Dodge Publishing started out in 1895 in San Francisco and moved to New York City in 1898. The company printed all kinds of calendars.
Each page of this calendar has six or seven days of the month and a box to the right of the date to write a note.
The calendar’s pages are made from a heavier stock paper while the cover is of lighter stock cardboard. The pages are bound together by red ribbon and a bow, just as it was 108 years ago.
Dodge Publishing hired Ralph Waldo Trine, considered a “New Thought” writer in 1917, to write some “food for thought” on each page.
The calendars measures 6 x 8 inches.
As you can see from the photos, the calendar was never used and kept in the original box for over a century.