Clogged drain line downstream of basement sink or possibly problem with venting.
where one toilet is draining to its own unshared line, the line can be 3" but once both toilets are draining to the same line, it needs to be 4". in other words, from the first toilet to the second toilet can be 3" but past the second toilet needs to be 4". there needs to be a vent downstream of the second toilet in the direction of flow if there is another fixture of any kind downstream of the two toilets.
//Lucas series - 2,1,3,4,7,11,18 #include <stdio.h> #define PRINTMAX 50 void lucas(int first, int second) //Prints 52 numbers { int count=1,total; printf("%d\t%d\t",first,second); while (count < PRINTMAX) { total = second + first; printf("%d\t",total); first = second; second = total; count++; } } int main(void) { lucas(2,1); return 0; }
Interfaces are designed to do exactly that: to interface or to interact. In object-oriented programming languages such as C++, you can incorporate up to three different interfaces per class. The private interface is accessible only to the class itself and to friends of the class. The protected interface is the same as the private interface but is also accessible to derivatives of the class. The public interface is accessible to any code. For one interface to interact with another interface, the first must have access to the second. If the first is a friend of the second or both are members of the same class, the first has unrestricted access to the private, protected and public interfaces of the second. If the first is derived from the second but is not a friend, the first only has access to the protected and public interfaces of the second. If the first is completely separate from the second, the first only has access to the public interfaces of the second.
The second shift is a woman's "shift" of work at home, consisting of housework. (The "first shift" being their job.)
second onetransmits,first onereceives.
First, the proper Navy terms would be "bulkheads" and "hatches". As for whether or not they have them, no - the whole idea of BT is to completely eliminate any individualism, and build the unit into a working team in all aspects of daily life in close quarters. That's why showers and toilets are completely open without any privacy whatsoever. It's different of course once you enter the fleet - all afloat and shore commands have standard setups for showers and toilets.
He turns on the first and second switch. Then he turns off the first. When he gets to the basement, if it's on then it's the second switch; if it's hot it's the first switch; otherwise it's the third.
Turn off the heat to the basement, first and second floors?
Yes it does have toilets, as it is a first world country.
The first man made showers were first invented around 1810. Before those, people used natural showers, such as waterfalls.
The second Goosebumps book is called "Stay Out of the Basement." It is the second book in the original Goosebumps series written by R.L. Stine and was first published in 1992. The story follows two siblings who discover their father's strange behavior and uncover dark secrets in their basement.
There isn't a basement. There is only the first floor.
Toilets go back to the beginning of cities at least. Minoans had flush toilets. Early Chinese had toilets. The beginning has been lost in time.
* It's an individuals choice and a second baby shower is acceptable. Afternoon baby showers are generally the most common.
of course toilets
If there is a tornado you should take your family and pets into the basement (if you have one) or a room with no windows, preferably on the first floor, not a second or third level of a home.
my basement