Green’s Dictionary of Slang

juicer n.

[juice n.1 ]

1. see lime-juicer n. (2)

2. (US) an electrician .

[US]N.Y. Times 11 Mar. VIII 6: Juicers — Electricians [HDAS].
[US]Irwin Amer. Tramp and Und. Sl. 112: Juicer. – An electrician.
[US]R.L. Bellem ‘Broken melody’ in Dan Turner – Hollywood Detective Dec. 🌐 Extras, juicers, grips — everybody was running toward the spot.

3. (US) one who chews rather than smokes tobacco [the tobacco/saliva ’juice’ created].

[US] ‘Smokers’ Sl.’ in AS XV:3 Oct. 336/1: Or if you chew tobacco [...] you are a juicer or a bell-ringer.

4. (US) a heavy drinker, an alcoholic.

[US]C. Cooper Jr Scene (1996) 71: He continued to be alone, apart from the reefer-smokers and juicers.
[US]Smith & Gay Heroin in Perspective 61: One third of combat personnel are ‘juicers’.
[US]J. Ellroy Brown’s Requiem 43: Juicers on the wagon are all big coffee fiends.
[US]P. Benchley Lush 45: He refused to say the word ‘alcoholic.’ Or ‘rummy.’ Or ‘lush.’ [...] ‘Juicer,’ he said.
[US]B. Hamper Rivethead (1992) 55: no wonder they want to phase out all you juicers and replace you with robotics!
[US]G. Pelecanos Shame the Devil 258: The neighborhood juicers were hip to the house hours.
B. Leopold ‘With One Stone’ in ThugLit Apr. [ebook] ‘He’s no crack addict, or juicer, or pill-popper; he’s a straight-ahead con man’.

5. (drugs) a woman who barters sex for drugs, esp. crack cocaine.

[US]T. Williams Crackhouse 149: juicers women with something to offer, who are expected to be successful when they go out to acquire crack-cocaine; they usually are attractive, have money, or are persuasive; males may also have the ‘juice’.
[US]L. Stavsky et al. A2Z.

6. a public house.

Twitter 8 Oct. 🌐 There was a pub there as well. [...] Being one of the closest juicers to the dental school, we weren’t unfamiliar with it at the time.