No, it will not- but you can use it though if you, want something to remove flea's easier. It will do that though; so, if you're going to be using it to wash your dogs or ect- use this first and mix it with the flea soap- it will make it so much eaiser on yourself.
USE NORMAL FLEA SOAP WOULD BE WISE- BECAUSE IT CAN DRY OUT THE SKIN AND IT WOULD NOT BE FUN FOR YOURSELF OR FOR THEM...
This answer is wrong - yes ivory will kill fleas. Give it a try - take a small glass of water and put a few drops of ivory in it - put a live flea in it and it will die almost on contact. It will kill fleas faster than flea soap. Have been using for years - vet recommended for animals with skin Allergies. You can also mix about 1 oz to 2 gallons of water and spray your yard - with no worry harming plants or animals.
Yes, you can do this treatment on your yard and it will kill fleas. The soap will coat the fleas and therefore kill them.
When I was little my mom always used Ivory bar soap. My sister-in-law swears by dial bar or liquid. I think its the soup changing the density of the water and drowning the fleas. I'm sure some kinds of soap drys out the animals skin though. Dish washing liquid mixed with water, about 1/2 inch of in a pan will drown the fleas also.
No! There is nothing in Dawn dish soap that will chemically kill fleas or their eggs! It will smother them like any other soap & water combo! Quit looking for the cheap way out & buy the right product for your animals.
Ivory soap bars are supposed to be nearly pure soap. Soap is made by combining fat and lye. This is not true of ivory detergents or liquid soaps.
James N. Gamble invented the ivory soap
It is unadvised to use gasoline on anything to kill off fleas. It is recommended to use blue dawn dish soap or products specifically made for flea removal.
No. Like other soaps, Ivory soap dissolves in water.
ivory hand soap liquid ingredients
From what I've read, Ivory soap was about 10 cents.
no, it is a different kind of ivory
89.73 percent of all bacteria is killed within the area treated.
This is nonfiction. Ivory soap is known to float due to its unique formulation that incorporates air bubbles during production.