Thank you, Russell. This quarter we grew organic sales, we increased our gross profit margins and we grew our bottomline nicely. Putting it all together, we reported third quarter GAAP EPS of $0.96, compared to $0.78 in the third quarter of last year, an increase of 23.1% and non-GAAP EPS, which is calculated as our GAAP EPS, excluding the $2.3 million after-tax gain on the sale of our PremiSys business and the after-tax impact of amortization expense was $0.95 this quarter, which was up 10.5% over Q3 of last year. The key financial takeaways this quarter are, another quarter of organic sales growth, nicely improved EPS, organic sales growth and segment profit growth in each of our three regions, and significantly improved cash flow, all of which helped us overcome the year-over-year appreciation of the U.S. dollar and delivered fantastic financial results. Let’s move to slide number four for our quarterly sales trends. Organic sales grew 1.9% this quarter, but foreign currency translation reduced sales by 2.1% and the impact of our PremiSys divestiture reduced sales by another 0.2%, resulting in a sales decline of 0.4% in total. Foreign currency had a much larger impact on our Europe and Australia segment, where we saw a reduction of 4.8% from currency translation in the quarter. However, with the recent strengthening of currencies such as the euro versus the U.S. dollar, we expect the headwind from foreign currency to subside as we progress through our fourth quarter. Based on April 30th exchange rates, we expect foreign currency to have a minimal impact on Q4 and then to turn positive in Q1 of next year. On slide number five, you can see our gross profit margin trending. Our gross profit margin increased 190 basis points to 50.3%, compared to 48.4% in the third quarter of last year, as we were able to offset the majority of our input cost increases through efficiency gains, pricing actions and reduced freight charges. Our strong gross profit margins really show the value that we can bring to our customers. Slide number six is our SG&A expense trending. SG&A was $91 million this quarter, compared to $96.2 million in the third quarter of last year. As a percent of sales, SG&A declined to 27%, compared to 28.4% in the third quarter of last year. If you exclude amortization expense from each of the periods presented exclude the non-routine charges from last year’s third quarter and exclude the gain on the sale of our PremiSys business from this quarter, then SG&A would have increased from 26.8% of sales in Q3 of last year to 27.4% of sales this quarter. On a year-to-date basis, we continue to reduce SG&A, both in absolute dollars and as a percent of sales through our continual focus on becoming a more efficient organization. Slide number seven is the trending of our investments in research and development. This quarter we invested $15.7 million in R&D, which was 4.7% of sales. We remain committed to new product development. We have opportunities throughout our global businesses, including the development of our newest lines of printers. As Russell mentioned, we launched three excellent new printers this quarter and a pipeline of additional printers are scheduled for launch over the next several quarters. On slide number eight, you can see that pretax earnings increased 23% on a GAAP basis. GAAP earnings this quarter include a pretax gain of $3.8 million from the sale of our PremiSys business. If you exclude this gain, exclude amortization expense from both the current year and the prior year and exclude last year’s non-routine charges that we recognized in our Workplace Safety business, then our non-GAAP pretax earnings would have increased by 8.6% from $56.8 million in Q3 of last year to $61.7 million this quarter. Slide number nine outlines the trending of earnings and EPS on an after-tax basis. Looking at these charts, you can see a clear trend of increasing earnings and you can also see that Q3 is our strongest quarter on record. On both a GAAP and non-GAAP basis, our Q3 EPS was an all-time record high. And on a year-to-date basis, EPS is up 23.1% versus last year on a GAAP basis and up 10.5% over last year on a non-GAAP basis. One other item to point out is that we did have a higher income tax rate than normal at 23.8% this quarter. This higher-than-normal tax rate was due to certain statute lapses that occurred last year and didn’t repeat this year. So we still expect that our annual tax rate will be approximately 21% and we still expect that our long-term tax rate will be approximately 21% as well. On slide number 10, you’ll find a summary of our cash generation. Operating cash flow increased substantially this quarter from $40.9 million in Q3 of last year to $72.5 million this quarter. For the quarter, operating cash flow was 151% of net income and free cash flow was 141% of net income. So if you look at the first three quarters of this year, operating cash flow was up nearly 100% over the prior year to $129.9 million and we expect to finish the year with another strong quarter of cash generation in Q4. Turning to slide number 11. You can see the impact that Brady’s historical cash generation has had on our balance sheet. We’re currently in a net cash position of $84.9 million. To put this in perspective, even with returning more than $23.3 million to our shareholders in the form of dividends and buybacks this quarter, we still reduced our outstanding debt by more than $26 million and we increased our net cash position by more than $53 million. Our approach to capital allocation is to first use our cash to fund -- fully fund organic sales and efficiency opportunities. This includes investing in new product development, sales generating resources, capability enhancing capital expenditures and automation focused CapEx. Despite the economic uncertainty, we’ll continue to deploy capital to drive productivity and sales growth into the future. And second, we focus on consistently increasing our dividends. We’ve increased our dividends annually for 37 consecutive years, which is a street that we’re very, very proud of. After fully funding organic investments and dividends, we then deploy our cash in a disciplined manner for either acquisitions where we have clear synergistic opportunities or for buybacks in an opportunistic manner when we see a disconnect between intrinsic value and Brady’s trading price. Our balance sheet puts us in a position to really drive value by investing in R&D and other organic sales opportunities, completing acquisitions when the price is right and the synergies are clear, and returning funds to our shareholders through dividends and buybacks. As we look to the future, -- we’re confident that our strong balance sheet and our positive momentum set us up for success even in this uncertain macro environment, which brings us to our guidance on slide number 12. We are raising the low end of our fiscal 2023 EPS guidance range of $3.40 per share to $3.60 per share on a non-GAAP basis and $3.23 per share to $3.43 per share on a GAAP basis to our new range of $3.45 per share to $3.60 on a non-GAAP basis and $3.32 per share to $3.47 per share on a GAAP basis. Our outlook is based on exchange rates as of April 30th and assumes continued economic expansion. Although we’re concerned about the stability of the global economy, we’re still experiencing organic sales growth in most of our businesses outside of Asia. Because of this, we still expect full year organic sales growth to be approximately in the mid-single-digit percentage range for the year ending July 31, 2023. Other elements of our guidance include an income tax rate of approximately 21%, depreciation and amortization expense of approximately $32 million to $34 million, and capital expenditures of approximately $20 million. We also expect our fourth quarter to be another strong cash generating quarter. Potential risks of this guidance, among others, include strengthening of the U.S. dollar, inflationary pressures that we can’t offset in a timely enough manner through price increases, destocking and inventory reductions at our distributor partners and an overall slowdown in economic activity. Now I’ll turn it back over to Russell to cover our performance by region. Russell?