Not recommended, it gives you a false sense of increased safety. If the bolt shears before the clutch slipped, you've wasted your money on the slip clutch. The bolt you select to fasten the slip clutch to the tranny input shaft should be stronger than the top rating of the slip clutch.
Yours is a 32 hp tractor, presumably you cited engine horsepower. That translates to about 28 PTO hp if it's a geared tractor, less if it's a hydrostat. It's turning a mower tranny that's likely rated for up to a 40hp input. In between is either a shear bolt, or a slip clutch. You select a shear bolt
based upon the tranny input rating, in this case a SAE Grade 2 (GR5 for 80hp, GR8 for 120hp, etc). You adjust a slip clutch
based upon the tractor PTO output rating. In this case, the one you selected is for between 20 and 40 PTO hp.
So now that you'll be running a properly sized clutch, you want it to slip
before the bolt holding it to the tranny input shaft breaks. That means you need something stronger than a GR2. I recommend at least a metric 8.8 or a SAE grade 5. A SAE grade 8 will work too, but they're pricey. Run either a GR2 shear bolt OR a slip clutch, but not both at the same time.
//greg//