Show DET AILS OF SECTION HAND GIVES GRAPHIC ACCOUNT OF THE AVALANCHE AT wellington slide which swept two trains into canyon canon occurred during terrific thunderstorm and Rescue Rescuers ra had difficulty in getting into gulch wellington wash wa sh slow progress la Is being made by the pien pen engaged in excavating the bodies of the victims of the terrible in which two trains were swept from the track and with the their tr loads loada of 0 human freight sent hurling down to the bottom of 0 death canyon rotary plows and hun diun deeds of men are working with feve feverish r energy night and day from poth sides of the cascades but the work seems terribly slow looking down from wellington into the gorge where too tho wrecked aral trains ns and sixty dead are buried n nothing 0 thing Is to be see deenon non the surface of the snow except broken broke iii arees trees the pilot of an a n engine portions of tors tora and fragments of a rotary plo plow r coroner J 0 snyder of king county who estimates the number of dead at more than a hundred believes that tha t all the bodies will have been recovered within a week the bodies when found are ln in their ihl sleeping garments and identification is difficult unless the outer clothing Is near by ed clark a section hand band who participated in ili the early relief work at t wellington gives a graphic account of his experience on the night when the two trains were swept swep tover over the chasm into the bed of the canyon feet below ile he says on that about forty p ua 48 all americans were asleep with our clothes on in the bunkhouse just juit above wellington sudden suddenly aly I 1 heard anilse a noise I 1 cant describe and chenchar then charlie charile anderson the section boss rushed in boys for gods sake get up he shouted and the men sprang up Ander andersan spa salu saiu that the pA passenger trains and motors had been swept out get out of this quick men or be cleaned out with that he ran out to td tell others it was vas ih thundering and lightning when we ran out the ile hashes flashes were blinding and the thunder kept up an awful racket it was dark as piton when the lightning blind us we heard a faint moaning down tle the gulch and made ft a break tor for it there were only two or three little railroad lanterns for light al ai around around us we could hear trees snapping and other slides tumbling down we know how big they were but wo we stumbled and rolled down into ahe the gulley where we could hear the cries some had grabbed up what axes there were when they first ran out and then the lanterns showed a ro row w of hands liec beckoning koning in every little hole and opening in the coaches we started chopping between the out stretched hands and and so began to take them out we had worked hard all day and were pretty well played out but we all set to work each man tor for himself and an d none leading vve could hear ps paa crying for water some were cr crying ying for nothing at all begot we got some of them out alive but many died be fore ore we could got get at them although they acy were living when we reached the spot |