The inner panels, filling about one third of the span had only slight taper, the sweep entirely on the trailing edge; the inner parts of them carried about 10° of dihedral but they flattened outboard.
[1] The Junior had a completely ply covered fuselage with a narrow ovoid cross section which tapered progressively to the tail.
The cockpit was just ahead of the wing, under a largely ply fairing smoothly integrated into the nose and fuselage; its only transparencies were portholes in its slightly concave sides.
A tapered, round tipped and largely fabric covered horizontal tail was mounted on top of the fuselage, far enough forward to place the trailing edges of its elevators at the rudder hinge line.
The latter was mounted on a narrow ply covered fin, carefully faired into the fuselage and extending below it to form a tail bumper.