Frances Gabe hadn’t cleaned her house in 20 years.The woman often called guests, who didn’t understand how clean all the rooms were.The woman didn’t tell her secret until she retired. Her way of cleaning the house was so thoughtful that it deserves a Nobel Prize.In her youth, Frances graduated from the Polytechnic Institute and was well versed in physics and mechanics.
He soon began to earn a good living, and by the age of 23, he began to fully support his husband, who was always looking for work, and then also began to help his children.The situation did not bother the woman too much: she just asked her family to keep the house clean.Frances really didn’t like cleaning. However, her husband did not want to help her and this eventually became one of the reasons for the divorce.
The children grew up and moved out, and Frances didn’t want to waste time keeping the house clean just yet.The woman turned to her physics background for help, and in 1979, she finally solved the cleaning problem.Frances never picked up the vacuum cleaner and rag again, but every room in the house was always kept clean.Surprised guests and relatives repeatedly tried to discover her secret, but the woman adamantly refused to tell.Only in retirement did he reveal the secret of the clean house.
Everything was designed as one big dishwasher:At the touch of a button, sprinklers were launched into every room, detergents flowed through pipes embedded directly in the walls.Another push of the button and clean water washed away the soap.The floor, sloped at a specific angle, allowed the water to flow immediately into the chimney siphon,then the hot air drying began. Naturally, Frances had to rework both the furniture and the walls.Unfortunately, in 2001, an earthquake damaged the main cleaning facility in the house. And Frances never restored it again.