---------------- Begin Forwarded Message ----------------

I sent three emails out yesterday, but I realize now that I sent them to
the wrong address.... So I have concatenated there into this one email.
If anybody has any clues I would appreciate it very much....

Thanks /lss

-------First Email
Strange event...

I got to work this morning and downloaded my (POP) email from overnight.

I sorta tripled clicked on one of them (a finger spaz) and I got the
rotating colored ball.
After a while I force quit Powermail.

When I restarted, it rebuilt the sort indexes on its own and then came
up. Lo and behold all of the email that I just downloaded was gone.
Also all of the email that I downloaded through the day on Sunday
(yesterday) was gone!
I did a "compaction" .... nothing.

Any body ever see this? Losing email is a pretty serious thing for me.

Running 4.2 on PBG4 with OS X 10.2.6.

-------Second Email
I tried a low-level database rebuild....no luck.

One interesting thing..... When I am in my inbox the footer shows 415
messages, 86 unread.
If I do a "View Only Unread" 64 messages are viewed.

It seems like the 22 unaccounted for messages are among the messages that
I seem to have lost.

Weird.

----------Third Email
1. If I create a temp folder and copy my entire inbox to it, I end up
with an empty inbox that says it has 35 messages, 22 unread

2. All of the mail in my SENT MAIL folder between Friday and Monday is gone.

Does anything have any thoughts on how to get this phantom mail back?

-- 
Larry S. Samberg         [EMAIL PROTECTED]
VM/Fax: 508-861-0261

"The condition upon which God hath given liberty to man is eternal vigilance;
which condition if he break, servitude is at once the consequence of his
crime,
and the punishment of his guilt."
John Philpot Curran 
----------------- End Forwarded Message -----------------

-- 
Larry S. Samberg         [EMAIL PROTECTED]
VM/Fax: 508-861-0261

"The condition upon which God hath given liberty to man is eternal vigilance;
which condition if he break, servitude is at once the consequence of his
crime,
and the punishment of his guilt."
John Philpot Curran 


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