He later moved a few blocks away within the neighborhood of 19th and Highland, where he operated out of an old trolley barn throughout the 1920s and 1930s when the neighborhood became famed for its Kansas City Jazz during the Tom Pendergast era.
Customers paid 25 cents for hot meat smoked over oak and hickory and wrapped in newsprint. Perry's sauce was described as "harsh, peppery" (rather than sweet). Perry’s menu included such barbecue standards of the day as beef and wild game such as possum, woodchuck, and raccoon.
At his death, Charlie Bryant took over the business; he, in turn, sold it to his brother Arthur, who made the sauce a little sweeter when he relocated the restaurant, Arthur Bryant's, to 1727 Brooklyn in the same neighborhood.
Also, Arthur Pinkard, who had worked for Perry, helped George Gates found Gates and Sons Bar-B-Q.
Kansas City now has more than 100 barbecue restaurants; local boosters are fond of proclaiming that the city is the "world capital of barbecue." In the late 1970s, Rich Davis, from suburban Johnson County, Kansas, began marketing nationally a sweeter version of Memphis style sauce called KC Masterpiece, which the manufacturer presently claims to be the number one premium barbecue sauce in the United States.citation needed