It looks fine to me. I don't see anything wrong with it. If I had to nitpick, it'd be your formatting and indenting... But that's just about it.
EDIT:
I think what the post you were referring to meant is that you can't return the address of a local or auto variable. In this example, everything is in the same scope so it's perfectly fine.
EDIT 2:
Okay, going back to prior experience, I think I can find "some" weakness in the code. I've seen this on the Intel Compiler.
Since the variable is local, the compiler may promote it to a register. In that case addresses to it are invalid. However, modern compilers need to be able to trace this dependency and avoid putting that variable into a register.
In one case that I encountered a while back, I was accessing the address of the variable via inline assembly - something that the Intel Compiler could not trace. The compiler then promoted the variable to register and my inline assembly kept reading the old value on the stack rather than the register value.
Obviously it was something I shouldn't have done, but it would have been okay if the variable wasn't auto.
<stdarg.h>
, 15 is UB, etc, etc. So if I were you I wouldn't give any credit to this link.