Question: I have found the part that is missing:
Read the excerpt from Chapter 3 of Wheels of Change .
In the 1890s, riding a bicycle in traditional clothing could be hazardous to a woman's health. Witness this all-too-typical account of a female cyclist whose adventure came to an abrupt end: "The wind was behind me, the road good, with just the least bit of down-slope, and I was skimming along like a bird, when there was an awful tug at my dress and a cracking sound," recalled the unnamed woman, who was quoted in the journal Sporting Life in October 1891. "Before I knew what was the matter I found myself lying in the road with the safety on the top of me."
Answer: Short-term effect: The rider fell off the bicycle after her skirt got caught
Explanation:
People were respecting the wearing of traditional clothing but they were also getting into trouble because those clothes weren't meant for every situation and it wasn't comfortable for them, especially for the women.
In this excerpt, we are finding out that wearing traditional clothes can be unhealthy for the women because their clothes can get caught in the bike wheels and they can fell off the bicycle and that is a short-term effect because after that they will not wearing those clothes in situations like this.