12 Tha Newi-Rcviow, Roscburg, Ore. Tues., Jan. 10, 196 TIT - . - A-'1 .- I 11,, " ' . , x - i-j - . : i OUT OF THE STORE AND INTO TIIE YARD Hubert Cooper has four.d a use for tha one-gallon glass jugs accumulating at his Batesv'lle, Art, ice cream emporium. Hubert has completed the first section of a jug fence which eventually will enclose his yard. Five hundred jugs have been used so far. BPA Predicts Drop in 1961 Sales, Takes Optimistic View Of Future POTITLAND (AP) The Bon noville Power Administration lias forecast a drop in power sates tins year, but look an op timistic view for the rest o this decade. The optimism springs from the U.S.-t'anadian treaty now being negotiated for upriver storage m the Columbia Basin. "Ratification of the treaty by both countries. . . will set in mo tion a tremendous power develop ment of Canadian storage proj ects and J.ibby Dam that could make available to the United .States 1,686,000 kilowatts of low cost prime power over the next 10-year period," said the annual report by administrator William A. Pearl. "These projects together with those existing or under construe lion assure the Pacific Northwest of power to meet the estimated normal firm power requirements of the region through 1970," he said. Pearl also said, "For the first time in nearly 15 years Bonne ville Power Administration finds itself in a period of surplus pow er instead of power scarcity. . . . There has probably never been a time in the history of the Pacific Northwest when we have faced a brighter outlook for the sound and continuing development of all aspects of our regional economy.' Tho Bonneville Power Adminis tration markets power from 13 Russian Archbishop Holds Mass As Thousands Attend MOSCOW (AP) Archbishop Alexei, patriacn ot an itussia, "' celebrated the Orthodox Church's Christmas here by officiating a', midnight Mass in Moscow Ca thedral in an atmosphere of min gled majesty and melancholy. Most of the congregation was made up of older persons, mostly women. Many of them were mar ried under the Czar more than 43 years ago before tho Communist revolution struck down tho wealthy church and reduced it to an al most pitiful -remnant. Other midnight Masses were cel ebrated in scattered city and coun try churches throughout tho Soviet Union to mark Christmas, which under tho old calendar comes 13 days after the Western world's Christmas. Thousands walked through a fresh snowfall to crowd into Mos cow Cathedral, ornato in gold and wiiitc. Archbishop Aicxei, past 80 but sturdy, stood in his golden robes and a glistening bcjeweled crown, in the center of the cathedral. Around him were rows of metro politans, bishops and priests also wearing gem-studded crowns. Red Domination Czars worshipped in this cathe dral before tho revolution and Archhishop Alexei has como down through tho years from that early day when the church was rich, when its leaders spoke on even terms with the Czar and all Rus sians lived under its mantle. But years of Communist domi nation has changed all that. Enamol cups, not the old crys tal or silver glasses, were used to dip holy water from founts to pass out among worshippers. Royalty was long since gone, replaced by about 2,000 workers and peasants. Old women in shapeless black garb kept changing slender brown candles used in the service as they sputtered out. Monastery In 3J Shape Despite this. Archbishoo Alexei preserved a certain amount of grandeur as ho presided over the Mass. His congregation showed pleasure at singing the old re ligious songs, hearing the old ritu al, seeing the old service. At Novodevichi Monastery, on the outskirts of Moscow, the fi nancial battering tho church has sustained was even more evident. The monastery resembles a ware house more than a house of wor ship. The rich lands it once owned on all sides are now owned by the state. Christmas in Moscow almost was a day of mourning for what once was. Both rclmiotts services were strangely cheerless and reflected not a joyous surge for expansion but a struggle to escape ex tinction. federal dams in the Columbia Basin. Pearl reported (hose dams pro duced 59.2 per cent of the power sold by major utilities in the re gion last year . Gross revenue was $71,200,563 for 19i0, an increase of $2,564,272 over the previous year. After op erating expenses were met, $31,- 764,840 was left for the interest charged on the government con struction outlay and another $18,- J74.oJ7 lor depreciation and am ortization, Pearl said. He said this was not as much as expected to be set aside for depreciation, but that good years earlier slili leave tho agency $81,500,000 ahead of schedule on repayments to the government. Pearl estimated power sales will drop $1,700,000 this vear. but other power servicing will offset ahout $1,000,000 of that. Revenues should turn upward in 1962, the report said. Skeleton Termed Major Archaeological Find LUBBOCK, Tex. (AP) - The skeleton of a pipe-smoking Indi an, termed by a Texas technol ocelli couege proicssor as a major archaeological find, was discovered Sunday in a canyon near i.uduock. Dr. David Kelley, professor of anthropology, estimated the skel eton had been buried 500 to 700 years. Nearby was found a Dine. mado of a marble-like stone, wilh cnarreu tooacco in me Dowl. 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