Found this link in a quick browse. Looks like the above pictured.
http://www.jaegerplatoon.net/PISTOLS3.htm
Calibre:
7,65 mm x 17 (.32 ACP)
Length:
160 mm (typically, varies from one pistol to another)
Barrel length:
81 - 94 mm
Weight:
About 850 g
Magazine:
9, removable
Official abbreviations:
"7,65 pist/19" and "765 PIST 19"
Country of origin:
Spain
Finnish use: About 10,000 bought from France in 1919. The first pistol model acquired for Finnish Army. Mainly used in Finnish home front during World War 2, few frontline units got these pistols also.
During World War 1 both French and Italian armed forces had shortage of pistols and were buying this quite heavy 7,65 mm blow-back pistol manufactured around Eibar in Spain. Demand was so large that a large number of small companies in Eibar and Guernica started making their own versions of this pistol during World War 1. This pistol unofficially called "Ruby" was produced in large numbers, but as practically all manufacturers did it with slight variations parts of different weapons were not interchangeable and getting exactly right kind of spare-parts was close to zero. When 7,65 mm x 17 ammunition used was also quite weak it was no surprise that both Italian and French Armies were eager to get rid of them as soon as possible after World War 1. Serbia had received 5,000 of these pistols, and for some reason Yugoslavia bought more of them between 1931 - 1933 and named them "Pistolj 7,65 mm/VTZ 1933".
At 1919 Finland was shopping new weapons for its newly born Army in France. Finnish Ministry of War was foolish enough to be tempted by these cheap pistols and bought 10,000 pistols worth of these maintenance nightmares. Pistols were shipped to Finland in July of 1919 and were distributed to Finnish military units. It didn't take long for those military units and weapons depots to find out just how problematic pistols M/19 were. As Finnish Armed Forces had a serious shortage of pistols these caricatures of pistols had to be kept in use for decades. During WW2 even some unfortunate battle-units got issued with these dubious pistols, even if intention was not to issue them to non-home-front units.
Year 1943 some 4,500 pistols M/19 remained, but by 1951 number had dropped to 2,581. After World War 2 these pistols were kept warehoused until most of them were sold to military personnel and collectors between 1965 - 1971.