Thank you, Christian, and good morning, everyone. Murphy USA continued to demonstrate the benefits of its advantaged business model as we delivered strong third quarter results from our core categories, once again benefiting from our distinctive everyday low-price positioning with the growing segment of value focused consumers. In addition to our strong current period results, I'm very excited about the acceleration in organic growth as current construction projects underway put us in a great place for Q4 openings and sets the foundation for more new stores and earnings growth in 2025 and beyond. Our efforts to front load our real estate pipeline have paid off as we've seen more stores exit the permitting process than expected. As such, we are updating our CapEx projections for the year as we take advantage of this beneficial timing. I want to acknowledge our asset development team who worked hard to build this high-quality pipeline and implement process improvements to ensure we would hit our goals this year and put us in a better position for ratable store growth going forward. Galagher will provide some more details on our CapEx and growth programs later in the call. Unpacking third quarter results, we see continued outperformance in our core nondiscretionary categories, including fuel and nicotine. We grew both fuel volumes and retail margins with total and APSM volumes up 2% and 1.1% respectively. Retail margins were up a little over $0.03 versus the prior year, largely due to a modest falling price environment. All in fuel margins were about $0.02 lower when combined with PS&W results, which behaved as we expected in a period of falling wholesale prices. In fact, the entire $0.05 per gallon difference versus the prior year quarter is attributable to the accounting and timing variance associated with our internal supply transactions and inventory positions impacted by the year-over-year difference in price movement. For the full year, we expect PS&W contribution to land closer to the low end of the $0.02 to $0.03 per gallon range we have told investors to expect over the long term as we continue to see a long supply market with lower volatility. Looking at our merchandise results, notably across the Murphy geographies, we are seeing the incremental benefit in basket building categories from the customer trade down in our traffic driving categories. In turn, we are leveraging the strengths of these core categories, including fuel, nicotine, beer and lottery to drive transactions and other more discretionary categories across the center of the store. Performance within the nicotine ecosystem specifically remains exceptionally strong. We are continuing to grow our market share in combustible products, eclipsing 20% share in Murphy markets. Similarly, we are taking share in driving sales and margin growth in traditional smokeless products and the fast-growing oral nicotine category, where collectively we are seeing double digit growth in sales and margin, further differentiating our performance versus peers. Under the Murphy banner stores, we saw total packaged beverage sales and margin growth of 2.9% and 6.2%, respectively. Further, we saw mid-high single-digit strength in general merchandise, candy and salty snacks, each of which grew share in our markets versus broader declines registered in the Nielsen data. In total, Murphy stores grew non nicotine total sales and margin 2.7% and 4.8%, respectively, underscoring both the strength of our core customers in our core geographies and the relative attractiveness of our offer. These results reflect the value of 2024 initiatives, including personalization of MDR offers to encourage customers to experience different elements of the Murphy USA offer, as well as analytics driven pricing and assortment strategies to optimize our offer and leverage price elasticities at the SKU level. On the QuickChek side, competition from QSR value pricing continued in Q3, continuing to pressure food and beverage traffic and margins and center store baskets. Nevertheless, fuel had a great quarter in the Northeast, where total volumes were up 2.9% and fuel margin dollars were up 9.2%. Coffee sales were a bright spot, up 4.3% on a per store basis with made to order specialty drinks up 14% on a per store basis as QuickChek placed second nationally in CSP's annual survey of coffee programs. Overall, food and beverage sales per store were essentially flat with center of store sales down 1.2%. Recognizing the inside traffic headwinds will likely persist into 2025, we are taking intentional action to drive QuickChek traffic and further increase the competitiveness of our value offer. In fact, inside transactions at QuickChek have improved throughout the third quarter from a 6% year-over-year decline in July to a 1% decline in September. We kicked off the fourth quarter with new value offers and promotions in the breakfast and lunch dayparts, featuring a $3.99 6-inch Italian spicy chicken or chicken tender sub sandwich. Additionally, we expanded our value offer on breakfast with a $5 breakfast bundle, including a breakfast sandwich, spuds and any size coffee and while it's early in the sandwich promotion, we are seeing significant customer uptake in the 6-inch sub offer where volumes were up 63% and perhaps more encouragingly, we are seeing a 16% increase in total sandwich units, meaning we are seeing cross pollination across the category. Coupled with the higher traction in the New York Giants premium subs versus their inaugural launch last year, we are very encouraged by the trips and transactions we are seeing attached to this core traffic driving category. Further capitalized on this momentum, we expect the newly designed and relaunched QuickChek Rewards program, which went live earlier this week to offer additional opportunities to engage with our customers and drive sales in 2025. The new app will feature mobile ordering and delivery, in app payment options, the ability to earn points on fuel transactions and extends deeper into more center store categories. This is another great example of a cross functional capability we are bringing to QuickChek based on the huge success and impact of our own Murphy Drive Rewards program. Taking these initiatives together, we expect to show incremental improvement in transactions into the fourth quarter at QuickChek, setting the stage for a more robust recovery in 2025. Turning to operating expense, average per store month OpEx was up 4% in the third quarter, a sequential improvement versus the first half of 2024 as we start to lap some wage increases and other investments we made in the stores in the second half of 2023. Importantly, only half of this increase is attributable to same-store increases, meaning the other half of the growth reflects the impact of a higher mix of larger new stores and raze-and-rebuild stores in the network. Given that we will be adding more new stores this year, next year and beyond, we expect this trend to continue and would therefore expect same-store costs to increase at about a 3% clip, which would translate into network wide per store cost growth in the 5% to 6% range going forward. The team has done a great job this year making QuickChek stores more efficient through demand planning and implementing a more sophisticated and efficient store labor model, a process we also expect to roll out at Murphy stores next year. Before I turn the call over to Galagher to provide more color on our store growth and capital allocation, I just want to reiterate we are very pleased with third quarter results. We have a lot of irons in the fire to further optimize and grow the business in the fourth quarter and the team is engaged and excited, all of which suggest 2025 will be another rewarding year for our team members and our shareholders.