She was also the director of the magazine La Estrella de Oriente, which was dedicated to publishing the movement's philosophical, religious, and esoteric texts.
[6][7] In her work as an activist, Paoli was a contemporary of Ana Roque, Beatriz Lassalle, Carmen Gomez, and Isabel Andreu de Aguilar.
She was also one of the architects of the Puerto Rico's suffrage campaign from the 1920s, participating in the Social Suffragette League, of which she was its vice president.
[12] On 27 February 1942, Paoli died in the Sagrado Corazon Hospital in San Juan.
[13] The local government of San Juan, Puerto Rico named a street "Calle Olivia Paoli" in her honor.