This trick right here will save DAYS of fiddling around. If you can actually measure the exact departure from square, then your shimming questions are answered from the start.
Jim is right!
Use every trick there is because the practical business of making adjustments by shimming takes a whole lot of back-and-forth.
Once you have the right shim, or combination of shims, it's great, but on the way, to find that when tightened, a shim is not quite enough, or too much, is a frustrating drag.
Do not fear shims and shim material. The aluminium rescued from a drinks can is remarkably constant. Small adjustments can be made with foil, which comes in 35 micron, and I think the thicker one is double that.
One can get steel shim stock almost anywhere. McMaster Carr surely.
Or Amazon -->
HERE
There is a more expensive type which comes as about 0.1" of many stuck together. You peel off as many as you need to get to the spacer you need. I am not so sure of that stuff as a way to go, but I have encountered it before being used to level a big tracking head.
It's best if you can use a single correct shim at a place needed, but you can as necessary contrive a 2-shim combination, or get creative with subtraction. e.g. if you dont happen to have a 0.002", but you do have a 0.003" and a 0.005", you can use the 5 and put the 3 on the other places. Not ideal, but it works.
You can get to any value you need in two shims with a combination of 1, 2, 2, 5, but the usual "set normally has enough combinations to get you there.