THUMBNAIL SKETCHES, IT was after dinner on a pleasant Sunday afternoon that a crowd of jolly Seniors, filled with the spirit of the day, gathered in one of the rooms of the old stone man sion on the hill, a room, the rendezvous of the gang, which had seen many such gatherings, to talk of the days gone by and the timings that had. been and peradventure a few of the might-have-beens. Their conversation however was not limited to any special theme, but covered quite a variety of subjects. They talked of the pranks played in the Engineering Building, of the hap, peningsin the Main, of . the events of the Botanical Labora tory, of their troubles in the "Lab." with "Swamp." They told how, because of their ravenous appetites the refrigera tors, the pantries and the cellars of the neighborhood had suffered. How well they have become acquainted with every nook and corner of the creamery and the barns, how old "Snowball" could he speak, would prick up his ears as he meets them and greet them with "Come again, boys, I like the sport," could only be learned from their conversation. They talked not only of all this, but light-hearted and buoyant, told of banquets, llagscraps, sports, student as tronomers; and of the meditations of the dignified Junior. They spoke of "Prex," "Lordy," "Sir William," "John Andy„' "Dutch," and all with whom they had ever had to do, arguing their merits pro and con. They remembered a sled ride, a serenade, a lark on a moonlight night, a donation. THOSE SENIORS.