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It's not just the food bill; it's the hay (The Spokesman-Review) If you think it’s expensive feeding a 175-pound teenager, try feeding a 1,200-pound horse. Like gasoline, hay prices are at all-time highs and still climbing. That has cattlemen culling their herds and equestrians unloading some of their horses. School district budgets to take a hit (The Spokesman-Review) Economics doesn’t get any simpler than this: When expenses rise faster than revenue, something has to give. As school districts work out their budgets for next year, many are being forced to make six- or seven-figure cuts as they cope with rising costs for fuel, salaries and employee benefits. Judge orders release of raceway bidders' names (The Spokesman-Review) Superior Court Judge Robert Austin ordered the release Thursday of the names of 18 bidders who signed up at a public auction to compete against Spokane County to buy 560 acres of land at Spokane Raceway Park.
Ways to save on cell phone bills (AM New York) Fees for using more minutes in a month than are allotted by your cell phone plan can really sting. In 2006, Prashanth Ranganathan got slapped with a $246 bill. Incensed, Ranganathan, 29, built a computer program that automatically monitors his cell phone usage by linking to his account via his cell phone provider's Web site. Cell Phone Courtesy Month (WTAJ-TV Altoona) STATE COLLEGE, CENTRE COUNTY - Sprint has named July National Cell Phone Courtesy Month, and folks in Central Pennsylvania said Sunday, it is about time. July Is Cell Phone Courtesy Month (The Kentucky Post) It may be time to rethink how you answer your cell phone calls. Sprint says that it is National Cell Phone Courtesy Month. The cell phone company wants users to think about common courtesies in the month of July when talking on the phone. July Is Cell Phone Courtesy Month (WCPO Cincinnati) One company is giving tips on cell phone etiquette.
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