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HOT SPRINGS NEWS UNFAVORABLE LEXINGTON, Ky., December 4. Col. R. L. Baker, who is taking his rest at Hot Springs, says in a letter received here today that the outlook for racing at the Springs in 1921 is not encouraging. "The smart fellows here," says he, "tell me that there is no chance for the sport, so long as the present judge is on the bench." Col. Baker thinks Kinney Nichols got a real bargain when lie bought King Gorin out of the sale last Thursday for ,000. "He is cheap at 0,000, and you will say so next year, as lie will make a success as a sire sure." William A. Shea, en route from New York to New Orleans, is spending half a dozen days here, arranging for the coming season for his gcod horse Tea Caddie. .He lias been to sec some of the weanlings by this splendid son of Rock Sand Teas Over and since seeing them he is more than ever satisfied that Tea Caddie is to make good as a sire. One of the handsomest weanlings in all this section is the get of Tea Caddie, the property of Miss Elizabeth Daingerfiehl. 1 ! 1 " L 1