CLOSE-UP SEND YOUR CAMPER Anywhere A BEAR!!! We'll In Ship The U.S.A. "Michigan's Largest Selection of Bears and Bearaphernalia" ESSENTIALS Charlevoix Continued from preceding page UNIQUE BEARS OF ALL KINDS PLUS . . . A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF PLUSH ANIMALS AND UNIQUE GIFT IDEAS.. [SPEC IAL!! FARMINGTON HILLS Hunters Square/Tally Hall 855-6577 1 3" JOINTED "ANTIQUE" [TEDDY BEAR Charlevoix NOW $1.00 with this ad — limit 1 per person WARNING THESE PREMISES PROTECTED BY is only a few short weeks away Round Lake in Charlevoix. Who Will Be Watching Your Home 541-5373 "Security is our middle name" LaBret Jewelers Showcase of Fine Jewelry and Gifts is now open at their new location • Fine Jewelry, Gold, Diamonds, Sterling, Ivory, Watches, Daum & Riedel Crystal. • Gemological Appraisals By Appointment. • Repairs While You Wait Done On Premises. CUBIC ZIRCONIUM TENNIS BRACELETS SEIKO WATCHES E`gr ALL CRYSTAL 25% OFF 307'0 OFF Sterling and Gold Plated Retail $200 Your Cost $ 160 IN ROBIN'S NEST • WEST BLOOMFIELD 7421 Orchard Lake Road Corner of Orchard Lake Rd. and Northwestern Hwy. 737-2333 Visa, American Express, Mastercard, Diners Club 6VRVVFW.?:P W€2, ng: PMVNOVnnalgrtelegqRtk„ f itNatg4e...0 28 FRIDAY, JULY 31, 1987 on Lake Charlevoix. In 1980 they bought the chalet on Lake Charlevoix that Earl had stayed in as a teenager. "I love the boating and the fishing, and we have good family times," Erman says. As he speaks, part of his family pulls up and rafts their boat onto his. His sister and brother-in-law, Melvy and Milford Lewis, own a con- dominium at La Croft. Milford first went to Charlevoix at age two in 1934. "I came with my family and stayed in rooming houses," he says. "I'm very nostalgic about the town. I remember the old bridge, and all the old landmarks. The Beach Hotel was magnificent. It was located where La Croft is now. On weekends people would dress formally and go to the Inn Hotel for dinner and gambling. There was also gambling at Koch's Colonial Club (pronounced Cooks) and the Beach Hotel. Gambling was not legal but was allow- ed in certain establishments. I remember all the people who came with their chauf- feurs and nannys." Lewis says he appreciates the scenery, the weather and the easy way of life. He com- mutes every weekend. His wife spends the summer and finds Charlevoix projects. 'I don't care if the sun is out," she says. "It always comes back. The sunsets on Lake Michigan are unbelievable. Charlevoix has always been in my husband's blood, and now it's in mine. We are both grateful that we are able to enjoy it." Many summer families left for Charlevoix the day school got out and stay through Labor Day. "We put everything in a trailer and moved our whole house," says Arvin Pearlman, a devoted Charlevoix fan. "The fathers commuted on weekends and played gin at the Beach Hotel. The mothers sat on the beach all day and played mahj at night. I remember the freedom we had, our parents never worried about us. The siren blew at night to an- nounce the curfew and we all went home." His father, Sam Pearlman, first went in 1936. "I went up with the fellas top lay golf and we did a little gambling," he recalls. "When I got mar- ried, we took the family. We went because the air was beautiful. A lot of Jewish families made the same trip every year." Pearlman returns to Charlevoix to visit his daughter, Helene Rothenberg, and her husband Ronald. Their condominium ,at the Dunes overlooks Lake Michigan. "When we were kids the park was always the meeting place," she says. "We would get dressed up every night. I remember reading my way through the whole Charlevoix library. We used to eat at the Turkey Wing and play bingo at the Lakeview Hotel. "Coming back to Charlevoix makes me feel like a kid again. There are so many memories. I went back as an adult because I loved it so much I knew my kids would love it too." A ttempts to trace the first Jewish families in Charlevoix lead to Edith Gilbert, author and local historian. In her book, Summer Resort Life: Tango Teas and All! Gilbert wrote: "Wherever the railroad built hotels, resorters followed." According to Gilbert, the Pere Marquette Railroad built the Inn Hotel in Charlevoix in 1886. "The railroad brought most of the summer people," Gilbert says. "They built the Inn Hotel to promote business. The Inn was populated by Jewish families, as was the