DYE, Cpl. Keith Ellsworth
DYE
Posted By: Sharon R Becker (email)
Date: 3/18/2013 at 09:48:58
The Globe Gazette
Mason City, Cerro Gordo County, Iowa
Monday, April 03, 1944, Page 21Cpl. Keith E. Dye
Reported Wounded in MediterraneanThe war department announced Monday that Cpl. Keith E. Dye, 118 13th N. E. was wounded in the Mediterranean area.
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The Globe Gazette
Mason City, Cerro Gordo County, Iowa
Thursday, August 24, 1944, Page 6To Honor Memory of Cpl. Dye at Radio Chapel on Sunday
Services at 3 o’clock With Rev. Sentman in Charge;Killed June 1
Memorial services for Cpl. Keith E. Dye, killed in action in Italy on June 1, will be held at Radio Chapel Sunday afternoon at 3 o’clock, with the Rev. Carl J. Sentman in charge. Patriotic organizations are invited to be present with their colors.
Cpl. Dye entered the service in April, 1943, and went overseas the following July. He had served in Africa and Italy. He had been awarded the purple heart for wounds received in action last Feb. 11, and had been returned to active duty.
Besides his wife, Virginia, 102 14th Place N. E., he is survived by a 21 months’ old daughter, Sharon Lee; his parents, Maj. And Mrs. Elmer E. Dye, Fort Leavenworth, Kans.; and a sister, also at Fort Leavenworth, all to be present at the services.
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The Globe Gazette
Mason City, Cerro Gordo County, Iowa
Monday, August 28, 1944, Page 111Cpl. Keith Dye Memorial Held
The Rev. C. Sentman Gives “Abiding Things”
“Rulers will come and go, governments will pass, but he that doth the will of God abideth forever,” stated the Rev. Carl J. Sentman in a message on “Abiding Things” at memorial services in Radio Chapel Sunday afternoon for Cpl. Keith E. Dye, killed in action in Italy on June 1.
The pastor based his message on the 13th verse of 1 Corinthians, chapter 13, which reads: “And now abideth faith, hope, love, these three, but the greatest of these is love.”
“Eternal love is the greatest. Not that we loved God, but that He loved us and sent His Son to be a propitiation for our sins. To rest on the Lord Jesus alone is the guarantee of abiding forever.”
Organ selections played while the people gathered for the services were “Prelude” by Handel; “Consolation” by Mendelssohn; “Prayer” by Guilmant, and “Andante Religioso” by Calver. Mr. and Mrs. Sentman sang “A Memory” by A. H. Ackley. Taps were played on the organ and a march selection followed as the people left the auditorium.
Colors were represented by various patriotic organizations.
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The Globe Gazette
Mason City, Cerro Gordo County, Iowa
Monday, October 30, 1944, Page 11MEMORIAL RITES HELD FOR THOSE WHO GAVE LIVES
Rogness Speaks for Services Held at Music Hall for 12
The great problem in rehabilitation of men in service will be to find something to do as significant as the services they have given on the battlefield, the Rev. Alvin N. Rogness, pastor of Trinity Lutheran church, said at the monthly memorial service Sunday at Music hall, commemorating those members of the army, navy and marine corps who have given their lives in the service of their country.
“The minds of these boys often reach high points of service that these things for which we fight shall live, even if it costs their life blood to have them live,” said Mr. Rogness.
“We have honor today those whose lives have been cut short by war. It is the price man pays for not having walked the ways of God. God did not make war. He didn’t desire their death. It is not wrong for us to say that God may take the blood shed by these and cleanse the earth of such pillage that has been our lot for several years.”
. . . The program was sponsored by the Veterans of Foreign Wars, with W. V. Clausen, commander of the post, in charge. Mrs. Harold Sayder sang 2 selections, accompanied by Mrs. Morris Laird at the piano.
The offering of symbolic tribute and roll call of departed comrades was given by Comdr. Clausen and this was followed by the presentation of flags and Gold Star citations to the next of kin assisted by H. A. Austin of the American Legion and by Cpl. Beverly Myers and Pvt. Jean Morley, WAC recruiting officers.
Those honored Sunday were:
Robert Harold Anderson
Jerold Richard Bond
Keith Ellsworth Dye
Willard Earl Dunton
Mickel John Garcis
Eugene Hall Kirshbaum
Louis Joseph Pion, Jr.
Ernest Hall Ruhnke
Robert Vance Ulin
Cecil Thomas Woldmoe
Lester Lee Williams
John Raymond GagnonThe ceremony was concluded by the firing squad under 1st Sgt. Frank Shobin, with Major Jack Cheyne sounding taps. The next ceremony will be held the final Sunday in November.
Transcriptions by Sharon R. Becker, March of 2013
Cerro Gordo Obituaries maintained by Lynn Diemer-Mathews.
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