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SILENT WOMEN

REPOSITORIES OF GREAT CRIME SECRETS j LORD BYNG'S SECRETARY j It lias surprised many people that j a woman should be considered of j sufficient importance, to be included j in the centenary photograph of the j Commissioner, Assistant Commission- j ers. Chief Constables, and other high i officials of Scotland Yard. The woman thus singled out is Miss j E. E. Drysdale, private secretary to j Lord Byng, the Commissioner. He ! is the third Commissioner to whom j she has acted in this capacity, - First j there was Sir Nevil Macready, then j Sir William Ilorwood, and now the j present police chief—all of them j soldiers. Miss Drysdale has been described as the perfect private secretary for a j great man. She is the essence of j tact and discretion. It is really easier i for a convict to break out of prison j than for a casual and unwanted caller • to reach the presence of the Commissioner—and in spite of this the caller always goes away convinced that it is only a series of unusual happening* j that has prevented him from reaching the chief. Miss Drysdale knows all the grim secrets of Scotland Yard, but crimes aud criminals, scandals and mysteries are things of which she never talks. If by any chance you ever find yourself in her pleasant little room adjoining the baronial-like apartment in j which the Commissioner sits you will be struck by the femininity of it. Miss Drysdale is not the only woman in a highly confidential position at Scotland Yard. There are two or three others. One, a member of one of the oldest families in the country, is concerned with the Secret Service, as Sir Wyndham Childs always described that special branch of the service of which he was for so many years chief. There is probably no little bit of secret history of this and other countries she does not know. To talk to her one would imagine 'that her sole interest in life was dogs, and one little animal in particular. British Reds will probably be annoyed to know that none of their secrets is hidden from a young and charming woman at “The Yard:” She knows all about their “cells” and “nuclei.” She knows exactly how much money X receives from Moscow, why it is paid to him, and how it gets here. They say women cannot keep secrets. The women of Scotland Yard are living refutations of this fable.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SUNAK19290713.2.192

Bibliographic details

Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 714, 13 July 1929, Page 12

Word Count
415

SILENT WOMEN Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 714, 13 July 1929, Page 12

SILENT WOMEN Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 714, 13 July 1929, Page 12