George Skoglund works in Denmark, Sweden and Norway, but he doesn't run an international business. He is a brick mason and Denmark, Sweden and Norway are towns in Maine.

Maine has a large number of towns named for foreign cities and countries. Just north of Denmark, Sweden and Norway are Madrid, Mexico and Peru. Belfast is on the coast and Stockholm is minutes from the Canadian border. There's a China and a Poland. And for a state with very few people of Italian ancestry, Maine has quite a few towns named for cities in Italy: Rome, Verona, Sorrento, Palermo and Naples. Tale of Two Romes

Vienna (pronounced VYE-enna by Mainers), Me., is a little town on Flying Pond next door to Rome, a town of 624 people on Great Pond, one of Maine's famed Belgrade Lakes. The two central Maine towns were not named by folks longing for their homelands. The early settlers of Rome and Vienna just admired the two European capitals and probably had never even been there.

According to a book published in 1955 called ''Maine Place Names and the Peopling of Its Towns,'' the people of Rome, Me., apparently could not resist comparing the two Romes, boasting that they had seven times as many hills and enough granite to rebuild Rome, Italy.