ALLIANCE GLOBAL SMALL CAP FUND INC
497, 1999-11-05
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This is filed pursuant to Rule 497(c).
File Nos. 2-25364 and 811-01415.

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(LOGO)
                                  ALLIANCE GLOBAL SMALL CAP
                                  FUND, INC.
_______________________________________________________________
c/o Alliance Fund Services, Inc.
P.O. Box 1520, Secaucus, New Jersey  07096-1520
Toll Free (800) 221-5672
For Literature:  Toll Free (800) 227-4618
_______________________________________________________________

            STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
                      November 1, 1999
_______________________________________________________________

This Statement of Additional Information is not a prospectus but
supplements and should be read in conjunction with the current
Prospectus for the Alliance Global Small Cap Fund, Inc. (the
"Fund") that offers the Class A, Class B and Class C shares of
the Fund and the current Prospectus for the Fund that offers the
Advisor Class shares of the Fund (the "Advisor Class Prospectus"
and, together with the Prospectus for the Fund that offers the
Class A, Class B and Class C shares of the Fund, the
"Prospectus").  Copies of such Prospectuses may be obtained by
contacting Alliance Fund Services, Inc. at the address or the
"For Literature" telephone number shown above.

                        TABLE OF CONTENTS

                                                             Page

Description of the Fund...................................
Management of the Fund....................................
Expenses of the Fund......................................
Purchase of Shares........................................
Redemption and Repurchase of Shares.......................
Shareholder Services......................................
Net Asset Value...........................................
Dividends, Distributions and Taxes........................
Portfolio Transactions....................................
General Information.......................................
Report of Independent Auditors and Financial Statements...
Appendix A:  Certain Employee Benefit Plans...............   A-1
________________________
(R):  This registered service mark used under license from the
owner, Alliance Capital Management L.P.



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_______________________________________________________________

                     DESCRIPTION OF THE FUND
_______________________________________________________________

         Alliance Global Small Cap Fund, Inc. (the "Fund") is a
diversified, open-end investment company.  Except as otherwise
indicated, the investment policies of the Fund are not
"fundamental policies" and, therefore, may be changed by the
Board of Directors without a shareholder vote.  However, the Fund
will not change its investment policies without contemporaneous
written notice to its shareholders.  The Fund's investment
objective may not be changed without shareholder approval.  There
can be, of course, no assurance that the Fund will achieve its
investment objective.

Investment Objective

         The investment objective of the Fund is to seek long-
term growth of capital through investment in a global portfolio
of the equity securities (i.e., common stocks, rights or warrants
to purchase common stocks and securities convertible into common
stocks) of selected companies with relatively small market
capitalization.  Current income is not a consideration.
Investing in smaller companies and in foreign securities involves
both opportunities and risks that are different from those
associated with investing solely in larger United States
companies.

How The Fund Pursues Its Objective

         The Fund will select its portfolio investments primarily
from among companies whose individual market capitalizations
would place them (at the time of purchase) in the same size range
as companies in approximately the lowest 20% by market
capitalization of companies that have equity securities listed on
a U.S. national securities exchange or traded in the NASDAQ
system.  Based on recent U.S. share prices, the Fund's portfolio
companies typically will have individual market capitalizations
of between approximately $50 million and $1 billion (although the
Fund will be free to invest in smaller capitalization companies
that satisfy the Fund's size standard).  Because the Fund applies
the U.S. size standard on a global basis, its investment outside
the U.S. might rank above the lowest 20% by market capitalization
in local markets and, in fact, might in some countries rank among
the largest companies in terms of capitalization.

         Under normal market conditions, the Fund will invest at
least 65% of its assets in equity securities of such smaller
capitalization issuers, and such issuers will be located in at
least three countries, one of which may be the U.S. Up to 35% of


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the Fund's total assets may be invested in securities of
companies whose market capitalizations exceed the Fund's size
standard.  Equity securities in which the Fund invests may be
listed on a U.S. or foreign exchange or traded over the counter.

         Special Investment Considerations.  Alliance Capital
Management L.P. (the "Adviser") believes that the issuers of
smaller capitalization stocks often have sales and earnings
growth rates which exceed those of larger companies, and that
such growth rates may in turn be reflected in more rapid share
price appreciation. However, investing in smaller capitalization
stocks can involve greater risk than is customarily associated
with larger, more established companies.  For example, smaller
capitalization companies often have limited product lines,
markets, or financial resources.  They may be dependent for
management on one or a few key persons, and can be more
susceptible to losses and risks of bankruptcy.  Also, their
securities may be thinly traded (and therefore have to be sold at
a discount from current market prices or sold in small lots over
an extended period of time), may be followed by fewer investment
research analysts and may be subject to wider price swings and
thus may create a greater chance of loss than investing in
securities of larger capitalization companies.  Transaction costs
in smaller capitalization stocks may be higher than those of
larger capitalization companies.

         The Adviser believes that global investing offers
opportunities for superior investment returns.  A portfolio
containing the securities of companies located in a number of
countries may offer the opportunity for greater capital
appreciation than investment in a portfolio composed only of the
securities of U.S. companies.  The Adviser will adjust the Fund's
exposure to particular national economies based on its perception
of the most favorable markets and issuers.  The Fund intends to
spread investment risk among the capital markets of a number of
countries and will invest in equity securities of companies based
in at least three, and normally considerably more such countries,
one of which may be the U.S. The percentage of the Fund's assets
invested in securities of companies in a particular country or
denominated in a particular currency will vary in accordance with
the Adviser's assessment of the appreciation potential of such
securities and the strength of that currency.  Investing in
securities issued by foreign corporations involves considerations
and possible risks not typically associated with investing in
obligations issued by U.S. corporations.  The values of foreign
investments are affected by changes in currency rates or exchange
control regulations, application of foreign tax laws, including
withholding taxes, changes in governmental administration or
economic or monetary policy (in this country or abroad) or
changed circumstances in dealings between nations.  Costs are
incurred in connection with conversions between various


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currencies.  In addition, foreign brokerage commissions are
generally higher than in the United States, and foreign
securities markets may be less liquid, more volatile and less
subject to governmental supervision than in the United States.
Investments in foreign countries could be affected by other
factors not present in the United States, including
expropriation, confiscatory taxation, lack of uniform accounting
and auditing standards and potential difficulties in enforcing
contractual obligations and could be subject to extended
settlement periods.

         The Fund may invest up to 10% of its total assets in
securities for which there is no ready market.  The Fund may
therefore not be able to readily sell such securities.  While
there may not be securities sales registration requirements
comparable to those under U.S. laws or laws imposing legal
restrictions on resales of securities in many of the countries in
which the Fund may invest, there may be contractual restrictions
on resale of securities.

         The Fund has the ability to invest up to 20% of its
total assets in warrants to purchase equity securities issued by
European companies to the extent consistent with the Fund's
investment objective; however, the Fund does not presently intend
to invest more than 10% of its total assets in such warrants.
The warrants in which the Fund may invest are a type of security,
usually issued together with another security of an issuer, that
entitles the holder to buy a fixed amount of common or preferred
stock of such issuer at a specified price for a fixed period of
time (which may be in perpetuity).  Generally, warrants are
commonly issued attached to other securities of the issuer as a
method of making such securities more attractive and are usually
detachable and, thus, may be bought or sold separately from the
issued security.  Warrants can be a speculative investment and
may be considered more speculative than certain other types of
investments in that they neither entitle a holder to dividends or
voting rights with respect to the securities which may be
purchased nor represent any rights in the assets of the issuing
company.  Also, the value of a warrant does not necessarily
change with the value of the underlying securities, and a warrant
ceases to have value if it is not exercised prior to the
expiration date.  The value of a warrant may decline because of a
decrease in the value of the underlying stock, the passage of
time or a change in perception as to the potential of the
underlying stock, or any combination thereof.  If the market
price of the underlying stock is below the exercise price set
forth in the warrant on the expiration date, the warrant will
expire worthless.  Warrants are freely transferable and are
generally traded on one or more stock exchanges.  The Fund
anticipates that the warrants in which it will invest will have
exercise periods of approximately two to ten years.  In addition


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to purchasing corporate securities of non-U.S. issuers in
overseas markets, the Fund may invest in American Depository
Receipts, European Depository Receipts or other securities
representing securities of companies based in countries other
than the United States.

         For temporary defensive purposes, the Fund may vary from
its investment policy during periods in which conditions in
securities markets or other economic or political conditions
warrant.  In such circumstances, the Fund will be able to invest
without limit in large capitalization companies or reduce its
position in equity securities and increase its position in debt
securities, which may include short-term U.S. Government
securities and U.S. dollar- or foreign currency-denominated
short-term indebtedness (including commercial paper), cash
equivalents and fixed income securities issued or guaranteed by
governmental entities, or by companies or supranational
organizations (e.g., International Bank for Reconstruction and
Development and the European Community) rated AA or better by
Standard & Poor's Corporation or Aa or better by Moody's
Investors Service, Inc. or if not so rated, of equivalent
investment quality as determined by the Adviser. Apart from
periods of defensive investment, the Fund may also at any time
temporarily invest funds awaiting reinvestment or held as
reserves for dividends and other distributions to shareholders in
U.S. dollar-denominated money market instruments.

Additional Investment Practices and Policies

         The following additional investment policies supplement
those set forth in the Prospectus.

         Options.  In seeking to attain capital growth, the Fund
may supplement customary investment practices by writing and
purchasing call options listed on one or more U.S. or foreign
securities exchanges and purchasing listed put options, including
put options on market indexes.  A put option gives the buyer of
such option, upon payment of a premium, the right to deliver a
specified number of shares of a stock to the writer of the option
on or before a fixed date, at a predetermined price.  A call
option gives the purchaser of the option, upon payment of a
premium, the right to call upon the writer to deliver a specified
number of shares of a specified stock on or before a fixed date,
at a predetermined price, usually the market price at the time
the contract is negotiated.  Prior to the expiration of the
option, the seller (the "writer") of the option has an obligation
to sell the underlying security to the holder of the option at
the exercise price regardless of the market price of the security
at the time the option is exercised. The premium received by the
Fund is recorded as a liability and is subsequently adjusted to
the current market value of the option written.  Premiums


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received from writing options which expire unexercised are
treated by the Fund on the expiration date as realized capital
gains.  The difference between the premium and the amount paid
upon executing a closing purchase transaction, including
brokerage commissions, is also treated as a gain, or if the
premium is less than the amount paid for the closing purchase
transaction, as a loss.  If a call option is exercised, the
premium is added to the proceeds from the sale in determining
whether the Fund has realized a gain or loss.

         Writing and purchasing options are highly specialized
activities and entail greater than ordinary investment risks.
The Fund will not write a call option unless the Fund at all
times during the option period owns either (a) the optioned
securities, or securities convertible into or carrying rights to
acquire the optioned securities, or (b) an offsetting call option
on the same securities.

         It is the Fund's policy not to write a call option if
the premium to be received by the Fund in connection with such
option would not produce an annualized return of at least 15% of
the then current market value of the securities subject to option
(without giving effect to commissions, stock transfer taxes and
other expenses of the Fund which are deducted from premium
receipts).  The Fund will also not write a call option if, as a
result, the aggregate of the Fund's portfolio securities subject
to outstanding call options (valued at the lower of the option
price or market value of such securities) would exceed 15% of the
Fund's total assets.  The Fund will not sell any call option if
such sale would result in more than 10% of the Fund's assets
being committed to call options written by the Fund which, at the
time of sale by the Fund, have a remaining term of more than 100
days.  The aggregate cost of all outstanding options purchased
and held by the Fund will at no time exceed 10% of the Fund's
total assets.

         In the event the option is exercised, the Fund will be
obligated to sell stocks below the current market price. The
Fund's potential for gain is limited to the difference between
the exercise price plus the premium less the cost of the
security.  Alternatively, the option's position could be closed
out by purchasing a like option.  It is possible, although
considered unlikely, that the Fund might be unable to execute
such a closing purchase transaction.  If the price of a security
declines below the amount to be received from the exercise price
less the amount of the call premium received and if the option
could not be closed, the Fund would hold a security which might
otherwise have been sold to protect against depreciation.  In
addition, the Fund's portfolio turnover may increase to the
extent that the market price of the underlying securities covered



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by call options written by the Fund increases and the Fund has
not entered into a closing purchase transaction.

         If an option purchased by the Fund expires without being
exercised, its premium would be lost by the Fund.

         Options on Market Indexes.  Options on securities
indexes are similar to options on a security except that, rather
than the right to take or make delivery of a security at a
specified price, an option on a securities index gives the holder
the right to receive, upon exercise of the option, an amount of
cash if the closing level of the chosen index is greater than (in
the case of a call) or less than (in the case of a put) the
exercise price of the option.

         Through the purchase of listed index options, the Fund
could achieve many of the same objectives as through the use of
options on individual securities.  Price movements in the Fund's
portfolio securities probably will not correlate perfectly with
movements in the level of the index and, therefore, the Fund
would bear a risk of loss on index options purchased by it if
favorable price movements of the hedged portfolio securities do
not equal or exceed losses on the options or if adverse price
movements of the hedged portfolio securities are greater than
gains realized from the options.

         Restricted Securities.  Where registration is required,
the Fund may be obligated to pay all or part of the registration
expense, and a considerable period may elapse between the time of
the decision to sell and the time the Fund may be permitted to
sell a security under an effective registration statement.  If,
during such a period adverse market conditions were to develop,
the Fund might obtain a less favorable price than prevailed when
it decided to sell. Restricted securities will be valued in such
manner as the Board of Directors of the Fund, in good faith,
deems appropriate to reflect their fair market value.

         Currency Hedging Techniques.  The Fund may engage in
various portfolio strategies to hedge its portfolio against
currency risks.  These strategies include the use of forward
foreign currency transactions, currency options and futures and
options on such futures.  The Fund may enter into such
transactions only in connection with hedging strategies. While
the Fund's use of hedging strategies is intended to reduce the
risk of declines in the net asset value of Fund shares, there can
be no assurance that the Fund's hedging transactions will be
effective.  Unanticipated changes in currency prices may result
in poorer overall performance for the Fund than if it had not
entered into such hedging transactions.  Furthermore, the Fund
will only engage in hedging activities from time to time and may



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not necessarily be engaging in hedging activities when movements
in the currency exchange rates occur.

         Although certain risks are involved in forward, futures
and options transactions, the Adviser believes that, because the
Fund will only engage in these transactions for hedging purposes,
the forward, futures and options portfolio strategies of the Fund
will not subject the Fund to the risks frequently associated with
the speculative use of futures transactions.

         Forward Foreign Currency Exchange Contracts.  The Fund
may purchase or sell forward foreign currency exchange contracts
("forward contracts") to attempt to minimize the risk to the Fund
from adverse changes in the relationship between the U.S. dollar
and other currencies.  Generally, the foreign exchange
transactions of the Fund will be conducted on a spot, i.e., cash,
basis at the spot rate for purchasing or selling currency
prevailing in the foreign exchange market.  Under normal market
conditions, this rate differs from the prevailing exchange rate
in an amount generally less than one-tenth of one percent due to
the costs of converting from one currency to another.  However,
the Fund has authority to deal in forward foreign exchange
between currencies of the different countries in whose securities
it will invest as a hedge against possible variations in the
foreign exchange rates between these currencies.  A forward
contract is an obligation to purchase or sell a specific currency
for an agreed price at a future date (up to one year) which is
individually negotiated and privately traded by currency traders
and their customers.  The Fund's dealings in forward contracts
will be limited to hedging involving either specific transactions
or portfolio positions.  Transaction hedging is the purchase or
sale of forward contracts with respect to specific receivables or
payables of the Fund accruing in connection with the purchase and
sale of its portfolio securities or the payment of dividends and
distributions by the Fund.  Position hedging is the sale of
forward contracts with respect to portfolio security positions
denominated or quoted in such foreign currency.

         The Fund may not position hedge with respect to the
currency of a particular country to an extent greater than the
aggregate market value (at the time of making such sale) of the
securities held in its portfolio denominated or quoted in that
particular foreign currency.  If the Fund enters into a position
hedging transaction, its custodian bank will place, to the extent
required by applicable law, liquid assets in a segregated account
of the Fund in an amount equal to the value of the Fund's total
assets committed to the consummation of such forward contract.
If the value of the assets placed in the segregated account
declines, additional liquid assets will be placed in the account
so that the value of the account will equal the amount of the
Fund's commitment with respect to such contracts.  In addition,


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the Fund may use such other methods of "cover" as are permitted
by applicable law.  The Fund will not commit more than 50% of the
value of its assets to position hedging contracts.

         Forward contracts reduce the potential gain from a
positive change in the relationship between U.S. dollar and other
currencies.  The Fund will not enter into a forward contract with
a term of more than one year or if, as a result thereof, more
than 50% of the Fund's total assets would be committed to such
contracts.

         Hedging against a decline in the value of a currency
does not eliminate fluctuations in the prices of portfolio
securities denominated in such currency or prevent losses if the
prices of such securities decline.  Such transactions also
preclude the opportunity for gain if the value of the hedge
currency should rise.  Moreover, it may not be possible for the
Fund to hedge against a devaluation that is so generally
anticipated that the Fund is not able to contract to sell the
currency at a price above the devaluation level it anticipates.
The cost to the Fund of engaging in foreign currency transactions
varies with such factors as the currency involved, the length of
the contract period and the market conditions then prevailing.
Since transactions in foreign currency exchange are usually
conducted on a principal basis, no fees or commissions are
involved.

         Foreign Currency Options, Foreign Currency Futures and
Options on Foreign Currency Futures.  The Fund is also authorized
to purchase or sell listed or unlisted foreign currency options,
foreign currency futures and related options on foreign currency
futures as a short or long hedge against possible variations in
foreign exchange rates.  Such transactions may be effected with
respect to hedges on non-U.S. dollar denominated securities owned
by the Fund, sold by the Fund but not yet delivered, or committed
or anticipated to be purchased by the Fund.  As an illustration,
the Fund may use such techniques to hedge the stated value in
U.S. dollars of an investment in a pound sterling denominated
security.  In such circumstances, for example, the Fund may
purchase a foreign currency put option enabling it to sell a
specified amount of pounds for dollars at a specified price by a
future date.  To the extent the hedge is successful, a loss in
the value of the pound relative to the dollar will tend to be
offset by an increase in the value of the put option.  To offset,
in whole or in part, the cost of acquiring such a put option, the
Fund may also sell a call option which, if exercised, requires it
to sell a specified amount of pounds for dollars at a specified
price by a future date (a technique called a "straddle"). By
selling such call option in this illustration, the Fund gives up
the unlimited opportunity to profit from increases in the
relative value of the pound to the dollar.  All options written


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by the Fund must be "covered," and must remain "covered" as long
as the Fund is obligated as a writer.  For example, where the
Fund sells a call option on a futures or forward contract, it may
cover either by entering into a long position in the same
contract at a price no higher than the strike price of the call
option or by owning the instruments or currency underlying the
futures or forward contracts.  The Fund could also cover this
position by holding a separate call option permitting it to
purchase the same futures or forward contract at a price no
higher than the strike price of the call option sold by the Fund.
A put option written by the Fund may be "covered" if the Fund
maintains liquid assets with a value equal to the exercise price
in a segregated account with its custodian, or else owns a put on
the same contract as the put written where the exercise price of
the put held is equal or greater than the exercise price of the
put written.

         Certain differences exist between these foreign currency
hedging instruments.  Foreign currency options provide the holder
thereof the right to buy or sell a currency at a fixed price on a
future date.  Listed options are third-party contracts (i.e.,
performance of the parties' obligations is guaranteed by an
exchange or clearing corporation) which are issued by a clearing
corporation, traded on an exchange and have standardized strike
prices and expiration dates.  Unlisted options are two- party
contracts and have negotiated strike prices and expiration dates.
The Fund will engage in unlisted transactions involving options
only with member banks of the Federal Reserve System and primary
dealers in United States Government securities or with affiliates
of such banks or dealers which have capital of at least $50
million or whose obligations are guaranteed by an entity having
capital of at least $50 million.  The Fund will acquire only
those unlisted options for which management believes the Fund can
receive on each business day at least two independent bids or
offers (one of which will be from an entity other than a party to
the option).  A futures contract on a foreign currency is an
agreement between two parties to buy or sell a specified amount
of a currency for a set price on a future date.  Certain futures
contracts and options on futures contracts are traded on boards
of trade or futures exchanges.  The Fund may enter into such
transactions only in connection with hedging strategies against
variations on exchange rates.

         The Fund will not speculate in foreign currency options,
futures or related options.  Accordingly, the Fund will not hedge
a currency substantially in excess of (i) the market value of the
securities denominated in such currency which it owns; (ii) the
expected acquisition price of securities which it has committed
or anticipates to purchase which are denominated in such
currency; and (iii) in the case of securities which have been
sold by the Fund but not yet delivered, the proceeds thereof in


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its denominated currency.  Further, the Fund will segregate in a
segregated account with its custodian bank liquid assets having a
market value substantially representing any subsequent decrease
in the market value of such hedged security, less any initial or
variation margin held in the account of its broker.  The Fund may
not incur potential net liabilities of more than 33 1/3% of its
total assets from foreign currency options, futures or related
options.

         Risk Factors in Options, Futures and Currency
Transactions.  Utilization of futures transactions involves the
risk of imperfect correlation in movements in the price of
futures contracts and movements in the price of the currencies
which are the subject of the hedge.  If the price of the futures
contract moves more or less than the price of the currency, the
Fund will experience a gain or loss which will not be completely
offset by movements in the price of the currencies which are the
subject of the hedge. Unanticipated changes in currency prices
may result in poorer overall performance for the Fund than if it
had not entered into such contract.  Transactions in options and
options on futures contracts involve similar risks.  The
successful use of such instruments draws upon the Adviser's
special skills with respect to such instruments and usually
depends on the Adviser's ability to forecast currency exchange
rate movements correctly.

      Other risks inherent in the use of these forward,
futures and options on futures strategies include: imperfect
correlation between movements in the prices of futures contracts
or options thereon and movements in the exchange rates of the
currencies hedged, the fact that skills and techniques needed to
trade futures contracts and options thereon are different from
those needed to select equity securities, no assurance that a
liquid secondary market will exist for any particular futures
contract or option thereon at any particular time, and the fact
that some futures markets have daily price movements limits.
There are similar risks inherent in the use of options on foreign
currencies.

         Prior to exercise or expiration, an exchange-traded
option position written by the Fund can only be terminated by
entering into a closing purchase or sale transaction. This
requires a secondary market on an exchange for call or put
options of the same series.  The Fund will enter into an option
or futures transaction on an exchange only if there appears to be
a liquid secondary market for such options or futures.  However,
there can be no assurance that a liquid secondary market will
exist for any particular call or put option or futures contract
at any specific time.  Thus, it may not be possible for the Fund
to close a particular option or futures position.  The Fund will
acquire only unlisted options for which management believes the


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Fund can receive on each business day at least two independent
bids or offers (one of which will be from an entity other than a
party to the option).  In the case of a futures position, in the
event of adverse price movements, the Fund would continue to be
required to make daily cash payments of variation margin.  In
such situations, if the Fund has insufficient cash, it may have
to sell portfolio securities to meet daily variation margin
requirements at a time when it may be disadvantageous to do so.
In addition, the Fund may be required to take or make delivery of
the currency underlying the currency futures contracts it holds.
The inability to close options and futures positions also could
have an adverse impact on the Fund's ability to effectively hedge
its portfolio.  There is also the risk of loss by the Fund of
margin deposits in the event of the bankruptcy of a broker with
whom the Fund has an open position in the futures contract or
related option.

         The exchanges on which the Fund intends to conduct
options transactions have generally established "position limits"
which are limitations governing the maximum number of call or put
options on the same underlying currency (whether or not covered)
which may be written by a single investor, whether acting alone
or in concert with others (regardless of whether such options are
written on the same or different exchanges or are held or written
on one or more accounts or through one or more brokers).
"Trading limits" are imposed on the maximum number of contracts
which any person may trade on a particular trading day.  An
exchange may order the liquidation of positions found to be in
violation of these limits and it may impose other sanctions or
restrictions.  The Adviser does not believe that these position
and trading limits will have any adverse impact on the portfolio
strategies for hedging the Fund's portfolio. On the other hand,
the protections afforded to exchange participants by position and
trading limits are not available with respect to transactions in
unlisted options.

         Lending of Portfolio Securities.  In order to increase
income, the Fund may from time to time lend portfolio securities
to brokers, dealers and financial institutions and receive
collateral in the form of liquid assets or bank letters of
credit.  Under the Fund's procedures, collateral for such loans
must be maintained at all times in an amount equal to at least
100% of the market value of the loaned securities (including
interest accrued on the loaned securities) adjusted (marking-to-
market) with the borrower each day the securities are on loan to
provide for price fluctuations.  The interest accruing on the
loaned securities will be paid to the Fund and the Fund will have
the right, on demand, to call back the loaned securities. The
Fund may pay fees to arrange the loans.  The Fund will neither
lend portfolio securities in excess of 30% of the value of its



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total assets nor lend its portfolio securities to any officer,
director, employee or affiliate of the Fund or the Adviser.

         While such securities are on loan, the borrower will pay
the Fund any income earned thereon and the Fund may invest any
cash collateral in portfolio securities, thereby earning
additional income, or receive an agreed upon amount of income
from a borrower who has delivered equivalent collateral.  The
Fund will not lend its portfolio securities if such loans are not
permitted by the laws or regulations of any state within which
its shares are qualified for sale. Loans will be subject to
termination by the Fund in the normal settlement time, currently
five business days after notice, or by the borrower on one day's
notice.  Although voting rights may pass with the loaned
securities, if a material event affecting the investment is to be
voted on, the loan must be terminated and the securities voted by
the Fund.  Borrowed or equivalent securities must be returned
when the loan is terminated.  Any gain or loss in the market
price of the borrowed securities that occurs during the term of
the loan inures to the Fund and its shareholders.  The Fund may
pay reasonable finders', borrowers', administrative, and
custodial fees  in connection with a loan.  The Board of
Directors will monitor the Fund's lending of portfolio
securities.

         ADRs and EDRs.  In addition to purchasing corporate
securities of non-U.S. issuers in overseas securities markets,
the Fund may invest in American Depository Receipts (ADRs),
European Depository Receipts (EDRs) or other securities
representing securities of companies based in countries other
than the United States.  Transactions in these securities may not
necessarily be settled in the same currency as transactions in
the securities into which they represent.  Generally, ADRs, in
registered form, are designed for use in the U.S. securities
markets and EDRs, in bearer form, are designed for use in
European securities markets.

         Portfolio Turnover.  Generally, the Fund's policy with
respect to portfolio turnover is to purchase securities with a
view to holding them for periods of time sufficient to assure
long-term capital gains treatment upon their sale and not for
trading purposes.  However, it is also the Fund's policy to sell
any security whenever, in the judgment of the Fund's Adviser, its
appreciation possibilities have been substantially realized or
the business or market prospects for such security have
deteriorated, irrespective of the length of time that such
security has been held.  This policy may result in the Fund
realizing short-term capital gains or losses on the sale of
certain securities.  See "Dividends, Distributions and Taxes." It
is anticipated that the Fund's rate of portfolio turnover will
approximate 100% in future years.  A 100% annual turnover rate


                               13



<PAGE>

would occur, for example, if all the stocks in the Fund's
portfolio were replaced within a period of one year.  A portfolio
turnover rate approximating 100% involves correspondingly greater
brokerage commission expenses than would a lower rates, which
expenses must be borne by the Fund and its shareholders.

         Certain Fundamental Investment Policies.  The following
restrictions may not be changed without shareholder approval,
which means the affirmative vote of the holders of(a) 67% or more
of the shares represented at a meeting at which more than 50% of
the outstanding shares are represented or (b) more than 50% of
the outstanding shares, whichever is less.  Whenever any
investment restriction states a maximum percentage of the Fund's
assets which may be invested in any security or other asset, it
is intended that such maximum percentage limitation be determined
immediately after and as a result of the Fund's acquisition of
such securities or other assets.  Accordingly, any later increase
or decrease in percentage beyond the specified limitation
resulting from a change in values or net assets will not be
considered a violation.

         The Fund may not:

         (i)    purchase the securities of any one issuer, other
                than the U.S. Government or any of its agencies
                or instrumentalities, if immediately after such
                purchase more than 5% of the value of its total
                assets would be invested in such issuer or the
                Fund would own more than 10% of the outstanding
                voting securities of such issuer, except that up
                to 25% of the value of the Fund's total assets
                may be invested without regard to such 5% and 10%
                limitations;

         (ii)   invest 25% or more of the value of its total
                assets in the same industry; this restriction
                does not apply to securities issued or guaranteed
                by the U.S. Government, its agencies and
                instrumentalities ("U.S. Government Securities"),
                but will apply to foreign government obligations
                unless the U.S. Securities and Exchange
                Commission (the "Commission") permits their
                exclusion;

         (iii)  borrow money except from banks for emergency or
                temporary purposes in an amount not exceeding 5%
                of the value of the total assets of the Fund;

         (iv)   make short sales of securities or maintain a
                short position, unless at all times when a short
                position is open it owns an equal amount of such


                               14



<PAGE>

                securities or securities convertible into or
                exchangeable for, without payment of any further
                consideration, securities of the same issue as,
                and equal in amount to, the securities sold short
                and unless not more than 5% of the Fund's net
                assets (taken at market value) is held as
                collateral for such sales at any one time;

         (v)    purchase a security (unless the security is
                acquired pursuant to a plan of reorganization or
                an offer of exchange) if, as a result, the Fund
                would own any securities of an open-end
                investment company or more than 3% of the total
                outstanding voting stock of any closed-end
                investment company, or more than 5% of the value
                of the Fund's total assets would be invested in
                securities of any closed-end investment company
                or more than 10% of such value in closed-end
                investment companies in the aggregate;

         (vi)   invest in companies for the purpose of exercising
                control;

         (vii)  purchase or sell real estate, except that it may
                purchase and sell securities of companies which
                deal in real estate or interests therein;

         (viii) purchase or sell commodities or commodity
                contracts (except foreign currencies, foreign
                currency options and futures and forward
                contracts or contracts for the future acquisition
                or delivery of foreign currencies and related
                options on futures contracts and other similar
                contracts);

         (ix)   invest in interests in oil, gas, or other mineral
                exploration or development programs, except that
                it may purchase and sell securities of companies
                that deal in oil, gas or other mineral
                exploration or development programs;

         (x)    purchase securities on margin, except for such
                short-term credits as may be necessary for the
                clearance of transactions; or

         (xi)   act as an underwriter of securities, except that
                the Fund may acquire securities in private
                placements under circumstances in which, if such
                securities were sold, the Fund might be deemed to
                be an underwriter within the meaning of the



                               15



<PAGE>

                Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the
                "Securities Act").

         In addition to the restrictions set forth above, in
connection with the qualification of its shares for sale in
certain states, the Fund may not invest in mineral leases nor may
the Fund invest in real estate limited partnerships.

_______________________________________________________________

                     MANAGEMENT OF THE FUND
_______________________________________________________________

Adviser

         Alliance Capital Management L.P., a Delaware limited
partnership with principal offices at 1345 Avenue of the
Americas, New York, New York 10105, has been retained under an
investment advisory agreement (the "Advisory Agreement") to
provide investment advice and, in general, to conduct the
management and investment program of the Fund under the
supervision of the Fund's Board of Directors (see "Management of
the Fund" in the Prospectus).

      The Adviser is a leading international adviser managing
client accounts with assets as of September 30, 1999 totaling
more than $317 billion (of which more than $143 billion
represented assets of investment companies).  As of September 30,
1999, the Adviser managed retirement assets for many of the
largest public and private employee benefit plans (including 28
of the nation's FORTUNE 100 companies), for public employee
retirement funds in 31 states, for investment companies, and for
foundations, endowments, banks and insurance companies worldwide.
The 52 registered investment companies managed by the Adviser,
comprising 118 separate investment portfolios, currently have
approximately 4.8 million shareholder accounts.

      Alliance Capital Management Corporation ("ACMC") is the
general partner of the Adviser.  As of September 30, 1999, The
Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States
("Equitable"), ACMC, Inc. and Equitable Capital Management
Corporation ("ECMC") were the beneficial owners of approximately
56% of the outstanding Units of the Adviser.  ACMC, ECMC and
ACMC, Inc. are wholly owned subsidiaries of Equitable, one of the
largest life insurance companies in the United States.  ECMC is a
registered investment adviser and ACMC, Inc. is a holding company
for Units of the Adviser.  Equitable is a wholly owned subsidiary
of AXA Financial, Inc. ("AXA Financial"), a Delaware corporation
whose shares are traded on the New York Stock Exchange.  AXA
Financial serves as the holding company for the Adviser,
Equitable and Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette, Inc., a broker-dealer


                               16



<PAGE>

holding company.  As of September 30, 1999, AXA, a French
insurance holding company, owned approximately 56% of the issued
and outstanding shares of the common stock of AXA Financial.

         Under the Management Agreement, the Adviser furnishes
advice and recommendations with respect to the Fund's portfolio
of securities and investments and provides persons satisfactory
to the Board of Directors to act as officers and employees of the
Fund.  Such officers and employees, as well as certain Directors
of the Fund may be employees of the Adviser or its affiliates.

         The Adviser is, under the Management Agreement,
responsible for certain expenses incurred by the Fund, including,
for example, the costs of clerical and accounting assistance to
the Directors and expenses of office rental. The Fund has, under
the Management Agreement, assumed the obligation for payment of
all of its other expenses.

      For the services rendered by the Adviser under the
Management Agreement, the Fund pays a monthly fee to the Adviser
at the annual rate of 1.00% of the average daily net assets of
the Fund during the month.  The Fund may utilize personnel
employed by the Adviser or by other subsidiaries of Equitable.
The Fund may employ its own personnel or contract for services to
be performed by third parties.  In such event, the services will
be provided to the Fund at cost and the payments specifically
approved by the Fund's Board of Directors.  The Fund paid to the
Adviser a total of $128,000 in respect of such services during
the fiscal year of the Fund ended July 31, 1999.

      For the fiscal years ended in 1997, 1998 and 1999, the
Adviser received from the Fund management fees of $1,054,834,
$1,347,278 and $1,104,000, respectively.

         The Management Agreement became effective on July 22,
1992.  The Management Agreement was approved by the unanimous
vote, cast in person, of the Fund's Directors (including the
Directors who are not parties to the Management Agreement or
interested persons, as defined in the Investment Company Act of
1940, as amended (the "1940 Act"), of any such party) at a
meeting called for the purpose and held on October 17, 1991.  At
a meeting held on June 11, 1992, a majority of the outstanding
voting securities of the Fund approved the Management Agreement.

      The Management Agreement must be approved each year
either by (a) a majority vote of the Board of Directors of the
Fund or (b) a majority vote of the outstanding voting securities
of the Fund, and, in either case, by majority vote of the
Directors who are neither parties to the Management Agreement nor
"interested persons" of any such party (as defined by the 1940
Act), cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of


                               17



<PAGE>

voting on such approval.  Any changes in the terms of the
Management Agreement must be approved by the shareholders.  Most
recently, the continuance of the Management Agreement until
September 30, 2000 was approved by a vote, cast in person, of the
Directors, including a majority of the Directors who were not
parties to the Management Agreement or "interested persons" of
any such party, at a meeting called for that purpose on July 14,
1999.

         The Management Agreement automatically terminates upon
its assignment.  In addition, the Management Agreement is
terminable at any time without penalty by the Board of Directors
of the Fund or by vote of a majority of the Fund's outstanding
voting securities on 60 days written notice to the Adviser or by
the Adviser on any January 1 on 60 days written notice to the
Fund.  The term "majority of the Fund's outstanding voting
securities" as used above means (i) 67% or more of the
outstanding shares present at a meeting, if the holders of more
than 50% of the outstanding shares of the Fund are represented at
the meeting or (ii) more than 50% of the outstanding shares of
the Fund, whichever is less.

         Certain other clients of the Adviser may have investment
objectives and policies similar to those of the Fund. The Adviser
may, from time to time, make recommendations which result in the
purchase or sale of a particular security by its other clients
simultaneously with the Fund.  If transactions on behalf of more
than one client during the same period increase the demand for
securities being purchased or the supply of securities being
sold, there may be an adverse effect on price or quantity. It is
the policy of the Adviser to allocate advisory recommendations
and the placing of orders in a manner which is deemed equitable
by the Adviser to the accounts involved, including the Fund.
When two or more of the clients of the Adviser (including the
Fund) are purchasing or selling the same security on a given day
from the same broker-dealer, such transactions may be averaged as
to price.

      The Adviser may act as an investment adviser to other
persons, firms or corporations, including investment companies,
and is investment adviser to AFD Exchange Reserves, Alliance All-
Asia Investment Fund, Inc., Alliance Balanced Shares, Inc.,
Alliance Bond Fund, Inc., Alliance Capital Reserves, Alliance
Global Strategic Income Trust, Inc., Alliance Global Dollar
Government Fund, Inc., Alliance Global Environment Fund, Inc.,
Alliance Government Reserves, Alliance Greater China '97 Fund,
Inc., Alliance Growth and Income Fund, Inc., Alliance Health Care
Fund, Inc., Alliance High Yield Fund, Inc., Alliance
Institutional Funds, Inc., Alliance Institutional Reserves, Inc.,
Alliance International Fund, Alliance International Premier
Growth Fund, Inc., Alliance Limited Maturity Government Fund,


                               18



<PAGE>

Inc., Alliance Money Market Fund, Alliance Mortgage Securities
Income Fund, Inc., Alliance Multi-Market Strategy Trust, Inc.,
Alliance Municipal Income Fund, Inc., Alliance Municipal Income
Fund II, Alliance Municipal Trust, Alliance New Europe Fund,
Inc., Alliance North American Government Income Trust, Inc.,
Alliance Premier Growth Fund, Inc., Alliance Quasar Fund, Inc.,
Alliance Real Estate Investment Fund, Inc., Alliance Select
Investor Series, Inc., Alliance Technology Fund, Inc., Alliance
Utility Income Fund, Inc., Alliance Variable Products Series
Fund, Inc., Alliance Worldwide Privatization Fund, Inc., The
Alliance Fund, Inc., The Alliance Portfolios and The Hudson River
Trust, all registered open-end investment companies; and to ACM
Government Income Fund, Inc., ACM Government Securities Fund,
Inc., ACM Government Spectrum Fund, Inc., ACM Government
Opportunity Fund, Inc., ACM Managed Income Fund, Inc., ACM
Managed Dollar Income Fund, Inc., ACM Municipal Securities Income
Fund, Inc., Alliance All-Market Advantage Fund, Inc., Alliance
World Dollar Government Fund, Inc., Alliance World Dollar
Government Fund II, Inc., Alliance Global Privatization Fund,
Inc., The Austria Fund, Inc., The Korean Investment Fund, Inc.,
The Southern African Fund and The Spain Fund, Inc., all
registered closed-end investment companies.

Directors and Officers

         The business and affairs of the Fund are managed
under the direction of the Board of DirectionThe Directors
and principal officers of the Fund and their primary
occupations during the past five years are set forth
below.  Unless otherwise specified the address of each of
the following persons is at 1345 Avenue of the Americas, New
York, New York 10105.  Each such Director and officer is also a
trustee, director or officer of other registered investment
companies sponsored by the Adviser.

Directors

      JOHN D. CARIFA,* 54, Chairman of the Board, is the
President, Chief Operating Officer and a Director of ACMC, with
which he has been associated since prior to 1994.

         RUTH BLOCK, 68, was formerly an Executive Vice President
and the Chief Insurance Officer of Equitable.  She is a Director
of Ecolab Incorporated (specialty chemicals) and BP Amoco
Corporation (oil and gas).  Her address is P.O. Box 4623,
Stamford, Connecticut 06903.
____________________

*      An "interested person" of the Fund as defined in the 1940
       Act.

                               19



<PAGE>

         DAVID H. DIEVLER, 70, is an independent consultant.  He
was formerly a Senior Vice President of ACMC until December 1994.
His address is P.O. Box 167, Spring Lake, New Jersey 07762.

         JOHN H. DOBKIN, 57, has been the President of Historic
Hudson Valley (historic preservation) since prior to 1994.
Previously, he was Director of the National Academy of Design.
His address is 150 White Plains Road, Tarrytown, New York 10591.

         WILLIAM H. FOULK, JR., 67, is an Investment Adviser and
an independent consultant.  He was formerly Senior Manager of
Barrett Associates, Inc., a registered investment adviser, with
which he had been associated since prior to 1994.  His address is
Room 100, 2 Greenwich Plaza, Greenwich, Connecticut 06830.

         DR. JAMES M. HESTER, 75, has been President of the Harry
Frank Guggenheim Foundation, with which he has been associated
since prior to 1994.  He was formerly President of New York
University, the New York Botanical Garden and Rector of the
United Nations University.  His address is 25 Cleveland Lane,
Princeton, New Jersey 08540.

         CLIFFORD L. MICHEL, 60, is a member of the law firm of
Cahill Gordon & Reindel, with which he has been associated since
prior to 1994.  He is President and Chief Executive Officer of
Wenonah Development Company (investments) and a Director of
Placer Dome, Inc. (mining).  His address is St. Bernard's Road,
Gladstone, New Jersey 07934.

         DONALD J. ROBINSON, 65, is Senior Counsel to the law
firm of Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe and was formerly a senior
partner and a member of the Executive Committee of that firm.  He
was also a Trustee of the Museum of the City of New York from
1977 to 1995.  His address is 98 Hell's Peak Road, Weston,
Vermont 05161.

Officers

         JOHN D. CARIFA, Chairman and President, see biography
above.

         ALDEN M. STEWART, Senior Vice President - Investments,
53, is an Executive Vice President of ACMC, with which he has
been associated since prior to 1994.  Prior thereto he was
associated with ECMC.

         KATHLEEN A. CORBET, Senior Vice President, 39, is an
Executive Vice President of ACMC, with which she has been
associated since prior to 1994.




                               20



<PAGE>

         MARK H. BREEDON, Vice President, 46, is a Vice President
of ACMC and a Director and Senior Vice President of Alliance
Capital Limited ("ACL"), with which he has been associate since
prior to 1994.

         RANDALL E. HAASE, Vice President, 36, is a Senior Vice
President of ACMC, with which he has been associated since prior
to 1994.

         THOMAS BARDONG, Vice President, 54, is a Senior Vice
President of ACMC, with which he has been associated since prior
to 1994.

         EDMUND P. BERGAN, JR., Secretary, 49, is a Senior Vice
President and the General Counsel of Alliance Fund Distributors,
Inc. ("AFD") and Alliance Fund Services, Inc. ("AFS"), with which
he has been associated since prior to 1994.

         MARK D. GERSTEN, Treasurer and Chief Financial Officer,
49, is a Senior Vice President of AFS and a Vice President of
AFD, with which he has been associated since prior to 1994.

         ANDREW L. GANGOLF, Assistant Secretary, 45, is a Vice
President and Assistant General Counsel of AFD, with which he has
been associated since December 1994.  Prior thereto, he was a
Vice President and Assistant Secretary of Delaware Management
Co., Inc.

         DOMENICK PUGLIESE, Assistant Secretary, 38, is a Vice
President and Assistant General Counsel of AFD, with which he has
been associated since May 1995.  Prior thereto, he was a Vice
President and Counsel of Concord Holding Corporation since prior
to 1994.

         EMILIE D. WRAPP, Assistant Secretary, 43, is a Vice
President and Assistant General Counsel of AFD, with which she
has been associated since prior to 1994.

         VINCENT S. NOTO, Controller, 34, is a Vice President of
AFS, with which he has been associated since prior to 1994.

         The aggregate compensation paid by the Fund to each of
the Directors during its fiscal year ended July 31, 1999, the
aggregate compensation paid to each of the Directors during
calendar year 1998 by all of the funds to which the Adviser
provides investment advisory services (collectively, the
"Alliance Fund Complex") and the total number of registered
investment companies (and separate investment portfolios within
those companies) in the Alliance Fund Complex with respect to
which each of the Directors serves as a director or trustee, are
set forth below.  Neither the Fund nor any other fund in the


                               21



<PAGE>

Alliance Fund Complex provides compensation in the form of
pension or retirement benefits to any of its directors or
trustees.  Each of the Directors is a director or trustee of one
or more other registered investment companies in the Alliance
Fund Complex.

                                                              Total Number
                                                Total Number  of Investment
                                                of Investment Portfolios
                                                Companies in  Within the
                                                the Alliance  Alliance Fund
                                  Total         Fund Complex, Complex,
                                  Compensation  Including the Including the
                                  From the      Fund, as to   Fund, as to
                                  Alliance Fund which the     which the
                    Aggregate     Complex,      Director is a Director is
                    Compensation  Including the Director or   a Director
Name of Director    From the Fund Fund          Trustee       or Trustee
________________    _____________ _____________ _____________ _____________

John D. Carifa        $0             $-0-             50            116
Ruth Block            $3,467         $180,763         37             79
David H. Dievler      $3,584         $216,288         44             86
John H. Dobkin        $3,586         $185,363         42             97
William H. Foulk, Jr. $3,587         $241,003         45            111
Dr. James M. Hester   $3,589         $172,913         38             80
Clifford L. Michel    $3,589         $187,763         39             96
Donald J. Robinson    $2,833         $193,709         41            105

      As of October 8, 1999, the Directors and officers of the
Fund as a group owned 12.5% of the Advisor Class shares of the
Fund and less than 1% of any other class of shares of the Fund.


_______________________________________________________________

                      EXPENSES OF THE FUND
_______________________________________________________________

Distribution Services Agreement

         The Fund has entered into a Distribution Services
Agreement (the "Agreement") with Alliance Fund Distributors,
Inc., the Fund's principal underwriter (the "Principal
Underwriter"), to permit the Principal Underwriter to distribute
the Fund's shares and to permit the Fund to pay distribution
services fees to defray expenses associated with the distribution
of its Class A shares, Class B shares and Class C shares in
accordance with a plan of distribution which is included in the
Agreement and has been duly adopted and approved in accordance



                               22



<PAGE>

with Rule 12b-1 adopted by the Commission under the 1940 Act (the
"Rule 12b-1 Plan").

      During the Fund's fiscal year ended July 31, 1999, with
respect to Class A shares, the Fund paid distribution services
fees for expenditures under the Agreement in the aggregate amount
of $215,726, which constituted .30%, annualized, of the Fund's
aggregate average daily net assets attributable to the Class A
Shares during the year and the Adviser made payments from its own
resources, as described above, aggregating $226,330.  Of the
$442,056 paid by the Fund and the Adviser under the Rule 12b-1
Plan with respect to Class A shares, $33,228 was spent on
advertising, $670 on printing and mailing of prospectuses for
persons other than current shareholders, $245,281 for
compensation to broker-dealers and other financial intermediaries
(including $89,525 to the Fund's Principal Underwriter), $4,602
for compensation to sales personnel and $158,275 was spent on
printing of sales literature, travel, entertainment, due
diligence and other promotional expenses.

      During the Fund's fiscal year ended July 31, 1999, with
respect to Class B shares, the Fund paid distribution services
fees for expenditures under the Agreement in the aggregate amount
of $310,184, which constituted 1.00%, annualized, of the Fund's
aggregate average daily net assets attributable to Class B Shares
during the year and the Adviser made payments from its own
resources, as described above, aggregating $312,820.  Of the
$623,004 paid by the Fund and the Adviser under the Rule 12b-1
Plan with respect to Class B shares, $47,517 was spent on
advertising, $5,885 on printing and mailing of prospectuses for
persons other than current shareholders, $324,333 for
compensation to broker-dealers and other financial intermediaries
(including $127,887 to the Fund's Principal Underwriter), $3,047
for compensation to sales personnel, $200,235 was spent on
printing of sales literature, travel, entertainment, due
diligence and other promotional expenses and $41,987 was spent on
Class B share financing.

      During the Fund's fiscal year ended July 31, 1999, with
respect to Class C shares, the Fund paid distribution services
fees for expenditures under the Agreement in the aggregate amount
of $72,574 which constituted 1.0%, annualized, of the Fund's
aggregate average daily net assets attributable to the Class C
shares during the year and the Adviser made payments from its own
resources, as described above, aggregating $134,866.  Of the
$207,440 paid by the Fund and the Adviser under the Rule 12b-1
Plan with respect to Class C shares, $17,029 was spent on
advertising, $1,275 on printing and mailing of prospectuses for
persons other than current shareholders, $115,924 for
compensation to broker-dealers and other financial intermediaries
(including $43,322 to the Fund's Principal Underwriter), $941 for


                               23




<PAGE>

compensation to sales personnel, $67,929 was spent on printing of
sales literature, travel, entertainment, due diligence and other
promotional expenses and $4,342 was spent on Class C share
financing.

         Distribution services fees are accrued daily and paid
monthly and are charged as expenses of the Fund as accrued.  The
distribution services fees attributable to the Class B shares and
Class C shares are designed to permit an investor to purchase
such shares through broker-dealers without the assessment of an
initial sales charge, and at the same time to permit the
Principal Underwriter to compensate broker-dealers in connection
with the sale of such shares.  In this regard the purpose and
function of the combined contingent deferred sales charge and
distribution services fee on the Class B shares and Class C
shares are the same as those of the initial sales charge and
distribution services fee with respect to the Class A shares in
that in each case the sales charge and distribution services fee
provide for the financing of the distribution of the relevant
class of the Fund's shares.

      With respect to Class A shares of the Fund, distribution
expenses accrued by AFD in one fiscal year may not be paid from
distribution services fees received from the Fund in subsequent
fiscal years.  AFD's compensation with respect to Class B and
Class C shares for any given year, however, will probably exceed
the distribution services fee payable under the Rule 12b-1 Plan
with respect to the class involved and, in the case of Class B
and Class C shares, payments received from contingent deferred
sales charges ("CDSCs").  The excess will be carried forward by
AFD and reimbursed from distribution services fees payable under
the Rule 12b-1 Plan with respect to the class involved and, in
the case of Class B and Class C shares, payments subsequently
received through CDSCs, so long as the Rule 12b-1 Plan is in
effect.

      Unreimbursed distribution expenses incurred as of the
end of the Fund's most recently completed fiscal year, and
carried over for reimbursement in future years in respect of the
Class B and Class C shares for the Fund were, respectively,
$2,907,082 (9.62% of the net assets of Class B) and $811,488
(11.50% of the net assets of Class C).

      The Rule 12b-1 Plan is in compliance with rules of the
National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. which
effectively limit the annual asset-based sales charges and
service fees that a mutual fund may pay on a class of shares to
 .75% and .25%, respectively, of the average annual net assets
attributable to that class.  The rules also limit the aggregate
of all front-end, deferred and asset-based sales charges imposed
with respect to a class of shares by a mutual fund that also


                               24



<PAGE>

charges a service fee to 6.25% of cumulative gross sales of
shares of that class, plus interest at the prime rate plus 1% per
annum.

      In approving the 12b-1 Plan, the Directors of the Fund
determined that there was a reasonable likelihood that the Rule
12b-1 Plan would benefit the Fund and its shareholders.  The
distribution services fee of a particular class will not be used
to subsidize the provision of distribution services with respect
to any other class.

      The Adviser may from time to time and from its own funds
or such other resources as may be permitted by rules of the
Commission make payments for distribution services to the
Principal Underwriter; the latter may in turn pay part or all of
such compensation to brokers or other persons for their
distribution assistance.

      The Agreement will continue in effect for successive
twelve-month periods (computed from each October 1) provided,
however, that such continuance is specifically approved at least
annually by the Directors, or by vote of the holders of a
majority of the Fund's outstanding voting securities (as defined
in the 1940 Act), of that class, and in either case, by a
majority of the Directors who are not parties to the Agreement or
interested persons, as defined in the 1940 Act, of any such party
(other than as directors of the Fund) and who have no direct or
indirect financial interest in the operation of the Rule 12b-1
plan or any agreement related thereto.  Most recently the
continuance of the Agreement was approved until September 30,
2000 by a vote, cast in person, of the Board of Directors,
including a majority of the Directors who are not "interested
persons", as defined in the 1940 Act, at their Regular Meeting
held on July 14, 1999.

      In the event that the Rule 12b-1 Plan is terminated or
not continued with respect to the Class A shares, Class B shares
or Class C shares, (i) no distribution services fees (other than
current amounts accrued but not yet paid) would be owed by the
Fund to the Principal Underwriter with respect to that class, and
(ii) the Fund would not be obligated to pay the Principal
Underwriter for any amounts expended under the Agreement not
previously recovered by the Principal Underwriter from
distribution services fees in respect of shares of such class or
through deferred sales charges.

         The Glass-Steagall Act and other applicable laws may
limit the ability of a bank or other depository institution to
become an underwriter or distributor of securities. However, in
the opinion of the Fund's management, based on the advice of
counsel, these laws do not prohibit such depository institutions


                               25



<PAGE>

from providing services for investment companies such as the
administrative, accounting and other services referred to in the
Agreement. In the event that a change in these laws prevented a
bank from providing such services, it is expected that other
services arrangements would be made and that shareholders would
not be adversely affected.

Transfer Agency Agreement

      Alliance Fund Services, Inc., an indirect wholly-owned
subsidiary of the Adviser located at 500 Plaza Drive, Secaucus,
New Jersey 07904, receives a transfer agency fee per account
holder of each of the Class A shares, Class B shares, Class C
shares and Advisor Class shares of the Fund, plus reimbursement
for out-of-pocket expenses.  The transfer agency fee with respect
to the Class B and Class C shares is higher than the transfer
agency fee with respect to the Class A and Advisor Class shares,
reflecting the additional costs associated with the Class B and
Class C contingent deferred sales charge.  During the fiscal year
ended in 1999, the Fund paid Alliance Fund Services, Inc.
$302,942 for transfer agency services.

_______________________________________________________________

                       PURCHASE OF SHARES
_______________________________________________________________

         The following information supplements that set forth in
the Fund's Prospectus under the heading "Purchase and Sale of
Shares -- How to Buy Shares."

General

         Shares of the Fund are offered on a continuous basis at
a price equal to their net asset value plus an initial sales
charge at the time of purchase ("Class A shares"), with a
contingent deferred sales charge ("Class B shares"), without any
initial sales charge and, as long as the shares are held for one
year or more, without any contingent deferred sales charge
("Class C shares"), or, to investors eligible to purchase Advisor
Class shares, without any initial, contingent deferred or asset-
based sales charge, in each case as described below.  Shares of
the Fund that are offered subject to a sales charge are offered
through (i) investment dealers that are members of the National
Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. and have entered into
selected dealer agreements with the Principal Underwriter
("selected dealers"), (ii) depository institutions and other
financial intermediaries or their affiliates, that have entered
into selected agent agreements with the Principal Underwriter
("selected agents"), and (iii) the Principal Underwriter.



                               26



<PAGE>

         Advisor Class shares of the Fund may be purchased and
held solely (i) through accounts established under fee-based
programs, sponsored and maintained by registered broker-dealers
or other financial intermediaries and approved by the Principal
Underwriter, (ii) through self-directed defined contribution
employee benefit plans (e.g., 401(k) plans) that have at least
1,000 participants or $25 million in assets, (iii) by the
categories of investors described in clauses (i) through (iv)
below under "--Sales at Net Asset Value" (other than officers,
directors and present and full-time employees of selected dealers
or agents, or relatives of such person, or any trust, individual
retirement account or retirement plan account for the benefit of
such relative, all of whom are not eligible to purchase and hold
Advisor Class shares) or, (iv) by directors and present or
retired full-time employees of CB Richard Ellis, Inc.  Generally,
a fee-based program must charge an asset-based or other similar
fee and must invest at least $250,000 in Advisor Class shares of
the Fund in order to be approved by the Principal Underwriter for
investment in Advisor Class shares.

         Investors may purchase shares of the Fund either through
selected broker-dealers, agents, financial intermediaries or
other financial representatives or directly through the Principal
Underwriter. A transaction, service, administrative or other
similar fee may be charged by your broker-dealer, agent,
financial intermediary or other financial representative with
respect to the purchase, sale or exchange of shares made through
such financial representative.  Such financial representative may
also impose requirements with respect to the purchase, sale or
exchange of shares that are different from, or in addition to,
those imposed by the Fund, including requirements as to the
minimum initial and subsequent investment amounts.  Sales
personnel of selected dealers and agents distributing the Fund's
shares may receive differing compensation for selling Class A,
Class B, Class C or Advisor Class shares.

         The Fund may refuse any order for the purchase of
shares.  The Fund reserves the right to suspend the sale of its
shares to the public in response to conditions in the securities
markets or for other reasons.

         The public offering price of shares of the Fund is their
net asset value, plus, in the case of Class A shares, a sales
charge which will vary depending on the purchase alternative
chosen by the investor, as shown in the table below under
"Class A Shares."  On each Fund business day on which a purchase
or redemption order is received by the Fund and trading in the
types of securities in which the Fund invests might materially
affect the value of Fund shares, the per share net asset value is
computed in accordance with the Fund's Articles of Incorporation
and By-Laws as of the next close of regular trading on the New


                               27



<PAGE>

York Stock Exchange (the "Exchange") (currently 4:00 p.m. Eastern
time) by dividing the value of the Fund's total assets, less its
liabilities, by the total number of its shares then outstanding.
A Fund business day is any day on which the Exchange is open for
trading.

         The respective per share net asset values of the
Class A, Class B, Class C and Advisor Class shares are expected
to be substantially the same.  Under certain circumstances,
however, the per share net asset values of the Class B and
Class C shares may be lower than the per share net asset value of
the Class A and Advisor Class shares, as a result of the
differential daily expense accruals of the distribution and
transfer agency fees applicable with respect to those classes of
shares.  Even under those circumstances, the per share net asset
values of the four classes eventually will tend to converge
immediately after the payment of dividends, which will differ by
approximately the amount of the expense accrual differential
among the classes.

         The Fund will accept unconditional orders for its shares
to be executed at the public offering price equal to their net
asset value next determined (plus applicable Class A sales
charges), as described below.  Orders received by the Principal
Underwriter prior to the close of regular trading on the Exchange
on each day the Exchange is open for trading are priced at the
net asset value computed as of the close of regular trading on
the Exchange on that day (plus applicable Class A sales charges).
In the case of orders for purchase of shares placed through
selected dealers, agents or financial representatives, as
applicable, the applicable public offering price will be the net
asset value as so determined, but only if the selected dealer,
agent or financial representative receives the order prior to the
close of regular trading on the Exchange and transmits it to the
Principal Underwriter prior to 5:00 p.m. Eastern time.  The
selected dealer, agent or financial representative, as
applicable, is responsible for transmitting such orders by
5:00 p.m. Eastern time (certain selected dealers, agents or
financial representatives may enter into operating agreements
permitting them to transmit purchase information to the Principal
Underwriter after 5:00 p.m. Eastern time and receive that day's
net asset value).  If the selected dealer, agent or financial
representative fails to do so, the investor's right to that day's
closing price must be settled between the investor and the
selected dealer, agent or financial representative, as
applicable.  If the selected dealer, agent or financial
representative, as applicable, receives the order after the close
of regular trading on the Exchange, the price will be based on
the net asset value determined as of the close of regular trading
on the Exchange on the next day it is open for trading.



                               28



<PAGE>

         Following the initial purchase of Fund shares, a
shareholder may place orders to purchase additional shares by
telephone if the shareholder has completed the appropriate
portion of the Subscription Application or an "Autobuy"
application obtained by calling the "For Literature" telephone
number shown on the cover of this Statement of Additional
Information.  Except with respect to certain omnibus accounts,
telephone purchase orders may not exceed $500,000.  Payment for
shares purchased by telephone can be made only by electronic
funds transfer from a bank account maintained by the shareholder
at a bank that is a member of the National Automated Clearing
House Association ("NACHA").  If a shareholder's telephone
purchase request is received before 3:00 p.m. Eastern time on a
Fund business day, the order to purchase shares is automatically
placed the following Fund business day, and the applicable public
offering price will be the public offering price determined as of
the close of business on such following business day.

         Full and fractional shares are credited to a
subscriber's account in the amount of his or her subscription.
As a convenience to the subscriber, and to avoid unnecessary
expense to the Fund, stock certificates representing shares of
the Fund are not issued except upon written request to the Fund
by the shareholder or his or her authorized selected dealer or
agent.  This facilitates later redemption and relieves the
shareholder of the responsibility for and inconvenience of lost
or stolen certificates.  No certificates are issued for
fractional shares, although such shares remain in the
shareholder's account on the books of the Fund.

      In addition to the discount or commission amount paid to
dealers or agents, the Principal Underwriter from time to time
pays additional cash or other incentives to dealers or agents, in
connection with the sale of shares of the Fund.  Such additional
amounts may be utilized, in whole or in part, to provide
additional compensation to registered representatives who sell
shares of the Fund.  On some occasions, such cash or other
incentives may take the form of payment for attendance at
seminars, meals, sporting events or theater performances, or
payment for travel, lodging and entertainment incurred in
connection with travel taken by persons associated with a dealer
or agent to locations within or outside the United States.  Such
dealer or agent may elect to receive cash incentives of
equivalent amount in lieu of such payments.

         Class A, Class B, Class C and Advisor Class shares each
represent an interest in the same portfolio of investments of the
Fund, have the same rights and are identical in all respects,
except that (i) Class A shares bear the expense of the initial
sales charge (or contingent deferred sales charge, when
applicable) and Class B and Class C shares bear the expense of


                               29



<PAGE>

the contingent deferred sales charge, (ii) Class B and Class C
shares each bear the expense of a higher distribution services
fee than do Class A shares, and Advisor Class shares do not bear
such a fee,(iii) Class B and Class C shares bear higher transfer
agency costs than those borne by Class A and Advisor Class shares,
(iv) each of Class A, Class B and Class C shares has exclusive
voting rights with respect to provisions of the Rule 12b-1 Plan
pursuant to which its distribution services fee is paid and other
matters for which separate class voting is appropriate under
applicable law, provided that, if the Fund submits to a vote of
the Class A shareholders, an amendment to the Rule 12b-1 Plan
that would materially increase the amount to be paid thereunder
with respect to the Class A shares, then such amendment will also
be submitted to the Class B and Advisor Class shareholders and
the Class A, Class B and Advisor Class shareholders will vote
separately by class, and (v) Class B and Advisor Class shares are
subject to a conversion feature.  Each class has different
exchange privileges and certain different shareholder service
options available.

         The Directors of the Fund have determined that currently
no conflict of interest exists between or among the Class A,
Class B, Class C and Advisor Class shares.  On an ongoing basis,
the Directors of the Fund, pursuant to their fiduciary duties
under the 1940 Act and state law, will seek to ensure that no
such conflict arises.

Alternative Retail Purchase Arrangements -- Class A, Class B and
Class C Shares.**

         Class A, Class B and Class C shares have the following
alternative purchase arrangements:  Class A shares are sold to
investors choosing the initial sales charge alternative, Class B
shares are sold to investors choosing the deferred sales charge
alternative, and Class C shares are sold to investors choosing
the asset-based sales charge alternative.  These alternative
purchase arrangements permit an investor to choose the method of
purchasing shares that is most beneficial given the amount of the
purchase, the length of time the investor expects to hold the
shares, and other circumstances.  Investors should consider
whether, during the anticipated life of their investment in the
Fund, the accumulated distribution services fee and contingent
deferred sales charges on Class B shares prior to conversion, or
the accumulated distribution services fee and contingent deferred
sales charges on Class C shares, would be less than the initial
sales charge and accumulated distribution services fee on Class A
shares purchased at the same time, and to what extent such
____________________

**     Advisor Class shares are sold only to investors described
       above in this section under "General."


                               30



<PAGE>

differential would be offset by the higher return of Class A
shares.  Class A shares will normally be more beneficial than
Class B shares to the investor who qualifies for reduced initial
sales charges on Class A shares, as described below.  In this
regard, the Principal Underwriter will reject any order (except
orders from certain retirement plans and certain employee benefit
plans) for more than $250,000 for Class B shares.  (See
Appendix A for information concerning the eligibility of certain
employee benefit plans to purchase Class B shares at net asset
value without being subject to a contingent deferred sales charge
and the ineligibility of certain such plans to purchase Class A
shares.)  Class C shares will normally not be suitable for the
investor who qualifies to purchase Class A shares at net asset
value.  For this reason, the Principal Underwriter will reject
any order for more than $1,000,000 for Class C shares.

         Class A shares are subject to a lower distribution
services fee and, accordingly, pay correspondingly higher
dividends per share than Class B shares or Class C shares.
However, because initial sales charges are deducted at the time
of purchase, investors purchasing Class A shares would not have
all their funds invested initially and, therefore, would
initially own fewer shares.  Investors not qualifying for reduced
initial sales charges who expect to maintain their investment for
an extended period of time might consider purchasing Class A
shares because the accumulated continuing distribution charges on
Class B shares or Class C shares may exceed the initial sales
charge on Class A shares during the life of the investment.
Again, however, such investors must weigh this consideration
against the fact that, because of such initial sales charges, not
all their funds will be invested initially.

         Other investors might determine, however, that it would
be more advantageous to purchase Class B shares or Class C shares
in order to have all their funds invested initially, although
remaining subject to higher continuing distribution charges and
being subject to a contingent deferred sales charge for a four-
year and one-year period, respectively.  For example, based on
current fees and expenses, an investor subject to the 4.25%
initial sales charge on Class A shares would have to hold his or
her investment approximately seven years for the Class C
distribution services fee to exceed the initial sales charge plus
the accumulated distribution services fee of Class A shares.  In
this example, an investor intending to maintain his or her
investment for a longer period might consider purchasing Class A
shares.  This example does not take into account the time value
of money, which further reduces the impact of the Class C
distribution services fees on the investment, fluctuations in net
asset value or the effect of different performance assumptions.




                               31



<PAGE>

         Those investors who prefer to have all of their funds
invested initially but may not wish to retain Fund shares for the
four-year period during which Class B shares are subject to a
contingent deferred sales charge may find it more advantageous to
purchase Class C shares.

      During the Fund's fiscal years ended July 31, 1999,
July 31, 1998 and July 31, 1997, the aggregate amount of
underwriting commissions paid with respect to shares of the Fund
were $72,792, $135,268 and $268,095, respectively.  Of that
amount, the Principal Underwriter, received $17,766, $8,313 and
10,485, respectively, representing that portion of the sales
charges paid on shares of the Fund sold during the year which was
not reallowed to selected dealers or agents (and was,
accordingly, retained by the Principal Underwriter).  During the
Fund's fiscal years ended in 1999, 1998 and 1997, the Principal
Underwriter received contingent deferred sales charges of $1,306,
$3 and $0, respectively, on Class A Shares, $93,920, $100,848 and
$27,720, respectively, on Class B shares, and $4,056, $2,747 and
$1,969, respectively, on Class C shares.

Class A Shares

         The public offering price of Class A shares is the net
asset value plus a sales charge, as set forth below.

                          Sales Charge

                                                   Discount or
                                                   Commission
                                  As % of          to Dealers
                   As % of        the Public       or Agents
Amount of          Net Amount     Offering         as % of
Purchase           Invested       Price            Offering Price
_________          __________     __________       ______________

Less than
  $100,000             4.44%        4.25%              4.00%
$100,000 but
  less than
  $250,000             3.36         3.25               3.00
$250,000 but
  less than
  $500,000             2.30         2.25               2.00
$500,000 but
  less than
  $1,000,000*          1.78         1.75               1.50

____________________
*  There is no initial sales charge on transactions of $1,000,000
or more.


                               32



<PAGE>


         With respect to purchases of $1,000,000 or more, Class A
shares redeemed within one year of purchase will be subject to a
contingent deferred sales charge equal to 1% of the lesser of the
cost of the shares being redeemed or their net asset value at the
time of redemption.  Accordingly, no sales charge will be imposed
on increases in net asset value above the initial purchase price.
In addition, no charge will be assessed on shares derived from
reinvestment of dividends or capital gains distributions.  The
contingent deferred sales charge on Class A shares will be waived
on certain redemptions, as described below under "--Class B
Shares."  In determining the contingent deferred sales charge
applicable to a redemption of Class A shares, it will be assumed
that the redemption is, first, of any shares that are not subject
to a contingent deferred sales charge (for example, because an
initial sales charge was paid with respect to the shares, or they
have been held beyond the period during which the charge applies
or were acquired upon the reinvestment of dividends or
distributions) and, second, of shares held longest during the
time they are subject to the sales charge.  Proceeds from the
contingent deferred sales charge on Class A shares are paid to
the Principal Underwriter and are used by the Principal
Underwriter to defray the expenses of the Principal Underwriter
related to providing distribution-related services to the Fund in
connection with the sales of Class A shares, such as the payment
of compensation to selected dealers and agents for selling
Class A shares.  With respect to purchases of $1,000,000 or more
made through selected dealers or agents, the Adviser may,
pursuant to the Distribution Services Agreement described above,
pay such dealers or agents from its own resources a fee of up to
1% of the amount invested to compensate such dealers or agents
for their distribution assistance in connection with such
purchases.

         No initial sales charge is imposed on Class A shares
issued (i) pursuant to the automatic reinvestment of income
dividends or capital gains distributions, (ii) in exchange for
Class A shares of other "Alliance Mutual Funds" (as that term is
defined under "--Combined Purchase Privilege" below), except that
an initial sales charge will be imposed on Class A shares issued
in exchange for Class A shares of AFD Exchange Reserves ("AFDER")
that were purchased for cash without the payment of an initial
sales charge and without being subject to a contingent deferred
sales charge or (iii) upon the automatic conversion of Class B
shares or Advisor Class shares as described below under "Class B
shares-- Conversion Feature" and "--Conversion of Advisor Class
shares to Class A shares."  The Fund receives the entire net
asset value of its Class A shares sold to investors.  The
Principal Underwriter's commission is the sales charge shown
above less any applicable discount or commission "reallowed" to
selected dealers and agents.  The Principal Underwriter will


                               33



<PAGE>

reallow discounts to selected dealers and agents in the amounts
indicated in the table above.  In this regard, the Principal
Underwriter may elect to reallow the entire sales charge to
selected dealers and agents for all sales with respect to which
orders are placed with the Principal Underwriter.  A selected
dealer who receives reallowance in excess of 90% of such a sales
charge may be deemed to be an "underwriter" under the Securities
Act.

         Investors choosing the initial sales charge alternative
may under certain circumstances be entitled to pay (i) no initial
sales charge (but may be subject in most such cases to a
contingent deferred sales charge) or (ii) a reduced initial sales
charge.  The circumstances under which such investors may pay a
reduced initial sales charge are described below.

         Combined Purchase Privilege.  Certain persons may
qualify for the sales charge reductions indicated in the schedule
of such charges above by combining purchases of shares of the
Fund into a single "purchase", if the resulting "purchase" totals
at least $100,000.  The term "purchase" refers to: (i) a single
purchase by an individual, or to concurrent purchases, which in
the aggregate are at least equal to the prescribed amounts, by an
individual, his or her spouse and their children under the age of
21 years purchasing shares of the Fund for his, her or their own
account(s); (ii) a single purchase by a trustee or other
fiduciary purchasing shares for a single trust, estate or single
fiduciary account although more than one beneficiary is involved;
or (iii) a single purchase for the employee benefit plans of a
single employer.  The term "purchase" also includes purchases by
any "company", as the term is defined in the 1940 Act, but does
not include purchases by any such company which has not been in
existence for at least six months or which has no purpose other
than the purchase of shares of the Fund or shares of other
registered investment companies at a discount.  The term
"purchase" does not include purchases by any group of individuals
whose sole organizational nexus is that the participants therein
are credit card holders of a company, policy holders of an
insurance company, customers of either a bank or broker-dealer or
clients of an investment adviser.  A "purchase" may also include
shares, purchased at the same time through a single selected
dealer or agent, of any other "Alliance Mutual Fund."  Currently,
the Alliance Mutual Funds include:

AFD Exchange Reserves
Alliance All-Asia Investment Fund, Inc.
Alliance Balanced Shares, Inc.
Alliance Bond Fund, Inc.
  -Corporate Bond Portfolio
  -Quality Bond Portfolio
  -U.S. Government Portfolio


                               34



<PAGE>

Alliance Global Dollar Government Fund, Inc.
Alliance Global Environment Fund, Inc.
Alliance Global Strategic Income Trust, Inc.
Alliance Greater China '97 Fund, Inc.
Alliance Growth and Income Fund, Inc.
Alliance Health Care Fund, Inc.
Alliance High Yield Fund, Inc.
Alliance International Fund
Alliance International Premier Growth Fund, Inc.
Alliance Limited Maturity Government Fund, Inc.
Alliance Mortgage Securities Income Fund, Inc.
Alliance Multi-Market Strategy Trust, Inc.
Alliance Municipal Income Fund, Inc.
  -California Portfolio
  -Insured California Portfolio
  -Insured National Portfolio
  -National Portfolio
  -New York Portfolio
Alliance Municipal Income Fund II
  -Arizona Portfolio
  -Florida Portfolio
  -Massachusetts Portfolio
  -Michigan Portfolio
  -Minnesota Portfolio
  -New Jersey Portfolio
  -Ohio Portfolio
  -Pennsylvania Portfolio
  -Virginia Portfolio
Alliance New Europe Fund, Inc.
Alliance North American Government Income Trust, Inc.
Alliance Premier Growth Fund, Inc.
Alliance Quasar Fund, Inc.
Alliance Real Estate Investment Fund, Inc.
Alliance Technology Fund, Inc.
Alliance Utility Income Fund, Inc.
Alliance Worldwide Privatization Fund, Inc.
The Alliance Fund, Inc.
The Alliance Portfolios
  -Alliance Growth Fund
  -Alliance Conservative Investors Fund
  -Alliance Growth Investors Fund
  -Alliance Short-Term U.S. Government Fund

         Prospectuses for the Alliance Mutual Funds may be
obtained without charge by contacting Alliance Fund Services,
Inc. at the address or the "For Literature" telephone number
shown on the front cover of this Statement of Additional
Information.

         Cumulative Quantity Discount (Right of Accumulation). An
investor's purchase of additional Class A shares of the Fund may


                               35



<PAGE>

qualify for a Cumulative Quantity Discount.  The applicable sales
charge will be based on the total of:

         (i)    the investor's current purchase;

         (ii)   the net asset value (at the close of business on
                the previous day) of (a) all shares of the Fund
                held by the investor and (b) all shares of any
                other Alliance Mutual Fund held by the investor;
                and

         (iii)  the net asset value of all shares described in
                paragraph (ii) owned by another shareholder
                eligible to combine his or her purchase with that
                of the investor into a single "purchase" (see
                above).

         For example, if an investor owned shares of an Alliance
Mutual Fund worth $200,000 at their then current net asset value
and, subsequently, purchased Class A shares of the Fund worth an
additional $100,000, the initial sales charge for the $100,000
purchase would be at the 2.25% rate applicable to a single
$300,000 purchase of shares of the Fund, rather than the 3.25%
rate.

         To qualify for the Combined Purchase Privilege or to
obtain the Cumulative Quantity Discount on a purchase through a
selected dealer or agent, the investor or selected dealer or
agent must provide the Principal Underwriter with sufficient
information to verify that each purchase qualifies for the
privilege or discount.

         Statement of Intention.  Class A investors may also
obtain the reduced sales charges shown in the table above by
means of a written Statement of Intention, which expresses the
investor's intention to invest not less than $100,000 within a
period of 13 months in Class A shares (or Class A, Class B,
Class C and/or Advisor Class shares) of the Fund or any other
Alliance Mutual Fund.  Each purchase of shares under a Statement
of Intention will be made at the public offering price or prices
applicable at the time of such purchase to a single transaction
of the dollar amount indicated in the Statement of Intention.  At
the investor's option, a Statement of Intention may include
purchases of shares of the Fund or any other Alliance Mutual Fund
made not more than 90 days prior to the date that the investor
signs a Statement of Intention; however, the 13-month period
during which the Statement of Intention is in effect will begin
on the date of the earliest purchase to be included.

         Investors qualifying for the Combined Purchase Privilege
described above may purchase shares of the Alliance Mutual Funds


                               36



<PAGE>

under a single Statement of Intention.  For example, if at the
time an investor signs a Statement of Intention to invest at
least $100,000 in Class A shares of the Fund, the investor and
the investor's spouse each purchase shares of the Fund worth
$20,000 (for a total of $40,000), it will only be necessary to
invest a total of $60,000 during the following 13 months in
shares of the Fund or any other Alliance Mutual Fund, to qualify
for the 3.25% sales charge on the total amount being invested
(the sales charge applicable to an investment of $100,000).

         The Statement of Intention is not a binding obligation
upon the investor to purchase the full amount indicated.  The
minimum initial investment under a Statement of Intention is 5%
of such amount.  Shares purchased with the first 5% of such
amount will be held in escrow (while remaining registered in the
name of the investor) to secure payment of the higher sales
charge applicable to the shares actually purchased if the full
amount indicated is not purchased, and such escrowed shares will
be involuntarily redeemed to pay the additional sales charge, if
necessary.  Dividends on escrowed shares, whether paid in cash or
reinvested in additional Fund shares, are not subject to escrow.
When the full amount indicated has been purchased, the escrow
will be released.  To the extent that an investor purchases more
than the dollar amount indicated on the Statement of Intention
and qualifies for a further reduced sales charge, the sales
charge will be adjusted for the entire amount purchased at the
end of the 13-month period.  The difference in the sales charge
will be used to purchase additional shares of the Fund subject to
the rate of sales charge applicable to the actual amount of the
aggregate purchases.

         Investors wishing to enter into a Statement of Intention
in conjunction with their initial investment in Class A shares of
the Fund should complete the appropriate portion of the
Subscription Application found in the Prospectus while current
Class A shareholders desiring to do so can obtain a form of
Statement of Intention by contacting Alliance Fund Services, Inc.
at the address or telephone numbers shown on the cover of this
Statement of Additional Information.

         Certain Retirement Plans.  Multiple participant payroll
deduction retirement plans may also purchase shares of the Fund
or any other Alliance Mutual Fund at a reduced sales charge on a
monthly basis during the 13-month period following such a plan's
initial purchase.  The sales charge applicable to such initial
purchase of shares of the Fund will be that normally applicable,
under the schedule of sales charges set forth in this Statement
of Additional Information, to an investment 13 times larger than
such initial purchase.  The sales charge applicable to each
succeeding monthly purchase will be that normally applicable,
under such schedule, to an investment equal to the sum of (i) the


                               37



<PAGE>

total purchase previously made during the 13-month period and
(ii) the current month's purchase multiplied by the number of
months (including the current month) remaining in the 13-month
period.  Sales charges previously paid during such period will
not be retroactively adjusted on the basis of later purchases.

         Reinstatement Privilege.  A shareholder who has caused
any or all of his or her Class A or Class B shares of the Fund to
be redeemed or repurchased may reinvest all or any portion of the
redemption or repurchase proceeds in Class A shares of the Fund
at net asset value without any sales charge, provided that
(i) such reinvestment is made within 120 calendar days after the
redemption or repurchase date and (ii) for Class B shares, a
contingent deferred sales charge has been paid and the Principal
Underwriter has approved, at its discretion, the reinstatement of
such shares.  Shares are sold to a reinvesting shareholder at the
net asset value next determined as described above.  A
reinstatement pursuant to this privilege will not cancel the
redemption or repurchase transaction; therefore, any gain or loss
so realized will be recognized for federal income tax purposes
except that no loss will be recognized to the extent that the
proceeds are reinvested in shares of the Fund within 30 calendar
days after the redemption or repurchase transaction.  Investors
may exercise the reinstatement privilege by written request sent
to the Fund at the address shown on the cover of this Statement
of Additional Information.

         Sales at Net Asset Value.  The Fund may sell its Class A
shares at net asset value (i.e., without an initial sales charge)
and without any contingent deferred sales charge to certain
categories of investors, including: (i) investment management
clients of the Adviser or its affiliates; (ii) officers and
present or former Directors of the Fund; present or former
directors and trustees of other investment companies managed by
the Adviser; present or retired full-time employees of the
Adviser, the Principal Underwriter, Alliance Fund Services, Inc.
and their affiliates; officers and directors of ACMC, the
Principal Underwriter, Alliance Fund Services, Inc. and their
affiliates; officers, directors and present and full-time
employees of selected dealers or agents; or the spouse, sibling,
direct ancestor or direct descendant (collectively "relatives")
of any such person; or any trust, individual retirement account
or retirement plan account for the benefit of any such person or
relative; or the estate of any such person or relative, if such
shares are purchased for investment purposes (such shares may not
be resold except to the Fund); (iii) the Adviser, Principal
Underwriter, Alliance Fund Services, Inc. and their affiliates;
certain employee benefit plans for employees of the Adviser, the
Principal Underwriter, Alliance Fund Services, Inc. and their
affiliates; (iv) registered investment advisers or other
financial intermediaries who charge a management, consulting or


                               38



<PAGE>

other fee for their services and who purchase shares through a
broker or agent approved by the Principal Underwriter and clients
of such registered investment advisers or financial
intermediaries whose accounts are linked to the master account of
such investment adviser or financial intermediary on the books of
such approved broker or agent; (v) persons participating in a
fee-based program, sponsored and maintained by a registered
broker-dealer or other financial intermediary and approved by the
Principal Underwriter, pursuant to which such persons pay an
asset-based fee to such broker-dealer or financial intermediary,
or its affiliate or agent, for services in the nature of
investment advisory or administrative services; (vi) persons who
establish to the Principal Underwriter's satisfaction that they
are investing within such time period as may be designated by the
Principal Underwriter, proceeds of redemption of shares of such
other registered investment companies as may be designated from
time to time by the Principal Underwriter; and (vii) employer-
sponsored qualified pensions or profit-sharing plans (including
Section 401(k) plans), custodial accounts maintained pursuant to
Section 403(b)(7) retirement plans and individual retirement
accounts (including individual retirement accounts to which
simplified employee pension ("SEP") contributions are made), if
such plans or accounts are established or administered under
programs sponsored by administrators or other persons that have
been approved by the Principal Underwriter.

Class B Shares

         Investors may purchase Class B shares at the public
offering price equal to the net asset value per share of the
Class B shares on the date of purchase without the imposition of
a sales charge at the time of purchase.  The Class B shares are
sold without an initial sales charge so that the Fund will
receive the full amount of the investor's purchase payment.

         Proceeds from the contingent deferred sales charge are
paid to the Principal Underwriter and are used by the Principal
Underwriter to defray the expenses of the Principal Underwriter
related to providing distribution-related services to the Fund in
connection with the sale of the Class B shares, such as the
payment of compensation to selected dealers and agents for
selling Class B shares.  The combination of the contingent
deferred sales charge and the distribution services fee enables
the Fund to sell the Class B shares without a sales charge being
deducted at the time of purchase.  The higher distribution
services fee incurred by Class B shares will cause such shares to
have a higher expense ratio and to pay lower dividends than those
related to Class A shares.

         Contingent Deferred Sales Charge.  Class B shares that
are redeemed within four years of purchase will be subject to a


                               39



<PAGE>

contingent deferred sales charge at the rates set forth below
charged as a percentage of the dollar amount subject thereto.
The charge will be assessed on an amount equal to the lesser of
the cost of the shares being redeemed or their net asset value at
the time of redemption.  Accordingly, no sales charge will be
imposed on increases in net asset value above the initial
purchase price.  In addition, no charge will be assessed on
shares derived from reinvestment of dividends or capital gains
distributions.

         To illustrate, assume that on or after November 19, 1993
an investor purchased 100 Class B shares at $10 per share (at a
cost of $1,000) and in the second year after purchase, the net
asset value per share is $12 and, during such time, the investor
has acquired 10 additional Class B shares upon dividend
reinvestment. If at such time the investor makes his or her first
redemption of 50 Class B shares (proceeds of $600), 10 Class B
shares will not be subject to charge because of dividend
reinvestment.  With respect to the remaining 40 Class B shares,
the charge is applied only to the original cost of $10 per share
and not to the increase in net asset value of $2 per share.
Therefore, $400 of the $600 redemption proceeds will be charged
at a rate of 3.0% (the applicable rate in the second year after
purchase, as set forth below).

         The amount of the contingent deferred sales charge, if
any, will vary depending on the number of years from the time of
payment for the purchase of Class B shares until the time of
redemption of such shares.

             Contingent Deferred Sales Charge as a %
                of Dollar Amount Subject to Charge

                             Shares Purchased   Shares Purchased
                                  Before           On Or After
Years Since Purchase         November 19, 1993  November 19, 1993

First                             5.50%              4.0%
Second                            4.50%              3.0%
Third                             3.50%              2.0%
Fourth                            2.50%              1.0%
Fifth                             1.50%              None
Sixth                             0.50%              None
Seventh and thereafter            None               None


         In determining the contingent deferred sales charge
applicable to a redemption of Class B shares, it will be assumed
that the redemption is, first, of any shares that were acquired
upon the reinvestment of dividends or distributions and, second,
of shares held longest during the time they are subject to the


                               40



<PAGE>

sales charge.  When shares acquired in an exchange are redeemed,
the applicable contingent deferred sales charge and conversion
schedules will be the schedules that applied at the time of the
purchase of shares of the corresponding class of the Alliance
Mutual Fund originally purchased by the shareholder.

         The contingent deferred sales charge is waived on
redemptions of shares (i) following the death or disability, as
defined in the Code, of a shareholder, (ii) to the extent that
the redemption represents a minimum required distribution from an
individual retirement account or other retirement plan to a
shareholder who has attained the age of 70-1/2, (iii) that had
been purchased by present or former Directors of the Fund, by the
relative of any such person, by any trust, individual retirement
account or retirement plan account for the benefit of any such
person or relative, or by the estate of any such person or
relative, or (iv) pursuant to a systematic withdrawal plan (see
"Shareholder Services--Systematic Withdrawal Plan" below).

         Conversion Feature.  Eight years after the end of the
calendar month in which the shareholder's purchase order was
accepted, Class B shares will automatically convert to Class A
shares and will no longer be subject to a higher distribution
services fee.  Such conversion will occur on the basis of the
relative net asset values of the two classes, without the
imposition of any sales load, fee or other charge.  The purpose
of the conversion feature is to reduce the distribution services
fee paid by holders of Class B shares that have been outstanding
long enough for the Principal Underwriter to have been
compensated for distribution expenses incurred in the sale of
such shares.

         For purposes of conversion to Class A, Class B shares
purchased through the reinvestment of dividends and distributions
paid in respect of Class B shares in a shareholder's account will
be considered to be held in a separate sub-account.  Each time
any Class B shares in the shareholder's account (other than those
in the sub-account) convert to Class A, an equal pro-rata portion
of the Class B shares in the sub-account will also convert to
Class A.

         The conversion of Class B shares to Class A shares is
subject to the continuing availability of an opinion of counsel
to the effect that the conversion of Class B shares to Class A
shares does not constitute a taxable event under federal income
tax law.  The conversion of Class B shares to Class A shares may
be suspended if such an opinion is no longer available at the
time such conversion is to occur.  In that event, no further
conversions of Class B shares would occur, and shares might
continue to be subject to the higher distribution services fee
for an indefinite period which may extend beyond the period


                               41



<PAGE>

ending eight years after the end of the calendar month in which
the shareholder's purchase order was accepted.

Class C Shares

         Investors may purchase Class C shares at the public
offering price equal to the net asset value per share of the
Class C shares on the date of purchase without the imposition of
a sales charge either at the time of purchase or, as long as the
shares are held for one year or more, upon redemption.  Class C
shares are sold without an initial sales charge so that the Fund
will receive the full amount of the investor's purchase payment
and, as long as the shares are held for one year or more, without
a contingent deferred sales charge so that the investor will
receive as proceeds upon redemption the entire net asset value of
his or her Class C shares. The Class C distribution services fee
enables the Fund to sell Class C shares without either an initial
or contingent deferred sales charge, as long as the shares are
held for one year or more. Class C shares do not convert to any
other class of shares of the Fund and incur higher distribution
services fees than Class A shares, and will thus have a higher
expense ratio and pay correspondingly lower dividends than
Class A shares.

         Class C shares that are redeemed within one year of
purchase will be subject to a contingent deferred sales charge of
1%, charged as a percentage of the dollar amount subject thereto.
The charge will be assessed on an amount equal to the lesser of
the cost of the shares being redeemed or their net asset value at
the time of redemption.  Accordingly, no sales charge will be
imposed on increases in net asset value above the initial
purchase price. In addition, no charge will be assessed on shares
derived from reinvestment of dividends or capital gains
distributions.  The contingent deferred sales charge on Class C
shares will be waived on certain redemptions, as described above
under "--Class B Shares."  In determining the contingent deferred
sales charge applicable to a redemption of Class C shares, it
will be assumed that the redemption is, first, of any shares that
are not subject to a contingent deferred sales charge (for
example, because the shares have been held beyond the period
during which the charge applies or were acquired upon the
reinvestment of dividends or distributions) and, second, of
shares held longest during the time they are subject to the sales
charge.

         Proceeds from the contingent deferred sales charge are
paid to the Principal Underwriter and are used by the Principal
Underwriter to defray the expenses of the Principal Underwriter
related to providing distribution-related services to the Fund in
connection with the sale of the Class C shares, such as the
payment of compensation to selected dealers and agents for


                               42



<PAGE>

selling Class C shares.  The combination of the contingent
deferred sales charge and the distribution services fee enables
the Fund to sell the Class C shares without a sales charge being
deducted at the time of purchase.  The higher distribution
services fee incurred by Class C shares will cause such shares to
have a higher expense ratio and to pay lower dividends than those
related to Class A shares.

Conversion of Advisor Class Shares to Class A Shares

      Advisor Class shares may be held solely through the fee-
based program accounts and employee benefit plans and registered
investment advisory or other financial intermediary relationships
described above under "Purchase of Shares-- General," and by
investment advisory clients of, and certain other persons
associated with, the Adviser and its affiliates or the Fund.  If
(i) a holder of Advisor Class shares ceases to participate in a
fee-based program or plan that satisfies the requirements to
purchase shares set forth under "Purchase of Shares--General" or
(ii) the holder is otherwise no longer eligible to purchase
Advisor Class shares as described in the Advisor Class Prospectus
and this Statement of Additional Information (each, a "Conversion
Event"), then all Advisor Class shares held by the shareholder
will convert automatically to Class A shares of the Fund during
the calendar month following the month in which the Fund is
informed of the occurrence of the Conversion Event.  The Fund
will provide the shareholder with at least 30 days' notice of the
conversion.  The failure of a shareholder or a fee-based program
to satisfy the minimum investment requirements to purchase
Advisor Class shares shall not constitute a Conversion Event.
The conversion would occur on the basis of the relative net asset
values of the two classes and without the imposition of any sales
load, fee or other charge.  Class A shares currently bear a .30%
distribution services fee.  Advisor Class Shares do not have any
distribution services fee.  As a result, Class A shares have a
higher expense ratio and may pay correspondingly lower dividends
and have a lower net asset value than Advisor Class shares.  The
conversion would occur on the basis of the relative net asset
values of the two classes and without the imposition of any sales
load, fee or other charge.  Class A shares currently bear a .30%
distribution services fee and have a higher expense ratio than
Advisor Class shares.  As a result, Class A shares may pay
correspondingly lower dividends and have a lower net asset value
than Advisor Class shares.

         The conversion of Advisor Class shares to Class A shares
is subject to the continuing availability of an opinion of
counsel to the effect that the conversion of Advisor Class shares
to Class A shares does not constitute a taxable event under
federal income tax law.  The conversion of Advisor Class shares
to Class A shares may be suspended if such an opinion is no


                               43



<PAGE>

longer available at the time such conversion is to occur.  In
that event, the Advisor Class shareholder would be required to
redeem his Advisor Class shares, which would constitute a taxable
event under federal income tax law.

_______________________________________________________________

               REDEMPTION AND REPURCHASE OF SHARES
_______________________________________________________________

         The following information supplements that set forth in
the Fund's Prospectus under the heading "Purchase and Sale of
Shares--How to Sell Shares."  If you are an Advisor Class
shareholder through an account established under a fee-based
program your fee-based program may impose requirements with
respect to the purchase, sale or exchange of Advisor Class shares
of the Fund that are different from those described herein.  A
transaction fee may be charged by your financial representative
with respect to the purchase, sale or exchange of Advisor Class
shares made through such financial representative.

Redemption

         Subject only to the limitations described below, the
Fund's Articles of Incorporation require that the Fund redeem the
shares tendered to it, as described below, at a redemption price
equal to their net asset value as next computed following the
receipt of shares tendered for redemption in proper form.  Except
for any contingent deferred sales charge which may be applicable
to Class A, Class B or Class C shares, there is no redemption
charge.  Payment of the redemption price will be made within
seven days after the Fund's receipt of such tender for
redemption.  If a shareholder is in doubt about what documents
are required by his or her fee-based program or employee benefit
plan, the shareholder should contact his or her financial
representative.

         The right of redemption may not be suspended or the date
of payment upon redemption postponed for more than seven days
after shares are tendered for redemption, except for any period
during which the Exchange is closed (other than customary weekend
and holiday closings) or during which the Commission determines
that trading thereon is restricted, or for any period during
which an emergency (as determined by the Commission) exists as a
result of which disposal by the Fund of securities owned by it is
not reasonably practicable or as a result of which it is not
reasonably practicable for the Fund fairly to determine the value
of its net assets, or for such other periods as the Commission
may by order permit for the protection of security holders of the
Fund.



                               44



<PAGE>

         Payment of the redemption price will be made in cash.
The value of a shareholder's shares on redemption or repurchase
may be more or less than the cost of such shares to the
shareholder, depending upon the market value of the Fund's
portfolio securities at the time of such redemption or
repurchase.  Redemption proceeds on Class A, Class B and Class C
shares will reflect the deduction of the contingent deferred
sales charge, if any.  Payment received by a shareholder upon
redemption or repurchase of his shares, assuming the shares
constitute capital assets in his hands, will result in long-term
or short-term capital gains (or loss) depending upon the
shareholder's holding period and basis in respect of the shares
redeemed.

         To redeem shares of the Fund for which no share
certificates have been issued, the registered owner or owners
should forward a letter to the Fund containing a request for
redemption.  The signature or signatures on the letter must be
guaranteed by an "eligible guarantor institution" as defined in
Rule 17Ad-15 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as
amended.

         To redeem shares of the Fund represented by share
certificates, the investor should forward the appropriate share
certificate or certificates, endorsed in blank or with blank
stock powers attached, to the Fund with the request that the
shares represented thereby, or a specified portion thereof, be
redeemed.  The stock assignment form on the reverse side of each
stock certificate surrendered to the Fund for redemption must be
signed by the registered owner or owners exactly as the
registered name appears on the face of the certificate or,
alternatively, a stock power signed in the same manner may be
attached to the stock certificate or certificates or, where
tender is made by mail, separately mailed to the Fund.  The
signature or signatures on the assignment form must be guaranteed
in the manner described above.

         Telephone Redemption By Electronic Funds Transfer.  Each
Fund shareholder is entitled to request redemption by electronic
funds transfer of shares for which no share certificates have
been issued by telephone at (800) 221-5672 by a shareholder who
has completed the appropriate portion of the Subscription
Application or, in the case of an existing shareholder, an
"Autosell" application obtained from AFS.  A telephone redemption
request may not exceed $100,000 (except for certain omnibus
accounts), and must be made by 4:00 p.m. Eastern time on a Fund
business day as defined above.  Proceeds of telephone redemptions
will be sent by electronic funds transfer to a shareholder's
designated bank account at a bank selected by the shareholder
that is a member of the NACHA.



                               45



<PAGE>

         Telephone Redemption By Check.  Except for certain
omnibus accounts or as noted below, each Fund shareholder is
eligible to request redemption by check of Fund shares for which
no stock certificates have been issued by telephone at
(800) 221-5672 before 4:00 p.m. Eastern time on a Fund business
day in an amount not exceeding $50,000.  Proceeds of such
redemptions are remitted by check to the shareholder's address of
record.  A shareholder otherwise eligible for telephone
redemption by check may cancel the privilege by written
instruction to AFS or by checking the appropriate box on the
Subscription Application found in the Prospectus.

         Telephone Redemptions - General.  During periods of
drastic economic or market developments, such as the market break
of October 1987, it is possible that shareholders would have
difficulty in reaching Alliance Fund Services, Inc. by telephone
(although no such difficulty was apparent at any time in
connection with the 1987 market break).  If a shareholder were to
experience such difficulty, the shareholder should issue written
instructions to Alliance Fund Services, Inc. at the address shown
on the cover of this Statement of Additional Information.  The
Fund reserves the right to suspend or terminate its telephone
redemption service at any time without notice.  Telephone
redemption is not available with respect to shares (i) for which
certificates have been issued, (ii) held in nominee or "street
name" accounts, (iii) held by a shareholder who has changed his
or her address of record within the preceding 30 calendar days or
(iv) held in any retirement plan account.  Neither the Fund nor
the Adviser, the Principal Underwriter or Alliance Fund Services,
Inc. will be responsible for the authenticity of telephone
requests for redemptions that the Fund reasonably believes to be
genuine.  The Fund will employ reasonable procedures in order to
verify that telephone requests for redemptions are genuine,
including, among others, recording such telephone instructions
and causing written confirmations of the resulting transactions
to be sent to shareholders.  If the Fund did not employ such
procedures, it could be liable for losses arising from
unauthorized or fraudulent telephone instructions.  Selected
dealers or agents may charge a commission for handling telephone
requests for redemptions.

Repurchase

         The Fund may repurchase shares through the Principal
Underwriter, selected financial intermediaries or selected
dealers or agents.  The repurchase price will be the net asset
value next determined after the Principal Underwriter receives
the request (less the contingent deferred sales charge, if any,
with respect to the Class A, Class B and Class C shares), except
that requests placed through selected dealers or agents before
the close of regular trading on the Exchange on any day will be


                               46



<PAGE>

executed at the net asset value determined as of such close of
regular trading on that day if received by the Principal
Underwriter prior to its close of business on that day (normally
5:00 p.m. Eastern time).  The financial intermediary or selected
dealer or agent is responsible for transmitting the request to
the Principal Underwriter by 5:00 p.m. Eastern time (certain
selected dealers, agents or financial representatives may enter
into operating agreements permitting them to transmit purchase
information to the Principal Underwriter after 5:00 p.m. Eastern
time and receive that day's net asset value).  If the financial
intermediary or selected dealer or agent fails to do so, the
shareholder's right to receive that day's closing price must be
settled between the shareholder and the dealer or agent.  A
shareholder may offer shares of the Fund to the Principal
Underwriter either directly or through a selected dealer or
agent.  Neither the Fund nor the Principal Underwriter charges a
fee or commission in connection with the repurchase of shares
(except for the contingent deferred sales charge, if any, with
respect to Class A, Class B and Class C shares).  Normally, if
shares of the Fund are offered through a financial intermediary
or selected dealer or agent, the repurchase is settled by the
shareholder as an ordinary transaction with or through the
selected dealer or agent, who may charge the shareholder for this
service.  The repurchase of shares of the Fund as described above
is a voluntary service of the Fund and the Fund may suspend or
terminate this practice at any time.

General

         The Fund reserves the right to close out an account that
through redemption has remained below $200 for 90 days.
Shareholders will receive 60 days' written notice to increase the
account value before the account is closed. No contingent
deferred sales charge will be deducted from the proceeds of this
redemption.  In the case of a redemption or repurchase of shares
of the Fund recently purchased by check, redemption proceeds will
not be made available until the Fund is reasonably assured that
the check has cleared, normally up to 15 calendar days following
the purchase date.

_______________________________________________________________

                      SHAREHOLDER SERVICES
_______________________________________________________________

         The following information supplements that set forth in
the Fund's Prospectus under the heading "Purchase and Sale of
Shares--Shareholder Services."  The shareholder services set
forth below are applicable to Class A, Class B, Class C and
Advisor Class shares unless otherwise indicated.  If you are an
Advisor Class shareholder through an account established under a


                               47



<PAGE>

fee-based program your fee-based program may impose requirements
with respect to the purchase, sale or exchange of Advisor Class
shares of the Fund that are different from those described
herein.  A transaction fee may be charged by your financial
representative with respect to the purchase, sale or exchange of
Advisor Class shares made through such financial representative.

Automatic Investment Program

         Investors may purchase shares of the Fund through an
automatic investment program utilizing electronic funds transfer
drawn on the investor's own bank account.  Under such a program,
pre-authorized monthly drafts for a fixed amount (at least $25)
are used to purchase shares through the selected dealer or
selected agent designated by the investor at the public offering
price next determined after the Principal Underwriter receives
the proceeds from the investor's bank.  In electronic form,
drafts can be made on or about a date each month selected by the
shareholder. Investors wishing to establish an automatic
investment program in connection with their initial investment
should complete the appropriate portion of the Subscription
Application found in the Prospectus.  Current shareholders should
contact Alliance Fund Services, Inc. at the address or telephone
numbers shown on the cover of this Statement of Additional
Information to establish an automatic investment program.

Exchange Privilege

         You may exchange your investment in the Fund for shares
of the same class of other Alliance Mutual Funds (including AFD
Exchange Reserves, a money market fund managed by the Adviser).
In addition, (i) present officers and full-time employees of the
Adviser, (ii) present Directors or Trustees of any Alliance
Mutual Fund and (iii) certain employee benefit plans for
employees of the Adviser, the Principal Underwriter, Alliance
Fund Services, Inc. and their affiliates may, on a tax-free
basis, exchange Class A shares of the Fund for Advisor Class
shares of the Fund.  Exchanges of shares are made at the net
asset value next determined and without sales or service charges.
Exchanges may be made by telephone or written request.  Telephone
exchange requests must be received by Alliance Fund Services,
Inc. by 4:00 p.m. Eastern time on a Fund business day in order to
receive that day's net asset value.

         Shares will continue to age without regard to exchanges
for purpose of determining the CDSC, if any, upon redemption and,
in the case of Class B shares, for the purpose of conversion to
Class A shares.  After an exchange, your Class B shares will
automatically convert to Class A shares in accordance with the
conversion schedule applicable to the Class B shares of the
Alliance Mutual Fund you originally purchased for cash ("original


                               48



<PAGE>

shares").  When redemption occurs, the CDSC applicable to the
original shares is applied.

         Please read carefully the prospectus of the mutual fund
into which you are exchanging before submitting the request.
Call Alliance Fund Services, Inc. at (800) 221-5672 to exchange
uncertificated shares.  Except with respect to exchanges of
Class A shares of the Fund for Advisor Class shares of the Fund,
exchanges of shares as described above in this section are
taxable transactions for federal income tax purposes.  The
exchange service may be changed, suspended, or terminated on 60
days' written notice.

         All exchanges are subject to the minimum investment
requirements and any other applicable terms set forth in the
Prospectus for the Alliance Mutual Fund whose shares are being
acquired.  An exchange is effected through the redemption of the
shares tendered for exchange and the purchase of shares being
acquired at their respective net asset values as next determined
following receipt by the Alliance Mutual Fund whose shares are
being exchanged of (i) proper instructions and all necessary
supporting documents as described in such fund's Prospectus, or
(ii) a telephone request for such exchange in accordance with the
procedures set forth in the following paragraph.  Exchanges
involving the redemption of shares recently purchased by check
will be permitted only after the Alliance Mutual Fund whose
shares have been tendered for exchange is reasonably assured that
the check has cleared, normally up to 15 calendar days following
the purchase date.  Exchanges of shares of Alliance Mutual Funds
will generally result in the realization of a capital gain or
loss for federal income tax purposes.

         Each Fund shareholder, and the shareholder's selected
dealer, agent or financial representative, as applicable, are
authorized to make telephone requests for exchanges unless
Alliance Fund Services, Inc. receives written instruction to the
contrary from the shareholder, or the shareholder declines the
privilege by checking the appropriate box on the Subscription
Application found in the Prospectus.  Such telephone requests
cannot be accepted with respect to shares then represented by
stock certificates.  Shares acquired pursuant to a telephone
request for exchange will be held under the same account
registration as the shares redeemed through such exchange.
Exchanges of shares of Alliance Mutual Funds will generally
result in the realization of a capital gain or loss for federal
income tax purposes.

         Eligible shareholders desiring to make an exchange
should telephone Alliance Fund Services, Inc. with their account
number and other details of the exchange, at (800) 221-5672
before 4:00 p.m., Eastern time, on a Fund business day as defined


                               49



<PAGE>

above. Telephone requests for exchange received before 4:00 p.m.
Eastern time on a Fund business day will be processed as of the
close of business on that day.  During periods of drastic
economic or market developments, such as the market break of
October 1987, it is possible that shareholders would have
difficulty in reaching Alliance Fund Services, Inc. by telephone
(although no such difficulty was apparent at any time in
connection with the 1987 market break).  If a shareholder were to
experience such difficulty, the shareholder should issue written
instructions to Alliance Fund Services, Inc. at the address shown
on the cover of this Statement of Additional Information.

         A shareholder may elect to initiate a monthly "Auto
Exchange" whereby a specified dollar amount's worth of his or her
Fund shares (minimum $25) is automatically exchanged for shares
of another Alliance Mutual Fund.  Auto Exchange transactions
normally occur on the 12th day of each month, or the following
Fund business day prior thereto.

         None of the Alliance Mutual Funds, the Adviser, the
Principal Underwriter or Alliance Fund Services, Inc. will be
responsible for the authenticity of telephone requests for
exchanges that the Fund reasonably believes to be genuine.  The
Fund will employ reasonable procedures in order to verify that
telephone requests for exchanges are genuine, including, among
others, recording such telephone instructions and causing written
confirmations of the resulting transactions to be sent to
shareholders.  If the Fund did not employ such procedures, it
could be liable for losses arising from unauthorized or
fraudulent telephone instructions.  Selected dealers, agents or
financial representatives, as applicable may charge a commission
for handling telephone requests for exchanges.

         The exchange privilege is available only in states where
shares of the Alliance Mutual Fund being acquired may be legally
sold.  Each Alliance Mutual Fund reserves the right, at any time
on 60 days' notice to its shareholders, to reject any order to
acquire its shares through exchange or otherwise to modify,
restrict or terminate the exchange privilege.

Retirement Plans

         The Fund may be a suitable investment vehicle for part
or all of the assets held in various types of retirement plans,
such as those listed below.  The Fund has available forms of such
plans pursuant to which investments can be made in the Fund and
other Alliance Mutual Funds.  Persons desiring information
concerning these plans should contact Alliance Fund Services,
Inc. at the "For Literature" telephone number on the cover of
this Statement of Additional Information, or write to:



                               50



<PAGE>

         Alliance Fund Services, Inc.
         Retirement Plans
         P.O. Box 1520
         Secaucus, New Jersey  07096-1520

         Individual Retirement Account ("IRA").  Individuals who
receive compensation, including earnings from self-employment,
are entitled to establish and make contributions to an IRA.
Taxation of the income and gains paid to an IRA by the Fund is
deferred until distribution from the IRA.  An individual's
eligible contribution to an IRA will be deductible if neither the
individual nor his or her spouse is an active participant in an
employer-sponsored retirement plan.  If the individual or his or
her spouse is an active participant in an employer-sponsored
retirement plan, the individual's contributions to an IRA may be
deductible, in whole or in part, depending on the amount of the
adjusted gross income of the individual and his or her spouse.

         Employer-Sponsored Qualified Retirement Plans.  Sole
proprietors, partnerships and corporations may sponsor qualified
money purchase pension and profit-sharing plans, including
Section 401(k) plans ("qualified plans"), under which annual tax-
deductible contributions are made within prescribed limits based
on compensation paid to participating individuals.  The minimum
initial investment requirement may be waived with respect to
certain of these qualified plans.

         If the aggregate net asset value of shares of the
Alliance Mutual Funds held by a qualified plan reaches $1 million
on or before December 15 in any year, all Class B or Class C
shares of the Fund held by the plan can be exchanged, at the
plan's request, without any sales charge, for Class A shares of
the Fund.

         Simplified Employee Pension Plan ("SEP").  Sole
proprietors, partnerships and corporations may sponsor a SEP
under which they make annual tax-deductible contributions to an
IRA established by each eligible employee within prescribed
limits based on employee compensation.

         403(b)(7) Retirement Plan.  Certain tax-exempt
organizations and public educational institutions may sponsor
retirements plans under which an employee may agree that monies
deducted from his or her compensation (minimum $25 per pay
period) may be contributed by the employer to a custodial account
established for the employee under the plan.

         The Alliance Plans Division of Frontier Trust Company, a
subsidiary of Equitable, which serves as custodian or trustee
under the retirement plan prototype forms available from the
Fund, charges certain nominal fees for establishing an account


                               51



<PAGE>

and for annual maintenance.  A portion of these fees is remitted
to Alliance Fund Services, Inc. as compensation for its services
to the retirement plan accounts maintained with the Fund.

         Distributions from retirement plans are subject to
certain Code requirements in addition to normal redemption
procedures.  For additional information please contact Alliance
Fund Services, Inc.

Dividend Direction Plan

         A shareholder who already maintains, in addition to his
or her Class A, Class B, Class C or Advisor Class Fund accounts,
a Class A, Class B, Class C or Advisor Class account with one or
more other Alliance Mutual Funds may direct that income dividends
and/or capital gains paid on the shareholder's Class A, Class B,
Class C or Advisor Class Fund shares be automatically reinvested,
in any amount, without the payment of any sales or service
charges, in shares of the same class of such other Alliance
Mutual Fund(s).  Further information can be obtained by
contacting Alliance Fund Services, Inc. at the address or the
"For Literature" telephone number shown on the cover of this
Statement of Additional Information.  Investors wishing to
establish a dividend direction plan in connection with their
initial investment should complete the appropriate section of the
Subscription Application found in the Prospectus.  Current
shareholders should contact Alliance Fund Services, Inc. to
establish a dividend direction plan.

Systematic Withdrawal Plan

         General.  Any shareholder who owns or purchases shares
of the Fund having a current net asset value of at least $4,000
(for quarterly or less frequent payments), $5,000 (for bi-monthly
payments) or $10,000 (for monthly payments) may establish a
systematic withdrawal plan under which the shareholder will
periodically receive a payment in a stated amount of not less
than $50 on a selected date. Systematic withdrawal plan
participants must elect to have their dividends and distributions
from the Fund automatically reinvested in additional shares of
the Fund.

         Shares of the Fund owned by a participant in the Fund's
systematic withdrawal plan will be redeemed as necessary to meet
withdrawal payments and such withdrawal payments will be subject
to any taxes applicable to redemptions and, except as discussed
below, any applicable contingent deferred sales charge.  Shares
acquired with reinvested dividends and distributions will be
liquidated first to provide such withdrawal payments and
thereafter other shares will be liquidated to the extent
necessary, and depending upon the amount withdrawn, the


                               52



<PAGE>

investor's principal may be depleted.  A systematic withdrawal
plan may be terminated at any time by the shareholder or the
Fund.

         Withdrawal payments will not automatically end when a
shareholder's account reaches a certain minimum level.
Therefore, redemptions of shares under the plan may reduce or
even liquidate a shareholder's account and may subject the
shareholder to the Fund's involuntary redemption provisions.  See
"Redemption and Repurchase of Shares--General."  Purchases of
additional shares concurrently with withdrawals are undesirable
because of sales charges when purchases are made.  While an
occasional lump-sum investment may be made by a holder of Class A
shares who is maintaining a systematic withdrawal plan, such
investment should normally be an amount equivalent to three times
the annual withdrawal or $5,000, whichever is less.

         Payments under a systematic withdrawal plan may be made
by check or electronically via the Automated Clearing House
("ACH") network. Investors wishing to establish a systematic
withdrawal plan in conjunction with their initial investment in
shares of the Fund should complete the appropriate portion of the
Subscription Application found in the Prospectus, while current
Fund shareholders desiring to do so can obtain an application
form by contacting Alliance Fund Services, Inc. at the address or
the "For Literature" telephone number shown on the cover of this
Statement of Additional Information.

         CDSC Waiver for Class B and Class C Shares.  Under a
systematic withdrawal plan, up to 1% monthly, 2% bi-monthly or 3%
quarterly of the value at the time of redemption of the Class B
or Class C shares in a shareholder's account may be redeemed free
of any contingent deferred sales charge.

         With respect to Class B shares, the waiver applies only
with respect to shares acquired after July 1, 1995.  Class B
shares that are not subject to a contingent deferred sales charge
(such as shares acquired with reinvested dividends or
distributions) will be redeemed first and will count toward the
foregoing limitations.  Remaining Class B shares that are held
the longest will be redeemed next.  Redemptions of Class B shares
in excess of the foregoing limitations will be subject to any
otherwise applicable contingent deferred sales charge.

         With respect to Class C shares, shares held the longest
will be redeemed first and will count toward the foregoing
limitations.  Redemptions in excess of those limitations will be
subject to any otherwise applicable contingent deferred sales
charge.




                               53



<PAGE>

Statements and Reports

         Each shareholder of the Fund receives semi-annual and
annual reports which include a portfolio of investments,
financial statements and, in the case of the annual report, the
report of the Fund's independent auditors, Ernst & Young LLP, as
well as a confirmation of each purchase and redemption.  By
contacting his or her broker or Alliance Fund Services, Inc., a
shareholder can arrange for copies of his or her account
statements to be sent to another person.

_______________________________________________________________

                         NET ASSET VALUE
_______________________________________________________________

         The per share net asset value is computed in accordance
with the Fund's Articles of Incorporation and By-Laws at the next
close of regular trading on the Exchange (ordinarily 4:00 p.m.
Eastern time) following receipt of a purchase or redemption order
by the Fund on each Fund business day on which such an order is
received and on such other days as the Board of Directors deems
appropriate or necessary in order to comply with Rule 22c-1 under
the 1940 Act.  The Fund's per share net asset value is calculated
by dividing the value of the Fund's total assets, less its
liabilities, by the total number of its shares then outstanding.
A Fund business day is any weekday on which the Exchange is open
for trading.

         In accordance with applicable rules under the 1940 Act,
portfolio securities are valued at current market value or at
fair value as determined in good faith by the Board of Directors.
The Board of Directors has delegated to the Adviser certain of
the Board's duties with respect to the following procedures.
Readily marketable securities listed on the Exchange or on a
foreign securities exchange (other than foreign securities
exchanges whose operations are similar to those of the United
States over-the-counter market) are valued, except as indicted
below, at the last sale price reflected on the consolidated tape
at the close of the Exchange or, in the case of a foreign
securities exchange, at the last quoted sale price, in each case
on the business day as of which such value is being determined.
If there has been no sale on such day, the securities are valued
at the mean of the closing bid and asked prices on such day.  If
no bid or asked prices are quoted on such day, then the security
is valued in good faith at fair value by, or in accordance with
procedures established by, the Board of Directors.  Readily
marketable securities not listed on the Exchange or on a foreign
securities exchange but listed on other United States national
securities exchanges or traded on The Nasdaq Stock Market, Inc.
are valued in like manner.  Portfolio securities traded on the


                               54



<PAGE>

Exchange and on one or more foreign or other national securities
exchanges, and portfolio securities not traded on the Exchange
but traded on one or more foreign or other national securities
exchanges are valued in accordance with these procedures by
reference to the principal exchange on which the securities are
traded.

         Readily marketable securities traded in the over-the-
counter market, securities listed on a foreign securities
exchange whose operations are similar to those of the United
States over-the-counter market, and securities listed on a U.S.
national securities exchange whose primary market is believed to
be over-the-counter (but excluding securities traded on The
Nasdaq Stock Market, Inc.), are valued at the mean of the current
bid and asked prices as reported by Nasdaq or, in the case of
securities not quoted by Nasdaq, the National Quotation Bureau or
another comparable sources.

         Listed put or call options purchased by the Fund are
valued at the last sale price.  If there has been no sale on that
day, such securities will be valued at the closing bid prices on
that day.

         Open futures contracts and options thereon will be
valued using the closing settlement price or, in the absence of
such a price, the most recent quoted bid price, If there are no
quotations available for the day of valuations, the last
available closing settlement price will be used.

         U.S. Government Securities and other debt instruments
having 60 days or less remaining until maturity are valued at
amortized cost if their original maturity was 60 days or less, or
by amortizing their fair value as of the 61st day prior to
maturity if their original term to maturity exceeded 60 days
(unless in either case the Board of Directors determines that
this method does not represent fair value).

         Fixed-income securities may be valued on the basis of
prices provided by a pricing service when such prices are
believed to reflect the fair market value of such securities.
The prices provided by pricing service take into account many
factors, including institutional size trading in similar groups
of securities and any developments related to specific
securities.

         All other assets of the Fund are valued in good faith at
fair value by, or in accordance with procedures established by,
the Board of Directors.

         Trading in securities on Far Eastern and European
securities exchanges and over-the-counter markets is normally


                               55



<PAGE>

completed well before the close of business of each Fund business
day.  In addition, trading in foreign markets may not take place
on all Fund business days.  Furthermore, trading may take place
in various foreign markets on days that are not Fund business
days.  The Fund's calculation of the net asset value per share,
therefore, does not always take place contemporaneously with the
most recent determination of the prices of portfolio securities
in these markets.  Events affecting the values of these portfolio
securities that occur between the time their prices are
determined in accordance with the above procedures and the close
of the Exchange will not be reflected in the Fund's calculation
of net asset value unless it is believed that these prices do not
reflect current market value, in which case the securities will
be valued in good faith by, or in accordance with procedures
established by, the Board of Directors at fair value.

         The Board of Directors may suspend the determination of
the Fund's, net asset value (and the offering and sale of
shares), subject to the rules of the Commission and other
governmental rules and regulations, at a time when:  (1) the
Exchange is closed, other than customary weekend and holiday
closings, (2) an emergency exists as a result of which it is not
reasonably practicable for the Fund to dispose of securities
owned by it or to determine fairly the value of its net assets,
or (3) for the protection of shareholders, the Commission by
order permits a suspension of the right of redemption or a
postponement of the date of payment on redemption.

         For purposes of determining the Fund's net asset value
per share, all assets and liabilities initially expressed in a
foreign currency will be converted into U.S. dollars at the mean
of the current bid and asked prices of such currency against the
U.S. dollar last quoted by a major bank that is a regular
participant in the relevant foreign exchange market or on the
basis of a pricing service that takes into account the quotes
provided by a number of such major banks.  If such quotations are
not available as of the close of the Exchange, the rate of
exchange will be determined in good faith by, or under the
direction of, the Board of Directors.

         The assets attributable to the Class A shares, Class B
shares, Class C shares and Advisor Class shares will be invested
together in a single portfolio.  The net asset value of each
class will be determined separately by subtracting the
liabilities allocated to that class from the assets belonging to
that class in conformance with the provisions of a plan adopted
by the Fund in accordance with Rule 18f-3 under the 1940 Act.






                               56



<PAGE>

_______________________________________________________________

               DIVIDENDS, DISTRIBUTIONS AND TAXES
_______________________________________________________________

         Dividends paid by the Fund, if any, with respect to
Class A, Class B, Class C and Advisor Class shares will be
calculated in the same manner at the same time on the same day
and will be in the same amount, except that the higher
distribution services applicable to Class B and C shares, and any
incremental transfer agency costs relating to Class B and Class C
shares, will be borne exclusively by the class to which they
relate.

      The Fund intends to qualify to be taxed as a "regulated
investment company" under Sections 851-855 of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code").  To so qualify,
the Fund must, among other things, (i) derive at least 90% of its
gross income in each taxable year from dividends, interest,
payments with respect to securities loans, gains from the sale or
other disposition of stock or securities or foreign currency, or
certain other income (including but not limited to gains from
options, futures and forward contracts) derived with respect to
its business of investing in stock, securities or currency; and
(ii) diversify its holdings so that, at the end of each quarter
of its taxable year, the following two conditions are met:
(a) at least 50% of the total value of the Fund's assets is
represented by cash, U.S. Government Securities, securities of
other regulated investment companies and other securities (for
this purpose, such other securities will qualify only if the
Fund's investment is limited, in respect of any one issuer, to an
amount not greater than 5% of the Fund's total assets and 10% of
the outstanding voting securities of such issuer) and (b) not
more than 25% of the total value of the Fund's assets is invested
in securities of any one issuer (other than U.S. Government
Securities or securities of other regulated investment
companies).

         The Treasury Department is authorized to issue
regulations to provide that foreign currency gains that are "not
directly related" to the Fund's principal business of investing
in stock or securities may be excluded from the income that
qualifies for purposes of the 90% gross income requirement
described above with respect to the Fund's qualification as a
"regulated investment company."  No such regulations have yet
been issued.

         If the Fund qualifies as a regulated investment company
and makes a timely distribution of 90% or more of its taxable net
investment company taxable income for that year (calculated
without regard to its net capital gain, i.e., the excess of its


                               57



<PAGE>

net long-term capital gain over its net short-term capital loss),
it will not be subject to federal income tax on the portion of
its investment company taxable income (including any net capital
gain) that it distributes to its shareholders.

         The Fund will also avoid the nondeductible 4% federal
excise tax that would otherwise apply to certain undistributed
income for a given calendar year if it meets certain minimum
distribution requirements by the end of each calendar year.  For
this purpose, income or gain retained by the Fund that is subject
to corporate income tax will be considered to have been
distributed by the Fund by year-end.  For purposes of the 4%
excise tax and federal income tax, dividends declared and payable
as of a date in October, November or December will be treated as
if they were paid on December 31 of that year if the dividends
are actually paid during the following January.

         In the case of corporate shareholders, a portion of the
Fund's dividends may be eligible for the dividends-received
deduction.  The amount eligible for the deduction is limited to
the amount of qualifying dividends received by the Fund.
Dividends received from foreign corporations generally do not
constitute qualifying dividends.  A corporation's dividends-
received deduction generally will be disallowed unless the
corporation holds shares in the Fund at least 46 days during the
90-day period beginning 45 days before the date on which the
corporation becomes entitled to receive the dividend.
Furthermore, the dividends-received deduction will be disallowed
to the extent a corporation's investment in shares of the Fund is
financed with indebtedness.

         A dividend or capital gains distribution with respect to
shares of the Fund held by a tax-deferred or qualified plan, such
as an individual retirement account, 403(b)(7) retirement plan or
corporate pension or profit-sharing plan, generally will not be
taxable to the plan.  Distributions from such plans will be
taxable to individual participants under applicable tax rules
without regard to the character of the income earned by the
qualified plan.

         The following discussion relates to certain significant
United States federal income tax consequences to the Fund with
respect to the determination of its "investment company taxable
income" each year. This discussion assumes that the Fund will be
taxed as a regulated investment company for each of its taxable
years.

      Currency Fluctuations - "Section 988" Gains or Losses.
Under the Code, gains or losses attributable to fluctuations in
exchange rates which occur between the time the Fund accrues
interest or other receivables or accrues expenses or other


                               58



<PAGE>

liabilities denominated in a foreign currency and the time the
Fund actually collects such receivables or pays such liabilities
are treated as ordinary income or ordinary loss.  Similarly,
gains or losses from the disposition of foreign currencies, from
the disposition of debt securities denominated in a foreign
currency, or from the disposition of a forward contract
denominated in a foreign currency which are attributable to
fluctuations in the value of the foreign currency between the
date of acquisition of the asset and the date of disposition also
are treated as ordinary income or loss.  These gains or losses,
referred to under the Code as "section 988" gains or losses,
increase or decrease the amount of the Fund's investment company
taxable income available to be distributed to its shareholders as
ordinary income, rather than increasing or decreasing the amount
of the Fund's net capital gain.  Because section 988 losses
reduce the amount of ordinary dividends the Fund will be allowed
to distribute for a taxable year, such section 988 losses may
result in all or a portion of prior dividend distributions for
such year being recharacterized as a non-taxable return of
capital to shareholders, rather than as an ordinary dividend,
reducing each shareholder's basis in his Fund shares.  To the
extent that such distributions exceed such shareholder's basis,
each distribution will be treated as a gain from the sale of
shares.

         Options, Futures and Forward Contracts.  Certain listed
options, regulated futures contracts, and forward foreign
currency contracts are considered "section 1256 contracts" for
federal income tax purposes.  Section 1256 contracts held by the
Fund at the end of each taxable year will be "marked to market"
and treated for federal income tax purposes as though sold for
fair market value on the last business day of such taxable year.
Gain or loss realized by the Fund on section 1256 contracts other
than forward foreign currency contracts will be considered 60%
long-term and 40% short-term capital gain or loss.  Gain or loss
realized by the Fund on forward foreign currency contracts will
be treated as section 988 gain or loss and will therefore be
characterized as ordinary income or loss and will increase or
decrease the amount of the Fund's net investment income available
to be distributed to shareholders as ordinary income, as
described above.  The Fund can elect to exempt its section 1256
contracts which are part of a "mixed straddle" (as described
below) from the application of section 1256.

         The Treasury Department has the authority to issue
regulations that would permit or require the Fund either to
integrate a foreign currency hedging transaction with the
investment that is hedged and treat the two as a single
transaction, or otherwise to treat the hedging transaction in a
manner that is consistent with the hedged investment.  The
regulations issued under this authority generally should not


                               59



<PAGE>

apply to the type of hedging transactions in which the Fund
intends to engage.

         With respect to equity options or options traded
over-the-counter or on certain foreign exchanges, gain or loss
realized by the Fund upon the lapse or sale of such options held
by the Fund will be either long-term or short-term capital gain
or loss depending upon the Fund's holding period with respect to
such option.  However, gain or loss realized upon the lapse or
closing out of such options that are written by the Fund will be
treated as short-term capital gain or loss.  In general, if the
Fund exercises an option, or an option that the Fund has written
is exercised, gain or loss on the option will not be separately
recognized but the premium received or paid will be included in
the calculation of gain or loss upon disposition of the property
underlying the option.

         Gain or loss realized by the Fund on the lapse or sale
of put and call options on foreign currencies which are traded
over- the-counter or on certain foreign exchanges will be treated
as section 988 gain or loss and will therefore be characterized
as ordinary income or loss and will increase or decrease the
amount of the Fund's net investment income available to be
distributed to shareholders as ordinary income, as described
above.  The amount of such gain or loss shall be determined by
subtracting the amount paid, if any, for or with respect to the
option (including any amount paid by the Fund upon termination of
an option written by the Fund) from the amount received, if any,
for or with respect to the option (including any amount received
by the Fund upon termination of an option held by the Fund).  In
general, if the Fund exercises such an option on a foreign
currency, or such an option that the Fund has written is
exercised, gain or loss on the option will be recognized in the
same manner as if the Fund had sold the option (or paid another
person to assume the Fund's obligation to make delivery under the
option) on the date on which the option is exercised, for the
fair market value of the option.  The foregoing rules will also
apply to other put and call options which have as their
underlying property foreign currency and which are traded over-
the-counter or on certain foreign exchanges to the extent gain or
loss with respect to such options is attributable to fluctuations
in foreign currency exchange rates.

         Tax Straddles.  Any option, futures contract, currency
swap, forward foreign currency contract, or other position
entered into or held by the Fund in conjunction with any other
position held by the Fund may constitute a "straddle" for federal
income tax purposes.  A straddle of which at least one, but not
all, the positions are section 1256 contracts may constitute a
"mixed straddle".  In general, straddles are subject to certain
rules that may affect the character and timing of the Fund's


                               60



<PAGE>

gains and losses with respect to straddle positions by requiring,
among other things, that (i) loss realized on disposition of one
position of a straddle not be recognized to the extent that the
Fund has unrealized gains with respect to the other position in
such straddle; (ii) the Fund's holding period in straddle
positions be suspended while the straddle exists (possibly
resulting in gain being treated as short-term capital gain rather
than long-term capital gain); (iii) losses recognized with
respect to certain straddle positions which are part of a mixed
straddle and which are non-section 1256 positions be treated as
60% long-term and 40% short-term capital loss; (iv) losses
recognized with respect to certain straddle positions which would
otherwise constitute short-term capital losses be treated as
long-term capital losses; and (v) the deduction of interest and
carrying charges attributable to certain straddle positions may
be deferred.  The Treasury Department is authorized to issue
regulations providing for the proper treatment of a mixed
straddle where at least one position is ordinary and at least one
position is capital.  No such regulations have yet been issued.
Various elections are available to the Fund which may mitigate
the effects of the straddle rules, particularly with respect to
mixed straddles.  In general, the straddle rules described above
do not apply to any straddles held by the Fund all of the
offsetting positions of which consist of section 1256 contracts.

         Foreign Tax Credits.  Income received by the Fund may
also be subject to foreign income taxes, including withholding
taxes.  It is impossible to determine the effective rate of
foreign tax in advance since the amount of the Fund's assets to
be invested within various countries is not known. If more than
50% of the value of the Fund's total assets at the close of its
taxable year consists of stocks or securities of foreign
corporations, the Fund will be eligible and intends to file an
election with the Internal Revenue Service to pass through to its
shareholders the amount of foreign taxes paid by the Fund.
However, there can be no assurance that the Fund will be able to
do so.  Pursuant to this election a shareholder will be required
to (i) include in gross income (in addition to taxable dividends
actually received) his pro rata share of foreign taxes paid by
the Fund, (ii) treat his pro rata share of such foreign taxes as
having been paid by him, and (iii) either deduct such pro rata
share of foreign taxes in computing his taxable income or treat
such foreign taxes as a credit against United States federal
income taxes. Shareholders who are not liable for federal income
taxes, such as retirement plans qualified under section 401 of
the Code, will not be affected by any such pass-through of taxes
by the Fund.  No deduction for foreign taxes may be claimed by an
individual shareholder who does not itemize deductions.  In
addition, certain shareholders may be subject to rules which
limit or reduce their ability to fully deduct, or claim a credit
for, their pro rata share of the foreign taxes paid by the Fund.


                               61



<PAGE>

A shareholder's foreign tax credit with respect to a dividend
received from the Fund will be disallowed unless the shareholder
holds shares in the Fund on the ex-dividend date and for at least
15 other days during the 30-day period beginning 15 days prior to
the ex-dividend date.  Each shareholder will be notified within
60 days after the close of the Fund's taxable year whether the
foreign taxes paid by the Fund will pass through for that year
and, if so, such notification will designate (i) the
shareholder's portion of the foreign taxes paid to each such
country and (ii) the portion of dividends that represents income
derived from sources within each such country.

         The federal income tax status of each year's
distributions by the Fund will be reported to shareholders and to
the Internal Revenue Service.  The foregoing is only a general
description of the treatment of foreign taxes under the United
States federal income tax laws. Because the availability of a
foreign tax credit or deduction will depend on the particular
circumstances of each shareholder, potential investors are
advised to consult their own tax advisers.

      The foregoing discussion relates only to U.S. federal
income tax law as it affects shareholders who are U.S. residents
or U.S. corporations.  The effects of federal income tax law on
shareholders who are non-resident aliens or foreign corporations
may be substantially different.  Foreign investors should consult
their counsel for further information as to the U.S. tax
consequences of receipt of income from the Fund.

_______________________________________________________________

                     PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS
_______________________________________________________________

         Subject to the general supervision and control of the
Directors of the Fund, the Adviser makes the Fund's portfolio
decisions and determines the broker to be used in each specific
transaction with the objective of negotiating best price and
execution.  When consistent with the objective of obtaining best
execution, brokerage may be directed to persons or firms
supplying investment information to the Adviser.  There may be
occasions where the transaction cost charged by a broker may be
greater than that which another broker may charge if the Fund
determines in good faith that the amount of such transaction cost
is reasonable in relation to the value of the brokerage, research
and statistical services provided by the executing broker.
Consistent with the Conduct Rules of the National Association of
Securities Dealers, Inc., and subject to seeking best execution,
the Fund may consider sales of shares of the Fund as a factor in
the selection of brokers to execute portfolio transactions for
the Fund.


                               62



<PAGE>

         Neither the Fund nor the Adviser has entered into
agreements or understandings with any brokers regarding the
placement of securities transactions because of research or
statistical services they provide.  To the extent that such
persons or firms supply investment information to the Adviser for
use in rendering investment advice to the Fund, such information
may be supplied at no cost to the Adviser.  While it is
impossible to place an actual dollar value on such investment
information, its receipt by the Adviser probably does not reduce
the overall expenses of the Adviser to any material extent.

         The investment information provided to the Adviser is of
the type described in Section 28(e)(3) of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 and is designed to augment the Adviser's own internal
research and investment strategy capabilities.  Research and
statistical services furnished by brokers through which the Fund
effects securities transactions are used by the Adviser in
carrying out its investment management responsibilities with
respect to all its client accounts but not all such services may
be used by the Adviser in connection with the Fund.

         The Fund may deal in some instances in securities which
are not listed on a national stock exchange but are traded in the
over-the-counter market.  The Fund may also purchase listed
securities through the third market, i.e., from a dealer which is
not a member of the exchange on which a security is listed.
Where transactions are executed in the over-the-counter market or
third market, the Fund will seek to deal with the primary market
makers; but when necessary in order to obtain the best price and
execution, it will utilize the services of others.  In all cases,
the Fund will attempt to negotiate best execution.

         The Fund may from time to time place orders for the
purchase or sale of securities (including listed call options)
with Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette Securities Corporation ("DLJ"),
an affiliate of the Adviser, and with brokers which may have
their transactions cleared or settled, or both, by the Pershing
Division of DLJ, for which DLJ may receive a portion of the
brokerage commissions.  In such instances, the placement of
orders with such brokers would be consistent with the Fund's
objective of obtaining best execution and would not be dependent
upon the fact that DLJ is an affiliate of the Adviser.

      During the Fund's fiscal years ended July 31, 1999, 1998
and 1997, the Fund incurred brokerage commissions amounting in
the aggregate to $620,564, $512,201 and $573,677, respectively.
During the fiscal years ended July 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997,
brokerage commissions amounting in the aggregate to $-0-, $90 and
$-0-, respectively, were paid to DLJ and no brokerage commissions
were paid to brokers utilizing the Pershing Division of DLJ.
During the fiscal year ended July 31, 1999, the brokerage


                               63



<PAGE>

commissions paid to DLJ constituted -0-% of the Fund's aggregate
brokerage commissions and the brokerage commissions paid to
brokers utilizing the Pershing Division of DLJ constituted -0-%
of the Fund's aggregate brokerage commissions. During the fiscal
year ended July 31, 1999, of the Fund's aggregate dollar amount
of brokerage transactions involving the payment of commissions,
- -0-% were effected through DLJ and -0-% were effected through
brokers utilizing the Pershing Division of DLJ.  During the
fiscal year ended July 31, 1999, transactions in portfolio
securities of the Fund aggregating $210,458,428 with associated
brokerage commissions of approximately $443,850  were allocated
to persons or firms supplying research services to the Fund or
the Adviser.

_______________________________________________________________

                       GENERAL INFORMATION
_______________________________________________________________

Capitalization

         The Fund was organized as a corporation in Maryland in
1966.  The authorized capital stock of the Fund currently
consists of 3,000,000,000 shares of Class A Common Stock,
3,000,000,000 shares of Class B Common Stock, 3,000,000,000 of
Class C Common Stock and 3,000,000,000 shares of Advisor
Class Common Stock, each having a par value of $.01 per share.
All shares of the Fund, when issued, are fully paid and non-
assessable.  The Directors are authorized to reclassify and issue
any unissued shares to any number of additional series and
classes without shareholder approval.  Accordingly, the Directors
in the future, for reasons such as the desire to establish one or
more additional portfolios with different investment objectives,
policies or restrictions, may create additional classes or series
of shares.  Any issuance of shares of another class or series
would be governed by the 1940 Act and the law of the State of
Maryland.  If shares of another series were issued in connection
with the creation of a second portfolio, each share of either
portfolio would normally be entitled to one vote for all
purposes.  Generally, shares of both portfolios would vote as a
single series on matters, such as the election of Directors, that
affected both portfolios in substantially the same manner.  As to
matters affecting each portfolio differently, such as approval of
the Advisory Agreement and changes in investment policy, shares
of each portfolio would vote as a separate series.

         Procedures for calling a shareholders' meeting for the
removal of Directors of the Fund, similar to those set forth in
Section 16(c) of the 1940 Act will be available to shareholders
of the Fund.  The rights of the holders of shares of a series may



                               64



<PAGE>

not be modified except by the vote of a majority of the
outstanding shares of such series.

         It is anticipated that annual shareholder meetings will
not be held; shareholder meetings will be held only when required
by federal or state law. Shareholders have available certain
procedures for the removal of Directors.

         A shareholder will be entitled to share pro rata with
other holders of the same class of shares all dividends and
distributions arising from the Fund's assets and, upon redeeming
shares, will receive the then current net asset value of the Fund
represented by the redeemed shares less any applicable CDSC. The
Fund is empowered to establish, without shareholder approval,
additional portfolios, which may have different investment
objectives and policies than those of the Fund, and additional
classes of shares within the Fund. If an additional portfolio or
class were established in the Fund, each share of the portfolio
or class would normally be entitled to one vote for all purposes.
Generally, shares of each portfolio and class would vote together
as a single class on matters, such as the election of Directors,
that affect each portfolio and class in substantially the same
manner. Class A, B, C and Advisor Class shares have identical
voting, dividend, liquidation and other rights, except that each
class bears its own transfer agency expenses, each of Class A,
Class B and Class C shares of the Fund bears its own distribution
expenses and Class B shares and Advisor Class shares convert to
Class A shares under certain circumstances. Each class of shares
of the Fund votes separately with respect to the Fund's Rule 12b-
1 distribution plan and other matters for which separate class
voting is appropriate under applicable law. Shares are freely
transferable, are entitled to dividends as determined by the
Directors and, in liquidation of the Fund, are entitled to
receive the net assets of the Fund.

      At the close of business on October 8, 1999 there were
6,730,392 Class A shares, 2,797,708 Class B shares, 659,340
Class C shares and 16,757 Advisor Class shares of common stock of
the Fund outstanding.  To the knowledge of the Fund, the
following persons owned of record or beneficially, 5% or more of
the outstanding shares of the Fund as of October 8, 1999:

Name and Address                       Shares          % of Class

Class A

MLPF&S                                 348,646           5.21%
For the Sole Benefit of
Its Customers
Attn:  Fund Administration (976X8)
4800 Deer Lake Dr East, 2nd Floor


                               65



<PAGE>

Jacksonville, FL 32246-6484

Class B

MLPF&S                                 426,731          15.26%
For the Sole Benefit of
Its Customers
Attn:  Fund Administration (976X2)
4800 Deer Lake Dr East, 2nd Floor
Jacksonville, FL 32246-6484

Class C

MLPF&S                                 194,102          29.34%
For the Sole Benefit of
Its Customers
Attn:  Fund Administration (97BG0)
4800 Deer Lake Dr East, 2nd Floor
Jacksonville, FL 32246-6484

Advisor Class

Mark J. Dunbar                           1,424           8.50%
5608 Pecan Spring Ct.
Dallas, TX 75252-2670

Josephine Metz                           1,091           6.51%
13 Remsen Circle
Yonkers, NY 10710-1006

Merrill Lynch                            1,185           7.07%
4800 Deer Lake Dr East
Jacksonville, FL 32246-6486

Christopher J. MacDonald &               1,619           9.66%
Deirdre M. Schroeder JT TEN
1880 N. El Camino Real #6
San Clemente, CA 92672-4901

Amy M. Levin                             2,254          13.45%
151 W. 86th St. Apt 8D
New York, NY 10024-3401

Alliance Plans DIV/F.T.C.                  843           5.03%
C/F Linda Pugliese
IRA Rollover
8 Borrell Court
St. James, NY 11780-1640

Clifford L. Michel                       1,243           7.42
15 St. Bernards Rd.


                               66



<PAGE>

P.O. Box 449
Gladstone, N.J.  07934-0449

Counsel

         Legal matters in connection with the issuance of the
shares of Common Stock offered hereby are passed upon by Seward &
Kissel LLP, New York, New York.  Seward & Kissel LLP has relied
upon the opinion of Venable, Baetjer and Howard, LLP, Baltimore,
Maryland, for matters relating to Maryland law.

Independent Auditors

         Ernst & Young LLP, New York, New York, has been
appointed as the independent auditors for the Fund.

Custodian

         State Street Bank and Trust Company, 225 Franklin St.,
Boston, Massachusetts, will act as the Fund's custodian for the
assets of the Fund but plays no part in deciding the purchase or
sale of portfolio securities.  Subject to the supervision of the
Fund's Directors, State Street Bank and Trust Company may enter
into sub-custodial agreements for the holding of the Fund's
foreign securities.

Principal Underwriter

         Alliance Fund Distributors, Inc., an indirect wholly-
owned subsidiary of Alliance, located at 1345 Avenue of the
Americas, New York, New York 10105, is the principal underwriter
of shares of the Fund.  Under the Agreement between the Fund and
the Principal Underwriter, the Fund has agreed to indemnify the
Principal Underwriter, in the absence of its willful misfeasance,
bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of its
obligations thereunder, against certain civil liabilities,
including liabilities under the Securities Act of 1933, as
amended.

Performance Information

         From time to time the Fund advertises its  "total
return," which is computed separately for Class A, Class B, Class
C and Advisor Class shares. Such advertisements disclose the
Fund's average annual compounded total return for the periods

prescribed by the Commission.  The Fund's total return for each
such period is computed by finding, through the use of a formula
prescribed by the Commission, the average annual compounded rate
of return over the period that would equate an assumed initial
amount invested to the value of the investment at the end of the
period. For purposes of computing total return, income dividends


                               67



<PAGE>

and capital gains distributions paid on shares of the Fund are
assumed to have been reinvested when paid and the maximum sales
charges applicable to purchases and redemptions of the Fund's
shares are assumed to have been paid.

      The Fund calculates average annual total return
information in the Performance Table in the Risk/Return Summary
according to the Commission formula as described above.  In
accordance with Commission guidelines, total return information
is presented for each class for the same time periods, i.e., the
1, 5 and 10 years (or over the life of the Fund, if the Fund is
less than 10 years old) ending on the last day of the most recent
calendar year.  Since different classes may have first been sold
on different dates ("Actual Inception Dates"), in some cases this
can result in return information being presented for a class for
periods prior to its Actual Inception Date.  Where return
information is presented for periods prior to the Actual
Inception Date of a Class (a "Younger Class"), such information
is calculated by using the historical performance of the class
with the earliest Actual Inception Date (the "Oldest Class").
For this purpose, the Fund calculates the difference in total
annual fund operating expenses (as a percentage of average net
assets) between the Younger Class and the Oldest Class, divides
the difference by 12, and subtracts the result from the monthly
performance at net asset value (including reinvestment of all
dividends and distributions) of the Oldest Class for each month
prior to the Younger Class's Actual Inception Date for which
performance information is to be shown.  The resulting "pro
forma" monthly performance information is used to calculate the
Younger Class's average annual returns for these periods.  Any
conversion feature applicable to the Younger Class is assumed to
occur in accordance with the Actual Inception Date for that
class, not its hypothetical inception date.

      The Fund's average annual total return for the one,
five and ten year periods ended July 31, 1999 (or since
inception through that date, as noted) was as follows:

               One Year Ended    5 Years Ended  10 Years Ended
               7/31/99           7/31/99        7/31/99

Class A        7.51%             13.80%          6.66%*
Class B        6.74%             12.98%         9.83%*
Class C        6.72%             12.98%         11.86%*
Advisor Class  7.63%             9.58%*         N/A

*Inception Dates: Class A - September 17, 1990
                  Class B - September 17, 1990
                  Class C - May 3, 1993
                  Advisor Class - October 2, 1996



                               68



<PAGE>

         The Fund's total return is computed separately for
Class A, Class B, Class C and Advisor Class shares.  The Fund's
total return is not fixed and will fluctuate in response to
prevailing market conditions or as a function of the type and
quality of the securities in the Fund's portfolio and the Fund's
expenses.  Total return information is useful in reviewing the
Fund's performance but such information may not provide a basis
for comparison with bank deposits or other investments which pay
a fixed return for a stated period of time.  An investor's
principal invested in the Fund is not fixed and will fluctuate in
response to prevailing market conditions.

      Advertisements quoting performance ratings of the Fund
as measured by financial publications or by independent
organizations such as Lipper, Inc. and Morningstar, Inc. and
advertisements presenting the historical record of payments of
income dividends by the Fund may also from time to time be sent
to investors or placed in newspapers and magazines such as The
New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Barrons, Investor's
Daily, Money Magazine, Changing Times, Business Week and Forbes
or other media on behalf of the Fund.

Additional Information

         Any shareholder inquiries may be directed to the
shareholder's broker or other financial adviser or to Alliance
Fund Services, Inc. at the address or telephone numbers shown on
the front cover of this Statement of Additional Information.
This Statement of Additional Information does not contain all the
information set forth in the Registration Statement filed by the
Fund with the Commission under the Securities Act.  Copies of the
Registration Statement may be obtained at a reasonable charge
from the Commission or may be examined, without charge, at the
offices of the Commission in Washington, D.C.



















                               69



<PAGE>

____________________________________________________________

                      REPORT OF INDEPENDENT
                AUDITOR AND FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
____________________________________________________________
















































                               70



<PAGE>



ALLIANCE GLOBAL SMALL CAP FUND

ANNUAL REPORT
JULY 31, 1999



PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
JULY 31, 1999                                    ALLIANCE GLOBAL SMALL CAP FUND
_______________________________________________________________________________

COMPANY                                          SHARES     U.S. $ VALUE
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
COMMON STOCKS & OTHER INVESTMENTS-98.9%
UNITED STATES INVESTMENTS-32.7%
CONSUMER SERVICES-13.7%
AIRLINES-2.0%
Alaska Air Group, Inc. (a)                       27,800    $   1,233,625
America West Airlines, Inc.
  Cl.B (a)                                       39,300          778,631
Atlas Air, Inc. (a)                               9,000          288,563
                                                             ------------
                                                               2,300,819

APPAREL-0.9%
Mens Wearhouse, Inc. (a)                         24,800          616,900
Stage Stores, Inc. (a)                           61,300          394,619
                                                             ------------
                                                               1,011,519

BROADCASTING & CABLE-1.1%
Citadel Communications
  Corp. (a)                                       4,500          144,000
Entercom Communications
  Corp. (a)                                       3,900          157,950
RCN Corp. (a)                                     5,700          239,400
SFX Entertainment, Inc.
  Cl.A (a)                                       15,000          672,188
                                                             ------------
                                                               1,213,538

ENTERTAINMENT & LEISURE-3.7%
Bally Total Fitness Holding
  Corp. (a)                                      24,600          696,488
Premier Parks, Inc. (a)                          51,300        1,984,669
Sunterra Corp. (a)                               83,800        1,126,062
Trans World Entertainment
  Corp. (a)                                      34,750          432,203
                                                             ------------
                                                               4,239,422

PRINTING & PUBLISHING-0.0%
Creo Products, Inc. (a)                           2,300           47,006

RETAIL - GENERAL MERCHANDISE-4.3%
BJ's Wholesale Club,
  Inc. (a)                                       24,800          759,500
Furniture Brands
  International, Inc. (a)                        15,900          429,300
Movado Group, Inc.                               19,600          475,300
Sharper Image Corp. (a)                           6,700           68,675
Shopko Stores, Inc. (a)                          11,900          455,918
Tiffany & Co.                                    14,400          724,500
Tweeter Home
  Entertainment Group,
  Inc. (a)                                        2,700           89,944
Venator Group, Inc. (a)                         107,400        1,127,700
Zale Corp. (a)                                   20,100          804,000
                                                             ------------
                                                               4,934,837

MISCELLANEOUS-1.7%
Carriage Services, Inc. (a)                      19,400          320,100
Century Business Services,
  Inc. (a)                                       47,500          724,375
Insight Enterprises,
  Inc. (a)                                       14,800          429,200
Nielsen Media Research,
  Inc.                                           13,300          432,250
TeleTech Holdings,
  Inc. (a)                                        2,400           28,950
                                                             ------------
                                                               1,934,875
                                                             ------------
                                                              15,682,016

TECHNOLOGY-4.4%
COMMUNICATIONS EQUIPMENT-0.6%
Focal Communications
  Corp. (a)                                       2,800           53,200
Tekelec (a)                                      12,900          129,806
TeleSpectrum Worldwide,
  Inc. (a)                                       69,600          491,550
                                                             ------------
                                                                 674,556


8


                                                 ALLIANCE GLOBAL SMALL CAP FUND
_______________________________________________________________________________

COMPANY                                          SHARES     U.S. $ VALUE
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
COMPUTER HARDWARE-0.8%
Apex, Inc. (a)                                   36,550    $     954,869
Digital Origin, Inc. (a)                             15               90
                                                             ------------
                                                                 954,959

COMPUTER SERVICES-1.1%
DBT Online, Inc. (a)                             29,400          887,512
IMRglobal Corp. (a)                              12,700          217,488
Visual Networks, Inc. (a)                         2,800          100,975
                                                             ------------
                                                               1,205,975

COMPUTER SOFTWARE-0.4%
Digex, Inc. Cl.A (a)                              7,300          162,881
Sapient Corp. (a)                                 4,900          270,725
                                                             ------------
                                                                 433,606

SEMI-CONDUCTOR CAPITAL EQUIPMENT-0.3%
MKS Instruments,
  Inc. (a)                                       14,500          309,031

SEMI-CONDUCTOR COMPONENTS-0.7%
MIPS Technologies,
  Inc. (a)                                        7,400          273,800
SDL, Inc. (a)                                     5,100          346,481
Triquint Semiconductor,
  Inc. (a)                                        4,800          199,200
                                                             ------------
                                                                 819,481

MISCELLANEOUS-0.5%
Excalibur Technologies
  Corp. (a)                                      19,400          209,763
Harman International
  Industries, Inc.                                9,200          404,800
                                                             ------------
                                                                 614,563
                                                             ------------
                                                               5,012,171

FINANCE-4.2%
BROKERAGE & MONEY MANAGEMENT-1.7%
Legg Mason, Inc.                                 53,700        1,879,500

REAL ESTATE-2.5%
Chelsea GCA Realty, Inc.                         43,400        1,508,150
MeriStar Hospitality
  Corp.                                          21,400          409,275
Taubman Centers, Inc.                            71,900          952,675
                                                             ------------
                                                               2,870,100
                                                             ------------
                                                               4,749,600

CONSUMER MANUFACTURING-3.1%
AUTO & RELATED-2.6%
Budget Group, Inc.
  Cl.A (a)                                       34,300          315,131
Circuit City Stores, Inc.-
CarMaxGroup (a)                                  74,000          296,000
Dollar Thrifty Automotive
  Group, Inc. (a)                                20,700          445,050
Group 1 Automotive,
  Inc. (a)                                       40,800          895,050
Monaco Coach Corp. (a)                           38,137        1,008,247
                                                             ------------
                                                               2,959,478

TEXTILE PRODUCTS-0.5%
K-Swiss, Inc. Cl.A                               16,300          528,731
                                                             ------------
                                                               3,488,209

HEALTH CARE-2.7%
BIOTECHNOLOGY-0.4%
Geltex Pharmaceuticals,
  Inc. (a)                                        9,300          130,781
Human Genome Sciences,
  Inc. (a)                                        5,600          291,550
                                                             ------------
                                                                 422,331

MEDICAL PRODUCTS-0.8%
Novoste Corp. (a)                                19,400          447,412
St. Jude Medical, Inc. (a)                        9,800          364,438
Women First Healthcare,
  Inc. (a)                                        9,600          109,200
                                                             ------------
                                                                 921,050


9


PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)             ALLIANCE GLOBAL SMALL CAP FUND
_______________________________________________________________________________

COMPANY                                          SHARES     U.S. $ VALUE
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
MEDICAL SERVICES-1.5%
Health Management
  Associates, Inc. (a)                           62,300    $     513,975
Lifepoint Hospitals,
  Inc. (a)                                       52,900          522,387
Medical Manager
  Corp. (a)                                       5,800          368,300
Orthodontic Centers of
  America, Inc. (a)                              23,500          390,688
                                                             ------------
                                                               1,795,350
                                                             ------------
                                                               3,138,731

CAPITAL GOODS-2.0%
MACHINERY-0.7%
United Rentals, Inc. (a)                         29,000          841,000

MISCELLANEOUS-1.3%
Applied Power, Inc. Cl.A                         11,000          313,500
Mohawk Industries,
  Inc. (a)                                       41,400        1,156,612
                                                             ------------
                                                               1,470,112
                                                             ------------
                                                               2,311,112

TRANSPORTATION-1.6%
SHIPPING-0.4%
Teekay Shipping Corp.                            29,500          494,125

TRUCKING-0.6%
Consolidated Freightways
  Corp. (a)                                      61,000          644,313

MISCELLANEOUS-0.6%
Carey International,
  Inc. (a)                                       37,200          732,375
                                                             ------------
                                                               1,870,813

ENERGY-0.6%
PIPELINES-0.6%
Southern Union Co.                               36,402          723,490

CONSUMER STAPLES-0.3%
RETAIL - FOOD & DRUG-0.3%
Whole Foods Market,
  Inc. (a)                                        7,000          308,000

MULTI-INDUSTRY COMPANIES-0.1%
Playtex Products, Inc. (a)                        8,000          128,000

Total United States
  Investments
  (cost $34,320,184)                                          37,412,142

FOREIGN INVESTMENTS-66.2%
AUSTRALIA-1.7%
Publishing & Broadcasting,
  Ltd.                                           75,000          505,102
Qantas Airways, Ltd.                            125,900          418,238
Smith (Howard), Ltd.                             65,000          502,704
Woodside Petroleum, Ltd.                         77,000          555,006
                                                             ------------
                                                               1,981,050

AUSTRIA-2.6%
Austria Tabakwerke AG                            14,100          785,132
Bank Austria AG                                  15,000          798,178
S & T System Integration &
  Technology Distribution
  AG (a)                                          7,000          647,764
Uproar, Ltd.                                     30,000          762,232
                                                             ------------
                                                               2,993,306

BELGIUM-0.6%
Mobistar NV, SA Cl.A (a)                         13,770          704,149

BRAZIL-0.9%
Tele Sudeste Celular
  Participacoes, SA
  (ADR)                                          12,900          317,663
Telesp Participacoes, SA
  (ADR)                                          36,500          647,875
                                                             ------------
                                                                 965,538

CANADA-1.2%
Cinar Films, Inc. Cl.B
  (ADR) (a)                                      16,100          456,838
FirstService Corp. (a)                           25,000          331,250
GST Telecommunications,
  Inc. (a)                                       22,600          339,000
Imax Corp. (a)                                    9,000          223,875
                                                             ------------
                                                               1,350,963


10


                                                 ALLIANCE GLOBAL SMALL CAP FUND
_______________________________________________________________________________

COMPANY                                          SHARES     U.S. $ VALUE
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
FINLAND-0.9%
Merita OYJ Cl.A                                 193,900    $   1,047,543

FRANCE-3.7%
CNP Assurances                                   33,020          888,419
Essilor International                             2,330          760,254
SEITA                                            22,770        1,311,751
Unibail, SA                                       5,100          675,450
Union des Assurances
  Federales                                       5,500          634,284
                                                             ------------
                                                               4,270,158

GERMANY-5.7%
B.U.S. Berzelius Umwelt-
  Service AG                                     63,070          870,393
Fresenius AG pfd.                                 5,190          993,855
Hornbach Holdings
  AG pfd.                                        28,730        1,247,856
MVV Energie AG (a)                               36,500          546,668
Primacom AG (ADR)                                25,000        1,203,525
Software AG (a)                                  27,200          925,334
Stinnes AG (a)                                   44,400          707,737
                                                             ------------
                                                               6,495,368

GREECE-0.3%
Antenna TV, SA
  (ADR) (a)                                      30,000          363,750

HONG KONG-1.6%
Amoy Properties, Ltd.                           780,000          723,562
Ng Fung Hong, Ltd.                              836,000          608,560
Television Broadcasting,
  Ltd.                                          100,000          462,534
                                                             ------------
                                                               1,794,656

HUNGARY-0.7%
Magyar Tavkozlesirt
  (ADS)                                          12,100          376,613
Mol Magyar Olaj-es
  Gazipari Rt                                    16,800          453,600
                                                             ------------
                                                                 830,213

INDIA-0.3%
Mahanagar Telephone
Nigam, Ltd. (GDR)                                27,200          287,640

ISRAEL-0.2%
BackWeb Technologies,
  Ltd. (a)                                        8,400          215,775

ITALY-2.4%
Acea SpA (a)                                     55,500          709,518
Banca Nazionale del
  Lavoro                                        302,000          872,315
Industrie Natuzzi SpA
  (ADR)                                          27,800          503,875
Seat-Pagine Gialle SpA                          502,000          702,985
                                                             ------------
                                                               2,788,693

JAPAN-14.2%
Ajinomoto Co., Inc.                              45,000          554,625
Alps Electric Co., Ltd.                          55,000        1,491,997
Banyu Pharmaceutical Co.,
  Ltd.                                           53,000        1,040,167
Daito Trust Construction
  Co., Ltd.                                      93,400          986,588
Daiwa Securities Co.,
  Ltd.                                          232,000        2,013,520
Familymart Co.                                   20,200        1,030,747
Fukuyama Transporting
  Co., Ltd.                                     217,000        1,287,104
Hoya Corp.                                       19,000        1,153,474
Kokuyo Co.                                       63,000        1,076,514
Mikuni Coca-Cola Bottling
  Co., Ltd.                                      41,000          795,717
Sankyo Co., Ltd.                                 27,500        1,592,743
Santen Pharmaceutical
  Co.                                            48,420        1,081,209
Shiseido Co., Ltd.                               84,000        1,161,324
Uni-Charm Corp.                                  20,000        1,041,476
                                                             ------------
                                                              16,307,205


11


PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)             ALLIANCE GLOBAL SMALL CAP FUND
_______________________________________________________________________________

COMPANY                                          SHARES     U.S. $ VALUE
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
LUXEMBOURG-0.6%
Millicom International
Cellular, SA (a)                                 23,600    $     722,750

MALAYSIA-0.1%
Lingkaran Trans Kota
  Holdings (a)                                   40,000           40,948
Metacorp Berhad                                  30,000           22,607
Sime Darby Berhad                                43,000           46,872
Star Publications                                10,000           20,142
UMW Holdings Bhd                                 16,000           31,279
                                                             ------------
                                                                 161,848

MEXICO-0.4%
Cifra SA, de CV (ADR)                            28,400          487,344

NETHERLANDS-4.4%
Equant NV (a)                                    18,000        1,579,025
Meta4 NV (a)                                     19,200          322,480
PinkRoccade NV (a)                               19,400          575,927
United Pan-Europe
  Communications NV (a)                          30,400        1,974,081
Versatel Telecom
  International NV (a)                           39,000          542,389
                                                             ------------
                                                               4,993,902

NORWAY-0.0%
Frontline Limited, Wts (a)                       15,216           23,115

PEOPLES REPUBLIC OF CHINA-0.3%
Beijing Datang Power
  Generation Co., Ltd.                        1,344,000          350,649

POLAND-0.7%
Kredyt Bank, SA
  (GDR) (a)                                      34,000          850,000

PORTUGAL-0.4%
Telecel-Comunicacaoes
  Pessoais, SA (b)                                3,200          409,605

SINGAPORE-0.9%
Development Bank of
  Singapore                                      82,000        1,067,340

SOUTH AFRICA-0.5%
M-Cell, Ltd.                                    115,400          210,669
Usko, Ltd.                                    1,824,900          355,356
                                                             ------------
                                                                 566,025

SOUTH KOREA-1.2%
Housing & Commercial
  Bank (a)                                       23,000          561,861
SK Telecom Co., Ltd.
  (ADR)                                          59,860          849,264
SK Telecom Co., Ltd.
  (ADR) Rights (a)                                   13               38
                                                             ------------
                                                               1,411,163

SPAIN-4.2%
Aldeasa, SA                                      25,300          748,373
Endesa, SA                                       34,780          683,877
Indra Sistemas, SA                               67,000          672,327
Portland Valderrivas, SA                         23,900          750,683
Sogecable, SA (a)                                33,000          930,245
Tabacalera, SA Series A                          53,000        1,048,939
                                                             ------------
                                                               4,834,444

SWEDEN-1.9%
Autoliv, Inc. (ADR)                              42,900        1,478,734
Securitas AB Series B                            44,000          651,141
                                                             ------------
                                                               2,129,875

SWITZERLAND-1.0%
SEZ Holding AG                                    3,600        1,170,163

THAILAND-0.7%
CMIC Finance & Security
  Public Co. (a) (c)                            110,000               -0-
Siam Commercial Bank
  Plc pfd. (a)                                  329,000          406,773

Total Access
  Communication Plc                             141,000          335,580
                                                             ------------
                                                                 742,353


12


                                                 ALLIANCE GLOBAL SMALL CAP FUND
_______________________________________________________________________________

COMPANY                                          SHARES     U.S. $ VALUE
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
UNITED KINGDOM-11.9%
BPB Plc                                         205,300    $   1,330,920
CMG Plc                                          36,300        1,011,901
Cordiant Communications
  Group Plc                                     292,000          802,150
Energis Plc (a)                                  36,400          968,673
Filtronic Comtek Plc                             83,800        1,109,606
Future Network Plc (a)                          150,000        1,045,352
Kingston Communication
  (Hull) Plc (a)                                123,200          612,988
Next Plc                                        124,000        1,364,565
Slough Estates Plc                              122,000          718,732
Stagecoach Holdings Plc                         225,900          795,388
Tomkins Plc                                     281,600        1,291,582
United News & Media Plc                         150,700        1,641,290
WPP Group Plc                                   101,000          906,847
                                                             ------------
                                                              13,599,994

Total Foreign Investments
  (cost $66,914,704)                                          75,916,577

Total Common Stocks &
  Other Investments
  (cost $101,234,888)                                        113,328,719


                                              PRINCIPAL
                                               AMOUNT
COMPANY                                         (000)       U.S. $ VALUE
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENT-2.3%
TIME DEPOSIT-2.3%
State Street Bank Euro
  Dollar
  4.75%, 8/02/99
  (amortized cost
  $2,688,000)                                   $ 2,688    $   2,688,000

TOTAL INVESTMENTS-101.2%
  (cost $103,922,888)                                        116,016,719
Other assets less
  liabilities-(1.2%)                                          (1,401,670)

NET ASSETS-100%                                            $ 114,615,049


(a)  Non-income producing security.

(b)  Securities are exempt from registration under Rule 144A of the Securities
Act of 1933. These securities may be resold in transactions exempt from
registration, normally to qualified institutional buyers. At July 31, 1999,
these securities amounted to $409,605 representing .36% of net assets.

(c)  Illiquid security, valued at fair market value (see Note A).

     Glossary of Terms:
     ADR - American Depositary Receipt
     ADS - American Depositary Shares
     GDR - Global Depositary Receipt

     See notes to financial statements.


13


STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
JULY 31, 1999                                    ALLIANCE GLOBAL SMALL CAP FUND
_______________________________________________________________________________

ASSETS
  Investments in securities, at value (cost $103,922,888)        $ 116,016,719
  Cash, at value (cost $12,812)                                         13,595
  Receivable for investment securities sold                            758,906
  Foreign tax receivable                                                61,199
  Dividends and interest receivable                                     37,685
  Total assets                                                     116,888,104

LIABILITIES
  Payable for investment securities purchased                          976,691
  Unclaimed dividends                                                  634,082
  Payable for capital stock redeemed                                   326,855
  Management fee payable                                                97,768
  Distribution fee payable                                              51,582
  Accrued expenses and other liabilities                               186,077
  Total liabilities                                                  2,273,055

NET ASSETS                                                       $ 114,615,049

COMPOSITION OF NET ASSETS
  Capital stock, at par                                          $     101,559
  Additional paid-in capital                                       103,059,534
  Accumulated net investment loss                                      (25,115)
  Accumulated net realized loss on investments and foreign
    currency transactions                                             (617,108)
  Net unrealized appreciation of investments and foreign
    currency denominated assets and liabilities                     12,096,179
                                                                 $ 114,615,049

CALCULATION OF MAXIMUM OFFERING PRICE
  CLASS A SHARES
  Net asset value and redemption price per share
    ($77,163,563/6,615,487 shares of capital stock issued
    and outstanding)                                                    $11.66
  Sales charge--4.25% of public offering price                             .52
  Maximum offering price                                                $12.18

  CLASS B SHARES
  Net asset value and offering price per share
    ($30,204,567/2,857,724 shares of capital stock issued
    and outstanding)                                                    $10.57

  CLASS C SHARES
  Net asset value and offering price per share
    ($7,058,338/666,351 shares of capital stock issued
    and outstanding)                                                    $10.59

  ADVISOR CLASS SHARES
  Net asset value, redemption and offering price per share
    ($188,581/16,058 shares of capital stock issued
    and outstanding)                                                    $11.74


See notes to financial statements.


14


STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
YEAR ENDED JULY 31, 1999                         ALLIANCE GLOBAL SMALL CAP FUND
_______________________________________________________________________________

INVESTMENT INCOME
  Dividends (net of foreign taxes withheld
    of $112,311)                                    $ 1,488,999
  Interest                                              202,047
                                                                   $ 1,691,046

EXPENSES
  Advisory fee                                        1,104,000
  Distribution fee - Class A                            215,726
  Distribution fee - Class B                            310,184
  Distribution fee - Class C                             72,574
  Transfer agency                                       481,236
  Custodian                                             288,116
  Printing                                              151,604
  Administrative                                        128,000
  Audit and legal                                        71,849
  Registration                                           44,885
  Directors' fees                                        23,000
  Miscellaneous                                          15,692
  Total expenses                                      2,906,866
  Less: expense offset arrangement (see Note B)         (33,696)
  Net expenses                                                       2,873,170
  Net investment loss                                               (1,182,124)

REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN (LOSS) ON INVESTMENTS
AND FOREIGN CURRENCY TRANSACTIONS
  Net realized gain on investment transactions                       3,594,930
  Net realized loss on foreign currency
    transactions                                                    (1,775,265)
  Net change in unrealized appreciation of:
    Investments                                                      5,258,819
    Foreign currency denominated assets and
      liabilities                                                     (152,624)
  Net gain on investments and foreign currency
    transactions                                                     6,925,860

NET INCREASE IN NET ASSETS FROM OPERATIONS                         $ 5,743,736


See notes to financial statements.


15


STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS               ALLIANCE GLOBAL SMALL CAP FUND
_______________________________________________________________________________

                                                   YEAR ENDED     YEAR ENDED
                                                     JULY 31,       JULY 31,
                                                      1999           1998
                                                  -------------  -------------
INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS FROM OPERATIONS
  Net investment loss                             $  (1,182,124) $  (1,518,977)
  Net realized gain on investments and foreign
    currency transactions                             1,819,665     14,877,192
  Net change in unrealized appreciation of
    investments and foreign currency denominated
    assets and liabilities                            5,106,195    (10,503,261)
  Net increase in net assets from operations          5,743,736      2,854,954

DISTRIBUTIONS TO SHAREHOLDERS FROM:
  Net realized gain on investments
    Class A                                          (7,496,012)    (6,916,095)
    Class B                                          (3,620,259)    (3,117,806)
    Class C                                            (837,402)      (796,527)
    Advisor Class                                       (18,180)       (28,565)

CAPITAL STOCK TRANSACTIONS
  Net increase (decrease)                           (10,689,478)    13,322,160
  Total increase (decrease)                         (16,917,595)     5,318,121

NET ASSETS
  Beginning of year                                 131,532,644    126,214,523
  End of year                                     $ 114,615,049  $ 131,532,644


See notes to financial statements.


16


NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
JULY 31, 1999                                    ALLIANCE GLOBAL SMALL CAP FUND
_______________________________________________________________________________

NOTE A: SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
Alliance Global Small Cap Fund, Inc. (the "Fund") is registered under the
Investment Company Act of 1940 as a diversified, open-end management investment
company. The Fund offers Class A, Class B, Class C and Advisor Class shares.
Class A shares are sold with a front-end sales charge of up to 4.25% for
purchases not exceeding $1,000,000. With respect to purchases of $1,000,000 or
more, Class A shares redeemed within one year of purchase may be subject to a
contingent deferred sales charge of 1%. Class B shares are currently sold with
a contingent deferred sales charge which declines from 4% to zero depending on
the period of time the shares are held. Class B shares will automatically
convert to Class A shares eight years after the end of the calendar month of
purchase. Class C shares are subject to a contingent deferred sales charge of 1%
on redemptions made within the first year after purchase. Advisor Class shares
are sold without an initial or contingent deferred sales charge and are not
subject to ongoing distribution expenses. Advisor Class shares are offered to
investors participating in fee-based programs and to certain retirement plan
accounts. All four classes of shares have identical voting, dividend,
liquidation and other rights, except that each class bears different
distribution expenses and has exclusive voting rights with respect to its
distribution plan. The financial statements have been prepared in conformity
with generally accepted accounting principles which require management to make
certain estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets
and liabilities in the financial statements and amounts of income and expenses
during the reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.
The following is a summary of significant accounting policies followed by the
Fund.

1. SECURITY VALUATION
Portfolio securities traded on a national securities exchange or on a foreign
securities exchange (other than foreign securities exchanges whose operations
are similar to those of the United States over-the-counter market) are
generally valued at the last reported sales price or if no sale occurred, at
the mean of the closing bid and asked prices on that day. Readily marketable
securities traded in the over-the-counter market, securities listed on a
foreign securities exchange whose operations are similar to the U.S.
over-the-counter market, and securities listed on a national securities
exchange whose primary market is believed to be over-the-counter, are valued at
the mean of the current bid and asked prices. U.S. government and fixed income
securities which mature in 60 days or less are valued at amortized cost, unless
this method does not represent fair value. Securities for which current market
quotations are not readily available are valued at their fair value as
determined in good faith by, or in accordance with procedures adopted by, the
Board of Directors. Fixed income securities may be valued on the basis of
prices obtained from a pricing service when such prices are believed to reflect
the fair market value of such securities.

2. CURRENCY TRANSLATION
Assets and liabilities denominated in foreign currencies and commitments under
forward exchange currency contracts are translated into U.S. dollars at the
mean of the quoted bid and asked price of such currencies against the U.S.
dollar. Purchases and sales of portfolio securities are translated into U.S.
dollars at the rates of exchange prevailing when such securities were acquired
or sold. Income and expenses are translated into U.S. dollars at rates of
exchange prevailing when accrued.

Net realized foreign currency gains and losses represent foreign exchange gains
and losses from sales and maturities of debt securities and foreign exchange
currency contracts, currency gains and losses realized between the trade and
settlement dates on security transactions, and the difference between the
amounts of interest recorded on the Fund's books and the U.S. dollar equivalent
amounts actually received or paid. The Fund does not isolate the effect of
fluctuations in foreign currency exchange rates when determining the gain or
loss upon the sale of equity securities. Net currency gains and losses from
valuing foreign currency denominated assets and liabilities at period end
exchange rates are reflected as a component of net unrealized appreciation of
investments and foreign currency denominated assets and liabilities.

3. TAXES
It is the Fund's policy to meet the requirements of the Internal Revenue Code
applicable to regulated investment companies and to distribute all of its
investment


17


NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)        ALLIANCE GLOBAL SMALL CAP FUND
_______________________________________________________________________________

company taxable income and net realized gains, if any, to shareholders.
Therefore, no provisions for federal income or excise taxes are required.

4. INVESTMENT INCOME AND INVESTMENT TRANSACTIONS
Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date. Interest income is accrued
daily. Investment transactions are accounted for on the trade date the
securities are purchased or sold. The Fund accretes discounts as adjustments to
interest income. Investment gains and losses are determined on the identified
cost basis.

5. INCOME AND EXPENSES
All income earned and expenses incurred by the Fund are borne on a pro-rata
basis by each outstanding class of shares, based on the proportionate interest
in the Fund represented by the net assets of such class, except that the Fund's
Class B and Class C shares bear higher distribution and transfer agent fees
than Class A shares and the Advisor Class shares have no distribution fees.

6. DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS
Dividends and distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend
date.

Income dividends and capital gains distributions are determined in accordance
with federal tax regulations and may differ from those determined in accordance
with generally accepted accounting principles. To the extent these differences
are permanent, such amounts are reclassified within the capital accounts based
on their federal tax basis treatment; temporary differences do not require such
reclassification.

During the current fiscal year, permanent differences, primarily due to net
investment loss and the tax treatment of foreign currency losses, resulted in a
net decrease in accumulated net investment loss and accumulated net realized
gains/loss on investments and foreign currency denominated assets and
liabilities and a corresponding increase in additional paid-in capital. This
reclassification had no effect on net assets.


NOTE B: MANAGEMENT FEES AND OTHER TRANSACTIONS WITH AFFILIATES
Under the terms of an investment advisory agreement, the Fund pays Alliance
Capital Management L.P. (the "Manager") a management fee at an annual rate of
1% of the average daily net assets of the Fund. Such fee is accrued daily and
paid monthly.

Pursuant to the management agreement, the Fund paid $128,000 to the Manager
representing the cost of certain legal and accounting services provided to the
Fund by the Manager for the year ended July 31, 1999.

The Fund compensates Alliance Fund Services, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of
the Manager, in accordance with a Services Agreement for providing personnel
and facilities to perform transfer agency services for the Fund. Such
compensation amounted to $302,942 for the year ended July 31, 1999.

In addition, for the year ended July 31, 1999, the Fund's expenses were reduced
by $33,696 under an expense offset arrangement with Alliance Fund Services.
Transfer agency fees reported in the statement of operations exclude these
credits.

Alliance Fund Distributors, Inc., (the "Distributor"), a wholly-owned
subsidiary of the Manager, serves as the Distributor of the Fund's shares. The
Distributor received front-end sales charges of $17,766 from the sales of Class
A shares and $1,306, $93,920 and $4,056 in contingent deferred sales charges
imposed upon redemptions by shareholders of Class A, Class B and Class C
shares, respectively, for the year ended July 31, 1999.

Brokerage commissions paid on investment transactions for the year ended July
31, 1999, amounted to $620,564, none of which was paid to brokers utilizing the
services of the Pershing Division of Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette Securities
Corp. ("DLJ"), an affiliate of the Manager, nor to DLJ directly.


NOTE C: DISTRIBUTION SERVICES AGREEMENT
The Fund has adopted a Distribution Services Agreement (the "Agreement")
pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the Investment Company Act of 1940. Under the
Agreement, the Fund pays a distribution fee to the Distributor at an annual
rate of up to .30 of 1% of the Fund's average


18


                                                 ALLIANCE GLOBAL SMALL CAP FUND
_______________________________________________________________________________

daily net assets attributable to Class A shares and 1% of the average daily net
assets attributable to both Class B and Class C shares. There is no
distribution fee on the Advisor Class shares. The fees are accrued daily and
paid monthly. The Agreement provides that the Distributor will use such
payments in their entirety for distribution assistance and promotional
activities. The Distributor has incurred expenses in excess of the distribution
costs reimbursed by the Fund in the amount of $2,907,082 and $811,488 for Class
B and Class C shares, respectively; such costs may be recovered from the Fund
in future periods so long as the Agreement is in effect. In accordance with the
Agreement, there is no provision for recovery of unreimbursed distribution
costs incurred by the Distributor beyond the current fiscal year for Class A
shares. The Agreement also provides that the Manager may use its own resources
to finance the distribution of the Fund's shares.


NOTE D: INVESTMENT TRANSACTIONS
Purchases and sales of investment securities (excluding short-term investments
and U.S. government securities) aggregated $128,998,961 and $149,279,652,
respectively, for the year ended July 31, 1999. There were no purchases or
sales of U.S. government and government agency obligations for the year ended
July 31, 1999.

At July 31, 1999, the cost of investments for federal income tax purposes was
$105,260,005. Accordingly, gross unrealized appreciation of investments was
$18,592,758 and gross unrealized depreciation of investments was $7,836,044,
resulting in net unrealized appreciation of $10,756,714, excluding foreign
currency transactions.

The Fund elects to treat net realized securities losses from 11/1/98 through
7/31/99 as having occurred in the following fiscal year.

FORWARD EXCHANGE CURRENCY CONTRACTS
The Fund enters into forward exchange currency contracts in order to hedge its
exposure to changes in foreign currency exchange rates on foreign portfolio
holdings and to hedge certain firm purchase and sale commitments denominated in
foreign currencies. A forward exchange currency contract is a commitment to
purchase or sell a foreign currency at a future date at a negotiated forward
rate. The gain or loss arising from the difference between the original
contracts and the closing of such contracts is included in net realized gain or
loss on foreign currency transactions.

Fluctuations in the value of forward exchange currency contracts are recorded
for financial reporting purposes as unrealized gains or losses by the Fund.

The Fund's custodian will place and maintain cash not available for investment
or other liquid assets in a separate account of the Fund having a value equal
to the aggregate amount of the Fund's commitments under forward exchange
currency contracts entered into with respect to position hedges.

Risks may arise from the potential inability of a counterparty to meet the
terms of a contract and from unanticipated movements in the value of a foreign
currency relative to the U.S. dollar.

There were no forward exchange currency contracts outstanding at July 31, 1999.


19


NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)        ALLIANCE GLOBAL SMALL CAP FUND
_______________________________________________________________________________

NOTE E: CAPITAL STOCK
There are 12,000,000,000 shares of $.01 par value capital stock authorized,
divided into four classes, designated Class A, Class B, Class C, and Advisor
Class shares. Each class consists of 3,000,000,000 authorized shares.
Transactions in capital stock were as follows:

                               SHARES                         AMOUNT
                    ---------------------------  ------------------------------
                    YEAR ENDED       YEAR ENDED    YEAR ENDED      YEAR ENDED
                       JULY 31,       JULY 31,      JULY 31,        JULY 31,
                         1999           1998          1999            1998
                     ------------  ------------  --------------  --------------
CLASS A
Shares sold              623,396     1,542,623     $ 6,806,663     $19,248,639
Shares issued in
  reinvestment of
  distributions          629,890       491,450       6,097,336       5,622,159
Shares converted
  from Class B            73,883        78,190         780,932         969,207
Shares redeemed       (1,536,869)   (1,908,638)    (16,383,463)    (23,505,697)
Net increase
  (decrease)            (209,700)      203,625     $(2,698,532)    $ 2,334,308

CLASS B
Shares sold              657,798     1,841,143     $ 6,355,692     $21,462,154
Shares issued in
  reinvestment of
  distributions          370,560       257,260       3,268,436       2,725,087
Shares converted
  to Class A             (77,917)      (84,225)       (780,932)       (969,207)
Shares redeemed       (1,559,407)   (1,202,471)    (14,943,035)    (13,793,910)
Net increase
  (decrease)            (608,966)      811,707     $(6,099,839)    $ 9,424,124

CLASS C
Shares sold              265,399       620,351     $ 2,571,782     $ 7,209,073
Shares issued in
  reinvestment of
  distributions           87,168        69,804         770,565         741,394
Shares redeemed         (530,032)     (569,558)     (5,072,717)     (6,465,829)
Net increase
  (decrease)            (177,465)      120,597     $(1,730,370)    $ 1,484,638

ADVISOR CLASS
Shares sold                4,127         6,144     $    44,310     $    77,324
Shares issued in
  reinvestment of
  distributions            1,319         2,093          12,857          24,004
Shares redeemed          (21,501)       (1,981)       (217,904)        (22,238)
Net increase
  (decrease)             (16,055)        6,256     $  (160,737)    $    79,090


NOTE F: BANK BORROWING
A number of open-end mutual funds managed by the Adviser, including the Fund,
participate in a $750 million revolving credit facility (the "Facility") to
provide short-term financing if necessary, subject to certain restrictions in
connection with abnormal redemption activity. Commitment fees related to the
Facility are paid by the participating funds and are included in the
miscellaneous expenses in the statement of operations. The Fund did not utilize
the Facility during the year ended July 31, 1999.


20


                                                 ALLIANCE GLOBAL SMALL CAP FUND
_______________________________________________________________________________

NOTE G: CONCENTRATION OF RISK
Investing in securities of foreign companies involves special risks which
include revaluation of currencies and the possibility of future political and
economic developments which could adversely affect the value of such
securities. Moreover securities of many foreign companies and their markets may
be less liquid and their prices more volatile than those of comparable United
States companies.


21


FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS                             ALLIANCE GLOBAL SMALL CAP FUND
_______________________________________________________________________________

SELECTED DATA FOR A SHARE OF CAPITAL STOCK OUTSTANDING THROUGHOUT EACH YEAR
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                          CLASS A
                                           -----------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                  YEAR ENDED JULY 31,
                                            ---------------------------------------------------------------
                                                1999         1998         1997         1996         1995
                                            -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
<S>                                         <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
Net asset value, beginning of year            $12.14       $12.87       $11.61       $10.38       $11.08

INCOME FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS
Net investment loss                             (.08)(a)     (.11)(a)     (.15)(a)     (.14)(a)     (.09)
Net realized and unrealized gain on
  investments and foreign currency
  transactions                                   .76          .37         2.97         1.90         1.50
Net increase in net asset value from
  operations                                     .68          .26         2.82         1.76         1.41

LESS: DISTRIBUTIONS
Distributions from net realized gains          (1.16)        (.99)       (1.56)        (.53)       (1.99)
Tax return of capital                             -0-          -0-          -0-          -0-        (.12)
Total distributions                            (1.16)        (.99)       (1.56)        (.53)       (2.11)
Net asset value, end of year                  $11.66       $12.14       $12.87       $11.61       $10.38

TOTAL RETURN
Total investment return based on net
  asset value (b)                               7.51%        2.49%       26.47%       17.46%       16.62%

RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net assets, end of year (000's omitted)      $77,164      $82,843      $85,217      $68,623      $60,057
Ratios to average net assets of:
  Expenses, net of waivers/
    reimbursements                              2.37%(c)     2.16%(c)     2.41%(c)     2.51%        2.54%(d)
  Net investment loss                           (.79)%       (.88)%      (1.25)%      (1.22)%      (1.17)%
Portfolio turnover rate                          120%         113%         129%         139%         128%
</TABLE>


See footnote summary on page 25.


22


                                                 ALLIANCE GLOBAL SMALL CAP FUND
_______________________________________________________________________________
SELECTED DATA FOR A SHARE OF CAPITAL STOCK OUTSTANDING THROUGHOUT EACH YEAR
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                         CLASS B
                                           -----------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                  YEAR ENDED JULY 31,
                                            ---------------------------------------------------------------
                                                1999         1998         1997         1996         1995
                                            -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
<S>                                         <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
Net asset value, beginning of year            $11.20       $12.03       $11.03       $ 9.95       $10.78

INCOME FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS
Net investment loss                             (.15)(a)     (.18)(a)     (.21)(a)     (.20)(a)     (.12)
Net realized and unrealized gain on
  investments and foreign currency
  transactions                                   .68          .34         2.77         1.81         1.40
Net increase in net asset value from
  operations                                     .53          .16         2.56         1.61         1.28

LESS: DISTRIBUTIONS
Distributions from net realized gains          (1.16)        (.99)       (1.56)        (.53)       (1.99)
Tax return of capital                             -0-          -0-          -0-          -0-        (.12)
Total distributions                            (1.16)        (.99)       (1.56)        (.53)       (2.11)
Net asset value, end of year                  $10.57       $11.20       $12.03       $11.03       $ 9.95

TOTAL RETURN
Total investment return based on net
  asset value (b)                               6.74%        1.80%       25.42%       16.69%       15.77%

RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net assets, end of year (000's omitted)      $30,205      $38,827      $31,946      $14,247       $5,164
Ratios to average net assets of:
  Expenses, net of waivers/
    reimbursements                              3.14%(c)     2.88%(c)     3.11%(c)     3.21%        3.20%(d)
  Net investment loss                          (1.59)%      (1.58)%      (1.92)%      (1.88)%      (1.92)%
Portfolio turnover rate                          120%         113%         129%         139%         128%
</TABLE>


See footnote summary on page 25.


23


FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS (CONTINUED)                 ALLIANCE GLOBAL SMALL CAP FUND
_______________________________________________________________________________
SELECTED DATA FOR A SHARE OF CAPITAL STOCK OUTSTANDING THROUGHOUT EACH YEAR
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                       CLASS C
                                           -----------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                  YEAR ENDED JULY 31,
                                            ---------------------------------------------------------------
                                                1999         1998         1997         1996         1995
                                            -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
<S>                                         <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
Net asset value, beginning of year            $11.22       $12.05       $11.05       $ 9.96       $10.79

INCOME FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS
Net investment loss                             (.16)(a)     (.19)(a)     (.22)(a)     (.20)(a)     (.17)
Net realized and unrealized gain on
  investments and foreign currency
  transactions                                   .69          .35         2.78         1.82         1.45
Net increase in net asset value from
  operations                                     .53          .16         2.56         1.62         1.28

LESS: DISTRIBUTIONS
Distributions from net realized gains          (1.16)        (.99)       (1.56)        (.53)       (1.99)
Tax return of capital                             -0-          -0-          -0-          -0-        (.12)
Total distributions                            (1.16)        (.99)       (1.56)        (.53)       (2.11)
Net asset value, end of year                  $10.59       $11.22       $12.05       $11.05       $ 9.96

TOTAL RETURN
Total investment return based on net
  asset value (b)                               6.72%        1.79%       25.37%       16.77%       15.75%

RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net assets, end of year (000's omitted)       $7,058       $9,471       $8,718       $4,119       $1,407
Ratios to average net assets of:
  Expenses, net of waivers/
    reimbursements                              3.15%(c)     2.88%(c)     3.10%(c)     3.19%        3.25%(d)
  Net investment loss                          (1.61)%      (1.59)%      (1.93)%      (1.85)%      (2.10)%
Portfolio turnover rate                          120%         113%         129%         139%         128%
</TABLE>


See footnote summary on page 25.


24


                                                 ALLIANCE GLOBAL SMALL CAP FUND
_______________________________________________________________________________
SELECTED DATA FOR A SHARE OF CAPITAL STOCK OUTSTANDING THROUGHOUT EACH PERIOD
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        ADVISOR CLASS
                                            ------------------------------------
                                                                       OCTOBER 2,
                                                                         1996(E)
                                               YEAR ENDED JULY 31,        TO
                                            ------------------------    JULY 31,
                                                1999         1998         1997
                                            -----------  -----------  -----------
<S>                                         <C>          <C>          <C>
Net asset value, beginning of period          $12.20       $12.89       $12.56

INCOME FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS
Net investment loss (a)                         (.07)        (.07)        (.08)
Net realized and unrealized gain on
  investments and foreign currency
  transactions                                   .77          .37         1.97
Net increase in net asset value from
  operations                                     .70          .30         1.89

LESS: DISTRIBUTIONS
Distributions from net realized gains          (1.16)        (.99)       (1.56)
Net asset value, end of period                $11.74       $12.20       $12.89

TOTAL RETURN
Total investment return based on net
  asset value (b)                               7.63%        2.82%       17.08%

RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net assets, end of period (000's omitted)       $189         $392         $333
Ratios to average net assets of:
  Expenses, net of waivers/
    reimbursements (c)                          2.13%        1.87%        2.05%(f)
  Net investment loss                           (.63)%       (.57)%       (.84)%(f)
Portfolio turnover rate                          120%         113%         129%
</TABLE>


(a)  Based on average shares outstanding.

(b)  Total investment return is calculated assuming an initial investment made
at the net asset value at the beginning of the period, reinvestment of all
dividends and distributions at net asset value during the period, and
redemption on the last day of the period. Initial sales charges or contingent
deferred sales charges are not reflected in the calculation of total investment
return. Total investment return calculated for a period of less than one year
is not annualized.

(c)  Ratios reflect expenses grossed up for expense offset arrangement with the
Transfer Agent. For the periods ended July 31, 1999, July 31, 1998 and July 31,
1997, the ratios of expenses net of waivers/reimbursements were 2.33%, 2.14%
and 2.38% for Class A shares, 3.11%, 2.86% and 3.08% for Class B shares, 3.12%,
2.85% and 3.08% for Class C shares and 2.10%, 1.84% and 2.04% for Advisor Class
shares, respectively.

(d)  If the Fund had borne all expenses, the expense ratios would have been
2.61%, 3.27%, and 3.31% for Class A, Class B and Class C shares, respectively.

(e)  Commencement of distribution.

(f)  Annualized.


25


REPORT OF ERNST & YOUNG LLP
INDEPENDENT AUDITORS                             ALLIANCE GLOBAL SMALL CAP FUND
_______________________________________________________________________________
TO THE SHAREHOLDERS AND BOARD OF DIRECTORS ALLIANCE GLOBAL SMALL CAP FUND, INC.
We have audited the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities of Alliance
Global Small Cap Fund, Inc., including the portfolio of investments, as of July
31, 1999, and the related statement of operations for the year then ended, the
statement of changes in net assets for each of the two years in the period then
ended, and the financial highlights for each of the periods indicated therein.
These financial statements and financial highlights are the responsibility of
the Fund's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these
financial statements and financial highlights based on our audits.

We conducted our audits in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements and financial
highlights are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a
test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial
statements and financial highlights. Our procedures included confirmation of
securities owned as of July 31, 1999, by correspondence with the custodian and
others. An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and
significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall
financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits provide a
reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion, the financial statements and financial highlights referred to
above present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of
Alliance Global Small Cap Fund, Inc. at July 31, 1999, the results of its
operations for the year then ended, the changes in its net assets for each of
the two years in the period then ended, and the financial highlights for each
of the indicated periods, in conformity with generally accepted accounting
principles.


New York, New York
September 8, 1999





















































<PAGE>

____________________________________________________________

                           APPENDIX A:

                 CERTAIN EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS
____________________________________________________________

         Employee benefit plans described below which are
intended to be tax-qualified under section 401(a) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended ("Tax Qualified Plans"), for
which Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated or an
affiliate thereof ("Merrill Lynch") is recordkeeper (or with
respect to which recordkeeping services are provided pursuant to
certain arrangements as described in paragraph (ii) below)
("Merrill Lynch Plans") are subject to specific requirements as
to the Fund shares which they may purchase.  Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary contained elsewhere in this Statement of
Additional Information, the following Merrill Lynch Plans are not
eligible to purchase Class A shares and are eligible to purchase
Class B shares of the Fund at net asset value without being
subject to a contingent deferred sales charge:

(i)  Plans for which Merrill Lynch is the recordkeeper on a
     daily valuation basis, if when the plan is established
     as an active plan on Merrill Lynch's recordkeeping
     system:

     (a)  the plan is one which is not already
          investing in shares of mutual funds or
          interests in other commingled investment
          vehicles of which Merrill Lynch Asset
          Management, L.P. is investment adviser or
          manager ("MLAM Funds"), and either (A) the
          aggregate assets of the plan are less than
          $3 million or (B) the total of the sum of
          (x) the employees eligible to participate in
          the plan and (y) those persons, not
          including any such employees, for whom a
          plan account having a balance therein is
          maintained, is less than 500, each of (A)
          and (B) to be determined by Merrill Lynch in
          the normal course prior to the date the plan
          is established as an active plan on Merrill
          Lynch's recordkeeping system (an "Active
          Plan"); or

     (b)  the plan is one which is already investing
          in shares of or interests in MLAM Funds and
          the assets of the plan have an aggregate
          value of less than $5 million, as determined



                               A-1



<PAGE>

          by Merrill Lynch as of the date the plan
          becomes an Active Plan.

          For purposes of applying (a) and (b), there
          are to be aggregated all assets of any Tax-
          Qualified Plan maintained by the sponsor of
          the Merrill Lynch Plan (or any of the
          sponsor's affiliates) (determined to be such
          by Merrill Lynch) which are being invested
          in shares of or interests in MLAM Funds,
          Alliance Mutual Funds or other mutual funds
          made available pursuant to an agreement
          between Merrill Lynch and the principal
          underwriter thereof (or one of its
          affiliates) and which are being held in a
          Merrill Lynch account.

(ii) Plans for which the recordkeeper is not Merrill Lynch,
     but which are recordkept on a daily valuation basis by
     a recordkeeper with which Merrill Lynch has a
     subcontracting or other alliance arrangement for the
     performance of recordkeeping services, if the plan is
     determined by Merrill Lynch to be so eligible and the
     assets of the plan are less than $3 million.

         Class B shares of the Fund held by any of the
above-described Merrill Lynch Plans are to be replaced at
Merrill Lynch's direction through conversion, exchange or
otherwise by Class A shares of the Fund on the earlier of
the date that the value of the plan's aggregate assets first
equals or exceeds $5 million or the date on which any Class
B share of the Fund held by the plan would convert to a
Class A share of the Fund as described under "Purchase of
Shares" and "Redemption and Repurchase of Shares."

         Any Tax Qualified Plan, including any Merrill Lynch
Plan, which does not purchase Class B shares of the Fund
without being subject to a contingent deferred sales charge
under the above criteria is eligible to purchase Class B
shares subject to a contingent deferred sales charge as well
as other classes of shares of the Fund as set forth above
under "Purchase of Shares" and "Redemption and Repurchase of
Shares."







                            A-2
00250176.AP5






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