BRAMWELL FUNDS INC
485APOS, 1999-08-13
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As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on August 13, 1999

                                                               File No. 33-79742
                                                                        811-8546

                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

                             Washington, D.C. 20549


                                    FORM N-1A

          REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933            [ ]

                         Pre-Effective Amendment No.                         [ ]

                      Post-Effective Amendment No. 7                         [X]

                                     and/or

       REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940       [ ]

                                AMENDMENT NO. 8                              [X]

                            THE BRAMWELL FUNDS, INC.
               (Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Charter)

                   745 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10151
               (Address of Principal Executive Office) (Zip Code)

       Registrant's Telephone Number, including Area Code: (212) 308-0505



                              Elizabeth R. Bramwell
                            The Bramwell Funds, Inc.
                   745 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10151
               (Name and address of agent for service of process)



   Approximate Date of Proposed Public Offering of the Bramwell Focus Fund is
                                November 1, 1999

  It is proposed that this filing will become effective (check appropriate box)

                immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b)
           ----
                on ________________ pursuant to paragraph (b)
           ----
                60 days  after  filing  pursuant  to paragraph (a)
           ----
                on (date)  pursuant to paragraph  (a) of  Rule  485
           ----
             X  75 days after  filing  pursuant to paragraph (a)(2)of  Rule 485
           ----
                on (date) pursuant to paragraph (a)(2) of Rule 485.
           ----

<PAGE>

Prospectus
November 1, 1999










The Bramwell Funds, Inc.

Elizabeth R. Bramwell, CFA
President and Chief Investment Officer








Bramwell Growth Fund
For Investors Seeking Primarily Long-Term Capital Growth
and Secondarily Current Income

Bramwell Focus Fund
For Investors Seeking Long-Term Capital Appreciation






The  Securities  Exchange  Commission  has not approved or  disapproved of these
securities  or  passed on the  accuracy  or  adequacy  of this  prospectus.  Any
representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.



                                                                 [LOGO]
                                                        The Bramwell Funds, Inc.


<PAGE>


How to Use This Prospectus







     This  prospectus  is designed to help you make an informed  decision  about
investing in the  Bramwell  Growth Fund or the  Bramwell  Focus Fund.  When both
funds are discussed together,  they will be referred to as the "Funds," and when
discussed  individually,  the "Fund." Both of the Funds are part of The Bramwell
Funds,  Inc.,  an  investment  company  governed  by a Board of  Directors.  The
investment adviser for both of the Funds is Bramwell Capital Management, Inc.



The prospectus has four main sections each covering different topics.

The  Funds  covers  such  topics  as  the  Funds'  investment  goals,  principal
investments,  investment  philosophy  and selection  process,  principal  risks,
performance history and expenses.

Management of the Funds discusses the background and experience of the directors
of the Funds and the people and  entities  who are  mainly  responsible  for the
day-to-day operation of the Funds: BramCap and Elizabeth R. Bramwell, CFA.

How to Buy and Sell Shares covers the investment options available to you should
you decide to invest in the Funds as well as how to set up your account.

Financial Highlights provides you with additional performance data and financial
information.



                                       2


<PAGE>


Table of Contents


The Funds                                                                      4
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Goals of Each Fund                                                             4
Principal Investments of the Funds                                             4
Investment Philosophy and Selection Process                                    5
Principal Risks                                                                5
Performance History                                                            6
Expenses                                                                       7

Management of the Funds                                                        9
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Investment Adviser                                                             9
Portfolio Manager                                                              9
Board of Directors                                                            10

How to Buy and Sell Shares                                                    12
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Net Asset Value                                                               12
How to Open and Add to Your Account                                           12
Additional Purchase Information                                               13
How to Sell Your Shares                                                       13
Telephone and Wire Transactions                                               15
Signature Guarantees                                                          15
Financial Service Agents                                                      15
Exchange Privileges                                                           16
Retirement Plans                                                              17
Automatic Investment Plans                                                    17
Shareholder Communications                                                    18
Dividends and Distributions                                                   18
Taxes                                                                         18

Financial Highlights                                                          20
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------


                                       3

<PAGE>


The Funds


Goals of Each Fund
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The  Bramwell  Growth  Fund  seeks  primarily   long-term   capital  growth  and
secondarily  current  income.  The Bramwell Focus Fund seeks  long-term  capital
appreciation.

Principal Investments of the Funds
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

     The Bramwell Growth Fund is a diversified fund that invests  primarily in a
broad range of common stocks of companies  that the adviser  believes have above
average growth potential.

     The  Bramwell  Focus  Fund is a  non-diversified  fund with a  concentrated
portfolio,  normally comprised of 20 to 30 securities, that invests primarily in
common stocks of companies  that the adviser  believes have above average growth
potential.

[On side panel:

Why a Mutual Fund

     A mutual  fund is a pooled  investment  vehicle  that allows  investors  an
opportunity to participate in the financial markets under continual  supervision
by professional management and with economies of scale not generally achieved by
an individual.  Although a fund strives to achieve its stated  investment goals,
no assurance  can be given that it will do so. You may lose money by  investing.
Investment  in a mutual  fund is not  insured  by the  FDIC or any  governmental
agency.  An  individual  mutual fund is not a complete  or  balanced  investment
program.]

[On side panel:  Investment  Flexibility:  To provide  more  flexibility  in the
selection  of  potential  investments,  the Board of  Directors of the Funds may
modify each Fund's investment objectives without shareholder approval.]

[On side panel:

Diversified Funds

o    Invest in a broad number of securities.

o    Cannot invest,  with respect to 75% of their assets,  more than 5% of their
     assets in the securities of any issuer.
o    Less dependent on the performance of any single investment choice.

Non-Diversified Funds

o    Invest in a limited number of securities.
o    Cannot invest,  with respect to 50% of their assets,  more than 5% of their
     assets in the securities of any issuer.
o    Greater  volatility  and  potential  risk  because a non-diversified fund's
     value is more dependent on the performance of each investment choice.

Neither  type of fund may invest  more than 25% of its total  assets in a single
issuer (other than securities issued by the U.S. government) and neither type of
fund may own more than 10% of the outstanding voting shares of any issuer.]


                                       4

<PAGE>

Investment Philosophy and Selection Process
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Funds' adviser,  Bramwell Capital Management,  Inc.  ("BramCap") attempts to
identify  companies  that  are  expected  to grow as a result  of the  potential
long-term payoff from investment in research, development,  capital spending and
market expansion. The potential payoff may not be reflected in a one-year period
in the equity market. In addition, BramCap looks for companies that it perceives
to be attractively valued relative to their future growth prospects,  as well as
to that of the market as a whole.

When selecting  investments for the Funds, BramCap utilizes a blended "top-down"
and "bottom-up" approach.  In top-down analysis,  focus is on such macroeconomic
factors as inflation, interest and tax rates, currency and political climate. In
bottom-up analysis, focus is on company-specific  variables, such as competitive
industry dynamics,  market leadership,  proprietary  products and services,  and
management expertise, as well as on financial  characteristics,  such as returns
on sales and equity, debt/equity ratios and earnings and cash flow growth.

Fundamental research supports investment decisions.  Information sources include
corporate financial reports and press releases, company presentations,  meetings
with  management,  general  economic and industry  data  supplied by  government
agencies and trade  associations,  and research  reports provided by Wall Street
analysts.

BramCap then  synthesizes  and analyzes  information  gathered from  fundamental
research to develop  financial and valuation models for each individual  company
in order to project  future sales and  earnings  growth  potential  and relative
valuations and to facilitate informed investment decisions.

Both Funds invest  primarily in  securities  of companies  headquartered  in the
United States but both Funds may also invest up to 25% of their assets, measured
at the time of investment, in securities of foreign issuers.

Both Funds may hold cash or cash  equivalents  and invest  without limit in U.S.
government  obligations when adverse economic or market conditions exist, in the
event of  exceptional  redemption  requests or when  BramCap  determines  that a
temporary defensive position is advisable. Under these circumstances,  the Funds
may not achieve their investment goals.

Although not anticipated to be widely used, the Funds may, for risk or portfolio
management purposes,  use various techniques and hedging instruments to increase
or  decrease  their  exposure  to the  effects of  possible  changes in security
prices,  currency  exchange  rates or other factors that affect the value of the
Funds' portfolios. These techniques and instruments include, but are not limited
to, options on securities  and securities  indices,  futures,  foreign  currency
contracts, repurchase agreements, short sales and securities lending. Please see
the  Statement  of  Additional  Information  for a complete  description  of the
investment policies and restrictions of each Fund.

Principal Risks
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

General Risks

Investment in any mutual fund has inherent  risks.  The Funds are subject to the
same general risks as all mutual funds.  Both Funds will invest primarily in the
common  stocks  of  various  companies,  subjecting  the  Funds,  and  you  as a
shareholder,  to the risks of common stock investing.  As a result,  there is no
assurance that the investment objectives of the Funds will be realized or that a
Fund's  portfolio will not decline in value.  You may lose money by investing in
the Funds.  You should  consider your own risk tolerance,  investment  goals and
investment timeline before committing money to an investment in any mutual fund.
Significant factors that can affect the Funds' performance are:


                                       5

<PAGE>

Market Risk

Economic  conditions  change  and stock  markets  are  volatile.  Political  and
economic  factors such as changes in  inflation  and  interest  rates,  currency
fluctuations,  political  climate  and taxes may have a  negative  impact on the
performance of the Funds.

Individual Company Risk

Changes in factors  specific to a particular  company,  such as its  competitive
position,  quality of management  or demand for its products and  services,  may
also have a negative impact on the performance of the Funds.

Foreign Investing Risk

Both Funds may invest up to 25% of their assets in foreign  securities.  Foreign
investments  may be riskier  than U.S.  investments  because of factors  such as
unstable international political and economic conditions, currency fluctuations,
foreign controls on investment and currency exchange,  withholding taxes, a lack
of adequate  company  information,  less liquid and more volatile  markets and a
lack of government  regulation.  Investments  in emerging  markets  involve even
greater risks such as immature economic structures and unfamiliar legal systems.

Other Risks

The  Bramwell  Focus Fund is a  non-diversified  fund,  meaning that it may hold
fewer securities than a diversified portfolio.  This increases the risk that the
value of the  Bramwell  Focus Fund could be affected to a greater  degree by the
underperformance of any single investment choice.

[On side panel:  Y2K Risk: The inability of some computers to recognize the year
2000 could  potentially  disrupt Fund  operations  and affect Fund  performance.
BramCap has taken steps to enable its systems to handle this issue.  BramCap has
also sought  assurances  that its service  providers and business  partners have
taken  similar  steps as well.  However,  it is  impossible  to know in  advance
exactly how this issue will  affect Fund  administration,  Fund  performance  or
securities markets in general.]

Performance History
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The bar chart below shows the Bramwell Growth Fund's calendar year total returns
for each whole year since its inception,  August 1, 1994, together with the best
and worst quarters during that period. The bar chart is intended to indicate the
risks  of  investing  in the  Fund  by  showing  the  difference  in the  Fund's
investment  returns from one year to the next. How the Fund has performed in the
past is not necessarily an indication of how it will perform in the future.

[Bramwell  Growth Fund Bar Chart:  1995- 32.55%;  1996 - 12.82%;  1997 - 33.67%;
1998 - 34.50%]

Best Quarter (12-31-98)    22.70%              Worst Quarter (9-30-98)   (9.98)%

*    The Bramwell Growth Fund's total return for the period from January 1, 1999
     to June 30,1999 was 8.09%.

                                       6

<PAGE>


The table below shows the relative  performance and risks of the Bramwell Growth
Fund by comparing the Fund's average annual total returns to that of the S&P 500
Index, a widely recognized  unmanaged index of stock  performance,  for calendar
year periods ending December 31, 1998.

                                                                 Since Inception
                               One Year          Three Year         on 8/1/94
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Bramwell Growth Fund            34.50%              26.58%            25.81%
S&P 500                         28.58%              28.23%            27.69%

Note: The Bramwell Focus Fund will commence  operations on November 1, 1999, and
therefore has no prior performance history to report.


Expenses
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

All mutual fund  investors pay certain fees and expenses  when they invest.  The
summary  below shows what you will pay directly and  indirectly to invest in the
Funds.

Shareholder Transaction Expenses are direct expenses that you pay when buying or
selling  shares of the  Funds.  Annual  Fund  Operating  Expenses  are  indirect
expenses  paid out of the  assets  of each Fund and are  reflected  in the share
price of each Fund.  The table  below  shows  actual  operating  expenses of the
Bramwell  Growth  Fund for the fiscal year ended June 30,  1999.  The table also
shows the estimated operating expenses of the Bramwell Focus Fund had it been in
operation for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1999.

Shareholder Transaction Expenses (paid directly from your investment)

                                                                      Both Funds
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sales Charges or Loads                                                      None
Wire Transfer Charges                                                     $12.00
Telephone Exchange Fee                                                     $5.00

Annual Fund Operating Expenses (expenses that are deducted from Fund assets)

                                     Bramwell Growth Fund    Bramwell Focus Fund
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Management Fees                                     1.00%               1.00%
Distribution 12b-1 Fees (a)                         0.25%               0.25%
Other Expenses (b)                                  0.33%               0.93%(c)
Total Fund Operating Expenses (d)                   1.58%               2.18%

(a)  The Funds have  adopted Rule 12b-1 plans which  authorize  the Funds to pay
     expenses  related  to  the  distribution  of  their  shares.   The  maximum
     distribution  fee is 0.25% of each  Fund's  average  net  assets  per year.
     Because these fees are paid out of the Funds'  assets on an ongoing  basis,
     the distribution  expenses you pay over time will increase the cost of your
     investment and may total more than the maximum sales charge  permissible if
     imposed entirely as an initial sales charge.

(b)  Such expenses include custodian,  transfer agency and  administration  fees
     and other customary Fund expenses.

(c)  This is an estimate  because the Bramwell Focus Fund has no prior operating
     history.

                                       7

<PAGE>


(d)  BramCap  has  voluntarily  agreed to limit the total  expenses of the Funds
     (excluding  interest,  taxes,  brokerage and extraordinary  expenses) to an
     annual rate of 1.75% of each Fund's average net assets until June 30, 2001.
     After such date, the expense limitation may be terminated or revised at any
     time.  BramCap  expects  to waive a portion of its  management  fee for the
     Bramwell Focus Fund so that actual  management  fees paid by the Fund would
     be 0.57% of average net assets,  reducing the total  expenses from 2.18% to
     1.75%.

Example

This  example is intended to help you compare the cost of investing in the Funds
with the cost of investing in other mutual funds.

The example  assumes  that you invest  $10,000 in the Fund for the time  periods
indicated  and then redeem all of your shares at the end of those  periods.  The
example also assumes that your  investment  has a 5.0% return each year and that
the Funds' operating expenses remain the same. Although your actual costs may be
higher or lower, your costs - based on these assumptions - would be:

                                 One Year   Three Years   Five Years   Ten Years
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bramwell Growth Fund               $161         $499         $860        $1,878
Bramwell Focus Fund*               $221         $682

* estimated


                                       8

<PAGE>

Management of the Funds


Investment Adviser
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Bramwell Capital Management, Inc. ("BramCap"),  located at 745 Fifth Avenue, New
York,  NY 10151,  serves as  investment  adviser to the Funds  under  Investment
Advisory   Agreements  which  provide  that  BramCap  will  furnish   continuous
investment  advisory  services and  management to the Funds.  In addition to the
Funds, BramCap is the adviser to individual and institutional accounts.

BramCap supervises and manages the investment  portfolios of the Funds.  Subject
to policies adopted by the Board of Directors of the Funds,  BramCap directs the
purchase or sale of investment  securities in the  day-to-day  management of the
Funds'  investment   portfolios.   BramCap,  at  its  own  expense  and  without
reimbursement  from the Funds,  furnishes  office space and all necessary office
facilities,   equipment  and  executive  personnel  for  making  the  investment
decisions  necessary for managing the Funds and maintaining their  organization.
BramCap also pays the  salaries  and fees of all  Officers and  Directors of The
Bramwell Funds, Inc. (except the fees paid to disinterested Directors).  For its
services,  BramCap receives a fee of 1% per year of the average daily net assets
of each Fund.

Portfolio Manager
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Elizabeth R. Bramwell,  who is the founder, sole shareholder and Chief Executive
Officer of BramCap,  as well as President  and Chief  Investment  Officer of The
Bramwell  Funds,  Inc.,  manages  the  investment  program  of each  Fund and is
primarily  responsible for the day-to-day  management of each Fund's  portfolio.
Ms.  Bramwell,  a Chartered  Financial  Analyst,  has more than thirty  years of
experience as a securities analyst/portfolio manager.

Prior to forming  BramCap in February  1994, Ms.  Bramwell was President,  Chief
Investment  Officer,  Portfolio Manager and a Trustee of The Gabelli Growth Fund
from its  inception,  April 10, 1987,  through  February 9, 1994. The cumulative
total return for The Gabelli Growth Fund from its inception through December 31,
1993 was 184%.  At December 31, 1993,  that fund had $695 million in net assets.
As  President  and Chief  Investment  Officer of The Gabelli  Growth  Fund,  Ms.
Bramwell had full discretionary  authority over the selection of investments for
that fund.  Average  annual  returns for the one-year,  three-year and five-year
periods  ended  December  31, 1993 and for the entire  period  during  which Ms.
Bramwell  managed  that fund  compared  with the  performance  of the Standard &
Poor's 500 Composite Stock Total Return Index were:

                                        The Gabelli                     S&P 500
                                     Growth Fund (a,b)                 Index (c)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

One Year                                   11.3%                         10.1%
Three Years                                16.0%                         15.6%
Five Years                                 16.5%                         14.6%
Inception through
    February 9, 1994                       16.6%                         10.8%


(a)  Average  annual  total  return   reflects   changes  in  share  prices  and
     reinvestment of dividends and distributions and is net of fund expenses.
(b)  The expense  ratio of The  Gabelli  Growth Fund was capped at 2.00% for the
     period  April  10,  1987  to  December  31,  1987  (reflecting   annualized
     reimbursement  of  expenses  of 4.45%) and was capped at 2.30% for the 1988
     calendar year, reflecting  reimbursement of expenses of 2.08%.  Thereafter,
     the expense  ratio  declined


                                       9

<PAGE>

     from 1.85% to 1.41%, reflecting, in general,  economies of scale associated
     with an increase in assets under management.
(c)  The  Standard  &  Poor's  500  Composite  Stock  Total  Return  Index is an
     unmanaged  index  of  common  stocks  that is  considered  to be  generally
     representative of the United States stock market.  The Index is adjusted to
     reflect reinvestment of dividends.

Historical  performance  is not  indicative of future  performance.  The Gabelli
Growth Fund is a separate fund and its historical  performance is not indicative
of the potential  performance of the Funds.  Share prices and investment returns
will   fluctuate   reflecting   market   conditions,   as  well  as  changes  in
company-specific fundamentals of portfolio securities.

Ms. Bramwell is a graduate of Bryn Mawr College and Columbia University Graduate
School of  Business.  She began her career as an analyst  with  Morgan  Guaranty
Trust Company from 1967 through 1973 (Assistant Vice President 1972-1973), was a
securities  analyst and Vice  President of William D. Witter,  Inc. from 1974 to
1976 and a Vice President and group head in the Investment  Research  Department
of Bankers Trust Company from 1976 to 1978. Ms.  Bramwell was a Limited  Partner
of and/or  securities  analyst  with  Kenneth S.  Davidson  Partners,  a private
investment  partnership  from 1979 to 1985 and Director of Research of Gabelli &
Company from 1985 through 1989.

Board of Directors
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Funds,  as part of The Bramwell  Funds,  Inc.,  are governed by its Board of
Directors. The Board of Directors is responsible for overseeing the business and
affairs of the Funds. In addition to Ms. Bramwell, the Directors are:

J. Sinclair Armstrong
444 Madison Avenue
New York, NY 10022

Director,   Secretary  and  Treasurer,   The  Reed   Foundation   (1986-present)
(philanthropy);  Partner  (1980-1984)  and Counsel  (1984-1995),  Whitman  Breed
Abbott & Morgan (formerly Whitman Ransom) (law firm);  Executive Vice President,
U.S.  Trust Co. of New York  (1959-1980);  Assistant  Secretary  of the Navy for
Financial  Management  and  Comptroller,  Department  of the  Navy  (1957-1959);
Chairman  (1955-1957)  and  Commissioner,  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission
(1953-1957).

Isabel H. Benham
745 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10151

Trustee Emeritus and former President (1992-1995), Board of Trustees of the John
W.  Barriger III  National  Railroad  Library;  Director,  St. Louis  Mercantile
Library  (1993-1995);   President,   Printon  Kane  Research,  Inc.  (1978-1991)
(railroad analysis and valuations); Senior Vice President, Shearson Hayden Stone
Corp. (1968-1978).

George F. Keane
745 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10151

Chairman  of the Board,  Trigen  Energy  Corporation  (1994-present);  President
Emeritus and  founding  Chief  Executive  Officer  (1971-1992),  The Common Fund
(investment   management);   Trustee,    Nicholas-Applegate   Investment   Trust
(1993-present);  Member,  Investment Advisory  Committee,  New York State Common
Retirement  Fund  (1982-present);   Director,   Northern  Trust  of  Connecticut
(1991-present), Universal Stainless & Alloy


                                       10

<PAGE>


Products  (1994-present),   Global  Pharmaceutical  Corporation  (1995-present),
United Water  Resources  (1996-present)  and Security  Capital Real Estate Funds
(1997-present).

James C. Sargent
745 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10151

Counsel,  Opton,  Handler,  Gottlieb,  Feiler & Katz  (1995-present) (law firm);
Director,  Scan-Graphics (1992- present), Austin's International (1992-present);
Former  Partner,  Whitman  Breed  Abbott  &  Morgan  (formerly  Whitman  Ransom)
(1964-1994)  (law firm);  Assistant  General  Counsel,  CIT Finance  Corporation
(1960-1964); Regional Administrator, New York City (1955-1956) and Commissioner,
Securities and Exchange Commission (1956-1960).

Martha R. Seger, Ph.D.
220 Park Avenue
Birmingham, MI 40889

Chairman, Martha Seger & Associates (1992-present); Current Director, Amerisure,
Fluor, Kroger, Tucson Electric Power and Xerox; Governor,  Federal Reserve Board
(1984-1991);   Commissioner  of  Financial   Institutions,   State  of  Michigan
(1981-1982); Chief Economist, Detroit Bank & Trust (Comerica) (1967-1974).


                                       11

<PAGE>

How to Buy and Sell Shares


Net Asset Value
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The price at which you purchase and redeem  shares of a Fund is equal to the net
asset value ("NAV") per share of the Fund as determined on the effective date of
your purchase or redemption.  The NAV is calculated by taking the total value of
a Fund's assets, subtracting out the Fund's liabilities, and dividing the result
by the number of Fund shares  outstanding.  This calculation is performed by the
Administrator  for the Funds,  Sunstone  Financial  Group,  Inc.,  at the end of
regular  trading hours on the New York Stock Exchange  (currently  4:00 p.m. New
York City  time) on days that the New York  Stock  Exchange  is open.  Portfolio
securities are valued based on market  quotations or, if not readily  available,
at fair market value as determined in good faith under procedures established by
the Board of Directors of The Bramwell Funds, Inc.

You can place an order to buy or sell shares of a Fund by contacting  the Funds'
Transfer  Agent,  Firstar  Mutual Fund Services,  LLC. Your order,  if in proper
form, will be processed upon receipt. Once accepted,  the purchase price or sale
price of your order will be equal to the next NAV calculation.

How to Open and Add to Your Account
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

You may purchase shares of the Funds by any of the following methods.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                        To Open an Account                          To Add to an Account
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<S>                     <C>                                        <C>
By Mail or Courier      o    Complete and sign the                  o    Additional investment
                             Purchase Application.                       forms will be included with
                                                                         each shareholder  statement
                        o    Make your check payable                     that you receive.
                             to the Bramwell Funds, Inc.
                                                                    o    If you wish to add to an
                        o    Mail to:                                    account, complete this form
                             The Bramwell Funds, Inc.                    and include it with your
                             Firstar Mutual Fund                         check made payable to
                             Services, LLC                               ---------------------
                             Milwaukee, WI 53201-0701                    The Bramwell Funds, Inc.
                                                                         ------------------------

                                                                    o    Print your account name,
                                                                         address and Bramwell account
                        o    Overnight Courier to:                       number on your check.
                             The Bramwell Funds, Inc.
                             Firstar Mutual Fund                    o    Mail or overnight the
                             Services, LLC                               form and check to the
                             615 East Michigan Street,                   appropriate address at left.
                             3rd Floor
                             Milwaukee, WI 53202

By Telephone            o    Telephone transactions                 o    Call 1-800-BRAMCAP to
                             may not be used for initial                 make your purchase from a
                             purchases.                                  bank checking or money market
                                                                         account by electronic funds
                        o    If you want to make                         transfer.  Specify your
                             subsequent telephone                        account name, address and
                             transactions, please select                 Bramwell account number.
                             this service on your initial
                             Purchase Application or call           o    This service must be
                             1-800-BRAMCAP                               established by you in advance
                             (1-800-272-6227) to set up                  by following the
                             your account.                               instructions  at left.


                                       12

<PAGE>

By Wire                 o    Call the Transfer Agent at             o    Follow the instructions
                             1-800-BRAMCAP to notify them                at left.  Please note that
                             that you intend to purchase                 wires may be rejected if they
                             shares by wire and to verify                do not contain complete
                             wire instructions.                          account information.

                        o    Then, wire funds care of:
                             Firstar Bank Milwaukee, N.A.
                             Milwaukee, WI
                             ABA #: 075000022
                             Credit:
                             Firstar Mutual Fund
                             Services, LLC
                             Account #: 112-952-137
                             Further credit:
                             Bramwell Funds, Inc.
                             Name of Fund to be purchased
                             Shareholder Account #:_________
                             Shareholder
                             Name/Registration:
                             __________________
                             Include your name, address
                             and taxpayer identification
                             number.
</TABLE>

All  purchases  must be made in U.S.  dollars  and checks  must be drawn on U.S.
banks.  No cash will be  accepted.  You will be  charged a $20 fee for any check
returned to the Transfer  Agent for  insufficient  funds,  stop payment,  closed
account or other reasons.  You will also be responsible  for any losses suffered
by the Funds as a result.  The  management  of the Funds  reserves  the right to
reject  any  purchase  order  for Fund  shares.

If you have any questions, a telephone representative will be pleased to provide
the  information  that you need.  Please call the  following  toll-free  number:
1-800-BRAMCAP (1-800-272-6227).

[On side panel:

Minimum Investment Requirements                  Initial              Additional
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Regular Accounts                                  $1,000                $100
IRAs and IRA Rollovers                               500                 100
Non-Earning Spousal IRAs                             250                 100
SEP/IRAs                                             500                 100
Gifts to Minors                                      500                  50
Automatic Investment Plans                            50                  50]

Additional Purchase Information
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Federal regulations require that you provide a certified taxpayer identification
number whenever you open or reopen an account. Congress has mandated that if you
fail to provide and certify to the  accuracy of your social  security  number or
other taxpayer identification number, the Funds will be required to withhold 31%
of all dividends,  distributions and payments, including redemption proceeds, to
which you are entitled, as a backup withholding procedure.

For reasons of economy and  convenience,  the Funds will not issue  certificates
for shares purchased.

How to Sell Your Shares
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

You may sell (redeem) your shares at any time.  Ordinarily,  the Funds will make
payment to you by check for the shares  that you sold  (redeemed)  within  three
business days after the Transfer Agent receives your properly completed request.
Your shares will be sold at the next NAV per share calculated after your request
is accepted by the  Transfer  Agent.  However,  the right of  redemption  may be
suspended or payment may be postponed under


                                       13

<PAGE>

unusual  circumstances  such as when  trading on the New York Stock  Exchange is
restricted or when it is not reasonably practical for the Funds to determine the
fair market value of their net assets.  Payment for shares that you purchased by
check will not be made until  your  check has  cleared,  which may take up to 15
calendar days from your original purchase date. The Funds reserve the right make
payments  wholly or partly in portfolio  securities if the Board of Directors of
The Bramwell Funds,  Inc.  determines that it is in the best interests of a Fund
to do so.

You may request the sale of your shares by any of the following methods.
<TABLE>
<S>                     <C>                                         <C>
By Mail or Courier      Request the sale of your shares             Mail to:
                        in a letter that includes:
                                                                    The Bramwell Funds, Inc.
                        o    Your Bramwell account                  Firstar Mutual Fund Services, LLC
                             number.                                P.O. Box 701
                        o    The name of the Fund                   Milwaukee, WI 53201-0701
                             whose shares you wish to
                             sell.                                  Overnight Courier to:
                        o    The number of shares or
                             dollar amount to be sold.              The Bramwell Funds, Inc.
                        o    The signatures of all account          Firstar Mutual Fund Services, LLC
                             owners exactly as they are             615 East Michigan Street, 3rd Floor
                             registered on the account.             Milwaukee, WI 53202
                        o    How and where to send the proceeds.
                        o    In the case of shares being            Note:  You may need to obtain any
                             redeemed from an IRA or SEP/IRA        required signature guarantees or
                             Plan, a statement of whether           other documentation.
                             or not federal income tax
                             should be withheld
                             (in the absence of any statement,
                             federal tax will be withheld).

By Telephone            o    You must select this                   o    Any written redemption
                             service in writing prior to                 requests received within 15
                             making a telephone                          days after an address change
                             redemption.                                 must be accompanied by a
                        o    Thereafter, call                            signature guarantee and no
                             1-800-BRAMCAP                               telephone redemptions will be
                             (1-800-272-6227) to redeem                  allowed within 15 days of
                             shares of a Fund.                           such change.
                        o    Proceeds must be mailed                o    The Funds reserve the
                             directly to you or                          right to limit your number of
                             transmitted to your                         telephone redemptions, and
                             predesignated bank account                  once made, they may not be
                             at a domestic bank.                         modified or canceled.
                        o    To change your                         o    During periods of
                             designated account, send a                  substantial economic or
                             written request with                        market changes, telephone
                             appropriate signature                       redemptions may be difficult
                             guarantees to the Transfer                  to implement. If you are
                             Agent.                                      unable to contact the
                        o    To change your mailing                      Transfer Agent by telephone,
                             address, call 1-800-BRAMCAP                 you may also redeem your
                             or send a written request                   shares by delivering a
                             with appropriate signature                  redemption request to the
                             guarantees to the Transfer                  Transfer Agent by mail as
                             Agent.                                      previously described.
                                                                    o    As with purchases by telephone,
                                                                         the Funds will not be held
                                                                         liable for following instructions
                                                                         communicated by telephone that
                                                                         they reasonably believe are genuine.

By Wire                 o    Contact the Transfer                   o    The recipient bank must
                             Agent at 1-800-BRAMCAP with                 be a commercial bank that is
                             wire instructions.                          a member of the Federal
                        o    Payment will normally be                    Reserve System.
                             made in federal funds on the           o    The Transfer Agent
                             next business day.                          currently charges a $12.00
                        o    The Transfer Agent will                     fee for each payment made by
                             wire redemption proceeds                    wire, which fee will be
                             only to the bank and account                deducted from your account.
                             designated on your initial
                             Purchase Application or in
                             written instructions
                             subsequently received by the
                             Transfer Agent.
</TABLE>
                                       14

<PAGE>

Telephone and Wire Transactions
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Only bank accounts held at domestic  financial  institutions  that are Automated
Clearing House ("ACH") members can be used for telephone transactions. Telephone
transactions may not be used for initial purchases. Your account must already be
established  prior  to  initiating  telephone  purchases.  Your  shares  will be
purchased at the next determined NAV per share of the Fund calculated  after the
Transfer  Agent  receives  payment  for shares  purchased  by  electronic  funds
transfer  through the ACH system.  Most  transfers  are  completed  within three
business days after your call to place your order. To preserve flexibility,  the
Funds may  revise or remove  the  ability to  purchase  shares by phone,  or may
charge a fee for such service,  although  currently,  the Funds do not expect to
charge a fee. You may also request by telephone a change of address, a change in
investments  made  through an  Automatic  Investment  Plan (see page 17),  and a
change in the manner in which you receive dividends (see page 17).

The Funds will  employ  reasonable  procedures  to confirm  that your  telephone
instructions are genuine. These procedures may include, among others,  requiring
some  form  of  personal   identification   prior  to  acting   upon   telephone
instructions,  providing written confirmations of all such transactions,  and/or
tape  recording of all telephone  instructions.  Assuming the Funds follow these
procedures,  the Funds will not be liable  for any loss,  cost,  or expense  for
acting upon telephone instructions or for any unauthorized telephone redemption.
As a result of this policy,  you will bear the risk of any loss unless the Funds
have failed to follow their procedure(s).

If you  purchase  your  initial  shares  by wire,  you must  prepare  and file a
Purchase Application,  marked "follow-up," with the Transfer Agent. The Transfer
Agent must receive the Purchase  Application  before any of the shares purchased
can be  redeemed.  You  should  contact  your  bank  (which  will  need  to be a
commercial  bank that is a member of the Federal Reserve System) for information
on sending funds by wire, including any fees that your bank may charge for these
services.

Signature Guarantees
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Signature  guarantees are designed to protect both you and the Funds from fraud.
Signature  guarantees can be obtained from most banks,  credit unions or savings
associations,  or  from  broker/dealers,  municipal  securities  broker/dealers,
government securities broker/dealers,  national securities exchanges, registered
securities  associations or clearing  agencies deemed eligible by the Securities
and Exchange Commission. Notaries public cannot provide signature guarantees.

You are required to obtain a signature guarantee for each account owner if:

o    You change ownership on your account.
o    You want redemption  proceeds  sent  to  a  different  address  from   that
     registered on your account.
o    Redemption proceeds are to be made  payable  to  someone  other  than  your
     account's registered owner(s).
o    Redemption proceeds are transmitted by federal wire transfer to your bank.
o    A change of address  request has been received by the Transfer Agent within
     the past 15 days.
o    Redemption is equal to or in excess of $25,000.

Financial Service Agents
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

You may also  purchase  (and sell) shares  through a Financial  Service Agent by
opening and  maintaining an account with a securities  broker or other financial
institution.

If you purchase shares through a Financial Service Agent,  please refer to their
program materials for any additional  special  provisions or conditions that may
be different from those described in this Prospectus.  Financial


                                       15

<PAGE>

Service Agents have the  responsibility of transmitting your purchase orders and
funds, and of crediting your account following  redemptions,  in a timely manner
in accordance with their customer agreements and this Prospectus.

If you  place an order for Fund  shares  through a  Financial  Service  Agent in
accordance with their procedures and the Financial  Service Agent transmits your
order to the Transfer  Agent  before 4:00 p.m.,  New York City time on that day,
then your purchase  will be processed at the net asset value  calculated at 4:00
p.m. New York City time on that day.

The Funds  understand  that some  Financial  Service  Agents may impose  certain
conditions  on their  clients  which are in addition to or different  from those
described  in this  Prospectus,  and,  to the  extent  permitted  by  applicable
regulatory authorities,  may charge their clients direct fees. Certain Financial
Service  Agents  may  receive  compensation  from the Funds.  Certain  Financial
Service  Agents may enter into  agreements  with the Funds which  permit them to
confirm purchase orders on behalf of customers by phone,  with payment to follow
no later than the Funds'  pricing on the  following  business day. If payment is
not received by such time, the Financial  Service Agent could be held liable for
resulting fees or losses.

Exchange Privileges
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The following table describes your exchange privileges:

From:                        To:                        Minimum Transfer Amount:
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Bramwell Growth Fund         Bramwell Focus Fund        $1,000
                             Firstar Money Market       $1,000

Bramwell Focus Fund          Bramwell Growth Fund       $1,000
                             Firstar Money Market       $1,000

Firstar Money Market(a)      Bramwell Growth Fund       $1,000
                             Bramwell Focus Fund        $1,000

(a)  The Firstar Money Market Fund  ("Firstar  Money  Market") is described in a
     separate  prospectus  which contains more complete  information  about that
     fund.  You may obtain a copy of the prospectus for the Firstar Money Market
     Fund by calling  1-800-BRAMCAP  (1-800-272-6227) and are advised to read it
     carefully before authorizing any investment in shares of that fund.

How to Exchange Your Shares

Telephone Exchanges

To make a telephone exchange, call the Transfer Agent at 1-800-BRAMCAP. You must
have selected the telephone exchange option on your initial Purchase Application
when  your  account  was  opened.  Otherwise,  complete  a written  request  for
telephone exchange privileges,  including signature  guarantees,  and send it to
the Transfer Agent prior to making a telephone exchange.  Currently, a $5.00 fee
is charged to your account for each telephone exchange.  The fee will be charged
to the account from which the funds are being  withdrawn  prior to effecting the
exchange.


                                       16

<PAGE>

Written Exchanges

To make a written exchange,  write to The Bramwell Funds,  Inc.,  Firstar Mutual
Fund Services,  LLC, P.O. Box 701,  Milwaukee,  WI 53201-0701,  or for overnight
delivery, The Bramwell Funds, Inc., Firstar Mutual Fund Services,  LLC, 615 East
Michigan Street, Third Floor, Milwaukee, WI 53202. There is no fee for a written
exchange request.

Your  exchange  will be made at the NAV per share of the shares to be  redeemed,
and the NAV per  share of the  shares  to be  purchased,  in both  cases as next
determined after the exchange request is received. Once your exchange request is
made, either by telephone or in writing, it may not be modified or canceled.

Although  there are  currently no such  limitations,  both the Funds and Firstar
reserve the right to limit the  frequency of exchanges or to otherwise  restrict
exchanges in order to ensure that  exchanges do not  disadvantage  the Funds and
its  other  investors  (or in  the  case  of  Firstar,  Firstar  and  its  other
investors).  You will be  notified at least 60 days in advance of any changes in
such limitations.  The exchange  privilege is only available in states where the
shares to be purchased may legally be sold.

For federal income tax purposes,  an exchange of Fund shares is a taxable event,
and  accordingly,  you may  realize a  capital  gain or loss.  Before  making an
exchange request,  you should consult with your tax advisor to determine the tax
consequences of a particular exchange.

[On side panel:

Redemption at the Option of the Funds

In order to relieve the Funds of the cost of  maintaining  very small  accounts,
the Funds  reserve the right to redeem all of the shares in your  account if the
net asset value of your  account  remains  below $500.  Before such  involuntary
redemption occurs, the Funds will give you 30 days' written notice to bring your
account balance up to $500. This minimum balance  requirement  does not apply to
IRAs and other tax-sheltered  investment accounts. The right of redemption shall
not apply if the value of your account  drops below $500 as the result of market
action.]

Retirement Plans
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Funds offer a variety of retirement  plans  including IRAs and SEP/IRAs that
may  allow  you to  shelter  a  portion  of your  income  from  taxes.  Complete
information including application forms, descriptions of applicable service fees
and certain limitations on contributions and withdrawals, are available from the
Transfer Agent upon request by calling 1-800-BRAMCAP (1-800-272-6227).

Automatic Investment Plans
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

You may  automatically  purchase  shares of the Funds on a  regular  basis  ($50
minimum per transaction) under each Fund's Automatic  Investment Plan. Under the
plans,   your  designated  bank  or  other   financial   institution   debits  a
preauthorized  amount  from your  account  each month or quarter and applies the
amount to the purchase of Fund  shares.  An  Automatic  Investment  Plan must be
implemented  with a  financial  institution  that is a member  of the  Automated
Clearing House. Also, the Funds must have a currently effective  registration in
those  states in which it is  required.  Applications  to establish an Automatic
Investment  Plan are available  from the Transfer  Agent upon request by calling
1-800-BRAMCAP (1-800-272-6227).


                                       17

<PAGE>

Using an Automatic  Investment Plan facilitates  dollar-cost  averaging  because
investing  equal dollar amounts  periodically  in a fluctuating  market leads to
buying more  shares at lows and fewer  shares at highs.  Of course,  dollar-cost
averaging  cannot  assure a profit or protect you against  losses in a declining
market.

Shareholder Communications
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Each Fund will provide you with the following statements and reports to keep you
informed regarding the status of your investment account:

Confirmation Statements                   After  each  transaction  that affects
                                          your   account   balance   or  account
                                          registration.

Account Statements                        Regular account statements  quarterly.
                                          You   will   also   receive  a  yearly
                                          statement    explaining    the     tax
                                          characteristics  of any  dividends  or
                                          distributions   that   you  may   have
                                          received throughout the year.

Financial Reports                         At  least  semiannually.  The   annual
                                          report will include audited financial
                                          statements.  To reduce Fund  expenses,
                                          one copy of each report will be mailed
                                          to each taxpayer identification number
                                          even though you may have more than one
                                          account in the Funds.

If you have questions about your account, have general questions about investing
in the Funds,  or wish to have additional  information  sent to you, please call
1-800-BRAMCAP  (1-800-272-6227).  In  addition,  if you wish to make a change in
your  address  of record or a change in the  investments  you make  through  the
Automatic Investment Plan, call 1-800-BRAMCAP.

Dividends and Distributions
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Funds intend to pay dividends  from net  investment  income and net realized
capital  gains (not offset by capital  loss  carryovers)  on an annual  basis in
December.  You may elect to reinvest  all income  dividends  and  capital  gains
distributions  in shares of the appropriate Fund or you may elect to receive all
dividends  and  distributions  in cash.  You make this  election on your initial
Purchase  Application.  If you do not specify an election,  all income dividends
and capital gains  distributions  will  automatically  be reinvested in full and
fractional shares of the appropriate Fund calculated to the nearest 1,000th of a
share.  Shares will be  purchased at the NAV in effect on the business day after
the  dividend  record date and will be  credited  to your  account on such date.
Reinvested  dividends and distributions  receive the same tax treatment as those
paid in cash.

You may change  your  election  at any time by  calling  the  Transfer  Agent at
1-800-BRAMCAP  (1-800-272-6227)  or  by  sending  written  notification  to  The
Bramwell  Funds,  Inc.,  Firstar  Mutual  Fund  Services,  LLC,  P.O.  Box  701,
Milwaukee,   WI  53201-0701.   Your  new  election  will  become  effective  for
distributions with a dividend record date on or after the date that the Transfer
Agent receives notice of your election.

Taxes
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Federal Taxes

The following is a brief summary of certain U.S.  federal tax and foreign income
tax  issues.  Please see the  Statement  of  Additional  Information  for a more
detailed  discussion  of these topics.  You should  consult your own tax advisor
with  regard to the  federal  tax  consequences  of your  prospective  purchase,
ownership or  disposition  of


                                       18

<PAGE>

shares of a Fund, as well as the tax consequences  arising under the laws of any
state, foreign country or other taxing jurisdiction.

Dividends  out of net  investment  income and  distributions  of net  short-term
capital gains are taxable to the shareholders as ordinary income. Dividends from
net investment  income and net short-term  capital gains may be eligible for the
corporate dividends-received deduction.

The excess of net long-term  capital gains over net  short-term  capital  losses
realized  and  distributed  by a  Fund  to its  shareholders  as  capital  gains
distributions  is  taxable  to  the  shareholders  as  long-term  capital  gain,
regardless of the length of time a shareholder has held his or her Fund shares.

An income  dividend  or capital  gains  distribution  declared  by a Fund during
October,  November  or  December  of a year to  shareholders  of  record as of a
specified date in such a month that is paid during January of the following year
is  includable  in the prior  year's  taxable  income of  shareholders  that are
calendar year taxpayers.

Any  dividend  or  distribution  received by a  shareholder  on shares of a Fund
shortly  after the purchase of such shares by him or her will have the effect of
reducing  the net asset value of such  shares by the amount of such  dividend or
distribution.  Furthermore, such dividend or distribution,  although in effect a
return of  capital,  is  subject  to  applicable  taxes to the  extent  that the
investor is subject to such taxes regardless of the length of time he or she may
have held his or her shares.

Upon a sale or other  disposition  of Fund  shares  which  are held as a capital
asset,  a shareholder  may realize a capital gain or loss which may be long-term
or short-term, depending on the shareholder's holding period for the shares.

A Fund may be required to withhold U.S. federal income tax at the rate of 31% of
all taxable  distributions  payable to shareholders who fail to provide the Fund
with  their  correct  taxpayer   identification   number  or  to  make  required
certifications  or who have been  notified  by the IRS that they are  subject to
backup  withholding.  Backup  withholding is not an additional  tax. Any amounts
withheld  may be credited  against the  shareholder's  U.S.  federal  income tax
liability.

Shareholders  will be advised annually as to the federal tax status of dividends
and  capital  gains  distributions  made  by a  Fund  for  the  preceding  year.
Distributions by a Fund generally will be subject to state and local taxes.

Foreign Income Taxes

Investment  income received by a Fund from sources within foreign  countries may
be subject to foreign  income taxes  withheld at the source.  It is not expected
that a Fund will be able to "pass through" these taxes to shareholders  but such
taxes generally will be deductible by a Fund.


                                       19

<PAGE>

Financial Highlights

The financial  highlights table is intended to help you understand the financial
performance  of the  Funds.  Because  the  Bramwell  Focus  Fund  will  commence
operations on November 1, 1999, it has no prior  performance  history to report.
The following table contains information about the Bramwell Growth Fund from its
inception,  August 1, 1994. Certain  information in the table reflects financial
results for a single Fund share.  The total  returns in the table  represent the
rate that you would have earned if you had invested in the Bramwell  Growth Fund
(assuming  reinvestment of all dividends and distributions).  The information in
the table has been audited by  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP, whose report,  along
with the Fund's financial statements,  are included in the Fund's annual report,
which is available upon request by calling 1-800-BRAMCAP (1-800-272-6227).

Bramwell Growth Fund
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                         For the Period
                                              Year             Year           Year            Year       August 1, 19941
                                              Ended           Ended           Ended          Ended             to
Selected Per-Share Data2                  June 30, 1999   June 30, 1998   June 30, 1997  June 30, 1996    June 30, 1995
- -----------------------                   -------------   -------------   -------------  -------------    -------------


<S>                                          <C>              <C>            <C>             <C>             <C>
Net Assets value, beginning of period        $23.05           $17.53         $14.60          $12.30          $10.00

Income from investment operations:
Net investment loss                           (0.18)           (0.13)         (0.15)          (0.08)            --3
Net realized and unrealized gains
    on securities                              4.45             6.82           3.35            2.42            2.31
                                             ------           ------         ------          ------          ------

Total from investment operations               4.27             6.69           3.20            2.34            2.31


Less distributions:
Distributions from capital gains              (1.25)           (1.17)         (0.27)          (0.04)          (0.01)
                                             ------           ------         ------          ------          ------

Net asset value, end of period               $26.07           $23.05         $17.53          $14.60          $12.30
                                             ======           ======         ======          ======          ======

Total return                                   19.4%            39.5%          22.2%           19.0%           23.1%4

Supplemental data and ratios:
Net assets, end of period (000S)           $268,726         $205,922       $125,924        $141,455         $62,241
Ratio of expenses to average net               1.58%            1.66%          1.75%           1.75%           1.75%6
assets5
Ratio of net investment loss to average       (0.79)%          (0.75)%        (0.85)%         (0.66)%         (0.11)%6
     net assets5

Portfolio turnover rate                          38%              49%            82%            118%             80%4
</TABLE>

1 Commencement of operations.
2 Information  presented  relates to a share of capital  stock of the  Bramwell
  Growth Fund outstanding for the entire period.
3 Less than $(0.01).
4 Not annualized.
5 Net of  reimbursements  and  waivers.  Absent  reimbursements  and  waivers of
  expenses  by  the  adviser, except  for the years ended June 30, 1999 and 1998
  where there were no reimbursements or waivers,  the ratios of expenses and net
  investment  loss  to  average net assets for the years ended June 30, 1997 and
  1996  and  the period  August 1, 1994 to June 30, 1995,  would have been 1.77%
  and (0.87)%; 1.79% and (0.70)%; and 2.68% and (1.04)%, respectively.
6 Annualized.


                                       20

<PAGE>

The Bramwell Funds, Inc.
Bramwell Growth Fund
Bramwell Focus Fund
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Investment Adviser
Bramwell Capital Management, Inc.

Administrator
Sunstone Financial Group, Inc.

Counsel
Dechert Price & Rhoads

Independent Certified Public Accountants
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

Custodian
Firstar Bank Milwaukee, N.A.

Transfer and
Dividend Disbursing Agent
Firstar Mutual Fund Services, LLC


                                       21

<PAGE>

The Bramwell Funds, Inc.
Bramwell Growth Fund
Bramwell Focus Fund
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Where to go for Additional Information About the Funds
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

For additional  information about the Bramwell Growth Fund or the Bramwell Focus
Fund, the following documents are available to you:

Annual/Semi-Annual Reports - Additional information about the Funds' investments
is available in each Fund's annual and semi-annual  reports to shareholders.  In
these  reports,  you  will  find a  discussion  of  the  market  conditions  and
investment strategies that significantly  affected the Funds' performance during
the most recent fiscal year.

Statement of Additional  Information - Additional  information  about the Funds'
structure  and   operations   can  be  found  in  the  Statement  of  Additional
Information.   The   information   presented  in  the  Statement  of  Additional
Information is  incorporated  by reference  into this  prospectus and is legally
considered to be part of this prospectus.

To request a free copy of any of the materials  described  above, or to make any
other inquiries, please call, write, or e-mail us:

The Bramwell Funds, Inc.
Firstar Mutual Fund Services, LLC
P.O. Box 701
Milwaukee, WI 53201-0701
1-800-BRAMCAP (1-800-272-6227)
E-mail:  [email protected]

Visit our web site: www.bramwell.com

Obtaining Information From the Securities and Exchange Commission
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Reports and other information about the Funds (including the Funds' Statement of
Additional  Information)  may also be obtained from the  Securities and Exchange
Commission:

1.   By going to the  Commission's  Public  Reference Room in  Washington,  D.C.
     where you can review and copy the information. Information on the operation
     of the Public  Reference  Room may be obtained by calling the Commission at
     1-800-SEC-0330.

2.   By accessing the  Commission's  Internet site at www.sec.gov  where you can
     view, download and print the information.

3.   By writing to the Public  Reference  Section of the Securities and Exchange
     Commission,   Washington,  D.C.  20549-6009,   where,  upon  payment  of  a
     duplicating fee, copies of the information will be sent to you.


SEC file number 811-8546


                                       22

<PAGE>






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                                       23

<PAGE>















The Bramwell Funds, Inc.                                         [LOGO]
745 Fifth Avenue                                        The Bramwell Funds, Inc.
New York, New York  10151
1-800-272-6227
1-800-BRAMCAP
www.bramwell.com


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                            The Bramwell Funds, Inc.



                              Bramwell Growth Fund

             A No-Load Diversified Mutual Fund for Investors Seeking
        Primarily Long-Term Capital Growth and Secondarily Current Income


                               Bramwell Focus Fund

           A No-Load Non-Diversified Mutual Fund for Investors Seeking
                         Long-Term Capital Appreciation


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                       STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

                                November 1, 1999


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This Statement of Additional  Information is not a prospectus and should be read
in conjunction with the prospectus for the Bramwell Growth Fund and the Bramwell
Focus Fund (each a "Fund" and together,  the "Funds") dated November 1, 1999, as
amended  from time to time,  a copy of which may be obtained  without  charge by
calling  1-800-BRAMCAP or writing to Sunstone  Financial  Group,  Inc., 207 East
Buffalo  Street,  Suite 400,  Milwaukee,  Wisconsin  53202.  The Bramwell Growth
Fund's Annual Report is incorporated herein by reference.



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Table of Contents
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Fundamental Investment Policies                                                1

Investment Objectives and Non-Fundamental Policies                             2

Further Information About Potential Investments and Fund Risks                 2

Directors and Officers                                                        14

Investment Advisory Services                                                  17

Other Services                                                                18

Distribution Plan                                                             19

Portfolio Transactions and Brokerage                                          20

Performance Information                                                       22

Tax Status                                                                    24

Net Asset Value                                                               29

Capital Structure                                                             30

Further Information about Redemption of Shares                                31

Experts                                                                       31

Financial Statements                                                          31



Appendix                                                                      33




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Fundamental Investment Policies
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The fundamental  policies of each Fund are listed below. They may not be changed
without the approval of a majority of a Fund's  outstanding voting securities as
defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended.

Fundamental Investment Policies of the Bramwell Growth Fund

o    With respect to 75% of its assets,  the Fund may not invest more than 5% of
     the market value of its total assets in the securities of any single issuer
     (other than  obligations  issued or guaranteed as to principal and interest
     by the U.S. Government or any agency or instrumentality thereof).

o    With respect to 75% of its assets,  the Fund may not purchase more than 10%
     of the outstanding  voting securities of any issuer (other than obligations
     of the U.S. Government).

Fundamental Investment Policies of the Bramwell Focus Fund

o    With respect to 50% of its assets,  the Fund may not invest more than 5% of
     the market value of its total assets in the securities of any single issuer
     (other than  obligations  issued or guaranteed as to principal and interest
     by the U.S. Government or any agency or instrumentality thereof).

o    With respect to 50% of its assets,  the Fund may not purchase more than 10%
     of the outstanding  voting securities of any issuer (other than obligations
     of the U.S. Government).

Fundamental  Investment  Policies  of Both  the  Bramwell  Growth  Fund  and the
Bramwell Focus Fund

o    The Funds may not issue  senior  securities  or  borrow  money  except  for
     temporary  purposes in amounts up to 10% of their net assets (including the
     amount  borrowed) less  liabilities  (not including the amount borrowed) at
     the time of such  borrowing,  provided that  collateral  arrangements  with
     respect  to  currency  exchange  contracts,  futures  contracts  and  other
     permitted  investments shall not be deemed to entail the issuance of senior
     securities  if  appropriately   covered.   The  Funds  will  not  make  any
     investments  while  outstanding  borrowings exceed 5% of the value of their
     total assets.

o    The  Funds may not  invest  25% or  more of their net assets in one or more
     issuers conducting their principal business in the same industry.

<PAGE>


o    The Funds may not make loans,  although they may invest in debt securities,
     enter into repurchase agreements and lend their portfolio securities.

o    The Funds may not invest in  securities  or other  assets that the Board of
     Directors  determines  to be  illiquid  if more than 15% of that Fund's net
     assets would be invested in such securities.

o    The Funds may not (a) purchase or sell  commodities or commodity  contracts
     (other than financial futures and related options), (b) invest in oil, gas,
     or mineral  exploration or development  programs or leases, or (c) purchase
     securities on margin, except for such short-term credit as may be necessary
     for the clearance of transactions  and except for borrowings in amounts not
     exceeding 10% of their net assets.

o    The Funds may not purchase or sell real estate or make real estate mortgage
     loans or invest in real estate limited partnerships,  except that the Funds
     may  purchase or sell  securities  issued by  entities  engaged in the real
     estate industry or instruments backed by real estate.

o    The Funds  may not act as  underwriters  of  securities  issued by  others,
     except to the extent they may be deemed to be  underwriters  in  connection
     with the disposition of portfolio securities of their Funds.

Except with respect to the first  investment  restriction  under the immediately
preceding heading, the percentage  limitations set forth above, as well as those
described  elsewhere in the  Prospectus  and this SAI, apply only at the time an
investment is made or other relevant action is taken by a Fund.

Investment Objectives and Non-Fundamental Policies
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In order to provide a degree of flexibility,  each Fund's investment objectives,
as well as other Fund policies which are not deemed fundamental, may be modified
by the Board of Directors without shareholder  approval.  Any change in a Fund's
investment  objectives  may  result  in the Fund  having  investment  objectives
different from the objectives  which the shareholder  considered  appropriate at
the  time of  investment  in the  Fund.  However,  a Fund  will not  change  its
investment  objectives,  non-fundamental  policies  or  investment  restrictions
without written notice to shareholders.

As a non-fundamental policy, each Fund may not purchase or retain the securities
of any  issuer if those  officers  or  directors  of the Fund or its  investment
adviser owning individually more than 1/2 of 1% of the securities of such issuer
together own more than 5% of the securities of such issuer.

Further Information About Potential Investments and Fund Risks
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Each Fund may invest from time to time in any of the following  securities up to
the limits as stated below or use any of the following investment  techniques to
increase or decrease its


                                       2

<PAGE>

exposure  to the  effects of  possible  changes  in  security  prices,  currency
exchange  rates or other factors that affect the value of its  portfolio.  These
techniques  may be used by the Funds for risk or portfolio  management  purposes
or, in the case of securities lending and repurchase agreements,  for incidental
income and not for  speculation.  The  following  descriptions  are  designed to
inform  you  about  the  general  characteristics  and  related  risks  of these
investments and investment techniques.

Cash and Cash Equivalents

Each Fund may hold cash and cash  equivalents  without  limit  when a  temporary
defensive position is deemed advisable. The cash equivalents in which a Fund may
invest include fixed-income securities,  such as certificates of deposit of U.S.
banks,  commercial  paper  and  commercial  paper  master  notes  if the bank or
commercial paper issuer has been rated within the two highest grades assigned by
Standard  & Poor's  Corporation  ("S&P")  or  Moody's  Investors  Service,  Inc.
("Moody's") or has been determined by the Investment Adviser to be of equivalent
quality or, in the case of banks,  provided  the bank has  capital,  surplus and
undivided  profits,  as of  the  date  of its  most  recently  published  annual
financial  statements,  with a value in  excess of  $100,000,000  at the date of
investment.  Commercial paper master notes are unsecured promissory notes issued
by  corporations  to finance  short-term  credit needs.  They permit a series of
short-term  borrowings  under a single note.  Borrowings  under commercial paper
master  notes are  payable  in whole or in part at any time,  may be  prepaid in
whole or in part at any  time,  and bear  interest  at rates  which are fixed to
known  lending  rates and  automatically  adjust when such known  lending  rates
change.  There is no secondary  market for  commercial  paper master notes.  The
investment adviser,  Bramwell Capital Management,  Inc. ("BramCap") will monitor
the  creditworthiness  of the issuer of the commercial  paper master notes while
any borrowings are outstanding.

U.S. Government Obligations

Each  Fund may  invest  without  limit  in U.S.  Government  obligations  when a
temporary  defensive  position  is  advisable.  Examples  of the  types  of U.S.
Government  obligations  that may be held by each Fund  include,  in addition to
U.S.  Treasury bonds,  notes and bills, the obligations of the Federal Home Loan
Bank,  Federal  Farm  Credit  Bank,  Federal  Land  Bank,  the  Federal  Housing
Administration,  Farmers Home  Administration,  Export-Import Bank of the United
States, Small Business Administration, Government National Mortgage Association,
Federal National Mortgage Association, General Services Administration,  Student
Loan Marketing  Association,  Central Bank for  Cooperatives,  Federal Home Loan
Mortgage  Corporation,   Federal  Intermediate  Credit  Bank,  Tennessee  Valley
Authority,   Resolution   Funding   Corporation  and  Maritime   Administration.
Obligations of certain agencies and  instrumentalities  of the U.S.  Government,
such as those of the Government National Mortgage Association,  are supported by
the  full  faith  and  credit  of  the  U.S.  Treasury;   others,  such  as  the
Export-Import  Bank of the  United  States,  are  supported  by the right of the
issuer  to  borrow  from the  Treasury;  others,  such as  those of the  Federal
National Mortgage Association,  are supported by the discretionary  authority of
the U.S. Government to purchase the agency's obligations;  still others, such as
those


                                       3

<PAGE>

of the Student Loan Marketing  Association,  are supported only by the credit of
the  instrumentality.  No assurance can be given that the U.S.  Government would
provide financial support to U.S.  Government-sponsored  instrumentalities if it
is not obligated to do so by law.

Foreign Securities

Each Fund invests  primarily in securities of companies  domiciled in the United
States,  but each Fund may also invest up to 25% of its assets,  measured at the
time of investment,  in securities of foreign  issuers.  Such investments may be
made either directly in such issuers or indirectly  through American  Depository
Receipts ("ADRs") or closed-end investment  companies.  It is possible that some
material information about unsponsored ADRs will be unavailable.

Foreign  securities involve certain inherent risks that are different from those
of domestic issuers,  including political or economic  instability of the issuer
or the  country  of issue,  diplomatic  developments  which  could  affect  U.S.
investments in those  countries,  changes in foreign currency and exchange rates
and the  possibility  of  adverse  changes in  investment  or  exchange  control
regulations.

Most foreign stock  markets are not as large or liquid as in the United  States,
fixed  commissions  on foreign stock  exchanges  are  generally  higher than the
negotiated commissions on U.S. exchanges, and there is generally less government
supervision  and  regulation of foreign stock  exchanges,  brokers and companies
than in the United  States.  You should  recognize  that  foreign  markets  have
different clearance and settlement  procedures and in certain markets there have
been times  when  settlements  have been  unable to keep pace with the volume of
securities  transactions,  making it  difficult  to conduct  such  transactions.
Delays in settlement could result in temporary periods when assets of a Fund are
uninvested  and no return is earned  thereon.  The  inability  of a Fund to make
intended security  purchases due to settlement  problems could cause the Fund to
miss  attractive  investment  opportunities.  Inability  to dispose of portfolio
securities  due to settlement  problems  either could result in losses to a Fund
due to subsequent  declines in value of the portfolio security or, if a Fund has
entered  into a  contract  to sell the  security,  could  result  in a  possible
liability  to the  purchaser.  Payment for  securities  without  delivery may be
required in certain foreign markets.

Further, a Fund may encounter difficulties or be unable to pursue legal remedies
and  obtain  judgments  in foreign  courts.  Foreign  governments  can also levy
confiscatory  taxes,  expropriate  assets,  and limit  repatriations  of assets.
Typically,  there is less publicly available information about a foreign company
than  about  a U.S.  company,  and  foreign  companies  may be  subject  to less
stringent reserve, auditing and reporting requirements. It may be more difficult
for a Fund's agents to keep currently  informed about corporate  actions such as
stock  dividends  or other  matters  which may affect  the  prices of  portfolio
securities.  Communications  between the United States and foreign countries may
be less  reliable than within the United  States,  thus  increasing  the risk of
delayed  settlements  of  portfolio  transactions  or loss of  certificates  for
portfolio  securities.  Individual  foreign  economies  may differ  favorably or
unfavorably  from the U.S.  economy in such


                                       4

<PAGE>

respects  as  growth  of gross  national  product,  rate of  inflation,  capital
reinvestment, resource self-sufficiency and balance of payments position.

Because  investments in foreign  securities will usually  involve  currencies of
foreign countries, and because each Fund may hold foreign currencies,  the value
of the assets of a Fund as measured in U.S. dollars may be affected favorably or
unfavorably by changes in foreign  currency  exchange rates and exchange control
regulations,  and a Fund may incur costs in connection with conversions  between
various currencies.  Although each Fund values its assets daily in terms of U.S.
dollars,  it does not intend to convert its holdings of foreign  currencies into
U.S.  dollars on a daily basis.  It will do so from time to time,  and investors
should be aware of the costs of currency  conversion.  Although foreign exchange
dealers do not charge a fee for  conversion,  they do realize a profit  based on
the difference  (the  "spread")  between the prices at which they are buying and
selling various currencies.  Thus, a dealer may offer to sell a foreign currency
to a Fund at one rate,  while offering a lesser rate of exchange should the Fund
desire to resell that currency to the dealer. Each Fund will conduct its foreign
currency exchange  transactions  either on a spot (i.e., cash) basis at the spot
rate prevailing in the foreign  currency  exchange  market,  or through entering
into forward foreign currency exchange contracts or by purchasing or writing put
or call options on foreign currencies.

As a result of these and other factors,  foreign securities  purchased by a Fund
may be subject to greater  price  fluctuation  and risk than  securities of U.S.
companies.

Illiquid or Restricted Securities

Each Fund may invest up to 15% of its net  assets in  illiquid  securities,  for
which there is a limited  trading market and for which a low trading volume of a
particular security may result in abrupt and erratic price movements. A Fund may
be unable to dispose of its holdings in illiquid securities at acceptable prices
and may have to dispose of such securities over extended periods of time. A Fund
may invest in (i)  securities  that are sold in private  placement  transactions
between their  issuers and their  purchasers  and that are neither  listed on an
exchange  nor  traded  over-the-counter,  and (ii)  securities  that are sold in
transactions between qualified  institutional buyers pursuant to Rule 144A under
the  Securities  Act of  1933,  as  amended.  Such  securities  are  subject  to
contractual or legal  restrictions  on subsequent  transfer.  As a result of the
absence of a public trading market,  such  restricted  securities may in turn be
less  liquid  and more  difficult  to value  than  publicly  traded  securities.
Although these  securities may be resold in privately  negotiated  transactions,
the prices realized from the sales could, due to illiquidity, be less than those
originally paid by a Fund or less than their fair value.  In some instances,  it
may be difficult to locate any purchaser.

In addition, issuers whose securities are not publicly traded may not be subject
to the  disclosure  and  other  investor  protection  requirements  that  may be
applicable if their securities were publicly traded.  If any privately placed or
Rule 144A  securities  held by a Fund are  required to be  registered  under the
securities laws of one or more  jurisdictions  before being resold, the Fund may


                                       5

<PAGE>

be required to bear the expenses of  registration.  Securities  which are freely
tradable  under Rule 144A may be treated as liquid if the Board of  Directors of
the Funds is satisfied  that there is sufficient  trading  activity and reliable
price  information.  Investing in Rule 144A securities  could have the effect of
increasing  the  level  of  illiquidity  of  a  Fund's  portfolio  if  qualified
institutional  buyers become,  for a time,  uninterested in purchasing such 144A
securities.

Other Investment Companies

In  seeking  to  attain  its  investment  objectives,  each  Fund may  invest in
securities issued by other investment  companies within the limits prescribed by
the 1940 Act. Each Fund intends to limit its  investments so that, as determined
immediately  after a  securities  purchase is made:  (i) not more than 5% of the
value of its net assets will be invested in the securities of any one investment
company;  (ii) not more than 10% of the value of its net assets will be invested
in the aggregate in securities of investment companies as a group; and (iii) not
more than 3% of the outstanding  voting stock of any one investment company will
be owned by either Fund. As a shareholder of another investment  company, a Fund
would bear,  along with other  shareholders,  its pro rata  portion of the other
investment company's expenses,  including advisory fees. These expenses would be
in addition to the advisory and other  expenses  that a Fund bears in connection
with its own operations.

Warrants and Rights

Each Fund may invest up to 5% of its net assets in warrants or rights, valued at
the lower of cost or market,  which entitle the holder to buy equity  securities
during a specific period of time. Each Fund will make such  investments  only if
the underlying equity securities are deemed appropriate by BramCap for inclusion
in the Fund's portfolio.  Included in the 5% amount, but not to exceed 2% of net
assets,  are warrants and rights whose  underlying  securities are not traded on
principal domestic or foreign exchanges.  Warrants and rights acquired by a Fund
in units or attached to securities are not subject to these restrictions.

Convertible Securities

Each Fund may invest only in high grade convertible securities;  that is, bonds,
notes,  debentures,  preferred stocks and other securities which are convertible
into common  stocks.  "High grade"  securities  are those rated within the three
highest  ratings  categories of S&P or Moody's or that are determined by BramCap
to be of equivalent quality.  Investments in convertible  securities may provide
incidental  income through interest and dividend  payments and/or an opportunity
for capital appreciation by virtue of their conversion or exchange features.

Convertible debt securities and convertible  preferred stocks,  until converted,
have  general  characteristics  similar  to both  debt  and  equity  securities.
Although to a lesser  extent  than with debt  securities  generally,  the market
value of convertible securities tends to decline as interest rates increase and,
conversely, tends to increase as interest rates decline. In addition, because of


                                       6

<PAGE>

the conversion or exchange feature,  the market value of convertible  securities
typically  changes as the market value of the  underlying  common stock changes,
and, therefore,  also tends to follow movements in the general market for equity
securities.  As the  market  price  of the  underlying  common  stock  declines,
convertible  securities tend to trade  increasingly on a yield basis, and so may
not experience market value declines to the same extent as the underlying common
stock.  When the market  price of the  underlying  common stock  increases,  the
prices of the  convertible  securities tend to rise as a reflection of the value
of the underlying common stock, although typically not as much as the underlying
common stock. While no securities  investments are without risk,  investments in
convertible  securities  generally  entail less risk than  investments in common
stock of the same issuer.

As debt securities,  convertible  securities are investments which provide for a
stream of income (or in the case of zero coupon securities, accretion of income)
with  generally  higher  yields  than  common  stocks.   Convertible  securities
generally offer lower yields than non-convertible  securities of similar quality
because of their conversion or exchange features.

Convertible   securities  are  generally   subordinated  to  other  similar  but
non-convertible  securities of the same issuer,  although  convertible bonds, as
corporate debt  obligations,  enjoy  seniority in right of payment to all equity
securities,  and  convertible  preferred  stock is senior to common stock of the
same issuer.  However,  because of the subordination feature,  convertible bonds
and  convertible  preferred  stock  typically  have lower  ratings  than similar
non-convertible securities.

Unseasoned Issuers

Each Fund may invest in  securities  of issuers which have a record of less than
three years of continuous operation,  including the operation of any predecessor
business  of a  company  which  came  into  existence  as a result  of a merger,
consolidation,  reorganization or purchase of substantially all of the assets of
such  predecessor  business,  if such  purchase  would  not cause the value of a
Fund's  investments  in all such  companies to exceed 5% of the value of its net
assets.

Securities Lending

For  incremental  income  purposes,  a Fund may lend  its  portfolio  securities
constituting  up to  30%  of  its  net  assets  to  U.S.  or  foreign  banks  or
broker/dealers  which have been rated within the two highest grades  assigned by
S&P or Moody's,  or which have been  determined  by BramCap to be of  equivalent
quality.  BramCap is  responsible  for  monitoring  compliance  with this rating
standard during the term of any securities lending agreement. In compliance with
Securities and Exchange Commission guidelines, any loans by a Fund of securities
in its portfolio would be required to be secured with collateral  (consisting of
any combination of U.S. currency,  securities issued or guaranteed by the United
States  Government or any agency  thereof,  or irrevocable  letters of credit or
other debt  securities  issued by entities  rated within the two highest  grades
assigned  by S&P  or  Moody's  or  determined  by  BramCap  to be of  equivalent
quality).


                                       7

<PAGE>

The  borrower  must agree to add to such  collateral  to cover  increases in the
market value of the loaned  securities  and a Fund must be entitled to terminate
any  loan at any  time,  with  the  borrower  obligated  to  redeliver  borrowed
securities  within five trading  days.  The borrower must agree that a Fund will
receive all dividends,  interest or other distributions on loaned securities and
a Fund  must be able to vote  loaned  securities  whenever  the right to vote is
material to a Fund's performance.

Securities lending involves the risk that the borrowing institution will fail to
redeliver the securities when due.  However,  loans of securities each Fund will
be fully  collateralized  at all times by at least  100% of the  current  market
value of the lent securities. Securities lending also involves the risk of delay
in  receiving  additional  collateral,  and  possibly  a loss of  rights  in the
collateral if the borrower of the securities becomes insolvent.

Repurchase Agreements

Repurchase  agreements may be entered into by each Fund for  incremental  income
purposes.  A repurchase  agreement provides a means for a Fund to earn income on
funds for periods as short as overnight. It is an arrangement under which a Fund
acquires a security and the seller  agrees,  at the time of sale,  to repurchase
the security at a specified time and price.  Securities  subject to a repurchase
agreement are held in a segregated  account and the value of such  securities is
kept at least equal to the  repurchase  price on a daily basis.  The  repurchase
price may be higher than the purchase price,  the difference being income to the
Fund, or the purchase and repurchase  price may be the same,  with interest at a
stated rate.  In either case,  the income to a Fund is unrelated to the interest
rate on the security itself.

Each Fund may enter into repurchase agreements with any foreign or domestic bank
or  broker/dealer  if the bank or  broker/dealer  has been rated  within the two
highest grades  assigned by S&P or Moody's or has been  determined by BramCap to
be of equivalent quality.  BramCap is responsible for monitoring compliance with
this rating  standard during the term of any repurchase  agreement.  A Fund will
not  enter  into  repurchase  agreements  with  entities  other  than  banks  or
broker/dealers  or invest over 5% of its assets in  repurchase  agreements  with
maturities of more than seven days.

Short Sales

Each  Fund  may  make  limited  short  sales of  securities.  A short  sale is a
transaction  in which the Fund sells a security it does not own in  anticipation
that the market price of that  security  will  decline.  The market value of the
securities  sold short will not exceed either 5% of a Fund's net assets or 5% of
each issuer's voting  securities.  A Fund may also make short sales "against the
box" without  respect to such  limitations.  In this type of short sale,  at the
time of the sale, the Fund owns or has the immediate and unconditional  right to
acquire at no additional cost the identical security.


                                       8

<PAGE>

Short sales  involve  transactions  in which a Fund sells a security it does not
own in  anticipation  of a market price decline in that security.  If the market
price of the security goes up, a Fund could face unlimited liability.

Options

Each Fund may write (i.e.,  sell)  covered put and call options and purchase put
and call options on securities  or securities  indices that are traded on United
States and foreign exchanges or in the  over-the-counter  markets.  Such options
can include  long-term options with durations of up to three years. The value of
the  underlying  securities on which options may be written at any one time will
not exceed 15% of the net assets of a Fund. A Fund will not purchase put or call
options if the  aggregate  premium paid for such options  would exceed 5% of its
net assets at the time of purchase.

An option on a security is a contract  that permits the purchaser of the option,
in return for the premium paid, the right to buy a specified security,  index or
currency (in the case of a call option) or to sell a specified  security,  index
or currency (in the case of a put option) from or to the writer of the option at
a  designated  price  during the term of the option.  An option on a  securities
index permits the purchaser of the option,  in return for the premium paid,  the
right to  receive  from the  seller  cash equal to the  difference  between  the
closing  price of the index and the  exercise  price of the option.  The gain or
loss on an option on an index  depends  on price  movements  in the  instruments
making up the market,  market segment,  industry or other composite on which the
underlying index is based, rather than price movements in individual securities,
as is the case with respect to options on securities. Each Fund may write a call
or put option only if the option is "covered." This means that so long as a Fund
is  obligated  as the  writer  of a call  option,  it will  own  the  underlying
securities  subject  to the call,  or hold a call at the same or lower  exercise
price, for the same exercise  period,  and on the same securities as the written
call. A put is covered if a Fund  maintains  liquid assets with a value equal to
the  exercise  price  in a  segregated  account,  or  holds  a put on  the  same
underlying  securities at an equal or greater  exercise  price.  Put options and
call options typically have similar structural  characteristics  and operational
mechanics regardless of the underlying instrument on which they are purchased or
sold.

Each Fund may invest in both conventional options which generally have a maximum
life  of nine  months  or less as well  as  longer  term  options  which  may be
exercised  for longer  periods of up to two or three  years.  Premiums  paid (or
received)  upon the  purchase (or sale) of these long term options may be two to
three times the price of a short-term option.

Each Fund's  purchase of a put option on a security might be designed to protect
its  holdings  in the  underlying  instrument  (or,  in some  cases,  a  similar
instrument)  against a substantial  decline in the market value by giving a Fund
the  right to sell  such  instrument  at the  option  exercise  price.  A Fund's
purchase of a call option on a security,  index or currency might be intended to
protect the Fund against an increase in the price of the  underlying  instrument
that it  intends to  purchase  in the future by fixing the price at which it may
purchase  such  instrument.  If a Fund sells a call option,


                                       9

<PAGE>

the premium that it receives may serve as a partial hedge,  to the extent of the
option premium,  against a decrease in the value of the underlying securities or
instruments in its portfolio or will increase the Fund's income. The sale of put
options can also provide income.

Even though a Fund will  receive the option  premium to help  protect it against
loss,  a call sold by a Fund  exposes  the Fund during the term of the option to
possible loss of opportunity to realize  appreciation in the market price of the
underlying security or instrument and may require the Fund to hold a security or
instrument which it might otherwise have sold.

A Fund's  ability to close out its position as a purchaser or seller of a put or
call option is  dependent,  in part,  upon the  liquidity of the option  market.
Among the  possible  reasons  for the  absence of a liquid  option  market on an
exchange  are:  (i)  insufficient  trading  interest  in certain  options;  (ii)
restrictions  on  transactions  imposed by an  exchange;  (iii)  trading  halts,
suspensions or other restrictions  imposed with respect to particular classes or
series of  options or  underlying  securities  including  reaching  daily  price
limits;  (iv)  interruption  of  the  normal  operations  of  an  exchange;  (v)
inadequacy of the facilities of an exchange to handle current trading volume; or
(vi) a decision by one or more exchanges to  discontinue  the trading of options
(or a particular class or series of options), in which event the relevant market
for that  option on that  exchange  would cease to exist,  although  outstanding
options  on  that  exchange  would  generally  continue  to  be  exercisable  in
accordance with their terms.

The hours of trading for listed  options may not coincide  with the hours during
which the underlying  financial  instruments are traded.  To the extent that the
option   markets  close  before  the  markets  for  the   underlying   financial
instruments,  significant  price  and  rate  movements  can  take  place  in the
underlying markets that cannot be reflected in the option markets.

Futures

Each Fund may enter into financial futures contracts or purchase or sell put and
call  options  on  such  futures.  Futures  are  generally  bought  and  sold on
commodities exchanges.  The sale of a futures contract creates a firm obligation
by a Fund,  as seller,  to deliver to the buyer the  specific  type of financial
instrument  called for in the contract at a specific future time for a specified
price (or the net cash  amount).  Options on futures  contracts  are  similar to
options on  securities  except  that 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 and obligates the seller to deliver such position.

Each Fund's use of  financial  futures and options  thereon will in all cases be
consistent with applicable  regulatory  requirements and in particular the rules
and regulations of the Commodity Futures Trading  Commission and will be entered
into only for bona fide hedging, risk management (including duration management)
or  other  portfolio  management  purposes.  Typically,  maintaining  a  futures
contract  or  selling  an  option  thereon  requires  a Fund to  deposit  with a
financial  intermediary  as security  for its  obligations  an amount of cash or
other specified  assets (initial  margin) which initially is typically 1% to 10%
of the face amount of the  contract


                                       10

<PAGE>

(but may be higher in some circumstances).  Additional cash or assets (variation
margin) may be required to be deposited  thereafter on a daily basis as the mark
to  market  value of the  contract  fluctuates.  The  purchase  of an  option on
financial  futures  involves  payment of a premium  for the option  without  any
further  obligation on the part of the Fund. If a Fund  exercises an option on a
futures  contract it will be  obligated to post  initial  margin (and  potential
subsequent variation margin) for the resulting futures position just as it would
for any position. Futures contracts and options thereon are generally settled by
entering into an offsetting  transaction  but there can be no assurance that the
position can be offset prior to settlement  at an  advantageous  price,  or that
delivery will occur.

A Fund will not enter into a futures  contract  or related  option  (except  for
closing transactions) if, immediately  thereafter,  the sum of the amount of its
initial margin and premiums on open futures  contracts and options thereon would
exceed 5% of the Fund's total assets (taken at current value);  however,  in the
case of an  option  that  is  in-the-money  at the  time  of the  purchase,  the
in-the-money amount may be excluded in calculating the 5% limitation.

There can be no assurance  that a liquid market will exist at a time when a Fund
seeks to close out a futures or futures option position. A Fund would be exposed
to possible  loss on the position  during the  interval  because of inability to
close, and would continue to be required to meet margin  requirements  until the
position  is closed,  which  could  result in a decrease in the Fund's net asset
value.  The  liquidity  of a  secondary  market  in a  futures  contract  may be
adversely affected by "daily price fluctuation  limits" established by commodity
exchanges  which limit the amount of  fluctuation  in a futures  contract  price
during a single  trading  day.  Once the  daily  limit has been  reached  in the
contract,  no trades may be  entered  into at a price  beyond  the  limit,  thus
preventing  the  liquidation of open futures  positions.  The trading of futures
contracts is also subject to the risk of trading halts, suspensions, exchange or
clearing house  equipment  failures,  government  intervention,  insolvency of a
brokerage  firm or  clearing  house  or  other  disruptions  of  normal  trading
activity,  which could at times make it  difficult  or  impossible  to liquidate
existing positions or to recover excess variation margin payments.

The Funds may use  options  and  futures  as a hedging  technique.  Options  and
futures may fail as a hedging  technique  in cases where the price  movements of
the  securities  underlying  the  options  and  futures  do not follow the price
movements  of the  portfolio  securities  subject to the hedge and the loss from
investing  in  futures  transactions  is  theoretically  potentially  unlimited.
Moreover,  gains and losses on  investments  in options  and  futures  depend on
BramCap's ability to predict  correctly the direction of stock prices,  interest
rates and other economic factors.

Currency Transactions

When a Fund holds portfolio  securities  denominated in a foreign currency,  the
Fund may enter into forward foreign  currency  exchange  contracts to attempt to
minimize the risk to the Fund from adverse changes in the  relationship  between
the U.S.  dollar  and  those  foreign  currencies.  Each  Fund  has no  specific
limitation on the percentage of assets it may commit to forward foreign


                                       11

<PAGE>

currency  contracts,  subject to its stated  investment  objective and policies,
except  that a Fund will not enter into such  contracts  if the amount of assets
set aside to cover such contracts would impede portfolio  management or a Fund's
ability to meet redemption requests.  Although forward foreign currency exchange
contracts will be used to protect a Fund from adverse currency  movements,  they
also involve the risk that anticipated currency movements will not be accurately
predicted.

When a Fund enters into a forward foreign currency exchange contract,  it relies
on the other party to consummate  the trade.  Failure of such party to do so may
result in a Fund's  incurring a loss or missing an opportunity to obtain a price
considered to be advantageous.

Each Fund may also  purchase put and call options and write covered put and call
options on foreign  currencies for the purpose of protecting against declines in
the U.S. dollar value of foreign currency  denominated  portfolio securities and
against increases in the U.S. dollar cost of such securities to be acquired.  As
in the case of other  kinds of options,  however,  the writing of an option on a
foreign  currency  constitutes  only a partial  hedge,  up to the  amount of the
premium  received,  and a Fund could be required  to  purchase  or sell  foreign
currencies at disadvantageous exchange rates, thereby incurring losses.

A Fund may cross-hedge  currencies by entering into  transactions to purchase or
sell one or more  currencies  that are expected to decline in value  relative to
other  currencies  to which  the Fund has or in which the Fund  expects  to have
portfolio exposure.

A forward foreign currency  exchange  contract  involves a privately  negotiated
obligation  to purchase or sell (with  delivery  generally  required) a specific
currency at a future  date,  which may be any fixed number of days from the date
of the contract  agreed upon by the  parties,  at a price set at the time of the
contract.  A currency  swap is an agreement to exchange  cash flows based on the
notional  difference  among two or more  currencies.  Each  Fund may enter  into
currency transactions with counterparties which have received (or the guarantors
of the  obligations  which have received) a rating within the two highest grades
assigned by S&P or Moody's or that are determined by the  investment  adviser to
be of equivalent quality.

A Fund's dealings in currency  transactions will be limited to hedging involving
either specific  transactions  or portfolio  positions.  Transaction  hedging is
entering  into a  currency  transaction  with  respect  to  specific  assets  or
liabilities  of a Fund,  which  will  generally  arise  in  connection  with the
purchase or sale of its portfolio securities or the receipt of income therefrom.
Position  hedging  is  entering  into a  currency  transaction  with  respect to
portfolio security positions denominated or generally quoted in that currency.

A Fund will not enter into a transaction to hedge currency exposure to an extent
greater,  after netting all transactions  intended wholly or partially to offset
other  transactions,  than the  aggregate  market value (at the time of entering
into  the  transaction)  of the  securities  held  in  its  portfolio  that


                                       12

<PAGE>

are  denominated  or  generally  quoted in or  currently  convertible  into such
currency, other than with respect to cross hedging as described below.

A Fund may cross-hedge  currencies by entering into  transactions to purchase or
sell one or more  currencies  that are expected to decline in value  relative to
other  currencies  to which  the Fund has or in which the Fund  expects  to have
portfolio exposure.

Currency  transactions  can  result in losses  to a Fund if the  currency  being
hedged  fluctuates  in  value  to  a  degree  or  in a  direction  that  is  not
anticipated.  Further,  there is the risk that the perceived correlation between
various  currencies may not be present during the particular time that a Fund is
engaging in proxy hedging.

Currency  transactions  are  subject  to  risks  different  from  those of other
portfolio  transactions.  Because currency control is of great importance to the
issuing governments and influences  economic planning and policy,  purchases and
sales  of  currency  and  related  instruments  can be  negatively  affected  by
government   exchange  controls,   blockages,   and  manipulations  or  exchange
restrictions imposed by governments.  These can result in losses to a Fund if it
is unable to deliver or receive  currency or funds in settlement of  obligations
and  could  also  cause  hedges  it has  entered  into to be  rendered  useless,
resulting  in full  currency  exposure as well as incurring  transaction  costs.
Currency  exchange  rates  may  fluctuate  based on  factors  extrinsic  to that
country's economy.

Segregated Accounts

Futures  contracts,  options,  options on  futures  contracts,  foreign  forward
currency  contracts and foreign currency  contracts  require a Fund to segregate
liquid high grade assets with its custodian to the extent Fund  obligations  are
not otherwise "covered" through ownership of the underlying security,  financial
instrument or currency. In general,  either the full amount of any obligation by
a Fund to pay or deliver  securities  or assets  must be covered at all times by
the securities, instruments or currency required to be delivered, or, subject to
any regulatory  restrictions,  an amount of cash or liquid high grade securities
at least equal to the current amount of the obligation  must be segregated  with
the  custodian.  The  segregated  assets  cannot be sold or  transferred  unless
equivalent assets are substituted in their place or it is no longer necessary to
segregate them.


                                       13

<PAGE>

Directors and Officers
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The  business  and affairs of the Funds are managed  under the  direction of the
Board of Directors.  The Directors and Officers of the Funds and their principal
occupations during the past five years are set forth below.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                      Positions held            Principal Occupations
Name, Address and Age                 with the Funds            During the Past Five Years
- ---------------------                 --------------            --------------------------

<S>                                   <C>                       <C>
Elizabeth R. Bramwell*                Director, President and   President and Chief Executive Officer, Bramwell
745 Fifth Avenue                      Chief Executive,          Capital Management (February 1994-present);
New York, NY 10151 Age: 58            Financial and             President, Chief Investment Officer, Portfolio
                                      Investment Officer        Manager and Trustee, The Gabelli Growth Fund
                                                                (April 1987-February 1994).

J. Sinclair Armstrong                 Director                  Director, Secretary and Treasurer, The Reed
444 Madison Avenue                                              Foundation, (1986-present) (philanthropy);
New York, NY 10022                                              Partner (1980-1984) and Counsel (1984-1995),
Age: 84                                                         Whitman Breed Abbott & Morgan (formerly Whitman
                                                                Ransom) (law firm); Executive Vice President,
                                                                U.S. Trust Co. of New York (1959-1980);
                                                                Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Financial
                                                                Management and Comptroller, Department of the
                                                                Navy (1957-1959); Chairman (1955-1957) and
                                                                Commissioner, Securities and Exchange
                                                                Commission (1953-1957).

Isabel H. Benham                       Director                 Trustee Emeritus and former President
745 Fifth Avenue                                                (1992-1995), Board of Trustees of the John W.
New York, NY 10151 Age: 90                                      Barriger III National Railroad Library;
                                                                Director, St. Louis Mercantile Library
                                                                (1993-1995); President, Printon Kane Research,
                                                                Inc. (1978-1991) (railroad analysis and
                                                                valuations); Senior Vice President, Shearson
                                                                Hayden Stone Corp. (1968-1978).


                                       14

<PAGE>

                                      Positions held            Principal Occupations
Name, Address and Age                 with the Funds            During the Past Five Years
- ---------------------                 --------------            --------------------------
George F. Keane                       Director                  Chairman of the Board, Trigen Energy
745 Fifth Avenue                                                Corporation (1994-present); President Emeritus
New York, NY 10151                                              and founding Chief Executive Officer
Age: 70                                                         (1971-1992), The Common Fund (investment
                                                                management); Trustee,
                                                                Nicholas-Applegate Investment Trust
                                                                (1993-present); Member, Investment
                                                                Advisory Committee, New York State Common
                                                                Retirement  Fund (1982-present); Director,
                                                                Northern Trust of Connecticut (1991-present),
                                                                Universal Stainless & Alloy Products
                                                                (1994-present), Global Pharmaceutical
                                                                Corporation (1995-present); United Water
                                                                Resources (1996-present) and Security
                                                                Capital Real Estate Funds (1997-present).

James C. Sargent                       Director                 Counsel, Opton, Handler, Gottlieb, Feiler &
745 Fifth Avenue                                                Katz (1995-present) (law firm); Director,
New York, NY 10151                                              Scan-Graphics (1992-present), Austin's
Age: 83                                                         International (1992-present); Former Partner,
                                                                Whitman Breed Abbott & Morgan (formerly
                                                                Whitman  Ransom) (1964-1994) (law firm);
                                                                Assistant General Counsel, CIT Finance
                                                                Corporation (1960-1964); Regional
                                                                Administrator, New York City (1955-1956)  and
                                                                Commissioner, Securities and Exchange
                                                                Commission (1956-1960).

Martha R. Seger, Ph.D.                Director                  Chairman, Martha Seger & Associates
220 Park Avenue                                                 (1992-present); Current Director, Amerisure,
Birmingham, MI 40889                                            Fluor, Kroger, Tucson Electric Power and Xerox;
Age: 67                                                         Governor, Federal Reserve Board (1984-1991);
                                                                Commissioner  of Financial Institutions,
                                                                State of Michigan (1981-1982); Chief Economist,
                                                                Detroit Bank & Trust (Comerica)(1967-1974).


                                       15

<PAGE>

                                      Positions held            Principal Occupations
Name, Address and Age                 with the Funds            During the Past Five Years
- ---------------------                 --------------            --------------------------
Mary F. McCollum                      Secretary and Treasurer   Executive Vice President, Bramwell Capital
745 Fifth Avenue                                                Management (May 1994-present); Vice President,
New York, NY 10151                                              Operations and Corporate Secretary (1985-1993),
Age: 53                                                         Assistant Treasurer/ Assistant Secretary
                                                                (1983-1985) and Financial Administrator
                                                                (1982-1983), The Common Fund (investment
                                                                management).

Margaret A. Bancroft                  Assistant Secretary       Partner, Dechert Price & Rhoads (law firm and
30 Rockefeller Plaza                                            counsel to the Fund).
New York, NY 10112 Age: 61
</TABLE>

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

*    Directors  who are  "interested  persons"  of the Funds,  as defined in the
     Investment Company Act of 1940 (the "1940 Act"). The Directors of the Funds
     who  are  officers  or  employees  of the  investment  adviser  receive  no
     remuneration  from the Funds. Each of the other Directors is paid an annual
     retainer  of  $3,000  and a fee of $500 for each  meeting  attended  and is
     reimbursed for the expenses of attending meetings.


                                       16

<PAGE>

The  following  table  sets  forth  information  regarding  compensation  of the
Directors by the Funds for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1999.  Officers of the
Funds and Directors who are  interested  persons of the Funds do not receive any
compensation from the Funds.  Neither Fund provides  compensation in the form of
pension or retirement benefits to any of its Directors.

                               Compensation Table
                        (Fiscal YEAR ended June 30, 1999)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                              Total
                                                            Pension or                                    Compensation
                                                            Retirement                                        From
                                     Aggregate               Benefits               Estimated               the Funds
                                    Compensation             Accrued             Annual Benefits            and Fund
                                        From                as Part of                 Upon               Complex Paid2
  Name of Director                   the Funds1           Fund Expenses             Retirement            to Directors
  ----------------                   ---------            --------------            ----------            ------------
<S>                                    <C>                     <C>                     <C>                   <C>
Elizabeth R. Bramwell                    $0                    None                    N/A                     $0
J. Sinclair Armstrong                  $5,000                  None                    N/A                   $5,000
Isabel H. Benham                       $5,000                  None                    N/A                   $5,000
George F. Keane                        $5,000                  None                    N/A                   $5,000
James C. Sargent                       $5,000                  None                    N/A                   $5,000
Martha R. Seger                        $5,000                  None                    N/A                   $5,000
</TABLE>
- --------------------------
1    Compensation is from the Bramwell Growth Fund only. The Bramwell Focus Fund
     will commence operations on November 1, 1999.

2    The Funds are not part of any fund complex  because they are not related to
     any registered investment company and their investment adviser does not act
     as investment adviser to any other registered  investment company (although
     it does act as  subadviser  with  respect to the assets of such a company);
     accordingly,   the  compensation  reported  in  column  (5)  includes  only
     compensation paid by the Funds.

As of September 30, 1999,  the Officers and Directors of the Funds owned ___% of
the outstanding shares of capital stock of the Bramwell Growth Fund.

The Funds' shares are sold through  broker-dealer  intermediaries that establish
single,  omnibus  accounts with the Funds'  transfer  agent. As a result of this
arrangement, Charles Schwab & Co., Inc., National Financial Services, Corp. each
technically  own in  excess  of  5.0%  of the  Funds'  outstanding  shares.  The
beneficial  owners of these shares,  however,  are the individual  investors who
maintain accounts with these broker-dealers intermediaries.

Investment  Advisory Services
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Bramwell  Capital  Management,  Inc.  located at 745 Fifth Avenue,  New York, NY
10151,  serves  as the  Funds'  investment  adviser  pursuant  to an  Investment
Advisory  Agreement with each Fund.  Under the terms of the agreements,  BramCap
supervises  and manages the  investment  portfolio of each Fund and,  subject to
such policies as the Board of Directors of the Funds may determine,


                                       17

<PAGE>

directs  the  purchase  or  sale  of  investment  securities  in the  day-to-day
management of each Fund's investment portfolio.  BramCap, at its own expense and
without  reimbursement from the Funds,  furnishes office space and all necessary
office facilities,  equipment and executive  personnel for making the investment
decisions   necessary  for  managing  the  Funds  and  maintaining  each  Fund's
organization,  and will pay the salaries and fees of all officers and  directors
of each Fund (except the fees paid to disinterested directors).

In addition to the Funds, BramCap is the adviser to individual and institutional
accounts.  Elizabeth R. Bramwell,  CFA, who is the founder, sole shareholder and
Chief Executive  Officer of BramCap,  as well as President and Chief  Investment
Officer of the Bramwell Funds, Inc., manages the investment program of each Fund
and is  primarily  responsible  for the  day-to-day  management  of each  Fund's
portfolio.

For the advisory  services  provided  and  expenses  assumed by it, the Bramwell
Growth Fund pays BramCap a fee at an annual rate of 1.00% of the Fund's  average
daily  net  assets,  payable  at the  monthly  rate of  1/12 of 1% on the  first
business day of each calendar  month.  For the fiscal years ended June 30, 1999,
1998 and 1997, the Bramwell Growth Fund paid BramCap investment advisory fees of
$2,338,520,  $1,587,601  and  $1,249,859,  respectively.  During those  periods,
BramCap  earned  investment  advisory  fees  of  $2,338,520,   $1,587,601,   and
$1,274,930, respectively, pursuant to its investment advisory agreement with the
Fund, but voluntarily waived $0, $0, and $25,071,  respectively,  of such fee in
order to limit the Fund's expenses to an annual rate of 1.75% of its average net
assets during these periods.

For the advisory  services  provided  and  expenses  assumed by it, the Bramwell
Focus  Fund  will pay  BramCap a fee at an  annual  rate of 1.00% of the  Fund's
average daily net assets  payable at the monthly rate of 1/12 of 1% on the first
business day of each calendar month.

BramCap has voluntarily agreed to limit the total expenses (excluding  interest,
taxes,  brokerage and extraordinary  expenses) of each Fund to an annual rate of
1.75% of each Fund's  average net assets until June 30,  2001.  After this date,
the expense limitation may be terminated or revised at any time.

Other Services
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Each Fund has entered into an Administration and Fund Accounting  Agreement with
Sunstone Financial Group, Inc. ("Sunstone"), 207 East Buffalo Street, Suite 400,
Milwaukee,  Wisconsin,  53202.  Under  the  terms  of the  agreements,  Sunstone
prepares  and files all  federal  income tax and excise  tax  returns  and state
income tax returns (other than those required to be made by the Bramwell  Funds'
custodian  or transfer  agent),  oversees  the Funds'  insurance  relationships,
reviews  drafts  of the  Funds'  registration  and  proxy  statements,  prepares
securities  registration  compliance  filings pursuant to state securities laws,
compiles data for and prepares  required  notices and reports to the  Securities
and  Exchange   Commission,   prepares  financial   statements  for  annual  and
semi-annual reports to investors, monitors compliance with the Funds' investment
policies and restrictions,  performs securities valuation,  calculates daily net
asset values of the


                                       18

<PAGE>

Funds,  maintains all general ledger accounts and related  subledgers,  prepares
and monitors the Funds' expense accruals and causes all appropriate  expenses to
be paid from fund assets,  monitors the Funds' status as a regulated  investment
company  under  Subchapter M of the Internal  Revenue Code of 1986,  as amended,
maintains and/or coordinates with the other service providers the maintenance of
the accounts,  books and other documents  required  pursuant to Rule 31a-1 under
the 1940 Act and  generally  assists in each Fund's  administrative  operations.
Sunstone, at its own expense and without reimbursement from the Funds, furnishes
office  space and all  necessary  office  facilities,  equipment,  supplies  and
clerical and executive  personnel  for  performing  the services  required to be
performed by it under the agreements. For the foregoing,  Sunstone receives from
the Funds a fee,  computed daily and payable  monthly,  based on the average net
assets of each Fund at the annual  rate of 0.150 of 1% on the first $50  million
of average net assets per Fund,  and  decreasing  as the net assets of each Fund
reach certain levels,  subject to an annual minimum fee of $60,000 per Fund, per
year,  plus  out-of-pocket  expenses.  For the fiscal years ended June 30, 1999,
1998 and  1997,  the  Bramwell  Growth  Fund  paid  Sunstone  fees of  $229,426,
$184,829, and $158,120, respectively.

The Funds pay all of their own expenses, including, without limitation, the cost
of preparing  and printing  their  registration  statements  required  under the
Securities Act of 1933 and the 1940 Act and any amendments thereto,  the expense
of registering  their shares with the Securities and Exchange  Commission and in
the various states,  advisory and administration fees, costs of organization and
maintenance  of corporate  existence,  the printing  and  distribution  costs of
prospectuses  mailed to existing  investors,  reports to  investors,  reports to
government authorities and proxy statements,  costs of meetings of shareholders,
fees paid to directors who are not interested persons of the Investment Adviser,
interest charges,  taxes, legal expenses,  association membership dues, auditing
services,  insurance premiums,  brokerage commissions and expenses in connection
with  portfolio  transactions,  fees and expenses of the custodian of the Funds'
assets,  charges of securities  pricing services,  printing and mailing expenses
and charges and  expenses of dividend  disbursing  agents,  accounting  services
agents, registrars and stock transfer agents.

Firstar  Mutual Fund  Services,  LLC,  615 East  Michigan  Street,  Third Floor,
Milwaukee,  Wisconsin,  53202,  is the Funds'  Transfer and Dividend  Disbursing
Agent.

Firstar  Bank  Milwaukee,  N.A.,  777 East  Wisconsin  Avenue,  Eleventh  Floor,
Milwaukee,   Wisconsin,  53201,  is  the  Funds'  Custodian.  The  Custodian  is
responsible  for the  safekeeping of a Fund's assets and the  appointment of any
subcustodian banks and clearing agencies.

PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP, 100 East Wisconsin  Avenue,  Milwaukee,  Wisconsin,
53202,    is   the   Funds'    Independent    Certified    Public    Accountant.
PricewaterhouseCoopers  examines financial statements for each Fund and provides
other audit, tax and related services.

Distribution  Plan
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Each Fund has adopted a Service and  Distribution  Plan (the "Plan") pursuant to
Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act. The Board of Directors believes that the adoption
of such plans may stimulate new


                                       19

<PAGE>

sales  of each  Fund's  shares,  causing  growth  in the  size of each  Fund and
potentially  leading to  economies  of scale and lower  expense  ratios for both
current  and  new  shareholders.  Each  Plan  authorizes  payments  by a Fund in
connection with the  distribution of its shares at an annual rate, as determined
from  time to time by the  Board of  Directors,  or up to  0.25%  of the  Fund's
average daily net assets.

Payments may be made by a Fund under the Plan for the purpose of  financing  any
activity  primarily  intended  to  result  in the sales of shares of the Fund as
determined  by  the  Board  of  Directors.  Such  activities  typically  include
advertising;  compensation for sales and sales marketing activities of Financial
Service Agents and others, such as dealers or distributors;  shareholder account
servicing;  and  production  and  dissemination  of  prospectuses  and sales and
marketing materials to prospective investors.  To the extent any activity is one
which a Fund may  finance  without a Plan,  the Fund may also make  payments  to
finance such  activity  outside of the Plan and not subject to its  limitations.
Payments  under the Plan are not tied  exclusively  to actual  distribution  and
service expenses,  and the payments may exceed distribution and service expenses
actually incurred.

For the fiscal year ended June 30, 1999, the  distribution  expenses  related to
the  Bramwell  Growth  Fund were  $32,176  for Fund  literature  and  materials,
$192,239 for advertising, $336,694 for broker fees, $46,202 for Fund reports and
materials for current  shareholders and administration of current accounts,  and
$27,969 for  conferences  and  seminars.  The Bramwell  Growth Fund paid BramCap
$584,630 of the total $635,280 as reimbursement  for these costs under the Plan,
with the balance being borne by BramCap.

Administration of each Plan is regulated by Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act, which
includes  requirements  that the Board of Directors  receive and review at least
quarterly reports  concerning the nature and qualification of expenses which are
made, that the Board of Directors  approve all agreements  implementing the Plan
and that  the  Plan may be  continued  from  year-to-year  only if the  Board of
Directors concludes at least annually that continuation of the Plan is likely to
benefit shareholders.

Portfolio   Transactions  and  Brokerage
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subject  to the  supervision  of  the  Directors,  decisions  to  buy  and  sell
securities for each Fund and negotiation of its brokerage  commission  rates are
made by the investment  adviser.  Transactions  on United States stock exchanges
involve  the payment by a Fund of  negotiated  brokerage  commissions.  There is
generally  no  stated  commission  in  the  case  of  securities  traded  in the
over-the-counter  market  but the  price  paid  by a Fund  usually  includes  an
undisclosed dealer commission or mark-up. In certain instances,  a Fund may make
purchases of underwritten issues at prices which include underwriting fees.

In selecting a broker to execute each  particular  transaction,  the  investment
adviser takes the following into  consideration:  the best net price  available;
the reliability,  integrity and financial  condition of the broker; the size and
difficulty in executing the order; and the value of the


                                       20

<PAGE>

expected contribution of the broker to the investment performance of a Fund on a
continuing basis.  Accordingly,  the cost of the brokerage commissions to a Fund
in any  transaction may be greater than that available from other brokers if the
difference is reasonably  justified by other aspects of the portfolio  execution
services offered. For example, the investment adviser will consider the research
and investment services provided by brokers or dealers who effect or are parties
to portfolio  transactions of a Fund or the investment  adviser's other clients.
Such research and investment  services include statistical and economic data and
research  reports on  particular  companies  and  industries as well as research
software.  Subject  to  such  policies  and  procedures  as  the  Directors  may
determine,  the investment  adviser shall not be deemed to have acted unlawfully
or to have breached any duty solely by reason of its having caused a Fund to pay
a broker that provides research services to the investment  adviser an amount of
commission  for effecting a portfolio  investment  transaction  in excess of the
amount another broker would have charged for effecting that transaction,  if the
investment  adviser  determines in good faith that such amount of commission was
reasonable  in relation to the value of the  research  service  provided by such
broker viewed in terms of either that  particular  transaction or the investment
adviser's ongoing responsibilities with respect to a Fund.

Research and investment information is provided by these and other brokers at no
cost to the  investment  adviser  and is  available  for the  benefit  of  other
accounts  advised by the investment  adviser and its affiliates,  and not all of
the information  will be used in connection with a Fund.  While this information
may be useful in varying degrees and may tend to reduce the investment adviser's
expenses,  it is not  possible to  estimate  its value and in the opinion of the
investment  adviser it does not reduce the  investment  adviser's  expenses in a
determinable  amount.  The extent to which the  investment  adviser makes use of
statistical,  research and other services  furnished by brokers is considered by
the investment  adviser in the allocation of brokerage  business but there is no
formula by which such business is allocated.  The investment  adviser does so in
accordance  with  its  judgment  of  the  best  interests  of  a  Fund  and  its
shareholders.

For the Fund's  fiscal  years ended June 30, 1999,  1998 and 1997,  the Bramwell
Growth Fund paid a total of $178,236,  $147,519 and $218,193,  respectively,  in
brokerage  commissions  with  respect  to  portfolio  transactions   aggregating
$478,011,734,  $303,812,815 and $402,062,130,  respectively.  Of such amount for
the fiscal year ended June 30,  1999,  $152,200 in  brokerage  commissions  with
respect to  portfolio  transactions  aggregating  $169,325,757  was placed  with
brokers or dealers who provide research and investment information.

During  the fiscal  year ended June 30,  1999,  the  Bramwell  Growth  Fund held
securities issued by Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc.  ("Merrill").  Merrill was one of
the  ten  brokers  that  received  the  greatest   dollar  amount  of  brokerage
commissions for portfolio transactions for the Fund during the fiscal year ended
June 30, 1999. The Fund held $779,375 of Merrill's  stock on June 30, 1999 as an
investment.


                                       21

<PAGE>

Performance Information

From  time-to-time,  a Fund may advertise its "average annual total return" over
various periods of time.  This total return figure shows the average  percentage
change  in value of an  investment  in a Fund  from  the  beginning  date of the
measuring period to the ending date of the measuring period. The figure reflects
changes in the price of a Fund's  shares and assumes  that any income  dividends
and/or  capital  gains  distributions  made  by a Fund  during  the  period  are
reinvested in shares of the Fund.  Figures will be given for recent one-,  five-
and ten-year  periods (when  applicable),  and may be given for other periods as
well (such as from commencement of the Fund's  operations,  or on a year-by-year
basis). When considering  "average" total return figures for periods longer than
one year,  investors  should note that a Fund's  annual total return for any one
year in the period  might have been  greater  or less than the  average  for the
entire period. A Fund also may use "aggregate"  total return figures for various
periods,  representing  the  cumulative  change in value of an investment in the
Fund for the specific period (again reflecting changes in the Fund's share price
and assuming  reinvestment  of dividends  and  distributions).  Aggregate  total
returns may be shown by means of schedules,  charts or graphs,  and may indicate
subtotals  of the various  components  of total  return  (that is, the change in
value of initial investment, income dividends and capital gains distributions).

A Fund may quote its Fund's average annual total and/or  aggregate  total return
for various time periods in advertisements or communications to shareholders.  A
Fund may also compare its performance to that of other mutual funds with similar
investment  objectives  and to stock and other  relevant  indices or to rankings
prepared  by  independent   services  or  industry   publications.   When  these
organizations'  tracking  results  are  used,  a Fund  will be  compared  to its
appropriate fund category,  that is, by fund objective and portfolio holdings or
the appropriate  volatility grouping,  where volatility is a measure of a Fund's
risk.  For example,  a Fund's  total return may be compared to data  prepared by
Lipper Analytical Services, Inc., Morningstar, Value Line Mutual Fund Survey and
CDA Investment Technologies, Inc. Total return data as reported in such national
financial  publications  as  The  Wall  Street  Journal,  The  New  York  Times,
Investor's Business Daily, USA Today,  Barron's,  Money and Forbes as well as in
publications of a local or regional  nature,  may also be used in comparing Fund
performance.

Each Fund's total return may also be compared to such indices as the:

         o Dow Jones Industrial Average
         o Standard & Poor's 500 Composite Stock Total Return Index
         o Nasdaq Composite OTC Index or Nasdaq Industries Index
         o Consumer Price Index
         o Russell 2000 Index

The performance of these unmanaged indices may assume  reinvestment of dividends
or interest but generally  does not reflect  deductions for  administrative  and
management costs.


                                       22

<PAGE>

Performance figures are calculated in the following manner.

Average Annual Total Return

Average  annual total return is the average  annual  compound rate of return for
periods of one year,  five  years and ten years,  all ended on the last day of a
recent calendar quarter.  Average annual total return quotations reflect changes
in the price of a Fund's  shares and assume that all dividends and capital gains
distributions  during the  respective  periods were  reinvested  in Fund shares.
Average  annual  total return is  calculated  by  computing  the average  annual
compound  rates of  return  of a  hypothetical  investment  over  such  periods,
according  to the  following  formula  (average  annual  total  return  is  then
expressed as a percentage):

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

It should be noted  that  average  annual  total  return is based on  historical
earnings  and is not intended to indicate  future  performance.  Average  annual
total return for a Fund will vary based on changes in market  conditions and the
level of the Fund's expenses. The average annual returns for the Bramwell Growth
Fund for the  fiscal  year ended June 30,  1999 and since  inception  (August 1,
1994) through June 30, 1999 were 19.39% and 24.89%, respectively.

Comparison of Portfolio Performance

Comparison of the quoted non-standardized  performance of various investments is
valid only if  performance  is  calculated  in the same manner.  Since there are
different  methods of calculating  performance,  investors  should  consider the
effect of the methods used to calculate  performance when comparing  performance
of a Fund with performance quoted with respect to other investment  companies or
types of investments.

From time to time, the average  price-earnings  ratio and other  attributes of a
Fund's securities may be compared to the average  price-earnings ratio and other
attributes of the securities that comprise the S&P 500.

Statistical  and  other   information,   as  provided  by  the  Social  Security
Administration,  may be used in marketing  materials  pertaining  to  retirement
planning in order to estimate future payouts of social security benefits.
Estimates may be used on demographic and economic data.


                                       23

<PAGE>

Marketing and other Fund  literature  may include a description of the potential
risks and rewards  associated  with an investment in a Fund. The description may
include a "risk/return spectrum" which compares a Fund to other funds advised by
BramCap,  or broad  categories of funds,  such as money  market,  bond or equity
funds, in terms of potential risks and returns.  Money market funds are designed
to maintain a constant  $1.00 share price and have a  fluctuating  yield.  Share
price, yield and total return of a bond fund will fluctuate. The share price and
return of an equity fund also will fluctuate. The description may also compare a
Fund to bank products,  such as  certificates  of deposit.  Unlike mutual funds,
certificates of deposit are insured up to $100,000 by the U.S.
Government and offer a fixed rate of return.

Risk/return  spectrums  also may depict  funds that invest in both  domestic and
foreign securities or a combination of bond and equity securities.

Tax Status
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Set forth  below is a  discussion  of  certain  U.S.  federal  income tax issues
concerning  the Funds  and the  purchase,  ownership,  and  disposition  of Fund
shares.  This  discussion  does not  purport to be  complete or to deal with all
aspects of federal income taxation that may be relevant to shareholders in light
of their particular circumstances,  nor to certain types of shareholders subject
to special  treatment under the federal income tax laws (for example,  banks and
life insurance  companies).  This discussion is based upon present provisions of
the Internal  Revenue Code of 1986,  as amended (the  "Code"),  the  regulations
promulgated thereunder, and judicial and administrative ruling authorities,  all
of which are subject to change,  which  change may be  retroactive.  Prospective
investors  should  consult their own tax advisers with regard to the federal tax
consequences of the purchase,  ownership, or disposition of Fund shares, as well
as the tax consequences arising under the laws of any state, foreign country, or
other taxing jurisdiction.

Each Fund intends to be taxed as a regulated investment company under Subchapter
M of the Code.  Accordingly,  a Fund  generally  must,  among other things,  (a)
derive in each  taxable  year at least 90% of its gross  income from  dividends,
interest,  payments with respect to certain securities loans, and gains from the
sale or other disposition of stock,  securities or foreign currencies,  or other
income  derived  with  respect  to its  business  of  investing  in such  stock,
securities or currencies;  and (b) diversify its holdings so that, at the end of
each fiscal quarter, (i) at least 50% of the value of the Fund's total assets is
represented by cash and cash items, U.S. Government  securities,  the securities
of other regulated  investment  companies and other securities,  with such other
securities  limited, in respect of any one issuer, to an amount not greater than
5% of the value of the Fund's  total  assets and 10% of the  outstanding  voting
securities of such issuer,  and (ii) not more than 25% of the value of its total
assets  is  invested  in the  securities  of any one  issuer  (other  than  U.S.
Government   securities  and  the  securities  of  other  regulated   investment
companies).

As a regulated  investment company, a Fund generally will not be subject to U.S.
federal income tax on income and gains that it distributes to  shareholders,  if
at least 90% of the Fund's  investment  company taxable income (which  includes,
among other  items,  dividends,  interest  and


                                       24

<PAGE>

the  excess of any net  short-term  capital  gains  over net  long-term  capital
losses) for the taxable year is  distributed.  Each Fund  intends to  distribute
substantially all of such income.

If in any taxable year a Fund fails to qualify as a regulated investment company
under  the  Code,  the Fund  would be taxed in the same  manner  as an  ordinary
corporation and distributions to its shareholders would not be deductible by the
Fund in computing its taxable income. In addition,  in the event of a failure to
qualify, the Fund's distributions, to the extent derived from the Fund's current
or accumulated  earnings and profits,  would constitute  dividends (eligible for
the corporate dividends received deduction) which are taxable to shareholders as
ordinary income,  even though those  distributions  might otherwise (at least in
part) have been treated in the  shareholders'  hands as long-term capital gains.
If a Fund fails to qualify as a  regulated  investment  company in any year,  it
must pay out its  earnings  and  profits  accumulated  in that  year in order to
qualify again as a regulated investment company.

Amounts not  distributed  on a timely basis in  accordance  with a calendar year
distribution  requirement  are subject to a  nondeductible  4% excise tax at the
Fund level.  To avoid the tax,  each Fund must  distribute  during each calendar
year an amount equal to the sum of (1) at least 98% of its ordinary  income (not
taking into account any capital gains or losses) for the calendar  year,  (2) at
least 98% of its capital  gains in excess of its capital  losses  (adjusted  for
certain ordinary losses) for a one-year period generally ending on October 31 of
the calendar  year,  and (3) all ordinary  income and capital gains for previous
years that were not distributed  during such years. To avoid  application of the
excise  tax,  the Funds  intend to make  distributions  in  accordance  with the
calendar year distribution  requirement.  A distribution will be treated as paid
on  December  31 of a  calendar  year if it is  declared  by a Fund in  October,
November or December of that year with a record date in such a month and paid by
the Fund  during  January of the  following  year.  Such  distributions  will be
taxable to  shareholders  in the calendar  year in which the  distributions  are
declared, rather than the calendar year in which the distributions are received.

Taxation of Options, Futures and Foreign Currency Forward Contracts

Any regulated futures  contracts,  any foreign currency  contracts,  and certain
options  (namely,  nonequity  options and dealer equity options) in which a Fund
may invest may be "section 1256 contracts." Gains (or losses) on these contracts
generally are considered to be 60% long-term and 40% short-term capital gains or
losses.  Also,  section 1256 contracts held by a Fund at the end of each taxable
year (and on certain other dates  prescribed in the Code) are "marked to market"
with the result that unrealized  gains or losses are treated as though they were
realized.

The transactions in options,  futures and forward contracts undertaken by a Fund
may result in "straddles"  for federal  income tax purposes.  The straddle rules
may affect the  character  of gains or losses  realized by a Fund.  In addition,
losses  realized  by a Fund on  positions  that  are part of a  straddle  may be
deferred  under the  straddle  rules,  rather than being  taken into  account in
calculating  the taxable  income for the  taxable  year in which such losses are
realized.  Because only a few regulations  implementing  the straddle rules have
been  promulgated,  the  consequences  of


                                       25

<PAGE>

such  transactions  to a Fund are not entirely  clear.  The  straddle  rules may
increase  the amount of  short-term  capital gain  realized by a Fund,  which is
taxed as ordinary income when distributed to shareholders.

A Fund may make one or more of the elections  available under the Code which are
applicable  to  straddles.  If a Fund makes any of the  elections,  the  amount,
character  and timing of the  recognition  of gains or losses from the  affected
straddle  positions  will be determined  under rules that vary  according to the
election(s)  made.  The rules  applicable  under  certain of the  elections  may
operate to  accelerate  the  recognition  of gains or losses  from the  affected
straddle positions.

Because  application  of the straddle rules may affect the character of gains or
losses,  defer losses and/or  accelerate the recognition of gains or losses from
the  affected  straddle  positions,  the  amount  which must be  distributed  to
shareholders  as ordinary  income or long-term  capital gain may be increased or
decreased  substantially  as  compared  to a fund  that did not  engage  in such
transactions.

Constructive Sales

Recently  enacted  rules will affect the timing and  character of gain if a Fund
engages in certain transactions that reduce or eliminate the Fund's risk of loss
with respect to appreciated financial positions, including stock and securities.
For  example,  if a Fund  enters  into a short sale of  property  while  holding
property substantially identical to that sold short, the entry into the contract
will generally  constitute a constructive  sale and the Fund will recognize gain
(but not loss) as if the property it held had been sold.  The  character of gain
from a  constructive  sale  will  depend  upon a Fund's  holding  period  in the
property.  If a short sale results in loss,  the loss will be  recognized at the
time of the closing of the short sale,  and its character may be affected by the
straddle rules described above.

Passive Foreign Investment Companies

Each Fund may invest in shares of foreign  corporations  that may be  classified
under the Code as passive foreign investment companies ("PFICs").  In general, a
foreign  corporation  is classified as a PFIC if at least one-half of its assets
constitute  investment-type  assets,  or 75% or  more  of its  gross  income  is
investment-type  income.  If a Fund receives a so-called  "excess  distribution"
with respect to PFIC stock, the Fund itself may be subject to a tax on a portion
of  the  excess  distribution,  whether  or  not  the  corresponding  income  is
distributed by the Fund to  shareholders.  In general,  under the PFIC rules, an
excess  distribution is treated as having been realized  ratably over the period
during which a Fund held the PFIC  shares.  A Fund itself will be subject to tax
on the portion,  if any, of an excess distribution that is so allocated to prior
Fund  taxable  years and an interest  factor will be added to the tax, as if the
tax had been payable in such prior taxable years.  Certain  distributions from a
PFIC as well as gain  from  the  sale of  PFIC  shares  are  treated  as  excess
distributions.  Excess  distributions  are characterized as ordinary income even
though,


                                       26

<PAGE>

absent application of the PFIC rules,  certain excess  distributions  might have
been classified as capital gain.

A Fund may be eligible to elect  alternative  tax treatment with respect to PFIC
shares. Under an election that currently is available in some circumstances, the
Fund generally would be required to include in its gross income its share of the
earnings of a PFIC on a current basis,  regardless of whether distributions were
received from the PFIC in a given year. If this election were made,  the special
rules, discussed above, relating to the taxation of excess distributions,  would
not apply.  In addition,  another  election  would  involve  marking to market a
Fund's  PFIC  shares  at the end of each  taxable  year,  with the  result  that
unrealized  gains would be treated as though they were  realized and reported as
ordinary  income.  Any  mark-to-market  losses  and  any  loss  from  an  actual
disposition of Fund shares would be deductible as ordinary  losses to the extent
of any net mark-to-market gains included in income in prior years.

Currency Fluctuations -- "Section 988" Gains or Losses

Gains or losses  attributable  to  fluctuations  in  exchange  rates which occur
between the time a Fund accrues  receivables  or  liabilities  denominated  in a
foreign  currency and the time the Fund actually  collects such  receivables  or
pays such liabilities generally are treated as ordinary income or ordinary loss.
Similarly,  on disposition of some  investments,  including debt  securities and
certain forward  contracts  denominated in a foreign  currency,  gains or losses
attributable to fluctuations  in the value of the foreign  currency  between the
acquisition and disposition of the position also are treated as ordinary gain or
loss. These gains and losses,  referred to under the Code as "Section 988" gains
or  losses,  increase  or  decrease  the amount of a Fund's  investment  company
taxable  income  available to be  distributed  to its  shareholders  as ordinary
income.

Distributions

Distributions  of  investment  company  taxable  income  are  taxable  to a U.S.
shareholder as ordinary income,  whether paid in cash or shares.  Dividends paid
by a  Fund  to a  corporate  shareholder,  to  the  extent  such  dividends  are
attributable to dividends received from U.S. corporations by a Fund, may qualify
for the dividends received deduction.  However,  the revised alternative minimum
tax applicable to  corporations  may reduce the value of the dividends  received
deduction. The excess of net long-term capital gains over the short-term capital
losses  realized and  distributed by a Fund to its U.S.  shareholders as capital
gains  distributions,  whether  paid in cash or in  shares,  is  taxable  to the
shareholders  as  long-term  capital  gain,  regardless  of the length of time a
shareholder  has  held  his or her  Fund  stock,  and is not  eligible  for  the
dividends received deduction.

Shareholders  will be  notified  annually  as to the U.S.  federal tax status of
distributions  and  shareholders  receiving  distributions  in the form of newly
issued  shares  will  receive a report as to the net asset  value of the  shares
received.

If the net asset  value of shares is  reduced  below a  shareholder's  cost as a
result of a distribution by a Fund, such distribution  generally will be taxable
even though it  represents  a return of


                                       27

<PAGE>

invested  capital.  Investors should be careful to consider the tax implications
of buying  shares of a Fund just  prior to a  distribution.  The price of shares
purchased at this time may reflect the amount of the  forthcoming  distribution.
Those purchasing just prior to a distribution will receive a distribution  which
generally will be taxable to them.

Disposition of Shares

Upon  a  redemption,  sale  or  exchange  of  his or her  shares  of a  Fund,  a
shareholder  will realize a taxable gain or loss depending upon his or her basis
in the  shares.  A gain or loss will be treated  as capital  gain or loss if the
shares are  capital  assets in the  shareholder's  hands and  generally  will be
long-term or short-term, depending upon the shareholder's holding period for the
shares.  Any loss realized on a redemption,  sale or exchange will be disallowed
to  the  extent  the  shares  disposed  of  are  replaced   (including   through
reinvestment  of dividends)  within a period of 61 days beginning 30 days before
and ending 30 days after the shares are disposed  of. In such a case,  the basis
of the shares  acquired  will be adjusted to reflect the  disallowed  loss. If a
shareholder held shares for six months or less and during that period received a
distribution  taxable to the  shareholder  as long-term  capital gain,  any loss
realized on the sale of such  shares  during such  six-month  period  would be a
long-term loss to the extent of such distribution.

Backup Withholding

Each Fund will be required to report to the Internal Revenue Service (the "IRS")
all  distributions  and gross proceeds from the redemption of the Fund's shares,
except  in the  case of  certain  exempt  shareholders.  All  distributions  and
proceeds from the  redemption of Fund shares will be subject to  withholding  of
federal  income  tax at a rate  of 31%  ("backup  withholding")  in the  case of
non-exempt  shareholders if (1) the  shareholder  fails to furnish the Fund with
and to certify  the  shareholder's  correct  taxpayer  identification  number or
social  security  number,  (2) the IRS notifies the shareholder or the Fund that
the  shareholder  has failed to report  properly  certain  interest and dividend
income to the IRS and to respond to notices to that effect, or (3) when required
to do so,  the  shareholder  fails to certify  that he or she is not  subject to
backup  withholding.  If the  withholding  provisions are  applicable,  any such
distributions or proceeds,  whether  reinvested in additional shares or taken in
cash, will be reduced by the amounts required to be withheld.

Other Taxation

Distributions may also be subject to additional  state,  local and foreign taxes
depending on each shareholder's particular situation.  Non-U.S. shareholders and
certain types of U.S.  shareholders  subject to special treatment under the U.S.
federal income tax law (e.g., banks and life insurance companies) may be subject
to U.S. tax rules that differ significantly from those summarized above.


                                       28

<PAGE>

Net Asset Value
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Shares are  purchased at their net asset value per share.  Each Fund  calculates
its net asset value (NAV) as follows:

              NAV = [(Value of Fund Assets) - (Fund Liabilities)]/
                          Number of Outstanding Shares

Net  asset  value  is  determined  as of the end of  trading  hours  on the NYSE
(currently 4:00 p.m. New York City time) on days that the NYSE is open.

A security  listed or traded on a recognized  stock exchange or quoted on NASDAQ
is valued at its last sale price prior to the time when assets are valued on the
principal  exchange on which the security is traded or on NASDAQ.  If no sale is
reported  at that  time,  the most  current  bid price  will be used.  All other
securities for which  over-the-counter  market  quotations are readily available
are valued at the most  current  bid price.  Where  quotations  are not  readily
available,  a Fund's  investments  are  valued at fair  value as  determined  by
management and approved in good faith by the Directors.  Debt  securities  which
will  mature in more than 60 days and  equity  securities  are  valued at prices
furnished by a pricing service  approved by the Directors  subject to review and
determination of the appropriate price by BramCap, whenever a furnished price is
significantly  different from the previous  day's  furnished  price.  Securities
which  will  mature  in 60 days or less are  valued  at  amortized  cost,  which
approximates market value.

Generally,  trading in foreign securities, as well as U.S. Government securities
and  certain  cash  equivalents  and  repurchase  agreements,  is  substantially
completed  each day at various times prior to the close of the NYSE.  The values
of such  securities  used in computing  the net asset value of the shares of the
Funds are determined as of such times.  Foreign currency exchange rates are also
generally  determined  prior to the  close  of the  NYSE.  Occasionally,  events
affecting the value of such securities and such exchange rates may occur between
the times at which they are determined and at the close of the NYSE,  which will
not be reflected in the  computation of net asset value. If during such periods,
events  occur  which  materially  affect  the  value  of  such  securities,  the
securities will be valued at their fair market value as determined by management
and approved in good faith by the Directors.

For  purposes of  determining  the net asset  value per share of each Fund,  all
assets  and  liabilities  initially  expressed  in  foreign  currencies  will be
converted  into  United  States  dollars at the mean  between  the bid and offer
prices of such currencies  against United States dollars  furnished by a pricing
service approved by the Directors.

Each Fund's net asset value per share will be calculated separately from the per
share net asset value of any other fund of the Company.  "Assets belonging to" a
Fund consist of the  consideration  received  upon the issuance of shares of the
particular  Fund together with all net  investment  income,  earnings,  profits,
realized   gains/losses  and  proceeds  derived  from  the


                                       29

<PAGE>

investment  thereof,  including any proceeds from the sale of such  investments,
any funds or payments  derived from any  reinvestment  of such  proceeds,  and a
portion of any  general  assets of the  Company not  belonging  to a  particular
series.  Each Fund will be charged with the direct  liabilities of that Fund and
with a share of the general liabilities of the Funds.  Subject to the provisions
of the Charter,  determinations  by the Directors as to the direct and allocable
expenses,  and the allocable  portion of any general  assets,  with respect to a
particular Fund are conclusive.

Capital Structure
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Description of Shares

The Bramwell  Growth Fund and the Bramwell Focus Fund are series of The Bramwell
Funds, Inc. (the "Company"), an open-end management investment company organized
as a Maryland  corporation on June 3, 1994. The Company's Charter authorizes the
Board of Directors to issue up to 500 million shares of common stock,  par value
$.0001 per share. Two hundred million shares of the Company's  authorized common
stock have been  allocated to each of the Bramwell  Growth Fund and the Bramwell
Focus Fund.  The shares of each Fund have equal voting,  dividend,  distribution
and liquidation  rights,  have no preemptive  rights and only such conversion or
exchange  rights  as the  Board may grant in its  discretion.  When  issued  for
payment as described in the  Prospectus,  each Fund's  shares will be fully paid
and non-assessable.

Shareholders of each Fund are entitled to one vote for each full share held, and
fractional votes for fractional  shares held, and will vote in the aggregate and
not by class or  series  except  as  otherwise  required  by the 1940 Act or the
Maryland General Corporation Law.

There will  normally  be no  meetings  of the  shareholders  for the  purpose of
electing  Directors  unless and until  such time as less than a majority  of the
Directors holding office have been elected by shareholders.

Rule 18f-2 under the 1940 Act provides that any matter  required to be submitted
to the holders of the outstanding  voting  securities of an investment  company,
such as the  Company,  shall not be deemed to have been  effectively  acted upon
unless approved by a majority of the outstanding shares of each fund affected by
the matter. A fund is affected by a matter unless it is clear that the interests
of each fund in the matter are  substantially  identical or that the matter does
not affect  any  interest  of the fund.  Under  Rule  18f-2 the  approval  of an
investment  advisory  agreement  or 12b-1  distribution  plan or any change in a
fundamental  investment policy would be effectively acted upon with respect to a
fund only if  approved  by a majority  of the  outstanding  shares of such fund.
However,  the rule also provides that the  ratification  of  independent  public
accountants,  the approval of principal  underwriting contracts and the election
of directors may be effectively acted upon by shareholders of the Company voting
without regard to particular funds.

Notwithstanding  any provision of the Maryland General Corporation Law requiring
for any purpose the  concurrence of a proportion  greater than a majority of all
votes  entitled  to be cast at a  meeting  at which a  quorum  is  present,  the
affirmative  vote of the holders of a majority of the total


                                       30

<PAGE>

number  of  shares of the  Company  outstanding  (or of a class or series of the
Company,  as  applicable)  will be  effective,  except to the  extent  otherwise
required by the 1940 Act and rules thereunder. In addition, the Charter provides
that, to the extent consistent with the General  Corporation Law of Maryland and
other  applicable law, the By-Laws may provide for  authorization to be given by
the affirmative  vote of the holders of less than a majority of the total number
of shares of the Company outstanding (or of a class or series).

Further Information about Redemption of Shares
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The right of  redemption  may be  suspended,  or the date of  payment  postponed
beyond the normal seven-day period by each Fund, under the following  conditions
authorized  by the 1940 Act:  (1) for any period  (a) during  which the New York
Stock Exchange is closed,  other than customary  weekend or holiday closing,  or
(b) during which trading on the New York Stock Exchange is  restricted;  (2) for
any period during which an emergency exists as a result of which (a) disposal by
a Fund of securities owned by it is not reasonably  practical,  or (b) it is not
reasonably  practical  for a Fund to determine the fair value of its net assets;
and (3) for such other periods as the Securities and Exchange  Commission may by
order permit for the protection of a Fund's shareholders.

The  value  of  shares  of a Fund on  redemption  may be more or less  than  the
shareholder's cost,  depending upon the market value of the Fund's assets at the
time.  Shareholders  should note that if a loss has been realized on the sale of
shares of a Fund,  the loss may be disallowed  for tax purposes if shares of the
same Fund are purchased within (before or after) 30 days of the sale.

It is possible  that  conditions  may exist in the future  which  would,  in the
opinion of the Board of  Directors,  make it  undesirable  for a Fund to pay for
redemptions  in cash.  In such cases the Board,  taking into  account  BramCap's
advice,  may  authorize  payment to be made in portfolio  securities  of a Fund.
However,  the Funds have obligated  themselves  under the 1940 Act to redeem for
cash all shares  presented for redemption by any one  shareholder up to $250,000
(or 1% of the  Fund's  net  assets  if  that  is  less)  in any  90-day  period.
Securities  delivered  in  payment of  redemptions  are valued at the same value
assigned  to them in  computing  the net  asset  value per  share.  Shareholders
receiving such securities generally will incur brokerage costs on their sales.

Experts
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The  Financial  Statements  of the  Bramwell  Growth  Fund as of June 30,  1999,
incorporated  by reference  into this Statement of Additional  Information  have
been  so   incorporated   by   reference   in   reliance   on  the   report   of
PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP, independent certified public accountants,  given on
the authority of said firm as experts in accounting and auditing.

Financial  Statements
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Bramwell Growth Fund's financial  statements and notes thereto  appearing in
the June 30,  1999  Annual  Report to  Shareholders  and the  report  thereon of
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, independent certified public accountants,  appearing
therein,   are  incorporated  by  reference  in  this  Statement  of  Additional
Information. The Fund will furnish, without charge, a copy of such


                                       31

<PAGE>

Annual Report to  Shareholders  on request.  Requests  should be made by calling
1-800-BRAMCAP  or writing to Sunstone  Financial  Group,  Inc., 207 East Buffalo
Street, Suite 400, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53202.


                                       32

<PAGE>

                                                                        APPENDIX

Ratings of Investment Securities
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

A rating of a rating service  represents the service's  opinion as to the credit
quality of the security  being rated.  However,  the ratings are general and are
not absolute standards of quality or guarantees as to the creditworthiness of an
issuer. Consequently, the Funds' investment adviser believes that the quality of
debt  securities  in which a Fund invests  should be  continuously  reviewed.  A
rating is not a recommendation to purchase, sell or hold a security,  because it
does  not  take  into  account  market  value or  suitability  for a  particular
investor. When a security has received a rating from more than one service, each
rating  should  be  evaluated  independently.   Ratings  are  based  on  current
information  furnished  by the issuer or obtained by the ratings  services  from
other sources which they consider reliable. Ratings may be changed, suspended or
withdrawn as a result of changes in or unavailability  of such  information,  or
for other reasons.

The following is a description of the characteristics of ratings used by Moody's
Investors Service, Inc. and Standard & Poor's Corporation.

Moody's Investors Service, Inc. Ratings

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

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

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

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


<PAGE>

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

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

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

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

Standard & Poor's Corporation Rating

AAA--Bonds  rated AAA have the highest  rating.  Capacity to pay  principal  and
interest is extremely strong.

AA--Bonds rated AA have a very strong capacity to pay principal and interest and
differ from AAA bonds only in small degree.

A--Bonds rated A have a strong capacity to pay principal and interest,  although
they are  somewhat  more  susceptible  to the  adverse  effects  of  changes  in
circumstances and economic conditions than bonds in higher rated categories.

BBB--Bonds  rated  BBB are  regarded  as  having  an  adequate  capacity  to pay
principal and interest.  Whereas they normally  exhibit  protection  parameters,
adverse economic conditions or changing circumstances are more likely to lead to
a weakened  capacity to pay  principal  and interest for bonds in this  capacity
than for bonds in higher rated categories.

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


                                       34

<PAGE>

                            Part C: Other Information

ITEM 23.  EXHIBITS

         (a)(1)            Articles of Incorporation (1)
            (2)            Articles Supplementary (2)

         (b)               By-Laws (1)

         (c)               Not Applicable

         (d)(1)            Investment Advisory Agreement between Registrant and
                           Bramwell Capital Management, Inc. with respect to the
                           Bramwell Growth Fund (1)
            (2)            Investment Advisory Agreement between Registrant and
                           Capital Management, Inc. with respect to the Bramwell
                           Focus Fund (2)

         (e)               Not Applicable

         (f)               Not Applicable

         (g)(1)            Custodian Agreement (1)
            (2)            Addendum to Custodian Agreement

         (h)(1)            Administrative and Fund Accounting Agreement (1)
            (2)(a)         Transfer Agent Agreement (1)
               (b)         Addendum to Transfer Agent Agreement

         (i)(1)            Opinion and Consent of Dechert Price & Rhoads with
                           respect to the Growth Fund (1)
            (2)            Opinion and Consent of Dechert Price & Rhoads with
                           respect to Bramwell Focus Fund (2)

         (j)               Consent of Independent Accountants (2)

         (k)               Not Applicable

         (l)(1)            Investment Representation Letters of the Bramwell
                           Growth Fund (1)
            (2)            Investment Representation Letters of the Bramwell
                           Focus Fund (2)

         (m)(1)            Service and Distribution Plan with respect to the
                           Bramwell Growth Fund (1)


<PAGE>

            (2)            Service and Distribution Plan with respect to
                           the Bramwell Focus Fund (2)

         (n)               Not Applicable

         (o)               Not Applicable

         (p)(1)            Powers of Attorney (1)
            (2)            Power or Attorney of Madame Seger


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

(1) Filed  electronically  with Registrant's  Post-Effective  Amendment No. 5 on
October 30, 1997 (Accession Number 0000894579-97-000175)

(2) To be filed by amendment.

ITEM 24.  PERSONS CONTROLLED BY OR UNDER COMMON CONTROL WITH THE REGISTRANT

          Not Applicable

ITEM 25.  INDEMNIFICATION

          The  Registrant  is  incorporated   under  the  laws  of  the State of
          Maryland  and is  subject  to  Section  2-418 of the  Corporation  and
          Associations  Article of the General  Corporation  Law of the State of
          Maryland  (Maryland Law) controlling the  indemnification of directors
          and officers.  Since the Registrant  has its executive  offices in the
          State of New York,  and is  qualified as a foreign  corporation  doing
          business in such State,  the persons covered by the foregoing  statute
          may  also  be  entitled  to  and  subject  to the  limitations  of the
          indemnification provisions of Section 721-726 of the New York Business
          Corporation Law.

          The  general  effect  of  these  statutes  is  to  protect  directors,
          officers,  employees  and  agents  of  the  Registrant  against  legal
          liability and expenses  incurred by reason of their positions with the
          Registrant.  The statutes provide for  indemnification  from liability
          for proceedings not brought on behalf of the corporation and for those
          brought  on  behalf  of  the  corporation,  and  in  each  case  place
          conditions under which  indemnification  will be permitted,  including
          requirements  that the indemnified  person acted in good faith.  Under
          certain   conditions,   payment  of   expenses  in  advance  of  final
          disposition  may be permitted.  The Articles of  Incorporation  of the
          Registrant  make  the  indemnification  if  its  directors,  officers,
          employees  and agents  mandatory  subject only to the  conditions  and
          limitations  imposed by the applicable  provisions of the Maryland Law
          and by the provisions of Section 17(h) of the  Investment  Company Act
          of 1940 (the 1940 Act) as  interpreted  and required to be implemented
          by SEC


<PAGE>

          Release No. IC-11330 of September 4, 1980.

          In  referring  in  its  Articles  of  Incorporation   to,  and  making
          indemnification of directors subject to the conditions and limitations
          of, both the  applicable  provisions  of the  Maryland Law and Section
          17(h) of the 1940 Act,  the  Registrant  intends that  conditions  and
          limitations  on the extent of the  indemnification  of  directors  and
          officers  imposed  by the  provisions  of either the  Maryland  Law or
          Section 17(h) shall apply and that any  inconsistency  between the two
          will be resolved by applying the  provisions  of said Section 17(h) if
          the  condition  or  limitation  imposed by  Section  17(h) is the more
          stringent.  In  referring  in its  Articles  of  Incorporation  to SEC
          Release   No.   IC-11330   as  the  source  for   interpretation   and
          implementation of said Section 17(h), the Registrant  understands that
          it would be  required  under  its  Articles  of  Incorporation  to use
          reasonable and fair means in determining whether  indemnification of a
          director or officer  should be made and undertakes to use either (1) a
          final  decision on the merits by a court or other body before whom the
          proceeding was brought that the person to be indemnified  (indemnitee)
          was not liable to the Registrant or to its security  holders by reason
          of willful  malfeasance,  bad faith,  gross  negligence,  or  reckless
          disregard  of the duties  involved in the conduct of his or her office
          (disabling  conduct)  or (2) in the  absence  of  such a  decision,  a
          reasonable  determination,  based upon a review of the facts, that the
          indemnitee was not liable by reason of such disabling conduct,  by (a)
          the  vote of a  majority  of a quorum  of  directors  who are  neither
          "interested  persons"  (as defined in the 1940 Act) of the  Registrant
          nor parties to the proceeding,  or (b) an independent legal counsel in
          a  written  opinion.  Also,  the  Registrant  will  make  advances  of
          attorney's fees or other expenses incurred by a director or officer in
          his or her defense only if (in addition to his or her  undertaking  to
          repay  the  advance  if  he or  she  is  not  ultimately  entitled  to
          indemnification) (1) the indemnitee provides a security for his or her
          undertaking,  (2) the  Registrant  shall  be  insured  against  losses
          arising  by reason of any  lawful  advances,  or (3) a  majority  of a
          quorum of the  non-interested,  non-party directors of the Registrant,
          or an independent legal counsel in a written opinion, shall determine,
          based on a review of readily  available facts, that there is reason to
          believe  that the  indemnitee  ultimately  will be found  entitled  to
          indemnification.   In  addition,   the  Registrant   will  maintain  a
          directors'  and  officers'  errors and omissions  liability  insurance
          policy protecting  directors and officers against liability for claims
          made by reason of any acts,  errors or  omissions  committed  in their
          capacity as  directors or  officers.  The policy will contain  certain
          exclusions,  among  which is  exclusion  from  coverage  for active or
          deliberate  dishonest or  fraudulent  acts and  exclusion for fines or
          penalties imposed by law or other matters deemed uninsurable.

          Insofar as indemnification  for liability arising under the Securities
          Act of 1933 (the 1933 Act) may be permitted to directors, officers and
          controlling  persons  of the  Registrant  pursuant  to  the  foregoing
          provisions,  or otherwise, the Registrant has been advised that in the
          opinion of the Securities and Exchange Commission such indemnification
          is  against  public  policy  as  expressed  in the  1933  Act  and is,
          therefore,   unenforceable.   In   the   event   that  a   claim   for
          indemnification  against such  liabilities  (other than the


<PAGE>

          payment by the Registrant of expenses  incurred or paid by a director,
          officer or  controlling  person of the  Registrant  in the  successful
          defense  of any  action,  suit  or  proceeding)  is  asserted  by such
          director,  officer  or  controlling  person  in  connection  with  the
          securities  being  registered,  the  Registrant  will,  unless  in the
          opinion of its  counsel  the matter  has been  settled by  controlling
          precedent,  submit to a court of appropriate jurisdiction the question
          whether  such  indemnification  by  it is  against  public  policy  as
          expressed  in  the  1933  Act  and  will  be  governed  by  the  final
          adjudication of such issue.

ITEM 26.  BUSINESS AND OTHER CONNECTIONS OF THE INVESTMENT ADVISER

          The   descriptions  of  the  Investment   Adviser  under  the  caption
          "Management  of the Funds" in the  Prospectus  and in the Statement of
          Additional  Information  constituting Parts A and B, respectively,  of
          this Registration Statement are incorporated by reference herein.

          Bramwell Capital  Management,  Inc. also acts as investment adviser to
          entities and individuals which are not registered investment companies
          and as a subadviser to other registered investment companies.


ITEM 27.  PRINCIPAL UNDERWRITERS

          Not Applicable

ITEM 28.  LOCATION OF ACCOUNTS AND RECORDS

          All accounts,  books or other  documents  required to be maintained by
          Registrant  pursuant  to  Section  31(a) of the 1940 Act and the rules
          promulgated  thereunder are in the  possession of  Registrant,  at the
          Registrant's  offices located at 745 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York,
          10151,  except  (1)  records  held  and  maintained  by  Firstar  Bank
          Milwaukee,   777  East  Wisconsin  Avenue,   11th  Floor,   Milwaukee,
          Wisconsin,  53201, relating to its functions as custodian, (2) records
          held and  maintained  by  Sunstone  Financial  Group,  Inc.,  207 East
          Buffalo Street, Suite 400, Milwaukee,  Wisconsin,  53202,  relating to
          its functions as administrator, and (3) records held and maintained by
          Firstar Mutual Fund  Services,  LLC, 615 East Michigan  Street,  Third
          Floor,  Milwaukee,  Wisconsin,  53202,  relating to its  functions  as
          transfer agent.

ITEM 29.  MANAGEMENT SERVICES

          Not Applicable


<PAGE>

ITEM 30.  UNDERTAKINGS

          Not Applicable.


<PAGE>

                                   SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,  and the
Investment  Company  Act of 1940,  as amended,  Registrant  has duly caused this
Registration Statement to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned,  thereunto
duly  authorized,  in the City of New York and State of New York on the __th day
of ______, 1999.

                                    THE BRAMWELL FUNDS, INC.
                                    By:                  *
                                        ----------------------------------------
                                        Elizabeth R. Bramwell
                                        President

Pursuant to the  requirements  of the Securities  Act of 1933, as amended,  this
Registration  Statement  has been signed below by the  following  persons in the
capacities and on the date indicated.

Signatures                        Title                                 Date
- ----------                        -----                                 ----
            *                     Director and President                /  /
- ----------------------------
Elizabeth R. Bramwell             (principal executive, financial
                                  and accounting officer)

            *                     Director                              /  /
- ----------------------------
J. Sinclair Armstrong

            *                     Director                              /  /
- ----------------------------
Isabel H. Benham

            *                     Director                              /  /
- ----------------------------
George F. Keane

            *                     Director                              /  /
- ----------------------------
James C. Sargent

            *                     Director                              /  /
- ----------------------------
Martha R. Seger


* By: /s/ Margaret A. Bancroft
      ------------------------
      Margaret A. Bancroft
      as Attorney-in-Fact


<PAGE>

Exhibits

          99.G(2)     Addendum to Custodian Agreement

          99.H(2)(b)  Addendum to Transfer Agent Agreement

          99.P(2)     Power of Attorney of Madame Seger





                         Addendum to Custodian Agreement

This Addendum to the Custodian  Agreement  dated August 1, 1994, is entered into
by and between Firstar Bank Milwaukee, N.A. and The Bramwell Funds, Inc. on this
30th day of September, 1998.

WHEREAS,  the  entity  known as  Firstar  Trust  Company  ceased  operations  on
September 30,1 998; and

WHEREAS,  Firstar Bank Milwaukee N.A. represents that it has the necessary trust
and custodial powers to enter into this Agreement; NOW,

THEREFORE,  Firstar Bank Milwaukee, N.A. will be the successor responsible party
to the Agreement  referenced  above and will assume all  responsibility  for any
acts or omissions  during the time Firstar  Trust  Company was the named service
provider under this same Agreement.

Firstar Bank Milwaukee, N.A.                     The Bramwell Funds, Inc.

BY:/s/Mike R. McVoy                               BY:/s/Elizabeth R. Bramwell
   -------------------------                         -------------------------

ATTEST:/s/Gaim M. Zess                            ATTEST:/s/Mary F. McCollum
       ---------------------                             ---------------------



                  Addendum to Firstar Transfer Agent Agreement

This Addendum to the Transfer Agent Agreement dated August 1st, 1994, is entered
into by and between  Firstar Mutual Fund Services,  LLC and The Bramwell  Funds,
Inc. as of the 30th day of September, 1998.

WHEREAS,  the mutual funds servicing  division of Firstar Trust Company became a
limited liability company and separate subsidiary of Firstar Bank,  Milwaukee on
September 30, 1998; and

WHEREAS,  the  entity  known as  Firstar  Trust  Company  ceased  operations  on
September 30, 1998; NOW,

THEREFORE,  Firstar Mutual Fund Services,  LLC will be the successor responsible
party to the Agreement  referenced above and will assume all  responsibility for
any acts or  omissions  during  the time  Firstar  Trust  Company  was the named
service provider under this Agreement.

Firstar Mutual Fund Services, LLC                The Bramwell Funds, Inc.

Y:/s/Mike R. McVoy                               BY:/s/Elizabeth R. Bramwell
   -------------------------                         -------------------------

ATTEST:/s/Gaim M. Zess                            ATTEST:/s/Mary F. McCollum
       ---------------------                             ---------------------



                               POWER OF ATTORNEY

KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS,  that the  undersigned  constitutes and appoints
Margaret A. Bancroft,  William  Goodwin,  Rose M. Burke and Lawrence B. Stoller,
and each of them, as the  undersigned's  and lawful  attorney-in-fact  and agent
with full poewr of wsubstitution and resubstitution for such attorney-in-fact in
such attorney-in-fact's  name, place and stead, to sign any and all registration
statements  applicable  to The  Bramwell  Funds,  Inc.  (the  "Fund"),  and any
amendments  or  supplement  thereto,  and to file the  same,  with all  exhibits
thereto and other  documents in connection  therewith,  with the  Securities and
Exchange  Commission,  granting unto said  attorney-in-fact and agent full power
and  authority  to do and  perform  each and every act and thing  requisite  and
necessary to be done,  as fully to all intents and  purposes as the  undersigned
might or could do in person  in the  undersigned's  capacity  as a  Director  or
Officer   of  the   Fund,  hereby ratifying   and   confirming   all  that  said
attorney-in-fact  and  agent,  or his  or her  substitute  or  substitutes,  may
lawfully do or cause to be done by virtue hereof.

Signature                          Title                         Date
- ---------                          -----                         ----

\s\Martha R. Seger                Director                    July 18, 1994



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