Good News!! I was able to get it moving sans oven roasting, although I was willing to go that route. I had to apply more force to the hand wheel, in the opposite direction of operational rotation, to break it free than I have ever done on a machine, then more oil, more oil, and hooking up a motor and letting it spin, which it did slowly at first and I could hear it pick up speed as it moved off the old gummy oil.
It's a 15 clone badged as a John Wanamaker, which my enabler tells me is/was an upscale store in the East. The machine looks almost unused, except some missing decal on the name.
Two unusual things, when I put the nose plate back on and tightened the screw (there is only one screw holding it on) it lifted the bottom of the plate away from the machine and then the presser foot lift lever wouldn't engage the tension release pin. I put a couple of washers under the plate and tightened the plate against this, no more lift at the bottom and the tension release functioned as it should. Also, with the nose plate dropped down against the screw and then tightened up, the take up arm was hitting at the top of the channel, never seen this before on a 15 clone. I had to tighten down the plate with it lifted slightly up off the screw, I also had to bend the arm a little bit towards the middle of the machine, so it would move up the center of the channel in the plate.
The machine makes decent stitches, so my work is done and it's going back to my enabler who plans on trying to sell it on ebay or some other place.
Thanks for everyone's input.