Business Muskrat Ramble General Auto Parts has seen a lot of "business" in. 71 years in Pontiac. GEORGE DILA Special to the Jewish News R etail business peo- ple are always look- ing for creative ways to expand the appeal of their stores. Gas stations sell coffee and donuts, restaurants offer gifts and clothing, discount stores lease space to fast-food joints, and supermarkets become homes for bank branches. But none of these combina- tions compare to the one put together by Sam Toby many decades ago at his place of business north of Detroit — an auto salvage yard where he sold used-car parts, but also traded in muskrat meat and hosted illegal cock fights in the back. "See this," says Mel Toby, pointing to a faint, oval-shaped scar high on his left cheek. "I got that when I was about 10 Mel and Bernie Toby of General Auto parts. years old, from one of the roosters." He laughs, then explains. "I kicked at it and it Flint, ended up in the Detroit area flew up and got me." where he met and married Ethel Mel and Bernie Toby, two of Sam's Standler. They had three boys, three sons, run the business now, Bernard, Melvin and Charles. In General Auto Parts in Pontiac. It's in 1939, Sam became part owner of an the same location as when their father auto salvage yard that an acquain- ran it, but you won't find muskrat tance had started 10 years earlier. pelts or roosters anymore. Around 1950 he bought his partner Mel, 57, is pleasantly round, with out. gray, wavy hair and silver-rimmed The location of General Auto glasses. Bernie is a trimmer 59, with Parts, about a mile south of down- gray curly hair. The brothers laugh a town Pontiac on what for years was lot, and love to tell stories. This is the called South Saginaw, but is now story they tell about their father: called Woodward Avenue, has not Samuel Toyb, born in White changed since 1929. But it did start Russia, came to America as a kid in out a lot smaller. 1920. An Ellis Island immigration "This was the original building," clerk decided Toyb was too hard a Mel says, pulling open a heavy metal name to pronounce, so he switched door. The old building, about 20 feet the "y" and the "b" and Sam set foot wide and 50 feet deep, is dark and on the soil of his new homeland with unused now. There are wooden a new last name. shelves lining the walls and wooden He grew up in Battle Creek and storage racks built down the center. "This is where the counter used to be," Bernie says with a sweep of his hand. "I remember from when I was just a kid. The front door was right there with a porch out front. Back there were all the parts. And all around," he says with another sweep of his hand, "I remember the muskrat skins hanging." "And roosters in cages," adds Mel. Sam would pay amateur trappers 50 cents to a dollar for a trimmed-out muskrat, only 25 cents for one not skinned. He'd sell the pelts to furriers, and the meat to the locals. No one remembers much about the cockfights. Salvage To New Behind the building was the wrecking yard. Until the early '70s, Sam sold mostly used parts, salvaged from wrecks, and from cars that sim- ply ran out of gas, figuratively speak- ing. Then he went out of the salvage business and started stocking more new and rebuilt parts. There are still a few of the old used parts around, gathering dust. Mel lifts up the end of a '49 Chevy transmission, and a Ford transmission, "probably a '65," he, guesses. Bernie picks up a round housing he says is a '44 distributor. There is a rack of brand new leaf springs, from the '50s and '60s. "And this," Mel says, indicating a monstrous floor scale, "is what he used to weigh radiators on. He paid by the pound for used radiators. The copper," he explains. But this wasn't Sam's only auto parts business. In the '50s he opened a second store, Bagley Auto Parts, on the other side of Pontiac. For sev- eral years, Bernie and Mel ran that store, in friendly competi- tion with their father. Their brother Chuck, now an attor- ney in Oakland County, worked there when he was a student at the Detroit College of Law. But in 1972, when their father was ready to retire, the brothers sold Bagley Auto Parts and took over General Auto Parts. They've been running it together ever since. Sam died in 1984 at age 77. Ethel, now 88, lives near her sons in West Bloomfield. "She walks every day," says Mel. "And plays the piano," adds Bernie. The original building has been added to three times, and now covers about 5,000 square feet. And how many parts do they stock? "I don't know," says Mel, laughing, "thousands and thousands." The store is open 365 days a year, and since there are only two part-time employees to help Mel and Bernie, one of the brothers is always there, and usually both of them. They've never had a computer. The 9/29 I 2000 R3