Armstrong provides a detailed, illustrated explanation of how money orders were processed in Oswald's day:
http://harveyandlee.net/Guns/PMO/Money_Orders.html
Armstrong really took a thumping from Lance Payette. And Lance had been an admirer of Armstrong. That "illustrated explanation of how money orders were processed in Oswald's day" resulted from that thumping. And he still went ahead and made this unsupported claim :
"All postal money orders had to be date stamped/endorsed by the bank receiving the deposit. Without the endorsement, the Federal Reserve would have no way of knowing to which bank the money order was to be credited."To my knowledge, he has yet to provide any proof for that claim.
Regarding Oswald's Jaggars-Stovall timesheet, if we look at the timesheet, we see that every print job had a job number and that the time spent on each job had to be noted:
Oswald was rather thorough in his fakery.
Finally, notice the obvious difference in how the "A" in "A. Hidell" is written on the color original of the order form vs. how it is written in Cadigan Exhibit 3A:
Clearly, somebody was meddling with the writing of the name on the order form between the time the order form was first filled out and the time it was copied as an evidence exhibit for the WC.
The order form filled out with blue ink is a fake. How could you not know that? The original order form was destroyed by Klein's. They kept all of their records on microfilm.