Thank you, Mark, and good afternoon, everyone. As Mark indicated, the overall trends that we saw in the third quarter were in the range of our outlook. The U.S. remained steady and sales were in line with our expectations. Canada was a little weaker than expected, with sales at the lower end of our range. We opened nine new stores during the quarter, and we are on track to open 29 new stores for the year. We also effectively managed our costs and delivered an adjusted EBITDA margin of greater than 20% despite top line headwinds, further demonstrating the resilience of our financial model. Turning now to the income statement. Total net sales increased 0.5% to $395 million. On a constant currency basis, net sales increased 1.2% and comparable store sales decreased 2.4%. In the U.S. net sales increased 6.2% to $212 million and comparable store sales increased 1.6%, driven by growth in both transactions and average basket. In Canada, net sales declined 7.1% to $152 million and comparable store sales declined 7.5%, primarily driven by declines in transactions. A timing shift in the Canada Day holiday negatively impacted Canadian comparable store sales by approximately 100 basis points. Cost of merchandise sold as a percentage of net sales increased 300 basis points to 43.3%, with the increase reflecting the impact of new stores and deleverage on lower comparable store sales. As a reminder, our new stores typically open at roughly half of their mature sales levels, resulting in lower profit margins in their first few years. As we accelerate our growth, new stores will be a headwind to profit margins in the short to medium term. However, this headwind will subside and become a tailwind as a growing number of new stores work their way up the maturity curve. New stores typically achieve profitability by year two. More importantly, investments in new stores are the highest returning use of our capital, generating returns well in excess of our cost of capital. As Mark indicated, we've made further progress on our store opening plans for 2025, and we now expect to open 25 to 30 new stores next year. Our 2025 new store opening plan will be more balanced throughout the year versus 2024's back end weighted opening cadence. Investments in off-site processing are also impacting our cost of merchandise sold. Off-site processing entails additional activities and costs, including freight and overhead, resulting in pressure on our profit margins when we open a central processing center or other off-site facility and work through the initial ramp phase. As we increase throughput and improve productivity in these facilities, the cost per unit is declining. In our most mature CPCs in the U.S. and Canada, cost per unit is approaching the level of in-store processing. Our total cost of merchandise sold per pound processed was $0.65 in the third quarter compared to $0.64 in the third quarter last year. Salaries, wages and benefits expense was $74 million. Excluding IPO-related stock-based compensation, salaries, wages and benefits as a percentage of net sales decreased 70 basis points to 16.6%. The decrease was driven primarily by lower incentive compensation expenses. Selling, general and administrative expenses as a percentage of net sales increased 50 basis points to 21.3%, primarily due to new stores and preopening expenses, partially offset by continued expense discipline. Depreciation and amortization increased 9% to $17 million, reflecting investments in new stores, central processing centers and automated book processing systems. Interest expense decreased 17% to $15 million due to reduced debt and lower average interest rates. GAAP net income for the quarter was $21.7 million, or $0.13 per diluted share. Adjusted net income was $25.1 million, or $0.15 per diluted share. Third quarter adjusted EBITDA was $82 million; and adjusted EBITDA margin was 20.8%. U.S. segment profit was $43.8 million, down $8.5 million versus last year due primarily to new stores and preopening expenses. Canada segment profit was $45.4 million, down $11 million versus last year, primarily due to comp store sales declines, new stores and preopening expenses. Turning now to capital allocation. We remain committed to a disciplined approach that funds our growth and strengthens our balance sheet. As our business continues to generate strong cash flow, we will continue to repay debt and be opportunistic in returning capital to shareholders. We remain on track for 29 new stores this year, and we expect operating cash flow to be more than sufficient to fund our capital expenditures. Our balance sheet remains strong with $138 million in cash and cash equivalents and a net leverage ratio of 2.1 times at the end of the quarter. We repurchased approximately 1.8 million shares of our common stock during the quarter at an average price of $9.86 per share. As of the end of the third quarter, we had approximately $29 million remaining on our share repurchase authorization. Finally, let me discuss our updated outlook for 2024. Based on our third quarter results and the continued macroeconomic headwinds in Canada, we are narrowing our outlook ranges for the full year to the following: Total net sales to a range of $1.53 billion to $1.54 billion; comparable store sales to a range of down 1% to flat, with the U.S. up low single-digits and Canada down low- to mid single-digits; net income to a range of $44 million to $49 million; adjusted net income to a range of $81 million to $86 million and adjusted EBITDA to a range of $290 million to $300 million. Our full year 2024 outlook remains unchanged for new store openings. We are still expecting a total of 29 new stores this year, which includes 22 organic openings and the seven acquired 2 Peaches locations. We closed two stores with expiring leases in the third quarter, bringing net new store growth for the year to 27. Finally, capital expenditures are planned in the range of $105 million to $115 million. Just a few final details: our outlook for net income assumes an effective tax rate of approximately 34%. And based on our share repurchase activity to date, we are now projecting weighted average diluted shares outstanding to be approximately 167 million for the full year. This does not contemplate any potential future share repurchases. This concludes our prepared remarks. We would now like to open the call for questions. Operator?