1912-1919 - George V - Silver Ten Cents
In Canada, a dime is a coin worth ten cents. It is the smallest (in physical size) of the currently issued Canadian coins. According to the Royal Canadian Mint, the official national term of the coin is the 10 cent piece, but in practice, the term dime predominates in English-speaking Canada. It is nearly identical in size to the American dime, but unlike its counterpart, the Canadian dime is magnetic due to a distinct metal composition: from 1968 to 1999 it was composed entirely of nickel, and since 2000 it has had a high steel content.
REF
Canadian Circulation: Pride and skill-the 10-cent coin
Source: mint.ca
1858 - 1936 Reverse Design
The crossed maple boughs
The design of two crossed maple boughs appear on all 10-cent, 25-cent, and 50-cent coins from 1858 to 1936.
1910 - 1919
Composition: 92.5% silver, 7.5% copper
Weight (g): 2.33
Diameter (mm): 18.034
Thickness (mm): n/a
Mintage:
1912 - 2,234,557
1913 - 3,613,937
1914 - 2,549,811
1915 - 688,057
1916 - 4,218,114
1917 - 5,011,988
1918 - 5,133,602
1919 - 7,877,722
REF
Dime (Canadian coin) - History of composition
Source: en.wikipedia.org
Years 1910–1919
Mass 2.33 g
Diameter 18.034 mm
Composition 92.5% silver, 7.5% copper
REF
10 Cents - George V
Source: en.numista.com
KM# 23
Features
Country Canada
Years 1912-1919
Value 10 Cents (0.1 CAD)
Metal Silver (.9250)
Weight 2.324 g
Diameter 18.034 mm
Engravers Edgar Bertram MacKennal (obverse)
W.H.J. Blakemore (reverse)
Shape Round
Orientation Medal alignment ↑↑
Demonetized yes
Edge: Milled
REF