Show DETAILS 0 F ASTER SECTION HAND GIVES GRAPHIC ACCOUNT OF THE AVALANCHE AT wellington slide which swept two trains into canyon occurred during Terri flo fla thunderstorm and rescuers had difficulty in getting into gulch wellington aaa binash slow pro gresa a ie Is being made by the men engaged in lit excavating the bodies of the victims of the terrible sno in which to trains were swept from front the track and with their load loal of human freight sent hurling down to the bottom of death canyon rotary plows and hun deeds of men are working with fever leb ish energy night ind day from poth sides of the cascades but the work seems terribly glow slow looking down from wellington into the gorge where the wrecked trains and sixty dead are burled buried nothing Is to be seen on an the surface of the snow except broken trees the pilot of an engine por portions tiona of two electric motors and fragments of a rotary plow ed dark clark a section hand who participated in the yearly early relief work at wellington gives a graphic account of his experience on the night when the two trains were swept over the chasm into the bed of the canyon 00 feet below he ile says on that about forty of us all americans were vere asleep with our clothes on in the bunkhouse just above wellington suddenly I 1 heard a noise I 1 can t describe and then char he ile anderson the section boss rushed in boys for code gods sake get up he shouted and the men sprang up andersen anderson sali salt that the pas passenger r trains and motors had been swept out get et out of this quick men or you 11 be cleaned out with that he ran out to tell others ailt it was thundering and lightning w when hen we ran out the me hashes flashes were blinding and the thunder kept up an awful ful racket it was dark as when then the lightning t blind us we beard heard a faint moaning down the gulch and made a break for it there we were re only two or three calm railroad lanterns for light all around us we could hear bear trees snapping and other slides tumbling down wrt wo didn dian t know how big they were but we stumbled and rolled down into the gulley where we could hear the cries some had grabbed up what axes were were when they first ran out and then the lanterns showed a row of handa hands beckoning la in every little hole an and d opening in the con coaches he we started chopping chopp lne between the out stretched hands and so began to take them out wo we had worked hard all day and were pretty well played m nt mt t but we all set to work each man lor for himself and none leading ve we could hear pas cring ing for water some were crying for nothing at all we got some of them out alive but many died tiled lefore we could get at thew altho although uga they were living when we reached the spot |