Back to the Farm is a 1914 silent comedy short film produced by the Lubin Manufacturing Company and co-starring Oliver Hardy and Bert Tracy.
The boys accidentally go to the wrong apartment, but they find a key under the mat and naturally assume that it belongs to their aunt.
When Mr and Mrs. Cassett, the occupants of the apartment, arrive home and find the boys sleeping in their bedroom, they grab guns and chase them out.
[3] Hardy had already appeared in a number of short split-reel comedies made at Lubin's Jacksonville studio in the spring and summer of 1914, but this was his first full one-reeler, as well as his first appearance with Bert Tracy, who was a close friend and colleague of Hardy's during his time at Lubin and later at the Vim studio.
"[5] The review in Motion Picture News described the disarming effect of the childish personalities of Tom and Bob in potentially objectionable or bawdy scenes: "The adventures of Tom and Bob would be risqué if they were not such simpletons and so awfully innocent of guilt in the situations which they create when they come to town to visit their aunt and get in the wrong house.