>On April 19, 1933, a delegation of the nearly 400 “Baby strikers,” ranging from 14 to 16 years, called on Governor Gifford Pinchot in Harrisburg and told him they were receiving wages as low as five cents a week. Shown here are Frank Selthofer, 14, a trimmer in a Northampton shirt factory who was earning about 87 cents a week, and Anna Miletics, 15, who packed shirts in boxes for 9 cents an hour. Her earnings for eight days were $3.50, less a 10 percent cut and two cents deducted from her earnings to pay the “check tax.”
RyanSmith
>On April 19, 1933, a delegation of the nearly 400 “Baby strikers,” ranging from 14 to 16 years, called on Governor Gifford Pinchot in Harrisburg and told him they were receiving wages as low as five cents a week. Shown here are Frank Selthofer, 14, a trimmer in a Northampton shirt factory who was earning about 87 cents a week, and Anna Miletics, 15, who packed shirts in boxes for 9 cents an hour. Her earnings for eight days were $3.50, less a 10 percent cut and two cents deducted from her earnings to pay the “check tax.”
[Source](http://explorepahistory.com/displayimage.php?imgId=1-2-1126&storyId=1-9-22)
LoserWithCake
That kid looks like a young JFK or the poster kid for MAD