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A Man Involved in Money 11-7-651H[an n 11'4 ne involved[ it 0-. John 13. MacArthur has a 30' -year winning -streak and . Nov. By NIXON SMILEY -OHN D. MacArtbur,'one of ibe, nation's richestnien, lives in a'$39,000 house, and. draws a salary of. $25,000. a year. And When, you see him slouching about his Colonnades Hotel at Palm Beach Shores ­ shirt -sleeved- and tier .less — you can believe that be lives on a m.u.cb small- er income. MacArthur, as incredibly healthy at 68 as he is incredibly rich, is a rare individual who make's no effort to impress anyone. 0- ' wner of the MacArthur Insurance Group, which includes Bankers Life and Casualty Co. of Chicago and 11 other insurance -firms, he is worth more than $300 million. He could live in as fine a Palm, Beach mansion. as he wished to, build, have a chauffeur, a house full of servants, and give lavish parties. When, such an idea was suggested to his wife, she exploded with laughter. "Him ate Palm Beach! " she exclaimed. "He'd go nuts, with nothing to do." MacArthur is an *early riser. Frequently getting up before his wife does, he may fry himself an egg, or, be may get into his two -year --old red Cadillac and drive from 'his Lake Park home to his hotel for eggs and toast. Later in the morning he may drive to his office, in a Boom -time bank building that looks like an aban- doned warehouse. Or, be, may choose to spend the morning slouching over coffee and smoking endless cigarets as he talks with engineers, architects, fore- men, bright-eyed salesmen, or his own executives. Half a dozen persons may be sitting about his table, each with his own mission. Even "con" men are not tossed out. Crusty MacArthur figures he can match wits with the best of them. A single idea made MacArthur wealthy. In the midst of the Depression of the 1930's, when millions of people were dropping their insur- ance policies because they could not meet the pay- ments,, MacArthur figured out how to cash in on an ,apparently hopeless economic situation. He offered insurance by mail — the - amount a man could buy "for the dollar be had in his pocket." The response was incredible. Competitors were slow to adopt what to them was an utterly unortho- dox. way of selling insurance, and MacArthur was immediately on the road to riches. , But MacArthur comes from a family noted for its ideas. Geneiral Douglas MacArthur was a distant cousin. The late, Charles MacArthur — author of "The Front Page" and husband of Helen Hayes was' a brother. And MacArthur has another brother, Alfred, of Chicago, who made his own millions. Alfred, made his in the insurance business too. John D. MacArthur has been called a genius. But whatever he has been called — and he has been, called many things —1 MacArthur does seem to have a genius for getting himself involved. in activi- ties that require money. His tendency to get himself involved. brought him to Florida, where he has investments valued at more than $50 million. Some of his investments came about almost 'by accident. Last year, for instance, be signed a note for over $1 million, and wound up with the first, mortgage On the Nassau Harbor Club — a property that . he never wanted. But MacArthur is like a cat. No matter how he is dropped, he always lands on his feet.. As it turned out, he can't lose on his Nassau "ire vestment," which is valued at between $3 and $4 mil- lion. Everybody knows of his latest involvement in the. DeLong Ruby case. A strange slide of the; DeLong Ruby involvement is MacArthur's complete lack of interest in jewelry. Why did he get involved? "The underworld vermin who had the ruby threatened to throw it into the ocean unless he got $25,000 for its return," MacArthur said, slouching in a. chair in the dining room. of his Colonnades Hotel. 0 $300 million, MacArthurPutup -the money a . nd the ruby was deliver -ed to b.im,., by way of a telephone booth at Palm Beach Gardens, on Sept. 2. He returned it to the American. Museum of Natural History in New 'York, from where it had been stolen the ye' ar before. "I felt like a -fool, giving that much money to the underworld vermin," MacArthur'said "but if it helps to catch, the rest, of the crumbs involved, then I'll. be satisfied." The $25,000 — which MacArthur hopes to "write off" his income tax as a gift to the museum — was less to him. than is a handful of change to most of us. Moreover, the ruby affairs brought him a world of publicity — for his insurance companies; for, the city- of his own creation, Palm Beach Gardens, and for his Colonnades Hotel. But one MacArthur involvement can easily lead' to another, as happened when hey and his wife Jour- neyed to New York where. hewas honored by the 'American Museum of Natural History for his public service. As MacArthur was leaving his hotel, in company with his 'Wife. and Heloen Hayes, a "kindly' looking man" approached and asked: "Are you Mr. John D. MacArthur?" "I can't deny it," MacArthur said figuring it was another person who wanted to congratulate him on. recovering the ruby. 'Well., 1've got a summons for you," the man replied, banding it to MacArthur. It proved to be a summons in a'S2 million dam- age suit filed against MacArthur by a former em.- p1oye. "He].], I'm always getting sued for something or other," he said, recalling the incident as he lighted a. fresh cigaret from the stub of the one he had just smoked. This time. il was by a fellow I fired some time ago. Claimed his reputation was damaged because, I let him out. Hell, I couldn't have damaged his reputa- tion. If he'd. been. any damn good I wouldn't have fired him.." MacArthur should be accustomed to litigation. Few successful men have been, involved in mora 'suits and counter -suits. "I'm supp o*sed to love litigation," he said, screw-, ing up his deeply lined face.. "I'll probably plead guil- ty. I did enjoy Winning* when I was young — and I won a lot of battles. "Maybe I won. so many battles because; I tried tc avoid. those where I stood a good chance of losing." He has no reluctance- about discussing the count- less suits in. which he has been, involved, including litigation with his wife, the former Catherine Hyland, in the late 1940's. "She sued the bell out of me and I sued her," he said. The MacAxthurs were divorced in 1.948 but smbse- quently remarried. She is a quiet wom-an, with, an ex- plosive laugh, who helped her husband to build his insurance business. MacArthur has a son and a daughter by his first wife, Louise Ingals MacArthur. He has no children by - his second wife, whom he married the first time — in 1937. ACARTIJUR has been investigated count- less times by the Internal Aevenue, Service —'which be refers to, as the "Infernal Rev- enue, Service." And be has been accused by. the. U.S. Post Office and by the Federal Trade Commission. "I've been investigated and re -investigated more. times than I can remember — and I've been exonerat- ed every time," he said. "I think that's a pretty damn good record. If I had ever committed anything wrong eveTybody would know, about it." But be contends that anybody who enjoys sky- rocketing financial success is subject to investigation and to lawsuits. I NOV, 4/) 194 ht/If you're highly successful in a, financial way," said, (tpeople may look at you and say: 'That fel- low's got to be crooked, to get where he is.' And people will sue you if there's a slim chance of collecting, he said. "A lawyer once. said to me after he had lost a suit ': 'MacArthur, I'm going to sue you every chance I get. I've got the law of averages on my side. One day I'll win and you'll pay plenty.' "I replied: 'Go ahead and sue, you S-O.B.' For several years MacArthur engaged in a battle with state insurance commissioners and competitors. His biggest suit — for $30 million — was filed against the late Ed Larson, Florida insurance commis- sioner, and Zack. Cravely, Georgia insurance commis- sioner. He charged that the commissioners conspired with his competitors to throttle -his insurance busi- ness -in the two states. -He dropped the suit after at- taining his goal — freedom for- his agents to sell in- surpnee in Florida and Georgia. "Hell, I liked Ed Larson," he said, recalling the suit of nearly- 15 years ago. "I' brought the suit in self-defense. I learned years ago that the best defense Is an. offense, MacArthur sued an olld friend` publicist Carl Byoir, for $5 million. 64l' did it to make Carl stop libeling me," MacAr,­ thur, said. "We had been good friends; but when a deal of his went sour he blamed me for it and proceed- ed to attack me, and my company." (Byoir was associated with. Ralph Stolkin and Julius Gaines in the early development of Carol City,, in. Dade County, and in the development of Lake Park in, Palm Beach County. NfacArthur acquired both properties, after which be, and Gaines engaged in li-ti- glation.) ECALLING his damage suit against Byoir, MacArthur winced painfully. "Hell) I couldn't figureout what got into Carl," he said.. "We had been good friends for years. Then, all of...a sudden, he began attacking, me, in. leit- ters to our mutual friends. I figured something was wrong —. and I began investigating. T had one of my agents get a copy of the hospital records wheire Carl. had gone fora physical checkup. "Sure enough. something- was wrong: Carl had cancer. He was going to die and be knew it. But up untiL.this time nobody knew it, but Carl and his doctor. He hadn't even told, his wife." After Byoir died in 1957, MacArthur dropped his suit - but because- it involved a dead man's estate, a legal ceremony was required. MacArthur and Mrs. Grace Byoir met with their lawyers and he signed papers releasing the Byolr es- tate from possible. damages-. Mrs. Byoir's lawyer turned to. her and informed her that she. must hand MacArth'ur a dollar to complete the legality. "She opened her purse," MacArthur recalled, `band took out a one dollar gold piece and handed it to Recollection of the incident was more touching than the tough-minded MacArthur wanted to show. "Hell, I took it home and showed it to my wife," he said. "And then's when the trouble started. I had to scrounge around and find another dollar gold piece so that she could have, a pair of earrings. MacArthur entered the insurance business with his oldest brother, -Alfred, in Chicago at the age of 19. Failure to) finish grammar school proved to be no handicap. About as crusty then as he is now, MacArthur soon be -came a topnotch salesman.. He left phis brother in the 1920's to take a jo,b with another company', quit it in 1928 to buy the Marquette Life, Insurance Co. for $7,500. Forming a partnership with. Catherine Hyland, MacArthur turned the office over to her and he went outside to sell. Together they survived the market crash of 1929 and the dep cession that followed. "But we were just holding our -own," MacArthur reca lled. In 1935 MacArthur purchased Bankers Life and L Casualty Co. for $2,500. It was through -Bankers that he started his mail order business. "Remember, it was in -the depression, and, people just didn't have money to make annual payments on the policies they had taken out in better 'times," Mae - Arthur said. "So they began dropping them. -64But everybody wanted some insurance -the amount they could afford. I figured. that if I could find some way to do business with- a persion for the amount of money he had in his pocket — a -dollar or two dollars — I could sell him insurance." But 'his troubles started as his business skyrock- eted. "Insurance commissioners just, couldn't believe that a company could suddenly start doing such a big business.," he said. It took MacArthur several years to convince state insurance commissioners that there was noth- ing. wrong with selling insurance by mail. MacArthur's Florida activities began 10�- years ago when he took possession of 3,000 -acre Carol City and 3,200 acres in Palm Beach County, -including the town of Lake Park. "It all happened because I lent Ralph Stolkin a rnitlion, dollars in..a weak moment," MacArthur said. "It it was getting late at night and I was -tired, so I said: 'Aw, hell, I'll let you have the money,' and wrote him a check. "The next thing I knew Ralph was down in Dade County with Carl Byoir,, announcing plans to build 10,000 homes in a place called Stolkin City. 0 ."But Ralph was getting some bad publicity and he decided to change the name to Coral City." (The Miami Herald and The Wall Street Journal ran series about Stolkin's activities as a punchboard manufacturer and his involvement in allegedly ques.- tionabte charity drives.) "No sooner than Ralph had changed the name to Coral City, the city of Coral Gables: began raising hell," MacArthur added. "To avoid a.suit, Ralph changed the name to Carol City." MacArthur took over Carol City and Lake Park ito recover his loan to Stolkin and one he had, subse- quently made to Byoir. He invested $8 million in Carol City before sell- ing it to developers Arthur Desser and Harold Gar- field for $12 million, but later repossessed it after their plans went sour. '.MacArthur concentrated his interest in the devol- opment of Lake Park, in which he owned 80 per cent of the vacant lots, as well as more than 2,000 acres of other north Palm Beach County properties. When Lake Park officials bucked his plans for ins tatting water and sewers, he ordered them. to va- eate the municipal buildings, which he owned, th'all proceeded to go over their heads to get the backing of voting residents. INCE -then Lake Park and surrounding communities have become the; fastest gro:w- ing part of Palm Beach County. In 1960 MacArthur started his own unique city, Palm Beach Gardens. Since then it. has grown from one squat -ter to -more than 3,000 and growth contin- ues rapidly. . MacArthur believes his city is one of the few ever to start with an industry -before the first home was built. The city's first building permit was issued for an RC.A computer -building plant,: since expanded and now employing 2,000. MacArthur owns a large block of RCA stock, Palm Beach Gardens is national headquarters of the Professional Golfers Association*, with ---two 36 - :Mi -,ami Herald StJNDA.YoMAGAZfNE'-Su'rida.y,,N.oy..:.7':--i-965 .9 AGC. # *4irmo_ Fz_ft�_M "I've been investigated and re-inves- mw-w tiacted-more times than I can re - M ember." "'Hell I'm always . getting sued for something; or other. =_n k.Maybe I -"7on so any hattles be-, Cause I tried to avo"d. fixose where I n g GIMCC Of' IOSI'ITBO '" F),toC,)d I _�00d. CT rj 0 ning in; shirt sleeveSNXI.--'S the uiAmer? Like his late brother, Charlie, MacArthur is pmcbezd joker. Some. Ynonths ago wher, he Nvass to, cut a r lbboo r to Dper, ffic, new Palm Beach Gardens interchange on the Sunsh6n.e State, Parkway, MacArthur unexpectedly reached J(:�ir I the taright necktie cd County Commission- eT K F. Van Kessel arid, sndppedll it in half. But even Charlie couldn't havem.atched his prac- tical joke with five earloads of lettuce some years aglo- ilE had grown the leltuee on his farm at l A.]am, osa-7 Colorado, after loading it into refrigerator cars, discorvered that the markets NxTere already glutted with lettuce. '117ho, eutiJd 'use, a carload of lettuce?" he thought. with And, running through his mind, he came up w the names of five friends and forwarded the lettuce to them, — A47 riting, ahead to let them know. I One who reC*j%7ed, a car was Patrick H. Hoy, then manager of the Sherman and Ambassador hotels in Chicago. Hay, now., president of Material Service, a divi- sion of General Dynamics, was sitting at the table when MacArthur related the incident. "I still remember . the shock oaf getting a carload L_ of lettuce',"Hov said,. "But '"Te disposed of it. We used some in Our hotels and sold the rest." MacArthur recalled that friends disposed of four carloads. "But Clarence Page sent his carload back to me and darnned if I didn't have to pay the freight both ways," he said. lfcakcArthur is frequently confused with Dairy- man J. ?N . McArthur. One the night of the last presidential election, Folin D. MacArthur was asked to comment on televi- sion about the trends of the returns, which showed Johnson leading Goldwater. MacArthur observed that he was sorry 'to see Gold,\vater losing; that he thought the country need- ed a change. The next day he received a letter from a viewer who informed him that he "would never drink anoth- er drop of MacArthur dairy milk as long. as I live." MacArthur doesn't care a hang about what peo- ple think of him, but he regrets that people continue to confuse him with "that nice man McArthur who has the dairy." MacArthur did not acquire all of his Florida properties merely to protect loans, he, had m a d e. good . g 'because "they . seemed like Some he acquired �n deals."' An example is the 32,000 acres in Sarasota County, for which he paid the Edith Ringling estate in excess of $2 million. -n Beach County I and He 0-"Tns 10,000 acres in Pali over 3,000 acres in Dade County. His latest big acqui- sition was 10,000 -acre Rocket City, near Orlando. "I took over Rocket City to protect the loan I had made to the developers," he said. The loan was for more than a million dollars. When a New York newspaper reported that he had bought Rocket City outright, MacArthur was quick to write a letter of correction. "They (the developers) defaulted and I am cur- rently a debtor in possession," he wrote. "I paid off several defaulted mortgages. I am in the process of unscrambling the eggs.'* He wound up with a first mortgage on the "INTas- sau Harbor Club through an entirely different route. "I didn't want the club," he said, running a hand through his thin hair, "and I still don't rant. it. The builder,Y William Jess, i-N-.a.s a good friend. He needed to borrow somethinv, over $1.5 million to pay off em - tractors" hens --and I signeO a Tiole." Jess; borrowed, mune-,: frol-r- C"hase Manhattan Bank,, ycid off .he hens, and soon, thereafter died of a heart attack. 'lite hank' brought suit against MacArthur to cullect the loan, ph -,is Inteiest. I ecT n I q bu & tfi . ri-ay have 6 U �W`,e; tg-z3:. _ng te no T 16 J J _­ S, Ul "I �ow In fbe hell co-luijd -7 kncoX thDt s v WO U. c -T' P Aec. 708' MacArthur paid, cif., The, -rjc)q:e Zk�j, tio, 1K. __9r-L9a9c­ on the Nassau' Ha bar Club. . a fjy�s L "I didnt mind, paying c.11 t`hle nolte,, but I got sore as hell when I got a blu:f±' , 'GTr- 113 -ie blanks- lawyer for. $32,500 — his fee, for puttinig hj.s, name or Per's," MacArthur said. He Pr'01MP-t1Y WrOte tcs. Wilharn , Ogden of the C -hasp Manhattan Bank arld, expressed his unhappi- ness oxer the. bili. 1", the letter, ivas a \761eeJ three:`_ t to take his insurance conripainiess, business- firorn tht- bank if 'he ha -d to pay the Ia a, A•yer- s fee. To, insure action, he . sent a Copy of .fhe letter to David Rockefeller, chairman of the board. MacArthur is in the PTOCeSs Of eonsohdatin*g hlc I'lorida properties under- a single corporation, Royal American Industries. Other properties DOt helrelcdore- mentioned, in- clude Southern Realty and Util J1Jc­s Co.. v-,Ith, acreage in Dade, Pinellas and Volusia ec�� A _)nticms; Fort Pierce Port and Terminal Co. at Fort Pierce, Radio Station .WEAT and Telvision Station 11'EAT-n7 in Palm Beach Count,3,, Miami Prefabricators and r1orida ANTi- ation., both in Miami. Because of his major holdings. he is likely to a/ forget little items, such as a 35,4 -acre Tr-aet in, Surf- side NN'Thich he purchased in, 1961 for $811,801, and Layton's Park Trailer Camp at Riviera Beach. And, of course, there is the Colonnades, Which he purchased with nearly 1,0010 feet of oceanfront for �675,000. He is now spending twice that amount on a revamping program which includes rebuilding just about everything except the hotel's familiar Moorish - styled eclumns. . In addition to his farm and ranch 'in, Colorado, he owns a tract at Kodiak Island,, Alaska: the Citizens Bank and. Trust Co., Park Ridge, IIL s several pieces of N,-aluabk-- property in Miohiganl- and tie Wilton Hotel, T .4ong Beach, Calif. He mens the Grayba-r Building in Neiv York — t5 or maybe it's the lease on the property. He couldn't remember which. cii got the Gra. ybar Building in. a deal with my friend, Bill Zeckendorf," he said. "Bill owed me somc, money and he paid me off..'' The building, located near Grand'Cenfral Station, stands on one of the most valuablie site's in Manhat- ta-m Zeckendorf sent MacArthuia*handsome lVelmar- aner dog, on '"7hich MacArthur" promptly phrii-)ed the name Zeckendorf _TI — "because., with 'his long nose, he looks exactly like Bill." Ho,",- does "MacArthur manage such a iiJde_o;;vp-rea(J "I've got one hell of a good, bunch, of Tw_--ople mlork- ing for me," he replied. He believes that - 90 per cent of the people you, deal ,xith arc, honest, Sincere, loyal.. "You've got to trust people,"' he said. "Ilf, you go around biting on quarters to, see it tbev're lead, N 7 OU11 wind up with a mouthful, of chipped teceth." I 1 9LT a major reason. for MacArthur"s in- redible success is plain drive and lots of guts. He f inds, it hard to believe that he. can't do something if he wants to. A feiv months ago he asked a Fort Lauderdale engineer ineer if he could raise the rof of a -r- audiiitorjum at the Colonnades Hotel about 18 inches. "Imposs-ible," the ei,-igineer rephecI "The hell it is," MacArthur remarked. He called his superintendent, Pat WIC-01-sh, who shaves once fa week. ``Pat, I Nvant that roof raiised,` he ordeir-ed. "'And t you ma wel�l raise it high t" -bile y1lou re at i .1 y as enough for another floor." "'Hell., 11acArthur, that's goiing- to be a to-,i�igh x7 Or -e 'Wefl, if it N� ere going- te ai,n be. ecas.jq�,, I'd hav given. it -t-o a boy to do." "OK, MacArthur; we'll do Ift." -k\.n.d the 200,000--poLmd rc�oJ. was raised 'hi.gh enough to add, a fourt"ha Eloor ID t�-ie three--sbo-ry bu-J-1d- ing'. . "'I v7 -ant any te-1.11ing --nae 0 -tat sonne- da-mri- ifib ean't be done,". _M_,1ac1\_.r1'hur sald, Se--r-lVVI�4ng -up, hi!s fa-ce as clgaxeed Eiomxake ch-Jifted iro-rn Ns raouth aad nOs:1rU_,&