Some old tricks for cartridge alignment
First, the suggested soundfountain.com provides an excellent setup procedure/process with diagrams.
-turntable level is critical and as suggested, leaving a round bubble level on the turntable is best...you never know if the turntable was bumped and is now not level. With it always there, you always know it's level or not.
-I have an old magazine (Audio Critic, I think) with a table of overhang adjustment settings, someplace. That is, with "A" arm pivot to stylus distance and "B" arm pivot to turntable platter center distance, use "C" overhang from the table(A-B=C). Adjusting, you add B+C to get what A should measure and move your cartridge. I'll look for it, it's been a long long time since I've used it.
-optimize offset angle for 2 locations on a record. Remember, it will be exactly aligned at those 2 locations and increasingly off as it moves away from them. So, 1/2" in from the lead-in groove and 1/2" out from the typical inner most groove, would be two good locations for adjustment.
-a preamp with 'Left-Right' selector (Apt-Holman pre-amp is one) is very handy cartridge alignment checking tool...I couldn't afford an oscilloscope. Mistracking/alignment error is immediately obvious to your ears.
When everything is set correctly, the cartridge will not jump left or right when dropped (to the record groove, a very small distance, say 1/16 th of an inch) and will ignore a record scratch (follow the groove, not the scratch) or bumps. An extra headshell and old/cheap cartridge would be good for practice.
The phono section of your pre-amp is very important too. Long ago I bought an Apt-Holman preamp (solid state) which was supposed to have a phono pre-amp that was 'overload' proof. I up-graded to a used Audio Research SP-9 pre-amp (tube hybrid) and guess what, some of the least likely records (Neil Diamond's 'Classics The Early Years') were overloading the Apt-Holman phono section! You just never know.
Currently I burn cdr's directly from records (thru my pre-amp), rip 'em on my pc, and listen to pc play lists/audio directed to my main audio system.