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will be put into use, as no Cuban pharmacopoeia yet exists. — Pharm. 
Era, X. Y., 1906, v. 36, p. 154. 
An editorial discusses the possibility of developing a Pan-American 
Pharmacopoeia and points out that the proposed translation of the 
Pharmacopoeia of the United States into Spanish should prove to be 
a step in this direction, and would cause physicians and pharmacists 
of the southern continent to turn their eyes toward American medi- 
cine and pharmacy. — Ibid., v. 35, p. 15. 
An editorial refers to the translation of the U. S. P. into Spanish 
as “ What might be called a scientific or pharmacopoeial adoption 
of the Monroe Doctrine.” — Bull. Pharm., Detroit, 1906, v. 20, p. 7. 
