Ace Hardware of Central Illinois

Locally Owned, Nationally Known                                                       March 2017


 


       


  
   

        

Ace Hardware of Central Illinois has 12 locations to serve you. Visit one today or go to our website at http://www.acesetsthepace.com
You can also click any of the store pictures below to go to the store website.
 
214 North Walnut
Springfield, IL 62702
217-528-5673
Manager:
 
 
900 West Morton
Jacksonville, IL 62650
217-245-9563
Manager: Mickey Bourne
 
1713 Spresser
Taylorville, IL 62568
217-824-3325
Manager: Shirley Niethe
 
1600 Wabash
Springfield, IL 62704
217-787-5100
Manager: Alan Miller

 
204 East College
Normal, IL 61761
309-454-5413
Manager: Kelly Warning
207 West Main
Havana, IL 62644
309-543-2638
Manager: Nichole Jones-Way
 
111 East 1st North
Carlinville, IL 62626
217-854-2564
Manager: Chad Strubbe 
 
521 North Kickapoo
Lincoln, IL 62656
217-735-1458
Manager: JR Bailey
 
1200 North Main
Chatham, IL 62629
217-483-4085
Manager: Gerardo Campos
 
300 Springfield
Hillsboro, IL 62049
217-532-6677
Manager: Kristel White
 
203 Livingston
Pontiac, IL. 61764
815-842-2966
Manager: Tina Hammer
 
104 Watters
Dwight, IL. 60420
815-584-2954
Manager:
 
Proud Member of Local First Springfield 
 Buy Local First

Area Chamber of Commerce

 

Bloomington Normal McLean

County Chamber of Commerce

www.mcleancochamber.org/ 

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Carlinville Community

Chamber of Commerce
www.carlinvillechamber.com/

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Chatham Area Chamber

of Commerce
www.chatham-il-chamber.com/

.
Greater Taylorville Chamber

of Commerce
www.taylorvillechamber.com/

.

Havana Chamber of Commerce
www.scenichavana.com/

.
Hillsboro Chamber of Commerce

www.hillsborochamber.net/

.
Jacksonville Chamber of Commerce

www.jacksonvilleareachamber.org/

.

 Lincoln Logan County Chamber of Commerce

www.lincolnillinois.com

.

Springfield Chamber of Commerce
www.gscc.org/ 

 Pontiac Chamber of Commerce
www.pontiacchamber.org


Dwight Economic Alliance
www.dwightalliance.org
 

Ace Rewards Exclusive Member Benefits

* 1,000 free bonus points on your first purchase.

* 10 points for every $1 you spend.

* $5 Reward for every 2,500 points earned.

* Members-only coupons.

* Manage your account online.

* E-Rebates CLICK, Don't Clip! submit your promotional rebates online.

  

Ace Rewards Members get instant savings right in the store. No mail-in rebates for Ace Rewards Members. Sign up and start saving today!  Plus earn points on every purchase.

*Instant Rebates Exclusively for Ace Rewards Members.

Not a member? It's easy to sign up and there are no membership fees, ever! Instant rebates available as mail-in rebates for non Ace Rewards members. Tax will be changed on pre-rebate price.


Sign up today to receive your statement electronically. Check your invoices and statements online 24hrs a day. Email Patty at patty@acesetsthepace.com or call 217-528-5673.

 
Dear ,

Thank you for opening our March newsletter!  We have almost made it through winter, knock on wood. It's time to start thinking and planning for Spring and Summer and your local Ace Hardware is busy transforming our stores from Winter to Spring now. Yes and Summer also.

Also visit our website www.acesetsthepace.com and our Facebook page for valuable information, quick breaking specials and timely news. We have included some icons and links in this issue that will take you directly to our site and page.

Sincerely,
Your local Ace Hardware Team

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         Toro 22" Personal Pace® Mower
                                    (20332)


This Toro 22" Personal Pace Recycler lawnmower gives you powerful performance and lightweight agility.

Powered by a 7.25 ft-lb Gross Torque Briggs & Stratton® EXi 163cc w/Ready Start® - no need to prime or choke. Includes Just Check & Add feature - no oil changes for the life of the engine. This mower features our exclusive Personal Pace Self-Propel System, which allows you to mow at speeds that are infinitely adjustable to your walking pace up to 4.8 miles per hour. The Quick Wash washout port is standard for easy cleaning.

It is backed by our two-year full warranty, simply put, if anything goes wrong within two years under normal use and maintenance, Toro will fix it for free. This mower will deliver the durable, reliable performance you need.

  • Personal Pace® Self Propel self propel system automatically adjusts to your walking speed
  • Bag on Demand allows you to switch from mulching to bagging in seconds while leaving the bag on the mower
  • 7.25 ft-lb Gross Torque Briggs & Stratton® EXi 163cc w/Ready Start® - no need to prime or choke. Just 
  • Check & Add feature - no oil changes for the life of the engine
  • 2 Year Full Warranty

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Shelly's Hot Items of the Month

Scotts 4 Step Program




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     Preen Green Vegetable Garden
             Organic Weed Preventer
Enjoy a weed-free vegetable garden without all the work. Preen Vegetable Garden Organic Weed Preventer is the organic way to keep weeds from sprouting!
Use the organic weed control in your fruit, vegetable, herb, and landscape beds anytime during the growing season to save time from back-breaking weeding. Preen Vegetable Garden Organic Weed Preventer is formulated to control some of toughest weeds, like clover, bluegrass, crabgrass, foxtail, lambsquarters and plantain. Because it's 100% organic, you don't have to worry.
Just sprinkle around established vegetables, herbs, and fruits once a month to prevent weeds from returning to your garden. Children and pets can play in the area immediately after application.


              Preen Flower Garden
                   Weed Preventer
Preen Weed Preventer stops weeds from germinating in flower and vegetable gardens, in ground covers and around trees and shrubs. Preen will not kill existing weeds. It will prevent new weeds from sprouting — eliminating the need for difficult and time‑consuming hand‑weeding. Without weeds, your valuable plants can grow larger and stronger.

Your beds will stay neat and weed-free all season long!

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          Smart Spring Yard Cleanup
                                  www.thisoldhouse.com










Tackle a little early spring maintenance now to get your yard ready for the growth spurt to come.

It's Cleanup Season
March is notoriously unpredictable. Shrubs can be crusty with snow on the first of the month, and then, a couple of weeks later, temperatures can warm up enough for flower and leaf buds to show signs of life.

Still, some early spring cleanup tasks are sure things this time of year. So go ahead and remove burlap from trees and shrubs as the weather warms. Prune away winter-killed branches to make room for new growth. Cut back spent perennials and pull up old annuals if you didn't get around to it last fall. Then look around. "March is a good time to take stock of your yard and see if it's time to thin out crowded beds and do some transplanting to fill in bare spots," says This Old House landscape contractor Roger Cook.

Here, a checklist to tackle now to give your green patch a clean start.

Trees and Shrubs

1. Prune away dead and damaged branches.

Where tree or shrub branches have been damaged by cold, snow, and wind, prune back to live stems; use a handsaw for any larger than ½ inch in diameter. Shaping hedges with hand pruners, rather than electric shears, prevents a thick outer layer of growth that prohibits sunlight and air from reaching the shrub's center. At right, Roger neatens up a yew by pruning wayward shoots back to an intersecting branch. Prune summer-flowering shrubs, such as Rose of Sharon, before buds swell, but wait to prune spring bloomers, like forsythia, until after they flower.

Trim overgrown evergreens back to a branch whose direction you want to encourage.

Perennials and Grasses

2. Cut back and divide perennials as needed.

Prune flowering perennials to a height of 4–5 inches and ornamental grasses to 2–3 inches to allow new growth to shoot up. Where soil has thawed, dig up perennials, such as daylilies and hostas, to thin crowded beds; divide them, leaving at least three stems per clump, and transplant them to fill in sparse areas. Cut back winter-damaged rose canes to 1 inch below the blackened area. On climbers, keep younger green canes and remove older woody ones; neaten them up by bending the canes horizontally and tipping the buds downward. Use jute twine or gentle Velcro fasteners to hold the canes in place.

A pair of sharp bypass pruners makes a clean cut on both dead and living foliage.

Beds and Borders


3. Clean Up Around Plants.

 

Rake out fallen leaves and dead foliage (which can smother plants and foster disease), pull up spent annuals, and toss in a wheelbarrow with other organic yard waste. Once the threat of frost has passed, Roger also removes existing mulch to set the stage for a new layer once spring planting is done. Push heaved plants back into flower beds and borders, tamping them down around the base with your foot, or use a shovel to replant them. Now is a good time to spread a pelletized fertilizer tailored to existing plantings on the soil's surface so that spring rains can carry it to the roots. Add a 5-10-10 fertilizer around bulbs as soon as they flower to maximize bloom time and feed next season's growth. Use pins to fasten drip irrigation lines that have come loose and a square-head shovel to give beds a clean edge and keep turf grass from growing into them.

Composting

4. Compost Yard Waste.

Dump collected leaves, cuttings, spent foliage, and last season's mulch into your compost pile, or make a simple corral by joining sections of wire fence (available at home centers) into a 3-by-3-by-3-foot cube like the one above. Shred leaves and chip branches larger than ½ inch in diameter to accelerate decomposition, or add a bagged compost starter to the pile. Keep the pile as moist as a wrung-out sponge, and aerate it with a pitchfork every two weeks. Just don't add any early spring weeds that have gone to seed—they might not cook completely and could sprout instead.

Lawn Care

 

5. Prep Damaged Lawn Areas for Spring Seeding.

In colder climates grass starts growing in April, but early spring is a good time to test the soil's pH so that you can assemble the right amendments. Remove turf damaged by salt, plows, or disease to prepare for the seeding that should follow in a few weeks. Work in a ½-inch layer of compost to keep the new seed moist, increasing the germination rate. Begin seeding once forsythia starts blooming in your area. In warmer climates, March is a good time to add the first dose of fertilizer and crabgrass treatment.

Remove dead turf with a square metal rake, then flip it over to spread compost.

Paths and Patios

6. Neaten Up Hardscape Surfaces.

Rake escaped gravel back into aggregate walkways and patios, and order more gravel to spread in large depressions, which often form near the driveway's apron. Refill joints between flagstones by sweeping in new sand or stone dust; water with a hose to set it, then repeat. If the freeze-thaw cycle has heaved pavers out of place, remove them and replenish the base material as needed before setting pavers back in. Use a pressure washer with a low pressure tip to remove slippery algae spots or leaf stains from patios and walkways.

Fences and Trellises

7. Patch or replace and paint worn wood.

Remove badly rotted or damaged pickets, boards, or lattice, then scrub wood structures clean with a mix of 2 gallons water, 2 quarts bleach, and 1 cup liquid soap; let dry. Patch rotted sections with wood epoxy; install new wood as needed. Check wobbly fence posts to see if they need replacing (find the how-to at thisoldhouse.com. Scrape off old paint, then sand wood all over with 60 grit to prep for a new finish coat. Once temperatures go above 50° F, brush on a new coat of paint or stain.

JR's Plant of the Month

JR's Plant of the month is Onion sets, Seed Potatoes and Asparagus

Seed Potatoe Sets

 


Onion Sets

 


Asparagus

 

 

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Weber E-310 Grill


Redesigned the new Spirit E-310 NG gas grill is complete with all the essential features a griller could want in an affordable package. With the control panel conveniently moved to the front, 2 full use stainless steel tables allow for food platters and prep. The grill offers enough room to cook a 20 lbs. turkey or roast meats and vegetables at the same time. Porcelain enameled cast iron cooking grates provide superior heat retention and clean up easily, and the durable porcelain enameled shroud will not fade, peel or rust.

Cooking System
Stainless steel burners: 3
Porcelain-enameled, cast-iron cooking grates
Porcelain-enameled Flavorizer bars
Main burners: BTU-per-hour input: 32,000
Electronic Crossover® ignition system

Cooking Area
Primary cooking area (square inches): 424
Warming rack area (square inches): 105
Total cooking area (square inches): 529

Construction
Porcelain-enameled shroud with center-mounted thermometer
Stainless steel work surfaces: 2
Front-mounted control panel
Painted enclosed steel cabinet with painted steel door
Front access, porcelain-enameled grease tray with catch pan
Heavy-duty front locking swivel casters: 2
Heavy-duty back swivel casters: 2

Features
Fuel gauge (LP models only)
Tool hooks: 6

                    Weber E-310 Gill Overview Video

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         March Monthly Coupon

Save $5 on your next purchase of $25 or more Limit 1 coupon per family.

Click on Coupon to print


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March Sales Flyer


Click on the above "Sale"  graphic to see the
current monthly sales flyer.


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Yes we cut House & Car Keys and also have electronic car keys at all our locations. With that said, here is a funny video, enjoy!

 Try Not To Laugh Challenge! Funny Kids Vines Compilation 2016

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