I feel your pain. I'm guessing you had this a couple of years ago in basic chemistry classes, and now you're in undergraduate research and your professor tossed this at you as kind of a sink or swim?
If this is the first time you've done this in a while, write everything out explicitly and keep track of the units. Start by writing out your reaction, so you can account for all your stoichiometry. Then begin your calculations.
In your first calculation, you start by calculating the number of moles you would have with 100 mg of 1,3-diaminopropane. Why are you multiplying this by two?
In your second calculation, you start with... what? Certainly not 100 mg, or you wouldn't be trying to apply a density calculation.
Your third calculation, your units are off so you've got things on the wrong end of the fraction. When you're converting grams to moles, the molecular weight has the units grams/mole, not moles. (you write "74.12 mol")
Try again, with more attention to explicitly writing out the details. Let's take it from the ground up.