I still have the BLACK cast-aluminum CH press and the UNDATED 8x57 RCBS dies I bought from Doug while he was running the HBC sporting goods department. Darn, but that was a long time ago!
Lever had a few .22 LEs in from time to time but they were never really a common item. He did get one big batch of them about 1966 during one of the firearms amnesties in England and I got one of those for my Brother. Mr. Lever let me have it for $25 WITH the PH sights included; they were worth more than the gun. My brother used that rifle (1918 Enfield, PH conversion, half-stock) until he was banned from EVERY turkey-shoot and ham-shoot in this end of the country. Thing was (is) so accurate that they wouldn't even let him shoot the good-luck targets! Robert passed away a year ago, so the rifle now is with my 4-foot-tall nephew..... and he is just as good a shot as his Dad was! Many years after that, I finally got a Long Branch .22 (prototype for the C Number 7)...... but I still don't have an SMLE .22" Mark IV*.
That is an awfully-nice rifle. Treat it well.
I don't know the W-in-a-C marking; one I have never encountered before. Anyone have an idea?
I note that this is an RCAF rifle. RCAF was founded in 1920; they could have had this one right from when they were flying Camels and wishing for Brisfits.
Number 110 "City of Toronto" Squadron was authorised in 1932, began flight training in 1934. They trained as army/air co-ordination flyers, flew Moths, Avros and Lizzies. Potted squadron history on the RCAF website.
Certainly a lot of our history in that old rifle.
YOU are a Very Lucky Guy.