Art Shield’s article linked to online text below.
Labor Age. Vol. 14 No. 2. February, 1925.
Contents: Kanawha’s Fighting Rednecks by McAllister Coleman, A Powerless America by George W. Norris, Manhandlers in Uniform, Sandhogs Battle the Bends by Art Shields, Brother Brown’s Pilgrim’s Progress by Bill Brown, Those Little Reds by Louis F. Budenz, How We Speak Without Words by Prince Hopkins, The Other Woman by John S. Martin, What of 1925? Labor History in the Making, Book Notes.
Labor Age was a left-labor monthly magazine with origins in Socialist Review, journal of the Intercollegiate Socialist Society. Published by the Labor Publication Society from 1921-1933 aligned with the League for Industrial Democracy of left-wing trade unionists across industries. During 1929-33 the magazine was affiliated with the Conference for Progressive Labor Action (CPLA) led by A. J. Muste. James Maurer, Harry W. Laidler, and Louis Budenz were also writers. The orientation of the magazine was industrial unionism, planning, nationalization, and was illustrated with photos and cartoons. With its stress on worker education, social unionism and rank and file activism, it is one of the essential journals of the radical US labor socialist movement of its time.
PDF of full issue: https://www.marxists.org/history/usa/pubs/laborage/v14n02-feb-1925-LA.pdf
