I would take the throttle cable loose at the motor - loosen the phillips head screw till you can move the tab that holds the throttle end in the hole, move it to the side and carefully take that cable loose. Now you can work with the motor without having to run back and forth.
In the face of the carb are those two slow speed idle adjust screws, one per carb. You already know about them. One or both are almost certainly too rich, that is unscrewed too much.
Start the motor and work the throttle at the motor to keep it running. Once it is stable and you can turn loose of the throttle arm: With the motor running -
If the top plug shows wet start with the top carb. Tighten the idle adjust screw 1/4 turn and stop, listen. Give it a couple seconds for lag. If it speeds up, push throttle arm to lower the rpms. If it runs worse, turn the screw the other direction, wait a couple seconds and see what happens. if No change: adjust more same direction. If it runs better: adjust more same direction. If runs worse: stop! go the other direction, repeat. Once you get the best range, try to stop the screw in the center of that range, then do the other carb the same way. I will go back to carb one after I finish carb two, I believe the center cylinder is fed from both top and bottom carbs.
If the magic happens and you get it where you want it that is great! Now you need to take it to the water, and while you are not in the water around that killer prop, have it in gear at low speed and redo the low speed adjustments. It will act different once you have in in the water because of the back pressure of the water in the middle section of the motor.
Please let me know what happens!
Dan