivalent  on an annual basis to .10% of each Fund's  average daily net assets.
For purposes of  calculating  average daily net assets,  as such term is used in
the Administrative  Services Agreements,  each Fund's net assets equal its total
assets  minus its total  liabilities.  Each  Fund  also  reimburses  VFM for its
out-of-pocket expenses in connection with VFM's provision of services under such
Fund's Administrative Services Agreement.

     A majority  of the  disinterested  directors  of the  Company  specifically
found, in the course of their review of the Administrative  Services  Agreement,
that such agreement is in the best  interests of the Fund and its  shareholders,
the services to be performed  pursuant to such  agreement are services  required
for the operation of the Fund,  VFM can provide  services the nature and quality
of which are at least  equal to those  provided by others  offering  the same or
similar  services,  and the fees for such  services are fair and  reasonable  in
light of the usual and customary charges made by others for services of the same
nature and quality. The Administrative Services Agreement is renewable from year
to year if the  Company's  directors  (including  a  majority  of the  Company's
disinterested  directors) approve the continuance of the Agreement.  The Company
or VFM can terminate the Administrative Services Agreement on 60 days' notice to
the other party.  The  Administrative  Services  Agreement  also  provides  that
amendments  to the  Agreement  may be  effected  if  approved  by the  Board  of
Directors of the Company  (including a majority of the disinterested  directors)
and that all proposed  assignments  of such Agreement are subject to approval by
the Company's Board of Directors.

EXPENSES OF THE FUNDS

     Marquette,  Cadre, VFM and the Underwriter reserve the right to voluntarily
waive their fees in whole or part and/or to voluntarily  absorb certain other of
the Fund's expenses.  Any such waiver or absorption,  however,  will be in their
sole discretion and may be lifted or reinstated at any time.

     All costs and expenses (other than those specifically  referred to as being
borne by Marquette,  Cadre, VFM or the Underwriter) incurred in the operation of
each Fund are borne by such Fund. These expenses include,  among others, fees of
the directors who are not employees of any investment  adviser or sub-adviser or
any of their  affiliates,  expenses of directors'  and  shareholders'  meetings,
including  the cost of printing  and  mailing  proxies,  expenses  of  insurance
premiums for  fidelity and other  coverage,  expenses of  redemption  of shares,
expenses of issue and sale of shares (to the extent not borne by the Underwriter
under its  agreement  with such Fund),  expenses of printing  and mailing  stock
certificates  representing  shares of such Fund,  association  membership  dues,
charges of such Fund's custodian, and bookkeeping,  auditing and legal expenses.
Each  Fund  will  also pay the fees and bear  the  expense  of  registering  and
maintaining the registration of such Fund and its shares with the Securities and
Exchange  Commission  and  registering  or qualifying  its shares under state or
other  securities  laws and the expense of preparing  and mailing  prospectuses,
reports and statements to shareholders.

PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS AND ALLOCATION OF BROKERAGE

     As the Funds'  portfolios  are composed  exclusively  of debt,  rather than
equity securities,  most of the Funds' portfolio  transactions are effected with
dealers without the payment of brokerage  commissions,  but rather at net prices
which  usually  include  a  spread  or  markup.   In  effecting  such  portfolio
transactions on behalf of a Fund, such Fund's investment  adviser or sub-adviser
seeks the most favorable net price consistent with the best execution.  However,
frequently,  such investment adviser or sub-adviser selects a dealer to effect a
particular  transaction  without  contacting  all  dealers  who might be able to
effect such  transaction,  because of the  volatility of the bond market and the
desire of the investment adviser or sub-adviser to accept a particular price for
a security  because the price  offered by the dealer  meets its  guidelines  for
profit,  yield or both. No brokerage  commissions are expected to be paid by the
Funds.

     Decisions with respect to placement of a Fund's portfolio  transactions are
made by such Fund's investment adviser or sub-adviser. The primary consideration
in making these decisions is efficiency in the execution of orders and obtaining
the most  favorable  net  prices  for such  Fund.  When  consistent  with  these
objectives,  business may be placed with  broker-dealers  who furnish investment
research  services  to the  investment  adviser or  sub-adviser.  Such  research
services  include  advice,  both  directly  and in  writing,  as to the value of
securities;  the advisability of investing in, purchasing or selling securities;
and the availability of securities,  or purchasers or sellers of securities;  as
well as analyses and reports concerning issues, industries, securities, economic
factors and trends,  portfolio  strategy and the  performance of accounts.  This
allows the  investment  adviser or  sub-adviser to supplement its own investment
research  activities and enables the investment adviser or sub-adviser to obtain
the views and  information of individuals  and research staffs of many different
securities firms prior to making investment  decisions for a Fund. To the extent
portfolio  transactions  are effected with  broker-dealers  who furnish research
services to an investment  adviser or sub-adviser,  such  investment  adviser or
sub-adviser  receive a benefit,  not capable of  evaluation  in dollar  amounts,
without   providing  any  direct  monetary   benefit  to  the  Fund  from  these
transactions.

     The Funds'  investment  advisers and sub-adviser  have not entered into any
formal or informal agreements with any broker-dealers,  nor do they maintain any
"formula"  which must be followed in connection with the placement of the Funds'
portfolio transactions in exchange for research services provided the investment
advisers  or  sub-advisers,  except as noted  below.  However,  each  investment
adviser and sub-adviser  maintains an informal list of broker-dealers,  which is
used from time to time as a general guide in the placement of a Fund's business,
in order to encourage certain  broker-dealers to provide such investment adviser
or  sub-adviser  with  research   services  which  the  investment   adviser  or
sub-adviser  anticipates  will be  useful  to it.  Because  the list is merely a
general  guide,  which is to be used only after the  primary  criterion  for the
selection  of  broker-dealers   (discussed  above)  has  been  met,  substantial
deviations  from the list are  permissible  and may be  expected  to occur.  The
investment advisers and sub-adviser will authorize the Funds to pay an amount of
commission  for  effecting a securities  transaction  in excess of the amount of
commission  another  broker-dealer  would have  charged  only if the  investment
adviser or  sub-adviser  determines in good faith that such amount of commission
is reasonable  in relation to the value of the  brokerage and research  services
provided  by such  broker-dealer,  viewed  in terms of  either  that  particular
transaction   or   the   investment    adviser's   or   sub-adviser's    overall
responsibilities  with  respect  to  the  accounts  as  to  which  it  exercises
investment discretion.

     The Funds will not effect any  brokerage  transactions  in their  portfolio
securities  with any  broker-dealer  affiliated  directly or indirectly  with an
investment  adviser or  sub-adviser,  unless such  transactions,  including  the
frequency thereof,  the receipt of commissions  payable in connection  therewith
and the selection of the affiliated  broker-dealer  effecting such  transactions
are not unfair or  unreasonable  to the  shareholders of the Funds. In the event
any  transactions  are executed on an agency basis,  the  investment  adviser or
sub-adviser  will authorize the  respective  Fund to pay an amount of commission
for  effecting a securities  transaction  in excess of the amount of  commission
another  broker-dealer  would have  charged  only if the  investment  adviser or
sub-adviser  determines  in  good  faith  that  such  amount  of  commission  is
reasonable  in  relation to the value of the  brokerage  and  research  services
provided  by such  broker-dealer,  viewed  in terms of  either  that  particular
transaction   or   the   investment    adviser's   or   sub-adviser's    overall
responsibilities  with  respect  to the Fund or  Funds as to which it  exercises
investment discretion. If the Funds execute any transactions on an agency basis,
they will generally pay higher than the lowest commission rates available.

     In determining  the  commissions to be paid to a  broker-dealer  affiliated
with an investment  adviser or  sub-adviser,  it is the policy of the Funds that
such commissions will, in the judgment of the investment adviser or sub-adviser,
subject to review by the Board of  Directors,  be both (a) at least as favorable
as those which would be charged by other  qualified  brokers in connection  with
comparable  transactions involving similar securities being purchased or sold on
an exchange during a comparable period of time, and (b) at least as favorable as
commissions  contemporaneously  charged  by such  affiliated  broker-dealers  on
comparable   transactions  for  their  most  favored   comparable   unaffiliated
customers. While each Fund does not deem it practicable and in its best interest
to  solicit   competitive  bids  for  commission  rates  on  each   transaction,
consideration  will regularly be given to posted  commission rates as well as to
other  information  concerning  the level of  commissions  charged on comparable
transactions by other qualified brokers.

     Pursuant to conditions  set forth in rules of the  Securities  and Exchange
Commission,  the Funds may purchase securities from an underwriting syndicate of
which an  affiliated  broker-dealer  is a member  (but not  directly  from  such
affiliated broker-dealer itself). Such conditions relate to the price and amount
of the  securities  purchased,  the commission or spread paid and the quality of
the  issuer.  The rules  further  require  that  such  purchases  take  place in
accordance  with  procedures  adopted and reviewed  periodically by the Board of
Directors of the Funds,  particularly  those  directors  who are not  interested
persons of the Funds.

     Consistent  with the Rules of Fair Practice of the National  Association of
Securities Dealers,  Inc. and subject to the policies set forth in the preceding
paragraphs and such other policies as the Company's directors may determine, the
investment advisers and sub-adviser may consider sales of shares of the Funds as
a factor in the  selection of  broker-dealers  to execute the Funds'  securities
transactions.

                    NET ASSET VALUE AND PUBLIC OFFERING PRICE

     The method for determining the public offering price of Fund shares,  which
is equal to the net asset value per share, is summarized in the Prospectus.  The
portfolio  securities in which the Funds invest fluctuate in value and hence the
net asset value per share of each Fund also  fluctuates.  The net asset value of
each  Fund's  shares  is  determined  on each  day on which  the New York  Stock
Exchange is open,  provided  that the net asset value need not be  determined on
days when no Fund  shares  are  tendered  for  redemption  and no order for Fund
shares is received.  The New York Stock Exchange is not open for business on the
following holidays (or on the nearest Monday or Friday if the holiday falls on a
weekend): New Year's Day, President's Day, Good Friday,  Memorial Day, July 4th,
Labor Day, Thanksgiving and Christmas.

                                      TAXES

GENERAL INFORMATION

     To qualify  under  Subchapter  M of the Internal  Revenue Code of 1986,  as
amended (the "Code") for tax treatment as a regulated  investment company,  each
Fund must,  among other things:  (a) distribute to its shareholders at least 90%
of its  investment  company  taxable income (as that term is defined in the Code
determined  without regard to the deduction for dividends paid); (b) derive less
than 30% of its annual gross income from the sale or other disposition of stock,
securities,  options,  futures,  or forward  contracts  held for less than three
months;  and (c)  diversify  its  holdings  so that,  at the end of each  fiscal
quarter of the Fund,  (i) at least 50% of the market value of the Fund's  assets
is represented by cash, cash items, U.S. Government securities and securities of
other regulated  investment  companies,  and other securities,  with these other
securities limited, with respect to any one issuer, to an amount no greater than
5% of the Fund's total assets and no greater than 10% of the outstanding  voting
securities of such issuer, and (ii) not more than 25% of the market value of the
Fund's total assets is invested in the  securities of any one issuer (other than
U.S.  Government   securities  or  securities  of  other  regulated   investment
companies).

     Each Fund will be subject to a nondeductible  excise tax equal to 4% of the
excess,  if any,  of the taxable  amount  required  to be  distributed  for each
calendar  year over the  amount  actually  distributed.  In order to avoid  this
excise tax,  each Fund must declare  dividends  by the end of the calendar  year
representing  98% of the Fund's ordinary income for the calendar year and 98% of
its  capital  gain net income  (both  long-term  and  short-term  gains) for the
12-month  period  ending  on  October  31 of such  year.  For  purposes  of this
requirement,  any income with respect to which a Fund has paid corporate  income
tax is deemed to have been  distributed.  Each Fund  intends to make  sufficient
distributions each year to avoid the payment of the excise tax.

     When  shares  of a Fund  are  sold  or  otherwise  disposed  of,  the  Fund
shareholder will realize a capital gain or loss equal to the difference  between
the  purchase  price and the sale  price of the  shares  disposed  of, if, as is
usually the case,  the Fund shares are a capital  asset in the hands of the Fund
shareholder.  In addition,  pursuant to a special provision in the Code, if Fund
shares with respect to which a long-term capital gain distribution has been made
are held for six months or less,  any loss on the sale or other  disposition  of
such  shares will be a long-term  capital  loss to the extent of such  long-term
capital gain distribution.  Certain deductions  otherwise allowable to financial
institutions and property and casualty insurance companies will be eliminated or
reduced by reason of the receipt of certain exempt-interest dividends.

     Any loss on the sale or  exchange  of  shares of a Fund  generally  will be
disallowed  to the extent that a  shareholder  acquires or  contracts to acquire
shares of the same Fund within 30 days before or after such sale or exchange.

     Pursuant to the Code, distributions of net investment income by a Fund to a
shareholder who, as to the U.S., is a nonresident alien individual,  nonresident
alien  fiduciary  of  a  trust  or  estate,  foreign  corporation,   or  foreign
partnership  (a  "foreign  shareholder")  will  generally  be  subject  to  U.S.
withholding  tax (at a rate of 30% or lower treaty rate).  Withholding  will not
apply if a dividend paid by the Fund to a foreign  shareholder  is  "effectively
connected" with a U.S. trade or business of such shareholder,  in which case the
reporting and withholding  requirements  applicable to U.S. citizens or domestic
corporations  will apply.  Distributions of net long-term  capital gains are not
subject to tax  withholding  but, in the case of a foreign  shareholder who is a
nonresident alien individual,  such distributions  ordinarily will be subject to
U.S. income tax at a rate of 30% if the individual is physically  present in the
U.S.  for more than 182 days  during the  taxable  year.  Each Fund will  report
annually to its shareholders the amount of any withholding.  It is expected that
dividends  paid by the Funds  will not be  eligible  for the 70%  deduction  for
dividends received by corporations because the Funds' income will not consist of
dividends paid by U.S. corporations.

     The  foregoing  relates  only to federal  income  taxation and is a general
summary of the  federal  tax law in effect as of the date of this  Statement  of
Additional Information.

                             PERFORMANCE COMPARISONS

     Advertisements  and  other  sales  literature  for the  Funds  may refer to
"yield,"  "average annual total return,"  "cumulative total return" and "current
distribution  rate."  These  amounts  are  calculated  as  described  below.  No
performance  information is provided for the Funds because none of the Funds had
commenced operations as of the date of this Statement of Additional Information.

YIELD

     Yield is computed by dividing  the net  investment  income per share deemed
earned during the computation  period by the maximum offering price per share on
the last day of the period,  according to the following formula: 

                                             6
                    SEC YIELD = 2(((a-b) + 1)  -1)
                                    ---
                                     cd

          Where:    a = dividends and interest earned during the period;      
                    b = expenses accrued for the period (net of reimbursements);
                    c = the average  daily number of shares  outstanding  during
                        the period that were entitled to receive dividends; and
                    d = the maximum  offering price per share on the last day of
                        the period.

AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURN

     Average  annual  total  return is computed  by finding  the average  annual
compounded rates of return over the periods indicated in the advertisement  that
would  equate  the  initial  amount  invested  to the ending  redeemable  value,
according to the following formula:

                                        n
                                  P(1+T)  = ERV

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

This calculation deducts the maximum sales charge from the initial  hypothetical
$1,000  investment,  assumes all  dividends and capital gain  distributions  are
reinvested at net asset value on the appropriate reinvestment dates as described
in the Prospectus,  and includes all recurring fees, such as investment advisory
and management fees, charged as expenses to all shareholder accounts.

CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURN

     Cumulative  total return is computed by finding the  cumulative  compounded
rate of return over the period indicated in the advertisement  that would equate
the initial amount  invested to the ending  redeemable  value,  according to the
following formula: 

                    CTR =  ERV - P    
                           -------    100
                              P

         Where:     CTR = Cumulative total return;
                    ERV = ending  redeemable value at the end of the period of a
                          hypothetical  $1,000  payment made at the beginning of
                          such period; and
                     P  = initial payment of $1,000.

This calculation deducts the maximum sales charge from the initial  hypothetical
$1,000  investment,  assumes all  dividends and capital gain  distributions  are
reinvested at net asset value on the appropriate reinvestment dates as described
in the Prospectus,  and includes all recurring fees, such as investment advisory
and management fees, charged as expenses to all shareholder accounts.

DISTRIBUTION RATE

     A Fund's current  distribution rate as of a specified date is calculated by
determining  the  amount of  distributions  that  would  have been paid over the
twelve-month  period ending on such date to the holder of one hypothetical  Fund
share purchased at the beginning of such period, and dividing such amount by the
current offering price per share.

PERFORMANCE COMPARISONS

     Comparative  performance  information  may be  used  from  time  to time in
advertising each Fund's shares,  including data from Lipper Analytical Services,
Inc.,  Morningstar,  Inc. and other  entities or  organizations  which track the
performance  of  investment  companies.  Each  Fund's  performance  also  may be
compared to the performance of its Comparison Index, if any, as described in the
Prospectus,  and  to  the  performance  of the  following  additional  unmanaged
indices:   Unmanaged   indices   generally   do  not  reflect   deductions   for
administrative and management costs and expenses.

                                   REDEMPTIONS

     Redemption  of shares,  or payment,  may be suspended at times (a) when the
New York Stock  Exchange is closed for other than  customary  weekend or holiday
closings, (b) when trading on said Exchange is restricted, (c) when an emergency
exists,  as a result of which disposal by the Funds of securities  owned by them
is not reasonably practicable, or it is not reasonably practicable for the Funds
fairly to  determine  the value of their net  assets,  or (d)  during  any other
period  when the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission,  by order,  so permits,
provided that  applicable  rules and  regulations of the Securities and Exchange
Commission  shall govern as to whether the  conditions  prescribed in (b) or (c)
exist.

     A signature  guarantee  is required if a  redemption:  (1) exceeds  $50,000
(unless it is being  wired to a  pre-authorized  bank  account,  in which case a
guarantee  is not  required),  (2) is to be  paid  to  someone  other  than  the
registered  shareholder  or (3) is to be mailed  to an  address  other  than the
address of record or wired to an account other than the  pre-authorized  bank or
brokerage  account.  On  joint  account  redemptions,  each  signature  must  be
guaranteed. A signature guarantee may not be provided by a notary public. Please
contact the Underwriter  for  instructions  as to what  institutions  constitute
eligible  signature  guarantors.  The  Underwriter  may waive  certain  of these
redemption  requirements at its own risk, but also reserves the right to require
signature   guarantees  on  all  redemptions,   in  contexts  perceived  by  the
Underwriter to subject a Fund to an unusual degree of risk.

                             ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

COUNSEL; INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

     Dorsey & Whitney LLP, 220 South Sixth Street, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55402,
serves as general counsel for the Funds.

     KPMG Peat Marwick LLP, 4200 Norwest Center,  Minneapolis,  Minnesota 55402,
serves as the Funds' independent auditors.

SHAREHOLDER MEETINGS

     The Company is not  required  under  Minnesota  law or under the  Company's
Articles of  Incorporation  to hold  annual or  periodically  scheduled  regular
meetings of shareholders. Regular and special shareholder meetings are held only
at such times and with such frequency as required by law.  Minnesota law and the
Company's  Articles  of  Incorporation  provide  for the Board of  Directors  to
convene shareholder meetings when it deems appropriate.  Additionally,  the 1940
Act requires  shareholder  votes for all  amendments to  fundamental  investment
policies  and  restrictions  and  for  all  investment  advisory  contracts  and
amendments thereto.

LIMITATION OF DIRECTOR LIABILITY

     Under  Minnesota  law, each director of the Company owes certain  fiduciary
duties to each  Fund and to its  shareholders.  Minnesota  law  provides  that a
director "shall  discharge the duties of the position of director in good faith,
in a manner the director  reasonably  believes to be in the best interest of the
corporation,  and with the care an ordinarily  prudent person in a like position
would exercise under similar circumstances." Fiduciary duties of a director of a
Minnesota  corporation include,  therefore,  both a duty of "loyalty" (to act in
good faith and act in a manner  reasonably  believed to be in the best interests
of the  corporation)  and a duty of "care"  (to act with the care an  ordinarily
prudent person in a like position  would exercise under similar  circumstances).
Minnesota  corporations  are  authorized  to  eliminate  or limit  the  personal
liability  of a director to the  corporation  or its  shareholders  for monetary
damages  for breach of the  fiduciary  duty of "care".  Minnesota  law does not,
however,  permit a corporation  to eliminate or limit the liability of directors
(i) for any breach of the directors' duty of "loyalty" to the corporation or its
shareholders,  (ii)  for acts or  omissions  not in good  faith or that  involve
intentional  misconduct or a knowing  violation of law, (iii) for  authorizing a
dividend,  stock repurchase or redemption or other  distribution in violation of
Minnesota  law or for violation of certain  provisions  of Minnesota  securities
law, or (iv) for any  transaction  from which the directors  derived an improper
personal benefit.  The Articles of Incorporation of each of the Funds limits the
liability of such Funds'  directors to the fullest extent permitted by Minnesota
statutes, except to the extent that such liability cannot be limited as provided
in the 1940 Act (which Act prohibits any  provisions  which purport to limit the
liability of directors arising from such directors'  willful  misfeasance,  bath
faith,  gross  negligence,  or reckless  disregard of the duties involved in the
conduct of their role as directors).

     Minnesota  law  does  not  eliminate  the  duty of  "care"  imposed  upon a
director.  It only authorizes a corporation to eliminate  monetary liability for
violations of that duty. Minnesota law, further,  does not permit elimination or
limitation  of liability of "officers"  to the  corporation  for breach of their
duties as officers).  Minnesota law does not permit elimination or limitation of
the  availability  of equitable  relief,  such as  injunctive  or  rescissionary
relief.  Further,  Minnesota law does not permit  elimination or limitation of a
director's  liability under the 1933 Act or the Securities Exchange Act of 1934,
and it is  uncertain  whether  and to what  extent the  elimination  of monetary
liability  would extend to violations of duties imposed on directors by the 1940
Act and the rules and regulations adopted thereunder.

ORGANIZATION AND CAPITALIZATION OF THE FUNDS

     Each Fund has a fiscal year end of October 31.

     As described in the text of the Prospectus  following the caption  "General
Information,"  shares  of the  Funds are  entitled  to one vote per share  (with
proportional  voting for fractional  shares) on such matters as shareholders are
entitled to vote.  There will  normally be no meetings of  shareholders  for the
purpose of electing  directors,  except  insofar as elections are required under
the 1940 Act in the event that (i less than a  majority  of the  directors  have
been elected by  shareholders,  or (ii) if, as a result of a vacancy,  less than
two-thirds of the directors have been elected by the  shareholders,  the vacancy
will be filled only by a vote of the  shareholders.  In addition,  the directors
may be  removed  from  office by a written  consent  signed  by the  holders  of
two-thirds  of the  outstanding  shares of the Funds and filed  with the  Funds'
custodian or by a vote of the holders of two-thirds of the outstanding shares of
the Funds at a meeting duly called for the purpose,  which meeting shall be held
upon the written  request of the holders of not less than 10% of the outstanding
shares. Upon written request by ten or more shareholders, who have been such for
at least six months,  and who in the  aggregate  hold shares  having a net asset
value of at least $25,000 or constituting 1% of the outstanding shares,  stating
that such shareholders  wish to communicate with the other  shareholders for the
purpose of obtaining  the  signatures  necessary to demand a meeting to consider
removal  of a  director,  the  Funds  have  undertaken  to  provide  a  list  of
shareholders  or to  disseminate  appropriate  materials  (at the expense of the
requesting  shareholders).  Except  as set  forth  above,  each  director  shall
continue to hold office and may appoint a successor.

     The shares of the Funds  constitute  separate  series of the parent  entity
Voyageur Mutual Funds,  Inc. (the  "Company"),  a Minnesota  corporation,  which
currently offers its shares in four series.  Voyageur U.S. Government Securities
Fund  currently  is the only  other  series of the  Company.  All shares of each
series are non  assessable  and fully  transferable  when issued and paid for in
accordance with the terms thereof and possess no cumulative  voting,  preemptive
or conversion  rights. The Company's Board is empowered to issue other series of
common  stock or  common  shares  of  beneficial  interest  without  shareholder
approval.

     Each share of a series has one vote  irrespective of the relative net asset
value of the shares. On some issues, such as the election of Board members,  all
shares of the corporation vote together as one series of such corporation. On an
issue affecting only a particular series, the shares of the affected series vote
as a  separate  series.  One  such  example  would be a  fundamental  investment
restriction  pertaining to only one series. Another example is the voting on the
Investment  Advisory  Agreements.  Approval by the  shareholders of a particular
series is necessary to make such agreement effective as to that series.

     The assets  received by the  corporation for the issue or sale of shares of
each series,  and all income,  earnings,  profits and proceeds thereof,  subject
only to the rights of creditors, are allocated to such series and constitute the
underlying  assets of such  series.  The  underlying  assets of each  series are
required to be  segregated  on the books of account,  and are to be charged with
the expenses in respect to such series and with a share of the general  expenses
of the corporation or trust. Any general expenses of the corporation not readily
identifiable  as belonging to a particular  series shall be allocated  among the
series,  based  upon the  relative  net  assets  of the  series at the time such
expenses were accrued.

                                     PART C

                              VOYAGEUR FUNDS, INC.

                          VFI SHORT DURATION PORTFOLIO
                       VFI INTERMEDIATE DURATION PORTFOLIO
                               VFI CORE PORTFOLIO

                                OTHER INFORMATION

ITEM 24. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND EXHIBITS

     (a)  Financial statements --- Not applicable.

     (b)  EXHIBITS:
   
          1.1  Amended and Restated  Articles of  Incorporation,  dated November
               22,  filed as an Exhibit to  Post-Effective  Amendment  No. 17 to
               Form N-1A on October 31, 1995,  File Nos.  33-16270 and 811-5267,
               and incorporated herein by reference.
          1.2  Certification  of  Designation  of Series B, C and D, filed as an
               Exhibit to Post-Effective  Amendment No. 19 to Form N-1A on March
               15, 1996,  File Nos.  33-16270  and  811-5267,  and  incorporated
               herein by reference.
          1.3  Articles of  Correction,  dated July 27, 1994, to the Amended and
               Restated  Articles  of  Incorporation,  filed  as an  Exhibit  to
               Post-Effective Amendment No. 17 to Form N-1A on October 31, 1995,
               File Nos.  33-16270  and  811-5267,  and  incorporated  herein by
               reference.
          2    Bylaws,  as  amended  October  24,  1995,  filed as an Exhibit to
               Post-Effective  Amendment No. 18 to Form N-1A on January 3, 1996,
               File Nos.  33-16270  and  811-5267,  and  incorporated  herein by
               reference.
          3    Not applicable.
          4    Specimen  copy of  share  certificate,  filed  as an  Exhibit  to
               Post-Effective  Amendment No. 18 to Form N-1A on January 3, 1996,
               File Nos.  33-16270  and  811-5267,  and  incorporated  herein by
               reference.
          5.1  Investment Advisory Agreement with Marquette, filed as an Exhibit
               to  Post-Effective  Amendment  No.  19 to Form  N-1A on March 15,
               1996, File Nos. 33-16270 and 811-5267, and incorporated herein by
               reference.
          5.2  Investment  Advisory  Agreement  with Cadre,  filed as an Exhibit
               hereto.
          5.3  Investment  Sub-Advisory  Agreement with Voyageur Funds Managers,
               Inc., filed as an Exhibit to  Post-Effective  Amendment No. 19 to
               Form N-1A on March 15, 1996,  File Nos.  33- 16270 and  811-5267,
               and incorporated herein by reference.
          6    Distribution  Agreement,  filed as an Exhibit  to  Post-Effective
               Amendment  No.  19 to Form  N-1A on March  15,  1996,  File  Nos.
               33-16270 and 811-5267, and incorporated herein by reference.
          7    Not applicable.
          8    Custodian  Agreement,  filed  as  an  Exhibit  to  Post-Effective
               Amendment  No.  19 to Form N- 1A on March  15,  1996,  File  Nos.
               33-16270 and 811-5267, and incorporated herein by reference.
          9.1  Administrative  Services  Agreement,   filed  as  an  Exhibit  to
               Post-Effective  Amendment  No. 19 to Form N-1A on March 15, 1996,
               File Nos.  33-16270  and  811-5267,  and  incorporated  herein by
               reference.
          9.2  Service Plan, filed as an Exhibit to Post-Effective Amendment No.
               19 to Form  N-1A on  March  15,  1996,  File  Nos.  33-16270  and
               811-5267, and incorporated herein by reference.
          10   Opinion and Consent of Dorsey & Whitney,  with  respect to Series
               B, C and D, filed as an Exhibit to  Post-Effective  Amendment No.
               19 to Form  N-1A on March  15,  1996,  File  Nos.  33-  16270 and
               811-5267, and incorporated herein by reference.
          11   Not applicable.
          12   Not applicable.
          13   Letter   of   Investment   Intent,   filed  as  an   Exhibit   to
               Post-Effective  Amendment  No. 19 to Form N-1A on March 15, 1996,
               File Nos.  33-16270  and  811-5267,  and  incorporated  herein by
               reference.
          14   Not applicable.
          15   Plan of Distribution. Not applicable.
          16   Schedule for Computation of Performance Data. Not applicable.
          17.1 Power  of  Attorney,   filed  as  an  Exhibit  to  Post-Effective
               Amendment  No. 17 to Form N-1A on  October  31,  1995,  File Nos.
               33-16270 and 811-5267, and incorporated herein by reference.
          17.2 Financial Data Schedule to be filed  electronically as Exhibit 27
               pursuant to Rule 401 of Regulation S-T. Not applicable.
          18   Not Applicable.
    
ITEM 25.  PERSONS CONTROLLED BY OR UNDER COMMON CONTROL WITH REGISTRANT

         Voyageur serves as investment  manager to the following  closed-end and
open-end management investment companies:

         CLOSED-END INVESTMENT COMPANIES
         Voyageur Arizona Municipal Income Fund, Inc.
         Voyageur Colorado Insured Municipal Income Fund, Inc.
         Voyageur Florida Insured Municipal Income Fund
         Voyageur Minnesota Municipal Income Fund, Inc.
         Voyageur Minnesota Municipal Income Fund  II, Inc.
         Voyageur Minnesota Municipal Income Fund  III, Inc.

         OPEN-END INVESTMENT COMPANIES AND SERIES THEREOF 
         Voyageur Funds, Inc.
                  Voyageur U.S. Government Securities Fund
                  VOYAGEUR FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS SHORT DURATION PORTFOLIO
                  VOYAGEUR FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS INTERMEDIATE DURATION 
                   PORTFOLIO
                  VOYAGEUR FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS CORE PORTFOLIO
         Voyageur Insured Funds, Inc.
                  Voyageur Minnesota Insured Fund
                  Voyageur Arizona Insured Tax Free Fund
                  Voyageur National Insured Tax Free Fund
                  Voyageur Colorado Insured Tax Free Fund
         Voyageur Intermediate Tax Free Funds, Inc.
                  Voyageur Minnesota Limited Term Tax Free Fund
                  Voyageur National Limited Term Tax Free Fund
                  Voyageur Arizona Limited Term Tax Free Fund
                  Voyageur Colorado Limited Term Tax Free Fund
                  Voyageur California Limited Term Tax Free Fund
         Voyageur Investment Trust
                  Voyageur  Florida  Insured Tax Free Fund  
                  Voyageur California Insured Tax Free Fund 
                  Voyageur Kansas Tax Free Fund 
                  Voyageur Missouri Insured Tax Free Fund  
                  Voyageur New Mexico Tax Free Fund 
                  Voyageur Oregon  Insured Tax Free Fund
                  Voyageur Utah Tax Free Fund 
                  Voyageur Washington  Insured Tax Free Fund 
                  Voyageur Florida Tax Free Fund
         Voyageur Investment Trust II
                  Voyageur Florida Limited Term Tax Free Fund
         Voyageur Tax Free Funds, Inc.
                  Voyageur Minnesota Tax Free Fund
                  Voyageur North Dakota Tax Free Fund
         Voyageur Mutual Funds, Inc.
                  Voyageur Iowa Tax Free Fund
                  Voyageur Wisconsin Tax Free Fund
                  Voyageur Idaho Tax Free Fund
                  Voyageur Arizona Tax Free Fund
                  Voyageur California Tax Free Fund
                  Voyageur National Tax Free Fund
         Voyageur Mutual Funds II, Inc.
                  Voyageur Colorado Tax Free Fund
         Voyageur Mutual Funds III , Inc.
                  Voyageur Growth Stock Fund
                  Voyageur International Equity Fund
                  Voyageur Aggressive Growth Fund
                  Voyageur Growth and Income Fund
         VAM Institutional Funds, Inc.
                  VAM Global Fixed Income Fund
                  VAM Short Duration Government Agency Fund
                  VAM Intermediate Duration Government Agency Fund
                  VAM Government Mortgage Fund
                  VAM Short Duration Total Return Fund
                  VAM Intermediate Duration Total Return Fund
                  VAM Intermediate Duration Municipal Fund

ITEM 26.  NUMBER OF HOLDERS OF SECURITIES

     No  information  is  presented  for the  Funds  because  they  have not yet
commenced operations.

ITEM 27.  INDEMNIFICATION

     The  Registrant's  Articles of  Incorporation  and Bylaws  provide that the
Registrant shall indemnify such persons,  for such expenses and liabilities,  in
such  manner,  under such  circumstances,  and to such  extent as  permitted  by
Section 302A.521 of the Minnesota Statutes, as now enacted or hereafter amended;
provided,  however,  that no such  indemnification may be made if it would be in
violation of Section 17(h) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as now enacted
or  hereinafter  amended,  and any rules,  regulations  or releases  promulgated
thereunder.

     The Registrant may indemnify its officers and directors and other "persons"
acting in an "official capacity" (as such terms are defined in Section 302A.521)
pursuant to a  determination  by the board of directors or  shareholders  of the
Registrant as set forth in Section  302A.521,  by special legal counsel selected
by  the  board  or a  committee  thereof  for  the  purpose  of  making  such  a
determination,  or by a Minnesota  court upon  application of the person seeking
indemnification.  If a director  is seeking  indemnification  for conduct in the
capacity of director or officer of the Registrant,  then such director generally
may not be counted  for the  purpose of  determining  either the  presence  of a
quorum or such director's eligibility to be indemnified.

     In any case,  indemnification is proper only if the eligibility determining
body  decides  that the  person  seeking  indemnification  has (a) not  received
indemnification  for the same conduct from any other party or organization;  (b)
acted in good faith; (c) received no improper personal benefit;  (d) in the case
of  criminal  proceedings,  had no  reasonable  cause to believe the conduct was
unlawful;  (e)reasonably  believed  that the conduct was in the best interest of
the Registrant,  or in certain contexts, was not opposed to the best interest of
the  Registrant;  and (f) had not otherwise  engaged in conduct which  precludes
indemnification  under  either  Minnesota  or Federal  law  (including,  but not
limited  to,  conduct  constituting   willful  misfeasance,   bad  faith,  gross
negligence,  or reckless  disregard of duties as set forth in Section  17(h) and
(i) of the Investment Company Act of 1940).

     If a person is made or threatened  to be made a party to a proceeding,  the
person is  entitled,  upon  written  request  to the  Registrant,  to payment or
reimbursement  by the Registrant of reasonable  expenses,  including  attorneys'
fees  and  disbursements,  incurred  by the  person  in  advance  of  the  final
disposition of the  proceeding,  (a) upon receipt by the Registrant of a written
affirmation  by  the  person  of a good  faith  belief  that  the  criteria  for
indemnification  set forth in Section 302A.521 have been satisfied and a written
undertaking  by the  person to repay all  amounts so paid or  reimbursed  by the
Registrant, if it is ultimately determined that the criteria for indemnification
have not been satisfied, and (b) after a determination that the facts then known
to those  making the  determination  would not  preclude  indemnification  under
Section 302A.521. The written undertaking required by clause (a) is an unlimited
general obligation of the person making it, but need not be secured and shall be
accepted without reference to financial ability to make the repayment.

     Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities Act
of 1933 may be permitted to directors,  officers and controlling  persons of the
Registrant pursuant to the foregoing  provisions,  or otherwise,  the Registrant
has been advised that in the opinion of the Securities  and Exchange  Commission
such  indemnification  is against  public policy as expressed in the Act and is,
therefore,  unenforceable. In the event that a claim for indemnification against
such liabilities  (other than the payment by the Registrant of expenses incurred
or paid by a director,  officer or  controlling  person of the Registrant in the
successful  defense of any  action,  suit or  proceeding)  is  asserted  by such
director,  officer or controlling person in connection with the securities being
registered,  the Registrant  will,  unless,  in the opinion of its counsel,  the
matter  has  been  settled  by  controlling  precedent,  submit  to a  court  of
appropriate  jurisdiction  the question  whether such  indemnification  by it is
against  public policy as expressed in the Act and will be governed by the final
adjudication of such issue.

     The Registrant  undertakes to comply with the indemnification  requirements
of Investment Company Release 7221 (June 9, 1972) and Investment Company Release
11330 (September 2, 1980).

ITEM 28.  BUSINESS AND OTHER CONNECTIONS OF INVESTMENT ADVISER

     The name and  principal  occupation(s)  during the past two fiscal years of
each  director and  executive  officer of Marquette  Trust  Company,  Adviser to
Voyageur  Financial  Institution  Intermediate  Duration  Portfolio and Voyageur
Financial Institution Core Portfolio,  are set forth below. The business address
of each is 13100 Wayzata Boulevard, Suite 100, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55480.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
NAME AND ADDRESS              POSITION WITH ADVISER              PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION(S)
- ----------------              ---------------------              -----------------------
<S>                           <C>                                <C>
Albert J. Colianni, Jr.       Director                           Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of
                                                                 Marquette Bank, N.A. since January, 1995;
                                                                 Executive Vice President and Chief Operating
                                                                 Officer of Marquette Bancshares, Inc. Since
                                                                 January 1993.

Thomas H. Jenkins             Director                           President of Marquette Capital Bank since
                                                                 June 1993; Senior Vice President of Marquette 
                                                                 Bancshares, Inc. since January, 1993.


Robert B. Bean                Senior Vice President              Senior Vice President for Institutional Trust
                                                                 Services of  Marquette  Trust
                                                                 Company since January 1, 1995;
                                                                 previously Senior Vice President for
                                                                 Institution Trust  Services of 
                                                                 Marquette Bank Rochester from 
                                                                 January 1, 1994 to December 31, 1994.

Craig W. Huntley              President and                      President and Chairman of the Board
                              Chairman of the Board              of Marquette Trust Company since
                                                                 April 1, 1994; previously Senior Vice 
                                                                 President, Sales and Marketing,
                                                                 Commerce Bank of Kansas City
                                                                 from February 1990 to April 1994.  

James R. Bullard              Director                           President of Marquette Bank N.A., 
                                                                 Hutchinson office, since January 1,
                                                                 1995; previously President of Marquette 
                                                                 Bank,  Hutchinson from January 1, 1988 
                                                                 to January 1, 1995.  

Jai L. Kim                    Director                           Vice President and Corporate Counsel Marquette
a/k/a Jay L. Kim                                                 Bancshares, Inc. since August, 1993.
</TABLE>

     The name and  principal  occupation(s)  during the past two fiscal years of
each  director and  executive  officer of Cadre,  Adviser to Voyageur  Financial
Institution Short Duration Portfolio,  are set forth below. The business address
of each is 905 Marconi Avenue, Ronkonkoma, New York 11779.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
NAME AND ADDRESS              POSITION WITH ADVISER              PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION(S)
- ----------------              ---------------------              -----------------------
<S>                           <C>                                <C> 
William T. Sullivan, Jr.      Chairman of the Board              Director and Chairman of the Board 
                                                                 of Cadre Securities, Inc. since 1986.

Francis X. Sullivan           Director and President             Director of Cadre Securities, Inc.
                                                                 since 1986.

Joan M. Restivo               Director and Executive             Director of Cadre Securities, Inc. 
                              Vice President                     since 1986.

Dr. Richard I. Bauer          Director and Executive             Director and President of Cadre 
                              Vice President                     Securities, Inc. since 1986 and 1984 
                                                                 respectively.

Eileen M. McElroy             Senior Vice President              None

Beth A. Smith                 Director and Senior Vice           Director and Senior Vice President
                              President                          of Cadre Securities Inc. since 1995 
                                                                 and 1993, respectively.

Ralph T. Cianchetti           Vice President                     None

George J. Dittenhoefter       Vice President                     None

William M. Sullivan           Vice President                     None

Timothy P. Sullivan           Vice President                     None

D. Joon Yoo                   Vice President                     Vice President of Cadre Consulting
                                                                 Services, Inc. since 1994; previously,
                                                                 Portfolio Manager for Aetna Life and
                                                                 Casualty from 1981 to 1994.
</TABLE>
     The name and principal  occupations(s)  during the past two fiscal years of
each director and executive officer of the Sub-Adviser,  Voyageur Fund Managers,
Inc., to Voyageur  Financial  Institution  Intermediate  Duration  Portfolio and
Voyageur Financial Institution Core Portfolio, are set forth below. The business
address of each is 90 South Seventh Street, Suite 4400,  Minneapolis,  Minnesota
55402.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
NAME AND ADDRESS              POSITION WITH ADVISER         PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION(S)
- ----------------              ---------------------         -----------------------
<S>                           <C>                           <C>    
Michael E. Dougherty          Chairman                      Chairman of the Board, President and Chief
                                                            Executive Officer of Dougherty Financial
                                                            Group, Inc. ("DFG") and Chairman of
                                                            Voyageur, the Underwriter and Dougherty
                                                            Dawkins, Inc.

John G. Taft                  President and Director        See biographical information in Part B of the
                                                            Registration Statement.

Jane M. Wyatt                 Director and Chief            See  biographical  information  in Part B of the  
                              Investment Officer            Registration  Statement.

Edward J. Kohler              Director and Executive        Director and Executive Vice President of the Adviser
                              Vice President                and Director of the Underwriter since 1995;
                                                            previously, President and Director of Piper Capital 
                                                            Management Incorporated from 1985 to 1995. 

Frank C. Tonnemaker           Director and Executive        Director of Voyageur and the Underwriter
                              Vice President                since 1993;  Executive  Vice  President of
                                                            Voyageur  since 1994;  Vice  President of 
                                                            Voyageur from 1990 to 1994.  

Thomas J. Abood               General  Counsel              See  biographical information in Part B of the
                                                            Registration Statement. 

Kenneth R. Larsen             Treasurer                     See biographical information in Part B of the 
                                                            Registration Statement.  

Steven B. Johansen            Secretary and Chief           Secretary of DFG, the Underwriter and 
                              Financial Officer             Dougherty Dawkins, Incorporated ("DDI");
                                                            Chief Financial Officer of DFG, the 
                                                            Underwriter and DDI since 1995; previously, 
                                                            Treasurer of DFG and DDI from 1990 to 1995

Steven P. Eldredge            Vice President                See biographical information in Part B of the
                                                            Registration Statement.
</TABLE>

     Information  on the  business of  Registrant's  Adviser is contained in the
section  of the  Prospectus  entitled  "Management"  and in the  section  of the
Statement  of  Additional   Information   entitled  "The   Investment   Adviser,
Sub-Adviser and Underwriter" filed as part of this Registration Statement.

ITEM 29. PRINCIPAL UNDERWRITERS

     (a) Voyageur Fund  Distributors,  Inc., the underwriter of the Registrant's
shares,  is  principal  underwriter  for the shares of Voyageur  Tax Free Funds,
Inc., Voyageur Insured Funds, Inc., Voyageur  Intermediate Tax Free Funds, Inc.,
Voyageur Investment Trust,  Voyageur Investment Trust II, Voyageur Mutual Funds,
Inc.,  Voyageur  Mutual Funds II, Inc.,  Voyageur Mutual Funds III, Inc. and VAM
Institutional Funds, Inc., affiliated open-end management investment companies.

     (b) The directors of the  Underwriter  are the same as the directors of the
Adviser as set forth above in Item 28. The executive officers of the Underwriter
and the positions of these individuals with respect to the Registrant are:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                POSITIONS AND OFFICES             POSITIONS AND OFFICES
NAME                              WITH UNDERWRITER                  WITH REGISTRANT
- ----                              ----------------                  ---------------
<S>                                 <C>                                    <C> 
Michael E. Dougherty                Chairman                               None
Frank C. Tonnemaker                 President and Director                 None
Steven B. Johansen                  Secretary & CFO                        None
Kenneth R. Larsen                   Treasurer                              Treasurer
Thomas J. Abood                     General Counsel                        Secretary
Jane M. Wyatt                       Executive Vice President               Executive Vice President
John G. Taft                        Executive Vice President               President
</TABLE>

The address of each of the executive officers is 90 South Seventh Street,  Suite
4400, Minneapolis, Minnesota
55402.

          (c) Not applicable.

ITEM 30. LOCATION OF ACCOUNTS AND RECORDS

     The custodian  for  Registrant is Marquette  Trust  Company,  13100 Wayzata
Boulevard,  Suite 100 , Minneapolis,  Minnesota 55408. The dividend  disbursing,
administrative  and  accounting  services  agent of  Registrant is Voyageur Fund
Managers, Inc. The address of Voyageur Fund Managers, Inc. and the Registrant is
90 South Seventh Street, Suite 4400, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55402.

ITEM 31. MANAGEMENT SERVICES

         Not applicable.

ITEM 32. UNDERTAKINGS

     (a)  Not applicable.

     (b)  The Registrant  undertakes to file a post-effective  amendment,  using
          financial  statements which need not be certified,  within four to six
          months from the commencement of operations of each respective series.

     (c)  Each  recipient of a prospectus  of any series of the  Registrant  may
          request  the latest  Annual  Report of such  series,  and such  Annual
          Report will be furnished by the Registrant without charge.


                                   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 on Form N-1A to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned,  thereunto
duly  authorized,  in the City of Minneapolis and State of Minnesota on the 20th
day of March, 1996.

                              VOYAGEUR FUNDS, INC.



                              By /s/ John G. Taft
                                 --------------------------
                                 John G. Taft, President

     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 date indicated.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
SIGNATURE                                            TITLE                                DATE
- ---------                                            -----                                ----  
<S>                                           <C>                                         <C>  
/s/John G. Taft
- ------------------------------                President (Principal                        March /s/20, 1996
   John G. Taft                               Executive Officer) 

/s/Kenneth R. Larsen
- ------------------------------                Treasurer (Principal Financial              March /s/20, 1996
Kenneth R. Larsen                             and Accounting Officer)  

James W. Nelson*                              Director

Clarence G. Frame*                            Director

Robert J. Odegard*                            Director

Richard F. McNamara*                          Director

Thomas F. Madison*                            Director


*/s/ Thomas J. Abood                         Attorney-in-Fact                             March /s/20, 1996
 ------------------------------
Thomas J. Abood
 (Pursuant to Powers of Attorney dated January 24, 1995)
</TABLE>


                  INVESTMENT ADVISORY AND MANAGEMENT AGREEMENT


     This  AGREEMENT,  made as of this 20th day of March,  1996,  by and between
Voyageur  Funds,  Inc.,  a  Minnesota  corporation  (the  "Company"),  and Cadre
Consulting Services,  Inc., a corporation  organized and existing under the laws
of the State of New York (the "Adviser").

     1. INVESTMENT ADVISORY AND MANAGEMENT SERVICES.  The Company hereby engages
the Adviser, and the Adviser hereby agrees to act as investment adviser for, and
to manage the affairs, business and the investment of the assets of the Voyageur
Financial  Institutions  ("VFI") Short Duration  Portfolio series of the Company
(the "Fund").

     The  investment  of the assets of the Fund shall at all times be subject to
the  applicable  provisions of the Articles of  Incorporation  and Bylaws of the
Company  and the  Registration  Statement  on  Form  N1-A  of the  Fund  and any
representations   contained  in  the  Prospectus  and  Statement  of  Additional
Information  of the Fund and shall  conform to the  policies and purposes of the
Fund as set forth in such  Registration  Statement,  Prospectus and Statement of
Additional  Information and (a) as interpreted from time to time by the Board of
Directors  of the Company and (b)as may be amended or limited  from time to time
by such Board of Directors  and/or the  shareholders of the Fund as permitted by
the  Investment  Company Act of 1940,  as amended.  Within the  framework of the
investment  policies  of the Fund,  and  subject to such other  limitations  and
directions  as the  Board of  Directors  may from  time to time  prescribe,  the
Adviser shall have the sole and exclusive  responsibility  for the management of
the Fund's assets and the making and execution of all  investment  decisions for
the Fund.  The Adviser  shall  report to the Board of  Directors  of the Company
regularly at such reasonable  times and in such  reasonable  detail as the Board
may from time to time determine to be appropriate,  in order to permit the Board
to  determine  the  adherence of the Adviser to the  investment  policies of the
Fund.

     The Adviser  shall,  at its own expense,  furnish the Company with suitable
office space, and all necessary office  facilities,  equipment and personnel for
servicing the  investments of the Fund. The Adviser shall arrange,  if requested
by the Company, for officers,  employees or other Affiliated Persons (as defined
in  Section2(a)(3)  of the  Investment  Company Act of 1940,  as amended and the
rules,  regulations  and  releases  relating  thereto)  of the  Adviser to serve
without compensation from the Company as directors, officers or employees of the
Company if duly elected to such positions by Fund  shareholders  or directors of
the Company.

     The Adviser hereby acknowledges that all records necessary in the operation
of the Fund,  including  records  pertaining  to its  shareholders,  if any, and
investments,  are the property of the Company,  and in the event that a transfer
of management or investment  advisory services to someone other than the Adviser
should ever occur,  the Adviser  will  promptly,  and at its own cost,  take all
steps necessary to segregate such records and deliver them to the Company.

     2.  COMPENSATION  FOR SERVICES.  In payment for all  services,  facilities,
equipment  and  personnel,  and for other  costs of the Adviser  hereunder,  the
Company  shall pay to the  Adviser,  from the assets of the  respective  Fund, a
monthly  investment  advisory fee  equivalent  on an annual basis to .10% of the
average daily net assets of the Fund.

     For purposes of the calculation of such fee, "average daily net assets" for
a particular period shall be determined on the basis of the Fund's net assets as
determined  as of the close of each  business  day of the month  pursuant to the
currently  effective  prospectus  of the Fund.  Such fee shall be payable on the
fifth day of each calendar  month for services  performed  hereunder  during the
preceding month. If the Fund commences operations after the beginning of a month
or this  agreement  terminates  prior to the end of a month,  such fee  shall be
pro-rated  according to the proportion  which such portion of the month bears to
the full month.

     3. ALLOCATION OF EXPENSES.
        
     In addition to the fee  described  in Section 2 hereof,  the Fund shall pay
all its costs and  expenses  which are not  assumed by the  Adviser.  These Fund
expenses include, by way of example,  but not by way of limitation,  fees of the
directors who are not employees of the investment  adviser or sub-adviser of any
series of the  Company or of any  affiliate  of any such  investment  adviser or
sub-adviser,  expenses of directors' and shareholders'  meetings,  including the
cost of  printing  and  mailing  proxies,  expenses of  insurance  premiums  for
fidelity and other coverage,  expenses of redemption of shares,  expenses of the
issue and sale of shares (to the extent not borne by Voyageur Fund Distributors,
Inc.  (the  "Underwriter")  under its  agreement  with the  Fund),  expenses  of
printing  and  mailing  stock  certificates  representing  shares  of the  Fund,
association  membership dues, charges of the Fund's custodian,  and bookkeeping,
auditing  and  legal  expenses.  The  Fund  will  also pay the fees and bear the
expense of registering  and  maintaining  the  registration  of the Fund and its
shares with the Securities and Exchange Commission and registering or qualifying
its shares under state or other securities laws and the expense of preparing and
mailing prospectuses, reports and statements to shareholders.

     4. LIMIT ON EXPENSES. If the total expenses of the Fund for any fiscal year
(including  the fees  payable to the  Adviser  but  excluding  interest,  taxes,
brokerage  commissions  or other costs of  acquiring  or disposing of any of the
Fund's portfolio  securities,  distribution fees, litigation and indemnification
expenses and other extraordinary expenses not incurred in the ordinary course of
the Fund's  business,  all to the extent  permitted by applicable  state law and
regulation)  exceed any expense  limitation imposed by applicable state law, the
Adviser shall reimburse the Fund for such excess in the manner and to the extent
required by applicable state law; provided,  however,  that at no time shall the
Adviser be required to make  reimbursements  for any fiscal  period in excess of
fees received pursuant to Section 2 hereof for that same period.

     5. FREEDOM TO DEAL WITH THIRD PARTIES.  The Adviser shall be free to render
services  to others  similar  to those  rendered  under this  Agreement  or of a
different  nature  except as such  services may conflict with the services to be
rendered or the duties to be assumed hereunder.

     6. REPORTS TO DIRECTORS  OF THE FUND.  Appropriate  officers of the Adviser
shall provide the directors of the Company with such necessary information as is
reasonably required by any plan of distribution adopted by the Company on behalf
of the Fund pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the Act.

     7. EFFECTIVE DATE,  DURATION AND  TERMINATION OF Agreement.  This Agreement
shall become  effective  with respect to the Fund on the  effective  date of the
post-effective  amendment to the Company's  Registration  Statement on Form N1-A
first  registering  shares of the Fund.  Wherever referred to in this Agreement,
the vote or approval of the holders of a majority of the  outstanding  shares of
the Fund  shall  mean the  lesser  of (I) the vote of 67% or more of the  voting
shares of the Fund present at a regular or special meeting of shareholders  duly
called, if more than 50% of the Fund's  outstanding voting shares are present or
represented  by  proxy,  or (ii)  the vote of more  than 50% of the  outstanding
voting shares of the Fund.

     Unless sooner  terminated as hereinafter  provided,  this  Agreement  shall
continue in effect for a period of two years from the date of its execution, and
thereafter  shall  continue  in  effect  only so long  as  such  continuance  is
specifically  approved at least  annually  (I) by the Board of  Directors of the
Company or by the vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the
Fund, and (ii) by the vote of a majority of the directors of the Company who are
not parties to this Agreement or "interested persons", as defined in the Act, of
the Adviser or the Company cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of
voting on such approval.

     This  Agreement may be  terminated at any time,  without the payment of any
penalty,  by the vote of the Board of Directors of the Company or by the vote of
the  holders  of a majority  of the  outstanding  shares of the Fund,  or by the
Adviser,  upon sixty (60) days written notice to the other party. This Agreement
shall  automatically  terminate in the event of its assignment as defined in the
Investment Company Act of 1940 and the rules thereunder, provided, however, that
such automatic  termination  shall be prevented in a particular case by an order
of exemption from the Securities and Exchange  Commission or a no-action  letter
of the Staff of the  Commission  to the  effect  that such  assignment  does not
require  termination as a statutory or regulatory  matter.  This Agreement shall
automatically  terminate upon  completion of the  dissolution,  liquidation  and
winding up of the Fund.

     8. LIMITATION OF LIABILITY. The Adviser will not be liable for any error of
judgment  or  mistake  of  law or for  any  loss  suffered  by the  Fund  or its
shareholders  in  connection  with the  performance  of its  duties  under  this
Agreement, except a loss resulting from willful misfeasance,  bad faith or gross
negligence  on its  part in the  performance  of its  duties  or  from  reckless
disregard by it of its duties under this Agreement.

     9. AMENDMENTS TO AGREEMENT.  No material  amendment to this Agreement shall
be effective until approved by the vote of: (I) the majority of the directors of
the Company who are not parties to this  Agreement or  "interested  persons" (as
defined in the Act) of the Adviser or of the Company cast in person at a meeting
called for the  purpose of voting on such  approval;  and (ii) the  holders of a
majority of the outstanding shares of the Fund.

     10.  NOTICES.  Any  notice  under  this  Agreement  shall  be  in  writing,
addressed,  delivered  or mailed,  postage  prepaid,  to the other  party at the
following  address,  or at such other  address as either party may  designate in
writing from time to time:

If to the Adviser: Cadre Consulting Services, Inc.
                   905 Marconi Ave.
                   Ronkonkoma, NY 11779-7255
                   Attn.: William M. Sullivan, Esq.

If to the Fund:    VFI Short Duration Portfolio
                   90 South Seventh Street, Suite 4400
                   Minneapolis, MN 55402
                   Attn.: Thomas J. Abood, Esq.

     IN WITNESS WHEREOF,  the Company and the Adviser have caused this Agreement
to be  executed  by  their  duly  authorized  officers  as of the day  and  year
indicated below.
                                        VOYAGEUR FUNDS, INC.



Date:/s/03/20/96                        By:/s/John G. Taft
                                            ------------------------------
                                              John G. Taft

                                          Title: /s/President
                                                 -------------------------
                                                    President


                                        CADRE CONSULTING SERVICES, INC.


Date:/s/03/20/96                         By /s/Francis X. Sullivan
                                           -------------------------------
                                              Francis X. Sullivan

                                          Title: /s/President
                                                 -------------------------
                                                     President


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