The Ghost of Slumber Mountain
Unk tells a story to his two nephews about the time when he and Joe visited the
stone-covered grave and haunted cabin of Mad Dick where they (and their dog, Soxie) were
able to view the prehistoric past through a queer looking instrument that accidentally
allowed T. Rex onto Slumber Mountain. Sadly, at the end, Unk suggests that it was all a
dream, but what does he know?!
The IMDb lists
Herbert M. Dawley as a co-writer, but Wikipedia
lists him as only the producer. The initial three-reel film premiered at the Strand
Theater, but an unhappy Dawley cut it from over 40 minutes to about 12. Around six extra
minutes were later restored by the Dinosaur Museum of Blanding, Utah, in 2016, but the
full version no longer exists.
— Michael Main
Far, far away, at the foot of a cliff, a Thunder Lizard—which must have been at least
one hundred feet long—appeared out of the mists of forty million years.