

They called 2 days in a row in the morning, first an Asian male, 2nd day a woman. Then I suddenly remember that I got the same person called me looking for the same name about 2 months ago. Then he apologized and said he would revise the information in his phone book and erase my number from his phone directory. Since I am not the person he was looking for, I told him that he got a wrong number. He didn't say that he was a Paypal representative. The person who I was talking to was a male, sounded like Asian. However, the second time I pickep up my phone. From the phone recording, it showed that this number belongs to Paypal. First I didn't pick up, and then I called the number back. I got several phone calls from this number. Si I would have to assume this is not right. Where the charge came from was not that checking acct. Paypal is link to one checking acct and only one. I will be calling as yes I have made purchases through Paypal BUT not with that checking acct. I've logged onto my PayPal and all seems to be in order, surely if it was urgent, they'd flag something up in there for me to contact them? I've not made any large transactions so can't see why they would need to check these? I noticed a recent charge of PAYPAL OUTDOORSJ32 40 CA from my checking acct. Not done the obvious "click on this link" from emails so I can only assume that some sort of newbie business phishing scam is going on through Ebay as there's no other way they could get my phone number. I haven't had any "dodgy" transactions from my account but have changed Ebay and PayPal passwords to be sure. I rarely give out my mobile number but it is in the "business information" section of my Ebay listings and, as I'm new to this Ebay, would I be right to be suspicious that this is some sort of "ploy" to get newbies to give out info? I've bought and sold on Ebay for years, I buy under one ID and sell under another but use the same paypal account for both. To contact the Reference Desk, call 91 or send an email.I had a call from this number today - I'm in the UK. The Archives Research Room is open to the public Monday through Friday 9:30 a.m. Before submitting your research request or planning your visit, please read information provided on the linked pages below. Generally, the research on these requests can be completed in 3-5 business days, but additional time may be required to photocopy and mail the records. We do not expedite requests or do "rush" orders. Telephone, email, fax, and "snail mail" requests are worked on in the order in which they are received.
#HAIWENG 402 935 7733 CA SERIES#
Generally, this means that staff will identify the series most likely to contain the information requested. We do not have the staffing available to do in-depth research or to look for a specific document within a record series. If, however, you are unable to visit, Reference Services will perform a limited amount of research for you. The California State Archives is a public research facility and we encourage you to come in person to do your research. Visit the Collections & Catalogs page for more information. The California State Archives serves a wide variety of researchers whose interests range from legislative intent and public policy to genealogy and railroad history in California.Īrchives staff continually organize and describe the records we receive to provide easier and faster access for researchers. The California State Archives, a division of the Office of the Secretary of State, continues to serve in the spirit of those early instructions, providing a repository for the state's permanent governmental records as well as other materials documenting California history. which appertain to or are in any way connected with the political history and past administration of the government of California." The Act Concerning the Public Archives ( Chapter 1, Statutes of 1850 (PDF)) was the first law signed by California's first governor on January 5, 1850. California's first legislature, meeting in 1849–50, charged the Secretary of State to receive "…all public records, registered maps, books, papers, rolls, documents and other writings.
