HISTORIC BELLEFONTE BREWERY INC
SB-2/A, 1996-08-27
MALT BEVERAGES
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<PAGE>
   
    AS FILED WITH THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION ON AUGUST 27, 1996
    
 
   
                                                       REGISTRATION NO. 333-5013
    
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                              WASHINGTON, DC 20549
                           --------------------------
   
                               AMENDMENT NO. 1 TO
                                   FORM SB-2
    
                             REGISTRATION STATEMENT
                                     UNDER
                           THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
                            ------------------------
                     THE HISTORIC BELLEFONTE BREWERY, INC.
             (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
 
<TABLE>
<S>                              <C>                            <C>
         PENNSYLVANIA                        2082                  25-6536769
 (State or other jurisdiction    (Primary Standard Industrial   (I.R.S. Employer
              of
incorporation or organization)   Classification Code Number)     Identification
                                                                    Number)
</TABLE>
 
                                  P.O. BOX 389
                              BELLEFONTE, PA 16823
                           (814) 355-5556 (EXT. 111)
   (Address and telephone number of registrant's principal executive offices)
 
                               367 PHOENIX AVENUE
                              BELLEFONTE, PA 16823
               (Address of intended principal place of business)
 
                              EDWARD J. LAUTH, III
                               ONE AQUAPENN DRIVE
                              MILESBURG, PA 16853
                           (814) 355-5556 (EXT. 111)
 (Name, address, including zip code, and telephone number, including area code,
                             of agent for service)
                           --------------------------
 
                                    COPY TO:
                           MICHAEL P. GALLAGHER, ESQ.
                       BALLARD SPAHR ANDREWS & INGERSOLL
                         1735 Market Street, 51st Floor
                          Philadelphia, PA 19103-7599
                                 (215) 665-8500
                           --------------------------
 
   
    If  any of the securities being registered on this Form are to be offered on
a delayed or continuous basis pursuant to  Rule 415 under the Securities Act  of
1933 check the following box. /X/
    
 
    If  this Form  is filed  to register  additional securities  for an offering
pursuant to Rule 462(b) under the Securities Act, please check the following box
and list  the  Securities  Act  registration statement  number  of  the  earlier
effective registration statement for the same offering. / /
 
    If  this Form  is a post-effective  amendment filed pursuant  to Rule 462(c)
under the Securities Act,  check the following box  and list the Securities  Act
registration  statement number  of the earlier  effective registration statement
for the same offering. / /
 
    If delivery of the prospectus is expected  to be made pursuant to Rule  434,
please check the following box. / /
                           --------------------------
 
                        CALCULATION OF REGISTRATION FEE
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                              PROPOSED MAXIMUM
                                                            PROPOSED MAXIMUM     AGGREGATE
        TITLE OF EACH CLASS OF               AMOUNT TO       OFFERING PRICE       OFFERING         AMOUNT OF
      SECURITIES TO BE REGISTERED          BE REGISTERED     PER SHARES (1)      PRICE (1)      REGISTRATION FEE
<S>                                      <C>                <C>               <C>               <C>
Common Stock (no par value)............  1,250,000 shares        $10.00         $12,500,000        $4,310.35
</TABLE>
 
(1) Estimated solely for the purpose of calculation of the registration fee.
                           --------------------------
 
    THE  REGISTRANT HEREBY  AMENDS THIS REGISTRATION  STATEMENT ON  SUCH DATE OR
DATES AS MAY BE NECESSARY TO DELAY ITS EFFECTIVE DATE UNTIL THE REGISTRANT SHALL
FILE A  FURTHER  AMENDMENT  WHICH SPECIFICALLY  STATES  THAT  THIS  REGISTRATION
STATEMENT  SHALL THEREAFTER BECOME EFFECTIVE IN  ACCORDANCE WITH SECTION 8(A) OF
THE SECURITIES ACT  OF 1933 OR  UNTIL THIS REGISTRATION  STATEMENT SHALL  BECOME
EFFECTIVE  ON SUCH DATE AS THE COMMISSION, ACTING PURSUANT TO SAID SECTION 8(A),
MAY DETERMINE.
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<PAGE>
INFORMATION   CONTAINED  HEREIN  IS  SUBJECT   TO  COMPLETION  OR  AMENDMENT.  A
REGISTRATION STATEMENT  RELATING TO  THESE SECURITIES  HAS BEEN  FILED WITH  THE
SECURITIES  AND EXCHANGE  COMMISSION. THESE SECURITIES  MAY NOT BE  SOLD NOR MAY
OFFERS TO BUY BE ACCEPTED PRIOR  TO THE TIME THE REGISTRATION STATEMENT  BECOMES
EFFECTIVE.  THIS  PROSPECTUS  SHALL  NOT  CONSTITUTE AN  OFFER  TO  SELL  OR THE
SOLICITATION OF AN OFFER TO BUY NOR SHALL THERE BE ANY SALE OF THESE  SECURITIES
IN  ANY STATE IN WHICH SUCH OFFER,  SOLICITATION OR SALE WOULD BE UNLAWFUL PRIOR
TO REGISTRATION OR QUALIFICATION UNDER THE SECURITIES LAWS OF ANY SUCH STATE.
<PAGE>
   
                       SUBJECT TO COMPLETION      , 1996
    
 
                                      [LOGO]
                     THE HISTORIC BELLEFONTE BREWERY, INC.
 
           A MINIMUM OF 500,000 AND A MAXIMUM OF 1,250,000 SHARES OF
                        COMMON STOCK AT $10.00 PER SHARE
 
   
    The Historic  Bellefonte  Brewery,  Inc. (the  "Company")  hereby  offers  a
minimum  of 500,000 and  a maximum of  1,250,000 shares of  Common Stock, no par
value per share (the "Shares"),  at an offering price  of $10.00 per share  (the
"Offering").  Within  five  days  of its  receipt  of  a  Subscription Agreement
accompanied by a check for  the purchase price, the  Company will send by  first
class  mail a written  confirmation to notify  the subscriber of  the extent, if
any, to which such subscription has  been accepted by the Company. The  offering
price  has been arbitrarily determined solely  by the Company. The Offering will
begin on the date of this Prospectus  and will terminate on or before  September
1, 1997 (the "Offering Termination Date").
    
                           --------------------------
 
THESE  SECURITIES HAVE  NOT BEEN APPROVED  OR DISAPPROVED BY  THE SECURITIES AND
EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION NOR HAS THE SECURITIES
   AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION PASSED  UPON
        THE  ACCURACY OR ADEQUACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY REPRESENTATION
                           TO THE CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL OFFENSE.
 
    THE OFFERING HAS  BEEN REGISTERED  UNDER THE  SECURITIES LAWS  OF A  LIMITED
NUMBER  OF  STATES, AND  THE SHARES  OFFERED HEREBY  MAY BE  SOLD ONLY  IN THOSE
STATES. SUCH  REGISTRATIONS,  HOWEVER,  DO  NOT  CONSTITUTE  AN  ENDORSEMENT  OR
APPROVAL BY ANY PARTICULAR STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION OF ANY SECURITIES OFFERED
OR THE TERMS OF THE OFFERING. NO STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION HAS PASSED UPON THE
ACCURACY OR COMPLETENESS OF THIS PROSPECTUS OR ANY OTHER SELLING LITERATURE.
 
   
    THE  OFFERING  INVOLVES  SUBSTANTIAL  RISKS CONCERNING  THE  COMPANY  AND AN
INVESTMENT THEREIN AND  SHOULD BE CONSIDERED  ONLY BY PERSONS  ABLE TO BEAR  THE
ECONOMIC  RISK OF  THE INVESTMENT FOR  AN INDEFINITE  PERIOD OF TIME  OR ABLE TO
AFFORD THE LOSS OF THEIR ENTIRE INVESTMENT. SEE "RISK FACTORS" BEGINNING AT PAGE
5. OFFERS  ARE PERMITTED  ONLY TO  RESIDENTS OF  CERTAIN STATES.  SEE  "INVESTOR
SUITABILITY" BEGINNING AT PAGE 5.
    
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   UNDERWRITING
                                                                     DISCOUNT
                                                                       AND             PROCEEDS TO
                                             PRICE TO PUBLIC     COMMISSIONS (1)     THE COMPANY (2)
<S>                                         <C>                 <C>                 <C>
Per Share.................................        $10.00                --                $10.00
Total Minimum (3).........................      $5,000,000              --              $4,800,000
Total Maximum.............................     $12,500,000              --             $12,300,000
</TABLE>
 
(1)  The  Shares will  be  offered and  sold by  officers  and employees  of the
    Company. No commissions or other compensation  will be paid to the  officers
    and  employees of the Company in connection  with the Offering. No broker or
    dealer has been retained or is under any obligation to purchase any  Shares,
    although the Company may use brokers or dealers and pay a commission on such
    sales. See "Plan of Distribution."
 
(2)  After deducting  offering expenses payable  by the Company  estimated to be
    $200,000, including, among other  expenses, printing, mailing and  marketing
    expenses and legal and accounting fees. See "Plan of Distribution."
 
   
(3)  Until the sale of at least a minimum of 500,000 Shares (the "Minimum") plus
    the receipt  of  financing  which  together with  the  sale  of  the  Shares
    aggregates  to at least $10,000,000 (before offering expenses payable by the
    Company) (the "Initial Closing"), all proceeds of the Offering will be  held
    in  escrow  by  American  Securities Transfer  &  Trust,  Inc.  (the "Escrow
    Agent"). If the Initial Closing has not occurred by the Offering Termination
    Date, the proceeds held in  escrow will be returned  by the Escrow Agent  to
    the  investors with interest. After closing on  the sale of the Minimum, the
    proceeds held in escrow will be disbursed by the Escrow Agent to the Company
    and the escrow will be closed. Thereafter, the Company may continue to  sell
    Shares for the remaining term of the Offering. Proceeds from such sales will
    be immediately available to the Company. See "Plan of Distribution."
    
 
               THE DATE OF THIS PROSPECTUS IS             , 1996
<PAGE>
                             AVAILABLE INFORMATION
 
    The  Company  has filed  with the  Securities  and Exchange  Commission (the
"Commission"), a Registration Statement  on Form SB-2  under the Securities  Act
with  respect  to  the  Common  Stock  offered  hereby.  This  Prospectus, which
constitutes a  part of  the Registration  Statement, omits  certain  information
contained  in the Registration Statement and  the exhibits and schedules thereto
on file with the  Commission pursuant to  the Securities Act  and the rules  and
regulations  of the Commission thereunder. The Registration Statement, including
the exhibits and  schedules thereto, may  be inspected, without  charge, at  the
Public Reference Section of the Commission at 450 Fifth Street, N.W., Room 1024,
Washington,  D.C. 20549,  and copies  may be  obtained at  the prescribed rates.
Statements contained in this  Prospectus as to the  contents of any contract  or
other  document referred  to are not  necessarily complete and  in each instance
reference is made to  the copy of  such contract or other  document filed as  an
Exhibit  to the Registration  Statement, each such  statement being qualified in
all respects by such reference.
 
    If the  Company's  Common Stock  becomes  qualified, and  is  accepted,  for
listing  on  the  Nasdaq  SmallCap  Market, copies  of  such  reports  and other
information filed with  the Commission would  also be filed  with, and would  be
available  for  inspection  at  the  offices  of,  the  National  Association of
Securities Dealers, Inc., 1735 K Street, Washington, D.C. 20006.
 
    In the event that the Company's Common Stock is not qualified, or  accepted,
for  listing  on the  Nasdaq SmallCap  Market,  it is  possible that  brokers or
dealers may  desire  to  trade shares  of  the  Company's Common  Stock  in  the
over-the-counter  inter-dealer  market.  Under  the  rules  of  the  Commission,
however, such trading would  only be permitted if  such brokers or dealers  have
current  public  information  about the  Company  as required  by  Rule 15c2-11,
promulgated under the  Exchange Act. In  order to assist  brokers or dealers  in
complying  with this  requirement, the  Company may  provide to  such brokers or
dealers copies of this Prospectus and/or other information about the Company.
 
                                       2
<PAGE>
                                    SUMMARY
 
    THE FOLLOWING SUMMARY IS QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY, AND SHOULD BE READ IN
CONJUNCTION  WITH,  THE  MORE  DETAILED  INFORMATION  AND  FINANCIAL  STATEMENTS
INCLUDED ELSEWHERE IN  THIS PROSPECTUS.  CERTAIN TERMS USED  HEREIN ARE  DEFINED
ELSEWHERE  IN THIS  PROSPECTUS. SEE "RISK  FACTORS" FOR A  DISCUSSION OF CERTAIN
FACTORS THAT SHOULD BE CONSIDERED IN CONNECTION WITH AN INVESTMENT IN THE SHARES
OFFERED HEREBY.
 
                                  THE COMPANY
 
    The Company was  recently formed  to build  and operate  a premier  regional
craft  brewery in the historic,  one hundred year old  Match Factory building in
Bellefonte, Pennsylvania. The Company intends to purchase and install a  premium
brewhouse, capable of annually producing initially 30,000 barrels and eventually
as  much  as 100,000  barrels  of high-quality  lagers.  The Company  intends to
develop a premium line of lager beers to be sold under the Bellefonte brand name
and other Company-owned  labels and names.  All of the  Company's beers will  be
brewed  utilizing the  natural spring  water from  the Bellefonte  Big Spring in
Bellefonte, Pennsylvania. In addition, the Company's equipment will enable it to
produce certain soft drinks, hard ciders and draft ciders.
 
    The Company has no operating history. The Company has been organized by  its
Chairman,  Edward J. Lauth III, to develop  and operate a regional craft brewery
in the historic one hundred  year old Match Factory  Building located on a  nine
acre  site in Bellefonte, Pennsylvania. The Company has undertaken the following
activities:
 
   
    - hiring Michael D. Graham, an experienced brewery executive, as  President,
      to  oversee the engineering,  construction and operation  of the Company's
      proposed premium brewhouse. See "Management."
    
 
    - obtaining an option,  expiring August 31,  1996, for the  purchase of  the
      historic Match Factory Building located on a nine acre site in Bellefonte,
      Pennsylvania  as  the location  for  the Company's  proposed  brewery. See
      "Business -- Initial Operations."
 
   
    - entering into discussions with and receiving a price quote from a  premier
      engineering  firm with significant brewery  experience, to engineer, build
      and install the  Company's proposed  brewhouse. See  "Business --  Initial
      Operations."
    
 
   
    - entering  into  discussions  with  and  receiving  a  price  quote  from a
      preeminent manufacturer  of bottle  filling and  labelling equipment.  See
      "Business -- Initial Operations."
    
 
    - selecting Alan Meyers, A.I.A., as the architect for the renovations of the
      Match Factory site. See "Business -- Initial Operations."
 
    - selecting  Lanny  and Kristin  Sommese as  the  graphic designers  for the
      design of the  Company's bottles,  labels and  promotional materials.  See
      "Business -- Initial Operations."
 
   
    - retaining John C. Haas Associates, Inc. as the structural engineer for the
      renovations   of  the  Match  Factory   site.  See  "Business  --  Initial
      Operations."
    
 
    - selecting Miller & Masters as the landscape architect for the  renovations
      of the Match Factory site. See "Business -- Initial Operations."
 
   
    - retaining  L. Robert Kimball &  Associates as the environmental consultant
      for the renovations of  the Match Factory site.  See "Business --  Initial
      Operations."
    
 
    - searching  for  an experienced  Brewmaster,  to assist  in  developing the
      Company's beer recipes. See "Management."
 
    Upon completion of the  Company's proposed brewery  and the commencement  of
operations,  the Company's strategy will be to market its products through third
party distributors  for resale  in bars,  restaurants, retail  stores and  other
retail  license holders, initially in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic regions and
eventually throughout the United States.
 
                                       3
<PAGE>
    The mailing address  of the  Company's executive  offices is  P.O. Box  389,
Bellefonte,  Pennsylvania  16823 and  the  Company's telephone  number  is (814)
355-5556 (ext. 111).
 
                                  THE OFFERING
 
   
<TABLE>
<S>                                      <C>
Common Stock Offered...................  Between  500,000   Shares   (the   "Minimum")   and
                                         1,250,000 Shares (the "Maximum")
 
Offering Price.........................  $10.00 Per Share
 
Initial Closing........................  The  initial closing of  the Offering (the "Initial
                                         Closing") will occur upon the sale of at least  the
                                         Minimum  plus the receipt of financing in an amount
                                         which together with the  sale of Shares  aggregates
                                         to  at least $10,000,000  (before offering expenses
                                         payable by the Company).
 
Common Stock Outstanding After the
 Offering..............................  912,500 assuming that only the Minimum is sold  and
                                         1,662,500  assuming that  the Maximum  is sold. See
                                         "Capitalization."
 
Dividend Policy........................  The Company does not anticipate paying dividends on
                                         its Common  Stock in  the foreseeable  future.  See
                                         "Dividend Policy."
 
Use of Proceeds........................  To   renovate,  equip  and   operate  the  proposed
                                         brewery. See "Use of Proceeds."
 
Risk Factors...........................  An investment  in  the  Shares  offered  hereby  is
                                         subject  to  a  high  degree  of  risk.  See  "Risk
                                         Factors."
 
Escrow of Shares.......................  Prior to  the  initial  closing  of  the  Offering,
                                         Edward  J.  Lauth, III  and Poole  Financial Group,
                                         Inc. ("PFG"), the Company's principal shareholders,
                                         will place in escrow       shares of the  Company's
                                         outstanding  shares of Common Stock currently owned
                                         by Mr. Lauth and PFG.  The escrow will provide  for
                                         the  release of these  shares to Mr.  Lauth and PFG
                                         based upon  the Company's  satisfaction of  certain
                                         revenue and earnings levels or the shares of Common
                                         Stock  being  traded at  certain price  levels. The
                                         escrow also  includes certain  restrictions on  Mr.
                                         Lauth  and PFG's ability to sell or transfer shares
                                         of Common Stock  owned by  Mr. Lauth  and PFG.  See
                                         "Security   Ownership  of  Management  and  Certain
                                         Shareholders."
</TABLE>
    
 
                                       4
<PAGE>
                              INVESTOR SUITABILITY
 
   
    Only  residents of the states of  Pennsylvania, Illinois, Florida, New York,
New Jersey,  Connecticut,  Massachusetts, Ohio  and  Michigan may  purchase  the
Shares   offered  hereby.  Each  subscriber  will   be  required  to  execute  a
Subscription Agreement which,  among other  things, requires  the subscriber  to
certify his or her state of residence. A subscriber who is a resident of a state
other  than a state in which the Shares have been qualified for sale may request
that the  Company register  the Shares  in the  state in  which such  subscriber
resides.  However, the Company is  under no obligation to  do so, and may refuse
any such request.
    
 
    Since the Company's intention is to  establish and operate a brewery in  the
Commonwealth  of Pennsylvania, the  Company will be subject  to licensure by the
Pennsylvania Liquor  Control Board  ("PLCB").  As a  result of  such  licensure,
ownership  of the Company's Common Stock is not permitted by persons or entities
which hold a wholesale or retail PLCB license or which have an "interest" (i.e.,
officer, director or owner; or creditor,  lessor, lender or guarantor; etc.)  in
an  entity holding a wholesale or retail PLCB license. This restriction does not
preclude a person or entity from owning shares in more than one brewery licensed
by the PLCB.  Each subscriber  in the  Offering will  be required  to execute  a
Subscription  Agreement which,  among other  things, requires  the subscriber to
certify his eligibility as a subscriber in accordance with the PLCB  restriction
described  above.  The  Company  will  use  reasonable  efforts  to  assure that
subsequent purchasers of shares of the  Company's Common Stock comply with  this
PLCB  restriction. However, there can  be no assurance that  the Company will be
able to prevent  shares of  the Company's Common  Stock from  being acquired  by
persons or entities in violation of this PLCB restriction. In the event the PLCB
determines that a holder of the Company's Common Stock also holds a wholesale or
retail  PLCB  license or  has an  "interest"  in a  wholesale or  retail license
holder, the PLCB may  compel such stockholder to  divest or otherwise  terminate
its interest with one of the conflicting license holders. Failure by such holder
to  comply  with the  PLCB  licensure requirements  may  subject the  Company to
enforcement action,  which  may include  fines,  penalties or  other  sanctions,
including suspension and revocation of the Company's license.
 
    AN  INVESTMENT IN THE COMPANY IS HIGHLY SPECULATIVE AND SHOULD BE CONSIDERED
ONLY BY THOSE PERSONS WHO ARE ABLE TO AFFORD A LOSS OF THEIR ENTIRE  INVESTMENT.
SEE "RISK FACTORS".
 
                                  RISK FACTORS
 
    IN  ADDITION  TO INFORMATION  SET FORTH  ELSEWHERE  IN THIS  PROSPECTUS, THE
FOLLOWING SPECIFIC  RISK  FACTORS  RELATING  TO THE  COMPANY  AND  ITS  PROPOSED
OPERATIONS  SHOULD BE  CONSIDERED CAREFULLY  BEFORE PURCHASING  SHARES OF COMMON
STOCK OFFERED BY THIS PROSPECTUS.
 
    NO OPERATING HISTORY.  The Company was incorporated on March 1, 1996, has no
operating history or revenues,  and has not engaged  in any business other  than
organizational  activities, including preparing this Prospectus. The Company has
limited assets, has not  yet produced any  beer, and there  can be no  assurance
that  it will be  successful in developing marketable  beers, or that marketable
beers, if  developed, will  result  in product  sales  that meet  the  Company's
expectations  or that  the Company will  ever operate  profitably. The Company's
viability will  depend upon  successful completion  of the  Offering,  obtaining
additional  financing, successful implementation of  the Company's plans for the
establishment of its proposed brewery and successful marketing of the  Company's
proposed beer products. See "Business."
 
   
    ADDITIONAL  FINANCING.   The Company may  be able to  consummate the Initial
Closing based upon the sale of  at least the Minimum, plus additional  financing
of up to $5,000,000, resulting in aggregate proceeds (before payment of offering
expenses)  of  at least  $10,000,000. To  date,  the Company  does not  have any
commitment for such financing. There can be no assurance that such financing can
be obtained  on  terms favorable  to  the Company  and/or  not dilutive  to  the
Company's  shareholders to  purchase at the  Minimum. See "Use  of Proceeds" and
"Business -- Initial Operations."
    
 
                                       5
<PAGE>
   
    NEED FOR ADDITIONAL  OPERATING CAPITAL.   In addition to  the proceeds  from
this  Offering (including any financing needed to conclude the Initial Closing),
the Company will need additional financing  in the amount of approximately  $1.0
million  at the Minimum  and $2.0 million  at the Maximum  (due to the increased
size and scope of brewery operations, in the event the Company is able to  close
on  the Maximum), to  provide operating capital  for the first  twelve months of
operations following completion of the  Offering. Thereafter, the Company  would
be  dependent upon revenues from the sale of its products, if any, or additional
debt or equity financing. To date, the Company does not have any commitments for
such financing.  Any incurred  in  order to  conclude  the Initial  Closing  may
adversely  effect the Company's ability  to obtain additional operating capital.
There can be no assurance that financing  can be obtained on terms favorable  to
the Company and/or not dilutive to the Company's shareholders. If the Company is
unable to obtain the financing needed, the Company may not have sufficient funds
to complete the establishment of the proposed brewery and/or to commence brewing
operations. See "Use of Proceeds" and "Business -- Initial Operations."
    
 
   
    LEVERAGE.  If the Company obtains additional financing, particularly if only
the  Minimum has  been sold, the  Company may  be highly leveraged  and may have
substantial debt service  obligations. Such leverage  could present  significant
risks  to an investor in the Shares. There  can be no assurance that the Company
would be  able to  generate sufficient  cash  flow to  make timely  payments  of
principal and interest on indebtedness. In that event, the Company could default
on  such indebtedness, which could result,  among other things, in a foreclosure
or other actions  of creditors  against collateral  securing such  indebtedness.
Such  collateral could include the proposed brewery, equipment and/or inventory,
as well as any other assets of the Company. See "Use of Proceeds" and  "Business
- -- Initial Operations."
    
 
    LACK  OF PUBLIC MARKET; IRREVOCABILITY OF SUBSCRIPTIONS.  There is no public
market for the  Company's Common Stock  and there  can be no  assurance that  an
active  public  market  will develop  in  the near  future  as a  result  of the
Offering. Accordingly, an investor in the Shares may not be able to sell his  or
her  Shares readily, if at all, and therefore  must be able to bear the economic
risk of the investment  in the Company  for an indefinite period  of time or  be
able  to afford  the loss  of his  or her  entire investment.  In addition, PLCB
regulations prohibit  ownership of  the  Company's Common  Stock by  persons  or
entities  holding  a wholesale  or  retail PLCB  license  or which  have certain
financial or business interests in an entity holding a wholesale or retail  PLCB
license.  This  restriction does  not preclude  a person  or entity  from owning
shares in  more than  one brewery  licensed by  the PLCB.  Subscriptions in  the
Offering  are generally irrevocable. See "Plan of Distribution" and "Description
of Common Stock -- Limitations on Transfers of Shares."
 
   
    CONTROL  BY  EXISTING  SHAREHOLDERS.    Upon  completion  of  the  Offering,
depending  upon the number  of Shares sold,  Edward J. Lauth  III, the Company's
Chairman of the Board and PFG, a corporation wholly owned by Sandra F. Poole,  a
Director  of the Company, will  beneficially own in the  aggregate 24.8%, if the
Maximum is sold, and 45.2%, if the Minimum is sold, of the outstanding shares of
the Company's Common Stock.  By virtue of this  beneficial stock ownership,  the
existing  shareholders will be in a  position to exert considerable control over
the election of the members of the Board of Directors of the Company  (including
any  new members of the Board to be appointed after completion of the Offering),
and will exert considerable control over the management, policies and operations
of the  Company. See  "Management"  and "Security  Ownership of  Management  and
Certain Shareholders."
    
 
   
    DILUTION.   Investors participating in the Offering will incur immediate and
substantial dilution of $4.81 per share, or 48.1%, assuming the Minimum is  sold
($2.64  per share or  26.4% assuming the  Maximum is sold),  in the net tangible
book value of their Shares. See "Dilution."
    
 
   
    DEPENDENCE ON MANAGEMENT.  The  Company's success will be heavily  dependent
upon  the efforts of Edward  J. Lauth, III and  Michael D. Graham, the Company's
President. The Company intends to hire a Brewmaster and Chief Financial  Officer
and  to  obtain additional  management, sales  and  marketing services  from the
employees and  outside consultants,  but is  dependent upon  Mr. Lauth  and  Mr.
Graham  for the development and start-up activities  of the Company. The loss of
Mr. Lauth's or
    
 
                                       6
<PAGE>
   
Mr. Graham's services for any reason could have a material adverse effect on the
Company's financial condition and operations. Mr. Lauth is a full-time employee,
Chairman and President  and a director  of AquaPenn Spring  Water Company,  Inc.
("AquaPenn"). Mr. Lauth is not expected to devote his full time to the Company's
activities.  See "Risk  Factors Conflict  of Interest."  The Company anticipates
that Mr. Lauth will devote such time,  on a part-time basis, to his duties  with
the  Company  as  is  reasonably  necessary  in  connection  with  the Company's
activities and objectives, and consistent with his other activities. The Company
intends to obtain a key-man insurance policy for its benefit on the lives of Mr.
Lauth and Mr. Graham in the amount of $500,000. Although Mr. Lauth has extensive
experience in various aspects  of beverage production  and marketing, Mr.  Lauth
has  never overseen the construction  of a brewery nor  acted in the capacity of
Chairman of the Board of a brewery. See "Management."
    
 
   
    PROCUREMENT OF BREWERY  SITE.   The Company plans  to locate  and build  its
brewery  at the Match  Factory in Bellefonte, Pennsylvania,  and has obtained an
option to  purchase such  site.  Any delay  in  the selection,  negotiation  and
closing  on  the  acquisition  of  the  site  could  delay  the  commencement of
construction, which would also delay the commencement of brewery production. The
Company may attempt to obtain or lease a different building as an alternative to
the site. However, there can  be no assurance that the  Company will be able  to
locate and/or acquire such a building. See "Business -- Initial Operations."
    
 
    CONSTRUCTION  AND EQUIPMENT COSTS;  FOREIGN CURRENCY RISK.   The Company has
prepared a preliminary design of its proposed brewery and developed an  estimate
to  cover the total costs of  renovating, constructing and equipping the brewery
of approximately $9 million, but it has  not obtained a bid or binding  estimate
of  the total cost. Consequently, the  actual cost of construction and equipment
could be higher  than presently  expected, which  would require  the Company  to
utilize  any available working  capital for construction  purposes and/or obtain
additional financing  to  complete  construction  and  commence  operations.  In
addition,  a significant portion of the  equipment cost estimates, including the
premium brewhouse, was quoted in Deutsche Marks. As a result of fluctuations  in
currency  exchange rates, it is  possible that the dollar  cost of the equipment
will be  higher  than  originally  estimated.  If  significant  construction  or
equipment  cost  overruns  or delays  occur,  the Company's  scheduled  goal for
beginning production at its proposed brewery would be delayed and the  Company's
operating  results  would  be materially  and  adversely affected.  See  "Use of
Proceeds" and "Business -- Initial Operations."
 
    PURCHASE OF EQUIPMENT.  Following  the Initial Closing, the Company  intends
to place an order for a brewhouse and for bottle filling and labelling equipment
from two separate premier manufacturers. The anticipated delivery date is six to
eight  months  after the  order is  placed. Any  significant delay  in receiving
and/or installing the brewhouse and other equipment, as well as any difficulties
in initial  brewing  production,  would  materially  and  adversely  affect  the
Company's operations. See "Business -- Initial Operations."
 
   
    SUBSTANTIAL LEAD TIME TO COMMENCE BREWING OPERATIONS.  Following the Initial
Closing, which could occur as long as one year from the date of this Prospectus,
the  Company will  commence with  obtaining the  site for  the proposed brewery,
construction, if needed,  and ordering  the brewhouse and  other equipment.  The
Company  anticipates that  it will take  approximately thirteen  months from the
commencement of renovations of the site  to commence brewing operations, due  to
lead  times needed before  the brewhouse and other  equipment will be delivered.
Since the Offering could last as long  as one year and brewery production  could
take  another thirteen months or more to commence, investors in the Offering may
have to wait  an extended period  of time before  the Company actually  produces
beer products for sale. See "Business -- Initial Operations."
    
 
   
    RECIPES AND LICENSES.  Following the Initial Closing, the Company intends to
create its own lager recipes and/or license lager recipes from other brewers. To
date, the Company has not employed a
    
 
                                       7
<PAGE>
   
brewmaster. There can be no assurance that the Company will be able to create or
license  suitable lager recipes, or that any  recipes created or obtained by the
Company will yield commercially successful lager beer.
    
 
    SHORTAGES OF  SUPPLY.   Shortages or  increased costs  of fuel,  water,  raw
materials  (certain of which will be  obtained from foreign suppliers) or power,
or allocations  by  suppliers or  governmental  authorities could  restrict  the
operations  of  the  Company's  proposed brewery,  or  otherwise  materially and
adversely affect the ability of the  Company to produce and market its  proposed
beer  products.  The Company  does not  anticipate  entering into  any long-term
contracts for its supplies of foreign  malt. See "Business -- Inventory and  Raw
Materials."
 
    DEPENDENCE  ON DISTRIBUTORS.   The Company  will be  dependent upon licensed
distributors and/or wholesalers for  the distribution and  sale of its  proposed
products.  The  Company currently  has no  agreements  with any  distributors or
wholesalers. Moreover,  it is  not anticipated  that the  Company will  be in  a
position  to  enter into  any such  agreements until  the Company  has commenced
operations and can  satisfy the  distributor requirements  for product  quality,
availability,  pricing and  marketing support. No  assurance can be  given as to
when or whether the Company will enter into agreements with distributors. If the
Company is  unable to  enter into  satisfactory distribution  arrangements in  a
timely  manner, its  operations will be  materially and  adversely affected. See
"Business -- Sales and Distribution."
 
    UNCERTAINTY OF TRADEMARK PROTECTION.  The Company has applied for a  Federal
trademark  registration for the Company's  logo, trademarks and brands. However,
there can be no assurance that the Company's application will be granted.  While
not  required for the use  of the trademark by  the Company, obtaining a Federal
registration may  enhance the  Company's ability  to enforce  its right  to  the
trademark. See "Business -- Intellectual Property."
 
    SEASONALITY.   Sales of  beer in general  are seasonal in  nature and are at
their highest  level in  the second  and third  calendar quarters  and at  their
lowest  in the first and fourth  calendar quarters. This seasonality is expected
to have a significant impact on the Company's operations on a quarter to quarter
basis. See "Business -- Sales and Distribution."
 
    COMPETITION.  The beer industry, in  general, and the craft brewing  segment
of  the beer industry, in particular, is highly competitive. The Company expects
competition and  the number  of  competitors in  the  craft brewing  segment  to
increase.  The Company's proposed products will compete with products from large
and small domestic and foreign breweries,  and an increasing number of  regional
specialty  breweries,  microbreweries, brewpubs  and  contract brewers.  Many of
these  competing  breweries,  including   some  existing  microbreweries,   have
significantly   greater  financial,   production,  distribution   and  marketing
resources than  the  Company. There  can  be  no assurance  that  the  Company's
proposed brewery will be successful in penetrating the beer market to the extent
necessary to become profitable. See "Business -- Competition."
 
    UNCERTAINTY  OF CONTINUED  GROWTH OF  THE CRAFT/MICROBREWERY  INDUSTRY.  The
sale and consumption  of craft/microbrewed beer  has increased substantially  in
recent  years. There can  be no assurance that  the demand for craft/microbrewed
beer will continue  to grow  at such  rate. New  craft/microbreweries, like  the
Company's    proposed    brewery,    are    being    developed    and   existing
craft/microbreweries are increasing their  production capacities. If the  demand
for  craft/microbrewed beer does not continue  to increase to match increases in
supply, the Company's  proposed brewery will  face intensified competition.  See
"Competition."
 
    GOVERNMENT  REGULATION;  ENVIRONMENTAL MATTERS;  PROPOSED LEGISLATION.   The
manufacture and sale  of alcoholic beverages  is regulated by  both federal  and
state  authorities. The  Company has not  yet obtained the  required federal and
state permits, licenses  and bonds  to operate the  Company's proposed  brewery.
Furthermore, the Company has not obtained the required city or county permits to
construct  the  proposed brewery.  In addition,  the  Company's brewery  will be
subject to regulation  by the water  pollution control divisions  of the  United
States Environmental Protection Agency and the
 
                                       8
<PAGE>
Pennsylvania  Department of  Environmental Resources. Although  the Company does
not expect to encounter any difficulties in obtaining these required  approvals,
the  process  often  requires considerable  lead  time. Failure  to  obtain such
permits, licenses and bonds would prevent the proposed brewery from engaging  in
any operations, and delays in obtaining such governmental approvals could have a
material adverse effect on the Company's results of operations. See "Business --
Government Regulation."
 
    PLCB  regulations  limit the  Company's ability  to  increase its  prices to
distributors within  180  days after  a  price decrease,  except  under  certain
limited  circumstances or with the  prior consent of the  PLCB. See "Business --
Government Regulation."
 
    PLCB regulations also prohibit  ownership of the  Company's Common Stock  by
persons  or entities holding  a wholesale or  retail PLCB license  or which have
certain financial or  business interests  in an  entity holding  a wholesale  or
retail  PLCB license. This restriction does not preclude a person or entity from
owning shares in more than  one brewery licensed by the  PLCB. In the event  the
PLCB  determines  that a  holder  of the  Company's  Common Stock  also  holds a
wholesale or retail PLCB license or has  an "interest" in a wholesale or  retail
license  holder, the  PLCB may  compel such  stockholder to  divest or otherwise
terminate its interest with one of  the conflicting license holders. Failure  by
such  holder  to comply  with the  PLCB licensure  requirements may  subject the
Company to  enforcement action,  which  may include  fines, penalties  or  other
sanctions,  including suspension  and revocation  of the  Company's license. See
"Description of Common Stock -- Limitations on Transfers of Shares."
 
    In addition,  the alcoholic  beverage  industry has  become the  subject  of
considerable  societal and political attention in recent years due to increasing
public concern  over alcohol-related  social problems  including drunk  driving,
underage drinking, and health consequences from the misuse of alcohol, including
alcoholism.  The possibility exists that advertising  by beer producers could be
restricted or  that additional  cautionary  labeling or  packaging  requirements
might  be imposed.  If beer  consumption in general  were to  come into disfavor
among domestic consumers,  or if the  domestic beer industry  were subjected  to
significant additional governmental regulations, the Company's business could be
materially  adversely affected. In addition, there  can be no assurance that the
operations of  the  Company's  proposed  brewery  will  not  become  subject  to
increased  taxation  by  federal or  state  agencies, which  may  materially and
adversely affect the  operations, revenues  and potential  profitability of  the
Company.  Congress and many state legislatures are considering various proposals
to impose  additional excise  taxes  on the  production  and sale  of  alcoholic
beverages,  including beer.  Some of the  excise tax rates  being considered are
substantial. Any increase in the taxes imposed  on beer can be expected to  have
an  adverse  impact  on  overall  sales of  such  products,  and  may materially
adversely affect the Company's result of operations. See "Business -- Government
Regulation."
 
    PRODUCT LIABILITY.  The production of beer can be prone to certain  hazards,
such as product contamination and broken glass fragments. The Company intends to
obtain product liability insurance in amounts it deems appropriate. No assurance
can be given, however, that the Company will be able to obtain such insurance on
terms  acceptable to the Company. Moreover, the amount and scope of any coverage
may be inadequate to protect the Company  in the event that a product  liability
claim is successfully asserted against the Company. See "Business."
 
    SINGLE  PRODUCTION FACILITY AND UNINSURED LOSSES.  The Company plans to have
only one  production  facility.  The Company  intends  to  obtain  comprehensive
insurance,  including liability, fire  and extended coverage,  as is customarily
obtained by  businesses similar  to  the Company.  No  assurance can  be  given,
however,  that  the Company  will  be able  to  obtain such  insurance  on terms
acceptable to the Company or that such  insurance can be obtained in amount  and
scope of coverage adequate to protect the Company. In addition, certain types of
losses   of   a   catastrophic   nature,   such   as   losses   resulting   from
 
                                       9
<PAGE>
floods, tornadoes, thunderstorms and earthquakes, are either uninsurable or  not
economically  insurable to  the full extent  of potential losses.  Such "Acts of
God," work  stoppages,  regulatory  actions or  other  causes,  could  interrupt
production  and  materially  and  adversely  affect  the  Company's  results  of
operations. See "Business."
 
   
    LIMITATION OF DIRECTORS' LIABILITY.  The By-laws of the Company provide that
directors of the Company will not  be personally liable for monetary damages  to
the  Company  or its  shareholders for  breaches of  their duties  as directors,
except in instances involving self dealing, willful misconduct or  recklessness,
criminal   violations  or  liabilities  involving  the  payment  of  taxes.  See
"Description  of  Common  Stock  --  Limitation  of  Directors'  Liability   and
Indemnification of Directors and Officers."
    
 
    DIVIDEND  POLICY.    The  Company  has never  paid  dividends  and  does not
anticipate paying dividends in the foreseeable future. See "Dividend Policy."
 
   
    NO UNDERWRITER OR DEALER; EXTENDED OFFERING  PERIOD.  The Offering is  being
made  by the Company  on a best-efforts  basis. The Company  has not retained an
underwriter or securities dealer to assist in selling the Shares, and no  broker
or  dealer is under any obligation to  purchase the Shares, although the Company
may use brokers or dealers  and pay them a  customary commission on such  sales.
Instead,  the Offering will be made directly by the Company through its officers
and employees, primarily  Edward J. Lauth,  III. While this  method of  offering
securities   is  less  expensive  for  the   Company  since  no  commissions  or
underwriting discounts are being paid in connection with the Offering, it may be
more difficult for the Company to  complete the Offering without the  assistance
of  an underwriter  or dealer.  In addition,  the absence  of an  underwriter or
market maker may further impede the development of an active trading market  for
the Company's Common Stock. The period during which the Offering will be made is
from  the date of this  Prospectus until the earlier of  the date the Maximum is
sold or September  1, 1997  (which is  one year  after the  commencement of  the
Offering),  unless earlier terminated  by the Company.  As a result, subscribers
may not have the availability  of the funds used to  purchase the Shares for  an
extended period of time. See "Plan of Distribution."
    
 
    PENNY  STOCK REGULATION.  If a trading market for the Common Stock develops,
such trading activity may  become subject to  rules that regulate  broker-dealer
practices  in  connection  with  transactions in  "penny  stocks."  Penny stocks
generally are equity  securities with  a price of  less than  $5.00 (other  than
securities  listed on  certain national  securities exchanges  or quoted  on The
Nasdaq Stock Market,  provided that  current price and  volume information  with
respect  to  transactions in  such  securities is  provided  by the  exchange or
market). Prior to a transaction in a  penny stock not otherwise exempt from  the
rules,  a broker-dealer  is required to  deliver a  standardized risk disclosure
document prepared by the Commission that provides information about penny stocks
and the nature and level of risks  in the penny stock market. The  broker-dealer
also  must provide  the customer  with bid  and offer  quotations for  the penny
stock, the  compensation  of  the  broker-dealer  and  its  salesperson  in  the
transaction,  and monthly  account statements showing  the market  value of each
penny stock held in the customer's  account. In addition, the penny stock  rules
require  that prior to a transaction in  a penny stock not otherwise exempt from
such rules, the broker-dealer must make a special written determination that the
penny stock  is  a  suitable  investment  for  the  purchaser  and  receive  the
purchaser's  written agreement to the transaction. These disclosure requirements
may have the effect of reducing the  level of trading activity in the  secondary
market for a stock that becomes subject to the penny stock rules.
 
    SHARES  ELIGIBLE FOR FUTURE SALE.  All of the 412,500 shares of Common Stock
currently  outstanding  were  offered  and  sold  by  the  Company  in   private
transactions   in  reliance  upon  an  exemption  from  registration  under  the
Securities Act. Accordingly, all of  such shares are "restricted securities"  as
defined  by Rule 144 ("Rule 144") under  the Securities Act and cannot be resold
without registration  except  in reliance  on  Rule 144  or  another  applicable
exemption  from registration.  In general, under  Rule 144 a  person (or persons
whose shares are  required to  be aggregated),  including any  affiliate of  the
Company,  who beneficially owns restricted  shares for a period  of at least two
years (currently
 
                                       10
<PAGE>
proposed to be reduced to one year)  is entitled to sell within any three  month
period  shares equal  in number  to the  greater of  (i) 1  percent of  the then
outstanding shares of Common Stock or (ii) the average weekly trading volume  of
the  same class of shares during the four calendar weeks preceding the filing of
the required notice  of sale with  the Commission. The  seller must also  comply
with  the notice and manner of sale requirements  of Rule 144, and there must be
current public information available about the Company. In addition, any  person
(or  persons whose shares are required to be aggregated) who is not, at the time
of sale, nor during the preceding three months, an affiliate of the Company, and
who has beneficially owned restricted shares for at least three years (currently
proposed to be reduced  to two years),  can sell such  shares without regard  to
notice,  manner of sale, public information  or the volume limitations described
above. Shares of Common Stock will be eligible for resale under Rule 144 in  May
1998  (assuming the  other requirements  of Rule  144 are  met and  assuming the
proposed reductions in holding period are not adopted). See "Security  Ownership
of  Management and  Certain Shareholders"  and "Description  of Common  Stock --
Shares Available for Future Sale."
 
    No prediction can be  made as to  the effect, if any,  that future sales  of
restricted  shares of Common Stock, or the availability of such Common Stock for
sale, will have on the market price of the Common Stock prevailing from time  to
time. Sales of substantial amounts of such Common Stock in the public market, or
the  perception  that such  sales  may occur,  could  adversely affect  the then
prevailing market price of the Common Stock. See "Description of Common Stock --
Shares Available for Future Sale."
 
   
    In addition, the Company may issue shares of Common Stock in the future.  No
prediction can be made as to the effect, if any, that future issuances of Common
Stock  may have on the market price of  the Common Stock prevailing from time to
time. Sales of substantial amounts of such Common Stock, or the perception  that
such sales may occur, could adversely affect the then prevailing market price of
the  Common  Stock. See  "Description of  Common Stock  -- Shares  Available for
Future  Sale."  See   also  "Security  Ownership   of  Management  and   Certain
Shareholders -- Escrow of Founder Shares."
    
 
                        DETERMINATION OF OFFERING PRICE
 
   
    There  is no public trading  market for the Company's  Common Stock, and the
price of the  Shares offered hereby  bears no relationship  to the assets,  book
value,  net worth or any other recognized  criteria of value of the Company. The
offering price of  the Shares was  determined arbitrarily by  management of  the
Company,  and should not be  considered as an indication  of the actual value of
the Company. Each prospective investor should make an independent evaluation  of
the  fairness  of such  price. See  "Plan of  Distribution." See  also "Security
Ownership of Management and Certain Shareholders -- Escrow of Founder Shares."
    
 
                                       11
<PAGE>
                                USE OF PROCEEDS
 
   
    The net proceeds from the Offering (after payment of offering expenses)  are
expected  to  range  from $9,800,000  at  the Minimum  (including  any financing
obtained to consummate the Initial Closing) to $17,300,000 at the Maximum. After
release from escrow (for proceeds on the sale of shares up to the Minimum),  the
proceeds  will be invested by the Company  in short-term obligations of the U.S.
Government, its agencies and  divisions, pending the  uses described below.  The
net  proceeds from the  Offering (including any  financing obtained to consumate
the Initial Closing will be used in  a manner which management believes is  best
suited  to develop, equip and operate the brewery based upon the size and timing
of receipt of such net proceeds.
    
 
    The following table sets forth the Company's present expectations as to  the
Use of Proceeds from the Offering:
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                        MINIMUM        MAXIMUM
                                                                                     -------------  --------------
<S>                                                                                  <C>            <C>
Total proceeds from sale of shares.................................................  $   5,000,000  $   12,500,000
  Less: offering expenses..........................................................        200,000         200,000
                                                                                     -------------  --------------
Net proceeds from the sale of Shares...............................................      4,800,000      12,300,000
Proceeds from additional financing (1).............................................      5,000,000       5,000,000
                                                                                     -------------  --------------
Net proceeds.......................................................................  $   9,800,000  $   17,300,000
                                                                                     -------------  --------------
                                                                                     -------------  --------------
</TABLE>
    
 
Uses of net proceeds:
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                       APPROXIMATE                    APPROXIMATE
                                                                      PERCENTAGE OF                  PERCENTAGE OF
                                                        MINIMUM(1)    NET PROCEEDS      MAXIMUM      NET PROCEEDS
                                                       -------------  -------------  --------------  -------------
<S>                                                    <C>            <C>            <C>             <C>
Brewery facility, restoration and related costs
 (2).................................................  $   2,500,000        25.5%    $    3,500,000        20.2%
Brewhouse (2)........................................      4,000,000        40.8%         7,000,000        40.5%
Bottling and other equipment (2).....................      2,000,000        20.4%         3,200,000        18.5%
Fixtures, furniture and vehicles.....................        150,000         1.5%           250,000         1.4%
Installation.........................................        500,000         5.1%           650,000         3.8%
Start-up costs and initial inventories...............        350,000         3.6%           400,000         2.3%
Facility and equipment initial financing costs.......        100,000         1.0%           150,000         0.9%
Contingency fund and working capital (3).............        200,000         2.1%         2,150,000        12.4%
                                                       -------------       -----     --------------       -----
    Total Use of Net Proceeds........................  $   9,800,000       100.0%    $   17,300,000       100.0%
                                                       -------------       -----     --------------       -----
                                                       -------------       -----     --------------       -----
</TABLE>
    
 
- ------------------------
   
(1) It is a condition to the Initial Closing that the Company have sold at least
    the  Minimum and  received financing in  an amount which,  together with the
    sale of Shares aggregates to at least $10,000,000 (before offering  expenses
    payable  by  the Company).  Assumes  Initial Closing  upon  the sale  of the
    Minimum plus additional financing of $5,000,000. There is no requirement  of
    additional financing in order to close at the Maximum.
    
 
   
(2) In  the event the Company closes on the Minimum, it shall purchase, renovate
    and equip  a premier  regional  craft brewery  capable of  producing  30,000
    barrels of premium lager beer per year. In the event that the Company closes
    on  the Maximum, it shall use  the additional proceeds to purchase equipment
    and fund  additional  renovations  to the  brewhouse  necessary  to  produce
    100,000 barrels per year.
    
 
(3) It is anticipated that the Company will use the contingency fund and working
    capital  for expenses related  to product advertising,  officer salaries and
    other payroll and related payroll taxes, insurance premiums, lease payments,
    taxes and any other proper corporate purposes.
 
   
    The Company  is actively  engaged in  efforts to  obtain the  additional  $5
million financing it may need in order to consumate the Initial Closing upon the
Minimum. In addition, the Company is also
    
 
                                       12
<PAGE>
   
seeking  additional  financing  of $1  million  (if  the Company  closes  on the
Minimum) or  $2  million (if  the  Company closes  on  the Maximum  due  to  the
increased  size and  scope of  brewery operations)  for working  capital for the
first  twelve  months  of  operations  following  the  Offering.  See  "Plan  of
Operations" and "Business -- Initial Operations." Sources of financing which the
Company is contemplating include commercial bank credit facilities, construction
and  development loans, equipment leases, and private debt or equity financings.
Among the  alternatives  being explored  by  the  Company are  state  and  local
low-interest  development loans for up to  approximately $1.8 million to cover a
portion of the site acquisition, construction, equipment and/or start-up  costs.
There  can be  no assurance  that the  Company or  the proposed  brewery will be
eligible for such loans, or that such loans will be available at the time of the
Company's application.  The Company  also  intends to  try to  secure  discounts
and/or  price  reductions  from  the  amounts  set  forth  above  for  the  site
acquisition,  construction,  brewhouse,   equipment,  furniture  and   fixtures,
vehicles,  inventory and  raw materials and  other expenses  associated with the
Company's proposed  activities. However,  there can  be no  assurances that  any
discounts or price reductions will be obtained.
    
 
                                       13
<PAGE>
                                 CAPITALIZATION
 
   
    The  following table shows the capitalization of  the Company as of July 31,
1996 on an actual basis and as adjusted to give effect to the Offering (assuming
the Minimum  or  the  Maximum is  sold  and  the payment  of  offering  expenses
estimated at $200,000).
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                             AS ADJUSTED
                                                                                    -----------------------------
                                                                          ACTUAL       MINIMUM        MAXIMUM
                                                                         ---------  -------------  --------------
<S>                                                                      <C>        <C>            <C>
Long term indebtedness:(1).............................................     --      $   5,000,000        --
Shareholders' equity:
  Preferred stock, $1 par value, 25,000,000 shares authorized; none
   issued and outstanding;.............................................     --           --              --
  Common stock, no par value, 50,000,000 shares authorized; 412,500
   issued and outstanding, actual;.....................................  $  50,000       --              --
  912,500 issued and outstanding, as adjusted -- Minimum;..............     --      $   4,850,000        --
  1,662,500 issued and outstanding, as adjusted -- Maximum.............     --           --        $   12,350,000
  Retained deficit.....................................................     (6,849)        (6,849)         (6,849)
                                                                         ---------  -------------  --------------
    Total shareholders' equity.........................................  $  43,151  $   9,843,151  $   12,343,151
                                                                         ---------  -------------  --------------
                                                                         ---------  -------------  --------------
</TABLE>
    
 
- ------------------------
   
(1) Assumes additional financing needed to consummate the Initial Closing.
    
 
                                    DILUTION
 
   
    The net tangible book value of the Company as of July 31, 1996 was $(60,246)
or approximately $(0.15) per share of Common Stock outstanding at that date. Net
tangible   book  value  per  share  represents   the  amount  of  the  Company's
shareholders' equity less intangible assets  and deferred stock offering  costs,
divided  by the  number of shares  of Common  Stock outstanding. As  of July 31,
1996, the Company had intangible assets and deferred stock offering costs with a
net book  value  of $(103,397).  Net  tangible  book value  per  share  dilution
represents  the difference  between the amount  per share paid  by purchasers of
Shares in the Offering and the pro forma net tangible book value per Share after
the Offering.
    
 
   
    The following  tables set  forth as  of  July 31,  1996, assuming  both  the
Minimum  and Maximum levels of the Offering, the difference between the existing
shareholders and the purchasers  of Shares in the  Offering with respect to  the
number  of Shares purchased  from the Company, the  total consideration paid and
the average price per share paid.
    
 
                       SALE OF MINIMUM NUMBER OF SHARES*
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                       SHARES PURCHASED        TOTAL CONSIDERATION
                                                    ----------------------  --------------------------  AVERAGE PRICE
                                                     NUMBER      PERCENT       AMOUNT        PERCENT      PER SHARE
                                                    ---------  -----------  -------------  -----------  -------------
<S>                                                 <C>        <C>          <C>            <C>          <C>
Existing Shareholders.............................    412,500       45.2%   $      50,000        1.0%     $    0.12
New Investors.....................................    500,000       54.8%       5,000,000       99.0%         10.00
                                                    ---------      -----    -------------      -----    -------------
    Total.........................................    912,500      100.0%   $   5,050,000      100.0%     $    5.53
                                                    ---------      -----    -------------      -----    -------------
                                                    ---------      -----    -------------      -----    -------------
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------------
* Assumes the sale of 500,000 Shares.
 
                                       14
<PAGE>
                       SALE OF MAXIMUM NUMBER OF SHARES*
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                     SHARES PURCHASED          TOTAL CONSIDERATION
                                                 ------------------------  ---------------------------  AVERAGE PRICE
                                                   NUMBER       PERCENT        AMOUNT        PERCENT      PER SHARE
                                                 -----------  -----------  --------------  -----------  -------------
<S>                                              <C>          <C>          <C>             <C>          <C>
Existing Shareholders..........................      412,500       24.8%   $       50,000         .4%     $    0.12
New Investors..................................    1,250,000       75.2%       12,500,000       99.6%         10.00
                                                 -----------      -----    --------------      -----    -------------
    Total......................................    1,662,500      100.0%   $   12,550,000      100.0%     $    7.55
                                                 -----------      -----    --------------      -----    -------------
                                                 -----------      -----    --------------      -----    -------------
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------------
* Assumes the sale of 1,250,000 Shares.
 
    After giving effect to the sale  by the Company of 500,000 Shares  (Minimum)
and  1,250,000 Shares (Maximum) at a purchase price of $10.00 per share, the pro
forma net tangible book value of the Company, the increase in net tangible  book
value  to the existing shareholders and the  decrease in net tangible book value
to purchasers of Shares in the Offering are summarized in the following table:
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                               MINIMUM      MAXIMUM
                                                                                             -----------  -----------
<S>                                                                                          <C>          <C>
Offering price per Share...................................................................   $   10.00    $   10.00
Net tangible book value per Share at March 1, 1996 (date of inception).....................   $    0.12    $    0.12
Pro forma net tangible book value per Share after the Offering.............................   $    5.19    $    7.36
Net tangible book value increase to existing shareholders after the Offering...............   $    5.34    $    7.51
Net tangible book value decrease (dilution) to purchasers of Shares in the Offering........   $    4.81    $    2.64
Percentage dilution to new shareholders....................................................        48.1%        26.4%
</TABLE>
    
 
                                DIVIDEND POLICY
 
    The Company  has  never  paid dividends  on  its  Common Stock  and  has  no
intention of paying dividends for the foreseeable future. Future dividend policy
will  depend upon  the Company's  earnings, financial  needs, covenants  in loan
agreements and other pertinent factors.
 
                               PLAN OF OPERATION
 
    The following discussion should  be read in  conjunction with the  financial
statements and notes thereto included elsewhere in this Prospectus.
 
    The  Company was organized on March 1, 1996, has no operating history and is
in the developmental stage.  The Company believes that  the net proceeds of  the
sale  of the Minimum in this offering, together with additional financing in the
amount of  $5,000,000 which  the Company  must obtain  before it  closes on  the
Minimum, will be sufficient for the Company to commence the purchase, renovation
and installation of a premier regional craft brewery and the development of high
quality lager beer and to continue the operation of such business for the twelve
month  period following this  Offering. There can  be no assurance  that the net
proceeds of this  Offering will  be sufficient or  that the  Company can  obtain
financing  in an amount necessary  to permit the Company  to operate during such
twelve month period.
 
   
    After the Initial Closing, the Company will begin taking the steps necessary
to restore, construct and  equip the Match Factory  site for its regional  craft
brewery.  The Company has  obtained an option  for the purchase  of the historic
Match Factory building in Bellefonte,  Pennsylvania as a potential location  for
the Company's proposed brewery. The terms of such option entitle the Company, at
its  option, to buy the site from M.L.  Clasters & Sons, Inc. ("Clasters") for a
purchase price  of  approximately  $800,000 within  ninety  days  following  the
Company's  exercise of the option. The site is currently vacant and has not been
used for manufacturing since 1949.
    
 
                                       15
<PAGE>
   
    In the event the Company closes on the Minimum, it shall purchase,  renovate
and  equip a premier regional craft  brewery capable of producing 30,000 barrels
of premium lager  beer per year.  In the event  that the Company  closes on  the
Maximum, it shall use the additional proceeds to purchase equipment necessary to
produce 100,000 barrels per year.
    
 
    In  addition, after the Initial Closing on the Minimum, the Company plans to
order the  brewhouse and  bottle filling  and labelling  equipment from  premier
manufacturers,  and the  Company anticipates that  these items will  take six to
eight months for  delivery. In addition,  the Company will  order the tanks  and
equipment  for the utilities  systems (steam boiler,  refrigeration plant, water
treatment plant, etc.). The Company believes that the lead time for these  items
will  be approximately between two and  four months. Once the equipment arrives,
the Company believes  it will  take approximately  three months  to install  and
commission   the  brewhouse.  Thereafter,  the  Company  believes  that  brewing
operations will commence immediately, with initial packaging approximately eight
weeks later.
 
    After  the  Initial  Closing,   the  Company  will   begin  to  take   other
organizational  steps necessary to begin production  and sales. These steps will
include hiring a management team, creating or licensing lager recipes, designing
the Company's  logo,  artwork  and packaging  materials,  filing  for  necessary
federal and state operating permits. See "Business -- Initial Operations."
 
                                       16
<PAGE>
                                    BUSINESS
 
GENERAL
 
    The  Company was formed on  March 1, 1996 as  a Pennsylvania corporation for
the purpose of  building a premier  regional craft brewery  to produce and  sell
high  quality lager beer initially in  the Northeastern and Mid-Atlantic regions
and eventually throughout the United States. The Company intends to develop  its
line  of products to compete in the rapidly growing specialty beer market in the
U.S. All of  the Company's  beers will be  brewed utilizing  the natural  spring
water  from the Bellefonte Big Spring  in Bellefonte, Pennsylvania. In addition,
the Company's equipment will enable it to produce hard ciders, draft ciders  and
certain soft drinks.
 
    The  Company may  also enter  into arrangements  for the  Company to provide
contract brewing services to existing American breweries and other third parties
which would  market and  sell beer  products brewed  in the  Company's  proposed
brewery  under their own proprietary labels. Such arrangements would be directly
between the Company and the  third party. To date,  the Company has not  entered
into  any arrangements for contract brewing, and  there can be no assurance that
the Company will be successful in obtaining any contract brewing business.
 
THE U.S. BEER INDUSTRY*
 
    The  U.S.  beer  market  is  dominated  by  six  large  brewing   companies.
Anheuser-Busch,  Miller, Coors, Stroh,  Heileman and Pabst  produced over 90% of
the 190.6 million barrels sold in the  U.S. in 1994. The next group consists  of
the  older  regional  brewers,  including  Latrobe  (brewers  of  Rolling Rock),
Genesee, Stevens  Point,  Pearl, Pittsburgh  Brewing,  Yuengling and  The  Lion.
Together,  these regional breweries accounted for  about 3% of the total barrels
sold in the  U.S. in 1995.  The rest of  the market was  represented by  imports
(6.0%  or 11.2 million barrels sold in the U.S. in 1995) and craft brewers (2.3%
or 4.3 million barrels sold in the U.S. in 1995).
 
    BEER STYLES
 
    While the beers from the major  American brewers are brewed to high  quality
standards, they are relatively neutral in flavor. They are brewed with less hops
and  malt  than  traditional European  or  craft-brewed beers,  creating  a less
bitter, lighter bodied flavor. In addition, these beers are usually brewed  with
a  high percentage of rice, corn or corn syrup, which further dilutes the flavor
and body of the  beers. Traditional lager  beers use 100%  malted barley in  the
mash  (with the  exception of  specialty wheat  beers), which  ensures a robust,
full-bodied character. The major U.S.  brewers have been successful in  creating
products that appeal to a wide consumer base and have spent heavily to advertise
and  promote their products. As a result, they have achieved a dominant position
in the market for their mass-produced beers.
 
    The older regional brewers traditionally produced beers similar in style  to
the  products of  major breweries, but  several have benefitted  from the recent
boom in specialty, craft-brewed beers  as both contract producers and  marketers
of their own products. Imported beers have long been viewed by the beer-drinking
public as being more flavorful and "authentic" than the standard American beers.
Although this has not always been the case, the high price and foreign origin of
the  imported beers  created a  niche category  of "specialty"  beers. In recent
years, craft-brewed beers have further expanded the "specialty" beer market, and
have increased in sales and visibility.
 
    The vast majority  of existing  craft/microbrewed products in  the U.S.  are
ales.  According to a survey published in  THE NEW BREWER, the five most popular
beer styles produced  in brewpubs  are all ales,  and among  the 130  responding
craft/microbrewers,  only the fourth most popular  style (European Pilsner) is a
lager. The  cost of  building and  operating a  lager brewery  is  substantially
greater than that
 
- ------------------------
   
* The  industry and market data included  herein was obtained from the INSTITUTE
  FOR BREWING  STUDIES  and BEVERAGE  MARKETING  CORPORATION and  the  following
  industry  publications: BEVERAGE  INDUSTRY (January 1995),  MODERN BREWERY AGE
  (March 13, 1995); THE NEW BREWER (November/December 1994 and May/June 1995).
    
 
                                       17
<PAGE>
for an ale brewery.  The Company believes craft/microbrewed  lager beers have  a
potentially greater market appeal than ales. Among imported beers (a market that
closely competes with craft brewers for the "specialty beer" consumers), the top
eight brands, constituting two-third's of U.S. import sales volume, are lagers.
 
    The  following terms are helpful in understanding the Company's business and
industry:
 
    CRAFT  BREWING:    Beers  produced  by  microbreweries,  regional  specialty
breweries,  brewpubs and contract brewers. The common appeal of these beers is a
more robust  flavor than  the standard  domestic beers,  and an  image based  on
traditional, European beer styles.
 
    MICROBREWERY:   Originally used  to refer to a  small brewery producing less
than 10,000 barrels a  year, which packages and  distributes its beers for  sale
off  site. The cutoff volume has since  been increased to 15,000 barrels a year.
The new breweries that were founded in  the late 1970s and early 1980s were  the
first to be called microbreweries.
 
    REGIONAL  SPECIALTY BREWERY:  A term  used to describe those breweries which
were founded as  microbreweries, but  have since  outgrown the  category. A  new
category  was needed to distinguish these  breweries from the older, established
regional breweries. Examples of regional specialty breweries are: Sierra  Nevada
(Chico, California), Anchor Brewing (San Francisco, California), Rockies Brewing
(Boulder, Colorado) and Abita Brewing (Abita Springs, Louisiana).
 
    BREWPUB:  A brewery that sells its beers exclusively or primarily at its own
bar  or restaurant. Since the market is  restricted to one outlet, brewpubs tend
to be quite  small (typically in  the 500  to 2,000 barrel  range). Examples  of
brewpubs  are  Zip  City (New  York,  New  York), Crescent  City  Brewhouse (New
Orleans,  Louisiana),  Wynkoop  (Denver,  Colorado)  and  Commonwealth  (Boston,
Massachusetts).
 
    CONTRACT  BREWER:  A company  that does not have  its own brewery but rather
markets beer  produced  "under  contract"  by  an  existing  (usually  regional)
brewery.  Examples of  contract brewers  are Boston  Beer Company  (Samuel Adams
brand beers), Pete's Brewing Company and Neuweiler.
 
    HARD CIDER:  A fermented apple cider  with an alcohol content between 7  and
14 percent.
 
    DRAFT CIDER:  A fermented apple cider with an alcohol content of less than 7
percent.
 
    DEVELOPMENT OF CRAFT-BREWING INDUSTRY
 
    Fritz  Maytag bought and revived the failing Anchor Brewery in San Francisco
in 1965 and is considered the grandfather of the microbrewing movement. However,
it wasn't until the late 1970s and early 1980s that the first new microbreweries
opened in the U.S., such  as New Albion, Redhook,  Yakima Brewing & Malting  and
Sierra Nevada on the West Coast and Newman Brewing Co. (Albany, New York) on the
East  Coast. By 1983, there were 11  operating microbreweries in the U.S., which
were defined as breweries producing less than 10,000 barrels per year  (although
all  were much smaller in 1983). At  least one of these (Buffalo Bill's Brewery,
Hayward, California)  was  a brewpub.  In  the early  to  mid 1980s,  the  first
contract brewers appeared.
 
    What  all of  the craft-brewed beers  have in  common is an  appeal based on
traditional, highly flavored  European beer  styles. They  have benefitted  from
their contrast with the products of the major brewers, which are much lighter in
body  and flavor. The  Company believes they  also were helped  by an increasing
concern by consumers about how alcoholic  beverages fit into a healthy,  active,
contemporary  lifestyle. As  a result,  consumers have  been drinking  less (per
capita consumption of beer  has declined every year  since 1990), but have  been
"trading  up" to  beers with  more flavor  and character.  Like fine  wines, the
Company  believes  that  consumers  view  craft-brewed  beers  as  beverages  of
moderation.
 
                                       18
<PAGE>
    MARKET TRENDS
 
    Since  the mid  1980s, the  total volume  of beer  consumed in  the U.S. has
increased only modestly, and  has been virtually flat  since 1991. However,  two
small  but important segments experienced significant growth: craft-brewed beers
and imports increased by  59.3% and 21.7%, respectively,  in the period 1993  to
1995. BEVERAGE MARKETING CORPORATION has recently reported the following data:
 
                          TOTAL U.S. BEER CONSUMPTION
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                        PER CAPITA
  YEAR     MILL. BARRELS   % CHANGE    GALS. PER YR.
- ---------  -------------  -----------  -------------
<S>        <C>            <C>          <C>
1993             188.4           0.1%         22.6
1994             188.7           0.2%         22.4
1995             187.5          -0.6%         22.0
</TABLE>
 
                           SPECIALTY BEER PRODUCTION
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                        % OF TOTAL US
  YEAR     MILL. BARRELS   % CHANGE       BEER MKT.
- ---------  -------------  -----------  ---------------
<S>        <C>            <C>          <C>
1993               2.7          28.1%           1.3%
1994               3.3          36.2%           1.7%
1995               4.3          31.7%           2.3%
</TABLE>
 
                           IMPORTED BEER CONSUMPTION
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                        % OF TOTAL US
  YEAR     MILL. BARRELS   % CHANGE       BEER MKT.
- ---------  -------------  -----------  ---------------
<S>        <C>            <C>          <C>
1993               9.2          12.2%           4.9%
1994              10.5          14.2%           5.6%
1995              11.2           6.7%           6.0%
</TABLE>
 
    The  Company believes that the growth rate of these two segments in the face
of a flat overall market indicates  that the higher-priced, specialty beers  are
developing  a significant  acceptance in  the market.  However, there  can be no
assurance that the Company's  assessment of consumer trends  is correct, or,  if
correct,  that such consumer trends will continue or that the Company's proposed
beer products will also receive acceptance by consumers.
 
COMPANY STRATEGY
 
    The Company intends  to renovate  the historic  one hundred  year old  Match
Factory  building in Bellefonte, Pennsylvania and  acquire and install a premier
brewhouse (which comprises  the main brewery  production equipment), capable  of
annually  producing initially 30,000  barrels and eventually  as much as 100,000
barrels of  high-quality  lagers.  Upon completion  of  the  Company's  proposed
brewery  and the commencement  of operations, the Company's  strategy will be to
market its  products  through  third  party distributors  for  resale  in  bars,
restaurants,  retail stores  and other retail  license holders  initially in the
Northeastern and Mid-Atlantic regions and eventually throughout the East Coast.
 
    The  Company  believes   that  there  is   currently  an  overabundance   of
craft/microbrewed  ales  on  the  market  due  to  the  relative  simplicity and
inexpensiveness of  the  ale brewing  process.  Therefore, by  offering  premium
lagers,   the  Company  believes  it  can  fill   a  niche  in  the  market  for
craft/microbrewed beer that has not yet been satisfied. In addition, the Company
also believes that it can participate in the growing market for draft ciders.
 
    The Company may  also enter  into arrangements  for the  Company to  provide
contract  brewing services to  existing breweries and  other third parties which
would market and  sell beer products  brewed in the  Company's proposed  brewery
under their own proprietary labels.
 
                                       19
<PAGE>
INITIAL OPERATIONS
 
    The  Company believes its success will be  dependent upon its ability to (i)
produce  high-quality   products,   (ii)   procure   advantageous   distribution
arrangements  to  distribute  and  sell  its  bottles  and  kegs  through  bars,
restaurants and  other  retail license  holders,  (iii) implement  a  successful
marketing  and promotion strategy to penetrate the market for specialty beers in
the Company's initial  marketing region and  (iv) develop unique  point of  sale
displays and packaging.
 
   
    After the Initial Closing, the Company will begin taking the steps necessary
to  restore, construct and equip  the Match Factory site  for its regional craft
brewery. The Company has obtained an  option, expiring August 31, 1996, for  the
purchase of the historic Match Factory building in Bellefonte, Pennsylvania as a
potential  location for the Company's proposed brewery. The terms of such option
entitle the Company, at its option, to buy the site from Clasters for a purchase
price of  approximately  $800,000 within  ninety  days following  the  Company's
exercise of the option. The site is currently vacant.
    
 
   
    In  addition, after the Initial Closing on the Minimum, the Company plans to
order the  brewhouse and  bottle filling  and labelling  equipment from  premier
manufacturers,   and  the  Company  anticipates   that  these  items  will  take
approximately eight  months  for  delivery.  If  the  Company  utilizes  foreign
manufacturers, it could involve the risk of additional delays in delivery due to
distance  and risks related to fluctuations  in foreign currency exchange rates.
In addition, the Company  will order the tanks  and equipment for the  utilities
systems  (steam boiler, refrigeration  plant, water treatment  plant, etc.). The
Company believes  that the  lead  time for  these  items will  be  approximately
between two and four months. Once the equipment arrives, the Company believes it
will  take approximately three  months to install  and commission the brewhouse.
Thereafter,  the  Company  believes   that  brewing  operations  will   commence
immediately, with initial packaging approximately eight weeks later.
    
 
    After   the  Initial  Closing,   the  Company  will   begin  to  take  other
organizational steps necessary to begin  production and sales. These steps  will
include:
 
    - Hiring a management team.
 
    - Procuring necessary insurance coverage.
 
    - Working with a graphic designer to design the Company's logos, artwork and
      packaging materials.
 
    - Working with packaging suppliers to "set-up" the artwork.
 
    - Filing for federal brand registration and label approval.
 
    - Filing for state brand registration and label approval.
 
    - Filing for necessary federal and state operating permits.
 
    - Purchasing necessary inventory and materials requirements.
 
   
    It  is  anticipated that  brewing will  begin approximately  thirteen months
after commencement of construction or improvements, and packaging will begin two
months after the initial  brewing. The Company anticipates  that the first  beer
produced  at the brewery will be available for sale approximately fifteen months
after the  Initial Closing,  and  that the  brewery will  produce  approximately
30,000  barrels  in the  first  year of  production.  However, there  can  be no
assurance that  the  Company will  not  experience other  delays  in  commencing
operations.
    
 
   
    In  the event the Company closes on the Minimum, it shall purchase, renovate
and equip a premier regional craft  brewery capable of producing 30,000  barrels
of  premium lager  beer per year.  In the event  that the Company  closes on the
Maximum, it shall use the additional proceeds to purchase equipment necessary to
produce 100,000 barrels per year.
    
 
                                       20
<PAGE>
PRODUCTS
 
    The Company  intends  to produce  premium  lager  beers under  a  number  of
proprietary  brands, including  Bellefonte and  Beast of  the East.  The Company
intends to create its own lager recipes and/or license lager recipes from  other
brewers.  The Company believes that its exciting and unique product designs will
enable make its  products attractive to  consumers, and that  its commitment  to
high quality lagers will help to ensure product loyalty.
 
    The  Company may  also enter  into arrangements  for the  Company to provide
contract brewing services to  existing breweries and  other third parties  which
would  market and  sell beer products  brewed in the  Company's proposed brewery
under their own proprietary labels. Such arrangements would be directly  between
the  Company and the third party. To date,  the Company has not entered into any
arrangements for  contract brewing,  and  there can  be  no assurance  that  the
Company will be successful in obtaining any contract brewing business.
 
    In  addition to  premium lager beers,  the Company  anticipates developing a
line of draft ciders and hard ciders. These beverages are popular in Europe  and
the  Company believes  that such  alcoholic non-beer  products will  also become
popular in the United States.
 
SALES AND DISTRIBUTION
 
    The Company intends to produce bottled and kegged beer for sale off-premises
and at an on-site beer hall. In all of the states in which its proposed products
will be sold, a strict  three-tier system for sales  is in effect. This  system,
consisting  of manufacturers, wholesale distributors  and retail license holders
(such as bars, restaurants  and retail stores),  is principally attributable  to
state  licensure requirements, which  generally restrict a  business to having a
license for only one tier of the trade. The Company believes it will be able  to
negotiate distribution arrangements with existing distributors in the markets in
which  the Company intends  to sell its  products. However, no  assurance can be
given that such distribution arrangements will be obtained. Moreover, it is  not
anticipated  that any such arrangements will be possible until the Company is in
operation  and  can  satisfy  distributor  requirements  for  product   quality,
availability, pricing and marketing support.
 
    The  distributor or distributors  would be responsible  for distributing the
Company's products to retail establishments, including bars, restaurants, retail
stores and other retail license holders.  The Company's sales staff will aid  in
the  effort of servicing retail accounts.  The Company's planned advertising and
promotional efforts will be designed to  raise the visibility of the brands  and
their attractiveness to potential distributors.
 
    Sales  of beer in  general are seasonal  in nature and  are at their highest
level in the second and third calendar quarters and at their lowest in the first
and fourth calendar quarters. This seasonality is expected to have a significant
impact on the Company's operations on a quarter to quarter basis.
 
MARKETING
 
    The Company intends to  market its products initially  in the Northeast  and
Mid  Atlantic regions, and eventually throughout  the Eastern United States. The
Company intends  to  promote its  products  through the  use  of point  of  sale
promotional materials, such as table tents, posters and signs in retail outlets.
In  addition, the Company intends to create  a homepage on the internet at which
it will provide public  relations information concerning  the renovation of  its
Match  Factory site, events such as beer-tastings  and brewery tours, as well as
the development of its  Bellefonte lager beers and  other products. The  Company
will  focus at the outset on developing unique design concepts to increase brand
strength at point  of sale.  In order to  develop such  unique and  recognizable
designs  for its products, the Company has designated Lanny and Kristin Sommese,
professors of graphic design at The Pennsylvania State University, to create its
labels, artwork and promotional items.
 
    The Company believes that the quality  and uniqueness of its package  design
will  create strong  demand for its  products. Moreover, the  Company expects to
engage management  personnel  whose knowledge  and  experience in  the  beverage
industry, will be beneficial in negotiating and arranging distribution contracts
with distributors.
 
                                       21
<PAGE>
MANUFACTURING/PRODUCTION FACILITIES
 
   
    The  Company  intends to  use  the proceeds  of  the Offering,  in  part, to
establish a  brewery  capable of  producing  premium lagers.  The  Company  will
selected  preeminent  industry  leaders to  design,  build and  install  a fully
automated, stainless  steel brewhouse  in the  Company's proposed  brewery.  The
brewhouse  is the main production equipment of a brewery and consists of brewing
vessels, automated controls, cleaning systems  and related pumps, valves,  pipes
and  electrical systems. The  Company intends to acquire  the bottle filling and
labelling equipment from a premier  manufacturer of such equipment. The  Company
believes  that this packaging  equipment will be capable  of meeting the highest
quality standards  for sanitation,  low air  pick-up in  the bottle,  consistent
fill-height  and proper label application. To  date, the Company has not entered
into any purchase orders or other  binding agreements relating to the  brewhouse
or packaging equipment.
    
 
    The  Company  anticipates that  its proposed  brewhouse  will be  capable of
producing at least  230 barrel brews  per day. The  initial brewery design  will
include  sufficient  fermenting  and  storage  tanks  for  an  annual  output of
approximately 30,000  barrels. The  Company  intends that  the brewery  will  be
easily expandable, primarily by the addition of fermenting and storage tanks, to
an  eventual output  of approximately 100,000  barrels per  year. The brewhouse,
utilities and packaging operation are intended to be sized appropriately so that
they  can  support  this  level  of  production  with  only  minimal  additional
investment  for upgrading. The Company believes it is important to begin with an
easily-expandable facility  to take  full advantage  of the  growing market  for
specialty  beers in  the U.S., both  as a  brewer of its  own products  and as a
contract brewer.
 
PROPERTY
 
   
    The historic Match Factory site is set on a nine acre site, adjacent to  the
Bellefonte Big Spring in downtown Bellefonte, Pennsylvania. In addition The site
is  located near Interstate I-80 as well as the campus of The Pennsylvania State
University. The Company has an option to  purchase the site from Clasters for  a
purchase  price  of  approximately  $800,000 within  ninety  days  following the
Company's exercise of the option. The Company paid $44,000 to Clasters in  order
to obtain the option. See "Certain Transactions."
    
 
   
    The  Match Factory building has not  been used for manufacturing since 1949.
Until November 1995, it has  been used for warehouse  and storage space, but  is
now  vacant except for certain limited office space. Once the Match Factory site
has been completely renovated,  the Company believes that  there will be  excess
leasable space which the Company anticipates leasing.
    
 
INVENTORY AND RAW MATERIALS
 
    The   Company  anticipates  that  the  proposed  brewery's  operations  will
primarily utilize the following ingredients: spring water, hops, malt and yeast.
Certain of  the  ingredients  for  the  Company's  proposed  beer  products  are
anticipated  to  be available  only  through particular  suppliers.  The Company
expects to use local natural spring water supplied from the adjacent  Bellefonte
Big  Spring for the Company's proposed  brewing operations. The Company does not
have any  contractual arrangements  for purchases  of ingredients  or other  raw
materials.  As  a result,  the Company's  ability to  commence and  maintain the
proposed  brewery's  operations  would  be  materially  adversely  impacted   by
shortages  in supply and/or price increases.  The Company's operations will also
utilize glass  bottles,  caps,  labels,  kegs and  corrugated  and  other  paper
products, all of which are anticipated to be available from several sources.
 
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
 
    All  beer recipes developed on behalf of the Company will be the property of
the Company. The Company has filed  an application for trademark protection  for
its  logo, and intends to file applications for the labels and logos for each of
its products, which will  be the exclusive property  of the Company. Should  any
contract  brewing and/or  product development  work be  done by  the Company for
other parties, including American or foreign brewing companies, the ownership of
the formulas would be held by such third parties.
 
                                       22
<PAGE>
    In addition, the  Company may obtain  licenses to produce  beer products  on
behalf  of third parties. The Company will have to pay royalties, commissions or
other fees for the rights to  such production, and, accordingly, it may  receive
less money from the sale of such products than from the sale of its own proposed
products.
 
COMPETITION
 
    The  Company  expects  to  compete  on  the  basis  of  product  quality and
freshness,  packaging  design,  distribution,  marketing  support  and  regional
identification.  However, the  beer industry in  general, and  the craft brewing
segment of  the beer  industry  in particular,  is  highly competitive  and  the
Company  expects competition and the number  of competitors in the craft brewing
segment to increase. The  INSTITUTE FOR BREWING STUDIES  estimated in June  1995
that  there were 658  regional specialty breweries,  microbreweries and brewpubs
operating in the  United States.  The Company's proposed  products will  compete
with  products from large and small domestic  and foreign breweries, and from an
increasing number of regional specialty breweries, microbreweries, brewpubs  and
contract   brewers,  including,  but   not  limited  to,   Boston  Beer  Co.  in
Massachusetts; Pete's Brewing  Company in  California; Red Hook  Ale Brewery  in
Washington (and expected to soon be in New Hampshire); Independence Brewing Co.,
Stoudt  Brewery and Whitetail Brewing Co. in Pennsylvania; Spring Street Brewing
Co. in New  York; Oxford Brewing  Co. and  Wild Goose Brewery  in Maryland;  and
Abita  Brewing Co. and  Rikenjaks Brewery in Louisiana.  Many of these competing
breweries, including some  existing microbreweries,  have significantly  greater
financial,  production, distribution  and marketing resources  than the Company.
One particular  large domestic  brewery, Anheuser-Busch,  has recently  made  an
equity  investment in a regional specialty brewery, and others may follow. There
can be no assurance  that the Company's proposed  brewery will be successful  in
penetrating the beer market to the extent necessary to become profitable.
 
EMPLOYEES
 
   
    In  addition to Mr. Graham, at the  initial planned level of production, the
Company intends to employ a Brewmaster, a Chief Engineer/Head of Maintenance and
such other employees  as are  necessary to  operate the  Company's business.  In
addition,  the Company intends  to employ initially two  or three employees, who
will be needed primarily  during packaging shifts. However,  the Company has  no
other  employees at the current time. Certain  of the Company's officers may not
be  expected  to  devote  their  full-time  to  the  Company's  operations.  See
"Management."
    
 
   
GOVERNMENT REGULATION AND RELATED MATTERS
    
 
    The  Company's proposed  brewery will  be subject  to regulation  by various
federal, state and local agencies. The  Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and  Firearms
of  the Department  of Treasury ("BATF")  regulates the  production of beverages
containing alcohol, including  beer. The  Company is subject  to regulation  and
inspection  by the BATF to ensure compliance  with federal tax provisions. For a
brewery of  the size  that the  Company intends  to build,  the current  federal
excise  tax is $7 per barrel for  the first 60,000 barrels of annual production.
The federal tax on all barrelage in excess of 60,000 annually is $18 per barrel.
In addition, BATF approval is required for all primary packaging materials (such
as labels  and  crowns) to  ensure  compliance with  laws  regarding  government
warnings and other required statements, as well as for truthfulness and accuracy
of  all claims and  representations made. The BATF  also issues annual operating
permits to manufacturers of beverages containing alcohol.
 
    The Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board ("PLCB") issues operating licenses  to
manufacturers  of beverages  containing alcohol  located in  the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania. The PLCB also  ensures compliance with  state tax provisions.  The
PLCB   regulations  provide  certain  operating,  record-keeping  and  marketing
requirements for  license  holders.  These requirements  include  posting  of  a
$10,000  bond  upon  issuance  of  a  license,  inspections  of  the  brewery by
representatives of the PLCB, maintaining records of the amount of beer  produced
and  sold, limiting certain promotional activities  and prohibiting sales by the
Company on Sundays.  Failure by  the Company  to comply  with PLCB  requirements
could  result in fines, penalties or sanctions being imposed against the Company
which could range from written warnings to revocation of the Company's  license.
The temporary or permanent
 
                                       23
<PAGE>
loss  of the Company's PLCB license would  have a material adverse affect on the
Company's operations.  PLCB  regulations also  limit  the Company's  ability  to
increase  its prices  to distributors  within 180  days after  a price decrease,
except under certain  limited circumstances  or with  the prior  consent of  the
PLCB.  In addition, the  license issued by the  PLCB to the  Company will not be
transferable or assignable without the approval of the PLCB. As a result, a sale
of the Company or its business would be  subject to, and may be delayed by,  the
required approval by the PLCB.
 
    In  addition, the Company's  proposed brewery will  be subject to regulation
and inspection by  (i) the  Food and  Drug Administration  and the  Pennsylvania
Department  of Health to  ensure compliance with  good manufacturing regulations
for  food  production;   (ii)  the  federal   Occupational  Safety  and   Health
Administration  and the  Pennsylvania Department of  Labor &  Industry to ensure
compliance with workplace  safety regulations; (iii)  the federal  Environmental
Protection  Agency, the  Pennsylvania Department of  Environmental Resources and
other governmental  agencies  to ensure  compliance  with air,  water  and  soil
pollution  regulations; and  (iv) local building  and fire  inspectors to ensure
compliance with local building and fire codes.
 
    ENVIRONMENTAL MATTERS.  The Company's business activities will be  regulated
pursuant  to federal, state  and local environmental laws.  Federal laws such as
the Clean  Air Act  and Clean  Water  Act and  their state  counterparts  govern
discharges  of pollutants to air  and water, and other  federal, state and local
laws such as  the Resource Conservation  and Recovery Act  and the  Pennsylvania
Solid    Waste   Management   Act   comprehensively   govern   the   generation,
transportation, storage, treatment  and disposal of  solid waste  (collectively,
"Environmental  Regulatory Laws").  The Environmental Regulatory  Laws and other
federal, state and local laws, such as the Comprehensive Environmental Response,
Compensation and Liability Act and the Pennsylvania Hazardous Sites Cleanup  Act
may   make  the  Company  potentially  liable  for  environmental  contamination
associated with  its  activities  on the  Property  ("Environmental  Remediation
Laws").
 
    The  Environmental Regulatory Laws may require  that a variety of permits be
issued for the renovation and operation of the Company's brewery. These  permits
often  are issued by state regulatory agencies under delegated federal authority
but also  may contain  standards  or conditions  that  are imposed  under  state
regulatory  programs. State or local air permits may be required. State or local
wastewater or stormwater discharge  permits are also  often required. State  and
local  law may require permits to be obtained for all activities associated with
construction and preparation of the Property prior to operation of the  Project.
There  can be no assurance that all permits required by Environmental Regulatory
Laws will be issued, and the process  of obtaining such permits can often  cause
lengthy  delays,  including delays  caused  by third  party  appeals challenging
permit issuance. Delays in the issuance of the required permits, or cancellation
of the Project for failure to receive such permits, may have a material  adverse
effect on the Company's operation in cases where it has already made substantial
expenditures in connection with the Project.
 
    The   Environmental  Regulatory  Laws  and  regulations  or  permits  issued
thereunder  could  also  establish  operational  standards,  including  specific
limitations  upon emissions of certain air  and water pollutants. Such standards
may apply to any and all phases  of the Project, including new construction  and
renovation  of existing structures. Failure to  meet these standards may subject
the Company to regulatory enforcement  actions, third party actions and,  unless
excused by particular circumstances, liabilities or damages.
 
    Standards  established  pursuant to  the  Environmental Regulatory  Laws and
governmental policies governing their enforcement  may change. For example,  new
technology  may be  required or  stricter standards  may be  established for the
control of discharges of air or water pollutants or for solid waste handling and
disposal. Such future developments could affect the manner in which the  Company
operates  and  could  require  significant  additional  expenditures  to achieve
compliance with such requirements or policies.
 
                                       24
<PAGE>
    Finally, the Environmental Remediation  Laws, including CERCLA, may  subject
the  Company, like any other  entity that generates waste,  to strict, joint and
several liability for  the costs  of remediating  contamination associated  with
contaminated  sites, including landfills, which the Company will utilize for the
disposal of residue or other waste handled or processed by the Company, and  the
Property,  to the extent that it has been  or will be utilized for the disposal,
storage or treatment of solid waste. Some  such state and local laws may  create
liabilities for injury to persons or property caused by site contamination.
 
    The  Company  commissioned  a  modified  Phase  I  Environmental  Assessment
("Assessment")  of  the  Property,  which  included  groundwater  sampling.  The
Assessment  does not  identify any  state or  federal enforcement  activity with
respect to the environmental condition of the Property. The Assessment  revealed
contaminants  in  the groundwater  consistent  with a  spill  of petroleum-based
materials and above  state minimum  concentration levels.  The Assessment  notes
that  there have been no  reports to state or  federal environmental agencies of
leaking above- or below-ground storage tanks in the immediate area. However, the
Assessment indicates that the contaminants may be associated with the operations
of one or more nearby gasoline  service stations. The Assessment notes that  the
gasoline  service  stations  are  within  2,500  feet  of  the  location  of the
contamination. Under Pennsylvania  law, there is  a rebuttable presumption  that
owners  or operators  of any  above or below  ground storage  tanks are strictly
liable for  all  contamination within  2,500  feet  of the  perimeter  of  their
property.
 
    The  Assessment also  suggests that the  source of the  contamination may be
from a documented spill of petroleum products from an adjacent gasoline  service
station.  The Pennsylvania  Department of  Environmental Protection  ordered the
owner of  that station  to clean  up the  spill. The  cleanup is  ongoing. As  a
result,  if  the spill  is  the source  of  contamination on  the  Property, the
Assessment reports that  concentrations of contaminants  on the Property  should
decrease over time.
 
    The  expense  of having  to remediate  any  environmental problems,  and the
potential unavailability of  such site  or facility for  the Company's  proposed
brewery, could materially adversely affect the Company's ability to complete its
planned construction and equipping of the proposed brewery.
 
    As  part of  its start-up and  operating activities, the  Company intends to
review and comply with  all federal, state and  local regulations regarding  all
aspects  of its operations. The Company  does not anticipate any difficulties or
delays in obtaining all necessary licenses and permits.
 
    FUTURE LEGISLATION.  The alcoholic beverage industry has become the  subject
of  considerable  societal  and  political  attention  in  recent  years  due to
increasing public concern over  alcohol-related social problems including  drunk
driving,  underage drinking, and health consequences from the misuse of alcohol,
including alcoholism. The possibility exists that advertising by beer  producers
could  be  restricted  or  that  additional  cautionary  labeling  or  packaging
requirements might be imposed. If beer consumption in general were to come  into
disfavor  among  domestic  consumers,  or if  the  domestic  beer  industry were
subjected to  significant  additional governmental  regulations,  the  Company's
business  could be materially  adversely affected. In addition,  there can be no
assurance that the operations of the Company's proposed brewery will not  become
subject to increased taxation by federal or state agencies, which may materially
and adversely affect the operations, revenues and potential profitability of the
Company.  Congress and many state legislatures are considering various proposals
to impose  additional excise  taxes  on the  production  and sale  of  alcoholic
beverages,  including beer.  Some of the  excise tax rates  being considered are
substantial. Any increase in the taxes imposed  on beer can be expected to  have
an  adverse  impact  on  overall  sales of  such  products,  and  may materially
adversely affect the Company's result of operations.
 
LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
 
    There are no legal proceedings pending to which the Company or its employees
are a  party or  to which  any of  its property  is subject,  and the  Company's
management does not know of any such action being contemplated.
 
                                       25
<PAGE>
                                   MANAGEMENT
 
DIRECTOR AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
 
    Set forth below is certain information regarding the Company's directors and
executive officers:
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
          NAME                AGE               POSITION
- ------------------------      ---      ---------------------------
<S>                       <C>          <C>
Edward J. Lauth, III              41   Chairman of the Board
Michael D. Graham                      President
Matthew J. Suhey                  37   Director
Sandra L. Poole                   40   Director
J. Randall Woolridge              45   Director
</TABLE>
    
 
    EDWARD  J. LAUTH, III is the founder,  Chairman and Director of the Company.
Mr. Lauth has  been Chairman  and President and  a Director  of AquaPenn  Spring
Water  Company, Inc.  ("AquaPenn") since he  founded AquaPenn in  1986. Prior to
founding  AquaPenn,  Mr.  Lauth  spent  several  years  developing  and  selling
commercial  real estate, in addition to  founding and selling two restaurants in
State College, Pennsylvania. Mr. Lauth received a B.S. from Rollins College.
 
   
    MICHAEL D. GRAHAM will become the Company's President effective September 1,
1996. Prior  to joining  the Company,  Mr. Graham  was the  President and  Chief
Operating  Officer of the Pittsburgh Brewing Company ("Pittsburgh Brewing"), the
ninth largest brewer  in the  United States  with approximately  $65 million  in
sales  and  325  employees.  Prior  to 1993,  Mr.  Graham  served  as Pittsburgh
Brewing's Vice President -- Sales and  Marketing. Mr. Graham received an  M.B.A.
from Duquesne University and a B.S. from The American University.
    
 
    MATTHEW  J. SUHEY has been a director  of the Company since its inception in
March 1996. Mr. Suhey played professional football with the Chicago Bears of the
National Football  League  from  1980  to  1989.  He  has  been  an  independent
commodities  trader at  the Chicago Board  of Trade  since 1983. Mr.  Suhey is a
director of AquaPenn Spring Water Company, Inc.
 
    SANDRA L. POOLE has been a director  of the Company since May 1996. For  the
past  thirteen years, Ms. Poole has been employed by S&A Custom Built Homes as a
Design Consultant.  Her duties  include furnishing  model homes,  designing  new
floor plans, developing marketing brochures and signage for subdivisions.
 
   
    J.  RANDALL WOOLRIDGE, a director  of the Company since  August 1996, is the
Goldman, Sachs & Co. and Frank P. Smeal Endowed University Fellow in Finance  at
the Pennsylvania State University.
    
 
    Mr.  Lauth  is  not  expected  to devote  his  full  time  to  the Company's
activities. The  Company  anticipates  that  he will  devote  such  time,  on  a
part-time  basis, to his duties  with the Company as  is reasonably necessary in
connection with the  Company's activities  and objectives,  and consistent  with
their other activities.
 
   
    The  Company  intends  to  hire a  Brewmaster  and  Chief  Financial officer
following the Initial Closing.
    
 
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
 
   
    The Company has only  recently been organized and,  prior to July 31,  1996,
had  not  paid or  accrued  any executive  compensation  nor will  any executive
compensation accrue or be paid until the Initial Closing.
    
 
   
    The Company has entered into an employment agreement, dated as of August   ,
1996, with  Mr. Graham  providing for  his full-time  service as  the  Company's
President.  The agreement has an initial term  of one year, and is automatically
renewable for additional five  year period. Mr.  Graham's initial annual  salary
shall  be $150,000, which amount shall be increased to $160,000 upon the renewal
of the employment agreement. In addition, Mr. Graham shall receive 12,500 shares
of the Company's
    
 
                                       26
<PAGE>
   
Common Stock for each year he is employed by the Company, beginning on September
1, 1997, for  a maximum period  of five years  and a maximum  of 62,500  shares.
Beginning  on September 1, 1997, Mr. Graham  shall be entitled to participate in
any incentive  plan instituted  by the  Company. Mr.  Graham will  have  certain
expenses  relating to  his relocation  to the  State College,  Pennsylvania area
reimbursed by the  Company. Mr.  Graham will also  be entitled  to receive  such
employee  benefits as shall be granted by the Company to its other employees. To
date, no  compensation has  been accrued  for, or  paid to,  Mr. Graham  by  the
Company.
    
 
   
    The  Company anticipates  entering into  employment agreements  with certain
other management personnel.  In addition,  the Company intends  to implement  an
incentive  stock  option  plan  and  to grant  to  key  employees,  advisors and
consultants, which  the  Board  of  Directors  determines  to  be  necessary  or
appropriate  to promote and foster the  loyalty and dedication of its directors,
officers and employees.
    
 
           SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF MANAGEMENT AND CERTAIN SHAREHOLDERS
 
   
    The following  table sets  forth  certain information  with respect  to  the
beneficial ownership of the Company's Common Stock, as of July 31, 1996, by each
person  who is an officer  or director of the  Company, each beneficial owner of
more than 10% of the Common Stock and by all directors and officers as a group.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                PERCENTAGE OWNED
                                                        AMOUNT OWNED       AMOUNT OWNED        AFTER THE OFFERING
                                                         BEFORE THE         AFTER THE      ---------------------------
NAME AND ADDRESS OF BENEFICIAL OWNER (1)                  OFFERING           OFFERING        MINIMUM        MAXIMUM
- ----------------------------------------------------  -----------------  ----------------  ------------  -------------
<S>                                                   <C>                <C>               <C>           <C>
Edward J. Lauth, III................................        206,250            206,250           22.6%         12.4%
Michael D. Graham (2)...............................              0                  0              0             0
Sandra L. Poole (3).................................        206,250            206,250           22.6%         12.4%
Matthew J. Suhey....................................              0                  0              0             0
Randall Woolridge...................................              0                  0              0             0
All directors and officers as a group (5 persons)...        412,500            412,500           45.2%         24.8%
</TABLE>
    
 
- ------------------------
(1) A person is  deemed to be  the beneficial  owner of securities  that can  be
    acquired by such person within 60 days from the date of this Prospectus upon
    the  exercise  of options  or warrants.  Each beneficial  owner's percentage
    ownership is determined by assuming that  options or warrants that are  held
    by  such  person (but  not  those held  by any  other  person) and  that are
    exercisable within 60  days from  the date  of this  Prospectus having  been
    exercised.  Unless otherwise  noted, the  Company believes  that all persons
    named in the table have sole voting and investment power with respect to all
    shares of  Common Stock  beneficially owned  by them.  The address  of  each
    director is P.O. Box 389, Bellefonte, Pennsylvania 16823.
 
   
(2) Under  Mr. Graham's employment  agreement, he will  receive 12,500 shares of
    the Company's Common  Stock for  each year he  is employed  by the  Company,
    beginning  on September 1,  1997, for a  maximum period of  five years and a
    maximum of 62,500 shares.
    
 
   
(3) Includes 206,250  shares  of  Common  Stock owned  by  PFG,  a  Pennsylvania
    corporation, of which Ms. Poole is the sole shareholder.
    
 
ESCROW OF FOUNDER SHARES
 
   
    Mr. Lauth and PFG have agreed with the Company, upon the initial closing for
the Offering, to place the 412,500 shares of the Company's Common Stock owned by
Mr.  Lauth and PFG  (the "Escrow Shares")  in escrow with  an independent escrow
agent. Of the  Escrow Shares, 206,250  shares (the "Condition  Shares") will  be
returned  to the  Company if  the Company does  not satisfy  one or  more of the
following conditions during the seven fiscal years following such closing:
    
 
   
    - The Company has net revenues of at least $1,500,000 in any fiscal year; or
    
 
   
    - The Company has net earnings of at least $275,000 in any fiscal year; or
    
 
                                       27
<PAGE>
    - The Company is acquired through sale, merger, consolidation, sale of  all,
      or  substantially all, of its assets or otherwise at a per share price, in
      the form of cash, debt, stock, cash equivalent or any combination thereof,
      with a value equal to or  greater than the amounts specified below  during
      the  periods indicated following such  closing; provided, however, that if
      all or part of the consideration is in the form of stock, that such  stock
      must be freely tradeable upon receipt by the Company's shareholders:
 
   
      From closing until the end of Fiscal Year 1 -- $11.00
                                    Fiscal Year 2 -- $12.10
                                    Fiscal Year 3 -- $13.31
                                    Fiscal Year 4 -- $14.64
                                    Fiscal Year 5 -- $16.10
                                    Fiscal Year 6 -- $17.71
                                    Fiscal Year 7 -- $19.48
    
 
    For  the purposes  of the escrow,  the Company's operating  results shall be
determined by reference to the Company's financial statements as audited by  the
Company's  independent accountants in each fiscal  year, and all share and share
price amounts will be adjusted to reflect any stock dividends, stock splits,  or
other recapitalization transactions.
 
    If,  by the end of  the seven year period, the  Company has not satisfied at
least one of the conditions described above, Mr. Lauth and PFG have agreed  with
the  Company to return to the Company a pro rata portion of the Condition Shares
determined by  multiplying the  Condition Shares  by the  highest percentage  of
satisfaction   of  any  of  such  conditions   during  such  period,  with  100%
representing successful satisfaction of at least one condition, up to a  maximum
of  all of the Condition Shares.  Mr. Lauth and PFG may,  at their option at any
time after the end of the third fiscal year following the initial closing, elect
to terminate the  escrow by returning  the number of  Condition Shares, if  any,
determined,  in the  manner described above,  based upon satisfaction  of one or
more of the conditions described above on or prior to the date of Mr. Lauth's or
PFG's election.
 
    In the  alternative, even  if none  of the  conditions described  above  are
satisfied,  Mr.  Lauth  and PFG  shall  not be  required  to return  any  of the
Condition  Shares  if  the  Common  Stock  is  quoted  in  the  over-the-counter
inter-dealer  market,  included  in  the Nasdaq  SmallCap  Market,  listed  on a
national securities exchange or included in the Nasdaq Stock Market for a period
of at least  six (6) months)  and such stock  attains a mean  average price  (as
reported  by such market,  exchange or independent  quotations reporting service
with the price being defined as the mean average of the high and low bid prices,
the mean average closing bid prices or the mean average closing price) equal  to
or greater than the amounts set forth below during any consecutive 6-week period
during the fiscal years indicated after such closing:
 
   
                                  Fiscal Year 3 -- $13.31
                                  Fiscal Year 4 -- $14.64
                                  Fiscal Year 5 -- $16.10
                                  Fiscal Year 6 -- $17.71
                                  Fiscal Year 7 -- $19.48
    
 
    For  purposes  of  determining whether  the  stock price  targets  have been
satisfied, any  6-week  periods  during  which  the  Company,  its  officers  or
directors,  Mr.  Lauth and  PFG, or  any affiliates  of any  of such  persons or
entities have  executed any  purchases  of Common  Stock  will not  be  eligible
periods.  If the stock price target condition is satisfied during fiscal year 3,
the Escrow  Shares will  not thereafter  be subject  to possible  return to  the
Company,  but the Escrow Shares will continue  to be subject to the restrictions
on transfer by Mr. Lauth and PFG described below.
 
    In addition, Mr. Lauth  and PFG have  agreed with the  Company not to  sell,
transfer or otherwise dispose of any of the Escrow Shares during the time period
that  the Escrow Shares are subject to escrow. Further, if the escrow conditions
are  satisfied   within   the  first   three   years  after   closing   on   the
 
                                       28
<PAGE>
Minimum, Mr. Lauth and PFG have agreed with the Company not to sell, transfer or
otherwise  dispose  of  any of  its  shares of  Common  Stock (other  than  in a
transaction described in the  condition relating to the  sale of the Company  as
described  above) in the first  year at all, in the  second year unless the sale
price is  equal to  or greater  than double  the offering  price of  the  Shares
offered  by this Prospectus, or in the third year unless the sale price is equal
to or greater than the offering price of the Shares offered by this  Prospectus.
After  the  third year  (assuming  the escrow  is  released), there  will  be no
restrictions on Mr. Lauth and PFG's ability to dispose of their shares of Common
Stock. During the  term of the  escrow, Mr.  Lauth and PFG  shall retain  voting
rights to all of the Escrow Shares.
 
    The  revenues, earnings or stock price figures presented above should not be
regarded as projections of future performance.  There can be no assurances  that
such  revenues, earnings or  stock prices, or  results approaching such amounts,
will actually be attained or that the Company will have revenues or net earnings
in future years.  All of the  fees of the  escrow of the  Escrow Shares will  be
borne by the Company.
 
                              CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS
 
   
    The Company's option to obtain the Match Factory site was originally granted
by  Clasters  to AquaPenn,  a company  in  which Mr.  Lauth serves  as Chairman,
President and  a  Director. Subsequently,  AquaPenn  decided it  was  no  longer
interested  in purchasing the Match Factory site  and assigned the option to the
Company in consideration  of the  Company's payment  to Clasters  of the  option
purchase price, after which Clasters returned to AquaPenn its original deposit.
    
 
   
    In  order to  finance the  Company's start-up, Mr.  Lauth and  PFG have each
loaned the Company $18,000, which funds shall be repaid, together with  interest
at the prime rate, with the proceeds from this Offering.
    
 
    The  Company's Board  of Directors has  adopted a  resolution which requires
that all  future material  transactions between  the Company  and its  officers,
directors,  principal shareholders and affiliates will be approved by a majority
of any independent members of the Company's  Board of Directors who do not  have
an  interest in the transactions, and will be  on terms no less favorable to the
Company than could be obtained from unaffiliated third parties. The Company does
not currently have  any independent directors.  The Company plans  to add up  to
three  independent directors following the completion of the Offering. There can
be no  assurance that  the Company  will be  successful in  identifying  persons
willing to serve as directors of the Company.
 
   
                           DESCRIPTION OF SECURITIES
    
 
COMMON STOCK
 
   
    The Company is authorized to issue 50,000,000 shares of Common Stock, no par
value,  of which  412,500 shares  were issued and  outstanding as  of August 23,
1996. As of  August 23, 1996,  there were  two holders of  the Company's  Common
Stock.  Each shareholder is entitled to one vote  per share on all matters to be
voted  on  by  shareholders,  without   any  right  to  cumulate  their   votes.
Shareholders  have no preemptive rights and  have no liability for further calls
or assessments on their shares.  The shares of Common  Stock are not subject  to
repurchase  by  the  Company  or  conversion  into  any  other  securities.  All
outstanding shares  of  Common Stock  are,  and  those to  be  outstanding  upon
completion of the Offering will be, fully paid and nonassessable.
    
 
    Shareholders  are entitled to  receive such dividends as  may be declared by
the Board of Directors  of the Company out  of funds legally available  therefor
and,  upon  the  liquidation, dissolution  or  winding  up of  the  Company, are
entitled to share ratably in all  net assets available for distribution to  such
holders  after  satisfaction  of  all  obligations of  the  Company.  It  is not
anticipated that any dividends  will be paid by  the Company in the  foreseeable
future  since the Company intends to retain its earnings, if any, to finance the
growth of its business.  Future dividend policy will  depend upon the  Company's
earnings,  financial  needs, covenants  in loan  agreements and  other pertinent
factors.
 
                                       29
<PAGE>
   
PREFERRED STOCK
    
 
   
    The Company is authorized to issue 25,000,000 shares of Preferred Stock, par
value $1.00 per share.  The Board of Directors  of the Company, without  further
action by the shareholders, is authorized to issue the shares of Preferred Stock
in  one or  more series and  to determine  the voting rights,  preferences as to
dividends, and the liquidation, conversion, redemption and other rights of  each
series. The issuance of a series with voting and conversion rights may adversely
affect  the  voting  power of  the  holders  of Common  Stock.  The  issuance of
Preferred Stock  may have  the effect  of delaying,  deferring or  preventing  a
change in control of the Company without further action by the shareholders. The
Company has no present plans to issue any shares of Preferred Stock.
    
 
LIMITATION OF DIRECTORS' LIABILITY AND INDEMNIFICATION OF DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS
 
    The By-laws of the Company provide that directors of the Company will not be
personally  liable for monetary  damages to the Company  or its shareholders for
breaches of  their  duties as  directors,  except in  instances  involving  self
dealing,  willful misconduct or recklessness, criminal violations or liabilities
involving the payment of taxes.
 
    The  Company  has   included  provisions  in   its  By-Laws  providing   for
indemnification  of its  directors and  officers by  the Company  to the maximum
extent permitted under  applicable law,  including the  advancement of  expenses
incurred  by a director or officer in any  suit in which the director or officer
is involved. The Company believes that such actions will assist it in attracting
and  retaining  qualified  individuals  to  serve  as  directors  and  officers.
Prospective  investors should be  aware, however, that  the cost associated with
indemnifying a director or officer could  be significant and, if not covered  by
insurance,   could  adversely  affect  the   Company's  results  of  operations.
Furthermore, in situations where the Company has advanced litigation expenses to
a director or  officer and  the director  or officer  is required  to repay  the
expenses  because it is ultimately adjudged that  the director or officer is not
entitled to indemnification,  the director  or officer may  not have  sufficient
cash or assets to repay the expenses advanced.
 
    Insofar  as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities Act
may be permitted to directors, officers  and controlling persons of the  Company
pursuant to the foregoing provisions, or otherwise, the Company has been advised
that   in  the   opinion  of  the   Securities  and   Exchange  Commission  such
indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act  and
is,  therefore, unenforceable.  In the  event that  a claim  for indemnification
against such liabilities  (other than  the payment  by the  Company of  expenses
incurred  or paid by a director, officer or controlling person of the Company in
the successful defense of  any action, suit or  proceeding) is asserted by  such
director,  officer or controlling person in connection with the securities being
registered, the Company will,  unless in the opinion  of its counsel the  matter
has  been settled  by controlling  precedent, submit  to a  court of appropriate
jurisdiction the question whether such  indemnification by it is against  public
policy  as expressed  in the Securities  Act and  will be governed  by the final
adjudication of such issue.
 
LIMITATIONS ON TRANSFERS OF SHARES
 
    There is currently no public market for the Company's Common Stock and there
is little likelihood  that an  active trading market  will develop  in the  near
future  as a result of  this Offering. The Registration  Statement of which this
Prospectus is  a part  has  been registered  with  the Securities  and  Exchange
Commission  pursuant to the Securities  Act and, as such,  the Shares are freely
tradeable under  the federal  securities laws.  The Shares,  however, have  been
registered  in only a limited number of states, and may not be sold or otherwise
transferred to persons who are residents of  any state in which the Shares  have
not  been registered unless they are  subsequently registered or there exists an
exemption from the applicable state's registration requirements with respect  to
such sale or transfer.
 
    The  Company intends to apply for listing  of the Common Stock on the Nasdaq
SmallCap Market when, and if, the Company meets the listing requirements of  the
Nasdaq  SmallCap Market.  The principal  listing requirements  are $4,000,000 of
total assets, $2,000,000 of total stockholders'  equity, a minimum bid price  of
$3.00  per  share  and  a  minimum  of  the  two  market  makers.  To  date, the
 
                                       30
<PAGE>
Company has not contacted any potential  market makers for the Company's  Common
Stock.  Following the completion of the sale of the Minimum, the Company intends
to begin contacting potential market makers  in this regard. However, there  can
be  no assurance that the Company will be able to interest brokers or dealers in
acting as market  makers for  the Company's Common  Stock. No  assurance can  be
given  as to when or whether the Company's Common Stock will qualify for listing
on the Nasdaq SmallCap Market.
 
    Since the Company's intention is to  establish and operate a brewery in  the
Commonwealth  of Pennsylvania, the  Company will be subject  to licensure by the
PLCB. As a result of such licensure, ownership of the Company's Common Stock  is
not  permitted for  persons or  entities which hold  a wholesale  or retail PLCB
license or have an  "interest" (i.e., officer, director  or owner; or  creditor,
lessor,  lender or guarantor; etc.)  in an entity holding  a wholesale or retail
PLCB license. This restriction does not preclude a person or entity from  owning
shares  in more  than one  brewery licensed  by the  PLCB. The  Company will use
reasonable efforts  to  assure  that  subsequent purchasers  of  shares  of  the
Company's  Common Stock comply with this PLCB restriction. However, there can be
no assurance that the Company  will be able to  prevent shares of the  Company's
Common  Stock from being  acquired by persons  or entities in  violation of this
PLCB restriction.  In  the  event the  PLCB  determines  that a  holder  of  the
Company's  Common Stock also holds a wholesale  or retail PLCB license or has an
"interest" in a  wholesale or retail  license holder, the  PLCB may compel  such
stockholder  to  divest or  otherwise  terminate its  interest  with one  of the
conflicting license holders.  Failure by  such holder  to comply  with the  PLCB
licensure  requirements may subject the Company to enforcement action, which may
include fines, penalties or other sanctions, including suspension and revocation
of the Company's license.
 
SHARES ELIGIBLE FOR FUTURE SALE
 
    All of the 412,500 shares of Common Stock currently outstanding were offered
and sold by the Company in a  private transaction in reliance upon an  exemption
from  registration under the Securities Act. Accordingly, all of such shares are
"restricted securities" as defined by Rule 144 ("Rule 144") under the Securities
Act and cannot be resold without registration except in reliance on Rule 144  or
another  applicable exemption  from registration. In  general, under  Rule 144 a
person (or persons whose  shares are required to  be aggregated), including  any
affiliate  of the Company, who beneficially  owns restricted shares for a period
of at least two years (currently proposed to be reduced to one year) is entitled
to sell within any three month period  shares equal in number to the greater  of
(i) 1 percent of the then outstanding shares of Common Stock or (ii) the average
weekly trading volume of the same class of shares during the four calendar weeks
preceding  the filing of  the required notice  of sale with  the Commission. The
seller must also comply with the notice and manner of sale requirements of  Rule
144,  and there must be current  public information available about the Company.
In addition, any person (or persons whose shares are required to be  aggregated)
who  is not,  at the  time of sale,  nor during  the preceding  three months, an
affiliate of the Company, and who  has beneficially owned restricted shares  for
at  least three years (currently proposed to  be reduced to two years), can sell
such shares without regard to notice, manner of sale, public information or  the
volume  limitations described above. Shares of Common Stock will be eligible for
resale under Rule 144 in June 1998 (assuming the other requirements of Rule  144
are met and assuming the proposed reductions in holding period are not adopted).
 
    No  prediction can be  made as to the  effect, if any,  that future sales of
restricted shares of Common Stock, or the availability of such Common Stock  for
sale,  will have on the market price of the Common Stock prevailing from time to
time. Sales of substantial amounts of such Common Stock in the public market, or
the perception  that such  sales  may occur,  could  adversely affect  the  then
prevailing market price of the Common Stock.
 
    In  addition, the Company may issue shares of Common Stock in the future. No
prediction can be made as to the effect, if any, that future issuances of Common
Stock may have on the market price of
 
                                       31
<PAGE>
the Common Stock prevailing from time  to time. Sales of substantial amounts  of
such  Common Stock, or the perception that such sales may occur, could adversely
affect the then prevailing market price of the Common Stock.
 
ANTI-TAKEOVER PROVISIONS
 
    The Pennsylvania Business  Corporation Law  of 1988, as  amended (the  "1988
BCL"),  includes certain  shareholder protection  provisions, some  of which may
apply to the Company, and as to which the Company has not yet determined whether
or not to opt  out. The following  is a description of  those provisions of  the
1988  BCL that apply to  the Company and that  may have an anti-takeover effect.
This description of the 1988 BCL is only a summary thereof, does not purport  to
be  complete and is qualified  in its entirety by reference  to the full text of
the 1988 BCL.
 
        (i) The Control Transaction provisions allow holders of voting shares of
    a corporation to  "put" their stock  to an  acquiror for fair  value in  the
    event  of a control transaction (the acquisition  of 20% of the voting stock
    of the corporation).  Fair value  is defined as  not less  than the  highest
    price paid by the acquiror during a certain 90 day period.
 
        (ii)  An interested shareholder (the  beneficial owner of twenty percent
    of the  voting stock  either of  a corporation  or of  an affiliate  of  the
    corporation  who was  at any  time within  the five-year  period immediately
    prior to the date in question the beneficial owner of twenty percent of  the
    voting  stock of  the corporation) cannot  engage in  a business combination
    with the  corporation for  a period  of  five years  unless: (a)  the  board
    approves  the business combination or the  acquisition of shares in advance,
    or (b) if the  interested shareholder owns 80%  of such stock, the  business
    combination  is approved by a majority of the disinterested shareholders and
    the  transaction  satisfies  certain  "fair  price"  provisions.  After  the
    five-year period, the same restrictions apply, unless the transaction either
    is approved by a majority of the disinterested shareholders or satisfies the
    fair price provisions.
 
       (iii)   Corporations   may   adopt   shareholders'   rights   plans  with
    discriminatory provisions (sometimes  referred to as  poison pills)  whereby
    options  to acquire shares or corporate  assets are created and issued which
    contain terms that limit persons owning  or offering to acquire a  specified
    percentage  of outstanding shares  from exercising, converting, transferring
    or receiving options  and allows the  exercise of options  to be limited  to
    shareholders or triggered based upon control transactions. Such poison pills
    take effect only in the event of a control transaction. Pursuant to the 1988
    BCL,  such  poison pills  may be  adopted by  the Board  without shareholder
    approval.
 
       (iv) In taking action with respect to tender offers or takeover proposals
    (as for any other action), directors may, in considering the best  interests
    of  the  corporation, consider  the effects  of  any action  upon employees,
    suppliers, customers,  communities where  located  and all  other  pertinent
    factors.
 
        (v)  Shareholders of a  corporation no longer have  a statutory right to
    call special  meetings  of shareholders  or  to propose  amendments  to  the
    articles under the provisions of the 1988 BCL.
 
    The  foregoing provisions may discourage  certain types of transactions that
involve a change of control of the Company and ensure a measure of continuity in
the management of  the business and  affairs of the  Company. While the  Company
does  not currently have a shareholder rights plan or poison pill, the effect of
the above-described provisions  may be  to deter  hostile takeovers  at a  price
higher  than the  prevailing market  price for  the Common  Stock and  to permit
current management to remain in control  of the Company. In some  circumstances,
certain  shareholders  may  consider  these  anti-takeover  provisions  to  have
disadvantageous effects. Tender offers or other non-open market acquisitions  of
stock  are frequently  made at  prices above  the prevailing  market price  of a
company's stock. In  addition, acquisitions  of stock by  persons attempting  to
acquire control through market purchases may cause the market price of the stock
to  reach  levels  that are  higher  than  would otherwise  be  the  case. These
anti-takeover provisions  may  discourage  any  or  all  of  such  acquisitions,
 
                                       32
<PAGE>
particularly  those of less  than all of  the Company's shares,  and may thereby
deprive certain holders of the Company's Common Stock of an opportunity to  sell
their stock at a temporarily higher market price.
 
    In addition to the provisions of the 1988 BCL, PLCB regulations provide that
changes  in stockholder ownership  of 10% or  more must be  reported to the PLCB
within 15 days of the change.
 
   
TRANSFER AGENT
    
 
   
    The transfer agent for the Common Stock will be American Securities Transfer
& Trust, Inc., Denver, Colorado.
    
 
                              PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION
 
   
    The Company is  offering to  sell, on  a best  efforts basis,  a Minimum  of
500,000 Shares and a Maximum of 1,250,000 Shares at a price of $10.00 per Share.
The  Company  will need  additional financing  of  approximately $5  million for
working  capital  during  the  proposed  brewery's  first  eighteen  months   of
operations  following the  Offering. The Company  will not close  on the Minimum
until such financing is obtained.  The Offering will begin  on the date of  this
Prospectus  and continue until the earlier of when all of the Shares offered are
sold or the Offering  Termination Date (which is  June 1, 1997), unless  earlier
terminated by the Company.
    
 
    No broker or dealer has been retained or is under any obligation to purchase
any Shares, however the Company may from time to time utilize brokers or dealers
in  which case it would pay a  customary brokers fee or commission in connection
with any  sales  effected  thereby.  Subject to  applicable  federal  and  state
securities  laws, the  Company's officers and  employees may  participate in the
selling effort, which is  expected to be handled  primarily by Edward J.  Lauth,
III.  The Company anticipates  that it may  send copies of  the Prospectus to as
many as 30,000 potential  investors. The Company will  not pay any  underwriting
discounts, commissions or other compensation to officers, employees or others in
connection with the sale of the Shares.
 
    Shares   may  be  purchased  by  completing  and  delivering  the  Company's
Subscription Agreement along with  the purchase price by  check to the  Company.
Checks  should be made payable to  "Bellefonte Brewery Proceeds Account." Within
five days of its receipt of a Subscription Agreement accompanied by a check  for
the  purchase  price,  the Company  will  send  by first  class  mail  a written
confirmation to  notify the  subscriber of  the extent,  if any,  to which  such
subscription has been accepted by the Company.
 
    All  subscription proceeds  received and accepted  will be  deposited by the
Company with  the Escrow  Agent until  the Initial  Closing. The  funds held  in
escrow  will be invested  by the Escrow  Agent in short-term  obligations of the
U.S. Government, its agencies and divisions. If closing on the Minimum does  not
occur  by the  Offering Termination  Date, all proceeds  held in  escrow will be
returned by the Escrow  Agent to the investors  with interest. When the  Company
has  sold the Minimum number  of shares, the Company  will close on the Minimum,
investors will be sent stock certificates representing the number of Shares they
have purchased,  and all  of the  proceeds held  in escrow,  including  interest
thereon, will be disbursed by the Escrow Agent to the Company. After the Initial
Closing,  the escrow  will be closed.  Thereafter, the Company  may continue the
Offering for the remaining term. All proceeds from the sale of Shares above  the
Minimum  will  be immediately  available for  use  by the  Company. See  "Use of
Proceeds."
 
    There is no public trading market for the Company's Common Stock, and  there
can be no assurance that an active public market will develop in the near future
as  a result of this  Offering. The offering price  of the Shares was determined
arbitrarily by the Company, and should not be considered as an indication of the
actual value of  the Company.  In determining  the offering  price, the  Company
considered,  among other  things, the Company's  lack of  operating history, its
limited financial  resources, its  growth and  profit potential,  the amount  of
dilution  to investors in the Offering and the risk of investing in the Company.
The  Company   intends  to   apply  for   listing  of   the  Common   Stock   on
 
                                       33
<PAGE>
The  Nasdaq SmallCap Market  when, and if, the  Company meets applicable listing
requirements. The  principal requirements  for listing  on The  Nasdaq  SmallCap
Market are $4,000,000 of total assets, $2,000,000 of total stockholders' equity,
a  minimum bid price of $3.00  per share and a minimum  of two market makers. To
date, the  Company  has  not  contacted any  potential  market  makers  for  the
Company's Common Stock. Following the completion of the sale of the Minimum, the
Company  intends to  begin contacting  potential market  makers in  this regard.
However, there can be  no assurance that  the Company will  be able to  interest
brokers or dealers in acting as market makers for the Company's Common Stock. No
assurance  can be given  as to when  or whether the  Company's Common Stock will
qualify for listing on The Nasdaq SmallCap Market.
 
                                 LEGAL MATTERS
 
    The validity of the Common Stock offered hereby will be passed upon for  the
Company  by Ballard Spahr Andrews & Ingersoll, 1735 Market Street, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania 19103.
 
                            INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
 
   
    The financial statements of The Historic Bellefonte Brewery, Inc. as of July
31, 1996 and  for the period  from March 1,  1996 (inception) to  July 31,  1996
included  in  this  Prospectus  have  been audited  by  KPMG  Peat  Marwick LLP,
independent accountants, as stated in their report appearing herein.
    
 
                                       34
<PAGE>
                         INDEX TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                PAGE
                                                                                                                -----
<S>                                                                                                          <C>
Independent Auditors' Report...............................................................................         F-2
Balance Sheet..............................................................................................         F-3
Statement of Operations....................................................................................         F-4
Statement of Stockholders' Equity..........................................................................         F-5
Statement of Cash Flows....................................................................................         F-6
Notes to Financial Statements..............................................................................         F-7
</TABLE>
 
                                      F-1
<PAGE>
                              FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' REPORT
 
The Board of Directors and Stockholders of
 The Historic Bellefonte Brewery, Inc.:
 
   
    We  have audited the  accompanying balance sheet  of The Historic Bellefonte
Brewery, Inc.  (a development  stage enterprise)  as of  July 31,  1996 and  the
related  statements of operations,  stockholders' equity and  cash flows for the
period March 1, 1996  (inception) to July 31,  1996. These financial  statements
are  the responsibility  of the Company's  management. Our  responsibility is to
express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audit.
    
 
    We conducted  our  audit  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 are free of material
misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence  supporting
the  amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. 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 audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.
 
   
    In our opinion, the financial  statements referred to above present  fairly,
in  all material  respects, the  financial position  of The  Historic Bellefonte
Brewery, Inc.  (a development  stage enterprise)  as of  July 31,  1996 and  the
results  of  its  operations  and  cash  flows  for  the  period  March  1, 1996
(inception) to July 31, 1996,  in conformity with generally accepted  accounting
principles.
    
 
                                          KPMG Peat Marwick LLP
 
   
August 15, 1996
State College, Pennsylvania
    
 
                                      F-2
<PAGE>
                     THE HISTORIC BELLEFONTE BREWERY, INC.
                        (A DEVELOPMENT STAGE ENTERPRISE)
                                 BALANCE SHEET
 
                                     ASSETS
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                        JULY 31,
                                                                                                          1996
                                                                                                      ------------
<S>                                                                                                   <C>
Cash................................................................................................   $      924
Deposit -- land escrow..............................................................................       44,000
Deferred organization and offering expenses.........................................................      103,397
                                                                                                      ------------
    Total assets....................................................................................      148,321
                                                                                                      ------------
                                                                                                      ------------
 
                                       LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
 
Accounts payable -- trade...........................................................................       69,170
Loan payable -- officer.............................................................................       36,000
                                                                                                      ------------
    Total liabilities:..............................................................................      105,170
                                                                                                      ------------
Stockholders' equity:
  Preferred stock, $1 par value, 25,000,000 shares authorized, none issued and outstanding..........       --
  Common stock, no par value, 50,000,000 shares authorized, 412,500 issued and outstanding..........       50,000
  Deficit accumulated during development stage......................................................       (6,849)
                                                                                                      ------------
    Total stockholders' equity......................................................................       43,151
                                                                                                      ------------
    Total liabilities and stockholders' equity......................................................   $  148,321
                                                                                                      ------------
                                                                                                      ------------
</TABLE>
    
 
                See accompanying notes to financial statements.
 
                                      F-3
<PAGE>
   
                     THE HISTORIC BELLEFONTE BREWERY, INC.
                        (A DEVELOPMENT STAGE ENTERPRISE)
                            STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
                    PERIOD MARCH 1, 1996 (DATE OF INCEPTION)
                                TO JULY 31, 1996
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                   MARCH 1, 1996
                                                                                                     (DATE OF
                                                                                                    INCEPTION)
                                                                                                 TO JULY 31, 1996
                                                                                                 -----------------
<S>                                                                                              <C>
Expenses incurred in the development stage:
  Professional expenses........................................................................      $   4,635
  Miscellaneous expenses.......................................................................          2,214
                                                                                                       -------
Net loss.......................................................................................      $   6,849
                                                                                                       -------
                                                                                                       -------
</TABLE>
    
 
                See accompanying notes to financial statements.
 
                                      F-4
<PAGE>
   
                     THE HISTORIC BELLEFONTE BREWERY, INC.
                        (A DEVELOPMENT STATE ENTERPRISE)
                       STATEMENT OF STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
                    PERIOD MARCH 1, 1996 (DATE OF INCEPTION)
                                TO JULY 31, 1996
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                    COMMON STOCK                        TOTAL
                                                                --------------------   ACCUMULATED   STOCKHOLDERS'
                                                                 SHARES     AMOUNT       DEFICIT        EQUITY
                                                                ---------  ---------  -------------  ------------
<S>                                                             <C>        <C>        <C>            <C>
Original stock issuance.......................................    412,500  $  50,000       --         $   50,000
Net loss......................................................     --         --           (6,849)        (6,849)
                                                                ---------  ---------       ------    ------------
Balance at July 31, 1996......................................    412,500  $  50,000       (6,849)    $   43,151
                                                                ---------  ---------       ------    ------------
                                                                ---------  ---------       ------    ------------
</TABLE>
    
 
                See accompanying notes to financial statements.
 
                                      F-5
<PAGE>
                     THE HISTORIC BELLEFONTE BREWERY, INC.
                        (A DEVELOPMENT STATE ENTERPRISE)
                            STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
 
   
                    PERIOD MARCH 1, 1996 (DATE OF INCEPTION)
                                TO JULY 31, 1996
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                   MARCH 1, 1996
                                                                                                     (DATE OF
                                                                                                    INCEPTION)
                                                                                                 TO JULY 31, 1996
                                                                                                 -----------------
<S>                                                                                              <C>
Cash flows from operating activities:
  Net loss.....................................................................................    $      (6,849)
  Increase (decrease) in cash due to changes in:
    Deposit -- land escrow.....................................................................          (44,000)
    Deferred organization and offering expenses................................................         (103,397)
    Accounts payable...........................................................................           69,170
                                                                                                 -----------------
Net cash used in operating activities..........................................................          (85,076)
                                                                                                 -----------------
Cash flows from investing activities...........................................................         --
                                                                                                 -----------------
Cash flows from financing activities:
  Proceeds from note payable...................................................................           36,000
  Proceeds from issuance of common stock.......................................................           50,000
                                                                                                 -----------------
Net cash from financing activities.............................................................           86,000
                                                                                                 -----------------
Net increase in cash...........................................................................              924
Cash at beginning of period....................................................................         --
                                                                                                 -----------------
Cash at end of period..........................................................................    $         924
                                                                                                 -----------------
                                                                                                 -----------------
</TABLE>
    
 
                See accompanying notes to financial statements.
 
                                      F-6
<PAGE>
   
                    THE HISTORICAL BELLEFONTE BREWERY, INC.
                        (A DEVELOPMENT STAGE ENTERPRISE)
                         NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                 JULY 31, 1996
    
 
(1) SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
 
    ORGANIZATION AND DEVELOPMENT STAGE
 
    The  Historic Bellefonte Brewery, Inc. (a development stage enterprise) (the
Company) was incorporated on March 1, 1996 and was formed to build and operate a
regional craft brewery in Bellefonte, Pennsylvania.
 
    The Company is in the development stage and has been engaged in  principally
organizational  activities, including  raising capital,  recruiting officers and
employees, application to state and federal authorities for necessary approvals,
and execution of certain agreements.
 
    DEPOSIT -- LAND ESCROW
 
    Deposit consists of  funds placed  in escrow  for the  purchase of  property
located in Bellefonte, Pennsylvania.
 
    ACCOUNTING ESTIMATES
 
    The  preparation  of  financial  statements  in  conformity  with  generally
accepted  accounting  principles  requires  management  to  make  estimates  and
assumptions  that  affect the  reported amounts  of  assets and  liabilities and
disclosure of contingent  assets and liabilities  at the date  of the  financial
statements  and  the  recorded  amounts  of  revenues  and  expenses  during the
reporting period. Actual results could differ from these estimates.
 
(2) LOAN PAYABLE -- OWNER
   
    The Company  has financed  a  portion of  its development  stage  operations
through  borrowing from  certain officers and  directors. The  amounts have been
advanced on an as needed basis at  the prime rate and principal repayment  terms
have not been determined as of July 31, 1996.
    
 
(3) INCOME TAXES
    The Company, a Pennsylvania corporation, will incur federal and state income
tax  expense (benefit) based on its taxable  income (loss). The Company will use
the asset and liability method of  accounting for income taxes. Under the  asset
and liability method, deferred tax assets and liabilities are recognized for the
estimated  future  tax  consequences  attributable  to  differences  between the
financial statement  carrying amounts  of existing  assets and  liabilities  and
their  respective tax  bases. Deferred tax  assets and  liabilities are measured
using enacted  tax  rates  in effect  for  the  year in  which  those  temporary
differences  are expected to be recovered or settled. The effect on deferred tax
assets and liabilities of a change in  tax rates is recognized in income in  the
period that includes the enactment date.
 
    Future benefit of tax loss carryforwards has not been recorded as management
believes that the net tax benefit is not likely to be realized.
 
    Certain  costs incurred in  the organization, start up  and financing of the
Company will  be  capitalized  under  the Internal  Revenue  Code  and  will  be
amortized over a 60 month period.
 
   
(4) LINE OF CREDIT
    
   
    The  Company entered into  a $100,000 unsecured line  of credit agreement in
July 1996. Under  terms of the  agreement, borrowings under  the line of  credit
bear  interest at prime and are personally guaranteed by certain officers of the
Company. There were no borrowings on the line at July 31, 1996.
    
 
                                      F-7
<PAGE>
- -------------------------------------------
                                     -------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------
                                     -------------------------------------------
 
    IN  CONNECTION WITH THE OFFERING, NO PERSON  HAS BEEN AUTHORIZED TO GIVE ANY
INFORMATION OR TO MAKE  ANY REPRESENTATIONS OTHER THAN  THOSE CONTAINED IN  THIS
PROSPECTUS  AND, IF  GIVEN OR  MADE, SUCH  OTHER INFORMATION  OR REPRESENTATIONS
SHOULD NOT  BE  RELIED UPON  AS  HAVING BEEN  AUTHORIZED  BY THE  COMPANY.  THIS
PROSPECTUS  DOES NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFER TO  SELL, OR A SOLICITATION OF AN OFFER
TO BUY, SHARES  IN ANY  STATE WHERE  THE OFFER  AND SALE  OF THE  SHARES IS  NOT
LAWFUL.  THE DELIVERY  OF THIS PROSPECTUS  AT ANY  TIME DOES NOT  IMPLY THAT THE
INFORMATION HEREIN CONTAINED IS  CORRECT AS OF ANY  TIME SUBSEQUENT TO THE  DATE
HEREOF. THE COMPANY RESERVES THE RIGHT TO REJECT OR ACCEPT SUBSCRIPTIONS FOR THE
PURCHASE OF SHARES IN WHOLE OR IN PART FOR ANY REASON.
 
                            ------------------------
 
                               TABLE OF CONTENTS
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                   PAGE
                                                 ---------
<S>                                              <C>
Available Information..........................          2
Summary........................................          3
Investor Suitability...........................          5
Risk Factors...................................          5
Determination of Offering Price................         11
Use of Proceeds................................         12
Capitalization.................................         14
Dilution.......................................         14
Dividend Policy................................         15
Plan of Operation..............................         15
Business.......................................         17
Management.....................................         26
Security Ownership of Management and Certain
 Shareholders..................................         27
Certain Transactions...........................         29
Description of Common Stock....................         29
Plan of Distribution...........................         33
Legal Matters..................................         34
Independent Accountants........................         34
</TABLE>
    
 
                A MINIMUM OF 500,000 AND A MAXIMUM OF 1,250,000
 
                     THE HISTORIC BELLEFONTE BREWERY, INC.
 
                                  COMMON STOCK
 
                             ---------------------
 
                                   PROSPECTUS
                             ---------------------
 
                                          , 1996
 
- -------------------------------------------
                                     -------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------
                                     -------------------------------------------
<PAGE>
                                    PART II
                     INFORMATION NOT REQUIRED IN PROSPECTUS
 
ITEM 24.  INDEMNIFICATION OF DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS.
 
   
    The  Company's By-laws provide that the Company shall indemnify its officers
and directors to the fullest extent permitted by Pennsylvania law. Sections 1741
and 1742 of the Pennsylvania Business Corporation Law (the "PBCL") provide  that
a  business corporation may indemnify directors and officers against liabilities
that may incur as such provided that  the particular person acted in good  faith
and  in a manner he or she reasonably believed  to be in, or not opposed to, the
best interests of the corporation, and, with respect to any criminal proceeding,
had no reasonable cause to believe his or her conduct was unlawful. In  general,
the  power  to indemnify  under these  sections does  not exist  in the  case of
actions against a director or officer by  or in the right of the corporation  if
the  person otherwise entitled to indemnification shall have been adjudged to be
liable to the corporation unless it  is judicially determined that, despite  the
adjudication  of liability but in view of all the circumstances of the case, the
person is  fairly  and  reasonably entitled  to  indemnification  for  speciifed
expenses.  The  Corporation  is  required to  indemnify  directors  and officers
against expenses  they may  incur  in defending  actions  against them  in  such
capacities  if they are successful on the  merits or otherwise in the defense of
such actions.
    
 
   
    Section 1713 of the PBCL permits the shareholders to adopt a bylaw provision
relieving a director  (but not an  officer) of personal  liability for  monetary
damages  except where (i)  the director has breached  the applicable standard of
care, and  (ii) such  conduct constitutes  self-dealing, willful  misconduct  or
recklessness.  The  statute provides  that  a director  may  not be  relieved of
liability for the payment of taxes pursuant  to any federal, state or local  law
or responsibility under a criminal statute.
    
 
   
    Section  1746 of the PBCL grants  a corporation broad authority to indemnify
its directors, officers and other agents for liabilities and expenses icurred in
such capacity,  except in  circumstances where  the  act or  failure to  act  or
failure  to act giving rise to the  claim for indemnification is determined by a
court to have constituted willful misconduct or recklessness.
    
 
ITEM 25.  OTHER EXPENSES OF ISSUANCE AND DISTRIBUTION.
 
    The following table sets forth the estimated expenses in connection with the
offering of  the Common  Stock pursuant  to this  Registration Statement,  which
shall be borne by the Company.
 
   
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                <C>
Securities and Exchange Commission Registration Fee..............  $   4,310
Printing and Engraving Expenses..................................
Accounting Fees and Expenses.....................................
Legal Fees and Expenses..........................................
Blue Sky Fees and Expenses.......................................     15,000
Fees of Transfer Agent and Registrar.............................
Miscellaneous Expenses...........................................
                                                                   ---------
    Total........................................................  $ 200,000
                                                                   ---------
                                                                   ---------
</TABLE>
    
 
- ------------------------
*  To be filed by amendment.
 
ITEM 26.  RECENT SALES OF UNREGISTERED SECURITIES.
 
    Since March 1, 1996 (inception), the Company has issued the following shares
of  Common  Stock  and  options  to  purchase  shares  of  Common  Stock without
registration in  reliance on  Section 4(2)  of the  Securities Act  of 1933,  as
amended:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                   NUMBER OF
      DATE          SHARES               PURCHASER              CONSIDERATION
- -----------------  ---------  --------------------------------  -------------
<S>                <C>        <C>                               <C>
March 1, 1996        206,250  Edward J. Lauth, III               $    25,000
May 17, 1996         206,250  Poole Financial Group, Inc.        $    25,000
</TABLE>
 
                                      II-1
<PAGE>
ITEM 27.  EXHIBITS.
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
  EXHIBIT
  NUMBER                                                 DESCRIPTION
- -----------  ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>          <S>
       3.1   Articles of Incorporation of the Company, filed March 1, 1996+
       3.2   By-Laws of the Company+
         4   Specimen Common Stock Certificate**
         5   Opinion of Ballard Spahr Andrews & Ingersoll**
      10.1   Purchase and Sale Agreement between Clasters and AquaPenn+
      10.2   Assignment of Purchase and Sale Agreement between AquaPenn and the Company+
      10.3   Amendment to Purchase and Sale Agreement between Clasters and the Company+
      10.4   Extension of Agreement of Sale*
      10.5   Employment Agreement between Michael D. Graham and the Company.*
      10.6   Escrow Agreement between American Securities Transfer & Trust, Inc. and the Company.*
      23.1   Consent of KPMG Peat Marwick LLP*
      23.2   Consent of Ballard Spahr Andrews & Ingersoll (included as part of Exhibit 5)
</TABLE>
    
 
- ------------------------
 *  Filed herewith.
**  To be filed by amendment.
   
 +  Previously filed.
    
 
ITEM 28.  UNDERTAKINGS.
 
   
    The undersigned small business issuer hereby undertakes to:
    
 
   
    (1)  File,  during any  period in  which  it offers  or sells  securities, a
post-effective amendment to this registration statement to:
    
 
   
        (i)  Include  any  prospectus  required  by  section  10(a)(3)  of   the
    Securities Act;
    
 
   
        (ii)  Reflect in the prospectus any  facts or events which, individually
    or together,  represent  a fundamental  change  in the  information  in  the
    registration  statement.  Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  any  increase or
    decrease in  volume of  securities offered  (if the  total dollar  value  of
    securities  offered  would not  exceed that  which  was registered)  and any
    deviation from the low or high  end of the estimated maximum offering  range
    may  be  reflected  in the  form  of  prospectus filed  with  the Commission
    pursuant to  Rule 424(b)(Section  230.424(b)  of this  chapter) if,  in  the
    aggregate,  the changes  in volume  and price represent  no more  than a 20%
    change in the maximum aggregate offering price set forth in the "Calculation
    of Registration Fee" table in the effective registration statement; and
    
 
       (iii) Include any additional or changed material information on the  plan
    of distribution.
 
   
    (2)  For  determining any  liability under  the  Securities Act,  treat each
post-effective amendment  as  a new  registration  statement of  the  securities
offered,  and the offering of the securities at that time to be the initial bona
fide offering.
    
 
   
    (3) File a post-effective amendment to  remove from registration any of  the
securities that remain unsold at the end of the offering.
    
 
   
    Insofar  as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities Act
of 1933 (the  "Act") may  be permitted  to directors,  officers and  controlling
persons of the small business issuer pursuant to the
    
 
                                      II-2
<PAGE>
   
foregoing  provisions, or otherwise, the small  business issuer has been advised
that  in  the   opinion  of   the  Securities  and   Exchange  Commission   such
indemnification  is  against  public policy  as  expressed  in the  Act  and is,
therefore, unenforceable.
    
 
   
    In the  event that  a  claim for  indemnification against  such  liabilities
(other  than the payment  by the small  business issuer of  expenses incurred or
paid by a director, officer or  controlling person of the small business  issuer
in  the successful defense  of any action,  suit, or proceeding)  is asserted by
such director, officer or controlling  person in connection with the  securities
being  registered, the small business issuer will,  unless in the opinion of its
counsel the matter has been settled by controlling precedent, submit to a  court
of  appropriate jurisdiction the question whether  such indemnification by it is
against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act and will be governed by
the final adjudication of such issue.
    
 
   
    For  determining  any  liability  under   the  Securities  Act,  treat   the
information  omitted  from  the  form  of  prospectus  filed  as  part  of  this
registration statement in  reliance upon rule  430A and contained  in a form  of
prospectus  filed by the small business issuer pursuant to Rule 424(b)(1) or (4)
or 497(h) under  the Securities  Act (Sections 424(b)(1),(4)  or 230.497(h))  as
part  of this registration statement  as of the time  the Commission declared it
effective.
    
 
   
    For  determining  any  liability  under  the  Securities  Act,  treat   each
post-effective   amendment  that  contains  a  form   of  prospectus  as  a  new
registration statement for the securities offered in the registration statement,
and that  offering of  the securities  at that  time as  the initial  bona  fide
offering of those securities.
    
 
                                      II-3
<PAGE>
                                   SIGNATURES
 
   
    In  accordance  with the  requirements of  the Securities  Act of  1933, the
registrant certifies that it has reasonable grounds to believe that it meets all
of the requirements of filing on Form  SB-2 and authorized this Amendment No.  1
to  Registration Statement to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, in the
City of Bellefonte, Pennsylvania, on the 26th day of August, 1996.
    
 
                                          THE HISTORIC BELLEFONTE BREWERY, INC.
 
                                          By:      /s/ EDWARD J. LAUTH, III
 
                                             -----------------------------------
                                                    Edward J. Lauth, III
                                                    CHAIRMAN AND DIRECTOR
 
                                   SIGNATURES
 
   
    In accordance with  the requirements  of the  Securities Act  of 1933,  this
Amendment No. 1 to Registration Statement was signed by the following persons in
the capacities and on the dates indicated.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                      SIGNATURES                                       TITLE                         DATE
- ------------------------------------------------------  ------------------------------------  -------------------
 
<C>                                                     <S>                                   <C>
               /s/ EDWARD J. LAUTH, III                 Chairman and Director (Principal
     -------------------------------------------         Executive Officer and Principal        August 26, 1996
                 Edward J. Lauth, III                    Financial and Accounting Officer)
 
                 /s/ MATTHEW J. SUHEY
     -------------------------------------------        Director                                August 26, 1996
                   Matthew J. Suhey
 
                 /s/ SANDRA L. POOLE
     -------------------------------------------        Director                                August 26, 1996
                   Sandra L. Poole
 
               /s/ J. RANDALL WOOLRIDGE
     -------------------------------------------        Director                                August 26, 1996
                 J. Randall Woolridge
</TABLE>
    

<PAGE>

                                                EXHIBIT 10.4

                  EXTENSION OF AGREEMENT OF SALE


     This Agreement made this 31st day of July, 1996, by and between M.L. 
CLASTER & SONS INC., a Pennsylvania corporation, with offices at 367 Phoenix 
Avenue, Bellefonte, Centre County, Pennsylvania, hereinafter referred to as 
"Claster", and THE HISTORIC BELLEFONTE BREWERY, INC., a Pennsylvania 
corporation, with principal offices at 197 South Water Street, P.O. Box 389, 
Bellefonte, Centre County, Pennsylvania, hereinafter referred to as "HBB".

     WHEREAS, on November 1, 1995, Claster and AquaPenn Spring Water Company, 
Inc. entered into a Purchase and Sale Agreement, hereinafter called the 
"Agreement"; and

     WHEREAS, on or about March 1, 1996, the rights of the Buyer under the 
Agreement were assigned by AquaPenn Spring Water Company, Inc. to HBB, and 
the Agreement was amended to provide for, INTER ALIA, certain extensions of 
time of the Contingency Date as defined in Paragraph 4(b) of the Agreement; 
and

     WHEREAS, HBB as Buyer has completed its inspection period of the 
Property before the Contingency Date and has identified certain environmental 
deficiencies on the Property which Claster has agreed to remediate prior to 
the scheduling of closing; and

     WHEREAS, Claster and HBB desire to evidence by this document their 
agreement with respect to the environmental remediation and time of closing.

     NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the foregoing and for other good and 
valuable consideration, the receipt and sufficiency of which are hereby 
acknowledged, and intending to be legally bound, Claster and HBB agree as 
follows:

     1. ENVIRONMENTAL REMEDIATION.  Claster will undertake to perform the 
remediation of the environmental deficiencies on the Property which are set 
forth in the modified Phase I Environmental Site Assessment of the Property 
prepared by L. Robert Kimball & Associates, Inc. and as summarized in the 
letter of July 18, 1996 to Claster as attached hereto marked Exhibit "A".

     2. CLOSING DATE. The parties agree that closing shall be held sixty (60) 
days from the time the site remediation of the environmental deficiencies has 
been completed.

     3. MISCELLANEOUS. In all other respects, the terms of the Agreement 
shall continue to govern the sale and purchase of the Property between the 
parties.

     IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have executed this Agreement the 
day and year above referenced.

                                        M. L. CLASTER & SONS, INC.

                                        By: /s/ ROBERT D. MASON (SEAL)
                                           -----------------------------

                                        HISTORIC BELLEFONTE BREWERY, INC.
      
                                        By: /s/ EDWARD J. LAUTH, III (SEAL)
                                           --------------------------------

<PAGE>
                                                            EXHIBIT 10.5


                              EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENT


     This Agreement, made as of this _____ day of August, 1996, by and between,
HISTORIC BELLEFONTE BREWERY, INC., a Pennsylvania business corporation,
hereinafter called the "Employer", and MICHAEL GRAHAM, an individual,
hereinafter called "Employee".

          Intending to be legally bound, and in consideration of the mutual
covenants contained herein, the parties hereto agree as follows:

          1.   TERM.     Employer shall employ employee for an initial term of
one (1) year beginning on September 1, 1996 and ending August 31, 1997 (the
"Initial Term").  Thereafter, this Agreement shall automatically renew for a
term of five (5) years beginning on September 1, 1997 and ending on August 31,
2002 (the "Renewal Term").  Following the Renewal Term, this Agreement shall
automatically renew for a "Second Renewal Term" of five (5) years under the same
terms and conditions set forth herein for the Renewal Term, unless either party
provides notice to the other party of intention to terminate this Agreement at
least one (1) year prior to the expiration of the Renewal Term.

          2.   EMPLOYEE'S DUTIES.  During the term of this Agreement, Employee
shall devote all necessary time and his best efforts to the faithful performance
of his duties as President

<PAGE>

of the Employer as directed by the Board of Directors and appropriate officers
of the Employer.  It is understood between the parties that said duties shall
concentrate in the areas of sales and marketing, administration, fiscal  and
strategic planning.  Employee shall devote his entire professional time to the
affairs of the Employer.  It is further understood that Employer, without
Employee's consent, may not materially diminish Employee's duties and
responsibilities, in view of Employee's status as President of Employer.  In the
event that Employer materially diminishes Employee's responsibilities or demotes
Employee without Employee's consent, such action will be deemed to be a
termination of Employee by Employer without cause under the applicable of
Section 10(c) or 10(d) hereof.

          3.   SALARY.  During the Initial Term, Employee's base salary shall be
ONE HUNDRED FIFTY THOUSAND and NO/100 ($150,000.00) DOLLARS per year, payable in
equal monthly installments.  At the commencement of the Renewal Term, Employee's
base salary shall be increased to the sum of ONE HUNDRED SIXTY THOUSAND and
NO/100 ($160,000.00) DOLLARS per year, payable in equal monthly installments.
On each succeeding anniversary date of this Agreement thereafter, Employee's
base salary shall be reviewed and may be increased by an amount determined by
the Employer in its sole discretion.

          4.   BENEFITS AND VACATION.
               a.   VACATION AND PERSONAL DAYS.  Each year during the Initial
     and Renewal Terms, Employee shall be entitled to thirty (30) days paid
     vacation.


                                       -2-
<PAGE>


               b.   AUTOMOBILE.  Employer will enter into a lease agreement for
     the lease of an automobile of a type and quality similar to a Ford
     Explorer, which Employer will lease for Employee's business and/or personal
     use for a period of three years.  Employer will pay all costs for operation
     of such automobile, including, without limitation, costs of fuel,
     maintenance, repairs and insurance.  Employee agrees to abide by all terms
     of any such lease agreement entered into by Employer to meet its
     obligations under this Section and shall indemnify Employer for any damage
     or expense incurred by Employer due to Employee's failure to comply with
     the terms of any such lease agreement.

               c.   HEALTH INSURANCE.  Commencing on the first day of the
     Renewal Term, if any, Employee shall be entitled to an Employer paid
     policy of health and hospital insurance including major medical
     insurance coverage for Employee and his dependents.  In lieu of such
     coverage, Employee, at his option, may elect to receive a health
     insurance allowance of up to Six Hundred and NO/100 ($600.00) Dollars
     per month or the cost of Employee's COBRA continuation health
     insurance coverage, whichever is lesser, for the period commencing on
     the first day of the Renewal Term and ending on December 31, 1998.

               d.   HOUSING.  During the first year of Employee's
     employment pursuant to this Agreement, Employer shall reimburse
     Employee for rental payments made by Employee as payment of rent for a
     two-bedroom apartment in


                                       -3-
<PAGE>


     Cluster Homes Apartments in State College, Pennsylvania to a maximum of
     Eight Hundred Forty and NO/100 ($840.00) Dollars per month.  Employer shall
     not be obligated to reimburse Employee for any rental payments allocable to
     a rental term, or any portion thereof, for periods subsequent to August 31,
     1997.


               e.   OTHER BENEFITS.  Employee shall be entitled to
     participate in such other employee benefit plans as shall be adopted
     by Employer for its employees during the term hereof in accordance
     with the specific terms and conditions of such plans.  It is presently
     contemplated that such benefits shall consist of a 401(k) plan, health
     insurance, disability insurance and group term life insurance plans.


          5.   FEE FOR DEVELOPMENT OF BUSINESS PLAN.  Employee understands that
Employer is a start up company and that one of Employee's first duties will be
to formulate a suitable business plan for Employer.  Employee shall develop such
business plan prior to September 30, 1996.  Employer shall pay Employee the sum
of Seven Thousand Five Hundred and No/100 ($7,500.00) as compensation in
addition to the salary set forth in Section 3 hereof, for the development of
such business plan.  Such sum shall be paid in six substantially equal
consecutive monthly installments beginning in September 1996.

          6.   STOCK COMPENSATION.  As further compensation for services
rendered hereunder, Employee shall be issued 12,500 common Shares (the "Shares")
of Historic Bellefonte


                                       -4-
<PAGE>


Brewery, Inc. each year during the term (including the Initial term and Renewal
Term) of this Agreement for a maximum period of five (5) years and a maximum of
62,500 Shares.  Employee shall be entitled to issuance of the Shares on August
31st of each year during the five year period as long as Employee is employed by
Employer on such date, such that the first payment of Shares
to Employee shall occur on August 31, 1997.  In the event that Employee is not
employed by Employer on any such August 31, then Employee shall not be entitled
to be issued any further Shares.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, should a change
in ownership of more than fifty (50%) percent of the issued and outstanding
voting common stock of Employer occur during the Renewal Term, if any, then
Employee shall vest immediately in the balance of such sixty-two thousand five
hundred (62,500) Shares.

          7.   STOCK INCENTIVE PLAN.  On or about August 31, 1997, Employer
shall implement a combination stock and/or cash incentive plan for Employee (the
"Plan").  The terms of the Plan shall be solely within the discretion of
Employer.  Employee shall be entitled to participate in the Plan beginning on
September 1, 1997 and such participation shall end on the date which Employee
ceases to be employed by Employer.

          8.   MOVING; RELOCATION EXPENSE.

               a.   Employer shall pay Employee's usual and customary
     moving expenses associated with the moving of Employee's
     household goods and furnishings from his previous principal residence
     in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania to his


                                       -5-
<PAGE>


     new principal residence in State College, Pennsylvania.

          b.   Employer shall pay reasonable tax and utility expenses
     associated with Employee's Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania residence so long
     as such residence is owned by Employee, is vacant (not occupied by
     Employee or Employee's family or tenants) and listed for sale on a
     multi list basis with a real estate firm at a fair market value
     determined by an independent appraiser selected by Employer.  Such
     expenses shall be paid on an "as incurred" basis and shall be properly
     substantiated by Employee.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, Employer
     shall only pay such expenses for the one (1) year period beginning on
     the date Employee's Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania residence is first listed
     for sale and to the extent such expenses do not exceed the sum of
     FIFTEEN THOUSAND and NO/100 ($15,000.00) DOLLARS in the aggregate.

          9.   NON-COMPETITION.

               a.   During the term of this Agreement, Employee shall not
     engage in any business activities directly or indirectly in
     competition with the business of Employer, without prior written
     consent of Employer.  Additionally, Employee agrees that for a period
     of one year after termination of his employment with Employer,
     Employee shall not, either directly or indirectly, for himself or any
     third party, become engaged in any business or activity which is or
     could be competitive with Employer's business within a radius of one
     hundred fifty (150)


                                       -6-
<PAGE>



     miles of Bellefonte, Pennsylvania.  For purposes of this section,
     businesses
     considered to be in competition with Employer shall include, without
     limitation, producers of regional craft beers competing primarily in
     the craft brewing market segment.  Provided, however, the provisions
     of this Paragraph obligating Employee not to compete with Employer
     following termination of employment of Employee shall not apply in the
     event that this Agreement is terminated by Employer under Sections
     10.c. or d. hereof.


               b.   In the event that any portion of the non-competition
     agreement contained in this section is judicially held to be invalid
     or unenforceable, for whatever reason, such invalid portion of this
     Agreement shall be treated as severed here from, and this Agreement
     shall be considered revised and limited in such manner and to such
     extent as may be necessary to make the remaining portions of this
     Agreement valid and enforceable to the maximum extent permitted by
     law.

               c.   In addition to any other rights or remedies at law or
     in equity to which Employer may be entitled, in the event of the
     breach of the covenants of Employee set forth in this Section 7,
     including, without limitation, the right to suit for monetary losses
     incurred by Employer as a result of the breach of
     this Agreement by Employee, it is agreed that Employer may obtain an
     injunction against the breach or further breach of said covenants.


                                       -7-
<PAGE>


          10.  TERMINATION.

               a.   This Agreement may be terminated for cause by Employer at
any time. Termination for "cause" shall mean termination of Employee's 
employment by Employer upon the occurrence of any of the following events: 
i.) Employee's willful insubordination, criminal conduct or dishonesty; 
ii.) Employee's unwillingness to faithfully and diligently perform the usual
and customary duties of his employment or iii.) drug or alcohol abuse by 
Employee. In the event of termination for cause, Employee's salary and 
benefits will be discontinued effective as of the date of Employee's 
termination of employment.

               b.   This Agreement may be terminated by Employer at any
     time as a result of Employee's extended absence from employment
     because of illness or disability, including, without limitation,
     disability or illness induced by drug and/or alcohol abuse.  For
     purposes of this section, an extended absence shall mean an absence of
     more than forty-five (45) consecutive days.  In the event of
     termination of Employee's employment under this Section 10.b.,
     Employee's salary and benefits will be discontinued effective as of
     the date of Employee's termination of employment.

               c.   During the Initial Term, this Agreement may be
     terminated without cause by  Employer at any time.  Provided, however,
     that if Employer terminates Employee's employment without cause prior
     to March 1, 1997, Employer will continue to pay and provide Employee the 
     salary and benefits set


                                       -8-
<PAGE>


     forth in Sections 3 and 4 hereof for the balance of the Initial Term.
     Provided further, however, that if Employer terminates Employee's
     employment without cause following February 28, 1997, but before September
     1, 1997, Employer will continue to pay and provide Employee the salary and
     benefits set forth in sections 3 and 4 hereof (at the rates and levels
     effective on the date of Employee's termination) for a period of six (6)
     months from the date of Employee's termination.  In either case, Employee
     shall not be required to render services to Employer following such
     termination without cause.

               d.   During the Renewal Term, this Agreement may be
     terminated without cause by  Employer at any time.  Provided, however,
     that if Employer terminates Employee's employment without cause during
     the Renewal Term, Employer will continue to pay and provide Employee
     the salary and benefits set forth in Sections 3 and 4 hereof (at the
     rates and levels effective on the date of Employee's termination) for
     a period of twelve (12) months from the date of Employee's
     termination.  Provided further, however, Employee shall not be
     required to render services to Employer following such termination
     without cause.

               e.   This Agreement may be terminated by Employee upon one
     hundred twenty (120) days prior written notice to Employer.  In such
     event, the post termination non-competition provisions of Section
     10.a. shall apply, but only for the period during which Employer
     continues to pay Employee the salary provided for in Section 3 hereof,
     to a maximum of nine


                                       -9-
<PAGE>


     (9) months.

          11.  LAW APPLICABLE.  This Agreement shall be interpreted and enforced
in all circumstances according to the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.

          12.  NOTICES.  Notices to the Employer shall be delivered to:
                         Historic Bellefonte Brewery, Inc.
                         P. O. Box 938
                         Milesburg, Pennsylvania 16853
                    CONFIDENTIAL


          Notices to Employee shall be delivered to:

                    Michael Graham
                    1510 Fox Chase Drive
                    R. D. 1
                    Sewickley, PA  15143

In either case the notice address above may be changed by written notice of the
addressee.

          13.  ENTIRE AGREEMENT.  This Agreement fully integrates all
understandings and agreements between the parties and shall constitute the
entire agreement between them and supersede any prior written employment
agreement between the parties or any oral representations of any kind.  This
Agreement may only be modified in writing by the voluntary signed consent of
both parties.

          14.  SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS.  This Agreement shall be binding upon and
inure to the benefit of the parties and their respective successors in interest.
Neither party hereto may


                                      -10-
<PAGE>


assign its interest without the prior written consent of the other party.

          15.  ARBITRATION.  Except for disputes or claims arising under Section
9 hereof (Non-Competition) the parties agree that any disputes or claims
hereunder shall be finally resolved
through binding arbitration in accordance with the rules of the American
Arbitration Association then in effect.  The arbitration shall take place in
Centre County, Pennsylvania in accordance with the laws of the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania.  Any dispute or claim shall be submitted to a single arbitrator
mutually selected by the parties.  In the event the parties are unable to agree
on the selection of an arbitrator, the dispute or claim shall be submitted to a
panel of three arbitrators with one arbitrator selected by each party and the
third arbitrator selected by the two arbitrators chosen by the parties.

          IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the undersigned have executed this Agreement as of
the day and year first written above.

ATTEST:                            HISTORIC BELLEFONTE BREWERY, INC.


                                   By: /s/ EDWARD J. LAUTH, III
_________________________             _______________________________(SEAL)
             , Secretary


WITNESS:                           EMPLOYEE:

                                   /s/ MICHAEL GRAHAM
_________________________          __________________________________
                                   MICHAEL GRAHAM

                                      -11-



<PAGE>
                                                         EXHIBIT 10.6

                                  ESCROW AGREEMENT


     THIS AGREEMENT is made and entered into this 23rd day of August, 1996, by
and among the following:

     (a)  The Historic Bellefonte Brewery, Inc. (the "Company"), a Pennsylvania
corporation whose address is P.O. Box 389, Bellefonte, PA 16823.

     (b)  American Securities Transfer & Trust, Incorporated (the "Escrow
Agent"), whose address is 1825 Lawrence Street, Suite 444, Denver, CO 80222.

                                      RECITALS

     A.   The Company has filed a Registration Statement on Form SB-2 and
amendments thereto (the "Registration Statement"), pursuant to which the Company
proposes to issue, and offer for public sale (the "Public Offering") a minimum
of 500,000 shares and a maximum of 1,250,000 shares of the Company's common
stock, no par value (the "Shares"), at an offering price of $10.00 per Share.

     B.   Pursuant to the terms of the Registration Statement, provision must be
made to impound in escrow for certain periods commencing upon the effective date
of the Registration Statement ("Effective Date") and for the benefit of
purchasers in the Public Offering, the gross proceeds from sale of the Shares;
and

     C.   The Company desires to enter into an agreement with the Escrow Agent
for the purpose of fulfilling the escrow requirements as set forth in the
Registration Statement.

     NOW THEREFORE, in consideration of the foregoing recitals, and the mutual
promises and covenants contained herein, the parties agree as follows:

     1.   The Company agrees to deliver to the Escrow Agent, promptly upon
receipt, all proceeds from the sale of the Shares at an offering price of $10.00
per Share, together with a written account of each sale, which account shall set
forth, among other things, the names and addresses of the purchasers, the number
of Shares purchased by each, the amount paid thereof, and whether the
consideration received was in the form of cash or evidenced by a check.

     2.   All funds or remittances delivered to the Escrow Agent pursuant hereto
shall be deposited immediately by the Escrow Agent in a separate non-interest
bearing account designated substantially as follows:  THE HISTORIC BELLEFONTE
BREWERY, INC., ESCROW ACCOUNT (the "Escrow Account"). The Escrow Account shall
be created and maintained subject to the customary rules and regulations of the
Escrow Agent pertaining to such accounts.

     3.   During the Escrow Period (as hereinafter defined), none of the amounts
deposited in the Escrow Account shall become the property of the Company or any
other entity, or subject to the debts of the Company or any other entity, and,
except as expressly provided herein with respect to payments

<PAGE>

by the Escrow Agent to the Company and others, the Escrow Agent shall make or
permit no disbursements from the Escrow Account.

     4.   The Escrow Period shall begin on the Effective Date and shall
terminate on the earlier to occur of:

          (a)  the date on which the Company notifies the Escrow Agent that the
               conditions to the Initial Closing (as defined in the Registration
               Statement) have been satisfied;

          (b)  one year from the Effective Date; or

          (c)  the election of the Company to terminate the Public Offering.

     5.   In the event that the Escrow Period terminates pursuant to paragraph
4(a), the Escrow Agent shall immediately deliver and pay over to the Company all
collected amounts deposited in the Escrow Account.

     6.   In the event the Escrow Period terminates pursuant to paragraph 4(b),
then the Escrow Agent, as promptly as possible, shall return to each of the
purchasers of the Shares the amount paid in by them for the purchase of the
Shares and collected by the Escrow Agent, without interest and without any
deductions. Each amount paid or payable to each purchaser pursuant to this
paragraph shall be deemed to be the property of each purchaser, free and clear
of any and all claims of the Company or any of its creditors, and the respective
agreements to purchase the Shares made and entered into in the Public Offering
thereupon shall be deemed to be cancelled, without any further liability of said
purchasers to pay for the Shares purchased. The Escrow Agent shall be required
to make such payment only to the person named in the written account of each
sale to be furnished by the Company pursuant to paragraph 1 hereof at the
address given in such paragraph 1 written account. Any funds payable to
purchasers of Shares which the Escrow Agent can not disburse to said purchasers
because the address given in the paragraph 1 written account is defective or
which the Escrow Agent cannot disburse for any other reason to said purchaser,
shall be retained by the Escrow Agent and dealt with in accordance with
applicable Colorado law. At such time as the Escrow Agent shall have made all
payments and remittances provided for in this paragraph, the Escrow Agent shall
be completely discharged and released of any and all further liabilities and
responsibilities hereunder.

     7.   The Company agrees to give the Escrow Agent appropriate written notice
of the date upon which the Registration Statement becomes effective and of any
extension of the offering period at the date thereof.

     8.   The Escrow Agent, in its actions pursuant to this Agreement, shall be
fully protected in every reasonable exercise of its discretion and shall have no
obligations hereunder to the Company, or to any other party, except as expressly
set forth herein.

     9.   The Company shall pay the Escrow Agent a $1,500 fee, which shall cover
all fees and expenses of the Escrow Agent in connection with the action taken
under this Agreement, and such fee shall be paid regardless of whether this
Agreement terminates pursuant to paragraphs 4(a), 4(b) or 4(c). In addition, the
Company shall pay the Escrow Agent a refundable deposit of $500 which shall be
used


                                          2
<PAGE>


to pay for costs and expenses incurred by Escrow Agent if funds deposited in the
subject escrow are resumed to investors pursuant to paragraph 6 or otherwise.
Any remaining portion of the said refundable deposit shall be returned by the
Escrow Agent to the Company upon termination of this Agreement.

     10.  The Escrow Agent shall have no obligation to invest any of the
deposited funds or to pay interest thereon.

     11.  The Escrow Agent shall not issue any certificates of deposit, stock
certificates, or any other instrument or document representing any interest in
the deposited funds, but written notice acknowledging receipt of the deposited
funds will be delivered from time to time, upon the request of the Company, by
the Escrow Agent to the Company.  The Escrow Agent shall give the Company prompt
written notice when funds deposited in the Escrow Account total $5,000,000.  The
Escrow Agent shall make an accounting to the Company when and if it pays escrow
funds to the Company or any other specified recipients pursuant to paragraph 5
or paragraph 6 hereof. The Escrow Agent shall not be responsible for fees in
conjunction with the issuance or transfer of securities.

     12.  The Company agrees to provide to the Escrow Agent all information
necessary to facilitate the administration of this Agreement, and the Escrow
Agent may rely upon such information provided. In performing any of its duties
hereunder, the Escrow Agent shall not incur any liability to anyone for any
claims, damages, losses, costs or expenses, except for willful misconduct or
gross negligence, and it shall, accordingly, not incur any such liability with
respect to (i) any action taken or omitted in good faith upon advice of counsel
given with respect to any questions relating to the duties and responsibilities
of the Escrow Agent under this Agreement, or (ii) any action taken or omitted in
reliance upon any instrument, including the written advices provided for herein,
not only as to its due execution and the validity and effectiveness of its
provision, but also as to the truth and accuracy of any information contained
therein, which the Escrow Agent shall in good faith believe to be genuine, to
have been signed or presented by a proper person or persons, and to confirm with
the provision of this Agreement.

     13.  The Company hereby agrees to indemnify and hold harmless the Escrow
Agent against any and all losses, claims, damages, liabilities, costs and
expenses, including reasonable costs of investigation and attorneys' fees and
disbursements, which may be imposed upon the Escrow Agent or incurred by the
Escrow Agent hereunder, or their performance of its duties hereunder, including
any litigation arising from this Agreement or involving the subject matter
hereof.

     14.  If at any time a dispute shall exist as to the duties of the Escrow
Agent and the terms hereof, or if funds deposited hereunder are not withdrawn on
or before thirty (30) days after the termination date set forth in paragraph 4,
the Escrow Agent may, in its discretion, deposit said funds with the Clerk of
the District Court for the City and County of Denver, State of Colorado, and may
interplead the parties hereto as to the rights, if any, in such funds. Upon so
depositing such funds and filing its complaint in interpleader, the Escrow Agent
shall be completely discharged and released from all further liability or
responsibility under the terms hereof. The parties hereto, for themselves, their
successors and assigns, do hereby consent to the jurisdiction of said Court and
do hereby appoint the Clerk of said Court as their agent for service of all
process in connection with the proceeding mentioned in this paragraph.

     15.  All notices, demands, or request required or authorized hereunder
shall be deemed given sufficiently if in writing and sent by registered mail or
certified mail, return receipt requested and postage


                                          3
<PAGE>


prepaid, or by facsimile, tested telex, telegram or cable to the person at his
address set forth above. In the case of any notices, demands or requests sent to
the Company, a copy shall also be delivered to Michael P. Gallagher, Esquire,
Ballard Spahr Andrews & Ingersoll, 1735 Market Street, 51st Floor, Philadelphia,
PA 19103.

     16.  The Escrow Agent is hereby expressly authorized and directed to
disregard any and all notices or warnings given by any of the parties hereto,
other than those notices and warnings specifically called for in this Agreement,
or by any other person or corporation, excepting only orders or process of
court, and is hereby expressly authorized to comply with and obey any and all
orders, judgments or decrees of any court. In the event that Escrow Agent obeys
or complies with any such order judgment, or decree of any court, it shall not
be liable to any of the parties hereto or to any other person, firm, or
corporation by reason of such compliance, notwithstanding that any such order,
judgment or decree may be subsequently reversed, modified, annulled or set aside
or vacated or found to have been entered without jurisdiction.

     17.  The Escrow Agent shall have no duty to know or determine performance
or non- performance of any provision of any agreement between the other parties
hereto, and the original, or a copy, of any such agreement deposited with the
Escrow Agent shall not bind such agent in any manner. The Escrow Agent assumes
no responsibility for the validity or sufficiency of any documents or paper or
payments deposited or called for hereunder except as may be expressly and
specifically set forth in this Agreement in clear and unambiguous language, and
the duties and responsibilities of the Escrow Agent are limited to those
expressly and specially stated in this Agreement in such language.

     18.  This Agreement shall be governed and interpreted by the laws of the
State of Colorado and shall be binding upon the parties hereto and their
respective successors and assigns. This Agreement may be executed in
counterparts.

     IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the Company and the Escrow Agent have executed this
Escrow Agreement on the date first written above.

ESCROW AGENT                                   COMPANY

American Securities Transfer & Trust, Inc.     The Historic Bellefonte Brewery,
                                               Inc.


By: /s/ GREGORY D. TUBBS                    By: /s/ EDWARD J. LAUTH, III
   ___________________________________         ________________________________
   Senior Vice President & 
    Trust Officer


                                          4

<PAGE>

                                                   EXHIBIT 23.1

ACCOUNTANT'S CONSENT

The Board of Directors and Stockholders of
The Historic Bellefonte Brewery, Inc.:

We consent to the use of our report included herein and to the reference to 
our firm under the heading "Independent Accountants" in the prospectus.

                                 KPMG Peat Marwick LLP

August 15, 1996
State College, Pennsylvania


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