In relation to what, then, is it that silver has fallen? As it has not fallen in relation to commodities, there remains but one thing in relation to which it can be said to have fallen, and that one thing is gold. The phrase "the fall of silver" is the ingenious and cunning invention by which it is sought to cast on that metal the discredit of depreciation rather than subject gold to the suspicion of any change whatever. The term to correctly describe what has taken place would be "the rise of gold;" but that term is scrupulously avoided, as implying that gold does not remain immovably fixed. That gold has risen, however, admits of no doubt, except to those who willfully shut their eyes to facts of common observation. The true test of the increasing or decreasing value of any one thing is not to compare it with any other one thing, but with a large range of commodities generally dealt in. It is not of so much importance to know how much gold can be bought with a given amount of silver, as it is to know how much bread, how much meat, and how much clothing can be bought, and how much of all the things that are necessary to the comfort and well-being of the people can be bought with that amount of silver.

PROOF THAT GOLD HAS RISEN.

In order to demonstrate that gold has risen, I will bring side by side the gold prices of a number of leading commodities of commerce in 1873 and 1889, respectively, and the amount in silver bullion that in 1889 would purchase an equal quantity of the same commodities, by a table prepared at my request by the Bureau of Statistics of the Treasury Department.

Average export prices of the following named domestic commodities for the years ending June 30, 1873 and 1889.

Commodities.Unit of
quantity.
Average price of the year ending June 30 —
1873.1889.
In currency.In gold.In gold.In silver bullion.
Bacon and hams Pounds $0.088 $0.077 $0.084 $0.108
Butter do .211 .184 .166 .212
Cheese do .130 .113 .092 .118
Corn Bushels .617 .539 .508 .650
Cotton:
Unmanufactured, not sea Island Pounds .188 .164 .099 .127
Cloth, colored Yards .166 .145 .065 .083
Cloth, uncolored do .162 .142 .068 .087
Iron and steel:
Bar-iron Cwt 5.480 4.784 3.183 4.074
Pig-iron do 2.498 2.181 .953 1.220
Railroad-bars do 4.114 3.592 2.169 2.776
Lard Pounds .092 .080 .076 .097
Leather do .253 .221 .185 .237
Rice do .071 .062 .055 .070
Sugar:
Brown Pounds .092 .080 .056 .072
Refined do .116 .101 .066 .084
Wheat Bushels 1.312 1.145 .874 1.119
Wheat-flour Barrels 7.565 6.604 4.703 6.020

What does an examination of this table show? It shows beyond dispute that gold has risen in value.

A bushel of wheat that, according to the figures of the Bureau of Statistics cost $1.14 in gold or silver in 1873, and which, as will be seen by the table, still commands $1.12 in silver bullion, will to-day bring only 87 cents in gold.

A pound of cotton that in 1873 cost the purchaser, in gold or silver, 16 cents, and which still commands 13 cents in silver bullion, will bring only 10 cents in gold.

A pound of cheese that in 1873 cost the purchaser 1113 cents in gold or silver, and which now brings 12 cents in silver bullion, will bring only 9 cents in gold.

A barrel of flour which in 1873 cost the purchaser $6.60 in gold or silver, and which to-day commands $6.02 in silver bullion, will bring but $4.70 in gold.