Navigation bar
  Print document Start Previous page
 17 of 24 
Next page End  

Of the large supermarkets in our region Tesco and Morrisons will be the cheapest, and
Somerfield the dearest for the standardised basket of goods.  But buy their special
offers and you will make good savings.  Also use loyalty cards to wrack up extra 
savings.  Tesco for example give you 1 clubcard point for every £1 you spend.  Often
there are deals for bonus points.  100 bonus points = £1 in Tesco vouchers or £4 in
deals (magazine subscriptions, meals/day out etc), so if your product costs around £4
you are in effect getting a very nice treat for free.  Aldi and Lidl are the best value
offering substantial savings over the big supermarkets, if you don’t mind purchasing
their own brands.  They also have some tremendous deals on everything from TVs to
the kitchen sink (yes really!).  In fact this PC that I am typing this
article on is an Aldi buy and was far and away cheaper than anything 
I could have got elsewhere.  Sign up to their email newsletter or look
out for their flyers for details of what’s coming  in store.
With a repeat prescription order form resembling a family’s weekly
shopping list, one of my biggest savings in a year comes from taking out a pre-paid
prescription.  This costs around £95 per year, but with an individual prescription 
costing £6.85 the savings are not long in mounting up.  If you don’t qualify for free
prescriptions then your chemist can give you an application form and more information.  
This brings me onto the subject of health and income benefits.  Here you are best to
visit a specialist charity for knowledgeable advice.  The Benefits Advice project based
in the Citizen’s Advice Bureau is one such organisation and they have been in contact
with the Network offering their support and help to our  Network members.
  More thrifty tips in the next issue                                       Craig Woods
Brain-Fog and Senior Moments:  !!
While making the tea I was surprised when the teapot lid would not fit.  Perhaps it was
because I’d made the tea in a mug instead of my usual pot.
Two elderly gentlemen, Jack and Harry, were chatting over coffee one morning
Jack said.  “Me and the Mrs. Went to a good restaurant last night”
Harry said “what was it called”
Jack was clearly struggling to recall the name.
------“What's the name of that flower that women like to get?”  
“Carnation”  Harry replies.  “No.” says Jack. “It’s usually red with big petals”  
Harry Makes another guess “Poppy”      
“No it has a thorny stem”….  “Do you mean a rose?”
       Jack cries...“That’s it ! and picks up his cell phone and Phones his wife. –“ Rose.
What was the name of that restaurant we went to last night”
                                    [From the DMC web site.  Thanks to Peter Kilcoyne for this]
Click to Convert - Powerful PDF Converter and HTML Converter.