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Unless your record player has tubes, you won't need a dummy load, though you could still use one. Find the impedance of the speaker and put a power resistor of that value from signal to ground. In parallel to the power resistor, put a resistor between signal and lug 3 of your pot, lug 1 to ground, lug 2 to output. This will behave like a pot that can't be turned all the way up. The values of the pot and resistor depend on how much attenuation you want.
Alternately, you can skip the dummy load and just put the power resistor between signal and lug 3, but you'll need a larger resistance in the power resistor than the speaker impedance.
But this might all be overkill. Small speakers can run off line/headphone level. You might not need anything but a patch cable.
Before you decide what to do, answer these three questions:
1. What is the impedance of the speaker?
2. What is the power rating of the record player's built-in amplifier?
3. How loud is it through the internal speaker?
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