8 K t OO KIDNtt LIVER 5"ffl!P DiHHolvcM CJ ravel 011 stone, brick dust In urine, pain In urethra, training after urination, pain In the back and hips, sudden stoppage of water with pressure. Brlght's Disease Tube- casta In urine, scanty urine. Swamp-Root cures urinary troubles and kidney difficulties. Liver Complaint forpid or enlarged liver, foul breath, bilious nets, bilious headache, poor digestion, pout. CatarrhoftheBladder Inflammation, Irritation, ulceration, dribbling, frequent calls, pass blood, mucus or pus. At Drugftiata 50 cent and $1.00 Alee. "loralld Oulde to tlnlth" rrfe-CbnaoltAtlon free. Da. Kxlhxk k Co., Binohamtok, N. Y. 9 W KANSAS RAILROAD. Electricity or 8tm to lie Applied U Crawford County. Topkka, Kan., July 18. Tho Kansas bum Missouri iMcciric Hallway com pany is tho nnmo of a now organiza tion which tui snttitA.1 a .!...... tho hocroUry of Btnto to do business In YBiiBUB nnu at sucn oinor points in the United States as tho board of directors way detcrmlno to bo to tho best In terests of tho company. Tho capital tock Is $35,000 and tho members 01 tho board of directors are as follows' ham Uarrott, Kobert ltobyn, A. h. Chaplin of Pittsburg, Kan., Robert Bimons of Westchester, Pa., L. M. Bedell, Carl J. 81inons and Harry W. Bedell of Chetopa. 'iM0 purposes of this company ns in dicated in the charter are to construct, maintain and opcrato a railroad for the transportation of freight and pas aengera by steam and eleotrlcity or any other power which they may choose to adopt upon the system of the road, which at this time seems to be confined to Crawford county. However, the directors say they will build tho road to other points iu Kan sas and Missouri. New Line of Insurance. TorKKA, Knn., July id The insur ance companies have opened up a new line of business in Wtrn k,,.,..nu That section is flooded with agents who Bre writing policies on tho growing crops, tho companies insuring against I.. ."--' -"-. nun uwwus. mo aca of Insurance conipunles issuing tuwiuBUKumsiiiiu destruction of crops y flood in tho western half of Kan Ma would havo been cousldured u great joke thirty days ago, but since the great fall of water and the loss of crops along the Smoky river, the farm- J? rcKlv!nK t,,c Insurance companies all the business they want. Liquor Sold is Wichita' Huburlin. , Wichita, Kan., July 18. Liquor is being- sold in English park, Ackerman's park, au Island lying in the Arkansas river, and beyond tho packing houses north of town. Tho chief of pclico claims that these pointa arc outsido of pollco jurisdiction and tho county authorities havo not yet molested tho jointlhU Hill McClurg, a bootlegger, was arrested and his stock of liquor seized. l UnnmiN Farmer Held at Kay. Atchison, Kun., July 18. T. V, Os tranger was arrested by Deputy Sheriir Ponuell this morning for stealing a team of horses, wugon and flvo hogs in the countrv liint niirlit a .......? j farmers surrounded tho prisoner and tried to tuko him uway from the orll cer, presumably to lynch him, but he was Anally landed safely in tho county A Hegular Tired of Life. Lk.vvenwokth, Kan., July 18. Al bert (J. Herrcman, iv private of Com pany C, Twentieth United States in fantry, shot himself through the heart this morning in u house of ill repute, lie left a note soyiug ho had decided to take his own life, us ho had nothing to llvo for. His term of enlistment would havo expired in elovou days. Oakland Win It Suit. OAKLAND, Cal., July 18. Superior Judge Ogden rendered his decision in ?5V0,rv th,? oityIn Iu caso against the Water 1-ront company, otherwise the Southern Pacific railroad, Involv ing tho title to eleven miles of water front, valued at many millions of dol lars, which has been practically in dispute for forty years. A Ilrewery Aicent Arri-ntrd. Kansas Citv, Mo., July 18. a com plaint was filed in Justice Hawthorne's court this morning charging Hermau L. Mueller, late general ugent in Kan sas City of tho Johoph Schlltz llrewlng company, with embezzlement. The amount stated in tho complulnt is 81,000, but the sum sa'ld to bo missing will probably reueh S5.000. MUiourl and Kmitaa Nmul Cadets. Washington, July 18. The follow lng persons have been appointed en dets, at the Nuvnl academy: L. 0 llroughtoii, Marysvllle, Kan. j Frank li juiuKwvu, mrmito, .lunetlon Clival Kun.i C. 1 lltiir, Uutlur. Mo.; R. fl.I 1 .-i ntfitiMi- W Lit.. 1..... . t, . .. 'I v- " '""i jviiji.; iv. .1. comer, -alternate, hedim, Kan.: It. D. Scott altornute, Murynvlllu, Kan. A Ttcwspapcr I'lunt Set on FJre. Hum:, Mo., July 18. Tho fllce of tho Bites County Globe, owned by I'aluter ilros., wus UTslly destroyed by file ut 2 o'clock this morning. Tho flro wiib of incuuclmry origin, having U-en set in tho oenter of the eompo.sinjr room. The loss is $.'1,500; insured for 6UM. Children Cry for Pitcher's Cattorla. LUTE PENSIONJECISIONS. ASSISTANT SECRETARY REYNOLDS HANDS DOWN THREE, IMPORTANT TO SOLDIERS. Tho Law Forbidding the Commissioner to Reduce I'cmlons Without Notice I)ooi Not Apply to Cane Acted on llefore It I'assago Tho Pensioning of Children. Wabiiinoton, July 18. Assistant Secretary Ileynolds has rendered three decisions in pension appeal casos. In tho first ho holds that while the com missioner of pensions Is forbidden by law to suspend payment of a pension pending proceedings to annul or re duco it, nevertheless, in oaso audi pen sion is annulled, all unpaid pensions apparently accrued at the data of tho annulment becomes Illegal and must not be paid. In the second caso tho secretary holds that tho law forbidding the com missioner to reducft pensions without thirty days notice does not apply to cases acted on boforo its passage In the third case it is hold that as the act pensioning tho children of a sailor who are under Id years of ago cxprossly provides that tho pensions shall begin from tho date of tho filing of the application for tho pension, a claimant who was ovor 10 years old when tho act was passed has no claim for pension at all. IN TIIK CUSTOMS HOUSE. Statement for the Year of Import, Ki port and Immigration. Wabiunoton, July 18. A statement of the imports,exports and immigration of tho United States during tho fiscal year ended June 30, 1803, shows as follows: Merchandise, exported, SS07,M13,'.'01; last year, 8801,007,700; merchandise imported, 8731,000,:il0, of which about one-half was free of duty; merchandise imported in 1804, 8(147, 77.1,017; of which 8372,57.'i,o:il was freo .of duty. The gold coin and bullion ex ported during the last flscul year amounted to 8(10,131,183, and tho im ports, 835,084,440. The exports last year, thorofore, were 8300,844,440 In excess of the Im ports. In the previous year tho exports exceeded tho Imports byi$'i38,042. The exports of silver during the lust year aggregated 840,220,012, against 80,518,028 In Imports. This Is a slight falling off from both exports and Im ports of the previous year. During tho fiscal year 1H05 tho number of im migrant who arrived in this country wus 270,130, ugainst 311,012 during the previous year. BLOW TO FAVORITISM. Vrceldent Cleveland II it he nn Important Killing Regarding Promotion. Wasuinotox, July 16. The presi dent has just promulgated a new rule modifying the old customs rule of the civil service, tho effect of which is to greatly limit the number of promo tions in classified customs districts, except after appropriate examinations. Tho necessity for tho change In tho rules urises from tho fact the e.vton. slon of the classification in tho cus toms service on November 2, last, over positions nuvlnc salaries of Ioha tlmn 8900 opened the doors for promotion of many persous who had entered the servico through personal nominal favoritism. Tho old ruin wmil.l tiai. mit these persons after thov wore brought into tho classified sorvico to 00 advanced to many of tho best pay ing positions in tho office without ex amination. Under the now rule pro motions can bo made only to a limited extent without examination, and no promotions can bo made from one grade to another without an appropri ate examination. CROP CONDITIONS. Report of the Weather llureau for the Week Kndt-d July IS. Washington, July 18. Tho weather bureau, In its report of crop condi tions for the week ended July 10, says: Drouth has been broken In Iowa and partly relieved in Wisconsin and South ern .Minnesota, but continues in Ohio and with great severity over the South ern half of Michigan. Excessive ruins have delayed threshing in .Missouri, Kansas, Northern Texas, Kentucky and Tennessee, uud caused gruln in shock to sprout. Corn needs rain in Ohio, Northern Indiana, Southern Michigan, Wiscon sin and South Dakota, and would bo Improved by rain in Nebraska, where tho blades are beginning to roll. In the Southern states the finest crop of corn for years Is promised. Frost on Tuesday morning caused slight dam age In Wisconsin. Drowned In the 1'rt-irnce of Muny, lliivir.it, Mo July 18. Kobert h. Edwards, eldest son of County Judge Thomas Kdwurdw, was drowned while swimming In l.oomls' pond at 7:3,". lust evening, In the presence of fifty or more men r.ud boys on the banks, Including his father and uncle, Juntos Edwards. Judge Edwards' attention whs culled to l-.lmer Francis, whuyjilso cTiino near drowning, but was rescued, and while he was working with young Francis his own boy was drowning and ho did not know It. Young Edwards is one of the brightest young men in thispartof the country und wus just 10 years of age. t Ilnnk Fullurr In MUiourl. Caiuiom.tox, Mo., July 18. Yester day morning an application was made before Judge ltuckcr to havo a receiver appointed for tho Hunk of Norborno, at.Norborno, Mo., and otto for tho Car roll county bank, at DoWitt, Mo. J. L. Minnls was appointed receiver for tho former and I. It. llrown for tho latter. This makes three bank failures In this county In two weeks. THE RED CLOUD CHIEF, FRIDAY, JULY 19, 1895. OLD-TIME ROMANCE ELUS, king ot Tyre, waa dead, and Pyjrmallon, his son, had succeeded to the throne. A new king Is some times a blessing tc a people, and some times he is not. This was one of the times when he wac not, for Pygmalion had atl the quali ties that make a sovereign detested, and none that make him loved. He had a sister, the Princess Dido, who wac married to a man of immense wealth, a' worthy nobleman of Tyre, named Blchaeus. You might think that a king would be glad to have the friendship and support of a man of that kind, especially In that far-away time, when thrones rested, at best, upon somewhat shaky foundations, but Pyg malion was so puffed up with Is own Importance and so confident of his pow er, that he sometimes "lost his head." He had one passion that subordinated everything else In hit nature tho love of gold, and he was In the habit of overriding anything that might stand In the way of acquiring It. In Bpfi, therefore, of his close rela tionship to Slchaeus, of the love that he should have felt, but did not, for his beautiful sister, the Princess Dido, he determined to become possessed of the wealth of Slchaeus, and to that end he had him put to death. Dut tho widowed Dido managed to outwit the avaricloUH king, her brother, and, knowing quite well that she would follow her husband to the land of shades if she did not put herself be yond the king's reach, she secretly or ganized a band of followers, men and women, and fled from Tyre, taking with her the riches that Slohaeus had left. She and her followers sailed away in ships. Dido had all the spirit and ambition of a royal race, and her purpose was to found a city In some new country where she might reign as became the daughter of Bclus. Committing herself and her companions, therefore, to the care and protection of the gods, she had her ships poluted toward the distant coast of Africa, and after a prosperous voy age landed at a point opposite to Sicily. The natives received her with many manifestations of friendship, and when she asked them for only so much ground aa might be Inclosed with a bull's hide, they readily gave their consent. Th'elr amusement, however, turned to dismay, and then to downright ad miration, when they saw how the shrewd princess had interpreted her own proposition. I don't know who suggested the idea to Dido; perhaps she evolved It out of her own head; but when the natives had consented to her request for as much ground as might be Inclosed with a bull's hide, she had the hide cut Into very fine atrlps, and then tied together Into a very long string. With this string she and her followers managed to In close a pretty good-sited piece of ground, upon which they at once built a citadel aa the nucleus of a town. And that la how the great and pow erful city of Carthage was founded, a city that afterward produced Hamllcar and Hannibal, two of the greatest sol dier and chieftains of those timet; a city that rivaled Rome itself In great ness and power. One day a great storm swept over the sea off Carthage, and In the midst of It' the people could tee several ves sels struggling with wind and wave. They were tome distance from shore, but their tempest-driven course showed that they must soon be wrecked upon the rocks that lay just outside the har bor. Word of their condition was brought to Queen Dlda In her palace, and she gave Immediate orders that her people should do what they could to aid the mariners If they should be wrecked. Dut suddenly, aB if by some super natural power, the winds subsided, the waves laid their foaming creBtt down upon the surface of the sea, the face of heaven was swept clear of tho dark clouds that had obscured It, and the vessels sailed quietly Into port. Tho people received the Btrangers with generous hospitality, and the queen sent a messenger to the leader of the expedition, requesting him to appear before her In the palace. Con anEAT STortM swept over THE SEA. ducted by the messenger, the leader set forth at once to obey the royal com mand. "Welcome, noble strunger," said Dido, as the leader came Into her presence. "I know sot whence you came, but It Is enough that you and your people havo been storm-driven; all Carthage s subject to your will until such tlmo as you shall hnve repaired tho Injury you hnve sustained. I, myself, am not unacquainted with sorrow, and I have learned to succor the unfortunate. Wel come, therefore, to this good city of Carthage, of which I am queen." ".Most noble queen," said the strang er', a man of herolo form and bearing, "I thank you for your hospitable greet ing; may the gods forever bless you and your generous people. "Know, Queen Dido, that I am Aeneas, one of the chieftains of.Troy. That fair city, after ten years of herolo struggle against the valor and strategy of the besieging Greeks,, has fallen, and its good people all except those that came her with mo In my ships have suffered death by spear 'and aword at the hands of our victorious enemy. "Yes. queen, Troy Isio more; Its palaces and Its temples are In a'thet, and Its people Ore dead. We are the only survivors of the dire calamity, and we seek a spot where, under the good will and pretectlon of the gods, we may rehabilitate ourselves and. maytrep. louTtu 11 new city ana a new race, . -- -. - nun a w V "fonie Aeneas," said Dido; "It grieves Mib$sy Jgk. AJ? " A me to hear that Troy Is no more. But right worthily did her gallant sons bear themselves In her defense. As long aa the world endures shall their praises be sung and their names be honored. "You say that you and your followers nre seeking a new home; rest here! Carthage welcomes all gallant men within her walls! Hero there shall bo no distinc tion between Carthaginian and Trojan. Your people shall be my people, and my people shall be yours. Abide In Carthage and find hero the fulfillment of your ambition!" And then the queen ordered a great feast prepared In honor of her guests; but before the feast there were athletic games, such as tho people of that age Indulged In, at which tho rnen of Carth ngo and the followers of Aeneas con tended on equal terms. Tho whole city gave Itself up to festivity, and the storm-beaten Trojans were led" to for get their distress. In tho evening the feast was spread In tho great hall of tho palace, and Queen Dido made Aeneas sit beside her on her throne. Then, while the festivi ties went on around them, she bade him tell her the story of his escape from Troy and his adventures before the stornj drove him to Carthage. "This, most noble queen," said Aeneas, "Is how It happened. For ten years had the Greeks, led by Agamem non, Mcnelaus, Achilles and the rest, sought In vain to capture Troy. Many a great and glorious struggle had tak en place upon tho plains before the city, and many a brilliant deed of arms had been done by warriors on both sides. "But strategy accomplished what valor had failed to do, and when our people hauled within the gates n great wooden horse that the Greeks had left upon the plain our doom was sealed. That wooden horse was filled with some of the bravest of our enemies, nnd at night a traitor opened Its side and turned the warriors loose upon our un suspecting people. "Straightway these warriors opened .the city gates to their soldiers and Troy was taken. Then followed all the hor rors of Are, pillage and massacre, In the midst of which I managed to find my, way out of the city, bearing my father, Anchlses, upon my shoulders, and leading my little son by the han'd. Close after me followed my wife, but she, alas! wat toon twept away In the confusion and utterly lost. "Some others escaped, also, and when I encountered them some distance from the city, they placed themselves under .my guidance and command. The fugi tives, as you see, were men, women and children, and I determined to seek a new country and establish a colony, perhaps build a city that might rival ratr Troy. "In time we secured shins and set sail, meeting with various adventures on our way. Wo first landed on tho shores of Thrace, but the gods sent me a warning, and we took ship again. Then sighting Delos, I sailed into Its harbor, and having gone ashore, I con sulted the oracle of Apollo for guidance. "The oracle answered me In ambigu ous phrase, as oracles always do: 'Seek your ancient mother; there the race of Aeneas shall dwell, and reduce all oth er nations to their sway.' "I knew not where to find my 'an cient mother,' but Anchlses, my father, remembered that Crete was the reputed home of my ancestors. To Crete, there fore, we sailed, and having lande.d, we began to build a city, but sickness broke out among my people, our crops utterly failed, and 1 had a dream In which I waa warned to seek Hesperla, In the west, whence Dardanus, the real founder of the Trojan race, had mi grated. "Leaving Crete, therefore, we turned our ships toward the west. Having touched at various points, and met with many strange adventures, we at last reached the coast of Sicily, over against your own good city of Carthage. "With, fair wjnds, clear skies, smooth water and hopeful hearts, we were speeding away prosperously toward our destination, when Juno, whose resent ment against Paris for awarding the Golden Apple to Venice extends to tho whole Trojan race, sent for Aeolus, the ruler of the winds, and ordered him to turn loose a gale upon our ships and .wreck them. "It was that storm, O queen, through which we struggled ns we neared this hospltnble shore. No doubt you mar veled at the suddenness with which It subsided; but know you that It was great Neptune that quieted the waves. Hearing the storm raging, and know ing that he had not ordered one, he looked from under the water and bade tho winds go back to their keeper. "Then It was that we sailed through smooth water to your fair city, where you and your people have so royally received us." "And hero you shall remain, noble Aeneas, If It please you, for whatever you nsk you shall have, even to the half of my kingdom. I beg you to seek not that unknown country, Hesperla; be content with Carthage, for here you shall have riches, luxury and power." Who will wonder that Aenpas accept ed the generous queen's offer? And when she gave him her hand and made him her royal consort, he ceased to think of Hesperla and the mysterious warning ho had received In his dream. Rut tile hands of the gods were upon this noble Trojan, for It had been do creed that his race should found tho city of Rome, In Hesperla, or Italy, aa It Is now called, and Jupiter sent Mer cury to remind him of the great destiny that had been predicted for him. .SurroundeO by luxury, wealth, power, love and all the allurements that en snare a man's ambition, he was content to remain In Carthage with his beauti ful queen. But a command from the gods he dared not disobey. When 'Mer cury had left him, therefqre, he began his preparations for leaving Carthage. Dido used all the Bwee porsua'slqnt that love and devotion could suggest but while his heart was torn with agony at the thought of leaving her, ho dread ed the anger of Jupiter too much to yield to her entreaties, t When the afflicted queen knew, that he had sailed away she gave herself up to a grief that was too heavyt to be borne, and even while hit ships were itUI within sight of vthe,clty, she mount td,a funeraLplle that had been prepared by her direction, thrust a dagger deep Into her heart and sunk dylnjr upon the pile aa the flames serif their loot;, tongues up Into the air. r M KmpreM iflaitbetk. The EmDretl Btlxifceth at. Kueal& waa w " - ..- "' l v" 'H""H' women 01 nentime.- FOREMAN CHARLES ROLFF" SUPERINTENDENT OF H IN Up in the top story of Tbe Globo buildiog where the typesetting and other maobines do everything bnt talk, sajs the Boston Globe ever since tho birthday of that great paper. Ho is the night foreman of tbe compos ing room, aid looks fully 15 years younger than he really is. Hit name is Mr. Ubarlei Relfe. Nervoai headaches that well-nigh drove hint to distraction first intro duced him to Paine's celery compound That wts Ivo years ago, and uatil that time be wat one of the most pronouno 'd opponents of prepared remedies to be found in the city. Just how Paine's celery aompound was first broigbt to his attention he does not remember, but it his dona him so much goodthat'theeompound has no mora enthuslastio champion living. Ho is as happy sb any one in the enjoyment of good health could be and for that happiness he gives full eredit to Paine's celery compound, Read what he his to say about the medioine: "I am always ready to recommend Paine's celery compound when 1 hear of a case similar to my own. Some five years ago I was suffering from headaches whioh were sometimes so severe during working hours of the night that I would clasp my hands over my head to 'hold tho lop on.' the pain being excruciating. Tbe attacks w.ould occur sometimes as often as thrte lime a week. Sloop was out of the question, the pillow seeming but a block of wood. "Just at the time I was suffering most I bought a bottle of Paine's ool- ery compound, began at once to take it, and before a week had passed the hetdache began to disappear. I felt almost a new man before tho bottle was empty. I purohastd more, and for two yoars kept it in the houso for uo whenever I felt a return of tho Market Kejtort. (Corrected Weekly.) Wheat $ os Corn 55 gate 3c Rye CO Flax 125 Hogs .1 2!i 4 nn Stock hoga 2oo3(X) Fat cows 350 Mutter 7 Errs 7 Potatoes no OhickenR lb 4 Spring Chickens 1 602 00 Turkeya lb 0 Hailed Hay pertonlO Tako your wagon work to Stapleton Ho forgee all irons for buggies out of the beat Norway iron, usoe no malleable iron in repairing buggies. When Baby waa tick, we gave her eaatoata. When the was a CUUd, the cried f or Catterta, When the became Mia, ahe clung to ewtorta, Wbea tilt bad Children, ahe gave them Owtorta. Repair work done at Featberly fe Young second hand store. I repair gunt revolvers, parasols,, door and trunk locks, gaa stover fit keys and sewing machines I will take produce in eange for my work. E. A. Youa I 111 THE BIGGEST C0RIN old paint. It never failed in giving me relief. Tbe other members of my family also began to take it my wife for a feeling of genrral weakness, she being at that time much 'run dowa' and never feeling well enough to per form tho work af tho home. Within a neck Bho was, at sho czpietsed it, 'as well as ever in her life,' and simlV lar reports same from all our friends te whom we had recommended it, "I fool confident that in nervous headaches and a 'run down' system the ctmpound will be beneficial every timo, if net a perfeot cure. "la some instances we have not only recommended it. but furnishedY it to very aged friends, and the effeot of one battle has seemed marvelous, one particular old friend ofLmJ 4tf': ing me how that befoff one bottle had been usbk ha 'felt at use he least ten years younger, and certainly had not felt as goed for 10 years." "During the last fivo years I have used a great many bottles of the com- pound that is, in my home. I am notitivo that it is a sure eure for ner vous headaohtB and a broken-down feeling, especially in the case of elder ly persons." "There is one case in particular I call to mind, in whioh Paine's oelery compound asserted its good qualities. Wo bad a young married lady friend, who was nursing her 4 months-old child, and found that sbo could not perform ber household dutios on ac count of the weak odndition she seem ed always to be in, On the recom mendation of my wife and myself she took ono bottlo ef the compound, and before two weeks had passed was able r to do her own washing eveo, in addi tion to housework. About threo bot tles wero used. I havo yot to hear from any friend to whoa I reoom mended it other than the most favor able results." Legal Notice). ttTATt Or NitlUSK A wasrraa coumtt, f IS At a county court, held at the county court room, In and for said ctunty, July Uth, A. V. UD3. If tht matttrof tho estate of Si 11 man F, Bart, Ittt deceased. On readlag and nllng the petition ot Nelson HartUtt, praying that the lustrumont, filed an the 3d day of July, 189S, and purporting to be tbe last will and testament of the said deceased, may be proved, approved, probated, al. , lowed and recorded as tha last will and tastnmont ot the said Hluinan V, Bartlett, de ceased, and that tli execution of said Instru. ineut may be committed and the administra tion ef said esU(e may be granted to Nelsoa Bartlett and Margaret II. Bartlettasoxocutors. uruerea, mat Tuesday July 30th. A. I. itaj, at 2 o'clock p. in., Is assigned for hearing said petition, whtn all persons Interested In said matter may appear at a coanty tourt to bo held In and for tald coanty, and show causo why the prayer of petitioner should not be granted; and that pttlce of the pendency of tald pttltlon and the hearing thereof, be given to all persons Interested In said matter ny puollshlng a copy of this order In the RedCIoad Cmar a weekly uewipaper printed In said county, for three suwesilre weeks, prior to salddayofheaajog. JAMasDurrr, County Judge, Notice. To Whim It May Coneera 1 nof.KtnAhVA!:"fi,.Lr'.?oLAy spsspm van by taioer 1.,'U ..rnimriA" "'""Wl IIO Ui U Ceteber offlsV aWi &X!WoMKk totl wl" m Aoiw"ruw.' tot" Jy.O.M.EAKMB, AHA M 1 a 4v Vff;3