Thank you, Steve, and good morning, everyone. Before discussing results for the quarter, I'd like to start today by thanking all our team members for their hard work and tireless dedication. As a result of the devastating hurricanes, Helene and Milton, the lives of both our employees and our customers were dramatically impacted. Importantly, all our team members are now safe and accounted for and we're fortunate that we did not suffer meaningful damage to our stores. We're grateful for both outcomes and thank you, team. Moving now to our results. I'm so proud of the profitability the team achieved in the quarter. We delivered third quarter adjusted EPS of $0.71 which was in line with our expectations shared earlier this year. On a year-to-date basis, adjusted EPS totaled $2.19, an increase of 3.8% versus prior year. Gross profit margin in the quarter was 36%, exceeding 35% for the 15th consecutive quarter. We achieved year-to-date net sales of $939.9 million, an increase of 4.9% and year-to-date adjusted operating income of $78.4 million, an increase of 6.6% versus prior year and growing faster than sales. The key drivers of our third quarter profit delivery included a very strong back-to-school performance with comparable store sales growth across our banners, efficiencies in our digital-first marketing approach, the addition of Rogan's in February 2024 and the rapid progress testing our store rebanner strategy, which I will discuss in a few moments. From a top line perspective, Rogan's continued to deliver in line with our expectation. And from a profit perspective, we further accelerated the Rogan's integration time line and began capturing significant profit synergies in the third quarter, a full six months ahead of our previous schedule, which was to begin capturing synergies in fiscal 2025. The synergy capture in the quarter was primarily corporate and back-office support, where we had the capacity to consolidate functions ahead of schedule. Patrick will go into more details in his comments, but our ability to accelerate the capture of these savings into 2024 demonstrates our team's ability to quickly identify and capture profit synergies while also delivering on our top line expectations for Rogan's. In addition to the profit synergies on Rogan's, we also drove leverage in our SG&A led by our digital-first marketing strategies. As we have previously discussed, our transition to a digital-first approach and away from more traditional forms of media, which began over a year ago, gives us the ability to quickly pivot and adjust spending to invest strategically and maximize engagement when customers are ready to purchase, just as we did during back-to-school in the quarter. Importantly, the inverse is also a key aspect of our digital strategy to be flexible enough to ratchet spending down when consumers are not engaging with advertising investments at a sufficiently profitable level, such as the weeks surrounding Hurricanes Helene and Milton. Our spending flexibility to match the customers' real-time behavior was essential to delivering our profit expectations this quarter. Turning to sales in the quarter. Back-to-school was an all-around success led by Children's and Athletics, we achieved solid comparable store net sales growth. In the back-to-school weeks leading up to Labor Day, we achieved comparable store net sales growth in both Carnival and Station banners, delivered strong product margins, customer traffic growth and transaction size increases versus prior year. And as I mentioned earlier, our flexible digital-first marketing campaigns were very effective, driving increased customer engagement while also delivering continued profit efficiencies as we were able to reach more customers while spending less. After Labor Day, in September and October, sales slowed meaningfully as a result of the two hurricanes and persistently warm weather. While we did not experience major damage to our stores resulting from the hurricanes, our business was significantly disrupted, ranging from some stores being closed for a day or two, all the way to one of our stores in Western North Carolina being closed for nearly a month without electricity or water. From a high level perspective, about half of our stores were affected to varying degrees by the hurricanes and our customers' lives were significantly impacted as well. Understandably, shopping for shoes during these storms was simply not a priority for them. Later in the quarter, the weather remained unseasonably warm into November, which delayed the start of our winter boot season. Carl will go into more details in his remarks, but as a point of reference, boots were down over 35% in the month of October and our sandals assortment, given the very warm weather, continued to deliver sales up double-digit in October. All-in, the disruption from the hurricanes to our stores and to our customers' lives, combined with the lack of a boot season in the quarter were the primary drivers of sales performing about $10 million below our goals in the back half of the quarter. Now shifting to thoughts on the balance of the year. Today, we revised our full year sales guidance given the sales performance in the third quarter. We anticipate customer purchasing behaviors during nonevent periods, which we are in now until the holidays, will continue to be in decline across the industry. And while the winter boot season was delayed out of the third quarter due to the warm weather, I expect trends to improve materially when the weather turns cooler and we enter the winter holiday event period. Consistent with last quarter, we anticipate the lower side of our guidance range is the most likely outcome considering where we stand today. But if boot trends turn to significant growth once the weather gets cold and strong holiday results are achieved then the mid to higher side of the range is a possible outcome. As I said, we believe the lower end is most likely as persistent warm weather has continued into early fourth quarter. We also reiterated our fiscal 2024 EPS guidance range based on our strong margins and profit delivery in the third quarter and year-to-date. Patrick will go into more details on guidance, but I'm proud of the team for delivering such strong profit results in the third quarter in the face of many unexpected weather challenges. I would now like to take a few moments to discuss two core growth strategies that support our vision to be the nation's leading family footwear retailer. One of those core strategies is profitable M&A activity. Rogan's, which we acquired in February 2024, continues to deliver top line results in line with our expectation. And as I discussed earlier, we achieved full run rate synergies in the quarter, six months faster than we anticipated. With integration largely complete and full synergies now being captured, the team is turning to building out our Shoe Perks CRM program in the Rogan stores, which we just rolled out and are mining customer data for new growth opportunities in the years ahead. Shoe Station, which we acquired in December 2021, continues to deliver strong sales growth year-over-year since the acquisition, along with profitable results that are accretive to our bottom line. In addition to being a profitable acquisition, the Shoe Station brand, product assortment and in-store shopping experience make Shoe Station a key component of a second core growth strategy, which is to grow our existing business. One of the primary focus areas in this strategy is to evaluate data on community characteristics, purchasing trends, product assortment and mix at a store level. As part of that analysis, we have defined existing Shoe Carnival locations where the customer and real estate characteristics are better aligned with Shoe Station. As I discussed on our last call, we rebannered three stores from Carnival to Station during the second quarter in the core station markets of Alabama and Mississippi. The results were very encouraging, surpassing our expectations early on and continuing to do so in the third quarter. During the third quarter, we expanded the testing of this strategy by rebannering seven more stores, bringing the total number of rebannered stores to 10. Our focus on this round of testing was to further validate that rebannering stores in core markets is profit accretive and to test expansion into additional southern markets where Shoe Station is present or known, but not the market leader. With the addition of these seven newly rebannered stores, we entered multiple new station markets in Florida, Alabama and Mississippi, along with the State of Tennessee. It's still early days on these seven stores, but the results are promising. Our success criteria for rebannered stores are plus 3% to 5% sales and profit growth. And based on the first 10 stores, we are very encouraged with the early results. The stores with more than one fiscal month of operating history have delivered a total sales and profit increase of over 10%. We will continue to learn from the rebannered stores during the fourth quarter and the important holiday shopping period, but it is very clear that these stores are significantly outperforming as Shoe Station banner stores compared to their performance prior as Shoe Carnival stores. As such, we plan to further expand the testing by rebannering an additional 25 stores in the first half of fiscal 2025. The markets currently planned are in the South and include new Shoe Station markets in Tennessee, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Georgia and possibly Kentucky and the Carolinas. With this round of testing, we plan to further test the success of this strategy by expanding it to markets outside of Alabama and Mississippi into markets further away from where the Shoe Station brand is known. With the additional 25 stores planned in early 2025, the number of rebannered stores will total 35 and represent approximately 10% of Shoe Carnival stores that will have been rebannered during the first phase of our testing. We see this strategy as a potential long-term source of growth and I look forward to providing an update on our next earnings call as well as our expectations for 2025 impact and thoughts on potentially expanding testing further geographically in the years ahead. I'd like to thank our team for their spirit of innovation and reimagining ways to better meet our customers' needs. This new strategy is energizing teams, delighting customers and early days are very profit accretive. Before handing it over to Carl, I'll summarize with a few closing thoughts. We delivered a very profitable quarter and EPS that was in line with our expectation, led by a successful back-to-school, strong margins and continued efficiencies in our successful digital-first marketing approach. Rogan's delivered top line results that were in line with our expectations for the quarter and we accelerated the integration and delivered full profit synergies in the quarter, six months ahead of schedule. As part of our store rebanner strategy, we expanded testing in the quarter with seven additional stores, bringing the total number of stores to 10. We continue to be encouraged by the early results and currently plan to further expand the strategy by rebannering 25 additional stores in the first half of fiscal 2025. And as we announced in October, Carl Scibetta has decided to retire during the spring of 2025 after over 50 years in the retail industry and over a decade of service to Shoe Carnival. I'd like to thank Carl for his partnership over the last decade as well as his valuable leadership, his friendship and many contributions to Shoe Carnival's successful growth during his tenure. The process to select Carl's successor is underway and we plan to share further information at the appropriate time in 2025. We are grateful that Carl will remain with the company to close out fiscal 2024 and to facilitate a smooth transition during fiscal 2025. And now I'll hand it over to Carl.