We had an excellent attendance at the meeting held at the Royal Philatelic Society on Saturday afternoon, October 22nd. 1955. The eleven displays covered nearly all the British West Indies and some very unusual and controversial items were shown. A GRENADA pre-adhesive of 1842 with straight line CARRIACOU was new to me, also some scarce later postmarks. I also recall seeing the scarce circular postmark of ST. KITTS with ' SP' for Sandy Point and some very fine early ST. VINCENT on cover, including a copy of the large 5/- with the flaw in the letter FIVE. After tea, several problems in regard to shades, specimen markings and unusual postmarks created a lively and interesting discussion to the satisfaction of members present, all of whom considered it a very enjoyable and helpful meeting Since then, one of our members has sent me a G.B. 1/- (S.G.73) with the obliterator A34 Claremont, Jamaica off cover. As most collectors of JAMAICA will know this A34 obliterator on any G.B. stamp is rare, and no copy of the 1/- has ever been recorded. I have no example in my collection on a G.B. stamp, but this A34 obliterator on Jamaica stamps is common and on comparison it was very evident that it was a clever fake. This 1/- G.B. stamp is catalogued at £15 and it beats me why any person can fake a stamp of this value with the hope of getting away with it. I feel I should warn collectors of JAMAICA to take the greatest care when purchasing these scarce G.B. used in Jamaica especially off cover. Dr. Urwick informs me that he has just acquired a Jamaica pre-adhesive with the straight line HIGHGATE, Type 3 dated 2/8/1838, the only known example to date.