sprinkling the streets wetting dirt streets to discourage clouds of dust from rising.
drygoods cloth, cloth products, thread, and so on.
Syndicat d'Initiative tourists' information bureau.
duster a lightweight coat worn to protect the clothes from dust, as formerly in open automobiles.
Basques a people living in the western Pyrenees of Spain and France.
pelota jai alai; a game like handball, played with a curved basket fastened to the arm, for catching the ball and hurling it against the wall.
carabineers a soldier armed with a carbine (a rifle).
Bonaparte hats hats like those worn by Napoleon Bonaparte (1769–1821), a French military leader and emperor of France (1804–1815), born in Corsica.
kepi a cap with a flat round top and a stiff visor, worn by French soldiers.
gunny-sacking a sack or bag made of gunny, a coarse, heavy fabric of jute or hemp.
peseta the basic monetary unit of Spain.
Café Iruña a café that still stands on the Plaza del Castillo in Pamplona.
Ayuntamiento town hall.
baize a thick woolen cloth made to resemble felt and often dyed green, used to cover billiard tables.
baggage-truck a handcart used for moving luggage.
darb a person or thing regarded as remarkable or excellent.
thrown on every screen projected onto every movie screen.
Irati River River in the Basque region of Spain.






















