Exactly. But at an earlier stage in development. The image hesham posted is from the 15 April 1928 edition of l'Ala d'Italia (page 362). The article - on the state of Soviet aerosani development - is titled Slitte russe con elica propulsiva (Russian sleds with propeller drive). The article is very general (and rather repetitive) but there are a few details ...
Mention is made of research on powered sleds done at the University of Novorossiysk by a Prof. Zagut (the name is Sephardic but I found no online references to this professor). A trial was performed with ten aerosani (presumably of different designs) on the route Moscow-Tver-Leningrad-Smolensk-Moscow ... with 9-of-10 aerosani completing the route.
The 3-view drawing may represent one of those ten experimental aerosan designs but, more likely, it is a generic concept for a future powered sled with a roughly aerofoil-shaped fuselage.
In an overview of Soviet aerosani, by 1928 directable air propellers had prevailed over earlier efforts with turning paddles and cylinders or screw-like helical drives. With propeller-driven aerosani, average engine powers between 100 and 150 hp were producing top speeds from 90 to 160 km/h. Soviet aerosan propellers were created from wood, hollow steel, or aluminum.