This could be a little piece of the reason Hitler did not invade Switzerland. The Swiss Karabiner Model 1931. The Swiss and their long heritage of firearms, were very much like Finland and Sweden. Producers of very high quality weapons. Often toted as one of the top three most accurate military weapons of the era, the metal work, finish and fitting of these is impressive for the time they were made. The bores are typically, due to the Swiss military training, immaculate. Weaponry was the heart and soul of Switzerland, even retired troops were allowed to keep their issued weapons, if they chose to, the military added a "P" prefix to the serial number.
These are not like typical Mauser, Mosin or Enfield, these are a straight pull action, you grab the knob, pull open and slap it shut with the palm. Just a quick back and forth action. It's a very smooth and very quick action. Stocks depending on the year or if refurbed could be either walnut or beech. Rough stocks are typical, and finding a troop ID tag is as well. And reloading is easy, these use a standard .308 bullet.
This is a walnut stocked K31, second from the top rifle in the bottom photo. Oh how I love tiger stripes.
Now the top rifle in the photo is a Swiss Vetterli M1869/71 in 10.4×38Rmm or .41 Swiss rimfire. It was built a Eidgenössische Montier-Werstätte, in Bern. Out of the total production of all Swiss arsenals of 114,000, that arsenal made a total of 8900 Vetterlis from 1870 to 1875. If I could find the ammo, I would shoot it. The top and bottom K31 are walnut stocks, the middle is beech.