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Posted By: Sycamore Meanwhile, in Butte, America - 03/16/19
https://mtstandard.com/news/local/a...eeb7ce8-fa3a-5cda-9228-9b8472e12092.html

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ANACONDA — For more than 30 years, the Anaconda AOH Pipes & Drums has marched in both the Butte and Anaconda St. Patrick’s Day parades. This year is no different.

The group will be playing in Butte and Anaconda on Saturday-Sunday, March 16-17. Their schedule is listed below. Times are subject to change.

Saturday, March 16
Anaconda

1 p.m.: Smelter City Brewery

1:30 p.m.: Thompson's/Harp & Thistle

2 p.m.: Anaconda parade

2:45 p.m.: AOH Hall

3:30 p.m.: Haufbrau

4 p.m.: Carmel's

4:30 p.m.: Club Moderne

Butte

6:30 p.m.: Friendly Sons and Daughters’ banquet

8 p.m.: East Side Athletic Club

8:30 p.m.: McQueen Club

9 p.m.: Uptown Butte bars

Sunday, March 17
Butte

12:30 p.m.: Parade

2 p.m.: Quarry Brewery

Subs
Nothin' like a good pipe band !
https://mtstandard.com/news/local/b...f1d9595-0482-5271-aa70-42cab787dc5a.html

Butte’s Finlanders to host a traditional St. Urho’s party Saturday


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At the East Side Athletic Club, 3200 Dexter, Butte’s Finlanders will host a traditional St. Urho’s Day celebration Saturday, March 16.

The crowning of St. Urho, Dean Peterson, and Princess St. Urho, Autumn Kielb will take place at 6 p.m. The Great Scots will perform from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Anaconda Pipe and Drums will be at the club at 8 p.m.

In addition, F.O.G., a rock and dance band comprised of Mark James, Gary Robinson and Toby Schelin, will perform from 7 p.m. to midnight. Details: 406-782-7539.
I hate bagpipes about as much as I hate dogs.
Originally Posted by deflave
I hate bagpipes about as much as I hate dogs.


Yeah well, I am pretty sure they didn't so much follow the pipes into battle as chased them.
Butte's a schit hole.
Cept for Pork Chop Johns
Originally Posted by deflave
Butte's a schit hole.


lighten up, Francis!
I didn't mean it in a caustic way. Just in a general way.
Originally Posted by Remington6MM
Cept for Pork Chop Johns


king of the pork chop sandwich!
Never drive past Butte without stopping at the Mercury street shop for the classic, extra mustard and onion slice.
Originally Posted by Remington6MM
Never drive past Butte without stopping at the Mercury street shop for the classic, extra mustard and onion slice.


Good eats.

By Montana standards...
Originally Posted by Remington6MM
Never drive past Butte without stopping at the Mercury street shop for the classic, extra mustard and onion slice.


+1

best is buying it through the walkup window in a snow storm! ; )
The Derby on the other side of town has/had a great steak house too.
Sweet Jesus...
Hey Sycamore, are you from Montana?
WHAT? Clark.
I love a pipe band, but would not want it for a steady diet. Once in a while is great.

My across-the-street neighbor lady is a nationally ranked piper, goes all over the Western states for events. Teaches pipes in her home or in the back yard when weather permits, lucky she has tolerant neighbors. laugh
That food fugking sucks man.
Trav, since you left, Montana only has one Butte Hole. blush

I have a pasty every time I go through, but can't remember the name of the joint. Perfect miner food, those.
Dave, that's why I said have/had. Ain't been there for a while. Wait, you talking about the Derby?
https://mtstandard.com/news/local/c...82958ee-6751-5455-ada6-eac07f807451.html

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Saturday marks the passing of another St. Urho’s Day in Butte, which means grasshoppers everywhere will be shaking in their boots.

In case you don’t know the legend of St. Urho, it goes something like this: As St. Patrick drove the snakes from Ireland, so did St. Urho drive the crickets from Finland in an effort to save the country’s grape harvest. And he did so by yelling really loudly, causing the crickets to run away.

St. Urho, of course, was a made-up saint. The holiday was actually invented in the 1950s by Finns in Minnesota who wanted to have an answer to St. Patrick’s Day.

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“The Finns were getting kind of miffed that they weren’t having a holiday like the Irish. And of course the Irish would take St. Paddy’s Day off, so they basically made this holiday up the day before St. Paddy’s Day,” said Gina Vareli, chair of the St. Urho’s celebration committee.

Today, several towns across the Midwest celebrate the holiday. In Butte, the celebration involves the crowning of a Finnish man and woman as St. Urho and Princess Urho. Bestowed upon them are purple robes. St. Urho also gets a horned helmet and a pitchfork topped with an impaled grasshopper, while Princess Urho is crowned with a garland of flowers.

Both give speeches.

Last year’s Princess Urho Barbara Hepola Burton told audience members — over 200 of them crowded into the East Side Athletic Club — that she took her title very seriously and that there wouldn’t be an infestation of grasshoppers under her watch.

“It has some humor to it,” Vareli said, describing the lighthearted nature of the holiday. “It’s a blast.”

The celebration also involves a cocktail or two.

Vareli has been organizing the celebration for several years at the East Side Athletic Club on Dexter Street off Continental Drive.

The first St. Urho’s Day in Butte took place in the early 1970s at the Helsinki Bar. The tradition was brought to Butte by the bar’s then-owner Ervin Niemi, a Minnesota native.

Niemi passed away in October.

Vareli, who formerly worked at the Helsinki, has been involved in the planning of the celebration since 2002. When the Helsinki closed, she brought the holiday to the East Side, now in its fourth year of hosting the celebration.

In light of her commitment to keeping Butte’s St. Urho’s Day alive, one would think that Vareli is a card-carrying Finlander, but she’s actually Italian.

“I’m an Italian in Butte, Montana, putting on a Finnish holiday,” she said, laughing.

Vareli loves the holiday nonetheless. For her, it’s part of the cultural backdrop of the Mining City.

“I believe in tradition, and I think it’s wonderful,” she said.

Glenn Laitinen is a longtime member of the celebration committee.

Laitinen said for him, Butte’s St. Urho’s Day is a matter of upholding the Finn tradition and continuing it — “and just having a good time.”

Laitinen lived in Butte’s Finn Town neighborhood when he was very young, and according to the Butte resident, his grandfather only spoke Finnish to him, to the point that English was almost like a second language when Laitinen entered school. Today, Laitinen still speaks a little bit of Finnish.

Holding the title of St. Urho Saturday will be Dean Petersen, who was also St. Urho in 2017.

“Oh yeah, it’s a good time,” Petersen said when asked if he’s looking forward to the event. “It’s a Butte tradition.”

He added that he hopes more young people will get involved in the celebration so that the tradition lives on.

This year’s Princess Urho is Autumn Kielb of Helena.

Her parents, Mark and Kim Waltee, are originally from Butte, and St. Urho’s Day was a family tradition in her household.

During her childhood, she would wear purple to school on the special day and took pleasure in explaining to her classmates her festive look. The next day, her family would often wear purple and green to celebrate the heritage of both her dad and mom, who’s part Irish.

“I’m pretty excited about it, just to be part of the tradition,” said Kielb, noting that she’s looking forward to the celebration.

Her mom and dad will also be attending Saturday.

“They wouldn’t miss it,” she said.
Originally Posted by RockyRaab
Trav, since you left, Montana only has one Butte Hole. blush

I have a pasty every time I go through, but can't remember the name of the joint. Perfect miner food, those.


Reported to Rick.

I will not be cyber-bullied.
Originally Posted by Remington6MM
Dave, that's why I said have/had. Ain't been there for a while. Wait, you talking about the Derby?


Hahahahaha.

Derby. I forgot about that guy. What a fugk stick.

I was just asking if Sycamore was from MT. He references it often but never answers. Prolly too busy chewing on a dick.
They party a lot in Butte.


Better to be drunk in Butte than to be in Butte and realize that you are in fact....in Butte, sober.
Originally Posted by Sycamore

2 p.m.: Anaconda parade

2:45 p.m.: AOH Hall


Must be quite a parade.
Judging by the snow and their attire, those are some frosty buttes
Originally Posted by Sycamore


Born and raised in Anaconda and I’d move back there or to Butte in a heartbeat. Chad is a good friend of mine and was one of my professors in college.
We love Butte. It's a real interesting two cities.
Posted By: 79S Re: Meanwhile, in Butte, America - 03/17/19
Originally Posted by deflave
Originally Posted by Remington6MM
Dave, that's why I said have/had. Ain't been there for a while. Wait, you talking about the Derby?


Hahahahaha.

Derby. I forgot about that guy. What a fugk stick.

I was just asking if Sycamore was from MT. He references it often but never answers. Prolly too busy chewing on a dick.


Nah he lives in Arizona big Johnny McCain fan, but loves Kyrsten Sinema now.. voted for Obama in 2012
Originally Posted by elkchsr
Originally Posted by Sycamore


Born and raised in Anaconda and I’d move back there or to Butte in a heartbeat. Chad is a good friend of mine and was one of my professors in college.


great song!
Posted By: Brad Re: Meanwhile, in Butte, America - 03/17/19
Butte... Pittsburgh in the Rockies. Chit food and a whole lot more.
Bagpipes are so annoying. Rather listen to women scream.
Sycamore is enamored with Butte and Anaconda for some reason.........
We always stop at Silverbow Pizza when slumming it in Butte.
It's a "unique" town. Lived there for about a year as a 12 yr old. It was an experience. Lots of good people there.
It's especially unique on St Pats day:)
https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/pekin-noodle-parlor?

More pictures at the link

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Pekin Noodle Parlor, the oldest continuously-operating Chinese restaurant in the United States, is unassuming, its flickering neon sign above the door a feeble indicator of its cultural significance. A narrow flight of stairs leads up to the vintage interiors of the Parlor, whose distinctive orange booths (with matching orange curtains) are individual cubicles offering a truly intimate meal. When the food arrives, it is rolled into the booths in trolleys.

An active Chinatown bustled in Butte in the late 19th century, with Chinese immigrants pouring in, many of them lured by the promise of the Gold Rush. In 1911, Hum Yow and Tam Kwong Yee opened the Pekin Noodle Parlor to feed this growing community. The Tam family has owned and operated the Parlor ever since. It’s currently run by Danny Wong (whose Chinese name is Ding Kuen Tam), who bought it from his great-uncle in the 1950s.

The Pekin Noodle Parlor serves Chinese-American staples such as chop suey, but also standard American sandwiches and steak. The Pekin building itself also has a colorful history. In its early years, its ground floor was a gambling hall and then an herbal medicine dispensary. Sensationalist local lore adds brothel to the mix, but some say that rumor stems from people simply misinterpreting the purpose of the restaurant’s private, curtained booths.

The restaurant is closed on Monday and Tuesday. It's open from 5:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. on Wednesday, Thursday, and Sunday, and open from 5:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. on Friday and Saturday.
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