Hey Andrew,
If you already have the parts, you might as well try building it so you can play around with the part values & circuit and hear/experience what sluckey, tubenit, and DL are talking about. Then try building a couple other tone stacks so you can experiment with them, too. Merlin's book, Designing Tube Preamps for Guitar and Bass, has been an invaluable resource for me as I started designing. It's worth checking out and has an entire chapter dedicated to tone stacks.
Sluckey mentioned attenuation - the values you've chosen for some of the resistors to ground in the stack (such as the 7.5k in the treble control) might give you the frequency corner you're looking for, but they will also act as voltage dividers, shunting some of the signal to ground. The arrangement you've got will attenuate the signal quite a lot. If you've got a few preamp tubes for driving and recovery, a high loss stack might work, but for a simple amp with just one preamp tube, you don't have much leeway for signal loss like that.
If you want to design your own tone stacks, you should definitely consider checking out a sim software like the one DL used to simulate your stack design. It's much easier to change component values and designs with a couple clicks of the mouse than it is to solder and desolder a bunch of stuff. :)
Looking forward to seeing what you come up with.