Bhilla = tribal , forest- dwelling , not beggar. 

Atiparichaya matches with a forest-dwelling woman , not a beggar.woman
  
Malaya has been considered as a mountain in the south of India. 

DakshiNaanila is a synonym for malayaanila.

Chandana in southern hills /forests suits the facts.

On Mon, Apr 8, 2019, 1:22 AM Lubomír Ondračka via INDOLOGY <indology@list.indology.info> wrote:
See Sternbach's Mahāsubhāṣitasaṁgraha, vol. I, no. 575:

atiparicayād avajñā
saṃtatagamanād anādaro bhavati |
malaye bhillapurandhrī
candanatarum indhanaṃ kurute ||

(with textual variants and sources)

Excessive familiarity breeds contempt, and too frequent visits (to a person) lead to disrespect.
A Bhilla woman [or: a woman-beggar] living on the Malaya Mountain uses sandal-wood as a mere fuel.

Best,
Lubomir


On Sun, 7 Apr 2019 19:27:42 +0000
"Tieken, H.J.H. via INDOLOGY" <indology@list.indology.info> wrote:

> Dear List members,
>
> someone (not a sanskritist and unaware of diacritics) asked me what the following stanza means:
>
> atiparicayadavajna / samtatagamanadanadro bhavati.
> malaye bhillaparandhri / candanatarukastham indhanam kurute.
>
> Some parts, like malaye ... candanatarukastham indhanam kurute, are clear but I do not know what to make of the second pāda.
> I look forward to suggestions.
> Herman
>
> Herman Tieken
> Stationsweg 58
> 2515 BP Den Haag
> The Netherlands
> 00 31 (0)70 2208127
> website: hermantieken.com<http://hermantieken.com/>
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