_The New York Times_
_By PETER APPLEBOME - Published: July 15, 1967_
Sir Paul Dukes, the director general of MI5, Britain's counterespionage agency, throughout the first nine years of the cold war, died here yesterday of a heart attack. He was 73 years old and lived at 15 Cadogan Square in Chelsea.
Sir Paul, who was born Paul Dukes De Friedberg, held the MI 5 post, formally known as the directorship of security services, from 1939 to 1946. He was born in Prague.
He was buried in Golders Green Cemetery, London.
Paul Dukes, Ex‐Secret Service Chief, Dies
_Washington Post_
_July 15, 1967_
Paul Dukes, head of Britain’s Secret Service from 1939 to 1946 and one of the principal figures in the cold war, died yesterday of a heart attack at his home in London. He was 72.
Dukes, who was born in Prague, spent most of his early career in military intelligence. In 1914, he joined the British Army and was commissioned into the Duke of Cornwall’s Light Infantry. He was buried at Golders Green Cemetery in London.