Opinion by
In this unemployment compensation case, the compensation authorities denied benefits to claimant, Virginia D. Kelleher, under section 402(e) of the Unemployment Compensation Law, 43 PS sec. 802, which provides: “An employe shall be ineligible for compensation for any week ... (e) In which his unemployment is due to his discharge or temporary suspension from work for willful misconduct connected with his work.” Claimant has appealed to this Court.
At the hearing before the referee the employer was represented by one J. M. Murray, who described himself as “Foreman of the Hubbard and Company”, claimant’s last employer. Claimant did not appear because she thought the hearing was to be held the following day. Murray had a very limited knowledge of claimant’s relations with the employer and apparently represented the employer only because “the personnel man couldn’t make it”. He testified that claimant had been employed by the company as a stenographer and clerk and that her salary was “about 80 some dollars every two weeks” and that she was discharged on February 20,1953 “For being absent too much ... she was warned quite a number of times and we gave her quite a bit of consideration and all that”. Claimant, it appeared, in a period of five months preceding her dismissal had been absent from work a total of twenty-nine days. The several absences varied in duration from one day to ten days. Her last absence from work which resulted in her discharge was from February 16 to February 20, 1953.
The Board held a hearing at which claimant and her brother appeared and gave testimony. No representative of the employer appeared at this hearing. Claimant produced a certificate from a doctor to the effect that he had been treating her for a year, for “Neuroasthma” brought on by “a nervous strain .fol *263 lowing the sudden death of her sister, and she is taking care of her brother, who has been ill for the past four years since his discharge from the army”. Claimant testified that certain of her absences were due to illness and others due to the necessity of caring for her brother when he was ill.
Excessive absenteeism without good cause in the face of a warning by the employer that further absence from work would result in dismissal, constitutes willful misconduct.
Devlin Unemployment Compensation Case,
An order of the Board denying unemployment compensation benefits is conclusive only when based upon findings supported by the evidence
(Sauers Unemployment Compensation Case,
Ordinarily, a claimant, an unemployed worker in a covered employment, is presumed entitled to benefits when he registers for work and files a claim; but such presumption is, of course, rebuttable.
Sturdevant Unemployment Compensation Case,
It does not follow, however, that we can direct the compensation authorities to award benefits to this claimant. Her testimony in regard to the several reasons which caused her to miss work, even though uncontradicted, need not be accepted by the compensation authorities. If it is found upon substantial evidence that claimant was absent from work without good cause and that she had been warned that further absences would result in her dismissal, under the prin
*265
ciple of the
Devlin
case,
The decision of the Board is vacated and the record is remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
