You may have the mouse problem tackled, but maybe not. {realizes this increases the paranoia; still determining which side of the war to be on; decides this is a matter for the sake of both sides} You see, this is about those sticky traps that you used. Let me tell you a story about those.
I worked for a construction company whose main office was plagued with a mouse population. The head dude decided to put out sticky traps one night. The next morning, he found two traps had caught poor, defenseless little mice. {Not choosing sides here; just telling a story} His problem was that the mice were still alive. As the innocent victims cowered in fear, trying in vain to get away, he wished he'd used the spring traps that would have done the dirty work for him. He dispatched them with a strategically dropped concrete block. {RIP, little ones.}
So, unless you have a concrete block readily available, I'd suggest spring traps for sure, next time. {And, there will be a next time. BWAH HA HA!} Or, get yourself a cat ((wrings hands, evily)) to protect your neck from rabies-laced scratches, for cats like to lay across your neck in the night because of the warmth {and their secret mission is to....ahem...never mind.}