I haven't had time to search for the one you want but there is a good article 10 September 1918, no. 4137, analysing what happened in West Finland during the Red Uprising. As you know, Turku was pretty red. I assume you are actually interested.
ETA if you look on page 4 of the above - nr. 4137 - you will find an account of how someone on a journey to church was ambushed by a bunch of reds, taken to a forest and shot. This happened 7 Feb 1918. The headline is: 'Maanwiljelia Kärjen murha kirkkomatkalla'. (NB: 'v' was written as 'w' then.)
I was interested in searching for that particular article. Like I said, I found articles about Red atrocities, but couldn't find the correct search terms for finding a murder happening on Härkätie. Part of the reason why I was interested in it was that the name Härkätie fell out of active use already a couple of centuries ago and it was very curious that someone would still use it in 1918 to refer to contemporary events.
But anyway, don't spend time trying to search for that one. That a Finnish White newspaper would report about atrocities (both real and imagined) committed by Reds is not an extraordinary claim needing special proof.
What is extraordinary is your claim that Times published accounts based on information sent by spies embedded into German armed forces. Spend your time searching those articles.
I don't believe that you will ever give us an accurate reference for that. I believe that you misremembered what you read long time ago and now your ego prevents you from admitting that.
[Edited to add something completely irrelevant to Estonia, just a tangent for the Härkätie tangent: doing a bit more searching in digitaaliarkisto I noticed that the name 'Härkätie' was in active use at Somero in the early 20th century. So it is plausible that someone discussing a murder happening at Somero (a few Whites were murdered there) could use it in a newspaper report. I couldn't find printed references to the name in a non-historical context from any other place.]
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