Fels Naphta is a soap, naphta is a product of the petrochemistry.
I believe Kerosene lasts longer but you have to keep pumping it every so often to keep the light going, then there's those little booties you have to replace once in a while, then filling your lantern using that little funnel, "Oh shoot! I left the funnel at home!". If you want no fuss no hassle go with propane it's less pain. So you have to carry a few tanks rather that a 1 gallon can?
Some one would use a propane lantern in many circumstances including going camping overnight, exploring cave systems in which a propane lantern is very important and mining also needs lantern as light in mines is very minimal.
because Alan likes men
No, kerosene is a liquid
kerosene (naptha kerosene)
You get the lantern and light it with the kerosene.
No, it smells like naptha.
Petroleum was turned into Kerosene for use in lanterns and stoves
You will get it from the fire then go to the kerosene and fill the lantern up.
No. Charcoal lighter is usually refined kerosene and cigarette lighter fluid is naptha. Naptha is also a component in clothes dry cleaning compounds, so that is the reason it will take spots out of clothes. Naptha has a different flash point than kerosene, so do not try to fill lighters with it.
To light up the lantern, go to the basement and use the kerosene in the bottom-left corner (below the entrance)
Since cars don't burn or use kerosene I would say the car has been around something that had kerosene in it ( camping stove and lantern) or had it poured on the surface some how.
kerosene, gasoline, fuel and gas
The Ring from Kerosene, also appeared in the video Dietz Kerosene Lantern Collection.
To light the lantern in the haunted house you have to go to the floor you came in on and click on the kerosene barrel.
There is a barrel of kerosene under the stairs in the basement (where you entered). Click on it to fill the lantern.