Brad Hays:
Ahh, the hope and promise of an affordable first bandsaw. In the early 80's, I pulled a similar saw out of a scrapheap; the saw was one of the "elephant" saws, so-called because of the elephant stamped on the plastic knobs that held the blade covers on. These were knock-offs of the Delta/Rockwell 14" band saw; one manufacturer, many different brand names.
The table trunnions were broken, and the previous owner "glued" the table in place with some construction adhesive. After cleaning it up, I ordered the Delta trunnions, and they fit perfectly, right down to the hole pattern. Delta may be a possible source for parts other than the motor pulley.
In addition to what has already been said, you might pull both blade covers off and see if you can get a straightedge to touch both rims of both wheels, or if it can be adjusted to do so, which would mean that you may actually be able to track a blade on the saw once you get it running. Make sure that any adjustment screws or knobs actually do something.
It looks like a workable 14" saw with a riser block, allowing a 12" cut under the guides. Finding out the blade speed on a 14" Delta saw will give you a good approximation to determine what the motor pulley size is that you need. Harbor Freight, Graingers, Northern Tool, McMaster-Carr and Ebay also come to mind as sources for the motor pulley.
Don't lose sight of the fact that a new band saw, of similar quality but without the riser block, is about $400.
Good luck.
TonyF