The Graham Leader (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 90, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 10, 1966 Page: 4 of 34
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The Graham Leader, Thurs., March 10, 1966
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7
ON QUALITY FOODiGg
•-SHOP HERE!!!
1
' REGULAR GRIND*
C. W. Proffitt RitesHeld Monday
0
1
3 oozen71
223 9
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8
h
4
CB
CHEESE 49 %;
BEEF
29
BRICK CHILI 1 49
Spic, Devil, White
i
Yellow
19-or Pkg.
1 LB.
CAN
Gal. 79‘
3
I
•S3
:9
SPECIAL
L, '
I
POTATOES
Colorado
Weekend Record Sale
Russets
45’s
Hi-Fi's
$3.79
Stereo
i
-
Southside 66 Service Station
Graham
912 Elm
1
Swift's
All Flavors
HONEY CUP
—*
CLIP AND SAVE !
CLIPAND SAVE
CLIP AND SAVE
CLIP AND SAVE
CLIP AND SAVE !
Double
Stamps
KIMBELL'S RED PIE "
CHERRIES 5 S1
-------- t — - - - - - - - r -
More Motivation Needed
For Peak Performance
Larqe
Size
303
Can
HALF
GAI.
CTN.
Only 79c
$2.79
p 4 UK**”
I 1
I 1 '
1
((
WINNERs— Larry Williamson left, and Wayne
Bullock, right senior 4-H- electric demonstration,
will attend the District Contest
3268
2652e
DEL MONTE Dm A €
ENGLISH FmA.
420898
Donald Duck
"Frozen"
Orange Juice
KIMBELL'S
COFFEE
3 - 25c
5139
-
25 Bonus 54 5 Red Stamps
with this coupon and purchas of
Six Cans of
Meads Biscuits
Coupon Void After March 14, 1966
Crouch's Super Market
100 FREE
S&S Red Stamps
With Purchase of $10.00 or More
(Excluding Cigarette*) one per family
Coupon Void After March 14, 1966
Crouch's Super Market
BEST VALUE
TOILET TISSUE
11
WEATHERFORD — Ex-Angelina & Neches River Railway steam,
engine built in 1912, or display at Texas Railroad Museum
in Weatherford. Weatherford is 28 miles west of Fort Worth
and is the county seat of Parker county.
Every
Wednesday
601
INDIANA
KIM
PAPER TOWELS
RUBY RED
GRAPEFRUIT
KIMBELL'S
(AKE MIX
50 Bonus S&S Red Stamp,
with this coupon and purchas of
Any Beef
Roast
Coupon Void After March 14, 1966
Crouch's Super Market
GEIS GRADE "A" SMALL
EGGS
MISS SWISS
FRUIT PIES
KIMBELL'S
VANILLA
PREMIUM
YAMS
8
50 Bonus S&S Rod Stamps
with thia coupon and purchase of
Two Pkgs. Bett Crocker
Coke Mix
Coupon Void After March 14, 1966
Crouch's Super Market
: En 1
L i
i
SAUSAGE 2 98[
BACON 79
B
07]
WISHBONE FRENCH Large •
DRESSING63%’
SAVE
"ON YOUR"
FOOD
BILL
THIS WEEK
Plus Your Extra
Bonus sBS Stamps
I
25 Bonus SAS Rod Stempt
with thit coupon end purchas of
One J. W Nichol* Cutup
Fryer
Coupon Void After March 14, 1966
Crouch's Super Market
SWIFT'S BEST
An OHso Co0pAb-:................
See Vieow.
Half Gallon A A,
Square 4
Carton - A
TEFLON IRONING BOARD
PAD&COVER'
HOUSE OF RIGO
People are the chief irritant
to life at the top, according to
a panel of four high-salaried
chief executives brought to-
gether by the National Indus-
trial Conference Board
The president or chairman
is committed to a maddening
dependence on others to ac-
complish the objectives he has
set So the same problem ap-
pears and reappears : How does
the head man motivate his cm
ployees to perform at peak
ability?
W. Maxey Jarman, chair-
man of Geneseo. Inc., specu-
lated that some want sufficient
recognition He observed,
"Some you go to for advice to
make them feel part of the
inner circle Money is good for
some ; others don't care There
are people who need money for
status, not for itself."
"Fear will motivate some
people, fear of losing their job.
or a desire for power-doing
things and directing other peo-
ple A lot of things," Jarman
added
Robert C. Townsend, chair-
man of Avis, Inc., described
this as "the classical approach
to organization direction and
control." The result is that
KRAFT ill
L Miracle ill
Whip IV
Salad Oressin9 DV
155
«
esy *
10 49‘
Madeline Hollenbeck at Cole
Springs, Oklahoma. -
Survivers include his wife,
Mrs. Madeline Proffitt of the
home; two daughters, Mrs. Wil-
lie Druesedow, Cap Cod, Mass.,
and Mrs. Ann Gibson of New
Orleans, La.; four grandchild-
ren, and two sisters, Mrs. Viv-
ian Ferguson and Mrs. Joyce
James, both of Stanton, Texas.
Pallbearers were Mike Sols-
by, Benni Haswell, Bud Reed,
M.H. House, T.R. Pierce, and
Sam Kink aid.
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unun ••• '
ROOM DEODORANT siz 79d
BOLOGNA 3 ■ 98c
Q MRS. BAIRD'S STA-FRESH ec,
rea RDFAno 29
Funeral services for Mr.
Cecil Wilson Proffitt, 53, of
this city, were conducted 2p.m.
Monday, March 7, from the
Morrison Funeral Chapel. Rev.
Buford Stockard, pastor of the
Morningside Baptist Church,
officiated for the funeral rites
and burial was in the Com-
manche, Texas Cemetery. Fun-
erl arrangements were di-
rected by Morrison Funeral
Home of this city.
Mr. Proffitt, who resided on
the Newcastle highway, was
stricken with an apparent heart
attack and was dead on ar-
rival at a Wichita Falls hos-
pital.
He moved to Graham in 1958
from Coahoma, Texas, and was
a member of the Baptist church.
Proffitt was born February 10,
1913 in Ada, Oklahoma, a son
of Mr.” and Mrs. Thomas F.
Proffitt. He married the former
BEAUry APPLES
1 - 69A
6°579c6
% WITH PURCHASE OF GAS
Chicago Fire
NEWYORK-The great Chi
i ago fire, which occurred Oct.
8-10, 1871, destroyed 17,430
buildings and did an estimated
$175 million in damage, accord-
ing to the Insurance Informa
non Institute:
Roll 24c
Pkg 4.)
CROUCH’S
a P
MARYLAND CLUB
COFFEE
INSTANT COFFEE Mo '“d
15=
98/4
people work at 20 per cent of
their intellectual capacity, he
said, and are "desperately un-
happy."
He defines the problem as
getting people to "enjoy work;
be enthusiastic about it in the
search of corporate objectives.”
Harleston R. Wood, chair-
man of Alan Wood Steel Co.,
disagreed that the boss must
"hand a job performance de-
scription to the employee." The
right description of a job “is
not what it is but what it ought
to be," he said
Mr. Townsend went a step
further. "You shouldn't write
a job description down. It only
protects the mediocre man-
ager," he said, "a job changes
minute by minute. If the com-
pany goes down the drain, a
manager can take his job de-
scription out of the drawer and
say: ‘It’s not my responsi-
bility’.”
Walter T Lucking, president
of Arizona Public Service Co.,
observed: "Every 10 years a
company should have a bad
year That way you can tell
how good your employees are.
If you’re making money hand
over fist, it’s hard to run a
tight ship."
» ‛ 6 ( < » •
V10
59‘ COOKIES"”::
MILK “
10016
alM T0*~
2 Lb$ 25c
WRIGHTS Purk
A • ' '
3 PICNIC
PORK & BEANS
Au HaN
•N *k
K NrP
«VM A 1
39c ,
---- Ae) Kimbell's 3 MRS. BAIRD'S STA-FRESH -
0 19‛,/BISCUITBRED-T-
(( - 8" 1) POT PIES
1 With Purchase •,4 CHICKEN • Ae
" of $5.00 or More ■ ■ C
Exci. Mo TURKEY ■ U
■ BEEF •I «J
E 6-ounce $100
.) Cans I
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The Graham Leader (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 90, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 10, 1966, newspaper, March 10, 1966; Graham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1506078/m1/4/: accessed May 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Library of Graham.