LyonsThe Velvet Metropolis and Its Factories :'--- -. .. .;' .... -------"r '.'.T'Ti . ..." U4 f "L, 1 Iff ' ' .' ' . m If - wmml'-- 'V,.. , . SILK WORKERS ARK HARK-A UM EI), BARE-HEADED GIRLS. IN THE SILK REELINO ROOM. (Copyright, VM2, by Frunk O. Carpenter.) f . YONS, Franco, Oct. 13. Sperlul I 1 I Correspondence of The Hoe.) 1 1 I om lii Ihn Hilk renter of I he world, where for more than four inf urli I III' 11 II I K t L'OWIIH of the belles of all natlotiH have been turnrd out on common hand Iooiiih. Lyons makes about $ltO,OUU,uuu worth of 6llks and Bilk goods every year. Its satins and velvets go all over the world, and within the pnm few months It has been busy making l ho rich rd velvets which were worn at the coronation of King Edward VII. The city Is tho commercial center of middle France, and, next to Paris, the chief city of this republic. It took me eight hours on the railroad to cover the 200 mlleB between here and l'arls, and I now find myself In tho rich valley of the Rhone, In one of the moBt beautifully located of cities. Lyons Is surrouuded by hills. It lies on the lowlands, under tho mountains, at the confluence of the Rhone and the Saone. On the other side of the Saone are the Heights of Fourvleres, with a great tower upon them, up which we shall climb for the view. We walk through the town, passing the site cf a Roman palace In which the most cruel of the Roman em perors, Claudius and Caligula, wero born; we go over one of the Saone bridges and by a cable railroad are elevated to the foot of the tower. Another elevator takes us to the top, and we are 600 feet above the river, hanging, as it were, high over the city. Uchlnd us are the Golden mountains of Lyons, and beyond them, over a valley of gardens and treeB, aro tho mighty Alps, their snowy peaks forming a ragged silver man against the clouds. The day Is clear and we can see tho snowy cap of Moul Ulanc 100 miles away. Turn about now and look down Into tho valley. There Is the Khone, fresh from Its glacier cradle In Mont St. Gothard, and nearer still, flow ing almost at our feet, la the Saone, wind ing about through the town slda by side with Its twin sister, tho Rhone. Between the two Is the greater part of Lyous, and as we look we see tho Bllvery streams em bracing the municipal maiden in her silken clothes and going singing on together to the sea. Stop a minute and think whre we are. We are In the heart of one of the oldest parts of Europe and on the site of one of the moBt famous cities of France. This Rhone valley was a trade route In tho days of Julius Caesar and great fairs were held here In the middle ages, to which merchants from Amsterdam to Venice and from other parts of Europe came to buy and sell. Tho Gauls had a town on this site 600 years bi fere Christ was born and at the time Christ lived h"re was a Roman city. On this very hill c ne Roman emperor caused 20,000 Christians to be massacred and In the days of the French revolution tho Tribunal, finding th;it the guillotine would not kill thj Ljons aris tocrats fast enough, tied them together with ropes In rows of sixty and executed them by wholesale with canntn leaded with grape shot. The Lyons of today, however, devot Itself more to business than to politics or religion. It Is a great manufacturing center. It contains 000,000 people and with Its suburbs has about three-quarters of million. Standing here on th' tower you can see the smokestacks of Its car shops, tanneries and chemical work and there, across the valley, on the other side. Is the famous Croix Rousso (Red Cross), the hill where the silk makers live, where the fashions of generation have been woven and where today some of the most beautiful cloths of the world are produced. The hill looks but little like a manufacturing center. It has no vast brick buildings, walled with window, such as you see In the factory towns of our country; It has no smokestacks pour ing volumes of black Into tba clouds and K-ji-r.-r - y- .SS, --" ' '- It looks more like a residence section than an Industrial one. Still Lyons has hundreds of silk factories snd the nw.t of them are situated upon that hill. Suppose we visit it. We descend by tho Saone, cross the bridge and take the trolley car through the city to the cable station at tho foot of Croix Rousso. We go Into tho car, dropping a sou, or 1 cent, at the turn stile, for that is what is charged for tho ride. We enter a box car where a score of silk workers are standing, and in a mo ment find ourselves riding to the top of the hill. A few steps from the station above takes you into the heart of the silk Indus try of Lyons. We can tell It by the click! click! click! which Is heard on every street and In every hallway. The houses are lean five-story structures, built along alley-like streets, with narrow entrance doors. They look like tenement buildings and they are Indeed little more than tenements, great beehives filled with laborers, every cell of which Is a little factory. Most of the work in the great silk depar.ment of the Rhone Is done on hand looms, and there are 400, 000 men thus employed In this department. Even where power looms are used the work Is largely that of house Industry, several weavers having, in a single room, looms worked by electricity, paying therefor a few cents per day per loom. We enter one of the buildings and walk up the narrow stone stairs. We hear the clicking going on as we mount from story to story. The building Is rudely constructed and without modern conveniences. We knock at a door, pounding loudly in order that we may overcome the noise of tin weaving. A Frenchman In his shirt sleeves, with a cap on his head, opens the door and asks us to enter. He has Just left his loom and at our request he again goes to work. The loom Is old-fashioned, and he works it with his feet, throwing the shuttle by hand from one side to the other through the silk threads. He Is making a pattern of dress goods which may eventually be worn by some of the four hundred, .'r may shine perhaps on a Virginia belle at a White House reception. I ask him his wages. 11m replies that he earns 3 francs and a half, or 70 American cents, a day of eleven hours. He has be working at his trade GENERAL VIEW OF LYONS FROM FOU ten years, and is one of the best paid men In the building. Going on, we enter room after room. Each has one or more looms, with bare armed, bare-headed nun and women weav ing away. All kinds of silks are turned out and the wages in all cases are low. The men earn on an average 60 cents a diy and the women 48 cents. The best workmen sometimes earn from $1 to $1.23 and a very few as much as $2.40, or 12 francs per day. In some buildings we find the looms worked by electricity, the lightning hav ing been called to make brocades and silks for our women's dresses. The electricity Is furnished by a society at such a rate that a man gets electrical power for 5 cents a day and pays for his loom on in stallments. With such looms the men can make better wages, working In the same room In which their families have been living and working for generations. I have talked with many of the silk men of Lycns, both factcrs and laborers. I find a general belief that the days of suoh hcuse industry are numbered. Lyons has been gradually losing its standing as the chief silk-making center of the world. Other countries are coming into competition with it, and its trade is slowly but steadily falling. Germany is making beautiful rill's with the best cf modern machinery at Kre feld, not far from the left bank of the Rhine; the English have leng neen k':own as makers of fine silks, the Russians are doing some wonderful weaving near Moscow arid the Italians are rapidly regaining the place they held in the middle au os one of tho chief silk-manufucturing peoples cf the wcrld. It used to be that thj most of the raw f ilk brought from Chin came to Marseilles; a largo part of it new pots to Genoa on the North Gerrann Lloyd Atlatlc lines, and the output of Italian silk gooes steadily grows. The United States, howe.T, Is Injuring the trade of Lyons more than any of (he European countries. Before our civil war we annually contributed about $.10,0?).'VO to the Lyons silk weavers. Now we Moke 90 per cent of the silk we consume, and, not withstanding our enormous increase in wealth and population, our Lyoas pnrc'ias? RVIERES. da not amount to more than $10,000,000 a year. The French writes claim that the falling off in their trade i'i due to our pro tective tariff, which has built up the tllk industry of Taterson on J other American cities. In these places the silk is vr.ule In large mills, and the cost Is so reduced that American commercial travelers ere now selling American silks in Europe. We al ready weave two-thirds as much Bilk as France and cur silk exports may yet be come cno of tho features ot tho tmerlcsn commercial invasion of Europe. I am told that a number cf the Trench factors have already removed th.'ir plants to the United Stales, and that others are remolellng the'r mills on tho Amorioan plan. I visited this afternoon the biggest silk mill of this country. It has 420 looms and two or three times that many employes. The hands are bare-armed, bare-headed girls, well dressed and in many case good look ing. They are the daughters cf the mea who work cn the house looms and are tho descendants of many generations of eilk weavers. The mill Is somewhat like a great cotton faittry, save that more bright col ors are uued. In the reeling room thi threads are of all the hues ot the rainbow, and the thcusanda cf spools make a maze of brilliant tints and shades. The factory is well lighted, and it is equipped with all the modern conveniences of our factories. Tho wages arc very low and there ia no trouble in getting employes. I was interested In the velvet w.rks. Th finer of such goods arc made by house in dustry, although power looms are generally used. The weavers have found they can not make wages' by using their old hand looms and they have had them remodeled so that they can now earn 73 cents and up wards per day. Much of the velvet woven In Lyons is brocade, and that In most beauti ful patterns. Silk and velvet curtains are made, some of which cost as much as $800 a pair. I saw velvets today which sell for $70 a yard, and was shown curtains which require four months to weave. The finest of the velvets - are made In these little rooms. The velvet is woven about wires, the threads being cut through to the wires with a knife and the wires taken out. The vel vet has to be made thread by thread, each lice being cut separately, so that a slip ot tho knife would ruin tho cloth. I visited one factory which made 8,000 yards of red velvet to be worn at the coro nation of King Edward, and another where I was Bhowu specimens of furniture cover ings made for one of .hi Vauderbilt fam ilies at a octet of $21 a yard. Think of paying til for a chair Kail And this la what the stuff costs in France. The price will bo doubled by the lime it gels into one cf tho Vanderbilt palaces and is fitted on to its luxurious sof.us. Every time oik bi.s down upon it lie r s'.ie wl.l eovir a yard of it. It would make n.e ulicounortable to tit down on $42 at one Uiik The very best of tho Fri nch silks seldom get to the I'nited States, as our dutUs make them almost prohibitory. Velvets whU-h will Bell for $1 a yard in Lyous would cost $10 a j aid in New York and silk brocaiUjt at $3 a yard would be doubled in price after they had passed through our custom house and paid the charges of tha middle men. I have gone through some of the largest cf th9 Lyons silk stores. They are to hi found in buildings not unlike factories. You entcran unpretentious stairway and on the second or third floor may find a door v. I h a little brass sign marked with the name of the merchant. Entering you come into large rooms with long counters running through them. There Is no Bilk on view, for the goods are stored away in cases or drawers until brought out for customers. The rooms are well lighted and parts of them are walled with mirrors in order that the colors may be shown by reflected as well as by direct light. Some of the oldest styles are the most beautiful, and these are repeated from age to age, new designs are being continually invented an 1 the great est artists of France are engaged iu design ing. The French are noted as designers, and they have schools here which teach de signing. Some of the factories make pic tures in silk both for tho decoration and wall covering. The faces of the most noted men of France are thus woven as well as fancy pictures of all sorts. Lyons is doing all it can to foster its silk industry. It. has its technical schools which teach all branches ot silk manufacture. Young men come here from all parts of the world to study how to make silk, and many work in the mills for that pjrpose. There Is one school which charges from 800 to 1,200 francs a year as tuition. The 800 francs Is the charge tor Frenchmen and the 1,200 francs that for foreigners. In this school the best of modern silk weaving machinery is used and a great part of it bears the mark of American manufacturers. An American sewing machine sews the pattern cards together, and American methods ot weaving are employed. All kinds of silks, velvets, plain and figured goods are made here, under the superintendence cf the most skilled workmen, the boys daing the wort, themselves with the professional silk men, as overseers. I visited the Lyons municipal silk school, on the Croix Rous-se, after going through the silk factories of that neighborhood. This school Is sustained by the city, and li open only to Lyounese youths. Any Lyons boy who has reached the age of 13 can euter upon the payment ot $1.73 and learn all about silk weaving, designing and pattern making. The course of day study is ten months, and there Is In addition a night school, in which a course of three years U required. There are about 300 pupils In this school. They belong to the rich and the poor, many of them being the sons of common laborers. Every boy has to keep a diary ot his work, with the patterns ot the Bilks he has matt. and also copies of bis designs. The school teaches all matters about the breeding of silk worms as well as all kinds cf weaving and designing. The professor in charge, a kind looking o!d Frenchman, wearing a (Continued on Seventh Page.l