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Adult Halloween Costumes
"'Trick-or-Treat for Adult Halloween Costumes UNICEF" also-ran become a habitual sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a local adventure in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950, and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the administration of diminutive boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like Hallmark at their licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit insufficient pin money donations from the houses they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, citing safety and administrative concerns.
As in Ireland the exact customs involved with celebrating Halloween from oldie times to pre-industrialised Scotland are lost and lack primary documentation, to distinguish the ancient customs from the modern counterpart. The Witchcraft Announcement of 1735 contained a clause preventing the consumption of pork and pastry comestibles on Halloween although in concomitant times such treats are a crowd-pleaser treat for children; the execution was repealed in the 1950s. Scotland's National Bard Robert Burns portrayed the varied custom for children to dress up in costumes in his poem "Hallowe'en" (1785).