studies that more than half the people that buy store brands are ever starting to prefer them. but there are a few things to look out for. so right here we have them and look how much they look alike. its beautiful isn t it. in this case, this might be a better deal today, but if this were on sale you might see this and think it s the cheaper one and grab the store brand. while you re browsing the isles don t miss out on instant savings. sometimes we get money off at the register for buying the right combination. its called mixed and maxed in most cases, and you ll see a certain grouping of offerings and i can buy four of any of these items and if i do i get free milk. and a gallon a milk is 3.59, 3.69 depending on where you are in the country. one of the biggest blunders is using a coupon at the wrong time. first of all you should use it, they re good for up to three month. so here we see there s a sale, its in the circular, but we didn t put it on
storm damage could make it a lot harder for people to get to the polls on election day. in virginia, the last day for in-person early voting is tomorrow in a state where thousands of customers still don t have electricity. the latest poll shows the race there could go down to the wire. and doug is in beesburg by washington d.c. it shows gov. romney by the slimmest are margins, one-half of one percentage point. both campaigns trying to read the tea leaves to see which way this swing state will swing. and one hint comes in a pretty sheet that was compiled by the cook political report which compares absentee voting this year to absentee voting from four years ago. it finds turnout is down 13.69% in counties that obama carried
access. he said no, we re going to do biofuels. i said you are going to have the highest gas prices in the history of the country by 2012. i said that in 2007. what do we have this year? the highest gas prices in the history of the nation cumulative over the course of 2000 12. he didn t drill. and we are stuck as consumers with what we re stuck with. he had a make believe policy that did not address the day-to-day needs of every day people. that s not good enough. all right. so here is the gas prices then. january of 2009. 1.84 a gallon. today, $3.69 is the national average. you argue in an op. ed this past week saying, quote: american families are burdened by record high fuel prices. only get worse if we return the incumbent for another turn. gas price could say call 15 cents in the last three weeks. s the large err argue. does the president have much control over the price that we pay at the pump?
388,000 weekly unemployment claims. and gas prices, i mean, you know look at the sticker shock thought at gas prices. $3.69. that came up during the last debate. by the way in the northeast it s 6.69. it s so much closer. 4 bucks too. former shell ceo is going to come up with what it has to do with who is in the white house. the number that jumps out to me though is nearly 5 million people have been unemployed six months or longer. those are people that have next to nothing now in their savings. that may speak to the stat we just said less than $500. that s a devastating number. absolutely. that s why that old keeping six months on hand no longer applies. you heard the record number of people on food stamps. 46, almost 47 million people, it s the highest that it t. has been. i mean all of these are just signs, i mean, the fact that the numbers are increasing are signs that the recovery is not doing as well. okay. but then there let me play the other side of this which
she is still fighting an infection and she will need reconstructive surgery, but she is making remarkable progress. now number three in our first five web stories, another big change at the gas pumps. prices could soon drop 50 cents a gal. wow! the reason, inventories are rising and demand is waning the change is expected to happen sometime over the next few weeks. a current price for a gal of regular is $3.69 a gal there. a month ago it was $3.84. and then a year ago it was $3.47. two years ago, the people of bp made a commitment to the gulf. and every day since, we ve worked hard to keep it. bp has paid over twenty-three billion dollars to help people and businesses who were affected, and to cover cleanup costs. today, the beaches and gulf are open for everyone to enjoy and many areas are reporting