In one end of the long green warehouse come heaps of powdery, malodorous chicken manure. Out the other goes garden-ready fertilizer sold to golf courses or companies like Scotts, which bag it and markets it as Miracle Gro Organic Choice and other products. Supporters say the Perdue AgriRecycle facility a few miles from the Maryland state line is one solution for chicken farmers on the Eastern Shore who need to get rid of manure. Along with the chicken litter, Perdue receives hundreds of thousands of state taxpayer dollars each year. A state porgram reimburses farmers, brokers and poultry companies for half of their costs to haul manure. Perdue is one of hte largest beneficiaries. The compant gets $18 a ton to have its processed. The company gets up to $18 per ton to have its processed fertilizers trucked out to market. Other grant recipients include one large Delaware manure brokerage and farmers scattered across the state. Maryland will likely spend more than $1 million this year on the program, and some expect the payouts to increase as restrictions to protect the Chesapeake Bay tighten.