
Roy
Y. Gustin
Roy
Y. Gustin, 95, Centralia, KS, died Sunday, February 29, 2004, at
Crestview Manor Care Home, Seneca, where he had been a resident
since August 7, 1990.
He was born October 9, 1908, in the Keats-Manhattan,
KS area, the oldest son of Herbert A. and Anna S. Nelson Gustin. He grew up north
of Keats and graduated
from the Keats High School. Roy played 1st base on the local baseball team and
worked at the Keats grain elevator. He was a musician and played guitar, fiddle
and drums for barn and house dances. The guitar and fiddle he played were passed
along to him by his dad. Drums were his specialty.
It
was
at
one of
these
dances
that
he met Mary Newman from Centralia, who was to become his wife.
On April 30, 1932, he married Mary M. Newman at
Manhattan, KS. Roy worked for several ranches in the Manhattan area as a cowhand
and stockman. In the early
1940s they moved to the Centralia area where they farmed and raised livestock
on two farms located west and north of Centralia. During the mid 1940s
he was the mowing superintendent at Ft. Riley for eight years. He was a very
good welder and also taught welding to returning World War II service men. He
built several of his farm implements, a disk, a listed corn cultivator, and several
hydraulic hoist wagons. In the late 1970s he worked for Nemaha County driving
a rock truck and working on the road crew. He later worked
for
the Green
Thumb Organization, remodeling and repairing homes.
Roy was a man of variable
industry. He could do many things and his hands were rarely idle. He continued
to play in several dance bands for many years. His wife, Mary, played the piano
and his son, Melvin, played the sax with them. He also played the drums with
an old time band in Horton and was a member of square dance clubs in Seneca,
Corning
and Onaga.
His
wife
Mary
preceded
him
in
death
on
May
15, 1989.
Survivors are a son, Melvin, Seneca; two daughters,
Thelma Rose Latta, Marysville, KS, and Kathryn M. Smith, Axtell, KS; nine grandchildren
and 19 great-grandchildren.
Besides his wife Mary, he was preceded in death
by
three brothers, Leo, Lester, and Dale Gustin; three sisters, Adrena Johnston,
Nellie Johnson, and Minnie
Brown; and a grandchild James Robert Smith, August 8, 1961.
Funeral services will be 2 P.M Wednesday at Lauer
Funeral Home in Seneca, where he will lie in state after 8:30 A.M. Tuesday. The
burial will be in Centralia
Cemetery.
Memorials may be given for the First Congregational Church or the Crestview Manor
Care Home both at Seneca and sent in care of the family.