We have the following indirect implication of form equivalence classes:
			
| Implication | Reference | 
|---|---|
| 345 \(\Rightarrow\) 14 | Topologie, Analyse Nonstandard et Axiome du Choix, Morillon,  M. 1988, Universit\'e Blaise-Pascal | 
| 14 \(\Rightarrow\) 229 | Variants of Rado's selection lemma and their applications, Rav,  Y. 1977, Math. Nachr. | 
Here are the links and statements of the form equivalence classes referenced above:
| Howard-Rubin Number | Statement | 
|---|---|
| 345: | Rasiowa-Sikorski Axiom: If \((B,\land,\lor)\) is a Boolean algebra, \(a\) is a non-zero element of \(B\), and \(\{X_n: n\in\omega\}\) is a denumerable set of subsets of \(B\) then there is a maximal filter \(F\) of \(B\) such that \(a\in F\) and for each \(n\in\omega\), if \(X_n\subseteq F\) and \(\bigwedge X_n\) exists then \(\bigwedge X_n \in F\). | 
| 14: | BPI: Every Boolean algebra has a prime ideal. | 
| 229: | If \((G,\circ,\le)\) is a partially ordered group, then \(\le\) can be extended to a linear order on \(G\) if and only if for every finite set \(\{a_{1},\ldots, a_{n}\}\subseteq G\), with \(a_{i}\neq\) the identity for \(i = 1\) to \(n\), the signs \(\epsilon_{1}, \ldots,\epsilon_{n}\) (\(\epsilon_{i} = \pm 1\)) can be chosen so that \(P\cap S(a^{\epsilon_{1}}_{1},\ldots,a^{\epsilon_{n}}_{n})=\emptyset\) (where \(S(b_{1},\ldots,b_{n})\) is the normal sub-semi-group of \(G\) generated by \(b_{1},\ldots, b_{n}\) and \(P = \{g\in G: e\le g\}\) where \(e\) is the identity of \(G\).) | 
Comment: