Including references to Gershom Bader (524), Moshe Nadir (524, 525), Moses Leib Halpern (525), Naphtali Gross (525, 526), Harry Sackler, Berish Weinstein, Meyer Stiker, Judah Leib Teller, Isaac Metzker (526) and more.
Including references to David Neumark (346, 359), Henry Malter (346, 354), Jacob Mann (373), Zevi Diesendruck (346, 372), Solomon Buber (348), Simon Bernfeld (361), Shalom Spiegel (362-363, 374), Salo Wittmayer Baron (363, 376-377), Jacob Zallel Lauterbach (364-365), Israel Elfenbein, (370) and Gershom Bader (378).
Including extensive deliberation regarding people from Galicia (and Bukovina) in Romania and their part in the history of the Jews there, mainly in the development of the Haskalah there. Among them, in the second part,: Abraham Joshua Heschel of Opatow, Moses Teietelbaum, Israel Friedmann of Ruzhin and his family (545), Benjamin Wolf Ehrenkranz (545, 547-549), Hirsch Mendel Pineles, Marcus Sterlisker (547), Hillel Kahana (547, 548), Moshe Valdberg, Solomon Rubin, Moses Ornstein, Matithjahu Simcha Rabner, Jakob Joachim Korn, and Nachman Frankel (548); In part three, 20 (1909), 70-76: including detailed reference to Julius Barasch (73-74), and reference to Ehrenkranz (75); Part four, ibid., 568-579 - including references to Elazar Rokach, Karpel Lippe, Reuben Asher Braudes, (568), Samuel Pineles (569) and Simon Bernfeld (569, 574); Part five, 22 (1910), 460-467 (ibid., 462-463 - Ronetti Roman, alias Aharon Blumenfeld); Part six, ibid., 563-572.