There were hundreds of new cars on show at the Scottish Motor Show at the Kelvin Hall in 1928. On show was the Phantom Rolls-Royce, third from front. Most Scots could not afford them, but they could dream...

Glasgow Times:

CHILDREN painting on the walls of their school’s loos is unlikely to go down well with the education authorities.
But that was not the case for the pupils of Hillhead Primary back in 1998, when they helped transform the school toilets into a work of art.
With the help of the Glasgow School of Art they adorned the walls with murals and mosaics they designed themselves.
The project cost about £3000, £1500 of whic h was donated by the Glasgow’s City Of Architecture  And Design Partnership Fund.
Two artists from the School Of Art transformed the loos during the summer holidays, bringing the pupils’ water designs to fruition.
One 10-year-old pupil, Richard Briggs, who designed a shark with “blood still in its teeth”, said: “The toilets are really nice. The walls used to be all dirty.”
In the picture are Kirsty Grace, 9, and Iain de Caestecker, 10.
That was in the old three-storey sandstone building in Cecil Street. Hillhead Primary has since moved to a new location next to Kelvingrove Park and is now the largest primary in the city.