No Frills flyer Dec 13 – 19, 2007:
- Coke, Sprite or Canada Dry x20 355ml Cans for $3.33! Awesome price!
Other good deals in this week’s No Frills flyer:
- Black diamond cheese bars $3.97/520 g
- Maxwell house instant coffee 200 g $1.99
- Swanson hungry-man express or dinners 360 – 455 g $1.99
- Green giant vegetables 1 kg $1.99
Click here to read this week’s No Frills Grocery Flyer
walmart has the same price on pop this week, usually has this price it seems.
Don’t forget those $1 off coupons for Hungry Mans from the Beer store promotion this summer that hopefully every saved to their computer. They don’t go bad until the end of January.
Justine, Walmart has the 20 or 12 cans for that price?
Kate, thanks for reminding us of the Hungry man coupons. Where do i find these? I forgot lol
Boo, I have it saved to my computer. I highly doubt you can find it online anywhere. DO you want me to send it to you or post it up?
If it’s in pdf and not single use can you please email it to me at [email protected]
If not, don’t worry about it.
Thanks 🙂
I actually think its a jpg. I could make it a pdf for you if you wanted it though. And I’ll send it to you when I get home tonight. I’m not on my own computer.
Just send it in jpg
Thanks Kate 🙂
The Safeway I shop at actually has coke on sale for $2.99:
Coca-Cola and Pepsi Products
Assorted varieties. 12 x 355 mL. Plus deposit and/or enviro levy where applicable. WEEKLY HOUSEHOLD LIMIT SIX – Combined varieties.
EXTREME PRICE CLUB PRICE
http://safeway1.inserts2online.com/SafewaySafeway12092007Canada/breakouts/b301455_12.jpg
Sam but these are only 12
No Frills is selling the *20* not *12* for $3.33!!!
This is a great deal, not that drinking that much coke is ever good for anyone.
Esso’s deal is still way better though
Buy 3 8-pack Coke products for $10, and get $10 Esso Gift card/certificate as Mail In Rebate
so $10 + $1.14 + 0.52 stamp – $10 = $2 for 24 cans
I find that No Frills is always the cheapest when it comes to grocery prices. No one touches them and I have shopped everywhere. Food Basics, Price Chopper, Wal-mart, Giant Tiger.
Most stores sell 3 packs for $ 9.99 ( that’s 36 cans ) No frills is the best price so far , cause if you get 3 packs for $ 9.99 ( 60 cans )the same price as other stores your basically getting a 24 pack free
This is nice. Loblaws (which No Frills is part of) is giving away all these Turkeys.
Loblaws donates 1,000 turkeys to make up Second Harvest’s shortfall
TORONTO, Dec. 19 /CNW/ – As a result of Sunday’s storm, Second Harvest’s
Turkey Drive came up short by over 1,000 turkeys. In a show of extreme
generosity, Loblaw Companies will be donating 1,000 turkeys to make up for the
loss.
Second Harvest’s Executive Director, Zoe Cormack Jones, is thrilled with
the donation. “We had to make a number of phone calls on Monday morning
telling our agencies that we wouldn’t be able to provide the turkeys they
needed. Those were hard calls to make, but when Loblaws came through with
those additional turkeys, it was wonderful to call the agencies back with the
news.”
This is the fifth year for the Turkey Drive, and this year’s goal was to
collect and deliver 5,000 turkeys in time for Christmas.
“Loblaw Companies has been associated with Second Harvest for a number of
years and the recent Toronto area storm put this year’s turkey drive in
jeopardy,” says Elizabeth Margles, Vice-President of Public Relations and
Public Affairs. “We just couldn’t allow this to happen when so many people in
need depend on Second Harvest during the holiday season.”
Media is invited to Loblaws at Queens Quay and Jarvis on Wednesday,
December 19th at noon when Second Harvest will be loading some of the turkeys
onto their refrigerated trucks and then delivering the turkeys to shelters,
drop-in programs and community centres throughout the G.T.A.
Every day, Second Harvest picks up donated, high quality fresh food,
which would otherwise have gone to waste, and delivers that food to 250 social
service programs in Metro Toronto. Second Harvest currently provides food for
about 14,000 meals a day to children in after-school programs, seniors on
fixed incomes, women fleeing domestic abuse, psychiatric patients, homeless
people, and many others who have fallen on hard times.