Samuel Hopkins Adams Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of Samuel Hopkins Adams's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from Writer Samuel Hopkins Adams's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 22 quotes on this page collected since January 26, 1871! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
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  • I'm a suicide. I walked right spang over the edge of life and disappeared. Splash! Bubble-bubble! There goes nothing.

    Samuel Hopkins Adams (1917). “Our Square and the People in it”
  • Ignorance and credulous hope make the market for most proprietary remedies.

    Collier's Weekly 7 October (1905)
  • The path of the pursuer and the prey often run obscurely parallel.

    Running   Path   Prey  
    Samuel Hopkins Adams (2015). “Average Jones”, p.9, Sheba Blake Publishing
  • Boredom and booze--cause and effect.

    Boredom   Causes   Booze  
    Samuel Hopkins Adams (1917). “Our Square and the People in it”
  • Boredom is simply romanticism with a morning-after thirst.

    Samuel Hopkins Adams (2015). “Average Jones”, p.4, Sheba Blake Publishing
  • You never get bored ... when you have the probabilities of your next meal to speculate on, pro and con.

    Bored   Meals   Next  
    Samuel Hopkins Adams (1917). “Our Square and the People in it”
  • The ordinary run of advertising is nothing more than an effort to sell something by yelling in print.

    Samuel Hopkins Adams (2015). “Average Jones”, p.5, Sheba Blake Publishing
  • According to the estimate of a prominent advertising firm, above 90 per cent, of the earning capacity of the prominent nostrums is represented by their advertising. And all this advertising is based on the well-proven theory of the public's pitiable ignorance and gullibility in the vitally important matter of health.

    Samuel Hopkins Adams (1912). “The Great American fraud”
  • Shortest straw pulls the skunk's tail.

    Tails   Straws  
    Samuel Hopkins Adams (1989). “Grandfather Stories”, p.145, Syracuse University Press
  • Work won't do me any good ... I've tried it, and it bored me worse than the other thing.

    Bored  
    Samuel Hopkins Adams (1917). “Our Square and the People in it”
  • Printer's ink, when it spells out a doctor's promise to cure, is one of the subtlest and most dangerous of poisons.

    Samuel Hopkins Adams (1912). “The Great American fraud”
  • Any physician who advertises a positive cure for any disease, who issues nostrum testimonials, who sells his services to a secret remedy, or who diagnoses and treats by mail patients he has never seen, is a quack.

    The Great American Fraud p. 39. Collier and Sons (1905)
  • Success: a marvelous stimulant, bubbling with inspiration and incitement. But for all except the few who are strong and steadfast, there lurks beneath the effervescence a subtle poison.

    Samuel Hopkins Adams (2014). “Success”, p.817, Lulu Press, Inc
  • Medicine would be the ideal profession if it did not involve giving pain.

    Pain   Medicine   Giving  
    The Health Master Ch.3
  • Average Jones had come by his nickname inevitably. His parents had foredoomed him to it when they furnished him with the initials A. V. R. E. as preface to his birthright of J for Jones. His character apparently justified the chance concomitance. He was, so to speak, a composite photograph of any thousand well-conditioned, clean-living Americans between the ages of twenty-five and thirty.

    Samuel Hopkins Adams (2015). “Average Jones”, p.3, Sheba Blake Publishing
  • With the exception of lawyers, there is no profession which, considers itself above the law so widely as the medical profession.

    The Health Master Ch. 1
  • Anything is easy to the man who sees.... The open eye of the open mind--that has more to do with real detective work than all the deduction and induction and analysis ever devised.

    Real   Eye   Men  
    Samuel Hopkins Adams (2005). “Average Jones”, p.17, 1st World Publishing
  • A wasted human being--that's a sort of practical blasphemy, according to my religion.

    Samuel Hopkins Adams (2013). “Wanted: A Husband: (With Original Illustrations)”, p.14, Simon and Schuster
  • With a few honorable exceptions the press of the United States is at the beck and call of the patent medicines. Not only do the newspapers modify news possibly affecting these interests, but they sometimes become their agents.

    Collier's Weekly 7 October (1905)
  • I'd sell my soul to the devil if he'd buy such a weakly, puny, piffling little soul, just really to live and be something besides a "thoroughly nice girl" for one short year.

    Girl   Nice   Years  
    Samuel Hopkins Adams (2013). “Wanted: A Husband: (With Original Illustrations)”, p.11, Simon and Schuster
  • Shut your eyes to the medical columns of the newspapers, and you will save yourself many forebodings and symptoms.

    Eye   Science   Diagnosis  
    Samuel Hopkins Adams (1912). “The Great American fraud”
  • We are living at a time when creeds and ideologies vary and clash. But the gospel of human sympathy is universal and eternal.

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We hope you have found the saying you were looking for in our collection! At the moment, we have collected 22 quotes from the Writer Samuel Hopkins Adams, starting from January 26, 1871! We periodically replenish our collection so that visitors of our website can always find inspirational quotes by authors from all over the world! Come back to us again!
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