. History of Cass County Indiana : From its earliest settlement to the present time : with biographical sketches and reference to biographies previously compiled. ttle farm—one that sus-tained him in his later years and now adds considerably to the incomeof his son. Since William Heffley came into ownership of the place,he has added something to it in improvement as well as in acreage, andthe place of seventy acres is more expansive now by some twenty has improved the building in many ways, and made of it a prosper-ous and well kept place. Mr. Heffley owns a fine residence in Logansi^


. History of Cass County Indiana : From its earliest settlement to the present time : with biographical sketches and reference to biographies previously compiled. ttle farm—one that sus-tained him in his later years and now adds considerably to the incomeof his son. Since William Heffley came into ownership of the place,he has added something to it in improvement as well as in acreage, andthe place of seventy acres is more expansive now by some twenty has improved the building in many ways, and made of it a prosper-ous and well kept place. Mr. Heffley owns a fine residence in Logansi^ort, which he built him-self, as well as having erected the buildings on his farm. He attendsthe Methodist Episcopal church and politically he gives his aid to theRepublican party. On November 25, 1908, Mr. Heffley was married to Mrs. ElizabethPotthoff Miller, the daughter of John and Fredericka (Eberlein) Pott-hoff, who were early settlers in Cass county. Charles A. Enyart. Charles A. Enyart has for the past twenty-fiveyears been continuously engaged in carrying mail in Logansport, inwhich city he was born, reared and passed his days thus far. He is the. HISTORY OF CASS COUNTY 1137 son of Pearson and Martha J. (Gearhart) Enyart, and the grandson ofBenjamin and Sarah Enyart. Pearson Enyart was born in Hamilton county, Ohio, on December28, 1828, and when he was six years old accompanied his parents toCass county. In those early days the region was infested with Indiansand wild animals, and the lives of the sturdy pioneer settlers were muchharassed by the unwelcome attentions of these older inhalntants of thecountry. Pearson Enyart was reared in a log cabin on the old place inClay township, and his boyhood days were passed for the most part inthe strenuous toil of grubbing and clearing up the wilderness farm and^assisting in the cultivation of such crops as were practicable under theconditions. In j^oung manhood he married Martha Gearhart and soonthereafter moved to Logansport,


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