CURFEW IMPOSED
SEQUEL TO BOMB THROWING IN PARIS TWO GERMANS & WOMAN KILLED. PATROLS TO SHOOT 6 P.M. (By Telegraph—Press Association—Copyright) VICHY, November 30. A bomb thrown on Friday night in a requisitioned Montmartre restaurant in Paris killed two German soldiers and one Frenchwoman, and injured other soldiers. The German commandant, von Schulenburg, imposed a curfew, commencing at 5.30 p.m., in the Montmartre district. Underground stations were immediately closed, and traffic banned in the area. A warning was issued that German patrols would shoot anyone out of doors after 6 p.m., and also anyone keeping windows open after the curfew.
The Italian news agency, Stefani, says the bombing was the act of British and de Gaullist agents trying to disturb Franco-German relations on the eve of the Goering-Petain meeting. The reports that 100 French .planes have left African bases to join the British in Egypt is denied by Stefani.
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Wairarapa Times-Age, 1 December 1941, Page 5
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148CURFEW IMPOSED Wairarapa Times-Age, 1 December 1941, Page 5
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