The paper deals with the surface properties of aqueous two- and three-component organic solutions (water-acetone; water-1,4-Dioxane; water-acetone-1,4-Dioxane). A modern installation, K-100 tensiometer, was used to measure equilibrium surface or interfacial tension, contact angle, etc. The du Noüy ring and the Wilhelmy plate methods were used to measure the surface tension. It shows that the surface tension isotherms for a ternary system do not contain any features uncharacteristic of the surface tension isotherms for lateral binaries. The findings made it easy to specify the adsorption of surface-active agents in water. It shows that the nature of the ternary adsorption isotherms qualitatively coincides with the binary adsorption isotherms, which leads to the conclusion that, once used together as surfactants, organic substances (acetone and 1,4-Dioxane) in water does not enhance the surface activity of each other.