Monday, Apr. 15, 1946
End of the Match Game
Ivar Kreuger, ill-famed Swedish match king, shot himself in a Paris apartment 14 years ago, but the evil that he did lived after him.* Not until this week were the effects of his slick cartel-making wiped out in the U.S. The end came in a consent decree in the Government antitrust suit against Kreuger's old Swedish Match Co. and six companies dominated by secretive U.S. Match King William Armstrong Fairburn. A Federal court in Manhattan ordered a stop to such cartel practices as: P: Dividing the world into noncompetitive markets. P: Restricting production. P: Fixing prices on matches, match machinery and match chemicals. P: Suppressing the manufacture of new "everlasting" or re-ignitable matches. The U.S. defendants, headed by big Diamond Match, were told (and agreed) to divest themselves of each other's stock, get rid of interlocking directorates.
* The final cleanup of his financial mess last year showed that he had swindled the public of $560,000,000 (TIME, Nov. 5, 1945).
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