Warn pee 
A GOOD DUCK COAXER 
Sometimes called duck corn and is an 
excellent marsh duck food. The seeds 
shell off the stalk in late Fall and will 
help hold the Mallards and other marsh 
ducks after many other foods are gone. 
Wampee seed may be planted this Fall 
in waters from 1 inch to 1 foot in depth. 
Ten pounds will plant an acre. 
—Price $0.50 per Pound— 
Sago Pondweed 
GOOD ALL AROUND DUCK FOOD 
Early in the season Pondweeds bring 
Mallards and Teal, later the Canvasbacks 
and other divers. In fact, all kinds of 
wild ducks feed upon the Pondweeds. 
These plants furnish a very large per¬ 
centage of food for wild ducks, producing 
more food than any other family of 
plants. They are hardy and will grow 
under almost any water conditions. 
The most important food plant of the 
Pondweed family is the Sago Pondweed, 
a submerged plant and perennial. When 
once established in your waters insures a 
permanent feeding ground. Wild ducks 
feed on all parts of the Sago including 
the small white tubers and tender roots 
which are produced in abundance. 
Pondweeds are very highly recom¬ 
mended as food and cover plants for bass, 
trout and other game fish. The foliage 
supports a very large amount of 
insect life as well as providing ex¬ 
cellent cover. 
Seed of these plants should be 
planted now in waters from 2 to 8 
feet in depth on almost any bottom, 
either fresh, stagnant, alkali or 
brackish waters. 
Forty pounds will plant an acre. 
—Plants with Seed $0.50 per Pound—■ 
More Duck Food on Other Side This 
Circular. 
—20% Discount Off These Prices— 
OSHKOSH, WISCONSIN, U. S. A.l 
Burreed 
A food plant for marsh ducks. The 
seeds shell off the large prickly burr like 
kernels of corn and are eagerly eaten by 
mallards and other shoal water ducks; 
it also provides wonderful nesting places 
for these waterfowl, and makes excellent 
blinds for the hunter. Burreed grows on 
damp lowlands or in shallow waters from 
1 inch to 1 foot in depth. Ten pounds 
will plant an acre. 
Price $0.50 per pound (2 quarts—1 lb.) 
Muskgrass 
RAPID GROWING DUCK FOOD 
Widgeon, Gadwalls, Green and Blue 
Wing Teal, Bufflehead, Ruddy Duck, Mal¬ 
lards, and Bluebills like Muskgrass. 
A few bushels of muskgrass (chara) 
planted this Fall will produce a few acres 
of food for the ducks next Fall. Ducks 
feed upon the foliage as well as the little 
tubers which are produced in abundance. 
This plant is also a valuable food and 
cover plant for fish. 
Plants with seed spores can be planted 
now in either fresh or alkali waters from 
2 to 12 feet in depth on almost any bot¬ 
tom. Four bushels will plant an acre. 
Muskgrass with seed spores $2.50 a 
bushel. 
