New Neighbors 
her supper, Guy and I followed her ; and what do 
you suppose we found ? We traced Bunny into a 
vacant lot, and there under some shrubs was a little 
cave, dug into a bank of autumn leaves. This was 
Bunny’s home, and in it she had living with her five 
as chipper and lively little Manx cats as one could 
wish to sec. Guy interested Don and Teddie in 
the little Bunnies, and the two boys brought them 
food mornings and noons ; so that thereafter they 
had three square meals a day. The boys also 
found good homes for them as soon as they were 
old enough to leave their mother. 
In the rear part of Mrs. Watt’s yard the grass is 
allowed to stand all summer so it becomes very tall. 
It was just a capital place for us cats to play hide 
and go seek, and to catch grasshoppers. I heard 
mistress say to Charlie one day that she wondered 
what we cats found to interest us so much in his 
back yard ; so I thought I would show her. The 
following Sunday, when she sat on the piazza, I 
carried a hopper up-stairs and laid him down at her 
feet. She was busy reading and did not notice him 
at once; but when he began flying around and I 
after him, she laid her book down and watched us. 
After the hopper had landed on the floor several 
