No US paper money has silver IN it; all bills are printed on special paper that's mostly cotton and linen.
If you're asking if the bills were silver certificates - i.e. could be traded for silver at that time - the answer is again no. All 1950 $10 bills were issued as familiar green-seal Federal Reserve Notes.
Please check your bill again and post a new question. It's either not a silver certificate or not from 1950. All 1950-series $10 bills were issued as Federal Reserve Notes. These have the familiar green seal indicating they're FRN's and have the specific wording Federal Reserve Note across the top of the front of the bill.
Click on the link in "RELATED LINKS" and you should see a 1950 $10 bill.
It will have the date "1950" at roughly the 5:00 position of Hamilton's portrait.
The US did not print any 10 dollar bills with this date. The closest years to 1952 were 1950 and 1953.
The green seal indicates that your bill is a Federal Reserve Note. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1950 C US 10 dollar federal reserve note?" for more information.
Please check your bill again, including the banner across the top. A blue seal would indicate that it's a silver certificate, but no $10 silver certificates were dated 1950.
None of them. 1950-series $10 bills remain common among collectors. There's more information at the question "What is the value of a 1950 US 10 dollar bill?".
There are two extremely valuable silver certificates. The 1928E 1 dollar bill and the 1933 10 dollar bill.
$10 silver certificate bill.
Please check your bill again and post a new question. It's either not a silver certificate or not from 1950. All 1950-series $10 bills were issued as Federal Reserve Notes. These have the familiar green seal indicating they're FRN's and have the specific wording Federal Reserve Note across the top of the front of the bill.
Click on the link in "RELATED LINKS" and you should see a 1950 $10 bill.
None of them. 1950-series $10 bills remain common among collectors. There's more information at the question "What is the value of a 1950 US 10 dollar bill?".
Look at the coin again and post a new question. No US dollar coins are dated 1950. Also no circulating US coin was ever made of pure silver, all were 90% silver and 10% copper.
It will have the date "1950" at roughly the 5:00 position of Hamilton's portrait.
99% of the time a 1950 $10 bill is just worth $10. If it is an error, star note, or in perfect condition it could be worth more.
The US did not print any 10 dollar bills with this date. The closest years to 1952 were 1950 and 1953.
The green seal indicates that your bill is a Federal Reserve Note. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1950 C US 10 dollar federal reserve note?" for more information.