VALLEY'S HIDDEN HISTORY A GLIMPSE OF LIFE WHEN IT TOOK 12 HOURS TO TRAVEL DOWNTOWN.From the Encino Ranch ranch, large farm devoted chiefly to raising and breeding cattle, horses, sheep, and goats. The cattle ranch was introduced from Latin America to Texas and the plains of the W United States and Canada. and the De La Osa Adobe in Encino, to the Minnie H. Palmer Residence in Chatsworth and the San Fernando San Fernando, city, Argentina San Fernando (săn fərnăn`dō), city (1991 pop. 144,761), Buenos Aires prov., E Argentina. It is a district administrative center in the Greater Buenos Aires area. Mission in Mission Hills, historical landmarks in the San Fernando Valley San Fernando Valley Valley, southern California, U.S. Northwest of central Los Angeles, the valley is bounded by the San Gabriel, Santa Susana, and Santa Monica mountains and the Simi Hills. offer visitors the opportunity to discover what life was like ``way back when.'' At the Leonis Adobe Museum in Calabasas, visitors are treated to a 19th-century experience that doesn't feel out of place in Old Town Calabasas. At 6 feet 4 inches tall, Miguel Leonis, a Basque Basque Spanish Vasco Member of a people of unknown origin living in Spain and France along the Bay of Biscay and in the western Pyrenees mountains in the region of the Basque Country. About 850,000 true Basques live in Spain and another 130,000 in France. from the French Pyrenees, was practically a freak of nature in the mid-1800s. ``He could do the work of three men,'' said Doris Butler, a docent at the museum. Complete story on Page 8 CAPTION(S): photo Photo: (color) With a children's buggy Refers to software that contains many flaws. Many in the software industry swear that bugs are inevitable, and perhaps they are right. As long as we work in the competitive, pressure-cooker environment of our high-tech world, products will more often than not be developed too hastily and directly behind her that was used to ferry children to and from school, Leonis Adobe Museum Docent Dee Martin of Agoura Hills says she still enjoys her job after 14 years. Rick Coca/Valley News |
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