The chicken sandwich wars get another contender with Chili s new offering. Plus, Chicago Northwest hosts Eat Local Week June 4-13 and Friday is National Doughnut Day.
Places to take kids for a fun day out in Northern Ireland this summer belfastlive.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from belfastlive.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Photo: Northern Ireland Office
For the final stop on day one of a two-day tour of Northern Ireland, Prince Charles visited Slieve Gullion Forest Park in County Armagh. During the engagement, the Prince took the time to learn how the park operates to reduce erosion on traditional stonework. He also learned how local trade is supported by buying sheeps’ wool to create fleeces to underlay the footpaths.Embed from Getty Images
The Prince was told during his visit,
“It never rains in south Armagh.” After flying in by helicopter, Charles was treated to a musical performance by a group of children from The Ring of Gullion Traditional Arts Partnership, which is a community arts association that focuses on traditional music and song.
DUP boycott of North-South council damaging interests on both sides of border irishtimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from irishtimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Comments
As my family came from a small farm six miles outside of Manorhamilton in Co Leitrim, I would like to tell the members about another great son of Leitrim, Patrolman Philip Fitzpatrick, Shield No. 15348, and this hero s tragic ending.
Patrolman Philip Fitzpatrick was born in Aughavas, Co. Leitrim in 1892, and emigrated to America in the early 1920s, settling like so many Irish men and Irish women in New York City. He joined New York s Finest in 1926 and became a Patrolman, assigned to Mounted Squad 1 in Manhattan.
Patrolman Fitzpatrick wrote the song, Lovely Leitrim, in a loving tribute to his beloved home county. Popularized when it was recorded by Larry Cunningham, the song is still loved both in Ireland and the US.