Looks like a German 1933 Standard Modell to me. These were export mausers made to compete with the Belgian and Czech mausers for the world arms trade. They normally came in 7.92x57 (8x57 Mauser), which in the interwar period was the standard cartridge of most armies as they upgraded from older rifles. Much like the .30-06 was after WWII. You can tell that it is a 1933 Modell because it has the finger grooves on the front of the stock that the 1934 version lacked. My guess would be that this one is likely still in 8x57, because not many places upgraded these to .30-06 or 7.62x51 after WWII. Some of the few that did, like Peru, had their own models, not the Standard Modell. The barrel looks like an original mauser barrel, and had it been an Israeli rifle (one of the other few places that did upgrade the barrel) they would have scrubbed the writing on the side as well. Since it is a 98 mauser, the .308 is well within it's operating pressure.
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