For the death of Polasky, an award of compensation was made to his two children, under sixteen years of age:, living with their mother, who, it appears, had without cause abandoned her husband, their father, three years before his death, and had taken the children with her to Brooklyn, N. Y., where she alone supported them. She received no award because she was entitled to none: sec. 307 of the amendment of June 26, 1919, P. L. 642, 647. The evidence shows she earned $11.77 a week, with which she supported herself and the two children, who attended school.
The single question raised by this appeal is whether compensation must be paid to decedent’s children under sixteen. Section 307 requires it. The legislature com sidered such children dependent. Actual dependence, in the sense that he had been contributing to their support, was not made a condition of their right to receive compensation although conditions were annexed as to all other beneficiaries specified. It is provided that “compensation shall be payable under this section to or on account of any child.......only if and while such child ......is under the age of 16......“......step-chil-dren, adopted children and children to whom he [the decedent] stood in loco parentis” shall be entitled only “if members of decedent’s household at the time of his *184death.” As to his own children there is no qualification. The statute, therefore,, requires the employer to pay compensation for these children (a guardian was appointed) ; an employer may not refuse because the father neglected his duty to contribute to their support: Logan v. Coal Co., 79 Pa. Superior Ct. 421.
Judgment affirmed.