| TATTER | Rag-and-bone man or scrap dealer (6) |
| TOTTER | Rag-and-bone man or scrap dealer (6) |
| SCRAPMERCHANT | Rag-and-bone man or boxing promoter? (5,8) |
| RAGMAN | Another name for rag and bone man |
| BRAMBELL | Wilfred, Irish actor who played rag and bone man Albert Steptoe in Steptoe And Son (8) |
| TOE | Step on it to get to the rag-and-bone man (3) |
| STEPTOE | TV rag and bone man |
| AGAR | Rag-and-bone man returns with seaweed (4) |
| STEPTOEANDSON | Classic sitcom about a rag-and-bone man (7,3,3) |
| OLD | 'Any - iron!', rag and bone man's cry (3) |
| CARTHORSE | Works for rag-and-bone man in Mini, Ford and Mustang? (9) |
| GRAHAM | Rory, real name of singer Rag'n'Bone Man (6) |
| FIGHTS | Battles or scraps (6) |
| SHREDS | What are bits, or scraps (6) |
| BEGFOR | Words before "mercy" or "scraps" |
| ANDSON | Classic sitcom of the 1960s and 70s about the rag-and-bone trade, Steptoe _ _ (3,3) |
| RAGMEN | Some scrap dealers |
| BIT | From Old English for "mouthful", a crumb, morsel or scrap; a bridle's snaffle or other metal mouthpiece; any small coin or piece; an awl for a brace or a drill; or, a brief space of time (3) |
| RAGPICKER | A bone-grubber, chiffonnier, junk-dealer, rummager, scrounger or totter who earns a living by making use of scavenged old clothes, tatters and other everyday discards or scrap (9) |
| MOTTO | Phrase accompanying a coat of arms; or, a maxim or scrap of verse in a fortune cookie or paper cracker (5) |