Due to these tensions, the newspaper was subject to strict censorship by the Polish authorities and was forcibly closed in October 1937.
[1] In 1930, the newspaper launched a supplement Mūsų artojas for farmers[4] and reduced its page count to four.
[1] Vilniaus rytojus was replaced by a series of one-time newspapers under different titles and official editors to exploit loopholes in the Polish law.
[2] In April 1938, after the Polish ultimatum to Lithuania, the situation somewhat normalized and Aidas was established as a replacement of Vilniaus rytojus.
[5] In its first issue, Vilniaus rytojus declared its mission to defend and promote two core values – Lithuanian national identity and Catholicism.
[4] Children's supplement Aušrelė published short stories, poems, articles on history, geography, nature, as well as didactic lectures.
[1] The newspaper published literature works as separate books which were often distributed for no additional costs to its subscribers.
As the official editor, he was legally responsible for the newspaper's content and thus, when issues were confiscated by the police, he was the one put on trial.
He worked as a head of administration of the Lithuanian Vytautas Magnus Gymnasium and wrote very little.
His most popular articles were collected and published as separate books Kovoje užgimtąją kalbą (1929) about the Lithuanian press ban and Tautinės mažumos (1937) about the national minorities.