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Show BUENOS AIRES SS NO PLACE FOR HIS WIFE I Charles H, H1JI of Kansas City returned from Bucnoa Aires bo- cause, ho said, "that city is no placo for an American woman to live." Mr. Hill took his brldo thero and brought her back beforo the dust had accumulated on their trunks. Mr. Hill married Miss Grace Margaret Mar-garet (Dottie) Barsen. 2S23 Forest avenue, Novombor 10. They left for South America tho day after. Mr. Hill gavo up the position of head buyer for ono of tho largest Dacklns: plants in South America to N- get back to "Gpd's country." The plant has Just beep placed n operation opera-tion by the Schwarzschlld & Sulzberger Sulz-berger Packing Cpmpany, for whose Kansas City plant Mr. Hill's father, Charles Kf, HUJ, Sr., Is heai buyer. Mr. Hill will tako up his old position po-sition of assistant to his father. "When I accepted that position In Buenos Aires there was a condition," con-dition," he said yesterday. "If wo liked the country we were to stay and If not come back." Strango'people 1,500,000 of them strange manners, a strango city and a strange language. And eight thousand miles from home. Tho young couple stayed thirty days. 'H "It Is a great and prosperous country," said tho young husband, "hut not one in which a man would 'MMt want to take his wife to live. Their MM customs aro not ours and they could nover be." Mrs. Hill is very anxious to have M corrected tho impression which pre- MMM ceded their coming homo that It MM was her homesickness which was MmM bringing them. Tho eight thousand miles had nothing to do with tho MM case, sho says. If the place had MmM been one in which they could havo fl made a home she would have stayed right there and raado it. fl |