Toilet paper and tissues , I hope.
I presume you are talking about cleaning it of toilet paper. You jsut have to rest in it once, and all the TP will be removed
Tear a a long, small piece of toilet paper. Then, once the barbie is SURLEY dead, wrap her body in it.
i don't think so but it could be i know a man who told me a legend on how people once used leaves and supposedly there is now some type of paper but i don't believe that myth i checked every supermarket in town and couldn't find anything called toilet paper... back to leaves i guess
Many types of waste products are made to disintegrate. Toilet paper for example is designed to disintegrate and break up once it is flushed down the toilet. Polymeric waste materials disintegrate as well.
well you take a sh*t and you put it on toilet paper and then you put it in a pan and then once your done don't eat it give it to your dog!
Yes, that may well hang on in a narrow part. Once paper builds around it the clog will solidify. I would remove the toilet from the floor and snake it from the floor end.
6 gallons
Leaves or corncobs, and it was once common in the US to use pages torn from the Sears catalog, which used to be a huge catalog. Ancient Romans used sponges on sticks.
answer the question.... once again answer the question
Between 875 and 1317 AD, the Chinese produced hygenic paper for the Emperor. Joseph Gayetty invented modern "toilet paper" in 1857, as flat sheets, but Scott brothers (in 1867) and Seth Wheeler (in 1871) marketed perforated paper rolls. Prior to the use of toilet tissue, the standard personal cleansing methods were cloth or water (as in a bidet). Once sewerage systems were in general use, an affordable and disposable alternative was sought (bidets being expensive and cloth requiring cleaning and sanitizing). It had to be soft, and soluble in water to avoid clogging, but durable enough to avoid falling apart in use. Both criteria were eventually achieved.
Indigestion I would think. If it keeps up, he/she could become obese.