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8 CHURCH KRNDERG (See story or VjH Miss Nellie Osborne's fifteen kir minute break" from their out of doc on the merry-go-round for Clothma Left to Right?Regina Crawford, non, Deayne Johnson, Patty Smith, Steve Campbell, Steven McGee, Ji: Bill Bowling, Michael Templeton, To m Halloween is a gay festival for many youngsters and you'd better be prepared for these ghostly tricksters who will walk your street with "Trick or Treat"?meaning a big appetite. And here are just the fun filled treats to bring gaiety to your Halloween table. They're fine party fare, of course, and served as dessert, they'll turn the family supper into a party. All are easily made from p a n t r y-shelf ingredients. Witches' hats are ice cream cones with a secret. Hobgoblins are delicious chocolate oat-meal cooKies. rne nappy jack-o-lanterns are made of butterscotch candy. When the doorbell rings and you are faced with the dire choice of "tricks or treat," there will be no tricks if you hand out those treats to the small-fry spooks. WITCHES' HATS \z 10 i** ice cream cones 1V4 cups milk 1 cup heavy cream V4 cup crunchy peanut butter 1 package instant vanilla pudding 12 to 14 cookies, 3 to 4 inches in diameter Brown Frosting, below Set ice cream cones into paper cups, so they stand upright. Four milk and cream into mixing bowl. Add Dea O ------ r nut butter; beat until blended. Then add instant pudding; beat until well mixed, about 1 minute. Pour into ARTENS i page 1) n \\ Tm" mX XL \\ idergarten students took a "five >rs play period last week to pose iker readers. Letha Johnson. Kathy McElhanDell Campbell, Danny Dawkins, mmy Ammons, Johnny Thomas, mmy Douglas, and Danny Holder. le ^'itch en cones. Set refigerator control for fast freezing; freeze cones until ice cream is firm. 2 to 3 hours. At serving time, invert cones on centers of cookies. With Brown Frost nig ^leuipe utfiuw; xn tase decorator, and ribbon tube, quickly make "hat band" around cones. Serve at once. Makes 12 to 14. If you can't get pointed ice cream cones, freeze ice cream in pointed paper cups. Then peel off paper; serve ice cream on cookie. BROWN FROSTING: Combine 1 cup sifted confectioners' sugar, Va cup cocoa, V* cup margarine, 2 teaspoons milk. JACK-O-LANTERNS 1 package instant butterscotch pudding 1 pound box (31 * cups) confectioners' sugar 1 .t cup soft margarine ' ? cup evaporated milk or cream Yellow and red food colors Green and black gumdrops Combine ingredients ii order listed, adding yellow then red food colors to mak< orange color. Mix with spoor as well as you can; then mi? with hands, about 2 minutes to make smooth ball. Breal off pieces of mixture abou 2Mi inches in diameter; shap< between hands to mak< pumpkin; make top-to-bot torn grooves with spool handle. Insert bit of greei gumdrop for stem; bits o black gumdrops for eyes am mouth. Refrigerate u n t i served. Makes 7. THE CLOTHMAKER BfllH, .*3 8 mIIII^^^H B^S Kj^H IM1 ?A .*>1 JH Yj _ 7> S i ^^Tf U CH |L M >'4^ .- : >*i Mrs. Emily Trammell, teach* youngsters posed for Clothmaker the church steps at the beginning Front Row Left to Right?J< Stroud. Robin Snelgrove. Cynthii Whitford, and Terry Pierce. Second Row Left to Right?I King. Mike Lydia. Bruce Lambert Mike Ringer was absent when Public En THE CARELI Match heads and cigarettes have no brains?and the same can be said for the type of smokers who persist ir starting fires in our homes and forests. Each year thoughtless smokers are responsible foi more than 200,000 fires, anc about 1,200 people die ir these fires, according to Fire Chief Paul Quinton. And, says the Chief, th< sad part of it is that we al most always mistakenh blame the match and cigar ette rather than the selfish unthinking person who usee them. For thinking persons wh( would be smart and safe smokers, Chief Quinton re commends observing these simple rules: 1 t c ? l ] 1. 11 yuu in ucu break this deadly habit a once. It is one of the mos common?and correctible ? causes of fire deaths. 2. Make certain you matches and cigarettes a r < completely out before dis posing of them. Break th< match between your finger and grind the cigarette unti the lighted, end is cool to th touch. 3. Have plenty of safe as] trays around your house am office. The safe ones ar State and Local Tax Bite in the 8-Hour Day PST\ '??!-! MR 4^Ba] ft sar^X ka^h ?r. and her fifteen pre-school age Photographer. Ellis Huffstetler, on [ of a session last week. >ni Caughman, Terry Stroud, Pam a Madden, Tim James, Berrie Jean darry Black, Kenneth Stroud, Ann , David Simmons, and Larry Owens, i picture was taken. emy No. 7 ESS SMOKER Smoking In Bed is Deadly! ) ? large enough and deep enough, so designed to hold ? a burning cigarette entirely within the tray so it can't fall out. t 4. When driving, discard t your matches and cigarettes in the car's ash tray, and see to it that other passengers do r the same. s 5. Every night before retiring ... especially if you e have had guests ... in the s house ... look beneath sofa 1 cushions and around the cree vices of upholstered chairs. Any still-hot cigarettes which h have lodged in these spots rt r>nn nanco u rlonrllv* cmnldor e ing nighttime fire. OCTOBER. 1961 Wives Are Safety Conscious Your wife would give you a quick and worried look if you asked her why she used a pot holder to lift a hot pan. She would certainly think you had suddenly slipped mentally. She doesn't want to burn her hands?what do you think she uses it for? And if while she is thinking about something .dse, she does reach for a hot pan and burns her fingers she quickly puts the blame where it belongs. She never thought about it as a safety rule. It was just a matter of common sense. If she asked somebody who was helping her to remove that pan from the stove she would probably add, "Here's a pot holder." And when she slices bread or vegetables does she take a chance of cutting a tablecloth or her new counter top? Not she. She uses a cutting board. Now let's go along with her when she visits a neighbor's home. She notices a new type of can opener. It is easy to use and, being well-mounted, it is alwavs handv. She notes the smooth edges of the can after it is opened. She may recall one or more cuts received from the jagged edges of cans opened the old way. The fact that this is a new idea and that grandmother always did it some other way means nothing to her. This new one makes sense?no further selling is needed. She sees its advantages and that's enough for her. She gets one and uses it. She doesn't think of this as a safety program. She is not expecting a safety award. She would say it is simply good operating practice. It is rigni oecause it prevents injuries to people and damage to her profession. It may be new?but what's wrong with that if it is an improvement over old practices? Are we making safety harder to practice bv thinking of it in some more complex way ?something apart from good operating practices? I firth Announcement Mr. and Mrs. James Frederick Wills announce the birth of a daughter, Jonnie Charlyne, on September 16 at Saint Marv's Hosoital in ' i Knoxville, Tennessee. Mrs. Wills was formerly Miss Neelv Ann Bigram. "SW ?