Tucker was re-elected to the Milwaukee County Board in 1928, and was instrumental in the passage of an old age pension plan for Milwaukee County in 1929, a project he had been advocating for some years. Tucker remained active as a member of the
Machinists Union; as of 1932, he was still Financial Secretary of the Milwaukee Lodge of the IAM. In spring of 1936, he was defeated for re-election to the County Board by Leon Szymanski.
Death mystery In November 1936, Tucker's automobile was found near a fishing cottage on the shore of
Pewaukee Lake in
Waukesha County, Wisconsin, which was used by a fishing club to which he belonged. Tucker had been keeping a
tavern in
Cudahy, and had disappeared. Tucker had been married for four years to Mary Frank, widow of John Frank (the former operator of the Cudahy tavern). A blood-stained razor, a pool of blood, Tucker's overcoat, and an envelope addressed "To the sweetest girl I ever loved" were found in an outbuilding, along with a trail of blood leading down to the lakeshore. Police estimated that two quarts of blood had been lost. == References ==