Thanks, Jeff. I am going to start with our loan portfolio on Slide 4. Our total loans outstanding increased $255 million from the end of the prior quarter. $211 million of the increase was attributable to loans added through the HomeStar acquisition.On an organic basis, our total loans were up $44 billion or 1.1% driven primarily by growth in the commercial loans and leases portfolio. The primary driver of the growth in this portfolio came from our equipment finance business, which increased total outstanding balances by $57 million or 11.2% from the end of the prior quarter.Turning to deposits on Slide 5. Total deposits were $4.45 billion at the end of the third quarter, an increase of approximately $434 million from the end of the prior quarter. The majority of the increase was due to the HomeStar acquisition, although as Jeff mentioned, we also had strong organic deposit growth in the quarter of $112 million or 2.8% driven by the $153 million increase we had in core deposits.Our success in core deposit gathering enabled us to continue to implement our strategy to reposition our deposit portfolio to improve our liquidity management and reduce our non-core funding. During the third quarter, we intentionally reduced our balances of brokered time deposits by another $46 million. With this run-off, and the addition of HomeStar’s deposits, brokered time deposits represented just 2% of total deposits at September 30.Turning to Wealth Management on Slide 6. At the end of quarter, our assets under administration were $3.28 billion with an increase of $155 million from the end of the prior quarter. The increase was primarily due to the addition of HomeStar’s assets under administration.Our Wealth Management revenue increased 9% from the prior quarter to $6 million, which was attributable to an increase in the state fees, and the contribution from HomeStar.Turning to our net interest income and net interest margin on Slide 7. Our net interest income increased 7.3% from the prior quarter primarily due to the contribution from HomeStar. Excluding the impact of accretion income, our net interest margin was relatively unchanged from the prior quarter as lower deposit costs were essentially offset by a decline in earning asset yields.The decline in deposit costs was primarily due to the impact of HomeStar’s lower cost deposits. Exclusive of the impact of HomeStar, we started to see our deposit cost plateau during the third quarter and we believe it’s likely that we will be able to continue to move rates down as a result of the recent rate cuts.Moving to loans, while we have seen some declines in the average rate on our new and renewed loans as a result of the lower rate environment, our focus on more attractive risk-adjusted yields enabled us to continue to add loans that exceed the average yield on our overall portfolio excluding accretion income.During the third quarter, the average rate on our new and renewed loans was 5.39% or 32 basis points higher than the average loan yields excluding accretion income on our overall loan portfolio. Looking ahead, we continue to be relatively neutral through a balance sheet sensitivity standpoint.However, the new subordinated debt we issued will temporarily raise our average borrowing cost by seven basis points until we resume our higher cost subordinated debt in June of 2020.We continue to expect our net interest margin excluding the impact of accretion income to remain relatively stable going forward, although the temporary increase in our average borrowing cost will apply some modest pressure to the downside.In terms of our scheduled accretion income, which does not include the impact of prepayments on acquired loans, we are expecting $2.4 million in the fourth quarter of 2019.Moving to our non-interest income on Slide 8, our total non-interest income was relatively unchanged from the prior quarter at $19.6 million. The $6 million of wealth management revenue remains our single largest contributor to our non-interest income and continues to generate the large recurring source to fee income that we target for this business.We had a strong quarter of loan production in our commercial FHA business this quarter with $113 million in rate loss commitments, our highest level in two years. However, we had $1.1 million impairment to mortgage servicing rights in this business and as we indicated after last quarter’s unusually low cost, and unusually high gain premium, both of these items returned to more normalized levels. As a result, our commercial FHA revenue came in at $2.9 million for the quarter and excluding the impairment we are within the range of $3 million to $5 million in revenue per quarter.Turning to our expenses and efficiency ratio on Slide 9. We incurred $5.3 million in integration and acquisition expense in the third quarter, and also recognized a gain on MSR's held-for-sale of $70,000. Excluding these adjustments, our non-interest expense increased by 5.9% on a linked-quarter basis which was primarily due to the addition of HomeStar’s operations.The strong expense management that Jeff previously discussed in combination with higher revenues lowered our efficiency ratio to 60.6% from 61.6% last quarter.Moving to Slide 10, we look at our asset quality. Our portfolio was generally stable this quarter with no significant new additions to non-performing loans. As we indicated on our last call, a number of existing non-performing loans that had specific reserves stood against them moved to charge-offs in the third quarter which resulted in elevated net charge-offs with a corresponding reduction in non-performing loans.Our net charge-offs represented 49 basis points of average loans in the third quarter while our non-performing loans dropped to 1.04% of total loans from 1.24% at the end of last quarter. We recorded a provision for loan losses of $4.4 million; $2.3 million of the provision was related to an increase in the specific reserves established from an existing non-performing loan.This additional $2.3 million was a result of recent appraisal data that we received on the underlying collateral. The third quarter provision brought our allowance to 58 basis points of total loans as of September 30, and our credit marks accounted for another 51 basis points.With that, I'll turn the call back over to Jeff. Jeff?