The Calgary Stampede is a 1925 American silent Western film directed by Herbert Blaché and starring Hoot Gibson.
[1][2] As described in a film magazine,[3] Dan Malloy (Gibson), an American cowboy noted as a Roman rider, is in Canada seeking adventure.
At this moment Fred Burgess (Corey), just out of prison on a charge made by La Farge, and seeking revenge for just punishment, sneaks up to the window and fires a shot which kills LaFarge.
Burgess, seeing them from the plain of Wainright Reserve, the government sanctuary for a great herd of bison, frightens the animals into a stampede in the hope of stamping out the life of the one man who can testify against him.
Harkness is thrown and Malloy saves his life, returning to the LaFarge house with the injured mountie and then escaping.
His new boss, Andrew Regan (Sellon), has been training a pair of Roman horses for the forthcoming Calgary Rodeo.