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   How 
    I bought my Honda 750   
   
  
    Other Motorcycle 
    Stories   
  
  
  
  Your bike is absolutely 
    beautiful.  The only thing that I don't like about it is that 
    I'm not on it myself.  This is exactly the same bike that I 
    bought brand new in Dec of 1973 in Huntington Tennessee,  
    except mine was orange.  It was a 1974 750 and they had a 
    hundred 750's on the show room floor.  When I bought it I had 
    2000 in my pocket and went to Millington Honda to by their 
    bike, with no fairing or any extras.  The salesman saw a 19 year 
    old kid walk into his shop and just sat there with his feet on 
    the desk talking on the phone to someone about some girl that he 
    just messed around with.  I waited for about twenty minutes 
    until he got off the phone.  He walked up to me and said, in a 
    very rude voice, "What do you want".  I just turned around and 
    walked out.  I guess that since I had dirty pants on and a wind 
    torn blue jean jacket that I didn't count.     
  
  So I went back to the 
    base and told my friend all about it.  My friend, Mike, said 
    that was the best thing that happened to you.  He said that we 
    will ride to Huntington and see their bikes, they sell for a 
    whole lot cheaper.  So that's exactly what we did.  Mike had a 
    750 and we rode a hundred miles double up to see if I could buy 
    a bike.  Immediately, the salesman came out and showed me all 
    kinds of 750's.  Their were 750 choppers, brand new and 
    beautiful, rows and rows of stock bikes and then the ones with 
    the Windjammers.  That's exactly what I wanted, a 750 with a 
    Windjammer, luggage rack and crash bar.  It cost me 1962 out 
    the door where the ones in Millington, bone stock was going to 
    cost slightly over 2000 out the door.     
  
  So I bought the exact 
    bike of my dreams, all set up exactly like I wanted, the right 
    color and everything.  The next day I drove it to Millington 
    Honda and showed it to the salesman.  He was screaming mad.  He 
    told me that the ones in Huntington Honda were factory rejects 
    and that I would have nothing but trouble with it.  I knew that 
    he was a liar because if a company sold factory rejects, they 
    would soon go out of business.  I drove it 132,000 miles before 
    I sold it.  I'm sorry that I did, but it was at a time when I 
    thought I was going to die and I had zero income and everything 
    had to go.     
  
  God let this guy be so 
    rude to me, he was foul mouth and talking about fornication.  
    That's why God sent me to Huntington and granted me my dream.  
    This goes to explain one thing that an old guy told me once.  He 
    was about the same age that I am now.  He said that everything 
    that you have, God gave it to you, and everything that is taken 
    away, the devil takes it away.  He went on to say that if God  
    himself walked up and gave you something, would you take care of 
    it, or would you let it go to junk?  I thought about this for 
    many years.  When I don't wax my truck and it starts to rust, 
    the devil is taking it away.  When I don't change the oil and 
    the engine wears out, the devil is taking it away from me.  I've 
    watched people who got motorcycles for nothing, as a gift, and 
    they said, in a haughty tone, "It didn't cost me anything", so 
    they let it go to junk.     
  
  This is why I have a 
    750 now, because God gave it back to me and now I need to do 
    everything that I can do to get it running.  This is why you 
    sent me a picture of the exact same bike that I always wanted, 
    God wanted me to testify to you about how he works.   
  
  Thank you very much 
    John.   
  
  By the way, my mom, 92, 
    is doing a bit better tonight but still has a long way to go.  
    Her name is Millie DeFord and I will appreciate your prayers 
    because both her and I know that prayers work.  She remarried after 
    my real dad died.  The man that she married was a good man and 
    never mistreated her.  They always used to have Ford trucks and 
    always had problems with them, so one day they bought a Chevy, 
    that's how she became DeFord.   
  
  Take care and God Bless 
    you,   
  
  
  C. Jeff Dyrek. 
  To the best of my knowledge neither 
    Huntington Honda or Millington Honda exist today.  
    
 
  
  
  
   
 
  
  
  
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