Scranton Sentence Examples

scranton
  • He replaced me in Scranton when I got this promotion here to the head office.

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  • There's someone who had it sent to Scranton!

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  • According to Byrne's expense account he was in Scranton for two days just before he shacked up at the Whitney Motel!

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  • Byrne was in Scranton on the sixth and seventh of April.

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  • There's no listing in the Scranton phone book for this guy either!

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  • We got off the high­way where we were supposed to and drove back to Scranton to see the broads.

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  • I know, because the twins always went up to Scranton on Wednesday night 'cause that's when this country and western band they liked played.

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  • Dean had no way of checking Byrne's mileage and if by chance he had detoured east on Interstate 84, probably 30 miles further, instead of taking the more direct south-easterly route between Scranton and Parkside.

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  • You're in Scranton on business.

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  • He rents an address, not too close to Parkside but not too far away, like maybe Scranton!

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  • Scranton is close to where he grabbed the dough.

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  • Maybe Scranton was the best spot to fill the bill.

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  • Let's you and me take a lit­tle drive to Scranton and meet Mr. Cleary.

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  • Maybe Scranton would provide the brick wall he was looking for and end this silly speculation.

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  • Scranton, Pennsylvania is one of those eastern cities whose past glories were years earlier than the memory of any living citizen.

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  • Fred stage-whispered to Dean that the sixth was one of the dates when Byrne was in Scranton.

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  • But their little sojourn to Scranton had not yielded once and for all what Dean had hoped for, a dead end to close off speculation on this business.

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  • The pho­tograph of Jeffrey Byrne he'd mailed to Chip Burgess in Scranton yesterday had been unnecessary.

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  • You're making some broad jumps just because Jeffrey Byrne visited in the Scranton area.

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  • Dean told Hunter about his off-hand comment and how Baratto had jumped all over the Scranton connection.

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  • Dean reluctantly explained Fred O'Connor's idea about the newspaper subscription and the fact that a paper had been sent to Scranton to a somewhat mysterious occupant.

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  • Winston didn't press for details—thankful­ly—and Dean made no mention of taking time for an off-duty trip to Scranton.

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  • He silently chastised himself for even caring that some guy named Cleary had spent a few weeks in Scranton and now was traveling off in the sunset in a blue-white-or-lavender motor home.

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  • This here's Chip Burgess—from Scranton.

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  • Let the old man think of something—after all, he'd been the one to make the Scranton connection, however tenuous, in the first place.

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  • Dean had polished the report, adding more posi­tive detail but not in any way referencing the Scranton connection, if there was one.

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  • My notes about Cleary and our investigation in Scranton were down here when those bozos broke in.

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  • There's still not a shred of proof tying Byrne to Scranton, the money, or being alive.

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  • Cleary must have done something in Scranton that leaves a trail.

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  • That's what I plan to find out when I go to Scranton.

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  • How will you get to Scranton?

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  • I take the dad-gum bus to Atlantic City—I sure can take one to Scranton.

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  • According to his expense accounts, he only went to Scranton twice that we know of—both visits only a day or two.

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  • He buys the bike in Scranton or someplace up north and stashes it in the trunk of his company car, dropping the tire patch kit.

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  • He bought a motor home in Scranton and towed his company car down to Norfolk!

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  • He wasn't in Scranton very often and the papers would pile up.

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  • It wouldn't do him any good sitting in the hall in Scranton after he skipped.

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  • By the time Dean made it to the kitchen Monday morning, Fred had already left on the early bus to Scranton.

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  • It took a pot and a half of coffee and a lot of patience before Dean learned just how complicated the Scranton excursion and return trip had been.

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  • That's north of Scranton.

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  • The date was April 7—the date Jeffrey Byrne was in Scranton!

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  • He managed to get a slow-moving truck between them on a winding road and nearly lost them until the road widened near Scranton.

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  • You drove all the way from Scranton?

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  • One more piece of unfinished business was put to rest when Dean arranged for two young friends of DeLeo to ferry Fred's rental car back to Scranton.

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  • Fred O'Connor was out, no doubt placating his sweethearts after his four-day hia­tus to Scranton.

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  • Some money turned up missing and I made a stupid off-hand comment in front of him about a connec­tion to Scranton where your husband had visited.

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  • You weren't there when them thugs followed me in Scranton and I made out pretty good, I'd say.

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  • They both knew Pat Corbin was one of the names used in Scranton.

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  • Maybe he signed up under a second name when he found out someone had been asking about him in Scranton.

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  • They had the newspaper forwarded from Scranton.

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  • I've known him since Scranton.

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  • The subscription was being sent to the name Cleary on Bascomb Place in Scranton but it stopped arriving there after he 'died.'

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  • We've done a damned good job covering our tracks—painting the Scranton Apartment, swip­ing motel receipts with Byrne's signature on them....

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  • Norfolk was too far from Scranton.

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  • When I considered it might not be Byrne who rented that apartment in Scranton, I began to wonder how come you identified him from his picture.

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  • You worked for the contrac­tor who built the World Wide office building in Scranton so you were at the opening dedication party there.

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  • He looked me up when he came to Scranton and I could tell there was going to be trouble.

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  • Dunmore became a station of the Scranton post office in 1902.

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  • It is served by the Erie, the Lehigh Valley, the Delaware, Lackawanna & Western, the Central of New Jersey, the Delaware & Hudson, and the Lackawanna & Wyoming Valley railways; there is an electric railway from Pittston to Scranton, and a belt-line electric railway connects Pittston with Avoca, Nanticoke, Plymouth and Wilkes-Barre.

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  • Scranton is served by the Erie, the Delaware, Lackawanna & Western, the Central of New Jersey, the New York, Ontario & Western, the Delaware & Hudson, and the Lackawanna & Wyoming Valley railways.

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  • Scranton is the see of a Roman Catholic bishop, has a good public school system, and is the seat of the International Correspondence Schools (1891), which give instruction by mail in the trades and professions to large numbers of students; Mt.

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  • Scranton is the largest city in the great anthracite-coal region of the United States; and 17,525,995 long tons of coal were produced within the county in 1905.

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  • A permanent settlement was established within the present limits of Scranton in 1788, and a primitive grist-mill, a saw-mill and a charcoal iron-furnace were erected during the next few years; but there was little further development until 1840, when the Lackawanna Iron Company was formed for the manufacture of iron here.

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  • Scranton better grades of iron ore and of limestone were procured, and within a decade a rolling mill, a nail factory and a manufactory of steel rails were established, and adequate facilities for railway transportation were provided.

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  • Scranton was incorporated as a borough in 1854, was chartered as a city of the third class in 1866, and became a city of the second class in 1901.

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  • The apparent object of the measure was to deprive the people of Pittsburg temporarily of the privileges of self-government by empowering the governor to appoint a recorder (in 1903 the title of mayor was again assumed) to exercise (until 1903, when the municipal executive should be again chosen by the people) the functions of the mayor, thus removed by the governor under this statute; and this act applied to the other cities of the second class, Allegheny and Scranton, although they had not offended the party managers.

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  • There have been mining strikes at Scranton (1871), in the Lehigh and Schuylkill regions (1875), at Hazleton (1897), and one in the anthracite fields (1902) which was settled by a board of arbitrators appointed by President Roosevelt; and there were street railway strikes at Chester in 1908 and in Philadelphia in 1910.

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  • Scranton was my baby—I wanted to see it hum but Brunell wasn't the hummer for the job.

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  • What about the newspaper sent to Scranton and J. Cleary?

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  • Winston didn't press for details—thankful­ly—and Dean made no mention of taking time for an off-duty trip to Scranton.

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  • This here's Chip Burgess—from Scranton.

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  • Let the old man think of something—after all, he'd been the one to make the Scranton connection, however tenuous, in the first place.

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  • I take the dad-gum bus to Atlantic City—I sure can take one to Scranton.

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  • According to his expense accounts, he only went to Scranton twice that we know of—both visits only a day or two.

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  • Dean considered relating to Jonathan his suspicions that Nota had contacted Mrs. Glass but he was hesitant to even mention the Byrne matter to the FBI, nor did he wish to volunteer information on Fred's clandestine trip to Scranton.

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  • The date was April 7—the date Jeffrey Byrne was in Scranton!

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  • Dean explained he was still interested in the J. Cleary who had ordered the Sentinel from a Scranton address.

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  • If it isn't being returned, isn't being forwarded and isn't accu­mulating at the Scranton address, what the hell is happening to it?

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  • They sure don't sell the Parkside Sentinel in Kansas or Durango, Colorado and he didn't have the newspaper forwarded from Scranton.

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  • Brunel had a connection with Scranton and he skipped out of Norfolk without even filing his expense account.

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  • We've done a damned good job covering our tracks—painting the Scranton Apartment, swip­ing motel receipts with Byrne's signature on them....

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  • There are institutes for the blind at Overbrook and Pittsburg, and for the deaf and dumb at Philadelphia and Edgewood Park, an oral school for the deaf at Scranton, a home for the training of deaf children at Philadelphia, a soldiers' and sailors' home at Erie (1886), a soldiers' orphans' industrial school (1895) at Scotland, Franklin county, the Thaddeus.

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  • Penn Foster Career School in Scranton, Pennsylvania offers a career diploma for students who want to become professional bridal consultants.

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  • Alternative Eating, located in the heart of Scranton, PA, features gluten-free products that are often hard to find.

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  • Jeffrey Byrne spent Tuesday and Wednesday in early March in Scranton.

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  • Dean presented the facts unemotionally but as soon as he mentioned Scranton, the old man caught the coincidence and could hardly contain himself.

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