Education
He attended Wendell Phillips Academy High School and played football there as a tackle.
He attended Wendell Phillips Academy High School and played football there as a tackle.
He served as the head football coach at Baylor University (1913), the University of Arkansas (1917–1918), and Iowa State University (1920), compiling a career college football coaching record of 16–11–3. Paine was also the head basketball coach at Baylor during the 1913-1914 season, tallying a mark of 1–8. He was the athletic director at Baylor from 1913 to 1914.
Paine later practiced medicine in Los Angeles County, California.
Paine was a native of Chicago, Illinois. He then moved on to the University of Chicago, where he played for the Chicago Maroons football team under Amos Alonzo Stagg.
In his first year at the university, Paine played as a guard on the freshman football team He made the varsity football team as sophomore and played guard and defensive halfback.
As a junior and senior he was the starting quarterback for the Maroons.
Paine was the head football coach at Baylor University in 1913. His record there stands at 4–4–2. From 1917 to 1918, he served as the head coach at the University of Arkansas, posting an 8–3–1 record.
In 1920, he served as the coach at Iowa State University posting a 4–4 record.
Paine graduated from Rush Medical College and was the head of the campus infirmary at Iowa State as well as the football coach. Paine was on the national board of the Young Men’s Christian Association, served Los Angeles County Hospital for 30 years and was a physician in Glendale, California.
Paine was an honored alumni of the University of Chicago and headed the Big Ten Club of Southern California and the Quarterbacks Club. He hosted several Big Ten Conference coaches during Rose Bowl appearances.
Paine was also a member of the Chicago Maroons men"s basketball team