[LOGO]



                                   GRACO INC.
                              88 Eleventh Avenue NE
                          Minneapolis, Minnesota 55413


                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS


Dear Shareholder:

     Please join us on Tuesday,  May 1, 2001,  at 1:30 p.m.  for Graco's  Annual
Meeting of  Shareholders  at the  Russell  J. Gray  Technical  Center,  which is
located at the intersection of Ramsey Street and 11th Avenue N.E.,  Minneapolis,
Minnesota.

     At this meeting, shareholders will consider the following matters:

     1.   Election of three directors to serve for three-year terms.

     2.   Adoption of the Graco Inc. Stock Incentive Plan.

     3.   Ratification of the selection of independent  auditors for the current
          year.

     4.   Transaction  of such other  business as may  properly  come before the
          meeting.

     Shareholders  of record  at the close of  business  on March 5,  2001,  are
entitled to vote at this meeting or any adjournment.

     We encourage  you to join us and  participate  in the  meeting.  If you are
unable to do so, you may either call our  toll-free  telephone  vote number,  or
mark and return the  enclosed  Proxy Card.  Have your Proxy Card in front of you
when you make your call as it contains  important  information which is required
to access the system.

     If you do not call us, return your Proxy Card or vote your shares in person
at the meeting,  you will lose your right to vote on matters that are  important
to you as a shareholder.  Accordingly, if you do not plan to attend the meeting,
please  call  1-800-240-6326  to vote your  shares,  or  execute  and return the
enclosed  Proxy  Card.  This will not  prevent  you from voting in person if you
decide to attend the meeting.

Sincerely,

/s/George Aristides                       /s/Robert M. Mattison
George Aristides                          Robert M. Mattison
Chief Executive Officer                   Secretary


March 29, 2001
Minneapolis, Minnesota



                             YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT


      We  urge  you  to  call  our   transfer   agent  any  time   toll-free  at
      1-800-240-6326 and vote your shares.  Have your Proxy Card in front of you
      when you make your call as it contains important information,  including a
      unique  shareholder  control number that is required to access the system.
      Follow  the  prompts  in the  automated  menu.  If you do not wish to take
      advantage of the telephone  voting,  please mark,  date and sign the Proxy
      Card and return it in the  accompanying  envelope as soon as possible.  If
      you attend the meeting, you may still revoke your proxy and vote in person
      if you wish.


                                TABLE OF CONTENTS

                                                                            Page

          Election of Directors................................................2
            Nominees and Other Directors.......................................2
            Meetings and Committees of the Board of Directors..................4
            Nomination of Directors............................................5
            Audit Committee Report.............................................5
               Report of the Audit Committee ..................................5
               Principal Accounting Firm Fees..................................6
            Executive Compensation.............................................6
               Report of the Management Organization
                  and Compensation Committee...................................6
               Comparative Stock Performance Graph.............................9
               Summary Compensation Table.....................................10
               Option Grants Table (Last Fiscal Year).........................11
               Aggregated Option Exercises In Last Fiscal Year and
                  Fiscal Year-End Option Values...............................11
               Change in Control and Termination Arrangements.................12
               Retirement Arrangements........................................12
               Directors' Fees................................................13
               Certain Business Relationships.................................14
            Beneficial Ownership of Shares....................................14
               Principal Shareholders.........................................15
               Section 16 Reporting Compliance................................15
          Adoption of Plan....................................................16
          Ratification of Appointment of Independent Public Auditors..........20
          Other Matters.......................................................20
          Shareholder Proposals...............................................20








      A copy of the 2000 Graco Inc.  Annual  Report on Form 10-K,  including the
      Financial Statements and the Financial Statement Schedule, can be obtained
      free of charge by calling (612)  623-6659,  requesting a copy from our web
      site at www.graco.com, or writing:


                                   Treasurer
                                   Graco Inc.
                                  P.O. Box 1441
                             Minneapolis, Minnesota
                                   55440-1441


                 NOTE: Vote by telephone - call 1-800-240-6326



                                     [LOGO]






                                   GRACO INC.
                              88 Eleventh Avenue NE
                          Minneapolis, Minnesota 55413

                                 PROXY STATEMENT
                       FOR ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                             TO BE HELD MAY 1, 2001


     Your proxy, represented by the accompanying Proxy Card, is solicited by the
Board of Directors of Graco Inc.  ("Graco" or the "Company") in connection  with
the Annual Meeting of the Shareholders of the Company to be held on May 1, 2001,
and any adjournments of that meeting.

     The costs of the solicitation,  including the cost of preparing and mailing
the Notice of Meeting  and this Proxy  Statement,  will be paid by the  Company.
Solicitation   will  be  primarily  by  mailing  this  Proxy  Statement  to  all
shareholders  entitled  to vote at the  meeting.  Proxies  may be  solicited  by
officers of the Company personally,  but at no compensation in addition to their
regular compensation as officers.  The Company may reimburse brokers,  banks and
others  holding  shares  in  their  names  for  third  parties,  for the cost of
forwarding  proxy material to, and obtaining  proxies from,  third parties.  The
Proxy Statement and accompanying Proxy Card will be first mailed to shareholders
on or about March 29, 2001.

     Proxies may be revoked at any time prior to being  voted by giving  written
notice of  revocation  to the  Secretary of the Company.  All properly  executed
proxies  received  by  management  will be voted in the manner set forth in this
Proxy Statement or as otherwise specified by the shareholder giving the proxy.

     Shares voted as  abstentions  on any matter (or a "withhold vote for" as to
directors)  will be counted as shares that are present and  entitled to vote for
purposes of determining  the presence of a quorum at the meeting and as unvoted,
although  present and entitled to vote, for purposes of determining the approval
of each matter as to which the shareholder has abstained.  If a broker submits a
proxy which indicates that the broker does not have  discretionary  authority as
to certain  shares to vote on one or more matters,  those shares will be counted
as shares that are present and entitled to vote for purposes of determining  the
presence of a quorum at the meeting,  but will not be  considered as present and
entitled to vote with respect to such matters.

     Only  shareholders  of record as of the close of business on March 5, 2001,
may vote at the  meeting  or at any  adjournment.  As of that  date,  there were
issued and outstanding  30,747,876 common shares of the Company,  the only class
of  securities  entitled  to vote at the  meeting.  Each share  registered  to a
shareholder  of  record  is  entitled  to one  vote.  Cumulative  voting  is not
permitted.

                                   PROPOSAL 1

ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

NOMINEES AND OTHER DIRECTORS

     The number of directors of the Company is currently set at 12 members.  The
directors  are  divided  into  three  classes  as equal in number as  reasonably
possible. Vacancies that occur during a term may be filled by a majority vote of
the directors then in office, though less than a quorum, and directors so chosen
hold  office for a term  expiring at the next  Annual  Meeting of  Shareholders.
Board  policy  states that no director  may continue to serve on the Board after
the last day of the month of his/her seventieth (70th) birthday.

     At the forthcoming  Annual Meeting,  three persons are to be elected to the
Company's Board of Directors.  The Board has nominated William G. Van Dyke, Mark
H.  Rauenhorst and J. Kevin  Gilligan for three-year  terms expiring in the year
2004.  One  nominee,  William  G. Van Dyke,  has  previously  been  elected as a
director of the Company by the shareholders.

     Unless  otherwise  instructed  not to vote for the  election of  directors,
proxies will be voted to elect the nominees.  A director  candidate must receive
the vote of a  majority  of the  voting  power of shares  present in order to be
elected.  Unless the Board reduces the number of directors,  the enclosed  proxy
will be voted to elect the  replacement  nominee  designated by the Board in the
event that a nominee is unable or unwilling to serve.

     The following  information is given as of March 5, 2001 with respect to the
nominees  for  election  and the seven  directors  whose  terms of  office  will
continue after the Annual Meeting.  Except as noted below,  each of the nominees
and directors has held the same position, or another executive position with the
same employer, for the past five years.


Nominees for election at this meeting to terms expiring in the year 2004:

William G. Van Dyke

     Mr. Van Dyke,  55, is  Chairman,  Chief  Executive  Officer and  President,
     Donaldson  Company,  Inc.,  a  diversified  manufacturer  of air and liquid
     filtration  products.  Mr. Van Dyke has been a director of Graco since 1995
     and is a director of Donaldson Company, Inc.

Mark H. Rauenhorst

     Mr.  Rauenhorst,  48, is the President and Chief Executive  Officer of Opus
     Corporation and Opus L.L.C., companies engaged in design,  construction and
     real estate development  activities,  positions he assumed in 1999 and 2000
     respectively.  Beginning in 1996 he was President and CEO of Opus Northwest
     L.L.C., where he supervised all activities relating to project development.
     He  joined  Opus in 1982.  He was  elected a  director  of the  Company  in
     September 2000.

J. Kevin Gilligan

     Mr.  Gilligan,  46, is  President,  Home and  Building  Control,  Honeywell
     International Inc., a diversified manufacturer of electronics, controls and
     equipment for the aerospace, industrial and building management markets. In
     1997 he was elected to the position of  President,  Solutions  and Services
     Business,  Home and Building  Control of Honeywell  Inc.  Prior to becoming
     Vice President and General  Manager,  North American  Region of Honeywell's
     Home and Building  Control business in 1994, he was Vice President for that
     business  in Europe.  He was  elected a director of the Company in February
     2001.

Directors whose terms continue until 2002:

David A. Koch

     Mr.  Koch,  70, is  Chairman of the Board of the  Company,  and will become
     Chairman  Emeritus  on May 1, 2001.  He was  Chairman  and Chief  Executive
     Officer  from 1985 to 1996.  Mr.  Koch has been a director  of Graco  since
     1962.  He is also a director of  SurModics,  Inc. As an  exception to Board
     policy,  the Board of Directors has extended the mandatory  retirement  for
     Mr. Koch until May 31, 2002.


Lee R. Mitau

     Mr. Mitau,  52, is Executive  Vice  President  and General  Counsel of U.S.
     Bancorp,  a regional bank holding company.  U.S. Bank National  Association
     provides Graco with cash management,  loans and foreign exchange  services.
     The trustee of the Graco Employee  Retirement  Plan is First Trust National
     Association. Both of these companies are subsidiaries of U.S. Bancorp. From
     1983 to 1995,  Mr.  Mitau was a partner of Dorsey & Whitney  LLP. Mr. Mitau
     has been a director of Graco  since 1990 and is a director  of H.B.  Fuller
     Company. (See section entitled Certain Business Relationships on page 14.)

Martha A.M. Morfitt

     Ms. Morfitt,  43, is President,  Chief Operating  Officer and a director of
     CNS Inc., a manufacturer and marketer of consumer  products,  including the
     Breathe  Right(R) nasal strip.  From 1997 to 1998, she was Vice  President,
     Meals, from 1994 to 1997, Vice President, Green Giant Brands, and from 1993
     to 1994, Team Leader,  Green Giant Shelf Stable  Vegetables,  The Pillsbury
     Company, a diversified marketer of packaged food products.  Ms. Morfitt has
     been a director of Graco since 1995.

Directors whose terms continue until 2003:

George Aristides

     Mr. Aristides, 65, is Chief Executive Officer of the Company, a position he
     has held  since  January 3, 2000.  Effective  May 1, 2001,  he will also be
     Chairman of the Board.  From March 1, 1999 to December 29, 1999 he was Vice
     Chairman.  From 1997 to February 28, 1999 he was Chief  Executive  Officer.
     From 1996 to 1997 he was President and Chief Executive  Officer;  from 1993
     to 1996, he was President and Chief Operating  Officer;  from March to June
     1993, he was Executive Vice President;  and from 1985 to March 1993, he was
     Vice President,  Manufacturing Operations and Controller. Mr. Aristides has
     been a director of Graco since 1993.

Ronald O. Baukol

     Mr. Baukol,  63, is Executive  Vice  President,  International  Operations,
     Minnesota   Mining  and   Manufacturing   Company  ("3M"),   a  diversified
     manufacturer of industrial,  commercial, consumer and health care products.
     Mr.  Baukol has been a director of Graco since 1989 and is a director of 3M
     and The Toro Company.

Robert G. Bohn

     Mr. Bohn, 47, is Chairman,  President and Chief Executive Officer,  Oshkosh
     Truck  Corporation,   Oshkosh,  Wisconsin,  a  designer,  manufacturer  and
     marketer  of a broad  range of  specialty  commercial,  fire and  emergency
     apparatus and military trucks.  Mr. Bohn has been a director of Graco since
     June 1999.

William J. Carroll

     Mr. Carroll, 56, is  President-Automotive  Systems Group, Dana Corporation,
     Toledo,  Ohio,  which is  engaged  in the  engineering,  manufacturing  and
     distribution  of  components  and  systems  for  worldwide   vehicular  and
     industrial  manufacturers.  Mr.  Carroll has been a director of Graco since
     June 1999.

Mr. Jerald Scott, a director  since 1997, is retiring from the Board,  effective
May 1, 2001.

MEETINGS AND COMMITTEES OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

     During  2000,  the  Board  of  Directors  met 5  times.  Attendance  of the
Company's  directors at all Board and  Committee  meetings  averaged 94 percent.
During 2000, each director  attended at least 75 percent of the aggregate number
of meetings of the Board and of all  committees  of the Board on which he or she
served.

     The Board of Directors has an Audit Committee, a Governance Committee,  and
a Management Organization and Compensation Committee.  Membership as of March 5,
2001, the record date, was as follows:


                                                    Management
                                                    Organization
Audit                       Governance              And Compensation
----------------------      -------------------     ---------------------
W. G. Van Dyke, Chair       L. R. Mitau, Chair      M. A.M. Morfitt, Chair
W. J. Carroll               G. Aristides            R. G. Bohn
J. K. Gilligan              R. O. Baukol            W. J. Carroll
M. A.M. Morfitt             D. A. Koch              L. R. Mitau
M. H. Rauenhorst                                    J. L. Scott
J. L. Scott                                         W. G. Van Dyke

Audit Committee  (2 meetings in fiscal 2000)

     o    Reviews and discusses with the Company's  management  and  independent
          auditor the Company's financial reporting and internal controls;
     o    Recommends  and  takes  action  to  oversee  the  independence  of the
          independent auditor and selects and recommends the independent auditor
          to the Board of Directors;
     o    Reviews and assesses the Audit Committee Charter annually; and
     o    Reviews  the  internal  audit  plan and audit  results  and  evaluates
          internal audit performance.

     The  responsibilities  of the  Audit  Committee  are set forth in the Audit
     Committee Charter,  adopted by the Company's Board of Directors on February
     25,  2000,  a copy of  which  is  included  in  Appendix  A to  this  Proxy
     Statement.


Governance Committee  (2 meetings in fiscal 2000)

     o    Evaluates policies related to Board membership and procedure;
     o    Recommends  to the Board the persons to serve as Chairman of the Board
          and as Chief Executive Officer;
     o    Reviews and makes recommendations on directors' compensation; and
     o    Recommends  to the Board of  Directors  nominees  for the  position of
          director.


Management Organization and Compensation Committee  (2 meetings in fiscal 2000)

     o    Develops the Company's philosophy on executive compensation;
     o    Determines the compensation of the Company's executive officers;
     o    Reviews  and makes  recommendations  on  management  organization  and
          succession plans; and
     o    Administers the Company's executive stock option and incentive plans.


NOMINATION OF DIRECTORS

     Shareholders may nominate candidates for election to the Board of Directors
who will be considered by the Board Governance Committee. Recommendations should
be made in writing and  addressed to the  Committee in care of the  Secretary of
the Company at the Company's  corporate  headquarters.  The By-laws provide that
timely  notice must be received by the  Secretary not less than 90 days prior to
the  anniversary  of the date of the Annual Meeting of  Shareholders,  the first
Tuesday in May of each year. The  nominations  must set forth (i) the name, age,
business and  residential  addresses and  principal  occupation or employment of
each  nominee  proposed  in such  notice;  (ii)  the  name  and  address  of the
shareholder  giving the notice,  as it appears in the Company's  stock register;
(iii)  the  number  of  shares  of  capital  stock  of  the  Company  which  are
beneficially  owned by each such nominee and by such shareholder;  and (iv) such
other  information  concerning  each such nominee as would be required under the
rules of the Securities and Exchange Commission in a proxy statement  soliciting
proxies for the election of such nominee. Such notice must also include a signed
consent of each such nominee to serve as a director of the Company, if elected.


AUDIT COMMITTEE REPORT

Report of the Audit Committee

     The Audit Committee of the Board is responsible for providing  independent,
objective oversight of the Company's accounting functions and internal controls.
In performing its oversight function, the Audit Committee has relied upon advice
and  information  which it has received in its  discussions  with the  Company's
management and independent auditors.

     The Audit Committee is composed of independent directors,  and acts under a
written  charter  adopted  and  approved  by the Board of  Directors.  The Audit
Committee  has  reviewed  and  reassessed  the  adequacy  of its Charter and has
concluded that the Charter  satisfactorily  states the  responsibilities  of the
Committee.  Each member of the Company's Audit Committee meets the  independence
requirements of the New York Stock Exchange.

     The Audit  Committee has reviewed with the Company's  management,  internal
audit  personnel  and the  independent  auditor  issues  concerning  significant
developments  in  accounting  rules,  changes in  accounting  practices  and the
adequacy of the Company's internal accounting controls.

     The Audit  Committee has reviewed the audited  financial  statements of the
Company for the fiscal year ended  December  29, 2000 with both  management  and
Deloitte & Touche LLP  ("Deloitte"),  the Company's  independent  auditors.  The
Committee  also  discussed  with  Deloitte the matters  required by Statement on
Auditing Standards No. 61,  Communication with Audit Committees.  Management has
represented to the Audit  Committee that the financial  statements were prepared
in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles.

     The Audit Committee has also received the written disclosure and the letter
required by Independence Standards Board Standard No. 1 (Independence Discussion
with Audit Committees) and the Audit Committee has discussed with Deloitte their
independence. The Audit Committee has considered the effect of non-audit fees on
the independence of Deloitte.

     Based on these reviews and discussions,  the Audit Committee recommended to
the Board of  Directors  that the  Company's  audited  financial  statements  be
included in the  Company's  Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended
December 29, 2000 for filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.


                                             The Members of the Committee
                                               Mr. William Van Dyke, Chairman
                                               Mr. William Carroll
                                               Ms. Martha A.M. Morfitt
                                               Mr. Mark Rauenhorst
                                               Mr. Jerald Scott


PRINICPAL ACCOUNTING FIRM FEES

     The following  table sets forth the aggregate fees billed to Graco Inc. for
the fiscal year ended December 29, 2000, by the Company's  principal  accounting
firm, Deloitte & Touche LLP.


                  Financial Information Systems
Audit Fees        Design and Implementation Fees            All Other Fees
----------        ------------------------------            --------------

$251,000                        $0                             $454,000 

[FN]

(1) Includes fees for non-audit services, principally tax consulting,  statutory
audit of non-U.S. subsidiaries and other services.

(2) The Audit  Committee has considered  whether the provision of these services
is compatible with maintaining the principal accountant's independence.


EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

Report of the Management Organization and Compensation Committee

Overview
     The  Management  Organization  and  Compensation  Committee of the Board of
Directors  (hereafter  called  "the  Committee"),  composed  of six  independent
nonemployee directors, is responsible for developing the Company's philosophy on
executive compensation.  Consistent with this philosophy, the Committee develops
compensation  programs  for the Chief  Executive  Officer  and each of the other
executive officers of the Company. On an annual basis, the Committee  determines
the  compensation to be paid to the Chief Executive  Officer and other executive
officers, based on the provisions of the compensation plans.

     Compensation  plans which  provide for grants or awards of Company stock to
executive  officers are approved by the Board of Directors and the  shareholders
of the Company.  In 1993, the Internal  Revenue Code ("the Code") was amended to
include a deductibility  limit for  remuneration to certain  executive  officers
[Section 162(m) of the Code].  Qualified  performance-based  compensation is not
subject to this  deductibility  limit. The Long Term Stock Incentive Plan, which
permits  grants of stock  options  and stock  appreciation  rights to  executive
officers, meets the requirements of Section 162(m) in all respects.

     In order to qualify annual incentive awards to the Chief Executive  Officer
and other executive  officers as  performance-based  compensation  under Section
162(m) of the Code, the Company has an Executive  Officer Annual Incentive Bonus
Plan. This Plan meets the requirements of Section 162(m) in all respects.

Executive Compensation Philosophy and Program

     It is the Company's philosophy to set its executive  compensation structure
at levels which are  competitive  with those of durable goods  manufacturers  of
comparable  size.  These  levels  are  determined  by  consulting  a variety  of
independent  third-party executive compensation surveys.  Executive compensation
is then delivered through:

     o    base  salaries  which  recognize the  experience  and  performance  of
          individual executives;
     o    aggressive, performance-driven incentives which:
          -  enhance shareholder value,
          -  balance annual and long-term corporate objectives; and
          -  provide meaningful amounts of Company stock; and
     o    competitive benefits.

     The specific components of the executive compensation program are described
below.

     Base salary ranges are  established  by the  Committee,  using the fiftieth
percentile   salary  and  trend   data  for   comparably-sized   durable   goods
manufacturers,  as published in a variety of independent  third-party  executive
compensation surveys. The actual base salary of each officer,  within the range,
is determined by the executive's performance, which is evaluated annually by the
Chief  Executive  Officer  and  reviewed  and  approved by the  Committee.  Both
financial and management factors are considered in the evaluation.

     The Executive  Officer Annual  Incentive Bonus Plan (the  "Executive  Bonus
Plan")  was  available  in 2000 to the  Chief  Executive  Officer  and any other
executive  officer  designated by the Committee.  The Committee is authorized to
establish   financial   growth  targets  for  each   participant   directly  and
specifically tied to one or more financial  measures.  On or before the 90th day
of the  Company's  fiscal  year,  the  Committee  identifies  the  participants,
establishes  the Targeted Bonus Maximum  Percentages for each  participant,  and
establishes  the  applicable  Financial  Measures  and the  Company  Performance
Target(s)  for  each  Financial  Measure,  as these  terms  are  defined  in the
Executive  Bonus Plan. At the close of the fiscal year, the Committee  certifies
whether or not the Company Performance Target(s) have been attained.

     The Annual  Bonus Plan covers key  managers  of the  Company and  executive
officers who do not  participate  in the Executive  Bonus Plan. The Annual Bonus
Plan,  available  in  2000  to 9  executive  officers  and 42  other  management
employees,  is structured to encourage  growth in both sales and net earnings by
the Company.  The Plan determines  individual  awards for executive  officers by
measuring  Company  performance  against corporate sales and net earnings growth
targets  established  by the Committee in the first quarter of each year.  Sales
and net earnings targets for 2000 were established to exceed prior year results.
In  addition,  the Chief  Executive  Officer  has been  given the  authority  to
establish  divisional and regional growth targets for the executive  officers in
charge of specific divisions and regions. Overall performance for the divisional
and regional  executives  is measured  against  both  divisional  and  corporate
targets.  Targets are set for minimum,  midpoint and maximum  payouts  under the
plan. In 2000, the Committee established a range of payouts as a percent of base
salary for executive positions as follows:




                                           Minimum Payout            Maximum Payout
Position                                   as a % of Base Salary     as a % of Base Salary
--------                                   ---------------------     ---------------------
                                                                     
Chief Executive Officer                              0%                    90%
President and Chief Operating Officer                0%                    80%
Vice President (Board-elected)                       0%                    70%
Vice President (By appointment)                      0%                    50%/60%


The actual  Annual  Bonus  Plan award is  determined  by  evaluating  corporate,
divisional  and  regional   performance   against  the   established   financial
objectives. For 2000, sales results led to an award that was 80.9 percent of the
maximum  payout.  Corporate  net earnings  results led to an award that was 93.9
percent of the maximum payout.  Awards were made to all executive officers under
the 2000 Annual Bonus Plan,  with the exception of the Chief  Executive  Officer
whose award was made under the Executive Bonus Plan.

     Under  the  Chairman's  Award  Program,  the  Chairman  granted  a total of
$125,000  in   individual   discretionary   awards  to   recognize   significant
contributions by selected executive officers and other management employees.  In
2000 Chairman Awards were granted to 11 employees, including an award of $25,000
to Patrick J. McHale.

     The Executive Long Term Stock Incentive  Program is structured to align the
interests of executive officers with those of all Graco  shareholders.  The Long
Term Stock Incentive  Program for 2000 consisted of stock options granted to the
executive  officers.  The  number of stock  options  granted  to each  executive
officer was determined using competitive data for comparably-sized durable goods
manufacturers,  as  reflected in  independent  third-party  long-term  incentive
surveys.  These options were non-incentive stock options with a 10-year duration
and a vesting schedule of 25 percent after years one, two, three and four.

     Executive  officers are  eligible to  participate  in the employee  benefit
programs available to all Graco employees.


Compensation of the Chief Executive Officer

     On an  annual  basis,  the  Committee  is  responsible  for  reviewing  the
individual   performance  of  the  Chief   Executive   Officer  and  determining
appropriate  adjustments in base pay and award opportunities under the Executive
Officer Annual Incentive Bonus Plan and the Long Term Stock Incentive Plan.

     Awards made to the Chief  Executive  Officer under the Executive Bonus Plan
are determined by the growth in sales and net earnings of the Company.  Sales of
$494.4  million in 2000 represent a growth of 10 percent over 1999. Net earnings
in 2000 of $70.1  million  represent an increase of 18 percent  over 1999.  This
growth in sales and net earnings for 2000 yielded a bonus award to Mr. Aristides
of 81.6 percent of his base salary.

     In reviewing Mr.  Aristides' 2000 performance,  the Committee  recognized a
number of significant accomplishments including record sales and net earnings, a
20 percent  increase in diluted  earnings per share, a successful entry into the
North  American home center  market,  continued  emphasis on expense  management
while maintaining high levels of customer  satisfaction,  and continued superior
return  to Graco  shareholders,  particularly  in  comparison  to the Dow  Jones
Factory Equipment Index and the S&P 500 Index.  Continued focus on investment in
new products, global marketing, and enhanced distribution and manufacturing have
been effective in yielding the eighth consecutive year of improved sales and net
earnings.  Based upon this analysis, the Committee increased Mr. Aristides' base
salary from  $483,000  to  $552,000  effective  January 1, 2001.  The  Executive
Officer Annual  Incentive Bonus Plan payout maximum for Mr.  Aristides  remained
unchanged.



                                             The Members of the Committee
                                                Ms. Martha A.M. Morfitt, Chair
                                                Mr. Robert Bohn
                                                Mr. William Carroll
                                                Mr. Lee Mitau
                                                Mr. Jerald Scott
                                                Mr. William Van Dyke


Comparative Stock Performance Graph

     The graph below compares the  cumulative  total  shareholder  return on the
common stock of the Company for the last five fiscal  years with the  cumulative
total return of the S&P 500 Index and of the Dow Jones Factory  Equipment  Index
over the same period (assuming the value of investment in Graco common stock and
each index was 100 on December 29, 1995, and all dividends were reinvested).


                 Five Year* Cumulative Total Shareholder Return

[GRAPH - Table below lists data points included in graph]

                                                                   Dow Jones
Year             Graco Inc.              S&P 500               Factory Equipment
----             ----------              -------               -----------------
1995                100                    100                        100
1996                125                    122                         98
1997                182                    164                        113
1998                203                    211                         90
1999                283                    255                         82
2000                332                    232                         76

                                      *Fiscal Year Ended Last Friday in December


Summary Compensation Table

     The following table shows both annual and long-term compensation awarded to
or earned by the Chief  Executive  Officer and the four most highly  compensated
executive  officers of the Company  whose total annual salary and bonus for 2000
exceeded $100,000.



                                                                                   Long Term Compensation
                                      Annual Compensation                                Awards
                      ----------------------------------------------------         -----------------------
      (a)             (b)        (c)               (d)                 (e)               (f)         (g)              (i)
                                                                       Other         Restricted    Securities      All Other
                                                                      Annual              Stock    Underlying        Compen-
Name and                        Salary            Bonus              Compen-           Award(s)      Options/         sation
Principal Position    Year         ($)      ($)   sation ($)                ($)      SARs (#)        ($)
------------------    ----    --------         --------           ----------         ----------    ----------      ---------

                                                                                                 
George Aristides      2000    $485,123         $395,657                    0                  0        60,000         $    0
Chief Executive       1999     406,876          182,001                    0                  0        60,000          4,800
Officer               1998     432,106          290,233                    0                  0        60,000          4,800

Dale D. Johnson       2000     280,267          202,989                    0                  0        30,000          5,100
President and         1999     160,287           76,234                    0                  0        15,000          4,800
Chief Operating       1998     138,178           80,589                    0                  0        15,000          4,800
Officer

Charles L. Rescorla   2000     168,211          112,450                    0                  0        11,250          5,100
Vice President,       1999     150,262           91,141                    0                  0        11,250          4,800
Manufacturing &       1998     135,295           87,837                    0                  0         7,500          4,800
Distribution
Operations


Robert M. Mattison    2000     165,414          104,666                    0                  0         7,500          5,100
Vice President,       1999     150,639           75,281                    0                  0         7,500          4,800
General Counsel and   1998     146,864           73,908                    0                  0         7,500          4,800
Secretary

Patrick J. McHale     2000     147,141          119,507                    0                  0        11,250          5,100
Vice President,       1999     105,360           36,172                    0                  0           300          3,994
Contractor Equipment  1998      94,583           27,763                    0                  0         4,500          3,138
Division



(1) Deferred compensation is included in Salary and Bonus in the year earned.

(2) In  addition to base salary,  the reported figure includes amounts attribut-
able to the imputed value of the group term life  insurance  benefit for each of
the named executive officers.

(3) Bonus includes any awards under the Executive Officer Annual Incentive Bonus
Plan,  the Annual Bonus Plan and the Chairman's  Award Program  described in the
Management Organization and Compensation Committee Report. Chairman's Awards for
2000 included a $25,000 award to Mr. McHale.  Mr. Rescorla  received $15,000 for
1999 and $33,000 for 1998, Mr. Mattison  received  $10,000 for 1999, Mr. Johnson
received  $10,000 for 1998 and Mr.  McHale  received  $10,000 for 1999 under the
Chairman's Award Program.

(4) On December 8, 2000, the Board of Directors  approved a three-for-two  stock
split  effective  February 6, 2001, for shares  outstanding on January 15, 2001.
The number of options,  as well as the exercise price, has been restated in this
table and all subsequent tables to reflect the split.

(5) The compensation reported includes the Company contributions under the Graco
Employee  Investment  Plan  (excluding  employee  contributions).  For 2000, the
Company  contribution  accrued under the Graco Employee Investment Plan for each
named executive  officer was as follows:  $0 for Mr.  Aristides;  $5,100 for Mr.
Johnson;  $5,100 for Mr.  Rescorla,  $5,100 for Mr.  Mattison and $5,100 for Mr.
McHale. The Company  contribution under the Graco Employee  Investment Plan is a
dollar for dollar match up to the first 3% of employee contribution.



Option Grants Table (Last Fiscal Year)

     The following  table shows the stock options granted to the named executive
officers during 2000, their exercise price and their grant date present value.





                                              Individual Grant                     Grant Date Value
                               -----------------------------------------------     ----------------
(a)                                 (b)            (c)        (d)         (e)                   (f)
                              Number of     % of Total
                             Securities        Options   Exercise                             Grant
                             Underlying     Granted to    or Base                              Date
                                Options   Employees in      Price  Expiration               Present
Name                        Granted (#)    Fiscal Year     ($/Sh)        Date             Value ($)
-------------------         -----------   ------------   --------  ----------      ----------------
                                                                            
George Aristides             60,000          13.8%     $20.46    02/09/10              $558,000
Dale D. Johnson              30,000           6.9%      20.46    02/09/10               279,000
Charles L. Rescorla          11,250           2.6%      20.46    02/24/10               103,950
Robert M. Mattison            7,500           1.7%      20.46    02/24/10                69,300
Patrick J. McHale            11,250           2.6%      20.46    02/24/10               103,950



(1) Non-incentive  stock options were granted on February 9, 2000, in the amount
shown on the table. The options were exercisable on the day of the grant.

(2) Non-incentive  stock options were granted on February 9, 2000, in the amount
shown on the table. The options may be exercised in equal installments over five
years, beginning with the second anniversary date of the grant.

(3) Non-incentive stock options were granted on February 23, 2000 in the amounts
shown on the table. The options may be exercised in equal installments over four
years, beginning with the first anniversary date of the grant.

(4) The Black-Scholes  option pricing model has been used to determine the grant
date present value.  Annual  volatility was calculated using monthly returns for
36 months prior to the grant date, the interest rate was set using U.S. Treasury
securities of similar  duration to the option  period as of the grant date;  and
dividend  yield was  established  as the yield on the grant  date.  A 10 percent
discount  for  nontransferability  and a three  percent  discount to reflect the
possibility  of  forfeiture  over a two-year  period  were  applied.  For grants
expiring  on  February 9, 2010,  the  assumptions  used in the model were annual
volatility of 44.50  percent,  interest rate of 6.61 percent,  dividend yield of
1.82 percent,  and time to exercise of 10 years. For grants expiring on February
24, 2010,  the  assumptions  used in the model were annual  volatility  of 44.50
percent, interest rate of 6.42 percent, dividend yield of 1.82 percent, and time
to exercise of 10 years.



Aggregated  Option  Exercises  In Last  Fiscal Year And Fiscal  Year-End  Option
Values

     The following table shows the value of outstanding  in-the-money options at
the end of the fiscal year for the named executive officers.




(a)                             (b)             (c)                   (d)                 (e)
                                                                Number of
                                                               Securities            Value of
                                                               Underlying         Unexercised
                                                              Unexercised        In-the-Money
                                                                  Options             Options
                                                            at FY-End (#)       at FY-End ($)
                             Shares          Value
                        Acquired on       Realized           Exercisable/        Exercisable/
Name                   Exercise (#)             ($)    Unexercisable        Unexercisable
----                   ------------       --------         -------------     ----------------
                                                                 
George Aristides                  0             $0             377,137/0         $5,158,525/0
Dale D. Johnson                   0              0         15,450/59,625     $260,793/548,168
Charles L. Rescorla               0              0         28,200/31,500     $572,105/320,261
Robert M. Mattison                0              0         26,815/26,864     $501,812/286,274
Patrick J. McHale                 0              0          6,187/14,925     $120,255/110,900


(1) "Value  realized"  is the  difference  between   the  closing  price  of the
Company's  common  stock  on the day of  exercise  and the  option  price of the
options multiplied by the number of shares received.

(2) "Value at fiscal  year-end" is the  difference between  $27.59,  the closing
    price of the  Company's common stock on December  29,  2000,  and the option
    price multiplied by the number of shares subject to option.



Change in Control and Termination Arrangements

     Each of the executive  officers listed in the Summary  Compensation  Table,
and certain other key  executives of the Company,  have entered into a change of
control  agreement with the Company  (singularly  "Agreement";  collectively the
"Agreements").  The change of control  period is defined to extend for two years
from the date the Agreement is executed.  Each year this period is automatically
extended for one year so as to terminate  two years from the annual  anniversary
date of the  Agreement,  unless the Company gives the executive  notice that the
Company does not wish to extend this period.

     A change of control is generally defined in the Agreements to have occurred
if:  (i) a person  other  than a trust  person  (as  defined  in the  Agreement)
acquires beneficial ownership of 25 percent or more of the Company's outstanding
common stock, except acquisitions  directly from the Company, by the Company, by
a Company  employee  benefit  plan, by the executive or a group of which he is a
part, or by a person with  beneficial  ownership of shares under the Trust Under
the Will of Clarissa L. Gray which  equals or exceeds a certain  percentage;  or
(ii) members of the Incumbent Board (as defined in the Agreement) cease to be in
the majority on the Board; or (iii) the shareholders  approve a  reorganization,
merger,  consolidation or statutory exchange of the Company's outstanding common
stock, or approve a sale or other disposition of all or substantially all of the
assets of the Company; or (iv) the shareholders  approve a complete  liquidation
or dissolution of the Company.

     Each Agreement  provides that for two years after a change of control there
will be no  adverse  change  in the  executive's  duties  and  responsibilities,
compensation  program,  benefits or other  circumstances,  provided that nothing
will  restrict  the right of the  executive  or the  Company  to  terminate  the
employment of the executive.  If the executive's employment is terminated by the
Company for any reason other than for good cause,  death,  or disability,  or by
the executive for "good reason" (as defined in the Agreement),  within two years
following  a change of  control,  the  executive  will be  entitled  to  certain
benefits. These benefits include a sum equivalent to the executive's base salary
to the date of  termination  (to the extent not yet  paid),  a bonus  calculated
according  to a formula (set forth in the  Agreement)  for the year in which the
termination  occurs, two times the executive's annual base salary, two times the
midpoint  between the maximum and minimum bonus for the fiscal year in which the
termination  occurs,  and benefit  coverage for a minimum of two years following
the date of termination.

     The  payments to which the employee is entitled are subject to reduction in
the event the payments would  constitute a parachute  payment within the meaning
of Section 280G of the Internal  Revenue Code of 1989, as amended,  (the "Code")
or any successor provision, provided that the reduction does not exceed $25,000.
If the  reduction  would  exceed  $25,000,  there will be no  reduction  and the
Company will make an additional  payment to the executive in an amount that will
put the executive in the same  after-tax  position as if no excise tax under the
Code had been imposed.

     It is the  practice of the  Company to  continue to provide  base salary to
selected executive officers whose employment is involuntarily  terminated by the
Company  for a period  of  twelve  months or until  the  officer  secures  other
employment.


Retirement Arrangements

     The Company has an employee retirement plan which provides pension benefits
for eligible regular,  full- and part-time  employees.  Benefits under the Graco
Employee Retirement Plan ("Retirement Plan") consist of a fixed benefit which is
designed  to  provide  retirement  income at age 65 of 43.5  percent  of average
monthly compensation,  less 18 percent of Social  Security-covered  compensation
(calculated in a life annuity  option) for an employee with 30 years of service.
Average monthly  compensation is defined as the average of the five  consecutive
highest  years'  salary  during the last ten years of  service,  including  base
salary,  Executive Officer Annual Incentive Bonus Plan awards,  and Annual Bonus
Plan awards, but excluding Executive Long Term Incentive Program awards, divided
by sixty.  Benefits  under the  Retirement  Plan vest upon five years of benefit
service.

     Federal  tax  laws  limit  the  annual  benefits  that  may be paid  from a
tax-qualified  plan such as the  Retirement  Plan.  The  Company  has adopted an
unfunded plan to provide benefits to retired executive  officers impacted by the
benefit limits,  so that they will receive,  in the aggregate,  the benefits the
executive  would have been entitled to receive under the Retirement Plan had the
limits  imposed by the tax laws not been in effect.  The maximum  annual pension
payable to or on behalf of the  executive  under the unfunded plan will be equal
to the difference  between $170,000 and the benefits  actually payable under the
Retirement Plan when the limits imposed by the tax laws are applied.

     The following table shows the estimated  aggregate  annual benefits payable
under the Graco Employee  Retirement Plan and the unfunded plan for the earnings
and years of  service  specified.  The years of  benefit  service  for the Chief
Executive Officer and the executive officers listed in the Summary  Compensation
Table are: Mr.  Aristides,  27 years; Mr. Johnson,  25 years;  Mr. Rescorla,  12
years;  Mr. Mattison,  9 years; and Mr. McHale,  11 years. A maximum of 30 years
had previously  been counted in the pension  benefit  calculation.  For 1998 and
subsequent years, the 30 year maximum has been eliminated.




                                       Estimated Aggregate Annual Retirement Benefit
                                       ---------------------------------------------
Final Average    5 Years    10 Years    15 Years     20 Years    25 Years     30 Years     35 Years     40 Years    45 Years
Compensation     Service     Service     Service      Service     Service      Service      Service      Service     Service
------------     -------    --------    --------     --------    --------     --------     --------     --------    --------
                                                                                         
$200,000         $13,508    $ 27,016    $ 40,525     $ 54,033    $ 67,541     $ 81,049     $ 94,557     $108,066    $121,574
 300,000          20,758      41,516      62,275       83,033     103,791      124,549      145,307      166,066     170,000
 400,000          28,008      56,016      84,025      112,033     140,041      168,049      170,000      170,000     170,000
 500,000          35,258      70,516     105,775      141,033     170,000      170,000      170,000      170,000     170,000
 600,000          42,508      85,016     127,525      170,000     170,000      170,000      170,000      170,000     170,000
 700,000          49,758      99,516     149,275      170,000     170,000      170,000      170,000      170,000     170,000
 800,000          57,008     114,016     170,000      170,000     170,000      170,000      170,000      170,000     170,000


     Prior to December 31, 1996, the Company entered into deferred  compensation
agreements with selected executive officers,  including certain named executives
in the Summary  Compensation Table. These agreements provide for the payment per
year of $10,000 in  deferred  compensation  to the  officer  for ten years after
retirement, or to a beneficiary in the event of death prior to the expiration of
the  ten  year   period.   These   agreements   also  include   provisions   for
non-competition  and the  payment  of $5,000  per year in the event the  officer
becomes disabled prior to age 65. The $5,000 per year disability  payments cease
upon the attainment of age 65. Deferred compensation agreements remain in effect
for Mr. Mattison and Mr. Aristides.


Directors' Fees

     During 2000,  the Company paid each  director,  except  directors  who also
served as officers,  an annual  retainer of $15,000,  plus a meeting fee of $900
for each Board meeting and $700 for each committee meeting attended. On February
23, 2001, the Board  approved an increase in the annual  retainer to $20,000 per
year and the meeting fee to $1,000 for each Board meeting and committee meeting.
The Board also  terminated the  retirement  benefit for  nonemployee  directors,
which  provided that upon cessation of service,  nonemployee  directors who have
served for five full years will receive  quarterly  payments for five years at a
rate equal to the director's  annual  retainer in effect on the director's  last
day of service on the Board. Retirement payments will be made in accordance with
the retirement benefit to Mr. Baukol, Mr. Mitau, Ms. Morfitt,  Mr. Scott and Mr.
Van Dyke upon their respective retirements.


     In 1994,  shareholders  approved a Nonemployee  Director Stock Plan.  Under
this  Plan,  a  nonemployee  director  may elect to  receive  all or part of the
director's  annual retainer in the form of shares of the Company's  common stock
instead of cash.  In September  1997,  the Plan was amended to create a deferred
stock  account  alternative  for  the  deferral  of the  annual  retainer.  This
alternative  provides for the  crediting of shares of common stock to a deferred
stock  account  held  by a  trustee  in the  name of the  nonemployee  director.
Dividends  paid on the common  stock,  held in the  deferred  accounts,  will be
credited  to the  accounts at the time of  payment.  In June 1999,  the Plan was
amended to allow nonemployee  directors to defer all or part of the meeting fees
as well as the annual  retainer.  Participating  directors  may elect to receive
payment  from  their  deferred  stock  account  in a lump  sum or  installments.
Payments,  whether in a lump sum or by installments,  shall be made in shares of
common stock,  plus cash in lieu of any fractional  share.  Seven directors have
elected to defer all or part of their annual  retainer  and/or meeting fees into
the deferred stock accounts established under this Plan.

     In 1996,  shareholders  approved a Nonemployee  Director Stock Option Plan.
Under this Plan,  nonemployee directors receive an initial option grant of 3,000
shares upon first  appointment  or election and an annual  option grant of 2,500
shares on the date of the Company's  Annual  Shareholders  Meeting.  In February
2001,  the Board  amended this Plan to fix the initial  option and annual option
grants at 3,000 and 2,500 shares  respectively and eliminate  adjustment of such
amounts in the event of a stock dividend or stock split.  Options  granted under
the Plan are  non-statutory,  have a ten-year  duration  and may be exercised in
equal installments over four years, beginning with the first anniversary date of
the grant.  The option  exercise  price is the fair market  value on the date of
grant.

Certain Business Relationships

     Mr. Mitau,  who has been a director of Graco since 1990, is Executive  Vice
President and General Counsel of U.S. Bancorp, a bank holding company. U.S. Bank
National Association is the lead bank in a syndicate of ten banks with which the
Company  entered  into  a  five-year   $190,000,000  reducing  revolving  credit
facility.  The July 2, 1998  repurchase  of  5,800,000  shares of the  Company's
common stock from the Company's largest shareholder, the Trust under the Will of
Clarissa L. Gray, was financed in part by an initial  borrowing of  $158,000,000
under this credit facility, $3,000,000 of which remained outstanding as of March
5, 2001.  For further  information  see  footnote F to the  Company's  financial
statements in its Annual Report to shareholders for fiscal year 2000.

BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP OF SHARES

     The  following  information,  furnished  as of  March  5,  2001,  indicates
beneficial ownership of the common shares of the Company by each director,  each
nominee for election as director,  the executive  officers listed in the Summary
Compensation  Table who are still  executive  officers on that date,  and by all
directors and executive officers as a group. Except as otherwise indicated,  the
persons listed have sole voting and investment power.



                                                                             Percent of
                                      Amount and Nature of                 Common Stock
Name of Beneficial Owner              Beneficial Ownership         Outstanding*
------------------------              --------------------                 ------------
                                                                             
G. Aristides                               397,086                         1.3%
R. O. Baukol                                        20,478
R. G. Bohn                                       1,969
W. J. Carroll                                        3,331
J. K. Gilligan                                           0
D. D. Johnson                                   29,414
D. A. Koch                           2,221,467                         7.2%
R. M. Mattison                                  57,204
P. J. McHale                                        12,490
L. R. Mitau                                         18,629
M. A.M. Morfitt                                     14,205
M. H. Rauenhorst                                     1,669
C. L. Rescorla                                  56,219
J. L. Scott                                         11,027
W. G. Van Dyke                                      16,981

All directors and
executive officers as a
group (21 persons)               3,045,868                         9.9%


* Less than one 1 percent, if no percentage is given.


(1) All share data reflects the three-for-two  stock split effective February 6,
2001.

(2) Includes  640,420  shares with respect to which  executive  officers  have a
right, as of May 1, 2001, to acquire  beneficial  ownership upon the exercise of
vested stock options.

(3) Includes  the  following  shares  owned by  spouses of  directors  and named
executive  officers as to which the director or executive  officer may be deemed
to share voting and investment power: Mr. Koch, 63,736 shares and Mr. Aristides,
69,597 shares.

(4) Excludes  the  following  shares  as  to   which  beneficial   ownership  is
disclaimed:  (i) 528,433 shares owned by the Graco Employee  Retirement Plan, as
to which  Messrs.  Aristides,  Koch,  Bohn,  Johnson  and  Rescorla  and certain
executive  officers of the Company share voting and investment  power as members
of the  Company's  Investment  Committee;  (ii) 13,047  shares held by The Graco
Foundation  as to which  Messrs.  Koch,  Mattison and Rescorla  share voting and
investment  powers as directors;  and (iii) 134,800 shares held by the Greycoach
Foundation  as to  which  Mr.  Koch  shares  voting  and  investment  power as a
director.

(5) Includes  1,490,463  shares held by the Clarissa L. Gray Trust, of which Mr.
Koch's wife,  Barbara Gray Koch, and their children are the beneficiaries and as
to which Mr. Koch shares voting and investment power as trustee.  See "Principal
Shareholders."

(6) If the  shares  referred  to in  footnote  4 above,  as to which one or more
directors and designated  executive  officers share voting power, were included,
the number of shares beneficially owned by all directors,  nominees for election
as director and executive officers would be 3,722,148 shares, or 12.1 percent of
the outstanding shares.



Principal Shareholders

   The following  table  identifies each person or group known to the Company to
beneficially  own as of March 5, 2001,  more than 5 percent  of the  outstanding
common shares of the Company, the only class of security entitled to vote at the
Annual Meeting.

                                              Beneficial           Percent
                                               Ownership          of Class
                                        ----------------          --------
David A. Koch                   2,221,461 shares              7.2%

Ariel Capital Management, Inc.      4,537,155 shares            14.96%
[FN]

(1)  Includes  1,490,463 shares owned by the Trust under the will of Clarissa L.
     Gray. Mr. Koch is one of the trustees of the Trust and the beneficiaries of
     the Trust are Mrs. Koch and their children.  The other trustees are Paul M.
     Torgerson,  Senior  Vice  President  and Chief  Administrative  Officer  at
     Fairview  Health  Services,  Minneapolis,  Minnesota,  and  US  Bank  Trust
     National  Association S.D., Sioux Falls,  South Dakota.  The Trustees share
     voting and  dispositive  power.  Includes  686,264 shares owned by David A.
     Koch or Mrs.  Koch.  Includes  44,740 shares with respect to which Mr. Koch
     has a right,  as of May 1, 2001, to acquire  beneficial  ownership upon the
     exercise of vested stock options.

(2)  Excludes  the  following  shares  as  to  which  beneficial   ownership  is
     disclaimed: (i) 528,433 shares owned by the Graco Employee Retirement Plan,
     as to which Messrs. Aristides, Koch, Bohn, Johnson and Rescorla and certain
     executive  officers of the Company  share  voting and  investment  power as
     members of the Company's Investment  Committee;  (ii) 13,047 shares held by
     The Graco Foundation as to which Messrs.  Koch, Mattison and Rescorla share
     voting and investment powers as directors; and (iii) 134,800 shares held by
     the Greycoach  Foundation as to which Mr. Koch shares voting and investment
     power as a director.

(3)  Based on information included in a Schedule 13G filed on February 12, 2001.


Section 16(a) Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance

     The Company's executive officers, directors and 10 percent shareholders are
required under the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934 and regulations  promulgated
thereunder to file initial reports of ownership of the Company's  securities and
reports  of  changes  in  that   ownership  with  the  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission. Copies of these reports must also be provided to the Company.

     Based  upon its  review of the  reports  and any  amendments  made  thereto
furnished  to the  Company,  or written  representations  that no  reports  were
required,  the Company believes that all reports were filed on a timely basis by
reporting  persons during and with respect to 2000,  except for two  inadvertent
late filings by George  Aristides,  who purchased  6,144 shares in January 2000,
sold 5,553  shares in April 2000 and whose  spouse sold  13,512  shares in April
2000.



                                   PROPOSAL 2


PROPOSAL TO ADOPT GRACO INC. STOCK INCENTIVE PLAN

     The Board of Directors  adopted the Graco Inc.  Stock  Incentive  Plan (the
"Stock Incentive Plan") at its regular meeting on February 23, 2001,  subject to
the approval of the shareholders of the Company.  Accordingly,  the shareholders
will be asked to approve the Stock  Incentive  Plan at the Annual  Meeting.  The
Stock Incentive Plan would become effective upon approval by the shareholders.


     The Board believes that the success of the Company depends in large measure
on its ability to attract and retain highly  qualified  officers,  employees and
non-employee  directors who are motivated to put forth maximum  effort on behalf
of the Company and its  shareholders.  The Company  currently  provides  for the
award of stock  options  to  non-employee  directors  through  its  Non-Employee
Directors Stock Option Plan and the award of stock options and restricted  stock
to officers  and key  employees  of the  Company  through  its  Long-term  Stock
Incentive  Plan.  The Board has reviewed  these current  arrangements  for stock
awards  and has  determined  that a program  that  permits  the award of a wider
variety of  stock-based  compensation  to officers,  employees and  non-employee
directors  will  promote  the  long-term   financial  success  of  the  Company.
Compensation  based upon the Company's  common stock encourages these persons to
align their interests with that of shareholders generally.  The Board recommends
that the Stock Incentive Plan be approved.


     After the date of shareholder  approval of the Stock  Incentive Plan by the
shareholders,  no further  awards will be granted under the Company's  Long-term
Stock Incentive Plan or the Company's  Non-Employee Directors Stock Option Plan.
However,  all awards  outstanding under either of these two plans prior to or on
the date of  shareholder  approval  of the  Stock  Incentive  Plan  will  remain
outstanding in accordance with the terms of those plans. The Company's  Employee
Stock  Incentive  Plan will  remain in effect,  and awards  will  continue to be
granted under that plan.

     The terms of the Stock  Incentive  Plan are  summarized  below and the full
text of the Plan is set forth as Appendix B to this Proxy  Statement.  The Stock
Incentive Plan has been designed to meet the  requirements  of Section 162(m) of
the  Internal  Revenue  Code of 1986,  as amended (the  "Code"),  regarding  the
deductibility of executive  compensation.  In addition,  it is intended that the
Plan qualify as an  incentive  stock  option plan  meeting the  requirements  of
Section 422 of the Code.

KEY FEATURES OF THE PLAN

Shares/Stock

     o    Graco Inc. common stock (par value $1.00).

Eligibility

     o    Any employee,  officer or non-employee  director of the Company or any
          affiliate.

Awards

     o    Any option,  stock appreciation  right,  restricted stock,  restricted
          stock  unit,   performance   award,   dividend   equivalent  or  other
          stock-based award.

Term of the Plan

     o    Ten years, unless earlier terminated by the Board of Directors.

Option Exercise Price

     o    Not less than 100 percent of the fair  market  value of a share on the
          date of grant.

     o    Fair  market  value is the last sale  price of Graco  common  stock as
          reported  by  the  New  York  Stock   Exchange  on  the  business  day
          immediately  preceding  the date upon which fair market value is being
          determined.

Number of Shares Authorized Under the Plan

     o    1,500,000

SUMMARY OF THE PLAN

     All employees,  officers and non-employee  directors of the Company and its
affiliates  will be eligible to receive  awards under the Plan at the discretion
of the Board of Directors or its designated committee.

     Upon approval of the Plan by the shareholders,  the Board of Directors will
designate  a  committee  to  administer  and make  awards  under the Plan.  This
committee will be composed solely of non-employee  directors  within the meaning
of Rule 16b-3 of the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934 (the  "Exchange  Act") and
outside  directors  within the meaning of Section  162(m) of the Code.  The Plan
will be  administered  in  accordance  with the  requirements  for the  award of
"qualified performance-based compensation" under Section 162(m) of the Code.

     The committee  designated by the Board of Directors shall have the power to
designate  persons eligible for awards under the Plan,  interpret and administer
the Plan and any award agreement,  establish rules as deemed appropriate for the
administration  of the Plan and,  subject to the  provisions  of the Plan and to
applicable law, determine:

     o    The type of award and number of shares covered by each award
     o    The terms and conditions of any award or award agreement
     o    The terms of exercise of any award

     The  committee  may also  amend or waive  the terms  and  conditions  of an
outstanding  award,  but may not  adjust  or  amend  the  exercise  price of any
outstanding  stock option or stock  appreciation  right [except in the case of a
stock split or other recapitalization pursuant to Section 4(c) of the Plan].

     The aggregate number of shares of common stock that may be issued under all
awards made under the Plan will be 1,500,000, with a maximum of 1,500,000 shares
available for issuance as awards of restricted stock and restricted stock units.
The  committee  may adjust the number of shares in the case of a stock  split or
other  recapitalization  pursuant to Section 4(c) of the Plan. Shares covered by
an award which are forfeited or not purchased  will be available  under the Plan
again for granting  awards.  In the event that the committee  determines  that a
dividend or other distribution, including a stock split, merger or other similar
corporate  transaction  or event,  affects the common  stock of the Company such
that an adjustment is deemed to be appropriate  in order to prevent  dilution or
enlargement of the benefits or potential  benefits  intended under the Plan, the
committee may make such  adjustments as it deems  equitable.  No person eligible
for awards under the Plan may be granted stock options and any other award,  the
value of which is based  solely on an  increase  in the  price of the  Company's
common  stock,  relating to more than  200,000  shares in the  aggregate  in any
calendar  year.  The number and types of awards  that will be granted  under the
Plan are not determinable, as the committee will make such determinations in its
sole discretion.  The market price per share of the Company's common stock as of
March 5, 2001 was $26.90.

     Under the Plan the committee may award options,  including  reload options,
stock appreciation rights, restricted stock, restricted stock units, performance
awards,  dividend  equivalents and other stock-based awards, and any combination
of these. The provisions of the Plan governing these awards are contained in the
Plan, attached hereto as Appendix B. Generally, the consideration to be received
by the Company for awards  under the Plan will be the  eligible  persons'  past,
present or expected future  contributions to the Company. The Plan provides that
all awards are to be evidenced by written  agreements  containing  the terms and
conditions of the awards.

     Transfer  of awards  may not be made  other  than by will or by the laws of
descent and distribution.  During the lifetime of a participant, an award may be
exercised only by the participant to whom the award is granted

     Subject to the provisions of the Plan or an award agreement,  the committee
may not amend any outstanding award agreement without the participant's consent,
if the action would adversely affect the participant's rights. The committee may
assist a participant in satisfying the participant's tax withholding obligations
by allowing the  participant to elect to have the Company  withhold shares which
would  otherwise  be  delivered  upon  exercise  or  receipt  of the award or by
delivering to the Company  shares already owned with a value equal to the amount
of the taxes.

     The Plan will become  effective as of the date of shareholder  approval and
will be in effect for ten (10) years from that date,  unless earlier  terminated
in accordance  with the provisions of the Plan. The Board of Directors may amend
or terminate the Plan, at any time, except that prior shareholder  approval will
be required for any amendment to the Plan that:

     o    Requires  shareholder  approval  under the rules or regulations of the
          New York Stock Exchange, any other securities exchange or the National
          Association  of Securities  Dealers,  Inc. that are  applicable to the
          Company,

     o    Permits repricing of outstanding  stock options or stock  appreciation
          rights  granted under the Plan [except in the case of a stock split or
          other recapitalization pursuant to Section 4(c) of the Plan],

     o    Increases  the number of shares  authorized  under the Plan [except in
          the  case of a stock  split  or  other  recapitalization  pursuant  to
          Section 4(c) of the Plan],

     o    Permits the award of stock options or stock appreciation  rights under
          the Plan with an  exercise  price  less  than 100% of the fair  market
          value of share of common stock as defined in the Plan, or

     o    Without  shareholder  approval,  would cause the Company to be unable,
          under the Code, to grant incentive stock options under the Plan.


FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES

     The following is a summary of the principal federal income tax consequences
generally applicable to awards under the Plan.

Option or Stock Appreciation Right
----------------------------------

Grant
-----
     The grant of an  option  or stock  appreciation  right is not  expected  to
result in any taxable income for the recipient.

Exercise
--------

     Incentive Stock Option
     The holder of an  incentive  stock  option  generally  will have no taxable
     income  upon  exercising  the option  (except  that a  liability  may arise
     pursuant to the  alternative  minimum  tax),  and the  Company  will not be
     entitled to a tax deduction.

     Nonqualified Stock Option
     Upon  exercising a nonqualified  stock option,  the optionee must recognize
     ordinary  income equal to the excess of the fair market value of the shares
     of common stock  acquired on the date of exercise over the exercise  price,
     and the Company  will be entitled at that time to a tax  deduction  for the
     same amount.

     Stock Appreciation Right
     Upon exercising a stock appreciation right, the amount of any cash received
     and the fair  market  value on the  exercise  date of any  shares of common
     stock  received  are  taxable  to the  recipient  as  ordinary  income  and
     deductible by the Company.

Disposition
-----------

     The tax  consequence  to a holder of an option upon a disposition of shares
acquired  through  the  exercise of an option will depend on how long the shares
have been held and upon  whether  such shares were  acquired  by  exercising  an
incentive  stock option or by  exercising a  nonqualified  stock option or stock
appreciation right.  Generally,  there will be no tax consequence to the Company
in connection with the  disposition of shares  acquired under an option,  except
that  the  Company  may  be  entitled  to a tax  deduction  in the  case  of the
disposition  of shares  acquired  under an  incentive  stock  option  before the
applicable  incentive  stock option  holding  periods set forth in the Code have
been satisfied.

Awards Other Than Options or Stock Appreciation Rights
------------------------------------------------------

     With respect to other awards granted under the Plan that are payable either
in cash or shares of common stock that are either transferable or not subject to
substantial  risk of  forfeiture,  the  holder of such an award  must  recognize
ordinary  income equal to the excess of (a) the cash or the fair market value of
the shares of common stock received  (determined as of the date of such receipt)
over (b) the amount (if any) paid for such shares of common  stock by the holder
of the award,  and the Company will be entitled at that time to a deduction  for
the same amount.

     With respect to an award that is payable in shares of common stock that are
restricted as to transferability  and subject to substantial risk of forfeiture,
unless a special  election is made pursuant to the Code, the holder of the award
must recognize  ordinary income equal to the excess of (i) the fair market value
of the  shares of common  stock  received  (determined  as of the first time the
shares become  transferable  or not subject to  substantial  risk of forfeiture,
whichever  occurs earlier) over (ii) the amount (if any) paid for such shares of
common  stock by the holder,  and the Company will be entitled at that time to a
tax deduction for the same amount.

Application of Section 16 of the Exchange Act
---------------------------------------------

     Special rules may apply in the case of individuals subject to Section 16 of
the Exchange Act. In particular,  unless a special  election is made pursuant to
the Code,  shares received pursuant to the exercise of a stock option or SAR may
be treated as restricted as to transferability and subject to a substantial risk
of  forfeiture  for a period of up to six  months  after  the date of  exercise.
Accordingly, the amount of any ordinary income recognized, and the amount of the
Company's tax deduction, are determined as of the end of such period.

Delivery of Shares to Satisfy Tax Obligation
--------------------------------------------

     Under  the  Plan,  the  committee  may  permit  participants  receiving  or
exercising  awards,  subject to the  discretion  of the  committee and upon such
terms and conditions as it may impose, to deliver shares of common stock (either
shares  received upon the receipt or exercise of the award or shares  previously
owned by the holder of the option) to the  Company to satisfy  federal and state
tax obligations.


SHAREHOLDER APPROVAL OF PLAN

     The Board of Directors  recommends that  shareholders  vote FOR approval of
the Graco Inc. Stock Incentive Plan. Proxies solicited by the Board of Directors
will be voted  FOR the  approval  of the  Plan,  unless  shareholders  specify a
contrary choice in their proxy.

     The  affirmative  vote of a  majority  of the  shares  present in person or
represented by proxy and entitled to vote at the 2001 Annual Meeting is required
for approval of the Graco Inc. Stock Incentive Plan.



                                   PROPOSAL 3

PROPOSAL TO RATIFY THE APPOINTMENT OF INDEPENDENT PUBLIC AUDITORS

     Deloitte & Touche LLP has acted as  independent  auditors  for the  Company
since 1962. The Board of Directors  recommends  ratification of the selection of
Deloitte & Touche LLP as  independent  auditors  for the  current  year.  If the
shareholders do not ratify the selection of Deloitte & Touche LLP, the selection
of the independent  auditors will be  reconsidered by the Board of Directors.  A
representative  of Deloitte & Touche LLP will be present at the meeting and will
have the  opportunity  to make a  statement  if so desired and be  available  to
respond to any shareholder questions.


OTHER MATTERS

     The Board of Directors is not aware of any matter,  other than those stated
above, which will or may properly be presented for action at the meeting. If any
other  matters  properly  come before the  meeting,  it is the  intention of the
persons  named in the enclosed form of proxy to vote the shares  represented  by
such proxies in accordance with their best judgment.


SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS

     The Company did not receive a request from any shareholder that a matter be
submitted to a vote at the 2001 Annual Meeting.  Any shareholder wishing to have
a matter  considered for inclusion in the proxy statement for the Annual Meeting
in the year 2002 must submit such  proposal in writing to the  Secretary  of the
Company at the address shown on page 1 of this  statement no later than December
3, 2001.

     The  persons  named as  proxies  intend  to  exercise  their  discretionary
authority  to vote as they  deem in the best  interests  of the  Company  on any
shareholder  proposal  submitted  at the Annual  Meeting  in year  2002,  if the
Company has not received advance written notice of the matter from the proponent
by February 1, 2002.

     YOU ARE  RESPECTFULLY  REQUESTED TO EXERCISE YOUR RIGHT TO VOTE. YOU MAY DO
SO BY CALLING OUR TOLL-FREE TELEPHONE VOTE NUMBER (1-800-240-6326) AND FOLLOWING
THE VOICE  INSTRUCTIONS OR BY FILLING IN AND SIGNING THE ENCLOSED PROXY CARD AND
RETURNING IT IN THE ENVELOPE  ENCLOSED FOR YOUR  CONVENIENCE.  In the event that
you attend the meeting,  you may revoke your proxy (either given by telephone or
by mail) and vote your shares in person if you wish.

For the Board of Directors



/s/Robert M. Mattison
Robert M. Mattison
Secretary

Dated:  March 29, 2001


                     NOTE: Vote by telephone - call 1-800-240-6326.

(C)2001 Graco Inc. 3/01 6.5M Printed in U.S.A.


                                                                      Appendix A


                                    GRACO INC
                                 AUDIT COMMITTEE
                                     CHARTER

STRUCTURE

The Audit Committee shall have at least three members,  and shall consist solely
of "independent"  directors, all of whom shall be "financially literate" and one
of whom shall have accounting or related  financial  management  expertise.  The
committee  shall  hold at  least 2  meetings  during  each  calendar  year,  and
additional meetings as necessary to perform its functions.

An  independent  director  shall be a director who: (i) is not, and has not been
for the last three years,  an employee or officer of the Company,  or any of its
affiliates; (ii) is not a partner,  controlling shareholder or executive officer
of an organization  that has a direct business  relationship with the Company or
any of its affiliates unless the Board determines, in the good faith exercise of
its business  judgement,  that such  relationship  does not  interfere  with the
director's  exercise of independent  judgment;  (iii) is not an immediate family
member of anyone who has been an officer of the Company or any of its affiliates
in  the  last  three  years;  or  (iv)  is not  employed  as an  executive  of a
corporation  which  has  any of the  Company's  executives  on its  compensation
committee.

"Financially  literate"  means that the  director,  in the good  faith  business
judgment  of the Board,  is able to read and  understand  fundamental  financial
statements, including a balance sheet, income statement and cash flow statement.
The Board may reasonably infer this ability by the employment  positions held by
the director at other  companies.  The Board shall also  determine,  in its good
faith business  judgment,  that one member of the Audit committee has accounting
or related financial management expertise. The Board may infer that the director
has such  expertise by the  employment  positions  held by the director at other
companies, the director possessing the requisite professional certification,  or
the educational background of the director.


PURPOSE

The Audit Committee shall perform the following functions:

1.   Have the ultimate  authority and responsibility to evaluate the independent
     auditor,  and recommend annually to the Board of Directors the selection of
     independent auditor;

2.   Assure that the independent  auditor submits to the Committee on a periodic
     basis a formal written statement  delineating all relationships between the
     independent  auditor  and the  Company,  actively  engage  the  independent
     auditor in a dialogue  with respect to any such  relationships  or services
     that  may  impact  the  objectivity  and  independence  of the  independent
     auditor,  and recommend to the Board any appropriate  action in response to
     the  independent  auditor's  report  to  satisfy  itself  of the  auditor's
     independence.

3.   Assure that the  independent  auditor,  and the head of the internal  audit
     function, are ultimately accountable to the Audit Committee and the Board;

4.   Review the independent  auditor's objectives and scope for the audit of the
     Company's financial statements;

5.   Review and discuss the audited financial statements with management and the
     independent auditors.

6.   Recommend  to  the  Board  of  Directors   whether  the  audited  financial
     statements should be included in the Company's annual report on Form 10-K.

7.   Review the independent auditor's year-end audit and opinion;

8.   Approve,  in advance,  the scope and fee arrangement of all examinations of
     the Company's financial statements by the independent auditors;

9.   Review all significant changes in accounting principles and their impact on
     the Company;

10.  Review the comments and  recommendations  of the  independent  auditors and
     management's responses thereto;

11.  Review the composition, responsibilities, authority, plans, activities, and
     significant  comments and recommendations of the internal audit department,
     and management's responses thereto;

12.  Review any  significant  changes to the  Company's  internal  controls with
     management;

13.  Review the results of the annual internal audit of officer expense reports,
     and a summary of officer perquisites;

14.  Review the status of the Company's tax returns and tax audits worldwide;

15.  Review the Company's policies and practices to prevent unethical or illegal
     activities;

16.  Review  all  material   threatened  or  pending  actions,   investigations,
     proceedings or litigation involving the Company;

17.  Hold  semi-annual   sessions   (without   management   presence)  with  the
     independent auditor and the head of the internal audit function;

18.  Approve all proposed personnel actions (except compensation)  pertaining to
     the head of the internal audit function;

19.  Review and reassess the adequacy of this Charter, and recommend any changes
     to the Board of Directors, on an annual basis.

20.  Submit a report for the Company's annual  proxy  statement  containing  the
     information required therein by applicable SEC or other regulations.

                                                                      Appendix B

                                   GRACO INC.
                              STOCK INCENTIVE PLAN


Section 1.  Purpose; Effect on Prior Plans.
------------------------------------------

     (a)  Purpose.  The purpose of the Plan is to promote the  interests  of the
Company and its  shareholders  by aiding the Company in attracting and retaining
employees,  officers and non-employee  Directors  capable of assuring the future
success of the Company,  to offer such persons  incentives  to put forth maximum
efforts for the success of the  Company's  business  and to provide such persons
with  opportunities  for stock  ownership in the Company,  thereby  aligning the
interests of such persons with the Company's shareholders.

     (b) Effect on Prior Plans.  After the date of shareholder  approval of this
Plan, no awards shall be granted under the Company's  Long-Term  Stock Incentive
Plan  or the  Company's  Non-Employee  Directors  Stock  Option  Plan,  but  all
outstanding  awards  granted  under either of those two plans prior to or on the
date of shareholder approval of this Plan shall remain outstanding in accordance
with the terms thereof. The Company's Employee Stock Incentive Plan shall remain
in effect, and awards will continue to be granted under that plan.

Section 2.  Definitions.
-----------------------

      As used in the Plan, the following terms shall have the meanings set forth
below:

     (a)  "Affiliate"  shall mean (i) any entity  that,  directly or  indirectly
through one or more  intermediaries,  is  controlled by the Company and (ii) any
entity in which the Company has a significant  equity interest,  in each case as
determined by the Committee.

     (b) "Award" shall mean any Option,  Stock  Appreciation  Right,  Restricted
Stock,  Restricted Stock Unit,  Performance Award,  Dividend Equivalent or Other
Stock-Based Award granted under the Plan.

     (c) "Award Agreement" shall mean any written  agreement,  contract or other
instrument or document  evidencing  an Award granted under the Plan.  Each Award
Agreement  shall be subject to the  applicable  terms and conditions of the Plan
and any other terms and conditions (not  inconsistent  with the Plan) determined
by the Committee.

     (d) "Board" shall mean the Board of Directors of the Company.

     (e) "Code"  shall mean the Internal  Revenue Code of 1986,  as amended from
time to time, and any regulations promulgated thereunder.

     (f) "Committee" shall mean a committee of Directors designated by the Board
to administer the Plan.  The Committee  shall be comprised of not less than such
number of Directors as shall be required to permit Awards granted under the Plan
to  qualify  under  Rule  16b-3,  and each  member of the  Committee  shall be a
"Non-Employee  Director"  within  the  meaning  of Rule  16b-3  and an  "outside
director"  within the meaning of Section 162(m) of the Code. The Company expects
to have the Plan  administered in accordance with  requirements for the award of
"qualified performance-based  compensation" within the meaning of Section 162(m)
of the Code.

     (g)  "Company"  shall mean Graco  Inc.,  a Minnesota  corporation,  and any
successor corporation.

     (h) "Director" shall mean a member of the Board.

     (i) "Dividend  Equivalent"  shall mean any right granted under Section 6(e)
of the Plan.

     (j)  "Eligible  Person"  shall  mean  any  employee,  officer,  consultant,
independent  contractor  or  non-employee  Director  providing  services  to the
Company or any Affiliate whom the Committee determines to be an Eligible Person.

     (k)  "Exchange  Act" shall mean the  Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934,  as
amended.

     (l)  "Fair  Market  Value"  shall  mean,   with  respect  to  any  property
(including, without limitation, any Shares or other securities), the fair market
value of such  property  determined  by such methods or  procedures  as shall be
established from time to time by the Committee.  Notwithstanding  the foregoing,
unless  otherwise  determined by the Committee,  the Fair Market Value of Shares
for  purposes of the Plan shall be the last sale price of the Shares as reported
on the  composite  tape by the New York Stock  Exchange on the date  immediately
preceding  the date as of which fair  market  value is being  determined  or, if
there were no sales of Shares  reported on the  composite  tape on such date, on
the most recent preceding date on which there were sales.

     (m)  "Incentive  Stock Option"  shall mean an option  granted under Section
6(a) of the Plan that is intended to meet the requirements of Section 422 of the
Code or any successor provision.

     (n) "Non-Qualified Stock Option" shall mean an option granted under Section
6(a) of the Plan that is not intended to be an Incentive Stock Option.

     (o) "Option" shall mean an Incentive Stock Option or a Non-Qualified  Stock
Option, and shall include Reload Options.

     (p) "Other  Stock-Based  Award" shall mean any right  granted under Section
6(f) of the Plan.

     (q) "Participant" shall mean an Eligible Person designated to be granted an
Award under the Plan.

     (r) "Performance  Award" shall mean any right granted under Section 6(d) of
the Plan.

     (s)  "Person"  shall  mean  any   individual,   corporation,   partnership,
association or trust.

     (t) "Plan" shall mean this Graco Inc. Stock Incentive Plan, as amended from
time to time.

     (u) "Reload Option" shall mean any Option granted under Section 6(a)(iv) of
the Plan.

     (v)  "Restricted  Stock" shall mean any Share granted under Section 6(c) of
the Plan.

     (w) "Restricted  Stock Unit" shall mean any unit granted under Section 6(c)
of the Plan  evidencing the right to receive a Share (or a cash payment equal to
the Fair Market Value of a Share) at some future date.

     (x) "Rule 16b-3" shall mean Rule 16b-3  promulgated  by the  Securities and
Exchange Commission under the Exchange Act or any successor rule or regulation.

     (y) "Shares" shall mean shares of Common Stock,  par value $1.00 per share,
of the Company or such other  securities  or  property as may become  subject to
Awards pursuant to an adjustment made under Section 4(c) of the Plan.

     (z) "Stock  Appreciation  Right" shall mean any right granted under Section
6(b) of the Plan.


Section 3.  Administration.
--------------------------

     (a) Power and Authority of the Committee. The Plan shall be administered by
the Committee.  Subject to the express  provisions of the Plan and to applicable
law,  the  Committee  shall  have full  power and  authoriy  to:  (i)  designate
Participants;  (ii)  determine the type or types of Awards to be granted to each
Participant  under the Plan;  (iii) determine the number of Shares to be covered
by (or the method by which  payments  or other  rights are to be  calculated  in
connection  with) each Award;  (iv)  determine  the terms and  conditions of any
Award or Award  Agreement;  (v) amend the terms and  conditions  of any Award or
Award Agreement, provided, however, that except as otherwise provided in Section
4(c)  hereof,  the  Committee  shall not adjust or amend the  exercise  price of
Options or Stock  Appreciation  Rights  previously  awarded to any  Participant,
whether through  amendment,  cancellation  and  replacement  grant, or any other
means;  (vi)  accelerate  the  exercisability  of  any  Award  or the  lapse  of
restrictions  relating to any Award; (vii) determine whether, to what extent and
under what  circumstances  Awards may be exercised in cash,  Shares,  promissory
notes, other securities,  other Awards or other property, or canceled, forfeited
or  suspended;   (viii)  determine  whether,  to  what  extent  and  under  what
circumstances  cash, Shares,  promissory notes, other securities,  other Awards,
other property and other amounts payable with respect to an Award under the Plan
shall be deferred either  automatically or at the election of the holder thereof
or the  Committee;  (ix) interpret and administer the Plan and any instrument or
agreement,  including an Award  Agreement,  relating to the Plan; (x) establish,
amend, suspend or waive such rules and regulations and appoint such agents as it
shall deem appropriate for the proper  administration of the Plan; and (xi) make
any other  determination  and take any other  action  that the  Committee  deems
necessary or desirable  for the  administration  of the Plan.  Unless  otherwise
expressly   provided   in   the   Plan,   all   designations,    determinations,
interpretations  and other  decisions  under or with  respect to the Plan or any
Award shall be within the sole  discretion of the Committee,  may be made at any
time and shall be final, conclusive and binding upon any Participant, any holder
or beneficiary of any Award and any employee of the Company or any Affiliate.

     (b) Power and Authority of the Board of Directors. Notwithstanding anything
to the contrary  contained  herein,  the Board may, at any time and from time to
time,  without  any further  action of the  Committee,  exercise  the powers and
duties of the Committee under the Plan.

Section 4.  Shares Available for Awards.
---------------------------------------

     (a) Shares Available.  Subject to adjustment as provided in Section 4(c) of
the Plan,  the  aggregate  number of Shares which may be issued under all Awards
under  the  Plan  shall be  1,500,000;  provided,  however,  that a  maximum  of
1,500,000  Shares  shall  be  available  for  issuance  pursuant  to  Awards  of
Restricted Stock and Restricted Stock Units.  Shares to be issued under the Plan
will be authorized but unissued Shares.  If any Shares covered by an Award or to
which  an Award  relates  are not  purchased  or are  forfeited,  or if an Award
otherwise  terminates without delivery of any Shares,  then the number of Shares
counted  against the aggregate  number of Shares  available  under the Plan with
respect to such  Award,  to the extent of any such  forfeiture  or  termination,
shall again be available for granting Awards under the Plan. Notwithstanding the
foregoing,  the number of Shares available for granting  Incentive Stock Options
under the Plan shall not exceed 1,500,000,  subject to adjustment as provided in
the Plan and subject to the  provisions of Section 422 or 424 of the Code or any
successor provision.

     (b)  Accounting  for Awards.  For  purposes of this  Section 4, if an Award
entitles the holder thereof to receive or purchase Shares,  the number of Shares
covered by such Award or to which  such  Award  relates  shall be counted on the
date of grant of such Award against the aggregate number of Shares available for
granting Awards under the Plan.

     (c)  Adjustments.  In the event that the Committee shall determine that any
dividend  or other  distribution  (whether  in the form of cash,  Shares,  other
securities  or other  property),  recapitalization,  stock split,  reverse stock
split, reorganization,  merger, consolidation,  split-up, spin-off, combination,
repurchase or exchange of Shares or other securities of the Company, issuance of
warrants or other rights to purchase  Shares or other  securities of the Company
or other similar corporate  transaction or event affects the Shares such that an
adjustment is determined by the Committee to be  appropriate in order to prevent
dilution or  enlargement  of the benefits or potential  benefits  intended to be
made available  under the Plan,  then the Committee  shall, in such manner as it
may deem  equitable,  adjust any or all of (i) the number and type of Shares (or
other  securities or other  property) that thereafter may be made the subject of
Awards,  (ii) the  number  and type of  Shares  (or  other  securities  or other
property) subject to outstanding Awards and (iii) the purchase or exercise price
with respect to any Award; provided,  however, that the number of Shares covered
by any Award or to which such Award relates shall always be a whole number.

     (d) Award Limitations Under the Plan. No Eligible Person may be granted any
Award or  Awards  under the  Plan,  the value of which  Award or Awards is based
solely on an increase in the value of the Shares after the date of grant of such
Award or Awards, for more than 200,000 Shares (subject to adjustment as provided
in  Section  4(c) of the  Plan)  in the  aggregate  in any  calendar  year.  The
foregoing  annual  limitation  specifically  includes  the grant of any Award or
Awards  representing  "qualified  performance-based   compensation"  within  the
meaning of Section 162(m) of the Code.

Section 5.  Eligibility.
-----------------------

     Any Eligible  Person shall be eligible to be designated a  Participant.  In
determining  which Eligible  Persons shall receive an Award and the terms of any
Award,  the Committee may take into account the nature of the services  rendered
by the respective Eligible Persons, their present and potential contributions to
the  success  of the  Company or such other  factors  as the  Committee,  in its
discretion,  shall deem relevant.  Notwithstanding  the foregoing,  an Incentive
Stock Option may only be granted to full-time or part-time employees (which term
as used herein includes, without limitation, officers and Directors who are also
employees), and an Incentive Stock Option shall not be granted to an employee of
an Affiliate  unless such  Affiliate is also a "subsidiary  corporation"  of the
Company  within  the  meaning  of  Section  424(f) of the Code or any  successor
provision.

Section 6.  Awards.
------------------

     (a)  Options.  The  Committee  is hereby  authorized  to grant  Options  to
Eligible  Persons  with  the  following  terms  and  conditions  and  with  such
additional terms and conditions not inconsistent with the provisions of the Plan
as the Committee shall determine:

            (i) Exercise Price. The purchase price per Share  purchasable  under
an Option shall be determined by the  Committee;  provided,  however,  that such
purchase  price shall not be less than 100% of the Fair Market  Value of a Share
on the date of grant of such Option.

            (ii) Option  Term.   The term of each  Option shall be  fixed by the
Committee.

            (iii) Time and Method of Exercise. The Committee shall determine the
time or times at which an Option  may be  exercised  in whole or in part and the
method  or  methods  by  which,  and  the  form  or  forms  (including,  without
limitation,  cash, Shares,  promissory notes, other securities,  other Awards or
other property,  or any combination  thereof,  having a Fair Market Value on the
exercise date equal to the applicable  exercise price) in which,  payment of the
exercise price with respect thereto may be made or deemed to have been made.

            (iv)  Reload  Options.  The  Committee  may  grant  Reload  Options,
separately or together with another  Option,  pursuant to which,  subject to the
terms and  conditions  established by the Committee,  the  Participant  would be
granted a new Option  when the  payment of the  exercise  price of a  previously
granted  option  is made by the  delivery  of  Shares  owned by the  Participant
pursuant to Section 6(a)(iii) hereof or the relevant  provisions of another plan
of the  Company,  and/or when Shares are  tendered or withheld as payment of the
amount to be withheld under  applicable  income tax laws in connection  with the
exercise  of an Option,  which new  Option  would be an Option to  purchase  the
number of Shares not  exceeding  the sum of (A) the number of Shares so provided
as  consideration  upon the exercise of the  previously  granted option to which
such Reload  Option  relates and (B) the number of Shares,  if any,  tendered or
withheld as payment of the amount to be withheld  under  applicable  tax laws in
connection  with the exercise of the option to which such Reload Option  relates
pursuant to the relevant  provisions  of the plan or agreement  relating to such
option. Reload Options may be granted with respect to Options previously granted
under the Plan or any other  stock  option plan of the Company or may be granted
in connection  with any Option  granted under the Plan or any other stock option
plan of the Company at the time of such grant.  Such Reload Options shall have a
per share  exercise  price equal to the Fair Market Value of one Share as of the
date  of  grant  of  the  new  Option.  Any Reload  Option  shall be  subject to
availability of sufficient  Shares for grant under the Plan.  Shares surrendered
as part or all of the exercise price of the Option to which it relates that have
been owned by the optionee less than six months will not be counted for purposes
of determining  the number of Shares that may  be purchased pursuant to a Reload
Option.

      (b) Stock Appreciation Rights. The Committee is hereby authorized to grant
Stock  Appreciation  Rights to Eligible Persons subject to the terms of the Plan
and any applicable Award Agreement. A Stock Appreciation Right granted under the
Plan shall confer on the holder thereof a right to receive upon exercise thereof
the  excess of (i) the Fair  Market  Value of one Share on the date of  exercise
(or, if the Committee shall so determine,  at any time during a specified period
before or after  the date of  exercise)  over (ii) the grant  price of the Stock
Appreciation Right as specified by the Committee,  which price shall not be less
than  100% of the Fair  Market  Value  of one  Share on the date of grant of the
Stock  Appreciation  Right.  Subject to the terms of the Plan and any applicable
Award Agreement,  the grant price, term, methods of exercise, dates of exercise,
methods  of  settlement  and  any  other  terms  and  conditions  of  any  Stock
Appreciation  Right shall be as determined by the  Committee.  The Committee may
impose such conditions or restrictions on the exercise of any Stock Appreciation
Right as it may deem appropriate.

      (c) Restricted  Stock and Restricted  Stock Units. The Committee is hereby
authorized to grant Awards of  Restricted  Stock and  Restricted  Stock Units to
Eligible  Persons  with  the  following  terms  and  conditions  and  with  such
additional terms and conditions not inconsistent with the provisions of the Plan
as the Committee shall determine:

            (i)  Restrictions.  Shares of Restricted  Stock and Restricted Stock
Units  shall  be  subject  to such  restrictions  as the  Committee  may  impose
(including,  without limitation,  any limitation on the right to vote a Share of
Restricted Stock or the right to receive any dividend or other right or property
with respect thereto), which restrictions may lapse separately or in combination
at such time or times,  in such  installments  or otherwise as the Committee may
deem appropriate.

            (ii) Stock  Certificates;  Delivery of Shares.  Any Restricted Stock
granted under the Plan shall be evidenced by issuance of a stock  certificate or
certificates,  which  certificate or certificates  shall be held by the Company.
Such  certificate  or  certificates  shall  be  registered  in the  name  of the
Participant and shall bear an appropriate  legend  referring to the restrictions
applicable to such Restricted Stock. Stock  certificates  registered in the name
of the  Participant  shall be delivered to the  Participant  promptly  after the
applicable  restrictions  lapse or are waived.  In the case of Restricted  Stock
Units,  no Shares shall be issued at the time such Awards are granted.  Upon the
lapse or waiver of restrictions and the restricted period relating to Restricted
Stock Units evidencing the right to receive Shares,  such Shares shall be issued
and delivered to the holder of the Restricted Stock Units.

            (iii) Forfeiture.  Except as otherwise  determined by the Committee,
upon a  Participant's  termination of employment  (as determined  under criteria
established by the  Committee)  during the applicable  restriction  period,  all
Shares  of  Restricted  Stock  and  all  Restricted  Stock  Units  held  by  the
Participant  at such time shall be  forfeited  and  reacquired  by the  Company;
provided,  however, that the Committee may, when it finds that a waiver would be
in the  best  interest  of the  Company,  waive  in  whole or in part any or all
remaining  restrictions with respect to Shares of Restricted Stock or Restricted
Stock Units.

      (d)  Performance  Awards.  The  Committee  is hereby  authorized  to grant
Performance  Awards to Eligible Persons subject to the terms of the Plan and any
applicable Award Agreement.  A Performance  Award granted under the Plan (i) may
be  denominated  or  payable in cash,  Shares  (including,  without  limitation,
Restricted Stock and Restricted Stock Units), other securities,  other Awards or
other  property and (ii) shall confer on the holder thereof the right to receive
payments,  in whole or in part, upon the achievement of such  performance  goals
during such performance periods as the Committee shall establish. Subject to the
terms of the Plan and any applicable Award Agreement,  the performance  goals to
be achieved during any performance period, the length of any performance period,
the  amount of any  Performance  Award  granted,  the  amount of any  payment or
transfer to be made  pursuant to any  Performance  Award and any other terms and
conditions of any Performance Award shall be determined by the Committee.

      (e) Dividend  Equivalents.  The  Committee is hereby  authorized  to grant
Dividend  Equivalents to Eligible  Persons under which the Participant  shall be
entitled to receive payments (in cash, Shares, other securities, other Awards or
other property as determined in the  discretion of the Committee)  equivalent to
the amount of cash  dividends  paid by the  Company  to  holders of Shares  with
respect to a number of Shares determined by the Committee.  Subject to the terms
of the Plan and any applicable  Award Agreement,  such Dividend  Equivalents may
have such terms and conditions as the Committee shall determine.

      (f) Other Stock-Based  Awards. The Committee is hereby authorized to grant
to Eligible  Persons,  subject to the terms of the Plan and any applicable Award
Agreements,  such other  Awards that are  denominated  or payable in,  valued in
whole or in part by reference  to, or otherwise  based on or related to,  Shares
(including,  without  limitation,  securities  convertible into Shares),  as are
deemed by the Committee to be consistent  with the purpose of the Plan.  Shares,
or other  securities  delivered  pursuant to a purchase right granted under this
Section 6(f) shall be  purchased  for such  consideration,  which may be paid by
such method or methods and in such form or forms (including, without limitation,
cash,  Shares,  promissory  notes,  other  securities,  other  Awards  or  other
property,  or any combination  thereof),  as the Committee shall determine,  the
value of which consideration, as established by the Committee, shall not be less
than 100% of the Fair Market Value of such Shares or other  securities as of the
date such purchase right is granted.

      (g)   General.

            (i)   No Cash Consideration for Awards. Awards may be granted for no
cash consideration or for such  other consideration as may be  determined by the
Committee or required by applicable law.

            (ii) Awards May Be Granted  Separately  or Together.  Awards may, in
the discretion of the  Committee,  be granted either alone or in addition to, in
tandem with or in  substitution  for any other Award or any award  granted under
any plan of the Company or any Affiliate other than the Plan.  Awards granted in
addition to or in tandem  with other  Awards or in addition to or in tandem with
awards  granted under any such other plan of the Company or any Affiliate may be
granted either at the same time as or at a different time from the grant of such
other Awards or awards.

            (iii)  Forms of Payment  under  Awards.  Subject to the terms of the
Plan and of any applicable Award Agreement,  payments or transfers to be made by
the Company or an Affiliate upon the grant,  exercise or payment of an Award may
be made in such  form or  forms as the  Committee  shall  determine  (including,
without  limitation,  cash, Shares,  promissory notes,  other securities,  other
Awards or other  property,  or any  combination  thereof),  and may be made in a
single payment or transfer, in installments or on a deferred basis, in each case
in accordance with rules and procedures established by the Committee. Such rules
and procedures may include,  without  limitation,  provisions for the payment or
crediting of  reasonable  interest on  installment  or deferred  payments or the
grant or  crediting  of Dividend  Equivalents  with  respect to  installment  or
deferred payments.

            (iv)   Limits  on  Transfer   of  Awards.   No  Award   (other  than
Non-Qualified  Stock Options,  as hereinafter  set forth) and no right under any
such Award shall be transferable  by a Participant  other than by will or by the
laws of descent and distribution;  provided,  however, that, if so determined by
the Committee,  a Participant  may, in the manner  established by the Committee,
designate  a  beneficiary  or  beneficiaries  to  exercise  the  rights  of  the
Participant  and receive any  property  distributable  with respect to any Award
upon the death of the  Participant.  Each  Award or right  under any such  Award
shall be exercisable  during the Participant's  lifetime only by the Participant
or, if permissible under applicable law, by the Participant's  guardian or legal
representative.  No  Award  or  right  under  any  such  Award  may be  pledged,
alienated,   attached  or  otherwise  encumbered,   and  any  purported  pledge,
alienation,  attachment or encumbrance  thereof shall be void and  unenforceable
against the Company or any Affiliate.

            (v)  Term of Awards. The term of each Award shall be for such period
as may be determined by the Committee.

            (vi) Restrictions;  Securities Exchange Listing. All Shares or other
securities  delivered  under  the Plan  pursuant  to any  Award or the  exercise
thereof  shall  be  subject  to such  restrictions  as the  Committee  may  deem
advisable  under the  Plan,  applicable  federal  or state  securities  laws and
regulatory  requirements,  and the Committee may cause appropriate entries to be
made or  legends  to be  placed  on the  certificates  for such  Shares or other
securities to reflect such  restrictions.  If the Shares or other securities are
traded on a securities  exchange,  the Company  shall not be required to deliver
any Shares or other securities  covered by an Award unless and until such Shares
or other securities have been admitted for trading on such securities exchange.

Section 7.  Amendment and Termination; Adjustments.
--------------------------------------------------

      (a)  Amendments  to the Plan.  The Board of  Directors  of the Company may
amend, alter,  suspend,  discontinue or terminate the Plan;  provided,  however,
that,  notwithstanding  any other provision of the Plan or any Award  Agreement,
prior  approval of the  shareholders  of the Company  shall be required  for any
amendment to the Plan that:

            (i)  requires shareholder approval under the rules or regulations of
the New York  Stock  Exchange, any  other  securities exchange or  the  National
Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. that are applicable to the Company;


            (ii) permits repricing of Options or Stock Appreciation Rights which
is prohibited by Section 3(a)(v) of the Plan;

            (iii)  increases  the  number of shares authorized under the Plan as
specified in Section 4(a);

            (iv) permits the award of Options or Stock Appreciation  Rights at a
price less than 100% of the Fair Market Value of a Share on the date of grant of
such Option or Stock  Appreciation  Right,  as prohibited  by Sections  6(a)(i),
6(a)(iv) and 6(b)(ii) of the Plan; or

            (v) without such shareholder approval, would cause the Company to be
unable, under the Code, to grant Incentive Stock Options under the Plan.

     (b)  Amendments  to Awards.  Subject  to the  provisions  of the Plan,  the
Committee  may  waive any  conditions  of or  rights  of the  Company  under any
outstanding Award, prospectively or retroactively.  Except as otherwise provided
herein or in an Award Agreement,  the Committee may not amend,  alter,  suspend,
discontinue or terminate any outstanding Award,  prospectively or retroactively,
if such action  would  adversely  affect the rights of the holder of such Award,
without the consent of the Participant or holder or beneficiary thereof.

     (c) Correction of Defects, Omissions and Inconsistencies. The Committee may
correct any defect,  supply any omission or reconcile any  inconsistency  in the
Plan or any Award in the manner and to the  extent it shall  deem  desirable  to
carry the Plan into effect.

Section 8.  Income Tax Withholding.
----------------------------------

     In order to comply with all applicable  federal,  state or local income tax
laws or regulations, the Company may take such action as it deems appropriate to
ensure that all applicable federal, state or local payroll, withholding,  income
or other taxes, which are the sole and absolute responsibility of a Participant,
are  withheld  or  collected  from  such  Participant.  In  order  to  assist  a
Participant  in paying all or a portion  of the  federal  and state  taxes to be
withheld or collected upon exercise or receipt of (or the lapse of  restrictions
relating to) an Award,  the  Committee,  in its  discretion  and subject to such
additional  terms and conditions as it may adopt,  may permit the Participant to
satisfy  such tax  obligation  by (a)  electing to have the  Company  withhold a
portion of the Shares  otherwise to be delivered upon exercise or receipt of (or
the lapse of restrictions relating to) such Award with a Fair Market Value equal
to the  minimum  statutory  amount of such taxes  required to be withheld by the
Company or (b) delivering to the Company Shares other than Shares  issuable upon
exercise or receipt of (or the lapse of restrictions relating to) such Award and
owned by the Participant for more than (6) months with a Fair Market Value equal
to the amount of such taxes. The election, if any, must be made on or before the
date that the amount of tax to be withheld is determined.

Section 9.  General Provisions.
------------------------------

     (a) No Rights to Awards.  No Eligible  Person,  Participant or other Person
shall have any claim to be  granted  any Award  under the Plan,  and there is no
obligation  for  uniformity of treatment of Eligible  Persons,  Participants  or
holders or  beneficiaries  of Awards under the Plan. The terms and conditions of
Awards need not be the same with respect to any  Participant  or with respect to
different Participants.

     (b) Award  Agreements.  No  Participant  shall have  rights  under an Award
granted to such Participant  unless and until an Award Agreement shall have been
duly executed on behalf of the Company and, if requested by the Company,  signed
by the Participant.

     (c) No Rights of  Shareholders.  Except with respect to  Restricted  Stock,
neither a Participant nor the Participant's  legal  representative  shall be, or
have any of the rights and  privileges  of, a  shareholder  of the Company  with
respect to any Shares  issuable  upon the  exercise or payment of any Award,  in
whole or in part, unless and until the Shares have been issued.

     (d) No Limit on Other Compensation Plans or Arrangements. Nothing contained
in the Plan  shall  prevent  the  Company  or any  Affiliate  from  adopting  or
continuing in effect other or additional compensation plans or arrangements, and
such plans or arrangements may be either generally applicable or applicable only
in specific cases.

     (e) No Right to Employment. The grant of an Award shall not be construed as
giving a  Participant  the right to be retained as an employee of the Company or
any Affiliate, or a non-employee Director to be retained as a Director, nor will
it affect in any way the right of the Company or an Affiliate to terminate  such
employment at any time,  with or without cause.  In addition,  the Company or an
Affiliate may at any time dismiss a Participant  from  employment  free from any
liability or any claim under the Plan or any Award,  unless otherwise  expressly
provided in the Plan or in any Award Agreement.

     (f) Governing  Law. The internal law, and not the law of conflicts,  of the
State  of  Minnesota,  shall  govern  all  questions  concerning  the  validity,
construction  and effect of the Plan or any Award, and any rules and regulations
relating to the Plan or any Award.

     (g)  Severability.  If any provision of the Plan or any Award is or becomes
or is deemed to be invalid,  illegal or  unenforceable  in any  jurisdiction  or
would  disqualify  the Plan or any Award under any law deemed  applicable by the
Committee,  such  provision  shall be construed or deemed  amended to conform to
applicable laws, or if it cannot be so construed or deemed amended  without,  in
the determination of the Committee, materially altering the purpose or intent of
the Plan or the Award,  such provision shall be stricken as to such jurisdiction
or Award,  and the  remainder of the Plan or any such Award shall remain in full
force and effect.

     (h) No Trust or Fund  Created.  Neither the Plan nor any Award shall create
or be  construed  to create a trust or separate  fund of any kind or a fiduciary
relationship between the Company or any Affiliate and a Participant or any other
Person.  To the extent that any Person acquires a right to receive payments from
the  Company or any  Affiliate  pursuant  to an Award,  such  right  shall be no
greater than the right of any unsecured  general  creditor of the Company or any
Affiliate.

     (i) No Fractional Shares. No fractional Shares shall be issued or delivered
pursuant to the Plan or any Award,  and the Committee  shall  determine  whether
cash shall be paid in lieu of any  fractional  Share or whether such  fractional
Share  or  any  rights  thereto  shall  be  canceled,  terminated  or  otherwise
eliminated.

     (j)  Headings.  Headings are given to the Sections and  subsections  of the
Plan solely as a convenience to facilitate reference. Such headings shall not be
deemed in any way material or relevant to the construction or  interpretation of
the Plan or any provision thereof.

Section 10.  Effective Date of the Plan.
---------------------------------------

     The Plan shall be subject to approval by the shareholders of the Company at
the annual  meeting of  shareholders  of the  Company to be held in 2001 and the
Plan shall be effective as of the date of such shareholder approval.

Section 11.  Term of the Plan.
-----------------------------

     Awards  shall  only be  granted  under  the Plan  during a  10-year  period
beginning  on the  effective  date of the Plan,  unless  the Plan is  terminated
earlier  pursuant  to  Section  7(a)  of the  Plan.  However,  unless  otherwise
expressly  provided in the Plan or in an applicable Award  Agreement,  any Award
theretofore  granted may extend beyond the end of such 10-year  period,  and the
authority of the Committee  provided for hereunder  with respect to the Plan and
any Awards,  and the authority of the Board of Directors of the Company to amend
the Plan, shall extend beyond the termination of the Plan.



                                     [MAP]



                                   GRACO INC.

                         ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

                              Tuesday, May 1, 2001
                                    1:30 p.m.

                        Russell J. Gray Technical Center
                               88-11th Avenue N.E.
                          Minneapolis, Minnesota 55413





                                     [LOGO]

GRACO INC.
88 Eleventh Avenue N.E.
Minneapolis, Minnesota  55413

This  Proxy is  Solicited  by the Board of  Directors  for use at the Graco Inc.
Annual Meeting on Tuesday, May 1, 2001.

The shares of common  stock of Graco  Inc.  which you were  entitled  to vote on
March 5, 2001, will be voted as you specify on this card.

By signing this proxy, you revoke all prior proxies and appoint George Aristides
and Mark W. Sheahan as Proxies,  each with full power of  substitution,  to vote
your shares as  specified  on the reverse  side and at their  discretion  on any
other  matter  which  may  properly  come  before  the  Annual  Meeting  or  any
adjournment thereof.

TO VOTE BY TELEPHONE - TOLL FREE - 1-800-240-6326 - QUICK *** EASY *** IMMEDIATE

Your telephone vote authorizes the Named Proxies to vote your shares in the same
manner as if you marked, signed and returned your proxy card.

o    Have your proxy card in hand.
o    Use any  touch-tone  telephone  to vote your proxy 24 hours a day, 7 days a
     week, until 12:00 p.m. on April 30, 2001.
o    You will be prompted to enter your 3-digit  Company Number and your 7-digit
     Control  Number.  Both  numbers  appear in the box in the upper  right hand
     corner.

Option 1: To vote as the Graco Board recommends on ALL proposals, press 1.

          When asked, please confirm by pressing 1.

Option  2: To vote on each  Proposal  separately,  press 0.  (You will then hear
these instructions:)

Proposal 1: to vote FOR ALL nominees, press 1
            to WITHHOLD from all nominees, press 9
            to WITHHOLD FROM  AN INDIVIDUAL  NOMINEE, press  0 and listen to the
               instructions.

Proposal 2: to vote FOR, press 1; AGAINST, press 9; ABSTAIN, press 0

Proposal 3: to vote FOR, press 1; AGAINST, press 9; ABSTAIN, press 0


          When asked, please confirm your vote by pressing 1.




TO VOTE BY MAIL

If you do not vote by telephone,  mark, sign and date your proxy card and return
the card in the  postage-paid  envelope  provided  (Graco Inc.,  c/o  Shareowner
ServicesSM, P.O. Box 64873, St. Paul, MN 55164-0873).


          If you vote by telephone, please do not mail your Proxy Card


Item 1.     Election of Directors            FOR ALL          WITHHOLD FOR ALL
                                          ---              ---

            NOMINEES:      William G. Van Dyke    J. Kevin Gilligan

                           Mark H. Rauenhorst


     (INSTRUCTION:  To withhold  authority to vote for any  individual  nominee,
strike a line through the nominee's name in the list above)

Item 2.     Adoption of the Graco Inc. Stock Incentive Plan

               FOR                     AGAINST                 ABSTAIN
            ---                     ---                     ---

Item 3.     Ratification of Appointment of Deloitte & Touche LLP as Independent
            Auditors

               FOR                     AGAINST                 ABSTAIN
            ---                     ---                     ---


In their discretion, the Proxies are authorized to vote upon such other business
as may properly come before the meeting. A properly executed proxy will be voted
in the manner  directed by the person(s)  signing below.  If you make no choice,
your proxy will be voted "FOR" Items 1, 2, and 3.

Please  sign  exactly  as your  name(s)  appears  at left.  In the case of joint
owners,  each should sign. If signing as executor,  trustee,  guardian or in any
other representative capacity or as an officer of a corporation, please indicate
your full title.


                                       Dated:                          , 2001
                                             --------------------------


                                       --------------------------------------
                                       Signature


                                       --------------------------------------
                                       Signature