Not me. But I used to work at a place that used to run a couple miles per day of that sort of thing. The normal method was to use what's known as a cine processor - a special sort of continuous machine. I think it's very unlikely that you'll come across one today that is configured for 70mm film.
Apparently this film has some significance to you, as you say you are willing to pay for processing. I would personally wonder if it has even been exposed. That particular style of film would have almost surely been for a long-roll portrait camera, used commercially, and Vericolor III film hasn't been made for something like 15 or 20 years. I can't hardly imagine that someone would have shot the roll and failed to process it - it would have something like 400 to 800 images on it, depending on the camera configuration. (The portrait subjects would have been clamoring, "where are my pictures?!") I think it's more than likely that the film was unused, or perhaps it was used as a dummy roll for training photographers.
This website being what it is, there will probably be a number of people trying to be helpful and offering advice. But most of them won't have any actual experience with this sort of film, so you have to take it with a grain of salt. They're gonna be asking you things like, is it perforated, etc.? For your info the "474" designation means that it is unperforated, and it comes on a #10 spool. From memory, I think that spool will have a square opening on one side; round on the other (someone would need to look up the spool spec to be sure). Now, portrait camera film magazines were set up such that the spool could only be loaded one way - with the square end down. The result was that after a roll had been shot (it rolls up onto another such spool) it would not be possible to accidentally load and reshoot it again (which would have double-exposed the entire roll, ruining it). Now, I personally spent several years with one of those cameras, going through 2 or 3 such rolls per week, but it was 1970ish, so I don't recall the loading orientation. But if you can find an old operating manual (the main cameras would have been Beattie-Coleman Portronic or Photo Control Camerz) you would be able to tell if the film had been through a camera or not (you check which way the film unwinds from the roll with the round hole on top; do this IN THE DARK, by feel).
If you really have your heart set on having it processed, look for a professional grade photofinisher that has a minilab-style processor that can handle that width (70 mm) film. Or possibly what they call a dip-n-dunk machine (they'll have to cut the roll into a series of shorter strips). Vericolor III was made for the Kodak C-41 process, which is still the standard color negative process in use today. But... today's C-41 no longer uses a final "stabilizer" bath, which I think that Vericolor film needs (not sure, though). But this only affects the long-term stability of the film.
One additional note: couple of years ago someone on this site was selling some similar film on this site; possibly some of the buyers may have described how they would get it processed... see this link.
https://www.photrio.com/forum/threads/70mm-film-value.156824/
Ps, if you have any photographer friends who develop their own black&white film, they could clip off a foot or so and develop it in b&w developer just to see if there are any images on it. Note that this is not the "proper" way to develop color film, but if there ARE any images on it they WOULD show up with a b&w developer.
Pps, are you SURE the film is not already processed? I ask because the standard way of storing such film is back in the original can. Except that normally the photographer would stick a label back on the can to identify what's in it.
Best of luck with it.
[Update:] sorry to hear about your father. I have a question: was he a pro photographer with the equipment to shoot this film? The cameras I mentioned would normally come in a trunk, roughly 15x20 inches, and maybe a foot tall. And it might weigh near 20 lb, very rough, with a couple of film magazines. If he did NOT have such a camera (along with a heavy duty tripod), it is extremely unlikely that there are exposures on the film. I'd guess, rather, that he bought the film as surplus and intended to use it for experimentation, as a hobbyist.
I'll be glad to answer any further questions about these systems, as far as my memory goes.