Okay. Thank you, Mike. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. One year ago, Bassett Furniture Industries, Incorporated announced a five-point restructuring strategy designed to grow business and improve profitability. We've been aggressively implementing that plan, which included the development of a pipeline of innovative products to support our reputation as a company that provides quality craftsmanship in the wholesale and retail channels and custom design services. All of us in the Bassett organization remain focused on executing these initiatives to meet these goals and reduce costs. I'm happy to report that second quarter results have improved again like last quarter, despite a very challenging sales environment that affects our entire industry. Consumer space, historically weak housing market, high interest rates, and uncertainty about the impact that the trade tariffs have on the cost of goods. This lack of confidence makes them very hesitant about investing in home furnishings right now. We believe that our restructuring program continues to have a positive effect on our results and our future strategy. We grew consolidated sales slightly up 1.1% from last year's second quarter. Excluding sales from Noah Home, Incorporated, which closed in late 2024, consolidated revenue from the ongoing business increased 2.5%. Efforts to reduce our cost structure that began this time last year coupled with higher levels of operating efficiency in both our wholesale and retail segments, delivered $2.5 million of operating profit or 3% of sales, compared to a loss this time last year. Before I get to our detailed comments for the second quarter, it's important to reiterate how tough the housing remodeling environment is in 2025. And we don't see that changing for the foreseeable future. The spring is normally the busiest time of the year for housing sales, and that activity flows to the home furnishings industry. Recent headlines pointed to data from the National Association of Realtors showing that home sales edged up 0.8% in May, ending a two-month streak of declines. However, that was the slowest pace for any May since 2009. Affordability remains a drag on housing, and like others, we're watching for some form of stimulus to spur mortgage activity and greater home sales and remodeling activity. Our strategic plan for this fiscal year was based on a continuation of the tepid housing market that has characterized the past three years. The decisions and the investments we have made on new lines and product launches, expanding e-commerce, and modifying our marketing activities are making a difference. That said, we have had to adjust to the impact of tariffs that panel our supply chain and, more importantly, on consumers in general. We are somewhat insulated versus others in the industry because almost 80% of our wholesale shipments are manufactured or assembled in our five US factories. But the fabrics, plywood, componentry, and finished goods that we do import from countries like Vietnam and India made it necessary to raise wholesale prices 3% to 5% in the quarter, something that we did not want to do in the current environment. We've also been successful in working intently with various fabric vendors to mitigate the effects of tariffs on further price hikes. We're closely watching the outcome of the final trade agreements, and our teams are monitoring the activity daily as these challenges affect future orders and products in transit. The dawning of Liberation Day, April, represented a direct line of demarcation between the more robust order pace that started the year and the slowness we clearly saw in the second quarter. March sales started off fine, but the rest of the quarter was down. Orders to our combined corporate and licensed store network grew by 9.6%, while our wholesale business from the open market declined by 6.6%, thus netting a 2.7% increase in all wholesale orders for the period. Our core products, led by our true custom upholstery, with last year's addition of leather, drove most of the year-over-year improvement. Domestic motion and reclining product was also strong. As discussed last quarter, we recommitted to whole home wood collection this year with three new offerings. The first, Copenhagen, is retailing well, and we are very pleased with the reaction to the 35-piece Newberry collection at the April home furnishings market. Newberry will arrive in Bassett stores and independent retailers this fall, followed later by the Andorra Collection. Also, in wood product, our new Benchmade hideaway dining program sold very well in wholesale this spring and will begin laboring our factory here in July and August. Bolstered in part by stronger sales in Q1, corporate retail deliveries increased by 7.5% and operating performance improved significantly compared to 2024. Written sales in the stores declined by 0.8%. Most of the key performance metrics were static during the quarter, although higher close ratios in the stores kept written sales almost flat while store traffic declined. Belt tightening from last year and restructuring in our marketing meant that we spent $1 million less in SG&A investments on $3.8 million more in delivered sales. The current pace of sales mandates that we continue to closely monitor all expenditures in the retail fleet. We've made progress on turning discontinued ads into inventory into cash. And while the discounting will modestly affect retail gross margin, this plan is in place for the rest of the year. Wholesale sales to customers outside the Bassett store network were a mixed bag but ultimately down by 6.6%. I noted earlier that March was strong, and almost all of the decline here occurred in April. The decline was largely due to lower sales in our club level program, particularly with those accounts that generally buy containers directly from our vendors in Asia. There has been a natural hesitancy from these dealers to commit to imported goods in large quantities until greater clarity is attained on the tariff question. Once again, we are looking forward to getting the large product from the April show on the retail floors this fall, as we felt we had a particularly strong market of placements in April. We're also encouraged by the progress from investments in our omnichannel model to enhance the retail customer experience. Written sales at bassettfurniture.com were up 31% in the second quarter versus last year, despite the housing issues, and this follows an increase of 36% in Q1. While website traffic was flat for the quarter, we have much higher levels of conversion and we're reaching customers where we don't have physical stores. We continue to tweak the technology drivers to improve traffic, the user experience, and our site conversions. We made changes to our marketing mix in a quarter to drive brand awareness, introduce new product lines, and to emphasize our custom design services. Last year, we relied exclusively on digital marketing for the quarter. This spring, we had success in using direct mail for the launch of the Copenhagen line and it is now part of our marketing strategy for the remainder of the year. We tested spot TV in key markets with mixed results. We brought back our private sale to key customers three weeks ahead of the public Memorial Day sales event, allowing them to get ahead of the rush and have more opportunity in inventory. This strategy effectively pulled our holiday business forward and resulted in a slight increase in written business for the month of May. Promotional events like July 4 are key to driving traffic, which was weak through June. Our new Bassett custom studio program in the open market grew by double digits as we added seven new retail stores. We also grew our business with the interior design community and are working hard to become a bigger provider to the design channel that continues to grow in importance to the entire industry. We are moving ahead with architectural plans to open in two new markets, Cincinnati and Orlando. We plan to start construction this fall on both locations and expect to have these stores open in the first quarter of fiscal 2026. Our Concord, North Carolina corporate store has been closed since April for remodeling and will reopen in October. Our board of directors will consider our regular quarterly cash dividend of 20¢ per share next week. Dividends augmented by opportunistic share repurchase remain a key piece of our capital return to shareholders. Now I'll turn things back over to Mike for more details on our financial results. Mike?