Saloons offered drinks, free toilets, water for horses , and free news papers for customers
Yes
Roman toilets were often communal and up to 10 or 12 people could use them at one time. They were sometimes cleaned with water from bath houses and a sponge on a stick replaced toilet paper.
Toilets to flush clockwise in the north. However, it is not due to the rotation of the earth as many people believe. It is because of the way water is jetted into them.
depends how much they eat and drink if they have all of it they will die
Poseidon was the Greek god of water he could control water and shoot it at people or make a giant wave. He also had other powers he could talk to horses. He can because according to Greek mythology he invented horses. He also had one more power to make earthquakes.
According to Wikipedia, people (including small children) have drowned in as little as 33 mm (1 inch) of water. Small children also can drown in toilets and buckets.
You could have a venting issue with your venting system, or a blockage with your main line. Your toilets dump alot of water all at once. Try to visualize all that water hitting a closed bubble of air in the pipes--that is why they could all be flushing oddly.
The toilets refill because water is leaking past the flapper. In your case, you are running some water or turning water off right when the toilets are ready to refill and your action "jiggles" the ballcock to start. The toilets are also refilling at other times but you have not noticed yet. Get them repaired.
The toilets they had were continues flow. Water came in one end and out the other. They were a lot more public about using them. 10 or more in one bench, no partitions, sit down next to someone, do your business and make room for the next guy.
you say, You have two toilets,,, Water everywhere in house, Except the two toilets? Contact me in my personal message board, Give more details
Rob Curtis has written: 'An evaluation of the reduction in water usage that could be achieved within the Southern water region from the installation of water conserving toilets'
In Europe, typically public toilets are labeled as WCs, which stands for “water closet.”