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Show LV th y wouldn t be able to go for another month. Will upa h ll t them? If they will give their numbers up you can ha e t mand u ' Okay, I will do that." So they called them and said w ill gi u th r number when the month comes that you're ready to go, if you 11 gi th numb ru tht you have now." They said that was fine with them. So, I got the numbers. We ent home. We had three days. We went home, got our stuff, packed up hurried out to the family close around and bid them farewell, and then over on the boat to Sweden. That was a bad day in Sweden. They were drunk, all these attendants on the train up there to Goteborg. They were drunk and sour and it wasn't a very pleasant ride up there. We came up there and got out to the harbor. There they were getting ready. The ship was in and landing platforms were down, so we could get up on there. Then we had to show our papers. We got there to the gangplank and they asked for our papers. At five o'clock, or sometime around five o'clock, the ship was filled up with passengers. They were singing down there, Swedish songs, and waved to us as we pulled out of the harbor there and were on our way. It took us ten days to get over the Atlantic. We went south around Norway, up north around England, and then down to New York. We had to watch for the minefields that they weren't sure of at that time, but they got us through. It was lots of memories. When we came over there, we helped several of the Danish people and some of the Norwegian people. I did, because my wife couldn't speak Norwegian and Swedish to understand them. I could, so I helped them through that. When we came in there, they looked at our papers and asked us questions and things like that: destinations and intentions. They knew our intentions. They said, "Well, we won't put any toll on you because you're going to stay in the country. So what you have is yours and that stays 41 |