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MacArthur:
An Era Has Ended
Staff Photo by Jonn J. LOpinor
Bob Ho e' Said MacArthur Cared About Everyone He Met
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Staff Artwork by Jim Johnston
Two of the things MacArthur took the most
pride in were the JDM Country Club in Palm
Beach Gardens and the Biltmore Hotel in Palm
Beach. MacArthur sold the Biltmore for $5.34
million to developer Stanley J. Harte a few
months ago. Jack Nicklaus was a friend of Mac -
Arthur's and won the World Cup and PGA
Championship at MacArthur's country club.
MacArthur
Doctolr --Reports Death
W'as N'-atural, Painless
By GAYLE PALLESEN
Post Staff Writer
John Donald MacArthur, the legendary
rags -to -riches billionaire who lived every com-
mon man's dream, died of cancer of the pan-
creas early yesterday morning.
Death came to the 80 -year-old Palm Beach
Shores resident hours after he slipped into a
coma. He was pronounced dead at 2:12 a.m. by
Dr. Frank Pedrosa at Good Samaritan Hospital
in West Palm Beach.
"It was a very natural death, pain-free and
with dignity,". Ron Kairalla, a visibly shaken
aide, told a morning press conference.
Flags were flown at half-staff in Palm
Beach Gardens, a town MacArthur built from
swampland.
His widow, Catherine Hyland MacArthur, is
holding up well, according to her sister, Patri-
cia Hyland, who is staying with her at the
Colonnades Beach Hotel on Singer Island.
"This is how John would have wanted it.
He wouldn't have wanted to end up in a nursing
home," Miss Hyland said quietly.
Her brother-in-law lost 20 pounds in the
past month and spent most of December hos-
pitalized for dehydration, exhaustion and what
was thought to be a gall bladder problem. Ex-
ploratory surgery Tuesday uncovered the can-
cer, and he was given two weeks or less to live
by doctors.
At MacArthur's request there will be no
funeral. He will be cremated. Services will be
private for family members. , In. lieu. of flowers,
the family said friends are welcome to make
donations to the charities of their choice.
The bulk of MacArthur's estate will go to
two charitable foundations with half of all his
tangible property going tax-free to his wife.
The other half, after taxes, will be divided
equally between his son John Roderick, and
Roderick's children and MacArthur's daughter,
Virginia de Cordova, and her children.
From around the nation, celebrities and
others had warm words for the man who start-
ed with nothing and built a financial empire.
tjo k e s always
amused him and
he never lost his
sense of humor in his
real-life game of Mono-
poly.
Story, A4
Bath took a man
who thought he
was a f ailu.re, de-
spite his millions, and a
man who was amazed
people were interested
in him.
Story, A5
oney didn 9 t make
MacArthur a re-
cluse or a remote
emperor like Howard
Hughes or J. Paul Getty.
He was a very public
roman.
Editorial, A22,
"He was truly an original," said comedian
Bob Hope. "He was a quiet,, warm giant of our
society and a giant, not j ast in business, but in
his positive and idealistic attitude toward life."
Hope and MacArthur were old friends. In
fact, the crusty billionaire named the fanciest
suite in his Colonnades Beach Hotel after the
comedian and the two , once were photographed
with MacArthur wearing a waiter's outfit serv-
ing Hope coffee in the suite's king-size bed.
`He cared about everyone he met — from
international dignitaries to the man on the
street," Hope said while preparing for a per-
formance in Boston.
"He was a man of humor and quite a story-
teller, by the way. I told him at' one time that I
was glad he didn't enter show business as I
wouldn't have welcomed the competition,"
Hope said.
Another close friend, commentator Paul
Harvey, dedicated part of his midday radio
broadcast to the passing of MacArthur.
"I don't think Francis of Assisi was a bet-
ter friend to dogs, birds and uprooted trees,"
Harvey told The Post prior to his broadcast.
He once labeled MacArthur as the man who
has "buttered the toast for the Harveys going
on a third generation now."
"If I was going to write John MacArthur's
epitaph, it would be something simple, like:
"He left the wood pile higher than he found it."
Former President Gerald Ford, who ar-
rived in Palm Beach County yesterday for a
day of golf, said he knew MacArthur for a
Turn to MACARTHUR, AS
ppiLrn Bt-f'ac14 6rlim�s
JAN. 7
number of years and had played golf with
him.
"I remember one incident with some nos-
talgia. We were playing, he came out and
actually acted as caddy as we were playing
on this particular. day," Ford said, adding
that the country has lost "an outstanding
citizen."
Jim Steli, who has been MacArthur's bar-
ber for 15 years, and last shaved the billion-
aire the day ' before Christmas, said he broke
down when learning of his friend's death.
"He was the greatest man I'have ever
known, and I have known a lot of people," he
said in a thick Italian accent. "He never re-
fused me anything. He always said yes. He
never said no."
State Senate President -designate Phi!
Lewis of West Palm Beach said he felt "very
close" to MacArthur and called him a
"pioneer" who reminded him very much of
his own father.
"For some reason, I just can't get over
that the guy is gone," Lewis said. "He is
going to be a loss to the county. People don't
realize — he was an industry in himself.
There was nothing he wouldn't do to bring the
economy up . "
"The beauty of John MacArthur was he
shook hands meaningfully with some of the
most powerful men in the world and shook
hands just as meaningfully with the man out
there who did the yard," Kairalla said.
MacArthur was one of two billionaires left
in the United States and he was labeled both
"brilliant" and "humble" by Jerry Thomas,
former undersecretary of the Treasury De-
partment.
"He once told me if ever a book was factu-
ally written about him, he wanted it called
"Luck."
6Luck " But, believe me — luck helps, but so
sloes creativity," Thomas said.
"To rise from the humblest type of finan-
caa.l origin to reach the heights as one of the
wealthiest and powerful men in the 9 world
should not pass unnoted at this time, said
Palm Beach developer Stanley J. Harte, who
nought the Biltmore Hotel in Palm Beach
from MacArthur a few months ago for $5.34
million.
Harte, who has renamed the most posh
suite ii -4 the building after the tycoon, said
MacArthur proved there is no limit to what
can be achieved under the American way of
life.
Golfer Jack Nicklaus, who won the World
Cup and PGA Championship at MacArthur's
Palm Beach Gardens country club said his
friendshhip with the man goes back to 1971.
MacArthur had "a good sense of humor"
the golfer said and was "pleasant to be with
through the years."
In the will, which leaves most of his money
to charity, MacArthur wanted to leave his
body to science. But friends said because of
his age and disease, that won't be possible.
"I am mindful of the fact that most people
attend funerals only as a matter of duty and
in order to be seen by others in attendance,"
he wrote in the will made out Feb. 19, 1963.
However, he said he wouldn't mind in a
month or so if his wife wants a memorial
service or get together.
"Such a function would present a reason-
able opportunity and excuse for my relatives
and friends to get together for a visit and —
perhaps with the aid of a drink or two — to
reminisce, as people like to do, over past
events and departed friends," MacArthur
said in his will.
Aceo 14* -00
19 7s' N7
The will was filed yesterday in the probate
division of Circuit Court in Chicago, where
the keystone of his wealth — Bankers Life
and Casualty Co. — has headquarters.
His attorney, William T. Kirby, said most
of the billionaire's assets were assigned to
two trusts set, up while MacArthur . was still
alive. The trusts, upon his death, went to two
charitable foundations, the John D. and Cath-
erine T. MacArthur Foundation and the Re-
tirement Research Foundation.
The trust which goes to the MacArthur
foundation includes all the stock of Bankers
Life and Casualty Co. which has assets of $1.-
24 billion. All of his stock in Citizens Bank
and Trust Co. of suburban Park Ridge goes to
the Retirement Research Foundation. The
bank has resources of $415 million.
Included in the will is $5,000 for MacAr-
thur's first wife, Louise Ingals MacArthur,
who is the mother of his two children.
"It will be some months before an accurate
estimate can be made of the value of the
assets that go to the family," Kirby said. "A
low preliminary figure of over. $1 million in
real estate and over $1 million in personal
property" is stated in the will.