Howdy from Kentucky, Im chippewa from the Sault Ste Marie Tribe in the UP.
Anyways, You should start by reading one or two of the modern reloading manuals. Dont read the old manuals until later (if you even want to), when you have a good grasp of reloading. I say this because, while some of them stuff in those old manuals are still relevant, most is not. Lots of the ballistic stuff is still the same, but the tools, powders, terms, techniques, and Ideals that were common back then are not in use today.
Another thing i'd recommend is not to be brand specific. Dont buy all Lee or RCBS or what have you. Buy each tool, used if you can, of the brand that suits you. You'll save money buying each part individually and used, than buying a kit.
I'd suggest for a press, either the lee hand press, or bench mounted C press. You'll need a priming tool for either, the hand press can be purchased with the ram prime as a kit. I didnt see the C press available with it. Cheap yes, but it will hold up a good while until you decided you need more, or it'll work just fine with no "upgrading".
https://www.amazon.com/LEE-PRECISION...lee+hand+press
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B002SF4X5I...544131327&sr=2
https://www.amazon.com/LEE-PRECISION...=lee+ram+prime
Personally I'd go with used RCBS dies.
Here is the lyman 48. The 49 isnt really got anything in it that the 48th doesnt, except load data for cartridges that werent in production at the time of its publication. I havent gotten ahold of the 50th yet for comparison.
http://marvinstuart.com/firearm/Manu...%20-%20ocr.pdf
Be careful bout learning from someone else without reading the manual first. There are a lot of folks that reload, but dont do it safely. Folks can put ammo together sloppy and get lucky a while, but they always end up hurting themselves, their guns, and others.
Dont be shy about asking questions.
~Bazoo