ok not sure what you mean quite.......
but here's the basic idea of impedance (and yes i'm going to pretend it's just resistance, as far as working out totals it makes no difference. Apologies to jbroll and other physics/maths people

)
the total impedance of two components in series (in a row, as seen above) is just the sum of the seperate impedances. So two 8 ohm speakers in series have a total impedance of 16ohms
however: 2 components in parralel
this is more complicated
(ignore the bottom equation in that last pic)
in the case of components with the SAME resistance (like the speakers in your 1936), this can be simplified. The total resistance is half for 2 components, or a third for 3, or a quarter for 4 etc of the resistance of ONE of the components.
ie two 16ohm speakers connected in parralel have a total impedance of 8ohms
4 16ohm speakers in parallel would have a total impedance of 16/4 = 4ohms
Your 1936 has 2 16ohm speakers in it. The choice of wiring you have is either each one seperately (stereo) meaning each input is 16 ohms. The other choice is mono, which in this case is both speakers connected in parallel giving 1/2 of 16 = 8ohms
Now, if you are connecting 2 speaker cables to your amp, each one loaded at 16ohms each, the amp treats them as in series and therefore sees 16/2 = 8ohms
Hence, you need your 6505 set to 8ohms if you're connecting it in stereo to your 1936
NB: remember, you can only just take a half or a third etc if the things you're dealing with are of THE SAME impedance, if they're not then use the equation in the pic