There are some older English traditions that carried into Canada.One of which I recall, is an old Scottish lady who will never eat rabbit again because her family ate so much rabbit during WWII.
From the theatrecrafts.com website:“There are two ghosts in residence – an unknown ballerina (who has been known to pirouette across the stage) and the famous actor Ivor Novello, who apparently watches performances from the magnificent Dress Circle.”
That is not a picture of the skinniest house in London, which is blue, is six feet wide across the front and very deep on the lot. That is the Thin House which is triangular shaped, thin on one end and wide on the other end.
I remember there was a house in The Netherlands that was only something like 28 inches wide. It was made in the space between two other houses. My family photos would show it if I could find it. It was touted as the narrowest occupied house in the world.
Lacking an explanation for the ‘WHY’ of things makes SO many of the examples presented in Ripley’s far less interesting. Like, you can say 100 three-headed children have been born in the last 40 years!" but unless we’re told that 39 of them happened within 30km of Three Mile Island, it’s just a statistic, not a story.
You can only listen to DVD playback using COAXIAL (X) and AUDIO OUT (A2) connections. The VCR will still be heard through the DVD/VCR AUDIO OUT (A1) jack.Connecting to an amplifier equipped with two channel analog stereo or Dolby Pro Logic II/Pro Logic
Connect the Left and Right AUDIO OUT (or DVD/VCR AUDIO OUT) jacks on the unit to the audio left and right in jacks on your amplifier, receiver, or stereo system using the audio cables (A1, A2) supplied.
Connecting to an amplifier equipped with two chan- nel digital stereo (PCM) or to an Audio/Video receiv- er equipped with a multi-channel decoder (Dolby DigitalTM, MPEG 2)
1. Connect one of the unit’s DIGITAL AUDIO OUT jacks (COAXIAL X) to the corresponding jack on your amplifier. Use an optional digital (COAXIAL X) audio cable.
2. You will need to activate the unit’s digital output. (See “AUDIO” on page 17).
Templo S.U.D. over 3 years ago
Wow… all England-themed tidbits. (Just imagine Andy Capp during WWI trying to mooch someone to get him a pint.)
Bilan over 3 years ago
That explains why the Londoners call their apartments Flats.
therese_callahan2002 over 3 years ago
“And another day goes by, the water flowing underground. Same as it ever was. Same as it ever was.”
Adam-Stone(Soup) over 3 years ago
There are some older English traditions that carried into Canada.One of which I recall, is an old Scottish lady who will never eat rabbit again because her family ate so much rabbit during WWII.
Pedmar Premium Member over 3 years ago
From the theatrecrafts.com website:“There are two ghosts in residence – an unknown ballerina (who has been known to pirouette across the stage) and the famous actor Ivor Novello, who apparently watches performances from the magnificent Dress Circle.”
bobpickett1 over 3 years ago
Andy Capp must have been devastated.
Flynn White Premium Member over 3 years ago
A lot about London today. I read someone gets stabbed in S. London on average approx every hour. Poor guy.
Gent over 3 years ago
Eh, today’s British day or something?
sandpiper over 3 years ago
6’ wide. So-o-o-o-o no furniture that fits, single cots for beds, one wooden chair, window out of which to jump when the walls close in.
Lots of old memories in the Palace. Great actors, royal patrons, famous writers and artists.
England was a wonderful tour even in 1960 when the war damages still covered whole blocks.
khmo over 3 years ago
Rationing
NeedaChuckle Premium Member over 3 years ago
I saw a movie featuring one of those houses. It had a scene where people were trying to move back and forth thru the narrow rooms.
RonnieAThompson Premium Member over 3 years ago
Happy Mother’s Day Ladies.
sbwertz over 3 years ago
That is not a picture of the skinniest house in London, which is blue, is six feet wide across the front and very deep on the lot. That is the Thin House which is triangular shaped, thin on one end and wide on the other end.
Huckleberry Hiroshima over 3 years ago
Yes but they’re quiet ghosts.
Take care, may prolific cutlery salesman Aaron “Jack” Kozminskord be with you, and gesundheit.
drycurt over 3 years ago
I remember there was a house in The Netherlands that was only something like 28 inches wide. It was made in the space between two other houses. My family photos would show it if I could find it. It was touted as the narrowest occupied house in the world.
tremaine53 over 3 years ago
Lacking an explanation for the ‘WHY’ of things makes SO many of the examples presented in Ripley’s far less interesting. Like, you can say 100 three-headed children have been born in the last 40 years!" but unless we’re told that 39 of them happened within 30km of Three Mile Island, it’s just a statistic, not a story.
ncorgbl over 3 years ago
Warm beer, cramped living space, water underfoot, and haunted theaters spelled wrong. It’s no wonder the Brits are really messed up.
dv1093 over 3 years ago
Is today Britek day?
Craig Westlake over 3 years ago
And all of it just spiteful work to ensure “chubby” Johnson couldn’t rent it…
Thorby over 3 years ago
Shades (?!?) of “Phantom of the Opera” at the Palace?
gozar over 3 years ago
Connection to an Amplifier
You can only listen to DVD playback using COAXIAL (X) and AUDIO OUT (A2) connections. The VCR will still be heard through the DVD/VCR AUDIO OUT (A1) jack.Connecting to an amplifier equipped with two channel analog stereo or Dolby Pro Logic II/Pro Logic
Connect the Left and Right AUDIO OUT (or DVD/VCR AUDIO OUT) jacks on the unit to the audio left and right in jacks on your amplifier, receiver, or stereo system using the audio cables (A1, A2) supplied.
Connecting to an amplifier equipped with two chan- nel digital stereo (PCM) or to an Audio/Video receiv- er equipped with a multi-channel decoder (Dolby DigitalTM, MPEG 2)
1. Connect one of the unit’s DIGITAL AUDIO OUT jacks (COAXIAL X) to the corresponding jack on your amplifier. Use an optional digital (COAXIAL X) audio cable.
2. You will need to activate the unit’s digital output. (See “AUDIO” on page 17).
pbr50138 over 3 years ago
That building could fall, if the wind was strong enough.