Oh, I'm certain it's Verichrome, not Verichrome Pan -- or at least the backing paper is. The paper is fragile (the tail tab tore off and lodged in the Autographic slot when winding the last of it onto the spool), so I doubt it was recycled paper (if someone had a choice, they'd want to use paper from at least the last decade of Kodak production, not stuff for a film that was discontinued 70 years ago). I can also see a series of creases close to the "fold here" at the tail, what I'd expect if the paper was wound on a slotted metal spool for decades. This gives me high confidence that this isn't recycled paper and is actually Verichrome (ortho).
I've never done see-saw and wouldn't expect good results with film that's been rolled up for seventy-plus years (and might be on nitrate base). Further, I've never done DBI.
I do recall that prior to about 1950 (and on into the '50s and even the '60s, for films that weren't new emulsions) there was a single standard time for B&W like there is for C-41, allowing a drug store to process multiple rolls together for efficiency. I recall it being something like 7 minutes at 68F in D-76 stock (which I can replicate with lower fog by using HC-110 Dilution E or 1+49, IIRC). So, if I can't find any better information, I'll pull a bottle of HC-110 syrup out of my stash and give it seven minutes at 1+49 (corrected as necessary for temperature, since my darkroom is rarely at 20C).
Oh, yes, and I need to order a 127 film holder for my scanner...