Green’s Dictionary of Slang

juicery n.

[juice n.1 (3a)]

a drinking house.

[US]J.G. Baldwin Flush Times of Alabama and Mississippi 325: We took Jefferson with us, in the recess of court, over to a place of departed spirits [...] we mean, an evacuated doggery, grocery or juicery.
Knickerbocker(NY) May 502: Let’s all go down to the ‘juicery,’ and drink to the Doctor's ' health!
W.H. Milburn Ten Years of Preacher-life 302: There’s a juicery here; let us get out and wet our whistles with some bald-faced whisky.
[US]Memphis Daily Appeal (TN) 14 Apr. 4/6: There are twenty-five or thirty stores, groceries and juiceries in Humboldt.
[US]J.C. Duval Young Explorers 7: I stepped up to one of the crowd collected around this ‘juicery’ and enquired if anything unusual had happened.
[US]Virginian Pilot (Norfolk, VA) 15 Dec. 7/1: A posse of revenue officers [...] captured four moonshine stills. These ‘juiceries’ were [...] at the point where the three counties [...] come together.
[Aus]Sun. Times (Perth) 13 Aug. 4/7: There’s a juicery up in Hay Street that knows all there is to tell.