Bisiness Going To Ar• 4014 :1:-; • Pearl and Ron Scissors Pearl and Ron Scissors own a cutting-edge belt-buckle store in Berkley. Motor City belt buckles DEBBIE L. SKLAR SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS hat do a swimming pool heater and men's ties have in common? Nothing, except when you're talking about Pearl Scissors of Oak Park, who has been selling belt buckles for nearly 30 years and is known by many as Mrs. Buckles, her citizens band radio han- dle. LU LU CC LU LU H- 34 Inside are some special belt buckles. Confused? There's no reason to be. Mrs. Scissors, 64, and her husband of 46 years, Ron Scissors, 66, own Buckles Unlimited, a small store on Coolidge in Berkley. An es- timated 3,500 buckles are on display there. Mrs. Scissors, who was born and raised in Detroit, began the business in 1967 when she decided she wanted to purchase a $650 heater for her 24-foot, above-ground swim- ming pool at the couple's home in Oak Park. "I started making men's ties and tak- ing them to craft shows to raise enough money to buy the heater," Mrs. Scissors said. "At the time, it was really difficult to find masculine prints. I remember going to New York once and spending $1,200 on men's fabrics. "I got to be known as the tie lady, but one day someone at a show asked if I had belt buckles. I thought it was a good idea, so I started selling them. "It turned out to be easier to sell buckles than ties. At the time, Nehru jackets were becoming really big and people didn't have to wear a tie with those." Mrs. Scissors never did get that pool heater. In 1974, she and her husband, a cer- tified public accountant and computer whiz, opened their Coolidge store. These days, Mr. Scissors designs special buckles for Shriners that the couple sells at nearly a dozen shows across the coun- try. Mr. Scissors, himself a Shriner, also de- signs lapel pins for Shriners units. Thou- sands of small boxes throughout the Berkley store attest to the pins' populari- ty. The couple travels to Shrine shows from May through September in their recently revamped motor home. Last year, they jour- neyed to places like Biloxi, Miss.; St. Louis; Virginia Beach, Va.; Myrtle Beach, S.C.; and Arkansas. "It's great to travel," said Mrs. Scissors, who breeds schnauzers in her spare time. "The motor home has everything but a shower. The license plate on the front reads: 'We're on the road again."' At the Berkley store, buckles start at $15 and pins start at $1. The store also sells a selection of leather belts. The Scissors will do custom belt-buckle work starting at $125. "I think people like us because they can trust us," Mrs. Scissors said. "Also, we sell quality stuff We don't sell junk. Best of all, though, we have a ball doing what we're do- ing." "When we started our lives together, we didn't have anything," Mr. Scissors said. "We had a $15 room we rented and that was it. We've earned everything we have today and we've had fun doing it. We have a very good life." ❑