When Henry Gibson's career in the lumber trade took him to Chicago circa 1904, Idah relocated too. Henry became the founder and publisher of a new journal,
The Hardwood Record; Idah contributed
nature writing, both poetry and short stories. She also started a beauty magazine,
The Woman Beautiful, advertised as a publication "written by women, for women." Its focus was on "the cultivation and preservation of womanly beauty;" she edited and published it from 1908-1911. Idah was subsequently hired by the
Chicago Tribune, where she wrote on the
Women's page. In addition to reviews of stage presentations, she wrote profiles of the stars. For example, she profiled actress
Lillian Russell, whom she had known for many years. When Russell began contributing a beauty column to the
Tribune's Women's page, it was Idah who helped her to write it. Among other famous people she interviewed or profiled were actress
Mary Pickford, and
Cora Harvey, a "woman hobo." She shared the beauty tips of famous actresses like
Jane Cowl. And she covered human interest stories like the honeymoon of President
Woodrow Wilson and his new bride Edith. In addition to writing about stars of the stage, Idah published a series of syndicated interviews with baseball players, around the time of the 1912 World Series. She spoke with New York Giants manager
John McGraw, Boston Red Sox manager
Jake Stahl, Boston Red Sox pitcher
Smoky Joe Wood, New York Giants pitcher
Christy Mathewson, and several others. Then, later in October 1912, she published a series of syndicated articles about the wives of presidents and presidential candidates; they included Edith Roosevelt, wife of
Theodore Roosevelt, and Nellie Taft, wife of
William Howard Taft. In 1916, Idah published another series of interviews with baseball players and managers, including
Wilbert Robinson and
Zach Wheat. In November 1913, a new serialized romantic novel, "Confessions of a Wife," debuted on the women's page of many newspapers. The pseudonymous author, "Margaret Hastings," was subsequently revealed to be Idah McGlone Gibson. The serial was so popular that it appeared in daily newspapers for nearly seven years, and ran to a total of 600,000 words. ==Personal life and later years==