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Grocery Coupons

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Free-Travel-Man

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May 14, 2008, 7:00:10 PM5/14/08
to
Get Grocery Coupons and save on your bill.

I use this company all the time. I have an account that I can share
for grocery coupons. With all the high cost of everything I think
every single dollar saved is worth it.

You will receive 100, $10 vouchers to redeem for coupons at the local
supermarkets. All it cost is just a $10.00 processing fee.

Go to https://www.cashsaver.net/fr92595ca/index.html?loadfile=catalog2_0.html

Follow the steps, were it says compliments of write down fr92595ca and
that’s it.

Coupons are good for items such as Cereal, Juices, Cookies, Crackers,
Beverages, Frozen Foods, Canned Fruits/Vegetables, Dairy Items, Meat,
Bread, Coffee, Soups, Sauces, Rice, Pasta, Condiments, Snack Foods,
Diet Items, Baking Items, Spices, Paper & Plastic Goods, Household
Items, Pet Items, Baby Products, Laundry Care, Body Care, and many
other items.

Have funny shopping and save.

clams_casino

unread,
May 14, 2008, 9:52:40 PM5/14/08
to
Free-Travel-Man the spammer wrote:

>Get Grocery Coupons and save on your bill.
>

>I use this company all the time. All it cost is just a $10.00 processing fee.
>
>
>

So just how many sign up for your web site?

Al Bundy

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May 15, 2008, 7:47:17 PM5/15/08
to

Free-Travel-Man wrote:
> Get Grocery Coupons and save on your bill.
>
> I use this company all the time. I have an account that I can share
> for grocery coupons. With all the high cost of everything I think
> every single dollar saved is worth it.
>
> You will receive 100, $10 vouchers to redeem for coupons at the local
> supermarkets. All it cost is just a $10.00 processing fee.
>

> Follow the steps, were it says compliments of write down fr92595ca and
> that�s it.
>
> Coupons are good for items such as Cereal, Juices, Cookies, Crackers,
> Beverages, Frozen Foods, Canned Fruits/Vegetables, Dairy Items, Meat,
> Bread, Coffee, Soups, Sauces, Rice, Pasta, Condiments, Snack Foods,
> Diet Items, Baking Items, Spices, Paper & Plastic Goods, Household
> Items, Pet Items, Baby Products, Laundry Care, Body Care, and many
> other items.
>
> Have funny shopping and save.

Most of the time coupons are a waste anyway as they are for name
brands with much higher prices to begin with. Can you beat $2.49 for
5# of brown rice or 30¢ per pound for carrots? Now if you are talking
about processed food in cans and boxes, shame on you for suggesting
it. I saved $10 just by ignoring your fee.

The Real Bev

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May 15, 2008, 8:24:05 PM5/15/08
to
Al Bundy wrote:

> Most of the time coupons are a waste anyway as they are for name
> brands with much higher prices to begin with. Can you beat $2.49 for
> 5# of brown rice or 30¢ per pound for carrots? Now if you are talking
> about processed food in cans and boxes, shame on you for suggesting
> it. I saved $10 just by ignoring your fee.

I like short-grain brown rice, which is not common. The health food
store carries it at 99 cents/pound. A fine price as far as I'm
concerned. The 5 pounds I just bought will last me a long time.

There used to be coupons for useful things like canned vegetables. Now
they're mostly for expensive disposable razors, expensive cosmetics and
other stuff that I don't buy.

--
Cheers,
Bev
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
No lawyering. Prosecutors will be violated.

Cheapo Groovo

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May 15, 2008, 11:50:45 PM5/15/08
to
In article <e1ed06de-2be1-402c-97de-30adbdbfc017
@z24g2000prf.googlegroups.com>, increasebu...@gmail.com says...

> Get Grocery Coupons and save on your bill.
>
> I use this company all the time. I have an account that I can share
> for grocery coupons. With all the high cost of everything I think
> every single dollar saved is worth it.
>
> You will receive 100, $10 vouchers to redeem for coupons at the local
> supermarkets. All it cost is just a $10.00 processing fee.
>
> Go to https://www.cashsaver.net/fr92595ca/index.html?loadfile=catalog2_0.html
>
> Follow the steps, were it says compliments of write down fr92595ca and
> that=3Fs it.

>
> Coupons are good for items such as Cereal, Juices, Cookies, Crackers,
> Beverages, Frozen Foods, Canned Fruits/Vegetables, Dairy Items, Meat,
> Bread, Coffee, Soups, Sauces, Rice, Pasta, Condiments, Snack Foods,
> Diet Items, Baking Items, Spices, Paper & Plastic Goods, Household
> Items, Pet Items, Baby Products, Laundry Care, Body Care, and many
> other items.
>
> Have funny shopping and save.
>
Coupons are a wase of time!!!

Stop searching, just follow the low cost aisle!

htp//www.cheapogroovo.com

clams_casino

unread,
May 16, 2008, 6:50:42 AM5/16/08
to
The Real Bev wrote:

> Al Bundy wrote:
>
>> Most of the time coupons are a waste anyway as they are for name
>> brands with much higher prices to begin with. Can you beat $2.49 for
>> 5# of brown rice or 30¢ per pound for carrots? Now if you are talking
>> about processed food in cans and boxes, shame on you for suggesting
>> it. I saved $10 just by ignoring your fee.
>
>
> I like short-grain brown rice, which is not common. The health food
> store carries it at 99 cents/pound. A fine price as far as I'm
> concerned. The 5 pounds I just bought will last me a long time.
>
> There used to be coupons for useful things like canned vegetables.
> Now they're mostly for expensive disposable razors, expensive
> cosmetics and other stuff that I don't buy.
>

While I still look over coupons, I suspect less than 1 / 100 have any
interest for us. Almost by definition, if an item has a coupon offer,
it's typically already too expensive.

Evelyn C. Leeper

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May 16, 2008, 8:57:47 AM5/16/08
to

The grocery coupons I find useful are the ones printed at the
supermarket check-out, but even then only the ones for free items, or
items I normally buy (for which I wait for a sale, and then use the
coupon as well). And also the supermarket's own coupons, which are
often for produce or other non-brand items. (Every year I get five
pounds of matzoh free with a coupon for spending $50 in groceries in one
trip--and with the price of a box of dry milk at $13.49, it's really
easy to spend $50! :-( )

If you have children (or adults) who insist on certain breakfast
cereals, or a certain brand of toothpaste for the flavor, coupons for
those can be useful.

I agree, though, that the coupons offered today in newspaper supplements
and on-line are pretty much aimed at really over-priced stuff to start with.

--
Evelyn C. Leeper
Nearly all men can stand adversity, but if you want to test
a man's character, give him power. -Abraham Lincoln

sarge137

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May 16, 2008, 12:22:47 PM5/16/08
to
> it's typically already too expensive.- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

Same here. Coupons are a classic example of "dollars chasing dimes".
The cost of producing, delivering and processing those coupons gets
rolled right into the price of those products, so what's the point?

If I find a coupon for an item I buy anyway (same brand, size, etc.)
I'll use it - 99+% of them go right into the trash. If they want me
to try a different brand of something I already use, they have to give
me a free sample.

Regards,
Sarge

h

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May 16, 2008, 2:39:48 PM5/16/08
to

"sarge137" <rboot...@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:614a6969-f847-46fe...@w7g2000hsa.googlegroups.com...

On May 16, 4:50 am, clams_casino <PeterGrif...@DrunkinClam.com> wrote:
> The Real Bev wrote:
> > Al Bundy wrote:
>
> >> Most of the time coupons are a waste anyway as they are for name
> >> brands with much higher prices to begin with. Can you beat $2.49 for
> >> 5# of brown rice or 30¢ per pound for carrots? Now if you are talking
> >> about processed food in cans and boxes, shame on you for suggesting
> >> it. I saved $10 just by ignoring your fee.
>
> > I like short-grain brown rice, which is not common. The health food
> > store carries it at 99 cents/pound. A fine price as far as I'm
> > concerned. The 5 pounds I just bought will last me a long time.
>
> > There used to be coupons for useful things like canned vegetables.
> > Now they're mostly for expensive disposable razors, expensive
> > cosmetics and other stuff that I don't buy.
>
> While I still look over coupons, I suspect less than 1 / 100 have any
> interest for us. Almost by definition, if an item has a coupon offer,
> it's typically already too expensive.- Hide quoted text -
>
Yep. The only thing I use coupons for is my hair color. It's the only brand
I would ever use, and I always have a $2 off coupon. I can't wait until
enough of my hair goes silver that I can just leave it alone.


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