delivered tlie opinion of the Court:
This is a trademark opposition proceeding in which the Patent Office dismissed appellant’s opposition to the registration by the appellee of the word “Eagle” as a trademark for ice cream cones.
The case was heard upon an agreed statement of fact, and where such an agreement has been entered into the ease must be determined in the light of it. District of Columbia v. Lee, 35 App. D. C. 341, 21 Ann. Cas. 973.
Turning to the statement in the present case we find that appellant, the Borden’s Condensed Milk Company, and its predecessors for many years have used the trademark “Eagle” on dairy products, comprising “condensed milk, evaporated milk, milk, cream, evaporated cream, buttermilk, and compounds of milk, and a food product, as, for example, malted milk and condensed coffee.” In 1905, a date long subsequent to the adoption and use by appellant, the appellee, the Eagle Manufacturing Company, adopted it as a trademark on ice cream cones. These cones are a bakery product consisting of a dough, made wholly without milk or any dairy product, and arc used as containers for ice cream.
.In the agreed statement it was stipulated that copies of all certificates of registration of trademarks “necessary or desirable in this proceeding” might be offered and marked in evidence. Attached to appellant’s brief is a copy of a registration on Juno 17, 1913, of the word “Eagle” as a trademark for ice cream. In this registration it is alleged that the mark has been used since November IS, 1912. We cannot consider this registration. In the first place, it was not offered in evidence and brought to the attention of the Patent Office, since the Examiner of Interferences states “that opposer has not shown that it has ever used the mark ‘Eagle’ on ice cream; it has not even alleged that it has made or sold ice cream.” The Assistant. Commissioner in his decision said: “The opposer not only does not deal in ice cream cones, but this record does not indicate that it deals in ice cream itself.” The stipulation to winch we have referred in the agreed statement of fact was not intended to *193broaden tlie scope of tlie issue. Obviously, the registrations there referred to were intended to be limited to the specific issues agreed upon. Moreover, since appellee adopted its mark in 1905, and appellant, according to the registration referred to, did not commence to use the word as a trademark for ice cream until seven years later, it acquired no rights thereby.
The sole question to be determined, therefore, is whether the us) of the mark by appellee on ice cream cones and the use of tlie same mark by appellant on the dairy products heretofore mentioned will be likely to cause confusion. We agree with the Patent Office that it will not. In Borden Ice Cream Co. v. Bordens Condensed Milk Co. 121 C. C. A. 200, 201 Fed. 510, tlie circuit court of appeals for the seventh circuit ruled that the former company, which made commercial ico cream, did not come into competition with the latter company, which sold dairy products, even though both used tlie same trademark. There is too much difference between dairy products and ice cream or ice cream cones to make applicable tlie rule announced in Simplex Electric Heating Co. v. Gold Car Heating & Lighting Co. 43 App. D. C. 28; Fishbeck Soap Co. v. Kleeno Mfg. Co. 44 App. D. C. 6; and Canton Culvert & Silo Co. v. Consolidated Car Heating Co. 44 App. D. C. 491, to the effect that the owner of a trademark will not he unduly restricted in the legitimate and natural extension of liis business by tlie registration of the mark to another.
The decision is affirmed. Affirmed.