you can set the toe in and steering wheel alignment yourself pretty damn close in about an hour just by feel, no tape measures or silver paint needed to get you by for a while if you're going to be a while before you get your pitman and real alignment done.
edit: I was wrong about this, I thought I remembered the outer tie rods connecting to the rear of the steering knuckle but they connect to the front.
so I've fixed/reversed all these instructions.
steering wheel:
steer the wheels straight in your driveway while moving, a competent spotter standing outside would be great for this (or make them a driver if you can't trust them as a spotter

) Steer just the drivers wheel straight if the wheels are obviously pointing different directions. Look at the position of the steering wheel, if it's cocked right you need to make your right tie rod longer and your left one shorter. You'll have to turn the wheels hard to one side to get at the adjuster and hard the other way for the other adjuster. Do the same number of turns each side. drive up and down the driveway a few feet to make sure the tires aren't bound up on the concrete and see if the steering wheel is better, keep adjusting till its perfect. For doing a steering wheel this redneck way you always would lengthen one side and shorten the other equally and drive up and down the driveway between each adjustment.
eyeball toe:
If your passenger wheel is obviously pointing a different direction than your reference drivers wheel just by eyeballing it fix that up some next, again driving up and down the driveway between adjustments until it looks perfect by eye. Drivers wheel is your reference here and it's now straight in relation to the steering wheel. Only adjust the passenger side here.
fine tune toe:
once you get the steering wheel done, and the wheels straight by eyeballing, leave the adjusting sleeves loose, grab your pliers and hit the roads. if it pulls to the left pull over real quick and shorten the left side and lengthen the right side. repeat until good.
-do all the first few adjustments opposite (lengthen one shorten other) and equally on both sides.
-keep track of how many turns you are adjusting so you can back it off if you need to all the way or partway.
-For the first or maybe first few adjustments go big, like 4 turns shortening one and 4 turns lengthening the other, it's better to overshoot on the first couple adjusts and possibly make it pull hard the opposite direction it was pulling just to know you're going in the right direction to fix the pull than to undershoot and not realize you might have done some good when you start driving.
-You'll eventually get it close and to where you only need to adjust one side, hard to describe but you'll kinda be able to tell by feel with your butt in the seat and hands on the wheel when its time to only adjust just one side. After that it will feel like its driving great
I did this on my lunch hour the day after I replaced all my stuff pulling over about 6 times and I had it good. It drove perfect, well compared to how it was before anyway, We put it on a friends hunter alignment machine a week later and was red instead of green for toe on both sides. But it only took one or maybe a half a turn of the adjusters to get it to go green so I guess even though it showed red I was pretty close.