sK-S-1Sres.The news on Mutual’s overseascorrespondents this week is good. Frank Cuhel, correspondent in Batavia, is now in Australia. Elizabeth Wayne, his immediate predecessor in Java, is awaiting ;d | clipper reservations for New York, in Port of Spain. Portugal.Miss Wayne left Batavia during the relatively peaceful days of December and was not heard from y ; until last week. How she got from £ Australia (her destination from Java to Trinidad will not be learned until she arrives in New York, presumably next week.Cuhel. on the other hand, left Java only hours before the Nip-onese piled in. With another radio correspondent and George Weller, the New York Post’s man in Java, Cuhel got aboard a small passenger steamer bound for Australia. Some 600 passengers jammed themselves into the boat, finally reached down under” after surviving bombs, torpedoes, and assorted forms of Japanese ingenuity.Mr. Cuhel says that the Australian reactions to American troops are unanimously enthusiastic. “Every American soldier and sailor is a gentleman” has been expressed by the Australians who wonder if the Americans’ uniforms are all tailored especially for them.