Grandma Dowdel doesn't like the idea of feeding Mary Alice's cat table scraps because she believes that cats should be able to hunt for their own food. Also, since Grandma Dowdel has very little food to spare, table scraps are hard to come by.
Additionally, the idea of cat food in a can is strange to Grandma Dowdel. It seems a little unnatural to her, considering that she's always believed all cats have natural hunter's instincts. Her personal philosophy about cats is that "they'd eat anything they could bite." In the story, Mary Alice's cat, Bootsie, eventually learns how to live like a country cat. She camps out in the cob-house and lies in wait for birds and field mice. After a time, Bootsie becomes "sleek and round," due to her country diet.
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