Record you drum machine in mono straight into the 4 track, it'll be a lot cleaner sounding and more realistic, the drums probably dont need the lows boosted to 11, you are probably compensating for deficiencies in you speakers.
Next recording the bass direct is probably best as well but if the sound really doesnt cut it you can try running it through the eq pedal or through the guitar amp direct or miking the amp with the 58 about 2 inches from the grill cloth and midway between the center and edge of the speaker, pointing straight at it or slightly to one side.
Next try the electric, leave the mic in about the same position, the center of the speaker will put out more highs and the edge puts out more lows, dont go for a HUGE tone with lots of bite and lots of bass because you need to leave 'room' in the audio spectrum for the other instruments, pick a piece of audio terrain and fit the guitar into it, it should sound kinda small by itself but it wont in the mix.
Now you have the framework of your song, balance the levels, not too much guitars since the vocals still need some room, bounce it all down to one track.
If the
acoustic guitar plugs in put it through the EQ pedal and roll off a little of the low end while boosting the high end 'sparkle' quite a bit, this will add a 'shimmer' behind your electric, if you want it more upfront you may need to make the electric smaller to make room.
next record your vocals, mic straight into 4 track.
I dont know your 4 track but it should have some kind of auxillary send, after you are done recording connect a reverb or delay to the aux send/out and turn up a little of the send on which ever channels need it, newbies ALWAYS use too much reverb so look out for this, you might be able to record the reverb to the remaining track or you can just add it when you are recording the final mix to stereo.