i Conservative. SENATOR HAYWARD. As , long ago , that home-returning baud Of Greeks , victorious o'er outuuinboriug foes , The last hard niouutaiu won , saw sweet repose Aud safety ou the distaut oceau straud ; So ho at last attained what ho had plauued , Triumphaut over hate aud ouvy rose , Aud saw admittance to the seats of those Most honored of our nation , in his hand. But rest and ease were not for him to ask ; He would be building still with them that build ; He sought the cross , now that he had the crown. And as ho dressed him to his lofty task , With manhood's aspiration unfulfilled , Death stretched a grisly hand and struck him down. United States Senator-elect Monroe Leland Hay ward died at Nebraska City on the morn ing of Tuesday , December 5,1809 , aged 59 years. Ho was born at "Willsboro , Essex county , New York , December 22,1810. Senator Hayward's youth was spout on a farm. He received a common- school education , and was also permitted to attend seminaries of learning and select schools at intervals. He made the best possible use of all his advantages. Early in 1801 he enlisted in the 22d New York Volunteer Infantry. In October of that year , however , he became a member of the 6th New York Cavalry. With that he served in the Shenaudoah Valley during the summer of 1862. He did special courier service for General Banks during that year and also participated in each of the battles of the Banks-Jackson campaign. In the autumn of 1802 his health was completely broken down. Therefore ho was discharged from the army and re turned to civil life. Then he commenced the struggle for completing his education and also entered upon the study of law. By teaching district schools and by manual labor he subsisted himself and became a student at Fort Edward Insti tute , remaining until he graduated with honor. He worked his way through college by teaching mathematics , by book-keeping and by strenuous efforts , manual and mental. Self-reliance and self-denial made him sturdy and efficient. Directly after graduating he began , at Fort Edward , N. Y. , in the office of Judge Wait , to read law. He subse quently completed his legal studies at Whitewater , Wis. , and was admitted to the bar in 1807. Then he located per manently at Nebraska City. Senator Hay ward , from the beginning to the end of his useful life , carriec determination and persistent industry into all his enterprises and undertakings. Every task which confronted him was tackled with a persistent pluck that could result only in achievement. The citizens of Nebraska Oity , Otoe county , and the state have honored him by assigning him to various positions o : trust and responsibility. He was a member of the board of education for this city. Ho was a delegate in the Oon stitutional convention of 1875. He was nany times chairman of the republican state convention. In private and domestic life he was a model of fidelity , industry and temper ance. His love of home and family 'which is primary patriotism ) was only equaled by his love of his country aud its institutions. In 1898 he was chosen by the republi can party of the state as its candidate tor the position of governor. He made a strong and very effective canvass , speaking in nearly every organized county of the commonwealth. The labors then performed did much to undermine his robust and powerful physique. Being defeated by Governor Poyuter , ho at once became , by pressure of his friends and admirers , the candidate of the republican party for a place in the United States senate , and was , after many ballots , finally chosen to that honorable position by the legislature of Nebraska in March 1809. It seems cruel that just as a man has entered upon a field of usefulness and eniiuouce towards which his ambition and efforts have long been directed , he should be stricken down and all the hopes of his friends shattered. His death , deplored by family , friends and neighbors as a personal sorrow and ir reparable loss , is a state and national calamity. His steady fidelity to those principles of finance which alone can give an un fluctuating purchasing power to Ameri can currency would have made him a prominent and efficient member of the senate. But "Death opens the gate of Fame and shuts the gate of Envy after it. " The funeral will transpire at 2 p. m. , Thursday , Dec. 7 , from the residence , and the burial will bo at Wyuka ceme tery. Aarulernodern JOHN M. FORBES. , biography is so adulatory that the real character of its subject is completely concealed or dis guised. But the biography of John Murray Forbes , by his daughter , Mrs. Hughes , is a splendid exception to the rule. The style is terse , clear and attractively simple. There is no biography bettor , written during the year 1899 , audit is valuable for the lessons hi the worth of absolute honesty combined with intelligent industry and unwavering courage. TIIE CONSERVA TIVE commends the biography of John M. Forbes , by his daughter , to the teachers of the youth and to the pur chasers of books for the public libraries of the United States. Mr. Forbes was a great man. Big in brain , gigantic in industry and generous of heart. His life illuminates the glories , the benefi cent labors of patriotic private lifo and the possibilities offered to all who , like him , love their homo , their family , their country 1 THE CONSERVATIVE will at times quote extensively from this biography. KCONOMY. To save expense and retain cash in the hands of the plain people with which they can allure themselves into voting a fusion presidential ticket in 1900 the Chicago platform folks should not call a national convention. There is no need of it. The nomina tion of Bryan is already declared. Let him now ratify the late Texas candi dature for the vice-presidency and go the whole hog. The platform of 1890 , according to Colonel Bryan , is a platform for all time and therefore there is no need of a national fusion convention for 1900. Where is Watson ? Where is Sewall ? "J. Sterling TUKKISYS."J. TUKKISYS. Mort 011 scolds vigorously i 11 his radical CONSERVATIVE because the American people chop down so many evergreens for Christmas trees each year , and why does he sit idly by and not raise a protest against the useless and extravagant killing of turkeys- each Thanksgiving anniversary ? " Wahoo Wasp. Turkeys a hundred years old could not be as useful , even to a boardinghouse - house keeper as a pine tree of that age. The parallel between a turkey and a tree is evidently drawn by a goose instead of a wasp. The Louisville BRYAN AND Evening Post CHINN. pro tests against the candidature of ox-Governor Hogg for the vice presidency on the ticket with Bryan , and nominates Col. Jack Ohinn of Kentucky in his place. To Nebraska this Kentucky nomina tion is entirely unendurable , for in her estimation there is "chin" enough in the head of the ticket. A single carload of gold ore recently shipped from Deadwood to Denver brought" returns of $85,000.