HANCOCK JOHN TAX FREE BOND FUND
497, 1996-10-03
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                      JOHN HANCOCK HIGH YIELD TAX-FREE FUND

                       Statement of Additional Information
                               September 30, 1996


This Statement of Additional Information provides information about John Hancock
High Yield  Tax-Free  Fund (the "Fund"),  a  diversified  series of John Hancock
Tax-Free  Bond Trust (the  "Trust"),  in  addition  to the  information  that is
contained in the Fund's Prospectus dated September 30, 1996 (the "Prospectus").

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

                   John Hancock Investor Services Corporation
                                  P.O. Box 9116
                        Boston, Massachusetts 02205-9116
                                 1-800-225-5291


                                TABLE OF CONTENTS


                                                                           Page

Organization of the Fund................................................     1
Investment Objective and Policies.......................................     2
Certain Investment Practices............................................     3
Investment Restrictions.................................................    14
Those Responsible for Management........................................    17
Investment Advisory and Other Services..................................    24
Distribution Agreement..................................................    27
Net Asset Value.........................................................    28
Initial Sales Charge on Class A Shares..................................    29
Deferred Sales Charge on Class B Shares.................................    31
Special Redemptions.....................................................    35
Additional Services and Programs........................................    35
Description of the Fund's Shares........................................    36
Tax Status..............................................................    37
Calculation of Performance..............................................    42
Brokerage Allocation....................................................    44
Transfer Agent Services.................................................    46
Custody of Portfolio....................................................    46
Independent Auditors....................................................    46
Appendix................................................................    47
Financial Statements

<PAGE>

ORGANIZATION OF THE FUND

John Hancock High Yield  Tax-Free  Fund (the "Fund") is organized as a separate,
diversified  series of John  Hancock  Tax-Free  Bond  Trust  (the  "Trust"),  an
open-end  management  investment  company organized as a Massachusetts  business
trust under the laws of The Commonwealth of Massachusetts.  Prior to the date of
this Statement of Additional Information,  the Fund was a series of John Hancock
Series, Inc.

John Hancock  Advisers,  Inc. (the "Adviser") acts as investment  adviser to the
Fund. The Adviser is an indirect, wholly owned subsidiary of John Hancock Mutual
Life Insurance  Company (the "Life  Company"),  a  Massachusetts  life insurance
company  chartered in 1862,  with national  headquarters  at John Hancock Place,
Boston, Massachusetts.

INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE AND POLICIES

The Fund's  primary  investment  objective  is to obtain a high level of current
income that is largely exempt from federal  income taxes and is consistent  with
the  preservation  of  capital.  The Fund  pursues  this  objective  by normally
investing   substantially  all  of  its  assets  in  medium  and  lower  quality
obligations, including bonds, notes and commercial paper, issued by or on behalf
of states,  territories  and  possessions of the United States,  The District of
Columbia and their political  subdivisions,  agencies or instrumentalities,  the
interest on which is exempt from federal income tax  ("tax-exempt  securities").
The Fund seeks as its secondary objective  preservation of capital by purchasing
and selling interest rate futures contracts ("financial futures") and tax-exempt
bond index futures  contracts ("index  futures"),  and by purchasing and writing
put and call options on debt  securities,  financial  futures,  tax-exempt  bond
indices  and index  futures to hedge  against  changes in the  general  level of
interest  rates.  There  can be no  assurance  that the Fund  will  achieve  its
investment objectives.

As a fundamental policy, the Fund invests, in normal circumstances, at least 80%
of its total assets in municipal bonds ("Municipal Bonds") rated, at the time of
purchase, "A," "Baa" or "Ba" by Moody's Investor Services, Inc. ("Moody's");  or
"A", "BBB" or "BB" by Standard and Poor's Ratings Group ("S&P"); or, if unrated,
that are of comparable  quality as determined  by the Adviser.  Municipal  Bonds
rated lower than "Ba" or "BB" may be bought by the Fund. However,  the Fund will
limit its investments in such securities to not more than 5% of its total assets
at the time of purchase.  The Fund may invest in Municipal Bonds with ratings as
low as "CC" by S&P or "Ca" by Moody's, but will invest in securities rated lower
than ""Ba" or "BB" only where,  in the opinion of the  Adviser,  the rating does
not  accurately  reflect  the true  quality  of the credit of the issuer and the
quality of such  securities is  comparable to that of securities  rated at least
"Ba" or "BB." The rating limitations  applicable to the Fund's investments apply
at the time of acquisition of a security; any subsequent change in the rating or
quality of a security will not require the Fund to sell the security.  A general
description of Moody's and S&P's ratings is set forth in Appendix A.

"Tax-exempt securities" are debt obligations generally issued by or on behalf of
states,  territories  and  possessions  of the United  States,  the  District of
Columbia and their political  subdivisions,  agencies or  instrumentalities  the
interest on which,  in the opinion of the bond issuer's  counsel (not the Fund's
counsel),  is excluded from gross income for federal income tax purposes.  These
securities consist of Municipal Bonds,  municipal notes and municipal commercial
paper  as well as  variable  or  floating  rate  obligations  and  participation
interests.

In  addition to the  hedging  strategies  employed by the Fund in pursuit of its
secondary  objective of  preservation  of capital,  the Fund can purchase  bonds
rated "BBB" and "BB" or "Baa" and "Ba,"  where  based upon price,  yield and the
Adviser's  assessment  of quality,  investment in such bonds is determined to be
consistent with the Fund's  secondary  objective of preserving  capital.  To the

                                       2

<PAGE>

extent  that the Fund  purchases,  retains  or  disposes  of such bonds for this
purpose,  the Fund may not earn as high a yield as might otherwise be obtainable
from lower quality securities.

While the Fund  normally  will  invest  primarily  in medium  and lower  quality
Municipal Bonds as indicated  above, it may invest in higher quality  tax-exempt
securities,   particularly   when  the  difference  in  returns  between  rating
classifications is very narrow.

To the  extent  that the Fund  does not  invest  in  medium  and  lower  quality
Municipal  Bonds, it will attempt to invest its assets in tax-exempt  securities
that are rated at least as high as follows:

(1)      Municipal Commercial Paper rated "MIG-3" by Moody's, or "A-3" by S&P;
(2)      Municipal Notes rated "MIG-3" by Moody's or "SP-2" by S&P; and
(3)      Municipal Variable Rate Demand Obligations rated "VMIG3"
         by Moody's, or "SP2/A-3" and "A/A-3" by S&P.

For temporary  purposes (such as pending new investments) or liquidity  purposes
(such as to meet redemption  obligations),  the Fund may invest up to 20% of its
total assets in taxable short-term debt securities with remaining  maturities of
one year or less ("money market instruments"),  including obligations guaranteed
or issued by the U.S.  Government,  its  agencies  or  instrumentalities  ("U.S.
Government  securities"),  high quality corporate debt securities,  high quality
commercial  paper,  certificates  of deposit,  bankers'  acceptances and related
repurchase agreements.

For defensive  purposes,  the Fund may  temporarily  invest more than 20% of the
value of its  total  assets in  taxable  money  market  instruments  to  enhance
liquidity or preserve capital when, in the Adviser's opinion, it is advisable to
do so  because  of  prevailing  market  conditions  so long as at the end of any
quarter of its taxable year,  tax-exempt securities comprise at least 50% of the
Fund's total assets.

CERTAIN INVESTMENT PRACTICES

Government Securities. The Fund may invest in U.S. Government securities,  which
are  obligations  issued or guaranteed by the U.S.  Government and its agencies,
authorities or instrumentalities.  Certain U.S. Government securities, including
U.S.  Treasury  bills,  notes  and  bonds,  and  Government   National  Mortgage
Association  certificates  ("Ginnie Maes"),  are supported by the full faith and
credit of the United States. Certain other U.S. Government securities, issued or
guaranteed by Federal  agencies or  government  sponsored  enterprises,  are not
supported  by the  full  faith  and  credit  of the  United  States,  but may be
supported  by the right of the issuer to borrow  from the U.S.  Treasury.  These
securities  include  obligations  of the Federal Home Loan Mortgage  Corporation
("Freddie   Macs"),   and   obligations   supported   by  the   credit   of  the
instrumentality,  such as Federal National  Mortgage  Association Bonds ("Fannie
Maes").  No  assurance  can be  given  that  the U.S.  Government  will  provide
financial support to such Federal agencies,  authorities,  instrumentalities and
government sponsored enterprises in the future.

Custodial  Receipts.  The Fund may acquire custodial receipts in respect of U.S.
Government  securities.  Such custodial  receipts  evidence  ownership of future
interest  payments,  principal payments or both on certain notes or bonds. These
custodial  receipts are known by various  names,  including  Treasury  Receipts,
Treasury  Investors  Growth Receipts  ("TIGRs"),  and Certificates of Accrual on
Treasury  Securities  ("CATS").  For certain securities law purposes,  custodial
receipts are not considered U.S. Government securities.

Bank and  Corporate  Obligations.  The  Fund may  invest  in  commercial  paper.
Commercial  paper  represents  short-term  unsecured  promissory notes issued in

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<PAGE>

bearer  form by  banks  or bank  holding  companies,  corporations  and  finance
companies.  The commercial  paper  purchased by the Fund consists of direct U.S.
dollar denominated  obligations of domestic or foreign issuers. Bank obligations
in  which  the  Fund  may  invest  include  certificates  of  deposit,  bankers'
acceptances  and fixed time  deposits.  Certificates  of deposit are  negotiable
certificates  issued against funds deposited in a commercial bank for a definite
period of time and earning a specified return.

Bankers' acceptances are negotiable drafts or bills of exchange,  normally drawn
by an importer or exporter to pay for specific merchandise, which are "accepted"
by a bank, meaning, in effect, that the bank  unconditionally  agrees to pay the
face  value  of the  instrument  on  maturity.  Fixed  time  deposits  are  bank
obligations  payable at a stated  maturity date and bearing  interest at a fixed
rate. Fixed time deposits may be withdrawn on demand by the investor, but may be
subject  to  early  withdrawal   penalties  which  vary  depending  upon  market
conditions  and  the  remaining  maturity  of  the  obligation.   There  are  no
contractual  restrictions  on the right to transfer a  beneficial  interest in a
fixed  time  deposit  to a third  party,  although  there is no market  for such
deposits.  Bank notes and bankers'  acceptances  rank junior to domestic deposit
liabilities of the bank and pari passu with other senior,  unsecured obligations
of the bank.  Bank  notes  are not  insured  by the  Federal  Deposit  Insurance
Corporation  or any other  insurer.  Deposit  notes are  insured by the  Federal
Deposit  Insurance  Corporation only to the extent of $100,000 per depositor per
bank.

Municipal Obligations. The Fund may invest in a variety of municipal obligations
which  consist of municipal  bonds,  municipal  notes and  municipal  commercial
paper.

Municipal  Bonds.  Municipal bonds are issued to obtain funds for various public
purposes including the construction of a wide range of public facilities such as
airports,  highways, bridges, schools, hospitals,  housing, mass transportation,
streets and water and sewer  works.  Other public  purposes for which  municipal
bonds may be issued include refunding outstanding  obligations,  obtaining funds
for general  operating  expenses  and  obtaining  funds to lend to other  public
institutions   and  facilities.   In  addition,   certain  types  of  industrial
development  bonds (often referred to as "private activity bonds") are issued by
or on behalf  of public  authorities  to obtain  funds for many  types of local,
privately operated facilities. The payment of the principal and interest on such
bonds is generally  dependent  solely on the ability of the  facility's  user to
meet its  financial  obligations  and the pledge,  if any, of real and  personal
property so financed as security for such  payment.  Such debt  instruments  are
considered  municipal  obligations  if the interest  paid on them is exempt from
federal income tax.

The  payment of  principal  and  interest  by  issuers  of  certain  obligations
purchased by the Fund may be guaranteed by a letter of credit,  note  repurchase
agreement,  insurance or other credit  facility  agreement  offered by a bank or
other  financial  institution.  Such  guarantees  and  the  creditworthiness  of
guarantors will be considered by the Adviser in determining  whether a municipal
obligation  meets the Fund's credit  quality  requirements.  No assurance can be
given that a  municipality  or guarantor  will be able to satisfy the payment of
principal or interest on a municipal obligation.

Municipal Notes.  Municipal notes are short-term  obligations of municipalities,
generally with a maturity  ranging from six months to three years. The principal
types of such notes include tax, bond and revenue anticipation notes and project
notes.

Municipal   Commercial  Paper.   Municipal  commercial  paper  is  a  short-term
obligation of a municipality,  generally issued at a discount with a maturity of
less than one year.  Such paper is likely to be issued to meet seasonal  working
capital needs of a municipality  or interim  construction  financing.  Municipal
commercial  paper  is  backed  in many  cases  by  letters  of  credit,  lending
agreements,  note  repurchase  agreements  or other credit  facility  agreements
offered by banks and other institutions.

                                       4

<PAGE>

Federal tax legislation enacted in the 1980s placed substantial new restrictions
on the issuance of the bonds  described  above and in some cases  eliminated the
ability of state or local governments to issue municipal obligations for some of
the above  purposes.  Such  restrictions  do not affect the  Federal  income tax
treatment  of  municipal  obligations  in which the Fund may  invest  which were
issued  prior  to  the  effective   dates  of  the   provisions   imposing  such
restrictions.  The effect of these  restrictions  may be to reduce the volume of
newly issued municipal obligations.

Issuers of municipal  obligations  are subject to the  provisions of bankruptcy,
insolvency and other laws  affecting the rights and remedies of creditors,  such
as the  Federal  Bankruptcy  Act,  and laws,  if any,  which may be  enacted  by
Congress or state  legislatures  extending  the time for payment of principal or
interest,  or both,  or imposing  other  constraints  upon  enforcement  of such
obligations.  There is also the  possibility  that as a result of  litigation or
other conditions the power or ability of any one or more issuers to pay when due
the principal of and interest on their municipal obligations may be affected.

Lower Rated High Yield Debt Obligations.  As described in "Investment  Objective
and  Policies,"  the Fund may invest in high yielding debt  securities  that are
rated  below  investment  grade  (i.e.,  rated Baa or lower by Moody's or BBB or
lower by S&P). Ratings are based largely on the historical  financial  condition
of the issuer.  Consequently,  the rating assigned to any particular security is
not necessarily a reflection of the issuer's current financial condition,  which
may be better or worse than the rating  would  indicate.  The Fund may invest in
comparable  quality  unrated  securities  which,  in the opinion of the Adviser,
offer comparable yields and risks to those securities which are rated.

Debt securities rated lower than Baa or BBB by Moody's or S&P,  respectively and
unrated   securities  of  comparable  quality  (commonly  called  "junk  bonds")
generally  have larger price  fluctuations  and involve  increased  risks to the
principal and interest than do higher rated securities. Many of these securities
are considered to be speculative  investments.  In general, these risks include:
(1) substantial market price volatility; (2) changes in credit status, including
weaker  overall  credit  condition  of  issuers  and risks of  default;  and (3)
industry,  market and economic risks,  including limited liquidity and secondary
market support.

The market price and liquidity of lower rated fixed income securities  generally
respond to short-term corporate and market developments to a greater extent than
the price and liquidity of higher rated securities,  because these  developments
are perceived to have a more direct  relationship to the ability of an issuer of
lower rated securities to meet its ongoing debt obligations.

Reduced  volume and  liquidity  in the high  yield high risk bond  market or the
reduced  availability of market quotations may make it more difficult to dispose
of the bonds and to value accurately the Fund's assets. The reduced availability
of reliable,  objective  data may increase the Fund's  reliance on  management's
judgment  in  valuing  high  yield  high risk  bonds.  In  addition,  the Fund's
investments  in high yield high risk  securities  may be  susceptible to adverse
publicity  and investor  perceptions,  whether or not  justified by  fundamental
factors.

The yields of municipal  bonds depend upon,  among other  things,  general money
market conditions,  general  conditions of the municipal bond market,  size of a
particular offering, the maturity of the obligation and rating of the issue. The
ratings of Standard & Poor's Ratings Group ("S&P"),  Moody's Investors  Service,
Inc.   ("Moody's")  and  Fitch  Investors  Service  ("Fitch")   represent  their
respective  opinions on the quality of the  municipal  bonds they  undertake  to
rate.  It should be  emphasized,  however,  that  ratings  are  general  and not
absolute  standards  of  quality.  Consequently,  municipal  bonds with the same
maturity, coupon and rating may have different yields and municipal bonds of the
same maturity and coupon with different ratings may have the same yield. See the
Appendix for a description of ratings.  Many issuers of securities choose not to
have their obligations rated.  Although unrated securities eligible for purchase

                                       5

<PAGE>

by the Fund must be determined to be comparable in quality to securities  having
certain specified ratings, the market for unrated securities may not be as broad
as for rated  securities since many investors rely on rating  organizations  for
credit appraisal.

Credit and Interest  Rate Risks.  Investors  should note that while ratings by a
rating  institution  provide a generally  useful guide to credit risks,  they do
not, nor do they purport to, offer any  criteria for  evaluating  interest  rate
risk.  Changes in the general level of interest rates cause  fluctuations in the
prices of fixed-income  securities already outstanding and will therefore result
in  fluctuation  in net asset value of the shares of the Fund. The extent of the
fluctuation is determined by a complex  interaction of a number of factors.  The
Adviser  will  evaluate  those  factors  it  considers  relevant  and will  make
portfolio  changes when it deems it appropriate in seeking to reduce the risk of
depreciation  in the value of the  Fund's  portfolio.  However,  in  seeking  to
achieve  the  Fund's  primary  objective,  there  will be times,  such as during
periods  of  rising  interest  rates,   when  depreciation  and  realization  of
comparable losses on securities in the portfolio will be unavoidable.  Moreover,
medium and lower-rated  securities and unrated  securities of comparable quality
tend to be subject to wider  fluctuations in yield and market values than higher
rated securities.  Such fluctuations  after a security is acquired do not affect
the cash income  received  from that security but are reflected in the net asset
value of the Fund's portfolio. Other risks of lower quality securities include:

         (i)      subordination  to the prior  claims of banks and other  senior
                  lenders and

         (ii)     the  operation  of mandatory  sinking fund or  call/redemption
                  provisions during periods of declining  interest rates whereby
                  the Fund may reinvest premature  redemption  proceeds in lower
                  yielding portfolio securities.

In determining  which securities to purchase or hold in the Fund's portfolio and
in seeking to reduce  credit and interest rate risk  consistent  with the Fund's
investment  objective and policies,  the Adviser will rely on  information  from
various sources,  including: the rating of the security;  research, analysis and
appraisals of brokers and dealers;  the views of the Trust's Trustees and others
regarding economic  developments and interest rate trends; and the Adviser's own
analysis of factors it deems  relevant as it  pertains to  achieving  the Fund's
investment objectives.

Municipal Lease Obligations. The Fund may purchase participation interests which
give the Fund an  undivided  pro rata  interest in a  tax-exempt  security.  For
certain participation interests, the Fund will have the right to demand payment,
on a  specified  number  of  days'  notice  for all or any  part  of the  Fund's
participation  interest  in  the  tax-exempt  security  plus  accrued  interest.
Participation  interests which are determined to be not readily  marketable will
be considered  illiquid for purposes of the Fund's 10% restriction on investment
in illiquid securities.

The Fund may also  invest  in  certificates  of  participation  ("COPs"),  which
provide  participation  interests  in  lease  revenues.  Each COP  represents  a
proportionate  interest  in or right to the  lease-purchase  payment  made under
municipal  lease  obligations or installment  sales  contracts.  Municipal lease
obligations  are issued by a state or municipal  financing  authority to provide
funds for the construction of facilities  (e.g.,  schools,  dormitories,  office
buildings or prisons) or the acquisition of equipment.  Certain  municipal lease
obligations may trade infrequently. Accordingly, COPs will be monitored pursuant
to analysis by the Adviser and reviewed  according to procedures  adopted by the
Board of Trustees,  which  considers  various  factors in determining  liquidity
risk.  COPs will not be  considered  illiquid  for  purposes  of the  Fund's 10%
limitation on illiquid securities, provided the Adviser determines that there is
a readily available market for such securities. An investment in COPs is subject
to the risk that a municipality  may not  appropriate  sufficient  funds to meet
payments on the underlying lease obligation.

                                       6

<PAGE>

Callable  Bonds.  The Fund may purchase and hold callable  Municipal Bonds which
contain a provision in the indenture  permitting  the issuer to redeem the bonds
prior to their maturity dates at a specified  price which  typically  reflects a
premium  over the bonds'  original  issue  price.  These  bonds  generally  have
call-protection  (a period of time  during  which the bonds may not be  called),
which usually lasts for 7 to 10 years, after which time such bonds may be called
away.  An issuer may  generally  be expected to call its bonds,  or a portion of
them during periods of relatively  declining interest rates, when borrowings may
be replaced at lower rates than those  obtained in prior years.  If the proceeds
of a bond called under such  circumstances  are reinvested,  the result may be a
lower overall yield due to lower current  interest  rates. If the purchase price
of such bonds included a premium related to the appreciated  value of the bonds,
some or all of that  premium may not be recovered  by  bondholders,  such as the
Fund, depending on the price at which such bonds were redeemed.

Variable  and  Floating  Rate  Obligations.  The Fund may invest in variable and
floating rate obligations, including inverse floating rate obligations, on which
the interest rate is adjusted at predesignated  periodic intervals or when there
is a change in the market rate of interest on which the interest rate payable on
the obligation is based.  Variable and floating rate  obligations  may include a
demand  feature  which  entitles  the  purchaser  to  demand  prepayment  of the
principal  amount  prior  to  stated  maturity.  Also,  the  issuer  may  have a
corresponding  right to prepay the principal  amount prior to maturity.  As with
any other type of debt security,  the marketability of variable or floating rate
instruments  may vary  depending on a number of factors,  including  the type of
issuer and the terms of the  instrument.  The Fund may  invest in more  recently
developed  floating rate  instruments  which are created by dividing a municipal
security's interest rate into two or more different components.  Typically,  one
component  ("floating  rate  component"  or "FRC") pays an interest rate that is
reset  periodically  through an auction  process or by  reference to an interest
rate index. A second  component  ("inverse  floating rate  component" or "IFRC")
pays an interest  rate that varies  inversely  with  changes to market  rates of
interest,  because the interest paid to the IFRC holders is generally determined
by  subtracting a variable or floating rate from a  predetermined  amount (i.e.,
the  difference  between the total  interest paid by the municipal  security and
that paid by the FRC).  The extent of increases and decreases in the value of an
IFRC generally will be greater than comparable  changes in the value of an equal
principal  amount of a  fixed-rate  municipal  security  having  similar  credit
quality, redemption provisions and maturity. To the extent that such instruments
are not readily marketable,  as determined by the Adviser pursuant to guidelines
adopted by the Board of Trustees,  they will be considered illiquid for purposes
of the Fund's 10% investment restriction on investment in illiquid securities.

Swaps,  Caps,  Floors  and  Collars.  As one way of  managing  its  exposure  to
different types of investments,  the Fund may enter into interest rate swaps and
other types of swap  agreements such as caps,  collars and floors.  In a typical
interest  rate  swap,  one party  agrees  to make  regular  payments  equal to a
floating  interest  rate  times a  "notional  principal  amount,"  in return for
payments equal to a fixed rate times the same amount,  for a specified period of
time.  Swaps may also depend on other  prices or rates,  such as the value of an
index or mortgage prepayment rates.

In a typical cap or floor  agreement,  one party  agrees to make  payments  only
under  specified  circumstances,  usually in return for  payment of a fee by the
other party. For example, the buyer of an interest rate cap obtains the right to
receive  payments  to the  extent  that a  specified  interest  rate  exceeds an
agreed-upon  level,  while the seller of an interest  rate floor is obligated to
make  payments  to the extent  that a  specified  interest  rate falls  below an
agreed-upon level. An interest rate collar combines elements of buying a cap and
selling a floor.

Swap  agreements tend to shift the Fund's  investment  exposure from one type of
investment  to  another.  Caps and  floors  have an effect  similar to buying or
writing options. Depending on how they are used, swap agreements may increase or
decrease the overall  volatility of the Fund's  investments  and its share price
and yield.

                                       7

<PAGE>

Swap agreements are sophisticated  hedging  instruments that typically involve a
small  investment  of cash  relative to the  magnitude  of risks  assumed.  As a
result,  swaps can be highly volatile and may have a considerable  impact on the
Fund's  performance.  Swap  agreements  are  subject  to  risks  related  to the
counterparty's   ability  to   perform,   and  may   decline  in  value  if  the
counterparty's creditworthiness deteriorates. The Fund may also suffer losses if
it is unable to terminate  outstanding  swap  agreements  or reduce its exposure
through offsetting transactions.  The Fund will maintain in a segregated account
with its custodian,  cash or liquid  securities equal to the net amount, if any,
of the excess of the Fund's  obligations over its  entitlements  with respect to
swap, cap, collar or floor transactions.

Structured  or Hybrid  Notes.  The Fund may invest in  "structured"  or "hybrid"
notes.  The  distinguishing  feature of a structured  or hybrid note is that the
amount  of  interest  and/or  principal  payable  on the  note is  based  on the
performance of a benchmark asset or market other than fixed income securities or
interest  rates.  Examples of these  benchmarks  include stock prices,  currency
exchange rates and physical  commodity  prices.  Investing in a structured  note
allows  the Fund to gain  exposure  to the  benchmark  market  while  fixing the
maximum  loss that the Fund may  experience  in the event that  market  does not
perform as expected. Depending on the terms of the note, the Fund may forego all
or part of the  interest  and  principal  that would be payable on a  comparable
conventional  note; the Fund's loss cannot exceed this foregone  interest and/or
principal. An investment in structured or hybrid notes involves risks similar to
those associated with a direct investment in the benchmark asset.

Risk  Associated With Specific Types of Derivative  Debt  Securities.  Different
types of derivative  debt  securities are subject to different  combinations  of
prepayment,  extension and/or interest rate risk. The risk of early  prepayments
is the primary risk associated with interest only debt securities ("IOs"), super
floaters and other leveraged floating rate instruments. In some instances, early
prepayments  may result in a  complete  loss of  investment  in certain of these
securities.  The primary risks  associated  with certain other  derivative  debt
securities are the potential  extension of average life and/or  depreciation due
to rising interest rates.

These  securities  include  floating rate securities  based on the Cost of Funds
Index ("COFI floaters"), other "lagging rate" floating rate securities, floating
rate securities that are subject to a maximum interest rate ("capped floaters"),
leveraged inverse floating rate securities ("inverse floaters"),  principal only
debt  securities  ("POs")  and  certain  residual  or support  tranches of index
amortizing notes. Index amortizing notes are subject to extension risk resulting
from the  issuer's  failure to  exercise  its option to call or redeem the notes
before their stated maturity date.  Leveraged  inverse IOs present an especially
intense combination of prepayment, extension and interest rate risks.

Other types of floating rate  derivative  debt  securities  present more complex
types of interest  rate risks.  For example,  range  floaters are subject to the
risk that the  coupon  will be  reduced to below  market  rates if a  designated
interest rate floats outside of a specified  interest rate band or collar.  Dual
index or yield curve  floaters  are subject to  depreciation  in the event of an
unfavorable change in the spread between two designated interest rates. X- reset
floaters  have a coupon that  remains  fixed for more than one  accrual  period.
Thus, the type of risk involved in these securities depends on the terms of each
individual X-reset floater.

Financial  Futures  Contracts.  The Fund may buy and sell futures contracts (and
related options) on debt  securities,  interest rate indices and tax-exempt bond
indices.  The Fund may hedge its  portfolio by selling or  purchasing  financial
futures  contracts as an offset against the effects of changes in interest rates
or in  security  values.  Although  other  techniques  could  be used to  reduce
exposure to market fluctuations, the Fund may be able to hedge its exposure more
effectively  and perhaps at a lower cost by using financial  futures  contracts.

                                       8

<PAGE>

The Fund may enter  into  financial  futures  contracts  for  hedging  and other
non-speculative purposes to the extent permitted by regulations of the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission ("CFTC").

Financial  futures  contracts  have been  designed by boards of trade which have
been designated  "contract markets" by the CFTC. Futures contracts are traded on
these  markets  in a manner  that is  similar  to the way a stock is traded on a
stock  exchange.  The  boards of trade,  through  their  clearing  corporations,
guarantee that the contracts  will be performed.  Currently,  financial  futures
contracts are based on interest rate instruments such as long-term U.S. Treasury
bonds, U.S. Treasury notes,  Government National Mortgage  Association  ("GNMA")
modified  pass-through  mortgage-backed  securities,  three-month U.S.  Treasury
bills,  90-day  commercial  paper,  bank  certificates of deposit and Eurodollar
certificates  of  deposit.  It is  expected  that  if  other  financial  futures
contracts are developed and traded the Fund may engage in  transactions  in such
contracts.

Although  some  financial  futures  contracts  by their  terms  call for  actual
delivery or acceptance of financial instruments, in most cases the contracts are
closed  out prior to  delivery  by  offsetting  purchases  or sales of  matching
financial  futures  contracts (same exchange,  underlying  security and delivery
month).  Other  financial  futures  contracts,  such  as  futures  contracts  on
securities indices, by their terms call for cash settlements.  If the offsetting
purchase price is less than the Fund's original sale price,  the Fund realizes a
gain, or if it is more, the Fund realizes a loss. Conversely,  if the offsetting
sale price is more than the Fund's original  purchase price, the Fund realizes a
gain, or if it is less,  the Fund realizes a loss.  The  transaction  costs must
also be  included  in these  calculations.  The Fund  will pay a  commission  in
connection with each purchase or sale of financial futures contracts,  including
a closing transaction. For a discussion of the federal income tax considerations
of trading in financial futures contracts, see the information under the caption
"Tax Status" below.

At the time the Fund enters into a financial futures contract, it is required to
deposit  with  its  custodian  a  specified  amount  of cash or U.S.  Government
securities,  known as "initial margin," ranging upward from 1.1% of the value of
the financial futures contract being traded. The margin required for a financial
futures  contract is set by the board of trade or exchange on which the contract
is traded and may be  modified  during  the term of the  contract.  The  initial
margin is in the  nature of a  performance  bond or good  faith  deposit  on the
financial futures contract which is returned to the Fund upon termination of the
contract,  assuming all contractual  obligations  have been satisfied.  The Fund
expects to earn interest  income on its initial margin  deposits.  Each day, the
futures  contract  is valued at the  official  settlement  price of the board of
trade  or  exchange  on  which  it is  traded.  Subsequent  payments,  known  as
"variation  margin,"  to and from the  broker  are made on a daily  basis as the
market price of the financial futures contract fluctuates. This process is known
as "mark to market."  Variation margin does not represent a borrowing or lending
by the Fund but is instead a  settlement  between the Fund and the broker of the
amount one would owe the other if the financial  futures  contract  expired.  In
computing  net asset  value,  the Fund will  mark to market  its open  financial
futures positions.

Successful  hedging depends on a strong  correlation  between the market for the
underlying  securities  and the futures  contract  market for those  securities.
There are several factors that will probably prevent this correlation from being
a perfect one, and even a correct  forecast of general  interest rate trends may
not  result  in  a  successful  hedging   transaction.   There  are  significant
differences  between the  securities  and futures  markets which could create an
imperfect  correlation between the markets and which could affect the success of
a  given  hedge.   The  degree  of  imperfection   of  correlation   depends  on
circumstances  such as  variations  in  speculative  market demand for financial
futures and debt securities,  including technical  influences in futures trading
and  differences  between  the  financial   instruments  being  hedged  and  the
instruments  underlying the standard  financial futures contracts  available for
trading  in  such   respects   as   interest   rate   levels,   maturities   and
creditworthiness  of issuers.  The degree of imperfection may be increased where

                                       9

<PAGE>

the underlying  debt securities are  lower-rated  and, thus,  subject to greater
fluctuation in price than higher-rated securities.

A decision as to whether,  when and how to hedge  involves the exercise of skill
and judgment, and even a well-conceived hedge may be unsuccessful to some degree
because of  unexpected  market or interest  rate trends.  The Fund will bear the
risk that the price of the  securities  being  hedged  will not move in complete
correlation  with  the  price  of  the  futures  contracts  used  as  a  hedging
instrument.  Although the Adviser  believes  that the use of  financial  futures
contracts will benefit the Fund, an incorrect market  prediction could result in
a loss on both the hedged  securities  in the Fund's  portfolio  and the hedging
vehicle so that the Fund's  return  might have been  better had hedging not been
attempted.  However,  in the absence of the ability to hedge,  the Adviser might
have taken portfolio  actions in anticipation of the same market  movements with
similar investment results but,  presumably,  at greater  transaction costs. The
low margin deposits required for futures  transactions  permit an extremely high
degree of leverage. A relatively small movement in a futures contract may result
in losses or gains in excess of the amount invested.

Futures  exchanges  may limit the  amount of  fluctuation  permitted  in certain
futures contract prices during a single trading day. The daily limit establishes
the maximum  amount the price of a futures  contract  may vary either up or down
from the previous  day's  settlement  price,  at the end of the current  trading
session.  Once the daily limit has been reached in a futures contract subject to
the limit,  no more trades may be made on that day at a price beyond that limit.
The daily limit  governs only price  movements  during a particular  trading day
and,  therefore,  does not limit potential  losses because the limit may work to
prevent the liquidation of unfavorable  positions.  For example,  futures prices
have occasionally moved to the daily limit for several  consecutive trading days
with little or no trading,  thereby  preventing prompt  liquidation of positions
and subjecting some holders of futures contracts to substantial losses.

Finally,  although the Fund engages in financial  futures  transactions  only on
boards of trade or  exchanges  where there  appears to be an adequate  secondary
market,  there is no assurance  that a liquid market will exist for a particular
futures  contract  at any given time.  The  liquidity  of the market  depends on
participants closing out contracts rather than making or taking delivery. In the
event  participants  decide to make or take  delivery,  liquidity  in the market
could be reduced. In addition,  the Fund could be prevented from executing a buy
or sell order at a specified  price or closing  out a position  due to limits on
open  positions or daily price  fluctuation  limits  imposed by the exchanges or
boards of trade.  If the Fund cannot close out a position,  it must  continue to
meet margin requirements until the position is closed.

Options on  Financial  Futures  Contracts.  The Fund may buy and sell options on
financial  futures  contracts  on debt  securities,  interest  rate  indices and
tax-exempt bond indices. An option on a futures contract gives the purchaser the
right,  in  return  for the  premium  paid,  to assume a  position  in a futures
contract  at a  specified  exercise  price at any time  during the period of the
option. Upon exercise, the writer of the option delivers the futures contract to
the holder at the exercise price. The Fund would be required to deposit with its
custodian  initial and variation  margin with respect to put and call options on
futures  contracts  written by them.  Options on futures contracts involve risks
similar to the risks of transactions in financial  futures  contracts.  Also, an
option purchased by the Fund may expire worthless,  in which case the Fund would
lose the premium it paid for the option.

Other  Considerations.  The Fund will engage in futures and options transactions
for bona fide hedging or other non-speculative  purposes to the extent permitted
by CFTC regulations.  The Fund will determine that the price fluctuations in the
futures  contracts  and  options  on  futures  used  for  hedging  purposes  are
substantially  related to price  fluctuations  in securities held by the Fund or
which it  expects  to  purchase.  Except as stated  below,  the  Fund's  futures
transactions  will be entered  into for  traditional  hedging  purposes -- i.e.,
futures  contracts  will be sold to  protect  against a decline  in the price of

                                       10

<PAGE>

securities that the Fund owns, or futures contracts will be purchased to protect
the Fund  against an increase  in the price of  securities,  or the  currency in
which they are  denominated,  the Fund intends to purchase.  As evidence of this
hedging  intent,  the Fund expects that on 75% or more of the occasions on which
it takes a long futures or option  position  (involving  the purchase of futures
contracts),  the  Fund  will  have  purchased,  or  will  be in the  process  of
purchasing equivalent amounts of related securities or assets denominated in the
related  currency in the cash  market at the time when the  futures  contract or
option  position  is  closed  out.  However,  in  particular  cases,  when it is
economically  advantageous for the Fund to do so, a long futures position may be
terminated  or an option  may  expire  without  the  corresponding  purchase  of
securities or other assets.

As an alternative to literal compliance with the bona fide hedging definition, a
CFTC regulation permits the Fund to elect to comply with a different test, under
which the aggregate initial margin and premiums required to establish nonhedging
positions in futures  contracts and options on futures will not exceed 5% of the
net asset value of the Fund's  portfolio,  after taking into account  unrealized
profits and losses on any such  positions and excluding the amount by which such
options  were  in-the-money  at the time of  purchase.  The Fund will  engage in
transactions  in futures  contracts  only to the extent  such  transactions  are
consistent with the  requirements of the Code for maintaining its  qualification
as a regulated investment company for federal income tax purposes.

When the Fund purchases  financial futures  contracts,  or writes put options or
purchases call options thereon, cash or liquid securities will be deposited in a
segregated  account with the Fund's  custodian in an amount that,  together with
the amount of initial  and  variation  margin held in the account of the broker,
equals the market value of the futures contracts.

Options  Transactions.  The Fund may write listed and  over-the-counter  covered
call options and covered put options on securities  in order to earn  additional
income from the premiums received. In addition, the Fund may purchase listed and
over-the-counter call and put options. The Fund may also write straddles,  which
are  combinations  of put and call options on the same  security.  The extent to
which  covered  options  will  be used  by the  Fund  will  depend  upon  market
conditions and the availability of alternative strategies.

The Fund will write  listed and  over-the-counter  call options only if they are
"covered,"  which means that the Fund owns or has the immediate right to acquire
the securities underlying the options without additional cash consideration upon
conversion or exchange of other securities held in its portfolio.  A call option
written by the Fund may also be "covered" if the Fund holds on a share-for-share
basis a covering call on the same securities where (i) the exercise price of the
covering  call  held is equal to or less  than  the  exercise  price of the call
written or the exercise  price of the covering call is greater than the exercise
price  of the  call  written,  in the  latter  case  only if the  difference  is
maintained by the Fund in cash or liquid securities in a segregated account with
the Fund's custodian, and (ii) the covering call expires at the same time as the
call  written.  If a covered call option is not  exercised,  the Fund would keep
both the option premium and the underlying security.  If the covered call option
written by the Fund is exercised and the exercise  price,  less the  transaction
costs,  exceeds the cost of the  underlying  security,  the Fund would realize a
gain in  addition  to the  amount of the  option  premium  it  received.  If the
exercise price, less transaction  costs, is less than the cost of the underlying
security, the Fund's loss would be reduced by the amount of the option premium.

As the writer of a covered  put  option,  the Fund will write a put option  only
with  respect to  securities  it intends to acquire for its  portfolio  and will
maintain  in a  segregated  account  with  its  custodian  bank  cash or  liquid
securities with a value equal to the price at which the underlying  security may
be sold to the Fund in the event the put option is exercised  by the  purchaser.
The  Fund  may  also  write  a  "covered"   put  option  by   purchasing   on  a

                                       11

<PAGE>

share-for-share  basis a put on the same security as the put written by the Fund
if the  exercise  price of the covering put held is equal to or greater than the
exercise  price of the put written and the covering put expires at the same time
as or later than the put written.

When writing listed and over-the-counter covered put options on securities,  the
Fund would earn income from the  premiums  received.  If a covered put option is
not exercised,  the Fund would keep the option premium and the assets maintained
to cover  the  option.  If the  option  is  exercised  and the  exercise  price,
including  transaction  costs,  exceeds  the  market  price  of  the  underlying
security,  the Fund  would  realize a loss,  but the amount of the loss would be
reduced by the amount of the option premium.

If the writer of an  exchange-traded  option wishes to terminate its  obligation
prior to its exercise,  it may effect a "closing purchase  transaction." This is
accomplished  by buying an option of the same  series as the  option  previously
written.  The effect of the purchase is that the Fund's  position will be offset
by the Options Clearing Corporation.  The Fund may not effect a closing purchase
transaction after it has been notified of the exercise of an option. There is no
guarantee that a closing purchase transaction can be effected. Although the Fund
will generally  write only those options for which there appears to be an active
secondary  market,  there is no assurance that a liquid  secondary  market on an
exchange  or board of trade  will  exist  for any  particular  option  or at any
particular  time,  and for some options no  secondary  market on an exchange may
exist.

In the case of a written  call  option,  effecting  a closing  transaction  will
permit the Fund to write  another call option on the  underlying  security  with
either a different  exercise  price,  expiration  date or both. In the case of a
written put option,  it will permit the Fund to write  another put option to the
extent that the exercise  price  thereof is secured by deposited  cash or liquid
securities.  Also,  effecting  a closing  transaction  will  permit  the cash or
proceeds from the concurrent sale of any securities  subject to the option to be
used for other  investments.  If the Fund desires to sell a particular  security
from its  portfolio  on which it has  written a call  option,  it will  effect a
closing transaction prior to or concurrent with the sale of the security.

The Fund  will  realize a gain  from a  closing  transaction  if the cost of the
closing  transaction is less than the premium  received from writing the option.
The Fund  will  realize a loss  from a  closing  transaction  if the cost of the
closing  transaction  is more than the premium  received for writing the option.
However,  because  increases in the market price of a call option will generally
reflect  increases  in the market  price of the  underlying  security,  any loss
resulting  from the  repurchase of a call option is likely to be offset in whole
or in part by appreciation in the value of the underlying  security owned by the
Fund.

Over-the-Counter  Options.  The Fund  may  engage  in  options  transactions  on
exchanges  and in the  over-the-counter  markets.  In  general,  exchange-traded
options are third-party contracts (i.e., performance of the parties' obligations
is guaranteed by an exchange or clearing  corporation) with standardized  strike
prices and expiration dates. Over-the-counter ("OTC") transactions are two-party
contracts with price and terms negotiated by the buyer and seller. The Fund will
acquire  only  those OTC  options  for which  management  believes  the Fund can
receive on each  business day at least two separate bids or offers (one of which
will be from an entity  other than a party to the  option) or those OTC  options
valued by an independent  pricing service.  The Fund will write and purchase OTC
options only with member banks of the Federal Reserve System and primary dealers
in U.S. Government securities or their affiliates which have capital of at least
$50 million or whose  obligations  are guaranteed by an entity having capital of
at least $50  million.  The SEC has  taken the  position  that OTC  options  are
subject to the Fund's 10% restriction on illiquid investments. The SEC, however,
allows the Fund to exclude  from the 10%  limitation  on illiquid  securities  a
portion  of the value of the OTC  options  written  by the Fund,  provided  that
certain  conditions are met. First, the other party to the OTC options has to be
a primary U.S.  Government  securities  dealer designated as such by the Federal

                                       12

<PAGE>

Reserve  Bank.  Second,  the Fund must  have an  absolute  contractual  right to
repurchase the OTC options at a formula price. If the above  conditions are met,
the Fund may treat as illiquid only that portion of the OTC option's  value (and
the value of its underlying  securities) which is equal to the formula price for
repurchasing the OTC option, less the OTC option's intrinsic value.

Repurchase  Agreements.   The  Fund  may  invest  in  repurchase  agreements.  A
repurchase  agreement is a contract under which the Fund acquires a security for
a relatively  short period  (generally  not more than seven days) subject to the
obligation of the seller to repurchase and the Fund to resell such security at a
fixed time and price (representing the Fund's cost plus interest). The Fund will
enter into  repurchase  agreements only with member banks of the Federal Reserve
System and with "primary  dealers" in U.S.  Government  securities.  The Adviser
will continuously monitor the creditworthiness of the parties with whom the Fund
enters  into  repurchase  agreements.  The  Fund  has  established  a  procedure
providing  that  the  securities  serving  as  collateral  for  each  repurchase
agreement  must be delivered to the Fund's  custodian  either  physically  or in
book-entry form and that the collateral must be marked to market daily to ensure
that each  repurchase  agreement is fully  collateralized  at all times.  In the
event of bankruptcy or other default by a seller of a repurchase agreement,  the
Fund could experience delays in liquidating the underlying securities during the
period which the Fund seeks to enforce its rights  thereto,  possible  subnormal
levels of  income  and lack of access to  income  during  this  period,  and the
expense of enforcing its rights.

Reverse Repurchase  Agreements.  The Fund may also enter into reverse repurchase
agreements  which  involve the sale of U.S.  Government  securities  held in its
portfolio to a bank or securities  firm with an agreement that the Fund will buy
back the  securities  at a fixed  future  date at a fixed  price  plus an agreed
amount of "interest"  which may be reflected in the  repurchase  price.  Reverse
repurchase  agreements  are  considered to be  borrowings  by the Fund.  Reverse
repurchase  agreements  involve  the risk that the  market  value of  securities
purchased by the Fund with  proceeds of the  transaction  may decline  below the
repurchase  price of the  securities  sold by the Fund which it is  obligated to
repurchase.  The Fund will also  continue to be subject to the risk of a decline
in the market value of the securities sold under the agreements  because it will
reacquire those  securities upon effecting their  repurchase.  The Fund will not
enter into reverse repurchase  agreements and other borrowings  exceeding in the
aggregate 33 1/3% of the market value of its total  assets.  The Fund will enter
into reverse repurchase  agreements only with federally insured banks or savings
and loan associations which are approved in advance as being creditworthy by the
Board of Trustees.  Under procedures  established by the Board of Trustees,  the
Adviser will monitor the creditworthiness of the banks involved.

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

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

                                       13

<PAGE>

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

Restricted Securities.  The Fund may purchase securities that are not registered
("restricted  securities")  under  the  Securities  Act of  1933  ("1933  Act"),
including securities offered and sold to "qualified  institutional buyers" under
Rule 144A under the 1933 Act. However, the Fund will not invest more than 10% of
its assets in illiquid investments, which include repurchase agreements maturing
in more  than  seven  days,  securities  that  are not  readily  marketable  and
restricted securities.  However, if the Board of Trustees determines, based upon
a continuing  review of the trading  markets for specific Rule 144A  securities,
that they are liquid,  then such  securities may be purchased  without regard to
the 10% limit. The Trustees may adopt guidelines and delegate to the Adviser the
daily  function of  determining  and  monitoring  the  liquidity  of  restricted
securities.  The  Trustees,  however,  will retain  sufficient  oversight and be
ultimately  responsible  for the  determinations.  The Trustees  will  carefully
monitor the Fund's  investments in these securities,  focusing on such important
factors, among others, as valuation,  liquidity and availability of information.
This  investment  practice  could  have the  effect of  increasing  the level of
illiquidity  in the Fund if  qualified  institutional  buyers  become for a time
uninterested in purchasing these restricted securities.

The Fund may acquire other restricted  securities including securities for which
market quotations are not readily  available.  These securities may be sold only
in privately  negotiated  transactions  or in public  offerings  with respect to
which  a  registration  statement  is  in  effect  under  the  1933  Act.  Where
registration  is  required,  the Fund may be obligated to pay all or part of the
registration  expenses and a considerable  period may elapse between the time of
the  decision to sell and the time the Fund may be  permitted to sell a security
under an effective  registration  statement.  If, during such a period,  adverse
market conditions were to develop,  the Fund might obtain a less favorable price
than prevailed when it decided to sell.  Restricted securities will be priced at
fair market value as determined in good faith by the Trust's Trustees.

Short Term Trading and Portfolio Turnover. Short-term trading means the purchase
and subsequent sale of a security after it has been held for a relatively  brief
period of time. The Fund may engage in short-term trading in response to changes
in  interest  rates  or  other  economic  trends  and  developments,  or to take
advantage of yield disparities  between various fixed income securities in order
to realize  capital  gains or improve  income.  Short term  trading may have the
effect of increasing  portfolio turnover rate. A high rate of portfolio turnover
(100% or greater) involves  corresponding  higher  transaction  expenses and may
make it more difficult for the Fund to qualify as a regulated investment company
for federal income tax purposes.

INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS

Fundamental Investment Restrictions

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

The Fund may not:

                                       14

<PAGE>

(1) Borrow money except from banks for temporary or emergency  (not  leveraging)
purposes,  including  the meeting of redemption  requests  that might  otherwise
require the untimely  disposition of  securities,  in an amount up to 15% of the
value of the Fund's  total  assets  (including  the amount  borrowed)  valued at
market less  liabilities  (not  including  the amount  borrowed) at the time the
borrowing was made. While borrowings  exceed 5% of the value of the Fund's total
assets, the Fund will not purchase any additional  securities.  Interest paid on
borrowings  will  reduce  the  Fund's  net  investment   income.  The  borrowing
restriction  set forth  above does not  prohibit  the use of reverse  repurchase
agreements, in an amount (including any borrowings) not to exceed 33-1/3% of net
assets.

(2) Pledge, hypothecate, mortgage or otherwise encumber its assets, except in an
amount up to 10% of the value of its total assets but only to secure  borrowings
for  temporary or emergency  purposes as may be  necessary  in  connection  with
maintaining  collateral in connection with writing put or call options or making
initial  margin  deposits in  connection  with the purchase or sale of financial
futures or index futures contracts and related options.

(3) Purchase  securities  (except  obligations  issued or guaranteed by the U.S.
Government,  its agencies or  instrumentalities) if the purchase would cause the
Fund at the time to have more than 5% of the value of its total assets  invested
in the  securities of any one issuer or to own more than 10% of the  outstanding
debt  securities  of any one issuer;  provided,  however,  that up to 25% of the
value of the Fund's asset may be invested without regard to these restrictions.

(4) Purchase or retain the securities of any issuer,  if to the knowledge of the
Fund,  any officer or director of the Fund or its Adviser  owns more than 1/2 of
1% of the  outstanding  securities  of such  issuer,  and all such  officers and
directors own in the  aggregate  more than 5% of the  outstanding  securities of
such issuer.

(5) Write, purchase or sell puts, calls or combinations thereof,  except put and
call options on debt  securities,  futures  contracts based on debt  securities,
indices  of debt  securities  and  futures  contracts  based on  indices of debt
securities,  sell  securities  on margin or make short  sales of  securities  or
maintain a short position,  unless at all times when a short position is open it
owns an equal  amount  of such  securities  or  securities  convertible  into or
exchangeable,  without payment of any further  consideration,  for securities of
the same issue as, and equal in amount to, the securities sold short, and unless
not more than 10% of the Fund's net assets  (taken at current  value) is held as
collateral for such sales at any one time.

(6) Underwrite  the securities of other issuers,  except insofar as the Fund may
be deemed an  underwriter  under the  Securities  Act of 1933 in  disposing of a
portfolio security.

(7)  Purchase the  securities  of any issuer if as a result more than 10% of the
value of the Fund's  total  assets  would be  invested  in  securities  that are
subject to legal or contractual restrictions on resale ("restricted securities")
and in securities for which there are no readily available market quotations; or
enter into a  repurchase  agreement  maturing in more than seven  days,  if as a
result  such  repurchase  agreement  together  with  restricted  securities  and
securities  for which there are no readily  available  market  quotations  would
constitute more than 10% of the Fund's total assets.

(8)  Purchase or sell real  estate,  real estate  investment  trust  securities,
commodities or commodity contracts, except commodities and commodities contracts
which are  necessary  to enable  the Fund to engage  in  permitted  futures  and
options transactions  necessary to implement hedging strategies,  or oil and gas
interests,  but this shall not  prevent  the Fund from  investing  in  municipal
obligations secured by real estate or interests in real estate.

                                       15

<PAGE>

(9) Make loans to  others,  except  insofar as the Fund may enter in  repurchase
agreements as set forth in the  Prospectus or this SAI. The purchase of an issue
of publicly  distributed bonds or other securities,  whether or not the purchase
was made upon the original  issuance of securities,  is not to be considered the
making of a loan.

(10) Invest more than 25% of its assets in the  securities  of the  "issuers" in
any single industry;  provided that there shall be no limitation on the purchase
of municipal  obligations  and  obligations  issued or  guaranteed by the United
States  Government,  its  agencies or  instrumentalities.  For  purposes of this
limitation  and that set forth in  investment  restriction  (3) above,  when the
assets and revenues of an agency, authority,  instrumentality or other political
subdivision  are  separate  from those of the  government  creating  the issuing
entity and a security is backed  only by the assets and  revenues of the entity,
the entity would be deemed to be the sole issuer of the security.  Similarly, in
the case of an industrial development or pollution control bond, if that bond is
backed only by the assets and revenues of the  nongovernmental  user,  then such
nongovernmental  user would be deemed to be the sole  issuer.  If,  however,  in
either case, the creating government or some other entity guarantees a security,
such a guarantee would be considered a separate security and would be treated as
an issue of such government or other entity.

(11) Invest more than 5% of the value of its total assets in the  securities  of
issuers having a record,  including  predecessors,  of fewer than three years of
continuous  operation,  except  obligations  issued or  guaranteed by the United
States Government, its agencies or instrumentalities,  unless the securities are
rated by a nationally recognized rating service.

(12)  Invest for the  purpose of  exercising  control or  management  of another
company.

(13) Issue any senior security (as that term is defined in the 1940 Act) if such
issuance is specifically prohibited by the 1940 Act or the rules and regulations
promulgated  thereunder.  For  the  purpose  of  this  restriction,   collateral
arrangements  with respect to options,  futures contracts and options on futures
contracts  and  collateral  arrangements  with respect to initial and  variation
margins are not deemed to be the issuance of a senior security.

Other Operating Policies

In order to comply with certain state regulatory policies, the Fund will not, as
a matter of operating  policy,  pledge,  mortgage or  hypothecate  its portfolio
securities if the percentage of securities so pledged, mortgaged or hypothecated
would exceed 15%.

In  order  to  comply  with  certain  state  regulatory  policies,  the  cost of
investments  in options,  financial  futures,  stock index  futures and currency
futures,  other than those acquired for hedging purposes,  may not exceed 10% of
the Fund's total net assets.

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

                                       16

<PAGE>

company  except in the open market where no commission or profit to a sponsor or
dealer results from the purchase, other than customary brokerage fees.

These  operating  policies  are  not  fundamental  and  may be  changed  without
shareholder   approval.  In  order  to  comply  with  certain  state  regulatory
practices, certain policies, if changed, would require advance written notice to
shareholders.

THOSE RESPONSIBLE FOR MANAGEMENT

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

The  following  table sets forth the  principal  occupation or employment of the
Trustees and principal officers of the Trust during the past five years:
























                                       17
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                   Position(s) Held              Principal Occupation(s)
Name and Address                   With the Trust                During Past Five Years 
- ----------------                   --------------                ---------------------- 
<S>                                <C>                           <C>
*Edward J. Boudreau, Jr.*          Trustee, Chairman             Chairman and Chief Executive       
101 Huntington Avenue              and Chief Executive           Officer, the Adviser and The       
Boston, MA 02199                   Officer (1)(2)                Berkeley Financial Group ("The     
October 1944                                                     Berkeley Group"); Chairman, NM     
                                                                 Capital Management, Inc. ("NM      
                                                                 Capital"); John Hancock Advisers   
                                                                 International Limited ("Advisers   
                                                                 International"); Chairman, Chief   
                                                                 Executive Officer and President,   
                                                                 John Hancock Funds, Inc. ("John    
                                                                 Hancock Funds"); John Hancock      
                                                                 Investor Services Corporation      
                                                                 ("Investor Services"), First       
                                                                 Signature Bank and Trust Company   
                                                                 and Sovereign Asset Management     
                                                                 Corporation ("SAMCorp"); Director, 
                                                                 John Hancock Freedom Securities    
                                                                 Corporation, John Hancock Capital  
                                                                 Corporation and New England/Canada 
                                                                 Business Council; Member,          
                                                                 Investment Company Institute Board 
                                                                 of Governors; Director, Asia       
                                                                 Strategic Growth Fund, Inc.;       
                                                                 Trustee, Museum of Science; Vice   
                                                                 Chairman and President, the Adviser
                                                                 (until July 1992); Chairman, John  
                                                                 Hancock Distributors, Inc. (until  
                                                                 April, 1994).                       
                                                                 
James F. Carlin                    Trustee (3)                   Chairman and CEO, Carlin           
233 West Central Street                                          Consolidated, Inc.                 
Natick, MA 01760                                                 (management/investments); Director,
April 1940                                                       Arbella Mutual Insurnace Company   
                                                                 (insurance), Consolidated Group    
                                                                 Trust (insurance administration),  
                                                                 Carlin Insurance Agency, Inc., West
                                                                 Insurance Agency, Inc. (until May  
                                                                 1995) and Uno Restaurant Corp.;    
                                                                 Chairman, Massachusetts Board of   


*    An  "interested  person" of the Trust,  as such term is defined in the 1940
     Act.
(1)  Member of the Executive Committee.  Under the Trust's Declaration of Trust,
     the Executive  Committee  may generally  exercise most of the powers of the
     Board of Trustees.
(2)  A Member of the Investment Committee of the Adviser.
(3)  Member of the Audit Committee and the Administration Committee.

                                       17

<PAGE>

                                   Position(s) Held              Principal Occupation(s)
Name and Address                   With the Trust                During Past Five Years 
- ----------------                   --------------                ---------------------- 

                                                                 Higher Education (since 1995);
                                                                 Receiver, the City of Chelsea 
                                                                 (until August 1992).          

William H. Cunningham              Trustee (3)                   Chancellor, University of Texas    
601 Colorado                                                     System and former President of the 
O'Henry Hall                                                     University of Texas, Austin, Texas;
Austin, TX 78701                                                 Lee Hage and Joseph D. Jamail      
January 1994                                                     Regents Chair for Free Enterprise; 
                                                                 Director, LaQuinta Motor Inns, Inc.
                                                                 (hotel management company);        
                                                                 Director, Jefferson-Pilot          
                                                                 Corporation (diversified life      
                                                                 insurance company) and LBJ         
                                                                 Foundation Board (education        
                                                                 foundation); Advisory Director,    
                                                                 Texas Commerce Bank - Austin.      

Harold R. Hiser, Jr.               Trustee (3)                   Executive Vice President,        
Schering-Plough                                                  Schering-Plough Corporation      
Corporation                                                      (pharmaceuticals) (retired 1996);
One Giralda Farms                                                Director, ReCapital Corporation  
Madison, NJ 07940-1000                                           (reinsurance) (until 1995).      
October 1931                                                     

Charles F. Fretz                   Trustee (3)                   Retired; self-employed; Former Vice
RD #5, Box 300B                                                  President and Director, Towers,    
Clothier Springs Road                                            Perrin, Forster & Crosby, Inc.     
Malvern, PA 19355                                                (international management          
June 1928                                                        consultants) (1952-1985).          

Anne C. Hodsdon*                   President and                 President and Chief Operating      
101 Huntington Avenue              Trustee (1)(2)                Officer, the Adviser; Executive    
Boston, MA 02199                                                 Vice President, the Adviser (until 
April 1953                                                       December 1994); Senior Vice        
                                                                 President, the Adviser (until      
                                                                 December 1993); Vice President, the
                                                                 Adviser (until 1991).              

Charles L. Ladner                  Trustee (3)                   Director, Energy North, Inc.       
UGI Corporation                                                  (public utility holding company)   
460 North Gulph Road                                             (until 1992); Senior Vice          
King of Prussia, PA 19406                                        President, Finance UGI Corp.       
February 1938                                                    (holding company, public utilities,
                                                                 LPGAS).                            
                                                                 

*    An  "interested  person" of the Trust,  as such term is defined in the 1940
     Act.
(1)  Member of the Executive Committee.  Under the Trust's Declaration of Trust,
     the Executive  Committee  may generally  exercise most of the powers of the
     Board of Trustees.
(2)  A Member of the Investment Committee of the Adviser.
(3)  Member of the Audit Committee and the Administration Committee.
                                             
                                       18
<PAGE>

                                   Position(s) Held              Principal Occupation(s)
Name and Address                   With the Trust                During Past Five Years 
- ----------------                   --------------                ---------------------- 

Leo E. Linbeck, Jr.                Trustee (3)                   Chairman, President, Chief         
3810 W. Alabama                                                  Executive Officer and Director,    
Houston, TX 77027                                                Linbeck Corporation (a holding     
August 1934                                                      company engaged in various phases  
                                                                 of the construction industry and   
                                                                 warehousing interests); Former     
                                                                 Chairman, Federal Reserve Bank of  
                                                                 Dallas (1992, 1993); Chairman of   
                                                                 the Board and Chief Executive      
                                                                 Officer, Linbeck Construction      
                                                                 Corporation; Director, PanEnergy   
                                                                 Eastern Corporation (a diversified 
                                                                 energy company), Daniel Industries,
                                                                 Inc. (manufacturer of gas measuring
                                                                 products and energy related        
                                                                 equipment), GeoQuest International,
                                                                 Inc. (a geophysical consulting     
                                                                 firm) (1980-1993); Director,       
                                                                 Greater Houston Partnership.       

Patricia P. McCarter               Trustee (3)                   Director and Secretary, The
Swedesford Road                                                  McCarter Corp. (machine    
RD #3, Box 121                                                   manufacturer).             
Malvern, PA 19355                                                
May 1928

Steven R. Pruchansky               Trustee (1)(3)                Director and President, Mast      
360 Horse Creek Drive, #208                                      Holdings, Inc. (since 1991);      
Naples, FL 33942                                                 DirectorFirst Signature Bank &    
August 1944                                                      Trust Company (until August 1991);
                                                                 Director, Mast Realty Trust       
                                                                 (1982-1994); President, Maxwell   
                                                                 Building Corp. (until 1991).      

Richard S. Scipione*               Trustee                       General Counsel, John Hancock      
John Hancock Place                                               Mutual Life Insurance Company;     
P.O. Box 111                                                     Director, the Adviser, Advisers    
Boston, MA 02199                                                 International, John Hancock Funds, 
August 1937                                                      Investor Services, John Hancock    
                                                                 Distributors, Inc., John Hancock   
                                                                 Subsidiaries, Inc., John Hancock   
                                                                 Property and Casualty Insurance and

                                                                 
*    An  "interested  person" of the Trust,  as such term is defined in the 1940
     Act.
(1)  Member of the Executive Committee.  Under the Trust's Declaration of Trust,
     the Executive  Committee  may generally  exercise most of the powers of the
     Board of Trustees.
(2)  A Member of the Investment Committee of the Adviser.
(3)  Member of the Audit Committee and the Administration Committee.
                                             
                                       19
<PAGE>
                                             
                                   Position(s) Held              Principal Occupation(s)
Name and Address                   With the Trust                During Past Five Years 
- ----------------                   --------------                ---------------------- 

                                                                 its affiliates (until November   
                                                                 1993), SAMCorp and NM Capital;   
                                                                 Trustee, The Berkeley Group;     
                                                                 Director, JH Networking Insurance
                                                                 Agency, Inc.                     

Norman H. Smith                    Trustee (3)                   Lieutenant General, USMC, Deputy  
Rt. 1, Box 249 E                                                 Chief of Staff for Manpower and   
Linden, VA 22642                                                 Reserve Affairs, Headquarters     
March 1933                                                       Marine Corps; Commanding General  
                                                                 III Marine Expeditionary Force/3rd
                                                                 Marine Division (retired 1991).   

John P. Toolan                     Trustee (3)                   Director, The Smith Barney Muni   
13 Chadwell Place                                                Bond Funds, The Smith Barney      
Morristown, NJ 07960                                             Tax-Free Money Fund, Inc., Vantage
September 1930                                                   Money Market Funds (mutual funds),
                                                                 The Inefficient- Market Fund, Inc.
                                                                 (closed- end investment company)  
                                                                 and Smith Barney Trust Company of 
                                                                 Florida; Chairman, Smith Barney   
                                                                 Trust Company (retired 1991);     
                                                                 Director, Smith Barney, Inc.,     
                                                                 Mutual Management Company and     
                                                                 Smith, Barney Advisers, Inc.      
                                                                 (investment advisers) (retired    
                                                                 1991); Senior Executive Vice      
                                                                 President, Director and member of 
                                                                 the Executive Committee, Smith    
                                                                 Barney, Harris Upham & Co.,       
                                                                 Incorporated (investment bankers) 
                                                                 (until 1991).                     

Robert G. Freedman*                Vice Chairman and             Vice Chairman and Chief Investment 
101 Huntington Avenue              Chief Investment              Officer, the Adviser; President,   
Boston, MA 02199                   Officer(2)                    the Adviser (until December 1994); 
July 1938                                                        Director, the Adviser, Advisers    
                                                                 International, John Hancock Funds, 
                                                                 Investor Services, SAMCorp., and NM
                                                                 Capital; Senior Vice President, The
                                                                 Berkeley Group.                    
                                                                 
                                             
*    An  "interested  person" of the Trust,  as such term is defined in the 1940
     Act.
(1)  Member of the Executive Committee.  Under the Trust's Declaration of Trust,
     the Executive  Committee  may generally  exercise most of the powers of the
     Board of Trustees.
(2)  A Member of the Investment Committee of the Adviser.
(3)  Member of the Audit Committee and the Administration Committee.
                                             
                                       20
<PAGE>

                                   Position(s) Held              Principal Occupation(s)
Name and Address                   With the Trust                During Past Five Years 
- ----------------                   --------------                ---------------------- 

James B. Little*                   Senior Vice President         Senior Vice President, the Adviser,
101 Huntington Avenue              and Chief Financial           The Berkeley Group, John Hancock   
Boston, MA 02199                   Officer                       Funds and Investor Services.       
February 1935                                                    

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

Susan S. Newton*                   Vice President and            Vice President and Assistant       
101 Huntington Avenue              Secretary                     Secretary, the Adviser; Vice       
Boston, MA 02199                                                 President and Secretary, John      
March 1950                                                       Hancock Funds, Investor Services   
                                                                 and John Hancock Distributors, Inc.
                                                                 (until 1994); Secretary, SAM Corp; 
                                                                 Vice President, The Berkeley Group.

John A. Morin*                     Vice President                Vice President, the Adviser,       
101 Huntington Avenue                                            Investor Services and John Hancock 
Boston, MA 02199                                                 Funds; Counsel, John Hancock Mutual
July 1950                                                        Life Insurance Company; Vice       
                                                                 President and Assistant Secretary, 
                                                                 The Berkeley Group.                
</TABLE>

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












*    An  "interested  person" of the Trust,  as such term is defined in the 1940
     Act.
(1)  Member of the Executive Committee.  Under the Trust's Declaration of Trust,
     the Executive  Committee  may generally  exercise most of the powers of the
     Board of Trustees.
(2)  A Member of the Investment Committee of the Adviser.
(3)  Member of the Audit Committee and the Administration Committee.

                                       21

<PAGE>

As of  September  4, 1996,  the  officers  and  Trustees of the Trust as a group
beneficially  owned less than 1% of the outstanding  shares of the Fund. On such
date,  the following  shareholders  were the only record  holders and beneficial
owners of 5% or more of the shares of the Fund:

                                           Number of          Percentage of
                                           shares of          total outstanding
Name and Address              Class of     beneficial         shares of the
of Shareholder                Shares       interest owned     class of the Fund
- --------------                ------       --------------     -----------------

Merrill Lynch Pierce          Class B       3,064,279.58            19.03%
Fenner & Smith Inc.
4800 Deerlake Drive East
Jacksonville, FL
32246-6484

At such date,  no other  person(s)  owned of record or was known by the Trust to
beneficially own as much as 5% of the outstanding shares of the Fund.

As of December 22, 1994,  the Trustees have  established an Advisory Board which
acts to  facilitate a smooth  transition of  management  over a two-year  period
(between  Transamerica Fund Management  Company  ("TFMC"),  the prior investment
adviser,  and the Adviser).  The members of the Advisory Board are distinct from
the Board of  Trustees,  do not serve  the Fund in any  other  capacity  and are
persons who have no power to determine what securities are purchased or sold and
behalf of the Fund.  Each member of the  Advisory  Board may be contacted at 101
Huntington Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts 02199.

Members of the Advisory Board and their respective principal  occupations during
the past five years are as follows:

R. Trent Campbell, President, FMS, Inc. (financial and management services);
     former Chairman of the Board, Mosher Steel Company.

Mrs. Lloyd Bentsen, Formerly National Democratic Committeewoman from Texas;
     co-founder, Houston Parents' League; former board member of various civic
     and cultural organizations in Houston, including the Houston Symphony,
     Museum of Fine Arts and YWCA. Mrs. Bentsen is presently active in various
     civic and cultural activities in the Washington, D.C. area, including
     membership on the Area Board for The March of Dimes and is a National
     Trustee for the Botanic Gardens of Washington, D. C.

Thomas R. Powers, Formerly Chairman of the Board, President and Chief Executive
     Officer, TFMC; Director, West Central Advisory Board, Texas Commerce Bank;
     Trustee, Memorial Hospital System; Chairman of the Board of Regents of
     Baylor University; Member, Board of Governors, National Association of
     Securities Dealers, Inc.; Formerly, Chairman, Investment Company Institute;
     formerly, President, Houston Chapter of Financial Executive Institute.

                                       22

<PAGE>

Thomas B. McDade, Chairman and Director, TransTexas Gas Company; Director,
     Houston Industries and Houston Lighting and Power Company; Director,
     TransAmerican Companies (natural gas producer and transportation); Member,
     Board of Managers, Harris County Hospital District; Advisory Director,
     Commercial State Bank, El Campo; Advisory Director, First National Bank of
     Bryan; Advisory Director, Sterling Bancshares; Former Director and Vice
     Chairman, Texas Commerce Bancshares; and Vice Chairman, Texas Commerce
     Bank.

Compensation of the Board of Trustees and Advisory Board.  The following  tables
provide  information  regarding the compensation  paid by the Fund and the other
investment  companies  in the  John  Hancock  Fund  Complex  to the  Independent
Trustees and the Advisory Board members for their services for the Fund's fiscal
year ended October 31, 1995. The two non-Independent  Trustees, Mr. Boudreau and
Ms. Hodsdon, and each of the officers of the Trust are interested persons of the
Adviser,  are  compensated  by the  Adviser  and its  affiliates  and receive no
compensation  from the Fund for their  services.  The  Trustees not listed below
were not trustees of the Trust during its most recently completed fiscal year.

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

James F. Carlin                     $ 1,313               $ 60,700
William H. Cunningham(t)              3,175                 69,700
Charles F. Fretz                          0                 56,200
Harold R. Hiser. Jr.(t)                 107                 60,200
Charles L. Ladner                     1,671                 60,700
Leo E. Linbeck, Jr.                   4,145                 73,200
Patricia P. McCarter                  1,671                 60,700
Steven R. Pruchansky                  1,730                 62,700
Norman H. Smith                       1,730                 62,700
John P. Toolan(t)                     1,298                 60,700
- ----------------------              -------               --------
Total                               $16,840               $627,500

(1)  Compensation made pursuant to different compensation arrangements then in
     effect for the fiscal year ended October 31, 1995.


(2)  Total compensation from the Fund and the other John Hancock funds is as of
     December 31, 1995. All Trustees except Messrs. Cunningham and Linbeck are
     Trustees or Directors of 33 funds in the John Hancock Complex. Messrs.
     Cunningham and Linbeck are Trustees or Directors of 31 funds.

                                       23

<PAGE>

(t)  As of December 31, 1995, the value of aggregate accrued deferred
     compensation from all funds in the John Hancock Fund complex for Mr.
     Cunningham was $54,413, for Mr. Hiser was $31,324 and for Mr. Toolan was
     $71,437 under the John Hancock Deferred Compensation Plan for Independent
     Trustees/Directors.

                                                            Total Compensation
                                                            from the Funds in
                              Aggregate                     John Hancock
                              Compensation                  Fund Complex to
Advisory Board*               from the Fund                 Advisory Board*
- ---------------               -------------                 ---------------

R. Trent Campbell               $  750                           $ 70,000
Mrs. Lloyd Bentsen                 750                             63,000
Thomas R. Powers                   750                             63,000  
Thomas B. McDade                   750                             63,000
                                ------                           --------
TOTAL                           $3,000                           $259,000

*    As of December 31, 1995.

INVESTMENT ADVISORY AND OTHER SERVICES

The Fund receives its investment advice from the Adviser. Investors should refer
to the  Prospectuses  for a description  of certain  information  concerning the
investment  management  contract.  Each of the Trustees and  principal  officers
affiliated  with the Trust who is also an  affiliated  person of the  Adviser is
named above,  together with the capacity in which such person is affiliated with
the Trust and the Adviser.

The Adviser,  located at 101 Huntington  Avenue,  Boston,  Massachusetts  02199-
7603,  was organized in 1968 and has more than $18 billion in total assets under
management  in its  capacity  as  investment  adviser  to the Fund and the other
mutual funds and publicly traded investment  companies in the John Hancock group
of funds having a combined total of over 1,080,000 shareholders.  The Adviser is
a wholly-owned  subsidiary of The Berkeley  Financial Group,  which is in turn a
wholly-owned  subsidiary of John Hancock Subsidiaries,  Inc., which is in turn a
wholly-owned subsidiary of John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company (the "Life
Company"),  one of the most recognized and respected  financial  institutions in
the nation.  With total assets under  management  of more than $80 billion,  the
Life  Company is one of the ten largest life  insurance  companies in the United
States, and carries high ratings from Standard & Poor's and A.M. Best's. Founded
in 1862, the Life Company has been serving clients for over 130 years.

The Trust,  on behalf of the Fund,  has entered  into an  investment  management
contract with the Adviser. Under the investment management contract, the Adviser
provides the Fund with (i) a continuous investment program,  consistent with the
Fund's  stated  investment  objective and policies and (ii)  supervision  of all
aspects of the Fund's operations except those that are delegated to a custodian,
transfer  agent or other agent.  The Adviser is  responsible  for the day-to-day
management of the Fund's portfolio assets.

                                       24

<PAGE>

Securities  held by the  Fund may  also be held by  other  funds  or  investment
advisory  clients for which the  Adviser or its  affiliates  provide  investment
advice.   Because  of  different  investment  objectives  or  other  factors,  a
particular  security  may be bought for one or more funds or clients when one or
more are selling the same  security.  If  opportunities  for purchase or sale of
securities  by the  Adviser for the Fund or for other funds or clients for which
the Adviser renders  investment  advice arise for  consideration at or about the
same time,  transactions in such  securities will be made,  insofar as feasible,
for the respective funds or clients in a manner deemed equitable to all of them.
To the extent that transactions on behalf of more than one client of the Adviser
or its affiliates may increase the demand for securities  being purchased or the
supply of securities being sold, there may be an adverse effect on price.

No person  other than the  Adviser and its  directors  and  employees  regularly
furnishes  advice  to the Fund  with  respect  to the  desirability  of the Fund
investing  in,  purchasing or selling  securities.  The Adviser may from time to
time receive statistical or other similar factual  information,  and information
regarding  general  economic  factors and trends,  from the Life Company and its
affiliates.

All  expenses  which  are not  specifically  paid by the  Adviser  and which are
incurred in the operation of the Fund  (including  fees of Trustees of the Trust
who are not  "interested  persons,"  as such term is defined  in the  Investment
Company Act, but excluding certain distribution-related  expenses required to be
paid by the Adviser or John Hancock Funds),  and the continuous  public offering
of the  shares  of the  Fund are  borne by the  Fund.  Class  expenses  properly
allocable to either Class A or Class B shares will be borne  exclusively by such
class of shares, subject to conditions the Internal Revenue Service imposes with
respect to multiple class structures.

As provided by the investment management contract,  the Fund pays the Adviser an
investment management fee, which is accrued daily and paid monthly in arrears at
the following rates of the Fund's average daily net assets as follows:

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

           The first $75 million                          0.625%
           The next $75 million                          0.5625%
           Over $150 million                               0.50%

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

For the period from  November  1, 1994 to  December  22, 1994 and for the fiscal
years ended October 31, 1994 and 1993, the Fund paid TFMC, its former investment
adviser,  advisory  fees in the  amounts of  $161,643,  $886,380  and  $541,737,
respectively.  For the period from  December 22, 1994 to October 31,  1995,  the
Fund paid the Adviser advisory fees in the amount of $830,016. During the period
from December 22, 1994 to April 17, 1995, the Adviser paid  subadvisory  fees in
the amount of $147,903 to Transamerica Investment Services, Inc.

If the total of all ordinary  business  expenses of the Fund for any fiscal year
exceeds  limitations  prescribed  in any  state in which  shares of the Fund are
qualified for sale, the fee payable to the Adviser will be reduced to the extent
required  by these  limitations.  At this time,  the most  restrictive  limit on

                                       25

<PAGE>

expenses  imposed by a state  requires that expenses  charged to the Fund in any
fiscal year may not exceed 2 1/2% of the first $30,000,000 of the Fund's average
net  assets,  2% of the next  $70,000,000  of such net  assets and 1 1/2% of the
remaining  average net assets.  When  calculating the above limit,  the Fund may
exclude interest, brokerage commissions and extraordinary expenses.

Pursuant to the investment  management  contract,  the Adviser is not liable for
any error of judgment or mistake of law or for any loss  suffered by the Fund in
connection  with  the  matters  to which  the  contract  relates,  except a loss
resulting from willful misfeasance, bad faith or gross negligence on the part of
the Adviser in the  performance of its duties or from its reckless  disregard of
the obligations and duties under the contract.

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

The investment management contract and the distribution contract discussed below
each  continue  in effect  from year to year if  approved  annually by vote of a
majority of the Trustees who are not interested persons of one of the parties to
the  contract,  cast in person at a meeting  called for the purpose of voting on
such  approval,  and by either the  Trustees or the holders of a majority of the
Fund's  outstanding  voting  securities.  Each of these contracts  automatically
terminates  upon  assignment and may be terminated  without  penalty on 60 days'
notice at the option of either party to the respective  contract or by vote of a
majority of the outstanding voting securities of the Fund.

Administrative  Services  Agreement.  The Fund was a party to an  administrative
services agreement with TFMC (the "Services Agreement"),  pursuant to which TFMC
performed bookkeeping and accounting services and functions, including preparing
and  maintaining  various  accounting  books,  records and other  documents  and
keeping such general ledgers and portfolio accounts as are reasonably  necessary
for  the  operation  of  the  Fund.  Other   administrative   services  included
communications  in  response  to  shareholder  inquiries  and  certain  printing
expenses of various financial reports. In addition, such staff and office space,
facilities  and  equipment  was provided as necessary to provide  administrative
services to the Fund. The Services  Agreement was amended in connection with the
appointment  of the Adviser as adviser to the Fund to permit  services under the
Agreement  to be provided to the Funds by the  Adviser and its  affiliates.  The
Services Agreement was terminated during the fiscal year 1995.

For the fiscal  years ended  October 31, 1995,  1994 and 1993,  the Fund paid to
TFMC (and to the Adviser for the period  from  December  22, 1994 to January 16,
1995)   administrative   services   fees  of  $10,565,   $88,709  and   $69,485,
respectively.

                                       26

<PAGE>

DISTRIBUTION AGREEMENT

The Fund has entered into a distribution contract with John Hancock Funds. Under
the  contract,  John Hancock  Funds is obligated to use its best efforts to sell
shares of each class of the Fund.  Shares of the Fund are also sold by  selected
broker-dealers  (the "Selling  Brokers")  which have entered into selling agency
agreements  with John Hancock  Funds.  John Hancock Funds accepts orders for the
purchase  of the shares of the Fund which are  continually  offered at net asset
value next determined,  plus any applicable sales charge. In connection with the
sale of Class A or Class B  shares,  John  Hancock  Funds  and  Selling  Brokers
receive compensation in the form of a sales charge imposed, in the case of Class
A shares,  at the time of sale or, in the case of Class B shares,  John  Hancock
Funds and Selling  Brokers  receive  compensation  in the form of a sales charge
imposed,  in the case of Class A shares,  at the time of sale or, in the case of
Class B shares,  on a deferred basis.  Upon notice to all Selling Brokers,  John
Hancock  Funds may allow  them up to the full  applicable  sales  charge  during
periods specified in such notice.  During these periods,  Selling Brokers may be
deemed to be  underwriters  as that term is defined  in the 1933 Act.  The sales
charges are discussed further in the Prospectus.

The Fund's Trustees adopted Distribution Plans with respect to Class A and Class
B shares  (together,  the "Plans")  pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the  Investment
Company Act. Under the Plans, the Fund will pay distribution and service fees at
an aggregate annual rate of up to 0.25% and 1.00%,  respectively,  of the Fund's
daily net assets  attributable to shares of that class.  However,  the amount of
the service  fee will not exceed  0.25% of the Fund's  average  daily net assets
attributable  to each class of shares.  In accordance  with  generally  accepted
accounting  principles,  the  Fund  does  not  treat  unreimbursed  distribution
expenses  attributable to Class B shares as a liability of the Fund and does not
reduce the current net assets of Class B by such amount, although the amount may
be payable under the Class B Plan in the future.

Under the Plans,  expenditures  shall be  calculated  and accrued daily and paid
monthly or at such other intervals as the Trustees shall determine.  The fee may
be spent by John Hancock  Funds on  Distribution  Expenses or Service  Expenses.
"Distribution Expenses" include any activities or expenses primarily intended to
result in the sale of shares of the relevant class of the Fund,  including,  but
not limited to: (i) initial and ongoing sales  compensation  to Selling  Brokers
and others  (including  affiliates of John Hancock Funds) engaged in the sale of
Fund shares;  (ii)  marketing,  promotional  and overhead  expenses  incurred in
connection with the distribution of Fund shares; and (iii) with respect to Class
B shares only, interest expenses on unreimbursed payments made to, or on account
of, account executives of selected broker-dealers  (including affiliates of John
Hancock Funds) and others who furnish personal and account maintenance  services
to  shareholders  of the relevant  class of the Fund.  For the fiscal year ended
October 31, 1995, an aggregate of $5,853,826 of  Distribution  Expenses or 3.77%
of the average  net assets of the Fund's  Class B Shares was not  reimbursed  or
recovered by John Hancock Funds through the receipt of deferred sales charges or
Rule 12b-1 fees in prior periods.

Pursuant to the Plans, at least quarterly,  John Hancock Funds provides the Fund
with a written  report of the amounts  expended  under the Plans and the purpose
for which these  expenditures  were made. The Trustees review these reports on a
quarterly  basis.  During the fiscal year ended October 31, 1995,  the Fund paid
John Hancock Funds the following amounts of expenses with respect to the Class A
and Class B shares of the Fund:

                                       27

<PAGE>

                                  Expense Items
                                   
                                                                    Interest,
                                   Printing and                     Carrying 
                                   Mailing of       Compensation    or Other 
                                   Prospectus to    to Selling      Finance  
                  Advertising      Shareholders     Brokers         Charges  
                  -----------      ------------     -------         -------  

Class A shares      $ 5,882           $1,187         $  5,714       $      0
Class B shares      $62,187           $6,679         $525,782       $666,273



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

When the Trust  seeks an  Independent  Trustee to fill a vacancy or as a nominee
for election by  shareholders,  the selection or  nomination of the  Independent
Trustee is under  resolutions  adopted by the  Trustees  contemporaneously  with
their  adoption of the Plans,  committed to the  discretion  of the Committee on
Administration  of the Trustees.  The members of the Committee on Administration
are all Independent  Trustees and are identified in this Statement of Additional
Information under the heading "Those Responsible for Management."

NET ASSET VALUE

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

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

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

                                       28

<PAGE>

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

Any  assets  or  liabilities  expressed  in  terms  of  foreign  currencies  are
translated  into U.S.  dollars by the  custodian  bank based on London  currency
exchange  quotations as of 5:00 p.m., London time (12:00 noon, New York time) on
the date of any determination of the Fund's NAV.

The Fund will not price its securities on the following national  holidays:  New
Year's Day; Presidents' Day; Good Friday;  Memorial Day; Independence Day; Labor
Day; Thanksgiving Day; and Christmas Day.

INITIAL SALES CHARGE ON CLASS A SHARES

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

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

Combined  Purchases.  In calculating the sales charge applicable to purchases of
Class A shares made at one time,  the purchases  will be combined if made by (a)
an  individual,  his or her  spouse  and  their  children  under  the  age of 21
purchasing  securities  for his or her  own  account,  (b) a  trustee  or  other
fiduciary  purchasing  for a single trust,  estate or fiduciary  account and (c)
certain groups of four or more  individuals  making use of salary  deductions or
similar  group  methods of payment  whose funds are combined for the purchase of
mutual fund shares.  Further  information  about combined  purchases,  including
certain  restrictions  on combined group  purchases,  is available from Investor
Services or a Selling Broker's representative.

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

o    Any state, county or any instrumentality, department, authority, or agency
     of these entities that is prohibited by applicable investment laws from
     paying a sales charge or commission when it purchases shares of any
     registered investment management company.

                                       29

<PAGE>

o    A bank, trust company, credit union, savings institution or other
     depository institution, its trust departments or common trust funds if it
     is purchasing $1 million or more for non-discretionary customers or
     accounts.

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

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

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

o    A member of an approved affinity group financial services plan.

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

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

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

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

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

Accumulation Privilege.  Investors (including investors combining purchases) who
are  already  Class A  shareholders  may also  obtain the benefit of the reduced
sales charge by taking into account not only the amount then being  invested but
also the  purchase  price or value of the  Class A shares  already  held by such
person.

                                       30

<PAGE>

Combination  Privilege.  Reduced  sales  charges  (according to the schedule set
forth  in the  Prospectus)  also  are  available  to an  investor  based  on the
aggregate  amount of his concurrent  and prior  investments in Class A shares of
the Fund and shares of all other John Hancock funds which carry a sales charge.

Letter of Intention.  The reduced sales loads are also applicable to investments
made over a specified  period  pursuant to a Letter of  Intention  (LOI),  which
should be read carefully prior to its execution by an investor.  The Fund offers
two options regarding the specified period for making investments under the LOI.
All  investors  have the  option of making  their  investments  over a period of
thirteen (13) months. Investors who are using the Fund as a funding medium for a
qualified  retirement plan, however,  may opt to make the necessary  investments
called for by the LOI over a  forty-eight  (48) month  period.  These  qualified
retirement plans include IRAs, SEP, SARSEP,  401(k), 403(b) (including TSAs) and
457 plans. Such an investment  (including  accumulations and combinations)  must
aggregate $100,000 or more invested during the specified period from the date of
the LOI or from a date  within  ninety  (90) days prior  thereto,  upon  written
request  to  Investor  Services.  The sales  charge  applicable  to all  amounts
invested  under the LOI is computed as if the  aggregate  amount  intended to be
invested had been invested immediately. If such aggregate amount is not actually
invested,  the difference in the sales charge actually paid and the sales charge
payable had the LOI not been in effect is due from the  investor.  However,  for
the purchases  actually made with the specified period (either 13 or 48 months),
the sales  charge  applicable  will not be higher  than that  which  would  have
applied  (including  accumulations  and  combinations)  had the LOI been for the
amount actually invested.

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

DEFERRED SALES CHARGE ON CLASS B SHARES

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

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

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

                                       31

<PAGE>

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

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

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

Example:

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

*        Proceeds of 50 shares redeemed at $12 per share                    $600
*        Minus proceeds of 10 shares not subject to CDSC
         (dividend reinvestment)                                            -120
*        Minus appreciation on remaining shares
         (40 shares X $2)                                                   - 80
                                                                            ----
*        Amount subject to CDSC                                             $400

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

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

                                       32

<PAGE>

For all account types:

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

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

*    Redemptions due to death or disability.

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

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

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

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

*    Returns of excess contributions made to these plans.

*    Redemptions made to effect distributions to participants or beneficiaries
     from employer sponsored retirement plans under Section 401(a) of the Code
     (such as 401(k), Money Purchase Pension Plan, Profit Sharing Plan).

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

Please see matrix for reference.







                                       33
<PAGE>


CDSC Waiver Matrix for Class B Funds

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                    401(a) Plan      
Type of             (401(k), MPP,                                                    IRA, IRA
Distribution        PSP)              403(b)                 457                     Rollover             Non-retirement
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                 <C>                 <C>                      <C>                      <C>                 <C>
Death or            Waived            Waived                 Waived                  Waived               Waived
Disability
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Over 70 1/2         Waived            Waived                 Waived                  Waived for           12% of account
                                                                                     mandatory            value annually
                                                                                     distributions or     in periodic   
                                                                                     12% of account       payments      
                                                                                     value annually     
                                                                                     in periodic
                                                                                     payments
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Between 59 1/2      Waived            Waived                 Waived                  Waived for Life      12% of account 
and 70 1/2                                                                           Expectancy or 12%    value annually
                                                                                     of account value     in periodic   
                                                                                     annually in          payments      
                                                                                     periodic payments  
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under 59 1/2        Waived            Waived for annuity     Waived for annuity      Waived for annuity   12% of account
                                      payments (72t)or       payments (72t)or        payments (72t)or     value annually
                                      12% of account         12% of account          12% of account       in periodic   
                                      value annually in      value annually in       value annually in    payments      
                                      periodic payments      periodic payments       periodic payments
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Loans               Waived            Waived                 N/A                     N/A                  N/A
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Termination of      Not Waived        Not Waived             Not Waived              Not Waived           N/A
Plan
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hardships           Waived            Waived                 Waived                  N/A                  N/A
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Return of 
Excess              Waived            Waived                 Waived                  Waived               N/A
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
                                       34

<PAGE>

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

SPECIAL REDEMPTIONS

Although  it  would  not  normally  do so,  the  Fund  has the  right to pay the
redemption  price  of  shares  of the  Fund in  whole  or in  part in  portfolio
securities as prescribed by the Trustees.  When the shareholder  sells portfolio
securities  received in this fashion, he will incur a brokerage charge. Any such
security  would be valued  for the  purpose of making  such  payment at the same
value as used in determining the Fund's net asset value. The Fund has,  however,
elected to be governed by Rule 18f-1  under the 1940 Act.  Under that rule,  the
Fund must  redeem  its  shares  solely in cash  except  to the  extent  that the
redemption  payments to any  shareholder  during any 90- day period would exceed
the lesser of $250,000 or 1% of the net asset value of the Fund at the beginning
of such period.

ADDITIONAL SERVICES AND PROGRAMS

Exchange Privilege. As described more fully in the Prospectus,  the Fund permits
exchanges  of shares of any class for shares of the same class in any other John
Hancock fund offering that class.

Systematic  Withdrawal  Plan. As described  briefly in the Prospectus,  the Fund
permits the establishment of a Systematic  Withdrawal Plan.  Payments under this
plan represent  proceeds  arising from the redemption of Fund shares.  Since the
redemption price of Fund shares may be more or less than the shareholder's cost,
depending upon the market value of the securities  owned by the Fund at the time
of  redemption,  the  distribution  of cash  pursuant to this plan may result in
realization  of gain or loss for  purposes  of federal,  state and local  income
taxes.  The  maintenance  of a  Systematic  Withdrawal  Plan  concurrently  with
purchases  of  additional  Class A or  Class  B  shares  of the  Fund  could  be
disadvantageous to a shareholder  because of the initial sales charge payable on
such  purchases of Class A shares and the CDSC imposed on redemptions of Class B
shares and because  redemptions  are taxable  events.  Therefore,  a shareholder
should not purchase Fund shares at the same time as a Systematic Withdrawal Plan
is in  effect.  The  Fund  reserves  the  right to  modify  or  discontinue  the
Systematic  Withdrawal  Plan of any shareholder on 30 days' prior written notice
to such  shareholder,  or to discontinue  the  availability  of such plan in the
future.  The  shareholder  may  terminate  the plan at any time by giving proper
notice to Investor Services.

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

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

The privilege of making investments  through the Monthly Automatic  Accumulation
Program  may be  revoked  by  Investor  Services  without  prior  notice  if any
investment is not honored by the shareholder's  bank. The bank shall be under no
obligation to notify the shareholder as to the non-payment of any checks.

                                       35

<PAGE>

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

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

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

DESCRIPTION OF THE FUND'S SHARES

The Trustees of the Trust are  responsible for the management and supervision of
the Fund.  The  Declaration  of Trust permits the Trustees to issue an unlimited
number of full and fractional  shares of beneficial  interest of the Fund,  $.01
par value per share.  Under the  Declaration  of Trust,  the  Trustees  have the
authority  to create and  classify  shares of  beneficial  interest  in separate
series, without further action by shareholders. As of the date of this Statement
of Additional  Information,  the Trustees have authorized shares of the Fund and
one other series.  Additional series may be added in the future. The Declaration
of Trust also  authorizes  the Trustees to classify and reclassify the shares of
the Fund, or any new series of the Trust,  into one or more  classes.  As of the
date of this Statement of Additional  Information,  the Trustees have authorized
the  issuance  of two classes of shares of the Fund,  designated  as Class A and
Class B.

The shares of each class of the Fund represent an equal  proportionate  interest
in the  aggregate  net assets  attributable  to that class of the Fund.  A sales
charge will be imposed  either at the time of the purchase,  for Class A shares,
or on a contingent  deferred basis, for Class B shares.  For Class A shares,  no
sales charge is payable at the time of purchase on  investments of $1 million or
more, but for such investments a contingent deferred sales charge may be imposed
in the event of certain redemption transactions within one year of purchase.

Class A shares  and  Class B shares  have  certain  exclusive  voting  rights on
matters relating to their respective  distribution  plans. The different classes
of the  Fund  may  bear  different  expenses  relating  to the  cost of  holding
shareholder meetings necessitated by the exclusive voting rights of any class of
shares.

                                       36

<PAGE>

Dividends paid by the Fund, if any, with respect to each class of shares will be
calculated in the same manner,  at the same time and on the same day and will be
in the same amount, except for differences resulting from the facts that (i) the
distribution  and  service  fees  relating to Class A and Class B shares will be
borne   exclusively  by  that  class,  (ii)  Class  B  shares  will  pay  higher
distribution and service fees than Class A shares, and (iii) each of Class A and
Class B shares will bear any other class  expenses  properly  allocable  to such
class of shares,  subject to the conditions the Internal Revenue Service imposes
with respect to multiple-class  structures.  Similarly,  the net asset value per
share may vary depending on the class of shares purchased.

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

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

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

Notwithstanding  the fact that the  Prospectus is a combined  prospectus for the
Fund and other John Hancock  mutual funds,  the Fund shall not be liable for the
liabilities of any other John Hancock mutual fund.

TAX STATUS

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

                                       37

<PAGE>

The Fund will be subject to a 4%  non-deductible  federal  excise tax on certain
amounts not distributed (and not treated as having been distributed) on a timely
basis in accordance  with annual  minimum  distribution  requirements.  The Fund
intends under normal circumstances to avoid liability for such tax by satisfying
such distribution requirements.

The Fund expects to qualify to pay  "exempt-interest  dividends,"  as defined in
the Code.  To qualify to pay  exempt-interest  dividends,  the Fund must, at the
close of each quarter of its taxable year, have at least 50% of the value of its
total assets  invested in municipal  securities  whose interest is excluded from
gross  income  under  Section  103(a)  of  the  Code.  In  purchasing  municipal
securities,  the Fund intends to rely on opinions of nationally  recognized bond
counsel for each issue as to the  excludability  of interest on such obligations
from gross income for federal  income tax purposes.  The Fund will not undertake
independent investigations concerning the tax-exempt status of such obligations,
nor does it  guarantee or represent  that bond  counsels'  opinions are correct.
Bond  counsels'  opinions will  generally be based in part upon covenants by the
issuers and related  parties  regarding  continuing  compliance with federal tax
requirements.  Tax laws enacted  principally  during the 1980's not only had the
effect of limiting the purposes for which  tax-exempt  bonds could be issued and
reducing the supply of such bonds,  but also increased the number and complexity
of requirements  that must be satisfied on a continuing basis in order for bonds
to  be  and  remain  tax-exempt.  If  the  issuer  of  a  bond  or a  user  of a
bond-financed  facility  fails to  comply  with such  requirements  at any time,
interest  on  the  bond  could  become  taxable,  retroactive  to the  date  the
obligations  was issued.  In that event,  a portion of the Fund's  distributions
attributable to interest the Fund received on such bond for the current year and
for prior years could be characterized or recharacterized as taxable income. The
availability of tax-exempt obligations and the value of the Fund's portfolio may
be affected by  restrictive  federal  income tax  legislation  enacted in recent
years or by similar future legislation.

If the Fund  satisfies the applicable  requirements,  dividends paid by the Fund
which are  attributable  to tax exempt  interest  on  municipal  securities  and
designated by the Fund as  exempt-interest  dividends in a written notice mailed
to its shareholders within sixty days after the close of its taxable year may be
treated by shareholders as items of interest  excludable from their gross income
under Section 103(a) of the Code. The recipient of tax-exempt income is required
to report such income on his federal income tax return.  However,  a shareholder
is advised to consult his tax adviser  with  respect to whether  exempt-interest
dividends retain the exclusion under Section 103(a) if such shareholder would be
treated as a "substantial  user" under Section 147(a)(1) with respect to some or
all of the  tax-exempt  obligations  held by the Fund.  The Code  provides  that
interest on  indebtedness  incurred or  continued to purchase or carry shares of
the Fund is not  deductible  to the  extent it is deemed  related  to the Fund's
exempt-interest  dividends.  Pursuant  to  published  guidelines,  the  Internal
Revenue  Service may deem  indebtedness to have been incurred for the purpose of
purchasing or carrying shares of the Fund even though the borrowed funds may not
be directly traceable to the purchase of shares.

Although all or a substantial  portion of the dividends  paid by the Fund may be
excluded by the Fund's  shareholders  from their gross income for federal income
tax  purposes,  the Fund may purchase  specified  private  activity  bonds,  the
interest from which  (including the Fund's  distributions  attributable  to such
interest)  may be a  preference  item for  purposes of the  federal  alternative
minimum tax (both individual and corporate).  All exempt-interest dividends from
the Fund,  whether or not  attributable to private  activity bond interest,  may
increase a corporate shareholder's  liability, if any, for corporate alternative

                                       38

<PAGE>

minimum tax and will be taken into account in determining  the extent to which a
shareholder's  Social  Security  or certain  railroad  retirement  benefits  are
taxable.

Distributions  other than  exempt-interest  dividends from the Fund's current or
accumulated  earnings  and profits  ("E&P")  will be taxable  under the Code for
investors who are subject to tax. Taxable  distributions  include  distributions
from the Fund that are  attributable  to (i) taxable  income,  including but not
limited to taxable bond interest,  recognized  market discount income,  original
issue  discount  income  accrued  with  respect to taxable  bonds,  income  from
repurchase agreements, income from securities lending, income from dollar rolls,
income from interest rate swaps, caps, floors and collars,  and a portion of the
discount from certain stripped  tax-exempt  obligations or their coupons or (ii)
capital gains from the sale of securities or other  investments  (including from
the disposition of rights to when-issued  securities  prior to issuance) or from
options and futures contracts.  If these  distributions are paid from the Fund's
"investment  company taxable  income," they will be taxable as ordinary  income;
and if they are paid from the Fund's "net capital gain," they will be taxable as
long-term  capital  gain.  (Net  capital  gain  is the  excess  (if  any) of net
long-term capital gain over net short-term  capital loss, and investment company
taxable income is all taxable  income and capital gains,  other than net capital
gain, after reduction by deductible expenses.) Some distributions may be paid in
January  but may be  taxable to  shareholders  as if they had been  received  on
December 31 of the previous year. The tax treatment  described  above will apply
without  regard to whether  distributions  are received in cash or reinvested in
additional shares of the Fund.

Distributions,  if any,  in excess of E&P will  constitute  a return of  capital
under the Code, which will first reduce an investor's  federal tax basis in Fund
shares and then, to the extent such basis is exceeded,  will generally give rise
to capital  gains.  Amounts  that are not  allowable as a deduction in computing
taxable income,  including expenses  associated with earning tax-exempt interest
income,  do not  reduce  the  Fund's  current  earnings  and  profits  for these
purposes.  Consequently,  the portion, if any, of the Fund's  distributions from
gross tax-exempt  interest income that exceeds its net tax-exempt interest would
be taxable as ordinary income to the extent of such  disallowed  deductions even
though  such  excess  portion  may  represent  an  economic  return of  capital.
Shareholders who have chosen automatic  reinvestment of their distributions will
have a federal tax basis in each share received  pursuant to such a reinvestment
equal to the amount of cash they would have received had they elected to receive
the  distribution  in cash,  divided  by the  number of shares  received  in the
reinvestment.

After the close of each calendar year, the Fund will inform  shareholders of the
federal  income tax status of its  dividends  and  distributions  for such year,
including the portion of such  dividends  that  qualifies as tax-exempt  and the
portion, if any, that should be treated as a tax preference item for purposes of
the federal  alternative  minimum tax.  Shareholders who have not held shares of
the Fund for its full taxable year may have designated as tax-exempt or as a tax
preference item a percentage of  distributions  which is not equal to the actual
amount of  tax-exempt  income or tax  preference  item income earned by the Fund
during the period of their investment in the Fund.

The amount of net realized  capital  gains,  if any, in any given year will vary
depending upon the Adviser's current investment strategy and whether the Adviser
believes  it to be in the best  interest  of the Fund to  dispose  of  portfolio
securities that will generate  capital gains or to enter into options or futures
transactions. At the time of an investor's purchase of Fund shares, a portion of
the purchase price is often attributable to realized or unrealized  appreciation
in the Fund's portfolio. Consequently,  subsequent distributions on these shares
from such  appreciation  may be taxable to such  investor  even if the net asset
value of the  investor's  shares is, as a result of the  distributions,  reduced

                                       39

<PAGE>

below the  investor's  cost for such shares,  and the  distributions  in reality
represent a return of a portion of the purchase price.

Upon a redemption  of shares of the Fund  (including by exercise of the exchange
privilege)  a  shareholder  will  ordinarily  realize  a  taxable  gain  or loss
depending  upon the  amount  of the  proceeds  and the  investor's  basis in his
shares.  Such gain or loss will be treated as capital gain or loss if the shares
are  capital  assets  in the  shareholder's  hands  and  will  be  long-term  or
short-term,  depending upon the  shareholder's tax holding period for the shares
and  subject to the  special  rules  described  below.  A sales  charge  paid in
purchasing  Class A shares of the Fund cannot be taken into account for purposes
of determining  gain or loss on the redemption or exchange of such shares within
ninety (90) days after their  purchase to the extent  Class A shares of the Fund
or another John  Hancock fund are  subsequently  acquired  without  payment of a
sales  charge  pursuant  to  the  reinvestment  or  exchange   privilege.   This
disregarded  charge will result in an increase in the shareholder's tax basis in
the shares  subsequently  acquired.  Also,  any loss realized on a redemption or
exchange  may be  disallowed  to the extent the shares  disposed of are replaced
with other shares of the Fund within a period of sixty-one  (61) days  beginning
thirty  (30) days  before  and  ending  thirty  (30) days  after the  shares are
disposed of, such as pursuant to  automatic  dividend  reinvestments.  In such a
case,  the  basis  of the  shares  acquired  will be  adjusted  to  reflect  the
disallowed  loss.  Any loss  realized  upon the  redemption of shares with a tax
holding  period of six  months or less will be  disallowed  to the extent of any
exempt-interest dividends paid with respect to such shares and, to the extent in
excess of the disallowed amount,  will be treated as a long-term capital loss to
the extent of any amounts  treated as  distributions  of long-term  capital gain
with respect to such shares.

Although its present  intention is to  distribute,  at least  annually,  all net
capital  gain, if any, the Fund reserves the right to retain and reinvest all or
any  portion of the excess of net  long-term  capital  gain over net  short-term
capital loss in any year. The Fund will not in any event  distribute net capital
gain  realized in any year to the extent that a capital loss is carried  forward
from prior years  against such gain.  To the extent such excess was retained and
not exhausted by the  carryforward of prior years' capital  losses,  it would be
subject to Federal income tax in the hands of the Fund. Upon proper  designation
of this amount by the Fund, each shareholder would be treated for Federal income
tax  purposes  as if the  Fund  had  distributed  to him on the  last day of its
taxable  year his pro rata  share of such  excess,  and he had paid his pro rata
share of the taxes paid by the Fund and  reinvested  the  remainder in the Fund.
Accordingly,  each  shareholder  would (a)  include  his pro rata  share of such
excess as long-term capital gain in his return for his taxable year in which the
last day of the Fund's  taxable  year  falls,  (b) be  entitled  either to a tax
credit on his  return  for,  or to a refund  of, his pro rata share of the taxes
paid by the Fund, and (c) be entitled to increase the adjusted tax basis for his
shares in the Fund by the  difference  between his pro rata share of this excess
and his pro rata share of these taxes.

For Federal  income tax  purposes,  the Fund is permitted to carry forward a net
capital loss in any year to offset net capital gains,  if any,  during the eight
years following the year of the loss. To the extent subsequent net capital gains
are offset by such losses, they would not result in Federal income tax liability
to the Fund and, as noted above, would not be distributed to shareholders. As of
October 31, 1995, the Fund had capital loss carryforwards of $3,216,205 of which
$2,785,979 expires in 2002 and $430,226 expires in 2003.

Dividends and capital gain  distributions from the Fund will not qualify for the
dividends-received deduction for corporations.

                                       40

<PAGE>

The Fund is required to accrue income on any debt securities that have more than
a de minimis amount of original issue discount (or debt securities acquired at a
market  discount,  if the Fund  elects  to  include  market  discount  in income
currently) prior to the receipt of the corresponding cash payments.  The mark to
market  rules  applicable  to certain  options  and futures  contracts  may also
require the Fund to recognize gain within a concurrent receipt of cash. However,
the Fund must distribute to shareholders for each taxable year substantially all
of its net income and net  capital  gains,  including  such  income or gain,  to
qualify as a regulated  investment  company and avoid  liability for any federal
income or excise tax.  Therefore,  the Fund may have to dispose of its portfolio
securities under disadvantageous  circumstances to generate cash, or may have to
leverage   itself  by  borrowing  the  cash,   to  satisfy  these   distribution
requirements.

A state  income (and  possibly  local income  and/or  intangible  property)  tax
exemption is generally available to the extent (if any) the Fund's distributions
are derived from interest on (or, in the case of intangibles taxes, the value of
its assets is attributable to) certain U.S. Government  obligations or municipal
obligations  of issuers in the state in which a  shareholder  is subject to tax,
provided in some states that certain thresholds for holdings of such obligations
and/or reporting  requirements are satisfied.  The Fund will not seek to satisfy
any  threshold or reporting  requirements  that may apply in  particular  taxing
jurisdictions,  although the Fund may in its sole  discretion  provide  relevant
information to shareholders.

The Fund will be required to report to the Internal  Revenue Service (the "IRS")
all taxable  distributions to  shareholders,  as well as gross proceeds from the
redemption  or exchange  of Fund  shares,  except in the case of certain  exempt
recipients,  i.e.,  corporations  and certain other investors  distributions  to
which are exempt from the information  reporting  provisions of the Code.  Under
the backup withholding  provisions of Code Section 3406 and applicable  Treasury
regulations,  all such reportable  distributions  and proceeds may be subject to
backup  withholding  of  federal  income  tax at the  rate of 31% in the case of
non-exempt shareholders who fail to furnish the Fund with their correct taxpayer
identification number and certain  certifications  required by the IRS or if the
IRS or a broker  notifies the Fund that the number  furnished by the shareholder
is  incorrect  or that the  shareholder  is subject to backup  withholding  as a
result of failure to report  interest or dividend  income.  However,  the Fund's
taxable  distributions may not be subject to backup  withholding if the Fund can
reasonably  estimate that at least 95% of its distributions for the year will be
exempt-interest  dividends.  The Fund may refuse to accept an  application  that
does not contain any required  taxpayer  identification  number or certification
that the number provided is correct.  If the backup  withholding  provisions are
applicable,  any  such  distributions  and  proceeds,  whether  taken in cash or
reinvested  in shares,  will be reduced by the amounts  required to be withheld.
Any amounts withheld may be credited against a shareholder's U.S. federal income
tax   liability.   Investors   should  consult  their  tax  advisers  about  the
applicability of the backup withholding provisions.

Limitations imposed by the Code on regulated  investment companies like the Fund
may restrict the Fund's ability to enter into futures and options  transactions.
Certain  options and futures  transactions  undertaken by the Fund may cause the
Fund to  recognize  gains or losses  from  marking  to market  even  though  its
positions have not been sold or terminated and affect the character as long-term
or short-term and timing of some capital gains and losses  realized by the Fund.
Also,  some of the  Fund's  losses on its  transactions  involving  options  and
futures  contracts  and/or  offsetting or successor  portfolio  positions may be
deferred  rather than being taken into  account  currently  in  calculating  the
Fund's taxable income or gain.  Certain of such  transactions may also cause the
Fund to dispose of investments sooner than would otherwise have occurred.  These
transactions  may  thereafter  affect the amount,  timing and  character  of the

                                       41

<PAGE>

Fund's  distributions  to  shareholders.  The Fund will take  into  account  the
special tax rules (including consideration of available elections) applicable to
options and futures  transactions  in order to seek to  minimize  any  potential
adverse tax consequences.

The  foregoing  discussion  relates  solely to U.S.  Federal  income  tax law as
applicable to U.S. persons (i.e.,  U.S.  citizens or residents and U.S. domestic
corporations,  partnerships,  trusts or estates)  subject to tax under such law.
The discussion does not address special tax rules  applicable to certain classes
of investors, such as insurance companies and financial institutions.  Dividends
(including exempt-interest dividends),  capital gain distributions and ownership
of or gains realized on the redemption  (including an exchange) of shares of the
Fund may also be subject to state and local taxes.  Shareholders  should consult
their own tax advisers as to the  Federal,  state or local tax  consequences  of
ownership  of shares of, and receipt of  distributions  from,  the Fund in their
particular circumstances.

Non-U.S. investors not engaged in a U.S. trade or business with which their Fund
investment is effectively  connected will be subject to U.S.  Federal income tax
treatment that is different from that described  above.  These  investors may be
subject to nonresident alien withholding tax at the rate of 30% (or a lower rate
under an applicable tax treaty),  on amounts treated as ordinary  dividends from
the Fund and, unless an effective IRS Form W-8 or authorized substitute for Form
W-8 is on file, to 31% backup  withholding  on certain  other  payments from the
Fund.  Non-U.S.  investors  should  consult  their tax advisors  regarding  such
treatment and the application of foreign taxes to an investment in the Fund.

The Fund is not subject to  Massachusetts  corporate  excise or franchise taxes.
Provided  that the Fund  qualifies as a regulated  investment  company under the
Code, it will also not be required to pay any Massachusetts income tax.

CALCULATION OF PERFORMANCE

For the 30-day period ended April 30, 1996, the annualized yields on Class A and
Class B shares  of the Fund were  6.06% and  5.58%,  respectively.  The  average
annual  total return of the Class B shares of the Fund for the 1 year and 5 year
periods  ended April 30, 1996 and since  inception on August 29, 1986 were 0.38%
7.00% and 6.38%,  respectively and reflect payment of the applicable CDSC at the
end of the period.

The  average  annual  total  return of Class A shares of the Fund for the 1 year
period ended April 30, 1996 and since  inception on December 31, 1993 were 1.31%
and 2.11%,  respectively,  and reflect payment of the maximum sales charge.  The
Fund's yield is computed by dividing net investment  income per share determined
for a 30-day period by the maximum  offering price per share (which includes the
full sales  charge) on the last day of the period,  according  to the  following
standard formula:

The  Fund's  yield is  computed  by  dividing  net  investment  income per share
determined  for a 30-day period by the maximum  offering  price per share (which
includes the full sales charge) on the last day of the period,  according to the
following standard formula:

                             Yield = 2 [(a-b) + 1)6 - 1]
                                         ---
                                          cd

                                       42

<PAGE>

Where:

         a =   dividends and interest earned during the period.

         b =   net expenses accrued during the period.

         c =   the average daily number of fund shares outstanding  during
               the period that would be entitled to receive dividends.

         d =   the maximum offering price per share on the last day of the 
               period (NAV where applicable).

         The Fund may  advertise a  tax-equivalent  yield,  which is computed by
dividing  that portion of the yield of the Fund which is tax-exempt by one minus
a stated income tax rate and adding the product to that portion,  if any, of the
yield of the Fund that is not  tax-exempt.  The tax  equivalent  yields  for the
Fund's  Class A and Class B Shares at the  maximum  36% tax rate for the  30-day
period ended April 30, 1996 were 9.47% and 8.72%, respectively.

         The Fund's  total  return is computed  by finding  the  average  annual
compounded rate of return over the 1 year, 5 year and 10 year periods that would
equate the initial amount invested to the ending  redeemable  value according to
the following formula:

                                     n _____
                                T = \ /ERV/P - 1

Where:

     P =      a hypothetical initial investment of $1,000.

     T =      average annual total return.

     n =      number of years.

     ERV =    ending redeemable value of hypothetical $1,000 investment made at 
              the beginning of the 1 year, 5 year and life-of-fund periods.

         Because  each  share has its own sales  charge and fee  structure,  the
classes have  different  performance  results.  In the case of Class A shares or
Class B shares, this calculation assumes the maximum sales charge is included in
the  initial  investment  or the CDSC  applied  at the end of the  period.  This
calculation also assumes that all dividends and  distributions are reinvested at
net asset value on the reinvestment dates during the period.

         In  addition  to  average  annual  total  returns,  the Fund may  quote
unaveraged or cumulative total returns  reflecting the simple change in value of
an investment over a stated period.  Cumulative total returns may be quoted as a
percentage or as a dollar amount, and may be calculated for a single investment,
a series of investments,  and/or a series of redemptions,  over any time period.
Total  returns may be quoted with or without  taking the Fund's  sales charge on
Class A shares or the CDSC on Class B shares  into  account.  The  "distribution
rate" is determined by annualizing the result of dividing the declared dividends

                                       43

<PAGE>

of the Fund during the period stated by the maximum  offering price or net asset
value at the end of the period.  Excluding  the Fund's  sales  charge on Class A
shares and the CDSC on Class B shares from a total return calculation produces a
higher total return figure.

         In the case of a tax-exempt  obligation  issued without  original issue
discount and having a current  market  discount,  the coupon rate of interest is
used in lieu of the  yield  to  maturity.  Where,  in the  case of a  tax-exempt
obligation  with  original  issue  discount,  the discount  based on the current
market  value  exceeds the  then-remaining  portion of original  issue  discount
(market  discount),  the yield to  maturity  is the  imputed  rate  based on the
original  issue  discount  calculation.  Where,  in  the  case  of a  tax-exempt
obligation  with  original  issue  discount,  the discount  based on the current
market value is less than the then-remaining  portion of original issue discount
(market premium), the yield to maturity is based on the market value.

         From time to time, in reports and  promotional  literature,  the Fund's
yield and total  return  will be  compared  to indices of mutual  funds and bank
deposit  vehicles such as Lipper  Analytical  Services,  Inc.'s "Lipper -- Fixed
Income  Fund  Performance  Analysis,"  a monthly  publication  which  tracks net
assets,  total  return,  and yield on fixed  income  mutual  funds in the United
States. Ibottson and Associates,  CDA Weisenberger and F.C. Towers are also used
for comparison purposes, as well the Russell and Wilshire Indices.

         Performance  rankings  and ratings  reported  periodically  in national
financial publications such as MONEY Magazine,  FORBES,  BUSINESS WEEK, THE WALL
STREET JOURNAL, MORNINGSTAR, and BARRON'S may also be utilized.

         The  performance  of the Fund is not fixed or  guaranteed.  Performance
quotations should not be considered to be  representations of performance of the
Fund for any period in the future.  The performance of the Fund is a function of
many factors including its earnings,  expenses and number of outstanding shares.
Fluctuating  market  conditions;  purchases,  sales and  maturities of portfolio
securities;  sales and redemptions of shares of beneficial interest; and changes
in  operating  expenses  are all examples of items that can increase or decrease
the Fund's performance.

BROKERAGE ALLOCATION

Decisions  concerning  the  purchase and sale of  portfolio  securities  and the
allocation  of  brokerage  commissions  are  made  by the  Adviser  pursuant  to
recommendations made by its investment committee, which consists of officers and
directors  of the Adviser and  affiliates  and  officers  and  Trustees  who are
interested persons of the Fund. Orders for purchases and sales of securities are
placed in a manner  which,  in the opinion of the  Adviser,  will offer the best
price and market for the  execution  of each such  transaction.  Purchases  from
underwriters  of portfolio  securities  may include a commission or  commissions
paid by the issuer  and  transactions  with  dealers  serving  as market  makers
reflect a "spread." Investments in debt securities are generally traded on a net
basis  through  dealers  acting for their own account as  principals  and not as
brokers; no brokerage commissions are payable on such transactions.

The Fund's  primary  policy is to execute all  purchases  and sales of portfolio
instruments  at the  most  favorable  prices  consistent  with  best  execution,
considering all of the costs of the transaction including brokerage commissions.
This policy governs the selection of brokers and dealers and the market in which
a transaction is executed.  Consistent with the foregoing  primary  policy,  the

                                       44

<PAGE>

Rules of Fair  Practice of the NASD and other  policies  that the  Trustees  may
determine,  the Adviser may consider  sales of shares of the Fund as a factor in
the selection of broker-dealers to execute the Fund's portfolio transactions.

To the extent  consistent with the foregoing,  each Fund will be governed in the
selection of brokers and dealers,  and the  negotiation of brokerage  commission
rates and dealer  spreads,  by the  reliability  and  quality  of the  services,
including primarily the availability and value of research  information and to a
lesser extent statistical  assistance  furnished to the Adviser of the Fund, and
their value and expected  contribution to the performance of the Fund. It is not
possible to place a dollar value on information and services to be received from
brokers and dealers,  since it is only  supplementary to the research efforts of
the  Adviser.  The receipt of  research  information  is not  expected to reduce
significantly  the  expenses  of  the  Adviser.  The  research  information  and
statistical  assistance  furnished  by brokers  and dealers may benefit the Life
Company or other  advisory  clients of the Adviser,  and  conversely,  brokerage
commissions and spreads paid by other advisory clients of the Adviser may result
in research information and statistical  assistance  beneficial to the Fund. The
Fund  will make no  commitments  to  allocate  portfolio  transactions  upon any
prescribed basis. While the Adviser's officers will be primarily responsible for
the allocation of the Fund's brokerage  business,  the policies and practices of
the Adviser in this regard must be consistent with the foregoing and will at all
times be subject to review by the Trustees.

For the  year  ended  October  31,  1995,  the Fund  paid  $6,650  in  brokerage
commissions.  For the years ended  October  31, 1994 and 1993,  the Fund paid no
brokerage commissions.

As permitted by Section 28(e) of the  Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, the Fund
may pay to a broker which provides  brokerage and research  services to the Fund
an amount of disclosed  commission  in excess of the  commission  which  another
broker would have  charged for  effecting  that  transaction.  This  practice is
subject  to a good  faith  determination  by the  Directors  that  the  price is
reasonable in light of the services  provided and to policies that the Directors
may adopt from time to time.  During the fiscal year ended October 31, 1995, the
Fund did not pay commissions to compensate brokers for research services such as
industry, economic and company reviews and evaluations of securities.

The  Adviser's  indirect  parent,  the  Life  Company,   is  the  indirect  sole
shareholder of John Hancock Freedom Securities Corporation and its subsidiaries,
three of which,  Tucker  Anthony  Incorporated  ("Tucker  Anthony") John Hancock
Distributors,  Inc.  ("John  Hancock  Distributors")  and Sutro & Company,  Inc.
("Sutro"),  are broker-dealers  ("Affiliated  Brokers").  Pursuant to procedures
determined  by the  Trustees and  consistent  with the above policy of obtaining
best net results,  the Fund may execute  portfolio  transactions with or through
Affiliated  Brokers.  During the year ended  October 31, 1995,  the Fund did not
execute any portfolio transactions with Affiliated Brokers.

Any of the  Affiliated  Brokers  may  act as  broker  for the  Fund on  exchange
transactions,  subject,  however,  to the  general  policy of the Fund set forth
above and the  procedures  adopted  by the  Trustees  pursuant  to the 1940 Act.
Commissions paid to an Affiliated  Broker must be at least as favorable as those
which the Trustees believe to be  contemporaneously  charged by other brokers in
connection with  comparable  transactions  involving  similar  securities  being
purchased or sold. A transaction  would not be placed with an Affiliated  Broker
if the  Fund  would  have to pay a  commission  rate  less  favorable  than  the
Affiliated Broker's  contemporaneous charges for comparable transactions for its
other most favored, but unaffiliated,  customers,  except for accounts for which
the Affiliated  Broker acts as a clearing broker for another brokerage firm, and

                                       45

<PAGE>

any customers of the Affiliated  Broker not comparable to the Fund as determined
by a majority of the  Trustees who are not  "interested  persons" (as defined in
the 1940 Act) of the Fund,  the Adviser or the Affiliated  Brokers.  Because the
Adviser,  which is affiliated with the Affiliated Brokers, has, as an investment
adviser to the Fund, the obligation to provide investment  management  services,
which includes elements of research and related investment skills, such research
and  related  skills will not be used by the  Affiliated  Brokers as a basis for
negotiating commissions at a rate higher than that determined in accordance with
the  above  criteria.  The Fund  will not  effect  principal  transactions  with
Affiliated  Brokers.  The Fund may,  however,  purchase  securities  from  other
members  of  underwriting  syndicates  of which  Tucker  Anthony  and  Sutro are
members,  but only in accordance  with the policy set forth above and procedures
adopted and reviewed periodically by the Trustees.

Brokerage or other transactions costs of a Fund are generally  commensurate with
the rate of portfolio  activity.  The Fund's  portfolio  turnover  rates for the
fiscal years ended October 31, 1995 and 1994 were 64% and 62%, respectively.

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

TRANSFER AGENT SERVICES

John Hancock Investor Services Corporation ("Investor Services"), P.O. Box 9116,
Boston, MA 02205-9116,  a wholly owned indirect  subsidiary of the Life Company,
is the transfer and dividend  paying agent for the Fund.  The Fund pays Investor
Services  monthly a transfer agent fee of $20 per account for the Class A shares
and  $22.50  per  account  for the  Class B  shares  on an  annual  basis,  plus
out-of-pocket  expenses.  These  expenses are aggregated and charged to the Fund
and allocated to each class on the basis of the relative net asset values.

CUSTODY OF PORTFOLIO

Portfolio  securities  of the Fund are held  pursuant to a  custodian  agreement
between the Fund and Investors  Bank & Trust Company,  89 South Street,  Boston,
Massachusetts.  Under the custodian  agreement,  the custodian performs custody,
portfolio and fund accounting services.

INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

The  independent  auditors  of the Fund are  Ernst & Young  LLP,  200  Clarendon
Street,  Boston,  Massachusetts 02116. The independent auditors audit and render
an opinion  on the  Fund's  annual  financial  statements  and review the Fund's
annual income tax returns.  With the exception of the financial  statements  for
the six-month period ended April 30, 1996, the financial  statements of the Fund
included in the  Prospectus and this  Statement of Additional  Information  have
been  audited by Ernst & Young LLP for the  periods  indicated  in their  report

                                       46

<PAGE>

thereon  appearing  elsewhere  herein,  and are  included in reliance  upon such
report  given  upon the  authority  of such firm as experts  in  accounting  and
auditing.





























                                       47
<PAGE>


                                   APPENDIX A

                      CORPORATE AND TAX-EXEMPT BOND RATINGS


Moody's Investors Service, Inc. ("Moody's)

Aaa,  Aa, A and Baa -  Tax-exempt  bonds rated Aaa are judged to be of the "best
quality." The rating of Aa is assigned to bonds that are of "high quality by all
standards," but long-term risks appear somewhat larger than Aaa rated bonds. The
Aaa and Aa rated bonds are generally  known as "high grade bonds." The foregoing
ratings  for  tax-exempt  bonds  are  rated  conditionally.  Bonds for which the
security depends upon the completion of some act or upon the fulfillment of some
condition  are rated  conditionally.  These are bonds secured by (a) earnings of
projects under  construction,  (b) earnings of projects  unseasoned in operation
experience,  (c)  rentals  that  begin when  facilities  are  completed,  or (d)
payments  to which some other  limiting  condition  attaches.  Such  conditional
ratings denote the probable  credit stature upon  completion of  construction or
elimination of the basis of the condition. Bonds rated A are considered as upper
medium grade obligations.  Principal and interest are considered  adequate,  but
elements may be present which suggest a susceptibility to impairment sometime in
the future.  Bonds rated Baa are  considered a medium grade  obligations;  i.e.,
they are neither  highly  protected nor poorly  secured.  Interest  payments and
principal  security  appear  adequate  for the present  but  certain  protective
elements may be lacking or may be  characteristically  unreliable over any great
length of time. Such bonds lack outstanding  investment  characteristics  and in
fact, have speculative characteristics as well.
   
Ba,  B, Caa,  Ca - Bonds  which  are  rated Ba are  judged  to have  speculative
elements;  their  future  cannot  be  considered  as  well  assured.  Often  the
protection of interest and  principal  payments may be very moderate and thereby
not well safeguarded during both good and bad times over the future. Uncertainty
of position characterizes bonds in this class. Bonds which are rated B generally
lack the  characteristics  of  desirable  investment.  Assurance of interest and
principal  payments or of  maintenance  of other terms of the contract  over any
long  period  of time  may be  small.  Bonds  which  are  rated  Caa are of poor
standing.  Such  issues may be in default  or there may be present  elements  of
danger with respect to principal or interest. Bonds which are rated Ca represent
obligations  which are  speculative  in a high degree.  Such issues are often in
default or have other marked shortcomings.
    
Standard & Poor's Ratings Group ("S&P")

AAA,  AA, A and BBB - Bonds rated AAA bear the highest  rating  assigned to debt
obligations,  which indicates an extremely  strong capacity to pay principal and
interest.  Bonds rated AA are  considered  "high  grade," are only slightly less
marked  than those of AAA  ratings and have the second  strongest  capacity  for
payment of debt service.  Bonds rated A have a strong  capacity to pay principal
and interest,  although they are somewhat  susceptible to the adverse effects of
changes in  circumstances  and economic  conditions.  The foregoing  ratings are
sometimes  followed  by a "p"  indicating  that the  rating  is  provisional.  A
provisional rating assumes the successful  completion of the project financed by
the bonds being rated and indicates that payment of debt service requirements is
largely or entirely  dependent upon the successful and timely  completion of the
project.  Although a provisional  rating addresses credit quality  subsequent to
completion of the project, it makes no comment on the likelihood of, or the risk
of default  upon  failure of, such  completion.  Bonds rated BBB are regarded as
having an adequate  capacity to repay  principal and pay interest.  Whereas they
normally exhibit protection parameters,  adverse economic conditions or changing
circumstances  are more likely to lead to a weakened capacity to repay principal
and pay interest for bonds in this category than for bonds in the A category.
   
BB, B, CCC,  CC - Debt  rated BB, B, CCC and CC is  regarded,  on  balanced,  as
predominantly  speculative  with  respect to capacity to pay  interest and repay
principal in  accordance  with the terms of the  obligation.  BB  indicates  the
lowest degree of  speculation  and CC the highest degree of  speculation.  While
such debt will likely have some quality and  protective  characteristics,  these
are  outweighed  by large  uncertainties  or major  risk  exposures  to  adverse
conditions.
    
Fitch Investors Service ("Fitch")

AAA, AA, A, BBB - Bonds rated AAA are  considered to be investment  grade and of
the highest quality.  The obligor has an  extraordinary  ability to pay interest
and repay principal,  which is unlikely to be affected by reasonably foreseeable
events.  Bonds  rated  AA are  considered  to be  investment  grade  and of high
quality.  The obligor's ability to pay interest and repay principal,  while very
strong,  is  somewhat  less than for AAA rated  securities  or more  subject  to
possible  change over the term of the issue.  Bonds rated A are considered to be
investment grade and of good quality.  The obligor's ability to pay interest and
repay  principal  is  considered  to be strong,  but may be more  vulnerable  to
adverse changes in economic  conditions and circumstances than bonds with higher
ratings.  Bonds  rated  BBB  are  considered  to  be  investment  grade  and  of
satisfactory  quality. The obligor's ability to pay interest and repay principal
is  considered  to be  adequate.  Adverse  changes in  economic  conditions  and
circumstances,  however,  are more likely to weaken this ability than bonds with
higher ratings.
   
BB, B, CCC,  CC - Debt  rated BB, B, CCC and CC is  regarded,  on  balanced,  as
predominantly  speculative  with  respect to capacity to pay  interest and repay
principal in  accordance  with the terms of the  obligation.  BB  indicates  the
lowest degree of  speculation  and CC the highest degree of  speculation.  While
such debt will likely have some quality and  protective  characteristics,  these
are  outweighed  by large  uncertainties  or major  risk  exposures  to  adverse
conditions.
    
                             TAX-EXEMPT NOTE RATINGS

Moody's - MIG-1  and  MIG-2.  Notes  rated  MIG-1  are  judged to be of the best
quality,  enjoying  strong  protection from  established  cash flow or funds for
their  services or from  established  and  broad-based  access to the market for
refinancing  or both.  Notes rated MIG-2 are judged to be of high  quality  with
ample margins of protection, though not as large as MIG-1.

S&P - SP-1 and SP-2.  SP-1  denotes a very  strong  or  strong  capacity  to pay
principal  and  interest.  Issues  determined  to  possess  overwhelming  safety
characteristics  are  given a plus  (+)  designation  (SP-1+).  SP-2  denotes  a
satisfactory capacity to pay principal and interest.

Fitch - FIN-1 and  FIN-2.  Notes  assigned  FIN-1  are  regarded  as having  the
strongest  degree of assurance for timely payment.  A plus symbol may be used to
indicate relative  standing.  Notes assigned FIN-2 reflect a degree of assurance
for timely payment only slightly less in degree than the highest category.

                CORPORATE AND TAX-EXEMPT COMMERCIAL PAPER RATINGS

Moody's -  Commercial  Paper  ratings are  opinions of the ability of issuers to
repay  punctually  promissory  obligations  not having an  original  maturity in
excess of nine months. Prime-1,  indicates highest quality repayment capacity of
rated issue and Prime-2 indicates higher quality.

S&P - Commercial  Paper ratings are a current  assessment  of the  likelihood of
timely  payment of debts  having an original  maturity of no more than 365 days.
Issues  rated  A have  the  greatest  capacity  for a  timely  payment  and  the
designation  1, 2 and 3 indicates  the relative  degree of safety.  Issues rated
"A-1+" are those with an "overwhelming degree of credit protection."

Fitch - Commercial  Paper  ratings  reflect  current  appraisal of the degree of
assurance of timely  payment.  F-1 issues are  regarded as having the  strongest
degree of assurance  for timely  payment.  (+) is used to designate the relative
position  of an issuer  within  the  rating  category.  F-2  issues  reflect  an
assurance of timely  payment  only  slightly  less in degree than the  strongest
issues.  The symbol (LOC) may follow either category and indicates that a letter
of credit issued by a commercial bank is attached to the commercial paper note.

Other  Considerations - The ratings of S&P,  Moody's,  and Fitch represent their
respective opinions of the quality of the municipal securities they undertake to
rate.  It should be  emphasized,  however,  that ratings are general and are not
absolute standards of quality. Consequently,  municipal securities with the same
maturity,  coupon and ratings may have different yields and municipal securities
of the same maturity and coupon with different ratings may have the same yield.

                                       49
<PAGE>

   
                                   APPENDIX B

                               EQUIVALENT YIELDS:
                          Tax-Exempt vs. Taxable Yield

         The table  below  shows  the  effect  of the tax  status  of  municipal
obligations  on the yield  received by their holders  under the regular  federal
income tax laws that  apply to 1996.  It gives the  approximate  yield a taxable
security must earn at various income brackets to produce after-tax yields.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                         TAX-FREE YIELDS 1996 TAX TABLE

                                                                              
Single Return           Joint Return    Marginal                       TAX-EXEMPT YIELD
- -------------           ------------     Income     ---------------------------------------------------
        (Taxable Income)                Tax Rate     4%     5%     6%      7%      8%      9%     10%
- ------------------------------------    --------    ---------------------------------------------------
                <S>                        <C>       <C>    <C>    <C>     <C>     <C>    <C>      <C>
$       0-24,000    $       0-40,100      15.0%     4.71%  5.88%  7.06%   8.24%   9.41%  10.59%  11.76%
$  24,001-58,150    $  40,101-96,900      28.0%     5.56%  6.94%  8.33%   9.72%  11.11%  12.50%  13.89%
$ 58,151-121,300    $ 96,901-147,700      31.0%     5.80%  7.25%  8.70%  10.14%  11.59%  13.04%  14.49%
$121,301-263,750    $147,701-263,750      36.0%     6.25%  7.81%  9.38%  10.94%  12.50%  14.06%  15.63%
   Over $263,750       Over $263,750      39.6%     6.62%  8.28%  9.93%  11.59%  13.25%  14.90%  16.56%
</TABLE>

         It is assumed that an investor filing a single return is not a "head of
household,"  a "married  individual  filing a separate  return," or a "surviving
spouse." The table does not take into account the effects of  reductions  in the
deductibility of itemized  deductions or the phaseout of personal exemptions for
taxpayers with adjusted gross incomes in excess of specified  amounts.  Further,
the table does not attempt to show any  alternative  minimum  tax  consequences,
which will depend on each  shareholder's  particular  tax situation and may vary
according to what portion,  if any, of the Fund's  exempt-interest  dividends is
attributable  to interest on certain  private  activity bonds for any particular
taxable  year. No assurance can be given that the Fund will achieve any specific
tax-exempt  yield or that all of its income  distributions  will be  tax-exempt.
Distributions  attributable  to any taxable  income or capital gains realized by
the Fund will not be tax-exempt.

         The  information set forth above is as of the date of this Statement of
Additional  Information.  Subsequent tax law changes could result in prospective
or retroactive changes in the tax brackets, tax rates, and tax-equivalent yields
set forth above.

         This table is for  illustrative  purposes  only and is not  intended to
imply or guarantee any particular yield from the Fund. While it is expected that
a  substantial  portion  of  the  interest  income  distributed  to  the  Fund's
shareholders  will  be  exempt  from  federal  income  taxes,  portions  of such
distributions from time to time may be subject to federal income taxes.
    


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