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Mercury Villager
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1994 MERCURY VILLAGER TAPE RADIO US $50.00
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1997 MERCURY VILLAGER TAPE RADIO US $50.00
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2002 MERCURY VILLAGER RADIO US $25.00
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1993 MERCURY VILLAGER TAPE RADIO US $50.00
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1995 MERCURY VILLAGER TAPE RADIO US $50.00
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1993 MERCURY VILLAGER TAPE RADIO US $60.00
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Nissan Quest/Mercury Villager 99-03 Stereo install kit US $17.99
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VILLAGER SPORT CASSETTE PLAYER MERCURY 01 00 US $39.99
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2002 MERCURY VILLAGER DOME LIGHT/SUNROOF CONTROL US $9.99
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2001 MERCURY VILLAGER 6 DISC CD CHANGER US $100.00
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1999 MERCURY VILLAGER TAPE RADIO US $65.00
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2001 Mercury Villager Changer GoToSuper US $75.00
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97 1997 MERCURY VILLAGER RIGHT FRONT DOOR SPEAKER US $9.95
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93 94 95 Nissan Quest Mercury Villager Door Lock Timer Module CPU Computer Relay US $22.00
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Many people have vague ideas of what real witches are, usually formed by children's stories or by the faith that they learned whilst growing up. To compound the problem, many people will simply parrot the information they've heard or assumed as fact - so when you are exploring the concept of witchcraft, you will come across many of these myths and misleading "facts". Here are a few of the most popular myths about witches, debunked.
Myth #1: Real witches are Wiccan
Witchcraft and Wicca are two entirely separate things. Saying that they are the same is akin to saying that artists and christians are the same. Witchcraft is a craft or skill, just as cooking is a craft or skill. It can be learned and practiced by anyone who can follow instructions and focus on what they're doing. Wicca is a religion, constructed in the 1950's by a man named Gerald Gardner. Some Wiccans are witches, but not all witches are Wiccans.
Myth #2: Real witches worship satan, and "pagan" means "satanist"
Witches do not believe in Satan. Satan himself is a construct of the Christian faith, as a counterpart to the religion's God. Therefore, to put it quite simply, to believe in Satan you first have to believe in God, which requires you to be a Christian.
Also, pagan comes from the Latin word "paganus", meaning villager, or someone who lived out of the city as a rural peasant. As the Christian faith spread, the outlying towns were often holdovers of polytheistic faiths, and as such those far-flung villagers were at first rightly called pagans (villagers, out of the city). However, the term morphed from that rightful meaning into a meaning of "not believing in God", as the unconverted did not. Today it has come to mean a person who does not believe in a monotheistic (one god) religion.
Myth #3: The pentagram is the symbol of Satan
The pentagram can be found dating back as far as 3,000 BC in Mesopotamian writings, having an astrological meaning; it represented the five planets Jupiter, Mercury, Mars, Saturn, and Venus. Since then it has appeared in many different cultures and represented many groups, including having a sacred meaning for Christians. - In Judaism it is the Seal of Solomon. - In Taoism it symbolises the five elements wood, fire, earth, metal, and water. - In Mormonism the pentagram appears inverted in many Temples - In Christianity the pentagram represents the five senses, and sometimes the five wounds of Christ. In medieval times Christians actually wore pentagrams in the belief that it would protect them from demons. - Both Ethiopia and Morocco have pentagrams on their country's flag. - Satanism uses the pentagram inverted, or pointing down, to symbolize pointing towards Hell, with the two upward points representing the devil's horns. - In Witchcraft, the pentagram points up towards the heavens, and the points represent earth, air, fire, water, and spirit. There are many different types of real witches, however, and Reconstructionist witches do not recognize or use the pentagram at all.
Myth #4: All real witches are female
Both men and women can practice witchcraft, and both may refer to themselves as "witches". Some modern-day men refer to themselves as "wizards" in an attempt to denote masculinity, and authors frequently use the term "wizard" to denote a male witch. In Old English, "wicca" (wik-ka) meant "male wizard or sorcerer" and "wicce" (witch-ee) meant "female witch or sorceress".
Myth #5: The persecution of real witches is over
Unfortunately this isn't true. While we no longer have public hangings, crushings, burnings, or quarterings of witches here in the United States, that does not mean that they are not persecuted. Some witches still find that if they reveal their beliefs, some people will shun them and their families. Many find that once their beliefs are found out, their employer will fire them. Outspoken witch authors both offline and online receive very nasty "hate" mail, comments on their websites, and slandering of their names and reputations. There are many different types of persecution, not just killings.
However even today people are still being tried, convicted, and sentenced to death as witches. In many countries, witchcraft is considered a criminal offense, and those accused of it can suffer jailtime and hefty legal fees. In July of 2010 Unicef published a paper titled "Children Accused of Witchcraft" detailing the rising tragedy of children being accused of witchcraft and being cast out of their homes, tortured, abused, and even killed all across Africa. It's not just children being persecuted in Africa, however; accusations of witchcraft made against adults is extremely common and even resulted in the burnings of 11 people in Kenya in 2008. In November of 2009, a Lebanese TV anchor was charged with witchcraft and sentenced to death in Saudi Arabia. In October of 2009, five widows in India were filmed being forced to strip naked, be beaten as they were paraded through the streets, and even being forced to eat human excrement - all because a local cleric accused them of being witches. According to the BBC, widows are often targeted in an attempt to seize their land and possessions.
Remember when doing your research to explore as many resources as possible, and when you run across something that seems a little far-fetched, it's very likely it's a myth. Look up credible sources of information and weigh out all of the differing viewpoints carefully. Blessed Be!
Raven LeFay is a real witch living and practicing solitary witchcraft in the eastern United States - Merry Meet!
For more great information on witchcraft, visit my site Real Witches at http://www.realwitches.net
Effect of the Union En Caule Company on Puerto Vallarta
Silver is probably not the first thing that comes to mind when you think of Mexico, but perhaps it should be. After all, Mexico has been the world's leader in the production of silver since the 1500´s and continued to be the number one producer through 2003.
The Tran-Volcanic Axis range of mountains that traverse Mexico from Veracruz at the eastern side to Cabo Corrientes on Banderas Bay near Puerto Vallarta at the western side are extremely rich with mineral wealth uncovered during the Pleistocene age when its 38 volcanoes erupted. As the crust of the earth was ripped open by the volcanic action, massive sulfide veins rich in gold, lead, zinc, copper, and silver were exposed.
For a thousand years prior to the 1500´s, Spain dominated the world in silver production. Silver was domestically used by the Spaniards in the Roman Empire and was also used in bartering for Asian spices. Soon after 1492, when the Spaniards first arrived in the New World, Cordoba visited the Yucatan coast of Mexico in 1517 and Cortez arrived in Veracruz, Mexico. Much to their delight, they discovered a land rich with vast deposits of silver, gold, and other prized minerals. That was the beginning of the Spanish Conquest of Mexico resulting in the Spaniards pretty well dominating the country for the following three centuries.
Cortez and his army of well trained and armed soldiers managed to terrorize and plunder Mexico for 20 years, stripping her of as much mineral wealth as possible. In 1524, for example, Cortez and his troops defeated a large band of native Indians in the Ameca Valley near Puerto Vallarta while on his journey to Baja California. During their ventures across the country, they discovered the rich ore deposits throughout the Tran-Volcanic Axis Mountains.
Within the first year of his arrival in Mexico, Cortez had staked his claim for silver in Taxco and the process of staking claims by Spaniards such as Guzman continued for many years as they traversed the country. Beautiful colonial mining cities sprung up all over central Mexico with adjacent farming communities as required to support the miners. For example, within 50 miles of the Pacific Ocean and high in the Sierra Madres, the beautiful colonial gold and silver mining city of Mascota was founded in 1592, Talpa de Allende in 1599, and San Sebastian in 1605.
Prior to arriving in Mexico, the Spaniards had extracted and refined silver and gold from ore by various means, however in 1557, a new mercury amalgamation process was developed in Pachuca, Hidalgo, Mexico, whereby ores were crushed to a fine powder and then mixed with salt (sodium chloride), water, copper sulfate, and mercury. The silver in the ore then chemically bonded to the free chlorine from the salt and the free sulfur from the copper sulfate. This slime was then spread out on a patio and allowed to dry; hence the name, Patio Process. After a month of drying and regrinding, the mercury was removed from the amalgamation of mercury, silver, and gold, and the refined silver and gold was ready for the market. Use of this extraction process continued for the next three centuries.
In 1804, a couple of the local indigenous people in the Sierra Madre mountains, about 30 miles southeast of Banderas Bay, discovered massive sulfide veins while searching for flint. They took vein samples to the miners in Talpa de Allende for evaluation, and lo and behold, within a few years a Spaniard named Hernandez had staked his claim on the area! This area was referred to as the Cuale District and mining began in 1824. The Hernandez family mined the area for 30 years but when the owners died, the slick lawyer hired to settle the estate somehow acquired the mining licenses and formed the Union en Cuale Company. This company owned all of the land from Los Arcos to the Pitillal River along the Banderas Bay and extended approximately 40 miles back up into the Sierra Madres.
All of the mines in the area from the Cuale District to Talpa de Allende, Mascota, San Sebastian, etc., required tons of salt, mercury, and other mining related materials and equipment. Of course the miners needed food and other products for daily living. Most of these supplies were transported by boat up the Cuale River or Rio Cuale which flows from high in the Sierras down to Banderas Bay on the Pacific Ocean.
The entire area along Banderas Bay near the mouth of the Cuale River was first referred to as Las Peñas when the Spanish explorer Don Pedro de Alvarado arrived in 1541. Las Peñas, or the rocks, was named after the huge rock outcropping; now called Los Arcos, in Banderas Bay located a few miles south of the mouth of the river. A small village known as Las Peñas was officially established at the mouth of the Rio Cuale to support the mining operations of the Union en Cuale Company and by 1885, the thriving village of Las Peñas consisted of approximately 1,000 residents living in 250 casitas.
As part of the Agrarian Reform, resulting from the 1919 Mexican Revolution, 39 square miles of the Union en Cuale Company property, located in the Mexican state of Jalisco, were expropriated by the federal government and granted to the local residents as an ejido, or farming cooperative. In memory of Don Ignacio Vallarta, the Governor of Jalisco, the name of Las Peñas was changed to Puerto Vallarta in 1918. Who could have imagined that this young municipality, located at the mouth of the Cuale River, was destined to become one of the most popular resort destinations in the world?
Today, that area where it all began near the mouth of the Rio Cuale is referred to as Old Town or The Romantic Zone. It is the home to numerous fine restaurants, curio and souvenir shops, beautiful new condominiums, and a magnificent new malecon or beachfront promenade that connects with the malecon in El Centro or downtown. Nestled among the mountainsides surrounding and overlooking the quaint Romantic Zone are thousands of villas and condominiums, all with spectacular views of the city, the bay, and the Sierra Madres.
With its perfect climate and incredible shoreline, in all probability Puerto Vallarta would have eventually been discovered as a world class travel destination and a retirement Paradise. However, without the Union en Cuale Company, it very well might have all begun near the mouth of the Ameca River which enters Banderas Bay at the state line between Jalisco and Nayarit, about five miles north of town. The Ameca River runs through the rich Ameca Valley which has been farmed for centuries and would have been the logical choice for the region's initial settlement in the absence of the Union en Caule Company.
In summarizing, thanks to the Union en Caule Company, Puerto Vallarta has become the world class retirement haven and tourist resort destination that it is today; a Paradise that has grown from 1,000 to 350,000 inhabitants in a mere century.
About the Author
Jim Scherrer has owned property in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico for 24 years and resided there for the past ten years. The mission of his series of 30 articles pertaining to retirement in Puerto Vallarta is to reveal the recent changes that have occurred in Vallarta while dispelling the misconceptions about living conditions in Mexico. For the full series of articles regarding travel to and retirement in Vallarta as well as pertinent Puerto Vallarta links, please visit us at Puerto Vallarta Real Estate Buyers‘ Agents and click on ARTICLES.
What do you have to remove 1st to remove the power steering pump on a 94 mercury villager?
It doesn't look like you could pull it down without removing the cv axle. It's very tight in there. How do you get this thing off?
you require a master repair manual
The hoses come off first
We remove the p/s unit
We install the new p/s unit
we install new hoses
we then break-in the new unit by turning the steering wheel from right to left full stop turns to get the air out, with the two front wheels off the ground.
The details are way to much for anyone to type here, it is lengthly, so get a book, their only 15.95
Go to your local auto parts store and as for a Haynes or chilton auto manual for a 94 Merc Villager
Police: 6-year-old boy gets behind wheel in Boulder, hits another car
Boulder police cited a mother over the weekend for leaving her keys in the ignition of her vehicle after her 6-year-old son started it up while she was in a store and hit a parked car.
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