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Wolfshadow
I may very well be in the same situation you are now in: 5 cats!
Males tend to be able to get along easier than females are in mixed groups, from my personal experiance. I would keep the new cats in a enclosed room (with their own box and food and water of course) and slowly try to intergrate things with the new cats scent into the old cats' living quarters, and vice versa. That way all parties involved know there are other cats around.
Slowly introduce the new cats to the old ones under supervised conditions. Be aware that there will most likely be some hissing and fighting at first- This is normal. If there are elderly or kittens in the house, you may want to supervise especially carefully.
Females have a tendancy to hate all males that invade "her" territory. Males can share easier, are more affectionate to one another than females, etc.
Also, make sure there are no breeding-capable cats before they are introduced. This goes double for un-neutered males, and also for un-neutered males and unspayed females. You don't want kittens.
After a few months of the occasional hissy-fit, the cats will settle in and get used to each other. Do not be surprised to see male cats (neutered or not!) mounting other male cats, and vice versa. They, like dogs, do this as a show of dominance. It's the natural way of showing the pecking order of the colony. I have a 5 year old cat, and rescued a 10 month old abandoned cat over the summer. My older boy is skinnier, smaller, and lighter than the kitten is now (8.5 versus 11.7) and he still mounts the kitten to show he is the dominate male, something the kitten takes without much complaint, oddly enough....
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