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DEDICATED

TO THE MEMORY OF MY MOTHER


SUSAN R. GANN
AND
TO AN OLD SCHOOLMATE IN TEXAS
MY NATIVE STATE

THE TUNNEL THRU THE AIR


or
LOOKING BACK FROM 1940
BY
W. D. GANN
Author of "Truth of the Stock Tape" and
"Speculation a Profitable Profession"
Copyright, 1927
By W. D. GANN
This E-Book is not to be sold.
It is a free educational service
in the public interest
published by
Gann Study Group
FOREWORD
“Happy is the man that findeth wisdom, and the man that
getteth understanding." -- Proverbs.
BOOK, to be worth reading, must do more than
amuse and interest. It must be instructive to
be of real value to the reader. This book has a threefold
purpose:
First, It is an interesting romance.
Second, It teaches a moral lesson and proves the
natural laws laid down in the Bible.
Third, It shows the value of science, foreknowledge
and preparedness.
It has been well said that truth is stranger than fiction.
This story is founded on facts and events, many
of which have happened or will happen in the future.
The "Tunnel Thru the Air" is mysterious and contains
a valuable secret, clothed in veiled language.
Some will find it the first time they read it, others will
see it in the second reading, but the greatest number
will find the hidden secret when they read it the third
time.
You will read it the first time because you are interested
in the love story and for amusement. This will
create a desire to read it a second time for instruction
and knowledge. The second reading will unfold some
of the hidden meanings and you will gain knowledge
thru understanding, which will stimulate an incent-

A
FOREWORD
ive to put the knowledge gained into action. You will read
it the third time because you want to make your dreams
and ideals become real and find how to start knowledge
into action.
When you read it the third time, a new light will dawn.
You will find the hidden secret, the veiled meaning and
will understand why the Bible says, “Seek and ye shall
find, knock and it shall be opened unto you.” You
will want to understand more about the Bible. Then
read the Bible three times and you will know why it is
the greatest book ever written. It contains the key to
the process by which you may know all there is to know
and get all that you need to supply your demands and
desires. You will appreciate why Solomon said, “Wisdom
is the principal thing: therefore get wisdom and
with all thy getting, get understanding.” The future
will become an open book. You will know that by following
the laws laid down in the Bible, man’s last great
enemy, Death, will be overcome and will understand
why Jesus rose on the third day and rested on the
seventh day. Robert Gordon’s seven days will no longer
be a mystery because you will have gained understanding.
I believe this book will prove interesting and valuable
to men and women in all walks of life. If it does,
you will be thankful to the power that guided my hand
in showing you the way to eternal Truth. My object
will have been accomplished and I will have my reward.
W.D.GANN.
May 9, 1927.
THE TUNNEL THRU THE AIR
CHAPTER I
N the extreme northeastern corner of the Lone Star
State of Texas, about eight miles west of Texarkana,
in a lonely farm-house on Sunday morning, June
10th, Amelia Gordon turned over in her bed and
watched the sunlight streaming thru the window on
the head of her new-born son. She had always hoped
that this, her third son, would be born on Sunday, but
he was born late Saturday night, June 9th, 1906. A
few months before his birth, his mother had suffered
a severe shock on account of the death of her oldest son
in the San Francisco earthquake in April, and for a
time it was feared that her third son might never be
born to live. She was happy this Sunday morning
when she looked at her bouncing baby boy, dreamed
of his future, and thought of what his name should be.
Calvin Gordon, the baby’s father, had been a Captain
in the U.S. Army in Spain. He had won distinction
for his cool courage and daring nerve, and after the close
of the Spanish-American war, moved from Tennessee
to Texas. Capt. Gordon had been very much depressed
after the loss of his eldest son in the San Francisco
earthquake, and was very much cheered up at the birth
of this boy, and hoped that the youngest son might fulfill
the ambitions he had for his first born.
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2
It had always been the custom of Calvin and Amelia
Gordon to go to the little country church every Sunday
morning, but this morning Capt. Gordon remained with
his wife so that they could talk over the naming of
their son. Capt. Gordon suggested the name “Robert,”
which was the name of his father, and his wife quickly
acquiesced, so the baby was named Robert.
Amelia Gordon was a great Bible student, and had
always hoped that she would have a son born who would
be a preacher, so she thought that little Robert might
fulfill her hopes and ambitions.
Capt. Gordon was a farmer, growing mostly cotton
crops on the Red River bottom lands. The following
year, 1907, after the birth of little Robert, Capt. Gordon's
crops were almost a failure. The Spring was
late and overflows damaged cotton. This, together with
unfavorable financial conditions, caused a panic in the
United States in the Fall of 1907. Thus the first year
of the boy's life started under unfavorable conditions.
When Robert was a little over two years old, his
mother gave birth to a girl, the first born to her, but
still she showed great interest in Robert; talked much
of his future and took great interest in teaching him to
live according to the Bible.
At about the age of five, his mother began to teach
him the alphabet. He learned very quickly how to read
and write, before he started to school. He was always
willing and glad to go to Sunday School with his
mother, took a great interest in the sermon, and what
the Sunday School teacher had to say about the creation
of the world, and about God’s great plan.
3
Little Robert went to church one day and the preacher
took his text from 1 Thes. 4: 16-18, “For the Lord himself
shall descend from Heaven with a shout, with the
voice of the archangel and with the trump of God; and
the dead in Christ shall rise first: Then we which are
alive and remain, shall be caught up together with them
in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air: and so shall
we ever be with the Lord. Wherefore comfort one another
with these words.”
Robert was very much interested in this sermon, and
asked his mother to explain how the Lord could descend
from Heaven and what kind of vehicle we would ride
in if we were caught up in the clouds to meet the Lord
in the air. His mind puzzled over this for weeks and
months, and he was anxious to understand more about
it. He said, "Mother, I should like to meet the Lord
in the air.”
His mother said, “You will be able to do so some
day, Bobbie.”
When in Sunday School one day, the teacher read
from 2 Thes. 1: 7-8, “And to you who are troubled rest
with us; when the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from
Heaven with his mighty angels, in flaming fire taking
vengeance on them that know not God, and that obey
not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ.” The preacher
said that the Lord had placed the rainbow in the sky
as a testimony that he would never again destroy the
world by water, but explained that God would come
again in a flame of fire and thus take vengeance on
those who did not believe and destroy the world by fire.
Robert wanted to know if the good Lord who loves us
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so much would destroy the world and all of those in
it. His mother explained that God would destroy those
that were sinners and rebelled against him and had not
accepted his word.
Bobbie was in Sunday School again and heard them
read from 1 Tim. 2: 11-14: “Let the woman learn in
silence with all subjection. But I suffer not a woman
to teach, nor to usurp authority over the man, but to
be in silence. For Adam was first formed, then Eve.
And Adam was not deceived; but the woman being
deceived, was in the transgression.” He asked the
Sunday School teacher to explain what this meant, -- by
learning in silence and subjection. He also wanted an
explanation of the statement that a woman should not
teach, because he said that his mother had always taught
him and loved him, and his father had paid no attention
to him and had no desire to teach him. He wanted
to know if it was wrong for his mother to teach him,
and if God would punish her. The teacher replied that
the Lord said, “Suffer the little children to come unto
me, and forbid them not, for of such is the Kingdom
of God.” She explained that his mother set an example
more by her love and devotion than by words; that a
mother's actions would influence a child more than anything
she could say, and this was the great silent
teaching.
Robert often visited the colored mammies on the plantation
and listened to the ghost stories they told, and the
fear was created in his mind of the spirits that walked
in the night. He was often afraid that the goblins
would get him if he didn't watch out. One Sunday at

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