A. 
No person shall store or keep in any building more than one approved twenty-five-gallon container of fuel oil or kerosene unless the container is so arranged and secured as to prevent tipping and the liquid is withdrawn from the container by an approved hand pump. If any such storage container is used for the purpose of filling other containers, said storage container shall not exceed 60 gallons' individual capacity.[1]
[1]
Editor's Note: Former § 119-33, Storage in buildings above lowest floor, which immediately preceded this section, was deleted 5-23-2000 by Ord. No. 00-19.
B. 
No person shall deliver or fill with fuel oil or kerosene any container located in any building, which container exceeds a capacity of 25 gallons unless the container is so arranged and secured as to prevent tipping and the liquid is withdrawn from the container by an approved hand pump. If any such storage container is used for the purpose of filling other containers, such storage container shall not exceed 60 gallons' individual capacity.
C. 
Nothing in this section is intended to prohibit the storage of fuel oil in approved tanks of 275 gallons' capacity used for the purpose of supplying fuel oil to stationary oil burners in central heating units.
No person shall store or keep outside any building more than five gallons of fuel oil or kerosene unless the container is so arranged and secured as to prevent tipping and is equipped with a self-closing nozzle or an approved hand pump.
No person shall store or sell kerosene or range or fuel oil in glass containers.
No person shall fill any container with or deliver any fuel oil or kerosene in or upon any premises, whether within or without a building, where, in the filling or delivery of such fuel oil or kerosene, it is necessary to pass an open fire or flame of any kind.