Red Cross 1918 15S(+5S) (134A) -CANCELLED G(III)-

ARTICLE DESCRIPTION:

MiNo. 134A G(III) SIAM
StTdr. (London); A = perf. 13 1/2, 14 1/2; 15; B = imperforated
Single Stamp, date of issue: 11/11/1918
Picture descriptions:
m-n) Portrait image of King Vajiravudh, red cross
134 A  15S (+ 5S) light blue (123)
Quantity: 20,000 pieces
Printer: Waterlow and Sons, London
Overprinted by: K. Oyama Printing, Bangkok
Conservation status:
Here as a "CANCELLED G(III)" perforated Single Stamp
Issue Notice:
  • Stamps of the 1917 issue with red imprint
  • CANCELED STAMP´s AND SET´s:
  • The images shown for canceled stamps and sets are ALWAYS! examples only and may/will differ from the actual supplied.
  • As a rule, we have differently canceled stamps and sets in stock.
  • If you would like to know exactly which canceled stamps and sets we have in stock, please ask us BEFORE! the purchase.
  • We will be happy to send you the corresponding original scans. Otherwise we will ship what we have in stock as well.


STAMPS:
We are specialize in Postal Stamps from Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Myanmar, supply many major dealers around the world with new issues and assist publishers in the listing of new issues with stamps and background information in their catalogs.
NEW STAMPS:
News subscriptions:
We offer for the countries THAILAND, MYANMAR, CAMBODIA & LAOS  novelties subscriptions on favorable terms. Just ask us and we will make you a non-binding offer.
JEWELLERY ITEMS:
We use only 316L surgical stainless steel, natural materials, allergen-free additives, 100% nickel-free pewter, genuine Citrine and / or quality cut glass in our jewelry products. In addition, all "Jewelrys" passed before delivery an elaborate quality control. We DO NOT support! Child labor and pay attention to the working conditions.
SHIPPING:
We ship for your safety:
Standard Shipping =
REGISTER / AIRMAIL
Express Shipping =
REGISTERED-EXPRESS-AIRMAIL
Please note we will despatch directly from Thailand by airmail. Nevertheless, the mail can take up to 4 weeks. Unfortunately, this happens from time to time. In 99% of all cases, it is customs that checks all shipments from Asia.