| THESAURUS | A storehouse of information, a dictionary or encyclopaedia (9) |
| LUMBER | Word for useless odds and ends; a pawnshop, considered as a storehouse of said jumble; flirtation; a prison; or, roughly sawn timber (6) |
| DEPOT | A storehouse of overseas marijuana |
| SHELLLIKE | Recipient of information a woman will approve of? |
| BITE | A short piece of information; a nip or sting; a morsel or quick snack; a feeling of cold in the air; or, the corrosive action of acid in etching (4) |
| DEPOSITED | A storehouse lost little time to have located a place to lay things down (9) |
| DEFINITION | Any one of the concise explanations of the meanings of words in a dictionary; or, visual clarity or sharpness of outline (10) |
| KNOWITALL | Presumably, this is the person with a set of encyclopaedias for sale to one of the Wise Guys (4-2-3) |
| COMPENDIA | Company representative's aim: one must have a set of encyclopaedias |
| WORD | Any one of the units of language or speech listed in a dictionary or thesaurus (4) |
| PAGE | Varlet or apprentice knight ranking next below a squire; or, one or both sides of a leaf of paper in a book, diary, dictionary or newspaper (4) |
| CECILROTH | Historian bon in 1899 who was the first editor of the "Encyclopaedia Judaica" (5,4) |
| CELILROTH | Historian born in 1899 who was the first editor of the 'Encyclopaedia Judaica' (5,4) |
| USAGE | Topic in a dictionary or on a utility bill |
| GRANGE | Word for a barn or a storehouse for threshed corn originally, later a an outlying farmhouse of an estate; a farm with its associated outbuildings and stables; or, a country manor (6) |
| REFER | Look (to), as a dictionary or an encyclopedia |
| GLOSS | Lustre; paint or cosmetic with a shiny finish; or, short word for a mini dictionary or lexicon of terms peculiar to field of knowledge (5) |
| DATACAPTURE | Conversion of information a little upset by top leaders of this union requesting extra (4,7) |
| STORAGECAPACITY | Maximum amount of information a computer can hold |
| DATASET | Collection of information a little bit put back by TV (4,3) |