You want a glue with long working time that dries clear and is thin and clear when dried. . First stain the edges of the break and don't be shy about it. Match the exterior color. If you used LMF on the orginal finish, use that on the edges...and go deep into the break. Let that dry for a few hours or overnight or longer.
When you apply the glue...cover all the surfaces of the break...heap it into the part of the wood still attached. Use gentle heat if needed to get it into every nook and cranny...you want total coverage.
Then use surgical tubing, or rubber hose etc. to wrap the break.. the long working time lets you align the break up exactly. Dont't worry about the glue sticking to the tubing..it will.
After a few days, strip the tubing/hose off, file off the excess glue, stuck hosing etc and sand till it's flush and you can't feel the break with your eyes closed.
Restain and refinsh and your done.
Don't add finish to the glue, it rarely works. Stain the wood, then glue.
When you apply the glue...cover all the surfaces of the break...heap it into the part of the wood still attached. Use gentle heat if needed to get it into every nook and cranny...you want total coverage.
Then use surgical tubing, or rubber hose etc. to wrap the break.. the long working time lets you align the break up exactly. Dont't worry about the glue sticking to the tubing..it will.
After a few days, strip the tubing/hose off, file off the excess glue, stuck hosing etc and sand till it's flush and you can't feel the break with your eyes closed.
Restain and refinsh and your done.
Don't add finish to the glue, it rarely works. Stain the wood, then glue.