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CBS Mornings Deals: Save up to 41% on beach tents
This week on “CBS Mornings” lifestyle expert Elizabeth Werner discussed deals on items that may make your life easier — all at exclusive discounts. Discover this week’s exclusive deals below and visit CBSDeals.com or text “CBS” to 65000 to take advantage of them today.
Disclaimer: CBS earns commissions on purchases made through CBSDeals.com. Deals are available for a limited time and while quantities last. Prices may change from the date of publication.
ClipperPro: Save up to 45%
ClipperPro toenail and fingernail clippers may make clipping your nails much easier.
The Clipper Pro is engineered with an ergonomic design that should feel more comfortable in hand, compared to standard nail clippers. These nail clippers also come with blades that rotate 180 degrees, a feature that was designed to offer a more precise cut.
You can get these individually in one of three colors, or buy a two-pack.
Normally priced at $54.99-$126.98 get them now at CBSDeals.com for up to 45% off, only $34.89-$74.89.
Red Suricata Beach: Save up to 41%
Get some much-needed shade from summer’s sun with Red Suricata’s Beach Sun Shade Canopy Tents. Whether lounging on the sandy shores or enjoying a picnic by the sea, these tents may provide a more comfortable experience while you enjoy the scenery.
The tents come in two sizes — medium (7 x 7 feet) and large (10 x 9 feet) — and six colors, ranging from pink to black. They offer sun protection equivalent to SPF 50 and come with a bag to carry a tent in once it’s broken down. Also on sale is the brand’s beverage holder, which can be attached to one of the tent’s poles.
Normally priced at $28.95-219.99, get them now at CBSDeals.com for up to 41% off, only $16.99-$174.99.
Clean People Laundry Detergent Sheets & More: Save up to 31%
Clean People Laundry Detergent Sheets were designed to revolutionize laundering. Just toss a sheet into your washer and it should get the job done just as any other laundry detergent would. How many sheets you use vary by load, with large loads requiring one sheet, medium loads requiring half a sheet and small loads requiring a quarter sheet.
These sheets may be best for eco-conscious shoppers looking to reduce waste as well as people with kids or pets who worry about their little loved ones getting access to and ingesting traditional laundry detergent. In addition to the laundry detergent sheets, the brand also offers baby laundry detergent sheets, a package of detergent and dryer sheets and a package of detergent sheets and dryer balls.
Normally priced at $33.00-$48.00 get one now at CBSDeals.com for up to 31% off at only $22.99-$33.49.
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Explosion kills 2 Mexican soldiers in suspected booby trap by drug cartel after troops found dismembered bodies
An improvised land mine apparently planted by a drug cartel killed two Mexican soldiers and wounded five others, Mexico’s defense secretary said Tuesday. Before the blast, the soldiers had discovered the dismembered bodies of three people, officials said.
Gen. Ricardo Trevilla acknowledged that the army had already suffered six deaths from such improvised explosive devices, or IEDs, between 2018 and 2024. But he didn’t specify whether those six had been killed by bombs dropped from drones, or by buried roadside bombs, both of which have been used by gangs in Mexico.
Trevilla said that devices like the one that exploded Monday were “very rustic,” and officials in the past have described them as similar to buried pipe bombs. There was no immediate information on the condition of the five wounded in the attack, which included at least one officer.
Trevilla’s description of the location where the two soldiers died Monday in the western state of Michoacan suggested that it may have been a sort of grisly drug cartel booby trap.
Trevilla said the army sent out a patrol to check on reports that there was an encampment of armed men in a rural area. The armed forces detected an area protected by stockades that appeared to be an encampment, but when soldiers approached in vehicles, they found the trail blocked by logs, so they descended and had to approach on foot.
While approaching, they spotted three dismembered bodies near the encampment, which appeared to be abandoned. But as they drew closer, a buried device exploded and struck the soldiers.
Trevilla blamed the blast on the United Cartels, an umbrella group that includes the local Viagras gang, which has been fighting bloody turf battles against the Jalisco cartel in Michoacan for years.
In August, the Mexican army acknowledged that some of its soldiers have been killed by bomb-dropping drones operated by drug cartels.
Previously, officials have said the army encounters far more roadside bombs than drone-dropped ones.
The Jalisco drug cartel has been fighting local gangs for control of Michoacan for years, and the situation has become so militarized that the warring cartels use roadside bombs or IEDs, trenches, pillbox fortifications, homemade armored vehicles and sniper rifles.
Nemesio Oseguera-Cervantes, also known as “El Mencho,” the leader of the Jalisco cartel, which the officials described as “one of the world’s most violent and prolific drug trafficking organizations.” The United States and the State Department has offered a $10 million reward for his capture.
In the only previous detailed report on cartel bomb attacks in August 2023, the defense department said at that time that a total of 42 soldiers, police and suspects were wounded by IEDs in the first seven and a half months of 2023, up from 16 in all of 2022.
Overall, 556 improvised explosive devices of all types – roadside, drone-carried and car bombs – were found in 2023, the army said in a news release last year.