THE
OUTHOUSE POEM 
The
service station trade was slow The owner sat around,
With sharpened knife and cedar stick Piled shavings on
the ground. No modern facilities had they, The log
across the rill Led to a shack, marked His and Hers That
sat against the hill. "Where is the ladies restroom,
sir?" The owner leaning back, Said not a word but
whittled on, And nodded toward the shack.

With
quickened step she entered there But only stayed a
minute, Until she screamed, just like a snake Or spider
might be in it. With startled look and beet red face She
bounded through the door, And headed quickly for the car
Just like three gals before. She missed the foot log -
jumped the stream The owner gave a shout, As her silk
stockings, down at her knees Caught on a sassafras
sprout. She tripped and fell - got up, and then In
obvious disgust, Ran to the car, stepped on the gas, And
faded in the dust. Of course we all desired to know What
made the gals all do The things they did, and then we
found The whittling owner knew. A speaking system he'd
devised To make the thing complete, He tied a speaker on
the wall Beneath the toilet seat.

He'd
wait until the gals got set And then the devilish tike,
Would stop his whittling long enough, To speak into the
mike. And as she sat, a voice below Struck terror,
fright and fear, "Will you please use the other hole,
We're painting under here!"