Item #74512 SUCCESS WITH SMALL CAPITAL. Butler Brothers.
SUCCESS WITH SMALL CAPITAL
SUCCESS WITH SMALL CAPITAL

SUCCESS WITH SMALL CAPITAL

New York: Butler Brothers, 1901. Wraps. George and Edward Butler founded the wholesale mail order company Butler Brothers in Boston in 1877 and opened a Chicago warehouse in 1879. The company focused on providing inexpensive staple goods to independent general stores and supported their growth. This pamphlet provides entrepreneurs the road map for starting their own department store, covering everything from location and naming the store, to setting up of displays, profit margins, and stocking the store with products offered by Butler Brothers. “The reason why a man with a small stock of variety goods can hold his own against concerns that have dollars, where he has dimes, is simple,” the brochure states. “Every penny of capital is in quick turning goods.”

Butler Brothers ultimately moved all operations to Chicago by 1930. “Like Sears and Montgomery Ward, other Chicago companies that had large mail-order operations, Butler Bros. moved into brick-and-mortar retailing during the 1920s. By the beginning of the 1930s, it operated over 100 of its own “Scott” and “L. C. Burr” stores; at the same time, it had begun a franchising business that allowed independent retailers to become members of the “Ben Franklin” and “Federated” chains, which were supplied by Butler Bros. By 1936, there were about 2,600 Ben Franklin stores and 1,400 Federated stores around the country, mostly in small towns. During the 1940s and 1950s, Butler Bros. approached $120 million a year in wholesale and retail sales, ranking it among the leading wholesalers in the United States. In 1960, after it sold Ben Franklin and its other retail operations to the City Products Corp. of Ohio (which was bought in 1965 by the Household Finance Corp. of Chicago), Butler Bros. faded away” (Encyclopedia of Chicago).

Tall octavo: 52 p. with black-and-white illustrations. Original printed paper wrappers, bound with three staples. Some light edgewear to the wrappers, with a bit of rust to the staples; else very good. Scarce, OCLC locates no holdings. Very good. Item #74512

Price: $150.00

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