BEAR MEADOWS An Attractive Bit 'of. Nature Near College. Regarding the Bear Meadows, an interesting bit of wild nature in our neighborhood, the following article, written by Dr. Buckhout about twenty years ago may serve to give a good idea of its former state, but as to its present condition the results are what might have been antici pated. Commercialism has done its work and left its trail of con sequences. Now that the state has accquired the property along with the region about it, we may expect that it may be slowly restored to its pristine con dition. This may- take many years, but it is much more probable and will require less of artificial aid than will be the case in the surrounding mountain lands, since there will be a measure of protection from fire, that greatest obstacle in any reforesting. . "To the many who in times past have visited the "Bear Meadows," in Center County, the announcement that a lumber company has begun operations there will come with a feeling of genuine regret. The isola tion -by which the meadows have been preserved so long has been overcome at last, and it is now only a question of time when they will be despoiled of their' chief attraction, the trees, and-it-is to be feared, left as barren and uninviting as modern lumbering methods can make them. The place is unique, and has its like nowhere else in this region, though common enough elsewhere; and from time immemorial has been a favorite resort of hunters, fishermen, and others, who have found a spe cial attraction in its curious peat bog, whose treacherous surface, shaking like jelly, has mired' many a ven turesome explorer, and about whose margins- pitcher plants and cran beiriei;' with' many less conspicuOus plants, - grow in - profusion. - Various THE STATE COLLEGIAN orchids and ferns, particularly north ern' forms, found- a shelter here. But the crowning glory lay in the fringe of noble spruces, black and an occasional balsam spruce, which reached a great- size, and because of their beautiful symmetry and color always attracted attention. Various other trees are especially fine, notably the so-called tulip poplar (Liriodendron), and any one who was ever rash enough to try a short cut through the laurel (rhOdoden dron) generally paid for it both in time and temper, and was made to declare that it was a little thicker and worse tangled than any he had ever tried before. Here were the favorite places for bear pens, and probably every fall and winter since the settle ment of Penn's valley, bears have been caught in these traps set in the raurel thickets. On the outskirts and hillikies occur the usual trees of the region—the oaks, particularly the chestnut oak, , pitch pine, etc. Parties,coming here to hunt and fish were wont to make free use of everything which nature had so 14yishly produced, and which seemed to have no owner and no value. If huts were_ needed, es pecially in summer, they were made of huge plates, of bark peeled from the standing spruces, and half hid den by the dark green of their living comrades, many blighted, spiry trunks could be seen, silent witnesses accentuating the barbarity of des truction. Here, too, in time past came the shingle maker when he wanted some extra good hand shaved pine shingles; and whenever a farmer needed a particularly neat, long, straight stick for any purpose, a trip to the "meadows" was gen erally undertaken to get it. Per haps the fascination and air of mystery about the place had more to do with it than the special ex cellence, of the timber; for such a trip was a.promise of a day's fishing after harvest, a something held in anticipation by many people, where in distance lends its usual enchant- .."The Indians were reputed to have come here for this and that, and the dark waters of the little stream charged with organic matter have been thought to favor the curi ous idea that the meadows held some peculiar mineral wealth. Many of the so-called. 'coal' mines . , east of the Alleghanies have been opened hereabouts, commonly in the lower silurian shales, which, as they crop out below the meadows, are strange.. ly deceptive in their blackneSs. Specimens of them have several times been sent to the writer, and they have always come from near the 'Bear Meadows,' evidently a point much in their favor. Upon one visit to a 'mine' which had 'al most reached the coal,' some fine specimens of pyrites were shown, which the miner remarked, 'were almost too bright for iron, and not quite the right color for copper, but mightn't they be brass ?" "Witn the extension of the Lewis burg and Tyrone railroad through the seven mountains and into and through Penn's Valley, considerable timber land bef6re inaccessible has • .‘ been opened to a market. That about the Bear Meadows has . • .1 remained untouched, however, until now. Recently some 5,000 acres, in which the meadows are included, have been secured by a lumber' com pany, who are now making prepara tions to cut from it. A tramway is being constructed to it, and active lumbering will soon begin. The actual amount of timber is not great, for some parts have none at all and others a very scanty growth of any thing usable, and much of it is past its prime, and should have been cut long ago. The regret that this'iso lated spot has at length been invaded is rather _for _the fear that wholesale cutting will be followed by neglect, and we shall - have - another, case ad