224 Thirty-fifth Annual Meeting 
Mr. Marks: If we get many dead ones we know there is 
something wrong. 
Mr. Lydell: How do you get your fish out of there finally ? 
A. It is not very hard. 
(). How is it done? 
A. With a small seine. 
Mr. Titcomb: Do you take them right up in the seine? 
Mr. Marks: Yes, sir. 
Mr. Titcomb: I think it would be easy to put below each rif- 
fle a flat frame of fine netting, so that they would wash down on 
it, on the principle of down-stream salmon rack. 
Mr. Marks: We take the bulk out with a seine and then take 
two screens and a scap, and catch the rest, and then move on 
down and do the same thing. There is no trouble in catching 
them. 
Mr. Atkins: You count those fish that you put in there ? 
Mr. Marks: Just estimate them—that is all. 
Mr. Atkins: And when they are taken out in the fall do you 
estimate them again ? 
Mr. Marks: We will count them—at least we did last year, 
but we don’t always count them. 
Mr. Lydell: How many fish did you get out of there last 
year in full? 
Mr. Marks: I could not say—lI think we had 17,000 brook 
trout and about 25,090 rainbow. 
