The Savage 110 package deals are currently selling for $400.00. The advertised packages have been in 30-06 or 7mm Remington magnum with a 3x9 Simmons scope mounted on the rifle. Recently another outfit was offering deals on Winchester M70 rifles in the 7mm WSM. The Winchesters also offer a Simmons scope. Many sportsmen miss out on these deals because they do not subscribe to a newspaper.
A good 4X scope is a starting point and not always the lowest cost answer. Standard crosshairs do not cover up a lot of the target at long range. The newer generation Dual X reticle, or what ever the manufacture calls them does cover-up more target area and are more suited to hunting in heavier cover. A better test of a 4X scope comes from shooting small game using standard crosshairs. I have shot a boat load of rock chucks out to 150 hundred yards with a .270 Win. using a 4x scope. Not the ideal chuck rifle, but you go chuck hunting with what you have. The bottom line is the standard cross hairs did not cover up a little rock chuck. A rock chuck is a smaller target then the kill zone on a deer or adult Elk which is two or three times larger then an adult deer.
Admittedly after today I will have only one deer rifle with a 4x scope. I will be replacing a bargain basement 4x with a 3x9 Banner on a rifle that was given to me. The Banner has a proven track record, but is being moved to make room for a shorter 3x9 that will not fit on my long action rifle.
An issue with early variable power scopes was that the crosshairs would increase in thickness when the power was cranked up. This was rather bothersome and I did not purchase my first variable scope unit 1969 or later. It is simple; a fixed power scope is less likely to have problems. Technology has improved many of the lowest price scopes around, but take a look at what you are buying. Your past Colorado experience will pay-off. In the late fall I have gone from 85 degree weather to minus 15 degree weather in Western Colorado. And snow came with the weather change. A low cost fix power or variable power scope may fail you at a critical time in a changing climate. I have always hunted with a limited budget. I have had some cheap scopes cause me problems when it comes to weather. The Banner’s have never failed me, nor my more recent Weavers.
I keep an unmounted 4x scope handy along with a pair of binoculars to watch deer. You never know who will be taking a nap out back and the cross hair do not cover a large area on this buck. Oops we are talking Elk.
NONYA's sugestion regarding the 710 package also fits. There is a good choice of package deals in suitable calibers.