A WOMAN IN THE CASE
MYSTERY OF STOLEN CIPHER • BLONDE BEAUTY SUSPECTED Australian and N.Z. Press Association LONDON, Thursday. The Beilin correspondent of the “Dally Telegraph" says two great Powers and one lesser one obtained copies of the secret cipher stolen from the Italian Embassy in Berlin. These were secured either from or through an official. Subsequently the representatives of two of the Powers concerned were intensely annoyed to find that each had paid an exorbitant price for the same secret. This led to the exposure. The correspondent says Britain was not one of the Powers in Question. Interest is still displayed in regard to the blonde society beauty upon whom suspicion rests. It is said that this woman spoke several languages fluently. She displayed an obvious preference for the society of diplomatists, and the head of one diplomatic mission warned his staff against her.
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Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 803, 25 October 1929, Page 11
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145A WOMAN IN THE CASE Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 803, 25 October 1929, Page 11
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