Good morning, everybody, and thank you for joining us for our Q1 earnings call. As you can see from the flip book on page three, Bob Kierlin, our founder, passed away on February 10th. He was 85 years of age. I thought I'd open with a few thoughts on Bob, if you'd indulge me. Bob was born in June of 1939 in Winona, Minnesota. It's a town of about 25,000 people in Southeastern Minnesota, on the banks of the western banks of the Mississippi River. His first memory as a child was a World War II victory parade going across the interstate bridge coming into Winona. In his obituary, it said Bob's compass was a true north with a belief in people, free minds, and free markets. He indiscriminately respected others, seeing the best in everyone, without desiring reciprocation himself. I had the good fortune. I knew Bob for just over thirty years. I met him in the second quarter of 1994. And I had a number of cross-country road trips. Bob preferred to travel by van and visit fast food locations. I remember my first trip with him. We left on a Sunday morning at about seven o'clock. We drove to Denver, visited some locations, met some investors. We drove to Salt Lake City, we drove to Vegas, we drove to LA, San Francisco, Rock Springs, Wyoming, and made our way back to Winona on Friday evening. In that, I learned how well-read Bob was. And one thing I observed over the years is there was not a day when Bob Kierlin did not read The Wall Street Journal from cover to cover. I thought it appropriate based on my travels with him that in his obituary, it said Bob's sense of humor was kindled from old Mad magazines and Bob and Ray comedy shows, which I might be older than most of the folks at Fastenal. I'm not sure what that is. Steve Martin and Bob Newhart. I do know the latter two, and I do know the Mad magazine reference. About sixty years ago, Bob convinced four friends to invest in a vending company selling nuts and bolts. The idea didn't work. But after calling on customers, understanding what they needed as far as helping in their supply chain needs with fasteners, he went with plan B. And that's the organization you know today and that the investing public first became aware of in 1987 when we went public. So forty years after our start in around 2007, 2008 time frame, we revisited Bob's vending idea. Today, about 25% of our revenue goes through a vending machine. And we've added a lot of other technologies to that since. If you look at our broadly defined FMI or Fastenal managed inventory, which is really point-of-use technologies that we've deployed, over 43% of our revenue today goes through some type of technology platform. There have been a number of articles written on Bob over the years and recently. I remember the first one after a trip I'd done with Bob. He was regarded as frugal, the cheapest CEO in America. The fact that he shares hotel rooms with other Fastenal employees when he travels. On all my trips with Bob, I shared a hotel room. And he wore used suits. And they painted somewhat of a character about Bob. I think in many ways, they missed the point. So what our flip book includes is an excerpt from a book Bob wrote in the late 1990s titled "The Power of Fastenal People." He talked about philosophy on leadership within your organization. He had ten rules about leadership he had coined over the years. I'm sharing that with our folks on the call today, whether that be shareholders, analysts, employees of Fastenal, others, in hopes that more of society can capture some of the ideas that Bob shared with us. I was very blessed to have met Bob, as I said, thirty years ago. Like many others at Fastenal, he changed the course of my life. For me, the ones that stand out particularly when I think of Bob is the first rule about challenge rather than control. Treating everyone as your equal, see the unique humanness in all persons, let people learn. We've tweaked that a little bit to challenge people to learn and ask them to consider changing when they learn something new. And then finally, remember how little you know. We have a lot of tenure within Fastenal. A lot of people choose to start their career young with Fastenal and spend their career here. Whether you've been here five years or thirty years, you always have things to learn. Bob carried that mantra through his entire life and will be sorely missed. I was personally blessed in that a couple of weeks before he passed away, I had a nice visit with Bob. We served on the board of another organization together. We had a nice conversation afterward, and he is sorely missed in the organization and in the community at large. Thanks, Bob. Looking to page four, some thoughts on the quarter. From a quarterly perspective, our sales grew about 3.5%. We had one less day, so our daily growth grew about 5%. The marketplace we operate in is still sluggish. I deem what's happening in our growth as mostly self-help. Things that we're doing from an execution standpoint, and there's an element of comps in there too. But it's mostly self-help. I make that comment when I look at the sequential patterns of our business. Because that's about how we're executing, new customer relationships we're creating, and expansion of existing customer relationships that we're creating. We're executing at a very high level. When I think of the changes we made two, two and a half years ago within the organization, as we came through COVID, we had drifted apart a little bit. We weren't as focused on a common goal as we should have been. As travel resumed, we saw signs of that, and we made leadership changes in our sales side of the organization. Everybody has been in their roles now a couple of years, and you're really seeing a gel. It's shining through in our numbers. The quarter's a little odd to look at if you think about it from a monthly perspective. But don't be misled by that either. January was a bit understated because of weather. March is a bit overstated because of the timing of Easter. I don't know if Holden will agree to my number here, but I estimate about 2-2.5% of the growth in March is a bit about Good Friday being in April. But regardless of that, even if you adjust for the weather in January and you adjust for the Easter timing in March, the sequential pattern is quite strong. It's strong in all of our geographies, which is really good to see. Again, I deem that to be about what Fastenal's doing engaging with the marketplace rather than what the marketplace is asking us to help with because of their business patterns because it's still sluggish. As is typical of April, we held our customer expo. A few of us actually traveled back yesterday. The expo finished on Wednesday evening and flew back on Thursday morning. We had similar what we witnessed in 2024, record attendance by customers at the event. Last year surprised us a bit because coming out of COVID, the first two years in 2022 and 2023 that we had the show, it was a very subdued event because a lot of organizations either weren't traveling yet or they were doing limited traveling, and it was so difficult to travel internationally that we weren't getting international folks. So folks weren't coming from Canada or up from Mexico for the event. This year, I can tell you firsthand that we had a record number of attendees from our business unit in Mexico because I had the opportunity to speak to a large group that was gathered, and it was exciting to see the types of questions they were asking about and the way they were approaching the relationship. The other thing, and I'll probably touch on this a couple of times through my commentary, it was a unique week because in talking to various groups, the one thing there wasn't a lot of discussion on was tariffs. That's not to say it didn't come up. But the way we address the conversation in every group I talked to, there were a few sessions we had where it was a Q&A, and Bill Dyer has Dresskowski was the moderator. He led off with a question on tariffs, and he pointed it at me each time. What I really impressed upon our customers is the way a supply chain partner approaches any kind of chaos. I shared some stories about the lead-up to COVID, the vetting of suppliers that we did for safety products before the world got weird, and how that put us in a position to be a better supply chain partner. The tactical decisions we made to go out and buy inventory, to get ahead of the onslaught of everybody else because of the strength of our balance sheet and our financial resources. A lot of that attributed to things we do, but really the foundation that Bob Kierlin laid many years ago in priorities in an organization and what you do with cash. But what I can tell you is we shared with them the tactics we're taking right now. In some cases, fattening our balance sheet a little bit, it doesn't solve any issue other than it gives you time to have options. We talked about products we're bringing directly into Canada and Mexico that we would have brought to the United States before because some of the new tariffs are not eligible for duty drawback. While it might be more expensive to bring it directly into that market, from a logistics perspective, it's a lot less expensive than a tariff that gets layered on top of maybe a tariff going into Canada or Mexico as well. We're being very thoughtful about that because about 15% of our revenue is in Canada or Mexico. From the standpoint of the U.S. and all markets, we talked a lot about how we've changed our sourcing patterns in the last five years. On diversifying where we're sourcing from, to provide a better supply chain, but we also talked about the fact that when we diversify our sourcing practices, we don't just play whack-a-mole and try to avoid a problem. We try to improve the supply chain in every step we take. We try to be relevant to the new manufacturing partners we join with, regardless of where they're located. In that, we're a top one, two, three, four, five customer with that manufacturer. Because if you're a significant customer to a manufacturer, and they get tied on capacity, or they need to expand their capacity, they're gonna help their largest partners first. They're prioritizing their efforts. The fact that they know we have financial resources to match with dollars what our commitments are, we often get in line ahead of everybody else. That serves our customers in the marketplace really well. We've added a bunch of customer site information to our disclosures this quarter. Three years' worth of history. We had a recent investor day where we talked about it. We touched on it in our January earnings call to really give better visibility to some of the strategies we have deployed and are deploying to broaden the size of our market opportunity. When I think of stepping into this role a decade ago, one of the points I've made to our board was coming from my old role, I had the advantage of I'd studied the numbers of Fastenal for years. I'd had a lot of conversations with our regional leaders over the years. So I understood maybe better how they thought about things. Where they discovered success, there were a few people for me that stood out that had been very successful in their business. When I think of our business in Minnesota and Wisconsin, I took a lot of stuff out of that playbook. When I think about our regional leaders, the two Millers, Randy who led our business down in Indianapolis and Casey who led our business down what we referred to as the Southeast Central at the time, which was Kentucky and Tennessee. Our team in Mexico, our team in international more broadly. Jeff Watts at the time had a lot of discussions to really understand their tactics for growing. Because they had consistently discovered success maybe sometimes when others hadn't. Bob Hopper is another one on that list where I'd touch with and he covered our Florida market. Incredible success. You learn and you ask people, how are you doing it? What I shared with the board is our most successful regions have a great key account program. If you put me in this role, I'm gonna drive the business towards where they're discovering success. Because I think it broadens the market for Fastenal, but we have to lower our cost structure to go after that kind of business. I'm pleased to say we've done that. You see the success that shines through in some of those customer site information statistics. Finally, on page four, we increased our dividend from $0.43 to $0.44 and it's a dumb reason. I'll give you a little historical perspective. In 2003, our sales, total sales, we needed 10.5% growth to break a billion that year. We came in at 9.9. We reported $995 million in sales. That was cool. But a billion plus would have been neater. But we can't change our sales. We can influence that by activities, but we can't change it. At least not legally. In 2018, our operating income came, we needed 13.4% growth to break a billion dollars that year. We only got 13.3. We came in at $999.2 million of operating income. We can't change that one either. Holden did get a dirty look from me, but we can't change that one. But we can change our dividend. So in the first quarter, we paid out $246 million and I looked at Holden. I said, we bumped that up a penny. If our board goes along with it and we continue this dividend through the year, we'll break a billion in dividend for the first time. Some reason sorry about that, flipping to page five. FMI, we continue to execute at a high level there. Given the comment I just made about dividend, I'd feel a lot better if we had 130,000 devices, not 129,996, but I'm gonna round it and say we have 130,000 devices deployed in 25 countries. Our device count grew 12.5%. When you look at our safety sales growth of almost 10% March, that's about execution and FMI and our vending more generally, but FMI more broadly. Going down the page, digital footprint. 61% of total sales versus 59% and 54% one and two years ago. Our goal remains in October, 66% to 68% of sales is going through digital footprint. And that's what we're working towards. And then, again, the customer site data, success in our 10k plus sites. And what that means is you this is a customer. It's a building. It's a campus. Where we provide more than $10,000 a month in product. And services. A subset of that is what we call on-site like customer sites, and that's where we do more than $50,000 a month with that customer. That group grew 7%. So that's about executing and engaging with customers at a high level. There's one category that you'll see that that that doesn't shine so strongly, and that's our under 5k, and it's really our under 2k. A subset of that. And if you're on our e-commerce team right now or if you're in IT, if you're in supply chain, you're getting a lot of pressure and dirty looks from Dan right now because we need to get better at the e-commerce side. We solved the problem with that group not by adding resources and sales teams to go after $500 and $800 a month customers. We want those customers. That marketplace has chosen to buy more in the online channels, and that accelerated during COVID. We're not great at that piece of the business. We're great at a lot of things. That's not on the list, but we can be. And the reason that matters is when you look at through some of the customer site data, I believe a great e-commerce platform enhances our ability to be successful in all groups, because I believe there's probably a 20% lift in and this is just this is the belief. This is not based on any data. I believe there can be a 20% lift in every category. If we have a great e-commerce strategy. Because there's random MRO spend we don't necessarily get even when we have a great relationship with that customer. Because some department in that organization might find it easier to order somewhere else. We need to get better at that. I'll shut up now and flip it over to Holden.