Not meaning to be a heretic, but Capt Laidler's description of the procedure needs to be clarified.

Let me know when it is safe to come out from cover.
Without a bushing, tighten the "king screw" until it stops.
Stops against what?
With or without trigger guard fitted?
Stop when the trigger guard gets tight against the wood?
How tight? Hand tight with a screwdriver? Or keep winding that screw in and crush the crap out of the wood and then stop? Crank it until the screw bottoms out?
Not trying to be a smart arse (dont have to try, it comes naturally), but if interpreted wrong, things could be either just lightly nipped up, or, cranked down severely crushing the wood.
This is an important process.
Laidler says tight but '
not under full unlimited compression of the screw.'
I understand the requirement and have my own enthusiastic amateur method of doing it to give me a
measured 10 thou of crush.
I set the length of the bushing and then crank that screw in F=x;ing tight into the adjusted bushing. It comes to a dead stop. It never comes loose.
I don't stake the screw as sometimes I want to take it back out at a later date.
Staking is using a center punch strike back slightly from the edge of the trigger guard hole to expand metal into the end of the screw slot to mechanically stop it from turning and coming undone.
If you do stake, my tip would be to do it just the once staking the guard into the screw slot. Then, if the screw is ever removed and reinstalled you need to stake it again, stake your screw into the existing stake hole in the guard as opposed to staking the trigger guard into the end of the screw slot.
Why? because if you stake the guard into the screw slot a few different times, the stake size starts to grow and you will need to move more and more material over to the screw (looks like crap). If the orientation of the screw ever changes, you will need a new stake im the guard.
I have seen recycled trigger guards with several stake marks, not pretty. Staking the screw into the guard, you will only ever need the one stake no matter how many times. Also, if staking the screw into the guard many times and the screw head becomes chewed up, the screw is a lot easier to replace with a new one than the trigger guard.