Let's give Recognition to the Model 14
I have a Model 14 Remington chambered in .30 Remington. It aggravates me every time I see someone say in print. "the .30 Remington cartridge is...a marginal round for deer."
I have never seen the same claim about the 30-30 Winchester, which is identical in bullet and load - all you need do to confirm this is to look in any reloading manual. The usual data is "for .30 Remington use same data as 30-30 Winchester."
My Model 14 was manufactured in 1917, and bought second-hand by my Dad's father in 1920, for the princely sum of $12.00. He took his vacations from the Post Office in winter, to work the logging camps in the Adirondacks. He brought home venison along with cash from those "vacations," and fed 5 kids through the Depression with that rifle.
My Dad hunted it from 1948 when his father died, until he too passed on in 1982. It has never shot at a deer that didn't get dragged out of the woods, although I recollect one that my Dad had to shoot twice.
The quality of work in the Model 14 is impressive. Yes, it's heavier than a Model 94, but it's still short and quick to the shoulder. It is a Pedersen design, and is the only tubular magazine gun I know of that vintage that doesn't suffer the risk of a pointed bullet in the tube punching the primer of the one in front of it.
That rifle has been in my family and used well and often for 92 years now, and it has never needed to go to a gunsmith for repairs. It still functions smoothly and reliably.