There isn't really any such thing as a stereo recording of early Beatles music. They had stereo equipment but they used it as a two track mono recorder with vocals on one channel and the band on the other. This is why, when you listen to such tracks today, you hear the vocals in one ear and the band in the other ear. That's probably also why there are so few pressings of the stereo version of your LP.
Having said that, the technical quality of a recording has no bearing on how much you can sell it for and I did find a stereo first pressing of Please Please Meon eBay that sold for £4,600.
Cheers Jeremy, thanks for the info.
Further to the info I gave in Mess. 4, I have now taken it(today) to an expert in Vinyl(including rare records). He cleaned it for me, using a professional vacuum driven cleaner, and played both sides on his equipment. The results were truly impressive(I haven't played it for at least 45 years) with very few clicks etc. and no jumping whatever. He has confirmed it is a genuine first issue, and immediately made me a promising offer, which I have not yet accepted. To be honest, We don't know whether to keep it with our sons/grandchildren in mind or to sell/auction it. He also tells me that it is the first one he has ever seen(stereo version, that is) and has taken photographs of both disk and sleeve. We'll see what transpires.
Strangely enough, the most enjoyable part of all this isn't the money, but the gradual dawning that it was possibly a first issue followed by the internet research that I did, which seemed to confirm this to be so. It was also tinged with a little nostalgia, as I remember going to see the Beatles live in Hull many years ago with a friend called John Harrison, who later became part of the folk group, the Watersons whom some may have heard of, and whom I knew quite well.