Probably because of the recent Tillinghast thread (with some really interesting new research production from Philadelphia's Joe Bausch) that eventually got into a discussion (argument?) on the identity of the early American Golfer magazine pen name "Far and Sure", some of us got interested in the entire subject of the use of pen names that seemed so prevalent back then.
What was that about really and what were some of the reasons they did it? Should it be done again like that? Should it even be done on this particular website like they did it back then?
And how did it work? It seems to me those who did it, particularly if Tillinghast really did use both pen names of Hazard and Far and Sure (even if one or some may've used it too for convenience or deflection or whatever), it surely was a pretty cool and interesting literary tool or trick to use, particularly if and when he referred to himself in the third person.
It kind of reminds me of the final scene in the movie "The Sting". The denoument was even after they conned the hell out of the big Irish gangster from New York, the deal was not just to walk away but to do what Henry Gondorf (Newman) said was, "To Hold the Con."
The deal was that noone (other than the con artists) was to ever know that the Big Mick from New York got conned.
Did Travis and Tillie or whomever it was who used that or those "pen names" actually hold the con? It seems like they may have, at least with most of them who never knew them well personally, because as hard as some of us research it and try we may never really know who it was who used some of those pen names.
If the likes of Travis and Tillie can hear us somehow I know it would have to make them chuckle.
I think it's cool. What do you think?