| OVERSTOCK | Put in too many deliveries to outskirts of Cradock (9) |
| GOVERNMENT | Ruling from chap pocketing deliveries to outskirts of Nottingham (10) |
| OVERMAN | Employ too many deliveries to isle |
| OVERCROWD | Six deliveries -- company put in too many (9) |
| OVERDOSED | Took too many deliveries at parties with journalist (9) |
| OVERDEVELOP | Put in too many buildings, and so spoil the picture |
| OVERSUBSCRIBE | Bribe covers us anyway if we put in too many offers for shares (13) |
| OVERLONG | By implication, too many deliveries becoming tedious (8) |
| HUSBANDRY | Animal breeding partner goes to outskirts of Rugby (9) |
| ALLOTMENT | Distribution of shares reveals people put in too much after all |
| OVERVALUE | Think too much of woman after deliveries to EU came back (9) |
| BLACKMORE | Author noted for depictions of the English countryside in novels including Cradock Nowell (New Forest), Lorna Doone (Exmoor), Mary Anerley (Yorkshire) and Christowell (Dartmoor) (9) |
| CARRYOVER | Have a cargo of six deliveries to take to the next page (5,4) |
| VALENTINE | Pseudonym of the lyricist and novelist Archibald Thomas Pechey, father of the TV cook Fanny Cradock |
| OVERSHOOT | Scornful outburst after many deliveries fail to stop where intended |
| OVERDRESS | During many deliveries, Dr West stripped off outer garb (9) |
| OVERFILLS | Puts in too much gas, e,g, |
| OVERSTATE | Exaggerate deliveries to gallery (9) |
| CABOVERDE | Transport six deliveries to extremely desperate republic (4,5) |
| LENGTH | Distance from end to end of winding glen to outskirts of Tulloch (6) |