Arthur James Conry Booth (1892–1926) was an Irish cartoonist and one of the founders of the satirical magazine Dublin Opinion.
Through his interest in amateur dramatics, he met fellow cartoonist Charles E. Kelly and writer Thomas J. Collins, and decided to start a humorous journal.
Booth resigned his job to become editor, and drew the covers as well as interior cartoons.
[1] Dublin Opinion was launched on 1 March 1922, on the eve of the Irish Civil War, and within four years it was selling 40,000 per issue.
Booths cartoons tended to be sombre, concentrating on the destruction caused by the Civil War and the unemployment that followed.