The unemployment rate was indeed 25% immediately after FDR took office, but the unemployment rate did not drop to 9% as you now claim (you previously claimed it dropped to 10%). It fact, it went down to only about 14% in June of 1937 (
http://www.u-s-history.com/pages/h1528.html ), and then proceeded to go back up to almost 19% by 1938. It was still over 17% in 1939, despite FDR doubling government spending again. Only the onset of WW2 and the enormous growth in demand for war goods finally brought it below 10% (in 1941).
And the timing of the rate dropping from 25% to 14% probably has more to do with the Supreme Court striking down key elements of the New Deal legislation (including the National Industrial Recovery Act in July 1935 and the Agricultural Adjustment Act in July 1935 and January 1936) than FDR's prolifigate spending.
Furthermore, the timing of it then going back up to 19% probably was the result of FDR, in 1936 and early 1937, packing the court with his own people, leading to reversals of the earlier Supreme Court decisions mentioned above in the spring of 1937. And immediately after that, the Dow collapsed and the unemployment rate shot back up to 19%.
All of these facts have been posted to you previously but you apparently just want to ignore them or lie. Readers will have to decide which you are doing.