This was a wonderful building. It's on the national register of historic places. Sadly, only the art-deco facade remains today. I was talking to my father about the building a while back and he said that it was one of the first "air conditioned" buildings in Kansas City. This was done by having huge blocks of ice delivered daily and placed in a basement room. I don't know how the cool air was circulated to the rest of the building. Anyway, this didn't last long. Once my great grandfather saw what the ice was costing him, he stopped the practice. Another funny thing about the building was the clandestine employee lunch room. The elevators only went to the ninth floor, but there actually was a partial tenth floor that could be reached by a stairway. The lunchroom was up there, and they had great, cheap food cooked on the premises. Apparently, the Kansas City Health Department never caught on.
The musical merchandise department, where the stringed instruments were sold, was located on the mezzanine that over-looked the main floor. It was all wood-paneled.
Bob











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