Thank you, Alberto. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. J&J Snack Foods delivered an excellent third quarter, building on our strong momentum from the first half of the year. I'm so proud of the J&J team and employees who continue to execute our strategy, while delivering consistent results. These results continue to validate that the investments we have made and the strategies that we have implemented are having a positive impact on the sales and earnings power of our business. And it's positioning J&J to win and what remains a dynamic consumer and operating environment. To further illustrate our success, I will share a few highlights from the quarter followed by a review of our sales performance and operations. Our record third quarter net sales of $440 million marked a second highest quarterly net sales performance in our company's 53-year history. This impressive result was led by strong sales in our foodservice and retail segments, offset by temporary challenges in the Frozen Beverages, which were impacted by softer sales in the theater channel. Our ability to grow the top line 3.3%, while maintaining a healthy 33.6% gross margin underscores the strength of our strategy led by improved operating efficiencies and a balanced and diverse portfolio of products, brands, and customer channels. We continued our trends of growing profits faster than sales with the third quarter operating income and net earnings growth of 3.8%. This resulted in a record high quarterly earnings per diluted share in the quarter. Kim will provide more insights into our financial performance in just a few minutes. Our strategies to leverage innovation and cross selling opportunities to expand placements of our core products and brands continue to deliver positive results. Taking a closer look at our sales performance. Third quarter net sales growth was driven by higher volumes across most of our core products and brands as well as strong business performance in our foodservice and retail segments. As we had anticipated, production delays related to the 2023 actors' strike had a negative effect on this quarter's film slate as compared to last year, especially in April and May. The theater industry reported declines in attendance during the quarter of approximately 30%, which impacted fiscal third quarter sales of Frozen Beverages, Soft pretzels, and Churros. We estimate that these temporary challenges impacted sales by approximately $7 million compared to the same period last year. While the sales theater channel declined in the third quarter, I do want to highlight the impact of great movie releases in the market and why we remain so confident in growing sales in this channel. The opening of Inside Out 2 in mid-June created momentum as we closed the quarter, resulting a record month of Frozen Beverage sales with gallons up 4% and overall sales increase of 6% compared to last year. Inside Out 2 was the first of several strong releases planned for Q4 and the remainder of the year. This momentum should also benefit our Dippin' Dots business as they complete the rollout to AMC, Cinemark, and Marcus Theatres over the next few months. Looking ahead, our movie theater customers as well as industry observers expect box office and attendance trends to begin to recover in the second half of calendar 2024. These positive trends are expected to continue into calendar 2025 with a greater number of titles, including a diverse offering of proven franchise films and highly anticipated new titles. As a result, we expect sales of our products and brands to significantly improve in this channel as attendance trends recover. Moving on to our segments. In foodservice, frozen novelties sales increased 9.1%, led by the continued growth of Dippin' Dots, which increased 5.3%. Bakery sales increased 6.8%, driven by unit volume growth in cookies, new products, encouraging Thinsters results, and expanded customer placements. In addition, we saw a meaningful improvement in the handheld sales, up 25.3%. Overall, foodservice segment sales grew 3.7% with the increase in these product categories, partially offset by softness in soft pretzels and churros due to the previously mentioned challenges in the theater. We continue to see strong growth in Churros with the third largest QSR and remain confident in this opportunity going forward Moving to retail. We experienced broad-based growth across nearly all of our product categories, resulting in a 12.4% increase in sales for the quarter. Handhelds grew approximately 70%, driven by expanded placements with a major mass merchant. Frozen novelties sales increased 11%, led by growth of Luizis, Icee Tubes, and Dogsters, which was driven by unit volume growth and incremental placements in the club channel. Soft pretzel sales increased 8.2%, led by our continued expansion of SuperPretzel products, largely reflecting strong demand for SuperPretzel Bavarian sticks. Biscuit sales were down slightly in the quarter. The Frozen Beverage segment declined 2.6% for the quarter, driven by the previously discussed softness in the theater channel. Frozen beverages decreased 1.1% due to a 6% drop in gallons. However, gallons increased 3% in Q3 excluding the impact of theaters. Let me just say that one more time. [Indiscernible] [0:10:02] increased 3% in Q3, excluding the impact of theaters, driven by strong performance in mass merchandisers, amusement and QSR. We continue to diversify our customer portfolio, finding growth opportunities in channels like QSR. In fact, we are very encouraged with the current test at KFC that was recently highlighted on Good Afternoon Kentucky as they market this new program and new flavors like Sweet Lightning and Blackberry Lemonade in the local Lexington market. Repair and maintenance revenues decreased 1.6%, reflecting lower preventative maintenance call volumes. Machine sales, well exceeding our internal budget for the quarter were down 15.4% as we lapped a large QSR rollout from last year. Let me quickly highlight a couple of other important focus areas as we continue to cross sell our brands and products across channels. Starting with SuperPretzel, this iconic brand is outperforming the snack category and continues to provide opportunities for growth, new product extensions or new points of sale. We are expanding across retail led by the launch of Bavarian Sticks, which remains the number 2 seller in the SuperPretzel portfolio reaching an ACV now of 28% and growing. I'm so pleased with the incremental distribution we are achieving with leading retailers. In late fiscal Q4, we expect to double our store count with a major grocery retailer under the SuperPretzel and Auntie Anne's brand. Let's talk about Dippin' Dots. Summer promotions are underway with Regal and Chuck E. Cheese resulting in higher volumes and increased brand awareness. We also continue to roll out Dippin' Dots at AMC, Cinemark and Marcus Theatres with expectations to be in approximately 930 locations by the end of the calendar year. Currently, we have installed Dippin' Dots in 176 AMC locations, 134 Cinemark locations and 51 Marcus locations. Also, we're actively testing new opportunities with convenience store customers and will be installing freezers in approximately 230 locations with a major food service customer. We remain confident in our plans to expand Dippin' Dots across customers and channels. I'd like to spend some time highlighting the significant impact of our operational investments over the last couple of years. The investments we have made in manufacturing and distribution capabilities are resulting in improvements across key efficiency metrics. Starting with our supply chain strategy. All three RDCs are exceeding expectations and will enable us to continue driving productivity improvements. At this time, 85% of our sales orders are shipped from the new distribution network versus only 26% a year ago with the average length of haul decreasing by 38% and on time performance improving to over 82% versus 73% a year ago. Line haul cost per pound decreased 17% compared to the same quarter last year in our snack food business. We have reached -- we have reduced the number of cold storage locations to 10, driving efficiencies in how we ship products and reducing transfer crops -- transfers across our network by 9%. Shifting to operations, the addition of six new production lines has significantly expanded our capacity. This has enabled added efficiencies and given us the ability to beat growth opportunities across our core products such as pretzels, churros and frozen novelties. The expanded capacity has created production efficiencies and higher output metrics through better automation, which improves product margins, decreases over time, and provides the flexibility to respond to new sales opportunities. Fill rates have reached 98.5%, a high point for J&J's business and high relative to the overall industry trends. Finally, as many of you likely saw in our 8-K filing, our CFO, Ken Plunk will be retiring at the end of this calendar year. The company will be conducting a thorough search process to identify a successor and to ensure a smooth transition. Ken's been a great partner and leader to both me and the organization. I want to thank Ken for his help and support as we transformed the business over these past four years. The entire J&J team, the Board of Directors, and I wish him and his family the very best in his new chapter of his life. Thank you, Ken. In summary, I'm pleased with our ability to post record third quarter sales and profits, while managing through continued challenges in the consumer environment. I'm so proud of how the J&J team continues to execute on our growth agenda. While we expect our 2024 fiscal fourth quarter results to be impacted by one less sales week versus the comparable prior year period, it is clear that our strategies to maximize sales across our customer channels and improve operating efficiencies are working. We have a strong portfolio of beloved products and brands with tremendous growth opportunities ahead of us. And we remain confident in our ability to deliver long-term value to our employees, our partners and our shareholders. With that, I would now like to pass the call over to Ken to review our financial performance in more detail. Ken?