OCR Text |
Show a receipt, may avoid penalties by delivering his excess wheat to any point in the country designated by the committee and at such time as the committee designates. This wheat is to be used for relief re-lief purposes and Is not to be placed on the market in competition compe-tition with other market wheat, Mr. Kilburn promised. No penalty will be charged against wheat delivered to the secretary, said A. Golden Kilburn, executive assistant, Utah State AAA, in an explanation here Tuesday Tues-day of marketing quota regulations. regula-tions. Excess wheat stored in accordance accord-ance with quota regulations may be held over and thus avoid the penalty provided: (1) wheat acreages ac-reages are reduced enough in 1942 to offset the overplanting in 1941, (2) the 1942 yield is reduced enough to offset the amount of excess wheat produced in 1942, or (3) no marketing quotas are in i effect on wheat in 1942, Mr. Kilburn Kil-burn said. Wheat farmers desiring to avoid penalties on excess wheat by delivering de-livering it to the secretary of agriculture ag-riculture may now deliver the actual ac-tual wheat to the treasurer of their county AAA committee. This is an amendment to previous pre-vious regulations and it states that the producer who shows to the satisfaction of the . county committee that it is impracticable, to deliver the excess wheat to an elevator or warehouse and obtain Excess Wheat May Go For Relief Purposes Under provisions of the wheat marketing quota law, the farmer who produces wheat in excess of his farm quota has the choice of: (1) paying the penalty of 49 cents a bushel on this excess, (2) storing stor-ing the excess wheat in accordance with storage regulations, thus postponing post-poning the payment of the penalty, penal-ty, or (3) delivering the excess wheat to the secretary of agriculture agri-culture for use in relief programs. |