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                  1 to 19 (of 19)
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                  BRUCHÉSI, PAUL (baptized Louis-Joseph-Paul-Napoléon; Napoléon)
                  returned to the Collège Joliette in 1899 as a teacher and monitor while continuing his theological studies. Ordained priest in Montreal on 1 June 1901 by the archbishop of Montreal, Paul
                  the École Littéraire de Montréal, he supported Victor Morin’s campaign for a public and secular municipal library in that city. Archbishop Paul
                  . Owing to the illness of the auxiliary bishop, Zotique Racicot*, on 24 Aug. 1912 Gauthier was consecrated auxiliary to Paul
                  . On his return to Montreal, Archambault was appointed assistant dermatologist at Notre-Dame Hospital. As early as April 1911, about a year after the German doctor Paul Ehrlich had published the first
                  ) (450.250 and 565.100); and the correspondence of Sister Sainte-Anne-Marie with Mgr Paul Bruchési (including the letters sent to the archbishop) (451.250 and
                  , succeeding Joseph-Alfred Archambeault*. Archbishop Paul
                  shortly after the death of her mother, who had also studied there. She was content in that environment, where she was influenced by a nun, Mother Marie de Lourdes, and preachers, especially Paul
                   – he finally obtained permission to build it. The school authorities and Archbishop Paul Bruchési
                  . In December 1905, Archbishop Paul Bruchési of Montreal launched a major temperance campaign and entrusted the
                  Hedges cigars. He mentioned various people who moved in his circle. He also kept up a correspondence with, among others, his friend Archbishop Paul
                  connected with the Roman Catholic elite. The future archbishop of Montreal Paul Bruchési, for example, would become a
                  -Jérôme, where he wrote literary and political articles in support of the party, sometimes under the pseudonym Paul Destrée (over the course of his career, he would also use Graindorge and Pierre Simon). He
                  the attitude of Archbishop Paul Bruchési, who was ready to try any and all means to restore good relations, and
                  group to join the Montreal council in 1896. Marguerite’s private meetings with the Catholic clergy, including Paul
                  decision of John Sprott Archibald in March 1901 [see Paul Bruchési]. In his
                  Bourassa* and his criticism of the Quebec bishops’ endorsement of the war effort [see Paul Bruchési
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                  1 to 19 (of 19)
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