June 8, 1921.—At Sea Breeze, Fla., Thomas L. Reynolds, a New Yorker, was assaulted while in his hotel by masked men, and beaten and shot.
June 13, 1921.—At Dallas, Texas, Edward Engers, filling station proprietor, was flogged by masked men and ordered out of town.
June 14, 1921.—At Houston, Texas, J. W. Boyd, a lawyer, was taken from his office by masked men and whipped. He was charged with annoying young girls.
June 17, 1921.—At Belton, Texas, James Collins, a negro, was given sixty lashes by masked men, and a placard, “Whipped by Ku Klux Klan,” placed on his back, following his release from jail after a Grand Jury had failed to indict him on the charge of making insulting approaches to white women.
June 18, 1921.—At Goose Creek, Texas, E. L. Bloodworth and Olan Jones, oil field workers, were whipped, tarred and feathered by masked men, who charged their victims with being “undesirable citizens.”
June 20, 1921.—At Goose Creek, Texas, W. Stewart, a jitney driver, was whipped, tarred, and feathered by twelve men after three passengers had lured him to a lonely spot. He was then ordered to leave town.
June 25, 1921.—At West Columbia, Texas, an unknown man was tarred and feathered and ordered to leave town.
June 21, 1921.—At Wharton, Texas, Henry Schultz was whipped, tarred and feathered after being kidnapped by masked men.
June 26, 1921.—At Yoakum, Texas, a white man, name withheld, citizen of the place for twenty years, was found on a lonely road, tarred, feathered and blindfolded.
June 27, 1921.—At Austin, Texas, Ku Klux Klan placards were posted warning against violation of moral codes.