Now accepting orders on WIDE LOAD printed sweatpants

or, why the hell did I buy all these Sweet Moments brownies (oh, yeah, I love chocolate)…

First of all the Con Agra catalina is still running as of a few minutes ago.  Plenty of HC soup – unfortunately, it’s at the new sale price of $2.  crap!  The Del Monte catalina is still on, but the veggies have jumped from .89 to $2.  double crap!  I was able to score 5 more of the Wesson oil for $2.50 and I saw stacks of Sparkle and Angel Soft for the $5.99 price; Folgers had gone up a buck to $7.99.

Picked up all the brownie stuff you see here for FREE!  well except for DAMNED TAXES!  Run seven of the Sweet Moments; sale price is $3.75 and preferred price is $2.50.  (7 x 2.5 = 17.50, less $10 Con Agra cat, less 1 $1.50 printable (DH was unable to print, so limit may have been reached) and 6 $1 coupons from 9/12 GM insert).  Final cost is .31 and 2 $5 cats spit out.  Earned another 3 pot stamps.  One more thing…go searching through coupons.com for any additional coupons you might need; I printed out a bunch of the $1/1 (now .65/1) Cinnamon Toast Crunch coupons since this should make them free (and I used up most of our cereal on the Panera breakfast sandwich deal).

And I’m only mildly joking about the sweatpants…

How many papers should I get tomorrow?

IF you are going the dollar store route – get at least four (maybe more?) Tribs.  There is a surprise mid-month P&G insert with, among other coupons, a $1 off Gain dish soap.  Can you say “More free dish soap.”  Since DG and Wal Mart both sell this for a buck or less, getting the paper for a buck means it’s paid for itself – any other coupon you use is a freebie.  There is also a $4/1 SINEX coupon, so if you get the paper today, run over to Wags for more free money (see prior posts).

Don’t forget, dollar stores generally put out their Sunday Tribs on Saturday afternoon.  Make certain that not only does your paper have a sealed plastic section, but open the bag after you’ve paid, but before you leave the check out area, to make certain that you have all three inserts:  P&G, SS and RP. There have been lots of thefts reported from all over…

4get 4less

No pictures to post of this trip BECAUSE I DIDN’T BUY ANYTHING!  They’re running a buy 10 Kraft get them for a buck.  Well, since we all have the $5/5 Kraft cheese printables that reset a week or two ago, I decided to pick up another 30 cheese packages (yes, we like cheese and it freezes so well).  They had a sign up on the shelf that there was a limit of 5 transactions (so mine would have been counted as three).  When I got to the register and everything was rung up, the cashier had to check at customer service if she could accept the coupons.  A asst mgr came over and said they had been sent an email that they were not to accept Kraft coupons, not because they were fraudulent, but because the instant price drop on sets of ten takes the place of the coupons! and she believed it!

The following is the email I just shot off to corporate.  Doubt they give a rat’s ass about it, but we’ll see:

I attempted to use the Kraft $5/5 printable coupons at the Bolingbrook store and was told by the asst mgr(?) that they had received an email from corporate that they were not to accept any coupons because the Kraft cheese was already on sale and the discount had been factored into that price.

Inasmuch as I have used coupons for years, I find this very hard to believe, and resent making an unnecessary trip, since obviously, I did not make the purchase.

Their store tagline is:  KICK OFF to Savings.  That’s not what I’d like to kick off…

Meijers Boughton Road today – $3.06

Learned a bit more about Meijer store policies…I already knew that if a shelf tag read “price drop” you were not able to get a rain check on that item.  Now I learned that only items appearing in the sale flyer are eligible for rain checks; which means all those 50% off sales popping up aren’t going to do you any good if/when they don’t have the item in stock.

Case in point, today:  No Bestlife buttery spread (don’t ask and I won’t tell), no pancake mix on shelf (associate found one case in back), no Nivea (although I could have gotten a rain check on these, didn’t bother) and only a few of the Frying’ Magic (or Bakin’ Miracle) breading mixes with the .75 peelies.  Also no Purina chew sticks (at .96 with a $4/4 mfr coupon).

Ended up getting 28 Mentos gum which is not even for me (Rachel, of Mashupmom infamy is an addict – hey, rachel, when did I turn into your bitch?  Oh, right, you will whine “But I never asked you to get them for me!”  Just kidding here folks, I love Rachel, she’s my bud (at least until she pays me back for the high tax) and this is not the forum to defend other sites/people.  Not likely that those worshippers with the Jill Cataldo home altars will be checking out deranged.me.

To recap:  28 Mentos ($1/1 q 10/3 S); 12 pancake mix ($.25/1 hangtag on 8 bottles and four $1/3 Meijer Mealbox coupons); 6 Fryin’ Magic ($.75 peelies and two $1/3 Meijer Mealbox).  Note that they still have a few boxes on the breading mix on the shelf, but these did not have the .75 peelies, so even at 50% off, it wasn’t that great a deal.  Using only Mealbox coupons you’d pay about .64/each box, less for each peelie you can find.

My total OOP was $3.06, of which $2.46 was tax; $2.36 was GUM TAX.  I consider gum part of a food group, why can’t the legislators?  Oh, right, if they had their way, they’d consider bread, milk and eggs as high tax items.  I honestly don’t mind paying high taxes since I know they will spend my money in a responsible and judicious manner. snort!

Many, many thanks to all those posters who contributed to these deals:  CW, The Coupon Artist, Meijer Madness.

Target trawling tonight

Since there’s really no good sales out there, I spent today at a couple of garage sales and then drove over to Target to pick up some freebies.  Exhibit A:I

I picked up 13 of the Chef Michael dog food (8/22 S Target q); 16 Meow Mix (9/26 RP); 10 single use Tide (9/26 P&G).  Total was $4.41 paid out of one of my many Target gift cards.  These things must be breeding ’cause there’s no other explanation for the quantity in my wallet.

Important note: The new P&G insert coupons state “LIMIT OF 4 LIKE COUPONS in same shopping trip.”  WTF?  This means some poor schmuck won’t be able to buy five Tide bottles during the next sale at Jewel or Dominicks?  I have some real doubts about the people running the P&G marketing campaigns…  In any case, just split up the orders, cause here I’m not looking to hit any price targets (ooh, a pun, laugh, dammit) or catalinas to spit out.  I ran three transactions, two with only Tide.  The cashier was very nice, no trouble at all about it.  But it’s still stupid.

It’s a hand-to-mouth existence when you make less than $300k

WTF?  I can almost hear you say.  Well, apparently a University of Chicago law professor who, together with his doctor wife, earns that much EVERY FRIGGIN YEAR, has some tough choices to make, given the possibility of Obama raising taxes:  should I fire the nanny?  the gardener?  the maid?  make the kids go to public schools?  These are hard choices, you understand?

Anyway, for the entire article, click here.  Let’s get together for a little road trip to teach this family just what hardship constitutes.

With many thanks to CW for this:  His original blog entry, from google cache:

Quote:

We are the Super Rich « Truth on the Market: Posted on September 15, 2010

The rhetoric in Washington about taxes is about millionaires and the super rich, but the relevant dividing line between millionaires and the middle class is pegged at family income of $250,000. (I’m not a math professor, but last time I checked $250,000 is less than $1 million.) That makes me super rich and subject to a big tax hike if the president has his way.

I’m the president’s neighbor in Chicago, but we’ve never met. I wish we could, because I would introduce him to my family and our lifestyle, one he believes is capable of financing the vast expansion of government he is planning. A quick look at our family budget, which I will happily share with the White House, will show him that like many Americans, we are just getting by despite seeming to be rich. We aren’t.

I, like the president before me, am a law professor at the University of Chicago Law School, and my wife, like the first lady before her, works at the University of Chicago Hospitals, where she is a doctor who treats children with cancer. Our combined income exceeds the $250,000 threshold for the super rich (but not by that much), and the president plans on raising my taxes. After all, we can afford it, and the world we are now living in has that familiar Marxian tone of those who need take and those who can afford it pay. The problem is, we can’t afford it. Here is why.

The biggest expense for us is financing government. Last year, my wife and I paid nearly $100,000 in federal and state taxes, not even including sales and other taxes. This amount is so high because we can’t afford fancy accountants and lawyers to help us evade taxes and we are penalized by the tax code because we choose to be married and we both work outside the home. (If my wife and I divorced or were never married, the government would write us a check for tens of thousands of dollars. Talk about perverse incentives.)

Our next biggest expense, like most people, is our mortgage. Homes near our work in Chicago aren’t cheap and we do not have friends who were willing to help us finance the deal. We chose to invest in the University community and renovate and old property, but we did so at an inopportune time.

We pay about $15,000 in property taxes, about half of which goes to fund public education in Chicago. Since we care the education of our three children, this means we also have to pay to send them to private school. My wife has school loans of nearly $250,000 and I do too, although becoming a lawyer is significantly cheaper. We try to invest in our retirement by putting some money in the stock market, something that these days sounds like a patriotic act. Our account isn’t worth much, and is worth a lot less than it used to be.

Like most working Americans, insurance, doctors’ bills, utilities, two cars, daycare, groceries, gasoline, cell phones, and cable TV (no movie channels) round out our monthly expenses. We also have someone who cuts our grass, cleans our house, and watches our new baby so we can both work outside the home. At the end of all this, we have less than a few hundred dollars per month of discretionary income. We occasionally eat out but with a baby sitter, these nights take a toll on our budget. Life in America is wonderful, but expensive.

If our taxes rise significantly, as they seem likely to, we can cut back on some things. The (legal) immigrant from Mexico who owns the lawn service we employ will suffer, as will the (legal) immigrant from Poland who cleans our house a few times a month. We can cancel our cell phones and some cable channels, as well as take our daughter from her art class at the community art center, but these are only a few hundred dollars per month in total. But more importantly, what is the theory under which collecting this money in taxes and deciding in Washington how to spend it is superior to our decisions? Ask the entrepreneurs we employ and the new arrivals they employ in turn whether they prefer to work for us or get a government handout.

If these cuts don’t work, we will sell our house – into an already spiraling market of declining asset values – and our cars, assuming someone will buy them. The irony here, of course, is that the government is working to save both of these industries despite the impact that increasing taxes will have.
The problem with the president’s plan is that the super rich don’t pay taxes – they hide in the Cayman Islands or use fancy investment vehicles to shelter their income. We aren’t rich enough to afford this – I use Turbo Tax. But we are rich enough to be hurt by the president’s plan. The next time the president comes home to Chicago, he has a standing invitation to come to my house (two blocks from his) and judge for himself whether the Xxxxxxxxxs are as rich as he thinks.

Buyzooka today

This dealio goes until Sunday, so no quick decisions necessary.  An Afternoon Deluxe Suite at any of the Sybaris’ three locations for $79 – BYO(Body).   If you’re into this sort of thing, it might make a nice holiday gift since the certificate doesn’t expire until January 31, 2011.  Definitely not for us though – I once bid on a “romantic getaway package” at a school fundraiser and won a week-end stay at an upscale hotel.  My husband’s comment?  Why would you waste your money on that?  gotta go check out the ads on Craigslist…

Wags ad this week

What looked like a pretty decent week turned out – not to be.  The deals I was looking at were the Trident gum single packs:  buy in multiples of 3 and 2 (example 6, 12, 18) and use the $1/3 from 9/12 SS, then the Wags September booklet’s $1/2 and then the in-ad coupon for .79 (in that order).  Although that coupon says limit 3, the register doesn’t give a shit and let’s hope it’s the same with your cashier.  In other words, ymmv.  This gives you a small MM, so make sure to have something to eat up the overage.  Then I was going to pick up the Gain dish soap .89 using the in-ad coupon and pair it up with the $1 from the September P&G insert.  Again, small MM.  Naturally, my store had neither; the store looked like a Soviet Union Wags – bare shelves (or was that bear [for Russia, get it? sometimes I slay myself]).  I was hoping to get all this and then use the extra 15% discount with my library card for greater overage.

Well, I got rainchecks on the Gain, so we’ll see later this week what comes in.  I’m holding rainchecks for 26 Garnier hair colors so I’ll use the overage to bring down the hair color even more.

Don’t forget, if you get grief at your Wags about the overage on Gain, you can always head on over to Wal-mart, Dollar General or Family Dollar, where it’s always a buck or less.

Garnier HerbaShite

Now I’m pissed.  Stopped off at Wags to pick up some of the HerbaShine hair color, ’cause I’m running scary-low.  Only 18 colors available, which made me think Wags was cutting back after the remodel.  Called Garnier’s toll-free number only to hear that their offices are closed through Wednesday due to the holiday.  Web site does not have a comments section (which is probably a good thing, considering), only an automated computer help section.

But…you can see from the colors section that those 18 are it.  And that there are no auburns at all!  So, while many of the HerbaShine colors match up with the Nutrisse line, (Wags carried 30 of the Nutrisse and 18 of the HerbaShine) we’re talking about 40% fewer colors.

L’oreal is starting to look pretty good right about now.

Tribune conflicting stories?

I’m sitting here reading the front page of the on-line Chicago Tribune and notice a stupid article on how the eat locally food movement is hurting the big farms (read conglomerates)!  Yeah, stupid, like I said.  Slightly over is a link to a story on a German conglomerate that falsified origination information on honey they export here – it’s actually from China.  Does anyone else see the irony here? If you purchase honey from a local bee keeper, it’s not likely the bees are vacationing elsewhere; same with produce from a farmer’s market (although I do like my traveling bananas).  I don’t see what the big deal is with buying stuff in season – can anyone honestly claim to like January tomatoes?

Unless and until I win the lottery (send winning numbers here before the drawing) and can set up a nice greenhouse, I’ll stick with peaches in the summer.