Wild Duck Millet 
For Mud Flats -- Lowlands -- Lands That Can 
Be Drained and Flooded 
Wild Duck Millet ( Echinochloa crus-galli ) is an 
important food for mallards, pintails and teal. It 
grows over most of the U. S. This plant made 
up to 50 to 75% of the food of mallards from Da. 
examined by U. S. Biological Survey. It is also an 
important food for ducks in Ark., Wis., Ala., Ill., 
S. D., Mass., S. C., Mo. and Calif. It grows 2 to 4 
feet high, making considerable cover. It is also a 
food for geese, quail, doves and upland game birds 
and song birds as well as wild ducks. 
Plant on mud flats, lowlands, areas left bare 
during summer when water goes down, or land 
along water’s edge. Suited to old rice fields in the 
South. Sow from April 1st to July 10 in the North 
and up to August 1st in South and a crop will be 
secured same season. 100 pounds plants 3 acres. 
100 ibs., $13; 25 lbsi, $3.50. Smaller lots 16c lb. 
or 26c lb. postpaid. 
Lowland Duck Food Mixture at a Low Price 
Contains Wild Duck Millet, Smartweed, and other 
lowland seeds that ducks love. Grows on mud 
flats and same conditions as wild duck millet. Not 
quite so high germination as our wild duck millet. 
100 lbs. $6 ; 25 lbs. $2 ; Small lots 10c id. or zoc 
lb. postpaid. Supply limited . 
(Seed heads) Wild Duck Millet 
Provides Excellent Food and Cover 
Get Terrell's Sure-Growing Planting Materials 
6JUJ 
3 
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Wapato 
Wapato Is To Ducks, 
Geese And Muskrats 
What Potatoes Are 
To You 
“Duck Potato’’ and “Muskrat 
Potato” are names often given 
this important food plant, Sagit- 
taria latifolia, that indicate its 
importance as a food. It produces 
numerous tubers, seed and tender 
white runners that are eaten by 
geese, swan and practically all 
kinds of wild ducks, as well as 
muskrats. Has handsome arrow- 
shaped leaves—stalks of white flowers with yellow 
center—widely planted as ornamental. 
Easily and quickly grown from Terrell’s selected 
tubers. ‘Thrives in practically all parts of U. S. and 
Canada, in marshy places, mud flats, and in water 
up to 1 y 2 ft. deep. Plant 1200 tubers per acre. 
1000, $15; 300, $5; 100, $2; 25 for $1. 
Get More And Bigger Fish 
Provide Food And Cover 
“We may stock our fish waters ever so liberally, 
but the fish will not thrive without an abundance 
of suitable food.”— Editorial from “American Field.” 
Certain plants provide plenty of food, also coyer 
where small fish can escape from their enemies. 
They insure more young fish reaching maturity 
and increase fish production. Pish feed on parts 
of the plants and on the countless numbers of small 
insect and animal life which these plants support. 
The following are excel¬ 
lent food and cover produc¬ 
ing plants for fish; 
Bladderwort (grows in 
acid waters), Coontail, 
Ducks Meat, Muskgrass, 
Naias, Pickerel Plant, Sago 
Pond Plant, Water Cress, 
Water Lilies, Water Mil¬ 
foil, Water Shield, Water 
Weed, Wild Celery, Wild 
Rice. 
For descriptions 
and prices on frogs, 
crawfish and plants 
listed above, see 
Cat-tail price-list. 
Terrell's Seeds Successfully Used Since 1896 
