* "Phasmophobia" is the fear of ghosts.

* A cup of candy corn has fewer calories than a cup of raisins.

* It's illegal to sell a haunted house in New York without informing
the buyer.

* Eighty-two percent of children take part in Halloween festivities,
as do 67 percent of adults.

* The first jack-o'-lanterns were made of turnips.

* "Samhainophobia" is the morbid fear of Halloween.

* Halloween is the biggest holiday of the year when it comes to
candy sales--estimated at $1.93 billion. One quarter of all the
candy sold each year is purchased between September 15 and November
10.

* The word witch comes from the Saxon word wicca, which means "wise
one."

* Pumpkins also come in white, blue and green.

* In France, more than 30,000 werewolf cases were tried between 1520
and 1630.

* Dracula is the most filmed story of all time.

* The biggest pumpkin on record weighed 1,385 pounds. It was weighed
in October 2003 at a pumpkin festival in Canby, Oregon.

* Trick-or-treating is an Irish tradition, based on a custom where
wealthy landowners would give food to the poor on Halloween night,
believing ghosts would look favorably on them for doing so and spare
them from mischief.

* In Romanian, Dracula means "Son of the Devil."

* The Scots believed in "Samhanach," a goblin who came out only on
Halloween and stole children.

* Halloween costume sales are estimated at $1.5 billion.

* Eighty percent of kids say their favorite Halloween candy is
either chocolate or gum.

* Pumpkins are fruits, not vegetables.

* Pennslyvania was the first colony to legalize witchcraft.

* There is a poisonous mushroom called a jack-o'-lantern. These
mushrooms are a bright orange-yellow in color and on rainy nights
they appears to glow in the dark.

* Fifty-one percent of all American adults believe in ghosts. Nine
percent of Americans claim to have been in the presence of a ghost
during their lifetime.

* Americans consume about 20 million pounds of candy corn each year.

* The Count Dracula Society was founded in 1962.

* In the 17th and 18th centuries, people in costumes and masks would
go from house to house, singing and dancing to keep evil at bay.
These people were known as "guisers."

* Americans spend about $50 million on Halloween greetings.

* According to studies, the smell of pumpkin pie is the most
arousing to women, followed by lavender, cucumbers, baby powder and
Good & Plenty candy.

* At one time, there were public trials and convictions of animals
for witchcraft.

* In Lewis, Scotland, Halloween was once celebrated by designating
one man to wade into the evening sea and offer a cup of ale to
Shoney, a sea god.

* In the North of England, Halloween was called "nut-crack"
and "snap-apple night."

* Ninety-nine percent of pumpkins sold in the U.S. are used to make
jack-o'-lanterns.

* The first Frankenstein film was produced by Thomas Edison in 1910.

* The average U.S. household spends $44 on Halloween candy.
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