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REVERSAL WON ON HUNTINGTON BANK FUND CASE The Tribune's Special Service. INDIANAPOLIS, June 24. โ€” Attorney General Philip Lutz, jr., has obtained a reversal of a lower court decision in the only case appealed involving a construction of the state's sinking fund law which provides state insurance on public funds in closed banks. The Indiana appellate court has reversed the Huntington circuit court in a case involving a Huntington bank. The receiver of the bank filed a petition for the determination of what portion of the city's deposit was to be paid out of the state's sinking fund under section nine of chapter 33 of the acts of 1932. The appellant and attorney general contended that only $16,510.93 was really new money after the sinking fund law became effective. The bank's books showed only $1.30 on deposit by the city on Jan. 1, 1933, but the city held SIX NOMINATED FOR DELEGATES TO POLISH MEET Six nominees for delegates to the national convention of the Polish National alliance of America at Baltimore, Md., next fall were chosen Sunday afternoon by delegates of Gmina No. 24, the central council of Indiana groups of the organization at a meeting in the alliance library at 325 McPherson street. In the order of their strength on the ballot, the following were placed in nomination: Ladislaus Jaroszewski, president of the Gmina; Dr. Francis S. Kubiak, and Andrew Przybysz, all of South Bend; John Fraczek, of Laporte; Alfred Zawisza, of South Bend, and John Kwasny, of Mishawaka. Fifteen societies comprising the gmina will vote on the nominees during next month to elect three. Included are six groups from South Bend and one each from Mishawaka, Laporte, Elkhart, Michigan City, Fort Wayne, Indianapolis, Muncie, Anderson and Evansville.