| SEWERAGE | Wise to include jug and the provision of drains |
| MUSICSTAND | I support the provision of notes reminding players of the score (5,5) |
| RESCUE | Search and ____, the provision of aid to people in distress or impending danger (6) |
| HENRYVII | The constitutional reforms of the Provisions of Oxford were forced upon this king of England (5,3) |
| CHAPERONAGE | The provision of a guard of honour for a dated young lady! (11) |
| HEALTHCARE | Hear chalet is to be repurposed for the provision of medical services |
| CARE | The provision of what's necessary, for health say (4) |
| ADOPTION | The provision of a home for a small charge (8) |
| REDEFINITION | The provision of a new meaning |
| MAKEALLOWANCES | Be tolerant in the provision of regular grants (4,10) |
| AGRITOURISM | The provision of holidays in rural or farm settings (11) |
| MINISTRATION | The provision of care |
| LAYINGONOFHANDS | Spiritual healing involving the provision of a ship's crew? (6-2,2,5) |
| ENTERTAINMENT | The provision of hospitality |
| PANTLER | An officer in charge of stocking the provisions of a manor house's kitchen (7) |
| EXOR | Person who carries out the provisions of a will (abbr) (4) |
| EXR | Person carrying out the provisions of a will (abbr) (3) |
| GRANT | Introduced to the Bloomsbury Set by his cousin Lytton Strachey, an artist who painted Still Life with Tulips and Narcissi in a Jug and Spring Flowers, Charleston (5) |
| DORA | Forename of the artist "Carrington" who painted Cyclamen in a Pot, Dahlias, Iris Tree on a Horse, Tidmarsh Mill, Tulips in a Staffordshire Jug and a portrait of Lytton Strachey (4) |
| DELFTWARE | Type of originally Dutch tinglazed pottery used to make blueand-white tiles and tulipieres or the later English variety for items such as puzzle jugs and flower bricks (9) |