The News From Oneida Lake. Return to main
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2. Clancy goes Scuba Diving. (Halloween 00)
It’s
been a quiet week up here on the lake, but there was a lot of commotion a few
weeks back. Everyone was very upset with the new addition to Clancey’s
sign. The main topic of discussion over at the Eat-A-Lot Diner and at the
Bait-N-Brew was what to do about the sign. Stinky Williams thought it was great
and wanted someone to take his picture standing beside the sign. Father
Migliori was so upset that he called Sheriff Wysocki and demanded that he do
something. Sheriff Wysocki said there was nothing he could do seeing as
how that was Clancey’s profession . I guess I should explain a little bit about
Clancey’s.
Clancey McBeth and his wife Elizabeth McBeth (that’s right, Beth McBeth, and
she married to the name, go figure) are both morticians. They met and
married in mortician school and now run the Lakeside Funeral Parlor and
Crematorium - known locally as Clancey’s. Around Oneida Lake,
instead of saying, “He’s gone to meet his maker” or “He’s bought the Farm”,
they say “He’s gone to Clancey’s”. Ever since they’ve had the parlor, Clancey
and Beth have taken separate vacations. As Beth says, “people don’t stop
dying, and you can’t just leave them lying on the slab for two weeks while you
go off cavorting
around the country side on vaction” Beth likes to go to Europe and has taken
many vacations to Paris, London, and other glamorous Eurpoean cities.
Clancey, on the other hand, used to like to go fishing, and traveled all over
the world on fishing trips. About ten years ago, Clancey was on a fishing
trip in the Bahamas and tried scuba diving and was “bitten by the scuba diving
bug”. Now every chance he gets, he goes diving. Clancey and his
brother Thomas are the only scuba divers here on the lake. It’s many a
times I have driven down Muskrat Bay Road and seen Clancey walking out to the
lake in his diving gear. He even has one of those diving flags flying
from his mailbox. Everybody thinks he’s sort of crazy to dive in Oneida
Lake. At its deepest point, it’s only 45 feet deep and the water’s so
clear you can see all the way to the bottom. No need to dive down to see
what’s there. But Clancey really enjoys it. One of his favorite
tricks is to sneak up from under water on someone who is fishing and pull on
the fishing line real hard then pop up out of the water and scare the living
daylights out of them.
Clancey’s also on a quest (or was). Having watched many specials on TV
about people searching for wrecks and treasure, he had started his own search
here on Oneida Lake. Many years ago, before they paved route 31, Charlie
Kasoag (who was the Postmaster at the time) used to run the mail up and down on
Oneida Lake in the winter from Sylvan Beach to Brewerton
on a mail sled – an enclosed sled drawn by a horse. After route 31 was
paved, Charlie converted the old mail sled into an ice fishing hut. One
year they forgot to bring it in before the spring thaw and it sank. Clancey’s
quest was to find that old sled. To that end, he had outfitted his boat
with all sorts of depth finders, sonar and radar devices. Somewhat
excessive for a lake that was only 45 feet deep at its deepest spot and so
clear you can see to the bottom. Well, the last weekend of September
Clancey was out in his boat depthfinding, sonaring, radaring and scuba diving
around Clark Bar and he found it. It was in
18 feet of water and clearly visible from the surface.
Clancey and his brother hauled the old sled out of the water and carried
back to Clancey’s house. When they finally got around to cleaning it up
and looking inside of it, they found a human skeleton. Clancey was very
excited with this find, especially given the line of work he was in. It
was then he came up with the idea. He had always thought that the sign
at the funeral parlor was very boring and needed something to liven it
up. Why not hang the skeleton from the Funeral Parlor sign. He
spent the rest of the weekend working on that skeleton and on Monday morning,
there it hung – a full size real human skeleton. Beth McBeth was furious.
She demanded that he take it down immediately, but Clancey would have none of
that. “Our parlor will be known through out the county. We’ll have
so much business we’ll be able to add that new wing we’ve been talking about”
he told her. By Friday, the whole town was in a fray. Father Migliori had
the Catholic Women’s group leading protests in front of the Parlor. The
crowd over at the Eat-A-Lot were trying to organize a boycott - no one would
die until Clancey removed the skeleton. The boys at the Bait-N-Brew were
going to sabotage Clancey’s boat. Stinky Williams was still trying to get
someone to take his picture beside the sign. And Beth had left for her
mother’s saying she wouldn’t return until the skeleton was gone. Clancey
was determined to stand his ground. That was until the true identity of
the skeleton was found out. As required by law in New York State, when
any unknown human remains are discovered,
a search must be performed to find out the identity of the remains. Clancey had
reported the find to Forest Barton, the Onondaga County Coroner. Forest
found out (through the use of dental records) that the skeleton was that of
Reiley Kasoag, a long lost Uncle of Charlie Kasoag. All the Kasoags had
thought that Uncle Reiley had moved to Florida. Upon finding out that the
skeleton hanging from Clancey's sign was that of their Uncle they were furious.
They demanded that Clancey remove it immediately and they were planning to sue
Clancey for every penny he had. After long negotiations and the removal
of the skeleton, and the promise by Clancey to provide the “best funeral ever
seen on Oneida Lake” free of charge, the Kasoags agreed not to sue.
Clancey was very
disappointed. He has now ordered a full size plastic skeleton to hang
from the sign.
And that’s the news from Oneida Lake, where all the men have gone hunting, all the women have gone shopping, and on Saturday mornings, all the children watch cartoons on television.
copyright James W. Kelly, Oct. 01, at Oneida Lake, NY
Painting by Ed Defendorf of San Juan Capistrano, Calif. (a CNY expatriate)