,V 0 00 0.: surplus stores in Detroit. The 69-year-old Army veteran, who suffered shrapnel wounds before leaving the service in 1945, says he's getting too old to run a business that takes in nickles, dimes and dollars when he and his son, general man- ager Gary Wine, can pull in much greater profits with their adjacent Barry's Air Tool business. "God's been very good to me, ex- tremely good to me," IrVing Wine said, slipping away from his active role in the surplus store to reminisce a little. "The business has been very good to me. I've prospered here . . ." Wine left the Army after nearly a year in the hospital recovering from his wounds. He says he received $2,000 in separation pay, came home on crutches, and went to work for George Spector at Spector Auto Parts in Detroit. Anybody could buy surplus goods from the government then, he ex- plained, but, everything else being equal, veterans had first crack. So Spector hired Wine, who soon found himself at massive government auc- tions bidding $3 for items which the government originally paid $300. "Seeing what they were doing in a short period of time I decided to go into business for myself," Wine said. He bought the lot on which Bar- , Ty's now sits and put up tents to sell his surplus, using stacked storage crates as shelves. Attention quickly focused on the new operation' after Wine put some old Army tanks across the street. He said he bought six tanks fr $25 each and wound up donating them to veterans organiza- tions. "Each tank had $200 worth of gasoline in it," said Wine, explaining why the deal was a good one. The ve- hicles were driven down Grand River from a nearby installation. "Today, Fd probably get 15 tickets," he said with a smile. "Over a period of time I built the building put four kids through college" because of that retail store. From the surplus business I went into manufacturing;z11air, tools, _which piisti one thew they{ makerin first importers of Japanese tools." Indeed, in some ways it's hard to tell where the surplus store leaves off and the tool company begins. In the tool company's warehouse are shelves and shelves of surplus stock, some of which just never was hauled out and taken over to the 'surplus store for sale. Gary Wine, 33, said his father "ran a One-man operation. If he didn't get it, nobody else went to get it. "We keep uncovering things in this warehouse that we should have taken over to the store a long time ago," he said. Some things are sold by the tool business through its catalogue. Wine said he just spent $100,000 on a new one. Among the items offered is a heavy-duty drill bought by Barry's for $300 from the government and sold by Barry's for $1,300. They are from a manufacturer which sells virtually the same item for $3,000. Another very profitable.item is a pipe-beading tool kit which Gary Wine said Barry's sells for $89.95 but which cost Irving. Wine 25 cents each 35 years ago. Barry's, Gary Wine said, hasn't bought any government surplus in ten years. "But all the cream is gone now," he added. Whatever hasn't been sold by the end of the Going Out of Business Sale, Gary Wine said, will be sold through special ads to dealers. Irving said other items will be taken "to the jun- kyard or I'm going to try to give it away." Among the things he plans to do- nate are fi4,p hundred 55-gallon drums of paint. Any Detroit or subur- ban business that wants a drum can have one to spruce up their place of business, Wine said. Also,' 100 pairs of Levi jeans will be given to five charities, along with 200 Navy middies. "My dad's been here a long time and he's helped a lot of people in the area," Gary Wine said. "We're a landmark. He wants to than'k everyone for doing business with him, over the years. ThatIs thv.eaion. , her !wants to give these ihings , awsy. Barry's is named after Irving Wine's first son, who became an at- torney and now owns the posh Quilted Giraffe restaurant in New York. An- other son, Hadley, is an attorney in Southfield, and a daughter, Sheree, lives in California. Irving's wife .Lil- lian works at the family business. The Wines own much of the prop- erty around their stores. They also own six retail buildings nearby,.rent- ing five of them, and two other build- ings. "We were able to buy (property) cheaper and cheaper and cheaper," .Gary Wine explained, "and since we were here we were able to rent it out and easily watch over it." As for the surplus store, "We just got tired of the retail business. I'm selling a pair of Levis for $20 that cost me $13 plus freight. Now I'm selling them for $10, $3 less than my cost. Now Dunham's has opened up. Hud- • son's runs sales $2 above their cost just to get ppople in. I can't compete anymore. People don't want to come to this neighborhood when you can go to Oakland Mall or Northland. "It used to be I was the only guy who had a pea coat, the only guy who had a sleeping bag, the only guy who had a canteen. There were three orig- . inal surplus 'dealers in Detroit: Sil- verstein's, Epps and Barry's. Silver- stein's went out of busiess. Epps went out of business. And we're the last one. "Now they don't have to come to me to buy a pea coat anymore. They can go to Brody's in West Bloomfield. They can go to any Hudson's .. . There are no: more genuine pea coats. They're all imitations. You can go buy a sleeping bag at any. Arbor Drugs. You can buy a canteen at any drugstore. We're just trying to take our loss and get out." But there are still things at Bar- ry's that you won't find in a drugstore, like metal ammunition boxes. A stack of them waist , high divided two sec- tions of the store. "Who's going to buy ammo boxes? Irving Wine was asked. Just then a mane walked, by, sift-. ing through coimtera of vviceuagootls, , .4 vp, rr Continued fin next page JP Bob McKeo wn 33 Gary and Irving Wine . are going to concentrate on their air tool business.