Full text: Cost of living in German towns

58 
ASCHAFFENBURG.* 
holdings, when two and three cows are kept, can any produce he turned 
into money. Some of the peasants cultivate fruit with success. Dessert apples 
and pears of good stocks are grown, and for the former as much as 8a. to los. 
per cwt. can be obtained, though cider-apples only fetch 6s. In the working of 
the farms the wives and daughters take a prominent part. Often, indeed, the 
great bulk of the work falls upon them, and the men only give a hand in the 
early morning or late evening during the busy seasons. TV here the work is more 
equally distributed the men take occasional " days off” from their factory em 
ployment, and the manufacturers are never unwilling to encourage their interest 
in rural life and labour. At least one Aschaffenburg firm, indeed, has a loan fund 
for the purpose of advancing money to its workpeople to enable them to buy plots 
-of land in the villages ; advances are made up to £7 10s. on any one transaction, 
and repayment may be made at Is., 2s., or 3s. at once, interest of 2 per cent, 
being charged on the outstanding debt meantime. Most of the properties are 
mortgaged to the extent of one-half, but their owners make steady efforts to free 
themselves from debt. 
Another Aschaffenburg industry whose workpeople live for the most part out 
of the town is the ready-made clothing industry. There are in Aschaffenburg 
about a dozen factories of different size engaged in the manufacture of men’s 
and boys’ clothing. The cutters, packers and distributors work and live in 
town, but the great majority of the tailors are scattered about in the villages of 
the Spessart, as the district surrounding Aschaffenburg is called. Work is 
fetched and brought back twice a week by rail and road, and at each visit 
of the workers there is a settlement of accounts. The amount which is paid 
in wages by Aschaffenburg manufacturers alone—for some of the tailors work 
for employers in other towns as well—is estimated at from £1,400 to £1,650 per 
week, the higher figure being the estimate of one of the largest employers 
of labour, while the number of workpeople of both sexes wholly or partially 
employed is placed at 2,500. In his last report the Factory Inspector for 
the district remarks—" The Wages in the main go to the Odenwald and Spessart 
villages. The often lamented migration from the country is in this way 
checked, and the money benefits the other manual occupations and visibly 
promotes the prosperity of the entire population.” At the present time 
the supply of workers is not equal to the demand, though a man can 
earn 4s. 6d. a day where he earned 2s. and 2s. 6d. 20 years ago. Men’s 
and boys’ clothes of a cheap kind are made exclusively, and the chief 
sale is to the towns of Rhenish-Westphalia, Alsace-Lorraine, Baden, and 
Wurtemberg, and to Switzerland and Holland ; not 10 per cent, of these 
Bavarian goods are sold in Bavaria. Every worker is restricted to a certain 
garment—coat, waistcoat, trousers, overcoat, as the case may be. In nearly 
all cases the machines used now belong to the workers : their cost is from 
£4 to £10. The busiest times are late spring and winter, and while 
many home workers have fair employment all the year round, an average 
would probably be from 30 to 32 weeks. It is seldom that a tailor Is 
without the help of some assistant, old or young, who relieves him of the 
simpler operations incidental to his work, like tacking, buttonhole making and 
button sewing, so that he may confine his attention to straightforward machine 
work. Now and then, however, a tailor owns a buttonhole machine and works 
for others. 
The earnings of the tailors vary greatly according to the class and quality of 
clothing made and the number of assistants employed. The work is all piece-work 
and the normal rates for single garments vary from la. to 2a. 3d. for coats, according 
to size and quality of material, 6d. to Is. for trousers, the same for waistcoats, and 
2a. to 4a. for overcoats, the workers providing their own thread and silk. 
Beginners .earn not more than la. 6d. or 2a. a day, but a man soon "gets 
his hand in, owing to the use of the machine, and he can then double these 
earnings In good times independent workers earn 5a. a day, and inferior men 
3a. and 3a. bd., but taking the year together these averages are not reached. It 
must aisc be remembered that from the gross earnings have to be deducted the 
cost of materials, light, oil, charcoal for the flat iron, and wear and tear of machines. 
Although relatively high wages sire the rule they are the results of 
excessive exertion, 1^, 13, and 14 hours a day being common. Even earnings
	        
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