MID-August 1944. There continues to be encouraging news from the various fronts in the war.

“Battle of Normandy nears end,” reads a headline in the Glasgow Herald on Monday the 14th. Our military correspondent’s report begins: “The great battle in Normandy is ending, and in a day or two we shall know the extent of our victory. It was apparent yesterday morning that the German army – let it be said again, the enemy’s only first-class fighting force in France – was in a trap from which extrication was rapidly becoming impossible.”

President Roosevelt has just declared that the war against Japan in the Pacific is “well in hand”.

On the 15th, it is reported that Red Army forces had tightened its grip on the approaches to East Prussia.

Other items from around this time: Scots newly repatriated from German prisoner camps say they had been led to expect by their captors that flying bombs had devastated Glasgow and that southern England had been reduced to ashes. They were relieved to see Glasgow still standing.

Read more: Herald Diary

In Glasgow's Queens Park, the latest attraction at a successful Army Equipment Exhibition features a realistic, billowing smoke-screen, accompanied by battle sounds recorded during D-Day, a few weeks earlier.

And in the city's Woodlands Road there is a timely reminder of the war effort when local members of the Auxiliary Territorial Service (above), go on parade.