A Belgian Gun Dog Team awaiting orders, resting in the rear of the firing line. 'Belgian Infantry Regiments are all provided with machine-gun sections, which accompany the corps in the field. The gun in use, a machine-gun of the Gatling type, is turned out at the 'Elswick' of Belgium, the war-munitions factory of John Cockerill et Cie, at Serning, near Liege. It fires rifle bullets and is mounted on a light travelling carriage, or 'voiturette de traction,' designed especially for rough work across country. Two dogs, such as visitors to Brussels in happier times have often seen drawing milk and vegetable carts about the streets, form a gun team, and the gun-squad consists of four men. The incident depicted took place in the rear of the fighting line on one of the battlefields between Liege and Brussels on a boiling hot day. (source:
The Illustrated War News Volume 1 August 1914 , please note that the image shown is of lower resolution and quality than the image on the CD-ROM)