Monday, December 11, at the Highland Park Funeral Home; entombment will be in the Highland Park Mausoleum. Friends may call from 1-2 p.m. Monday at the funeral home. The family suggests contributions to the Zion United Church of Christ Memorial Fund or to Heart of America Hospice.
Mrs. Bartz was born in Harrison, NE, and had lived in the Kansas City area for 72 years, moving from Lowry City, MO. She and her husband, the late Fred Bartz, owned and operated a vegetable farm in Wyandotte County for 34 years. Prior to that, she was manager of the lunch counter at F.W. Woolworth Co. in Kansas City, MO, from
1922-1931. She had also taught at a one room schoolhouse in Lowry City, MO. She was a member of the Zion United Church of Christ and the Martha Circle and the Women's Fellowship at the church. She is survived by two daughters, Helen Steffey, Shawnee, KS, and Marie Eils, Lenexa, KS; five grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren.
December 09, 1995
The Kansas City Star
Monday, December 11, at the Highland Park Funeral Home; entombment will be in the Highland Park Mausoleum. Friends may call from 1-2 p.m. Monday at the funeral home. The family suggests contributions to the Zion United Church of Christ Memorial Fund or to Heart of America Hospice.
Mrs. Bartz was born in Harrison, NE, and had lived in the Kansas City area for 72 years, moving from Lowry City, MO. She and her husband, the late Fred Bartz, owned and operated a vegetable farm in Wyandotte County for 34 years. Prior to that, she was manager of the lunch counter at F.W. Woolworth Co. in Kansas City, MO, from
1922-1931. She had also taught at a one room schoolhouse in Lowry City, MO. She was a member of the Zion United Church of Christ and the Martha Circle and the Women's Fellowship at the church. She is survived by two daughters, Helen Steffey, Shawnee, KS, and Marie Eils, Lenexa, KS; five grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren.
December 09, 1995
The Kansas City Star
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