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  2. d-CON - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D-CON

    d-CON is an America brand of rodent control products, which is distributed and owned in the United States by the UK-based consumer goods company Reckitt. The brand includes traps and baits for use around the home for trapping and killing some rats and mice. As of 2015, bait products use first-generation vitamin K anticoagulants as poison.

  3. Rodenticide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rodenticide

    Typical rat poison bait station (Germany, 2010) Rodenticides are chemicals made and sold for the purpose of killing rodents. While commonly referred to as "rat poison", rodenticides are also used to kill mice, woodchucks, chipmunks, porcupines, nutria, beavers, [1] and voles. [2]

  4. Mousetrap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mousetrap

    The design is such that the mouse's neck or spinal cord will be broken, or its ribs or skull crushed, by the force of the bar. The trap can be held over a bin and the dead mouse released into it by pulling the bar. In the case of rats, which are much larger than mice, a much larger version of the same type of trap is used to kill them. Some ...

  5. Franklin County Sheriff's Office seeks suspect in fatal Home ...

    www.aol.com/franklin-county-sheriffs-office...

    The Franklin County Sheriff's Office continues to look for a gunman who fatally shot a man last Friday night in the parking lot of a Home Depot store in Prairie Township.

  6. ‘The Mouse Trap’ Review: You’d Be Surprised How ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/mouse-trap-review-d-surprised...

    This year saw one of the most zealously-guarded corporate empires of intellectual property spring a leak, as all the Magic Kingdom’s horses and men couldn’t keep Mickey Mouse from entering the ...

  7. ContraPest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ContraPest

    The city of Washington D.C. was utilizing a 5,000 unit, four-year supply of ContraPest to be used in all eight wards of the city in an attempt to combat the increasing rat population in 2020. [11] Local news reported that the district was unsure of the company's early claims of success in rat control. [12]