Ah.
Partailly burned combustion gasses that leak past stems and rings, enter the crankcase, foul your oil, are, by (first) Callyforneea, taken in via PCV and re-burned.
Carb MUST be designed for the inherent vacuum leak of the PCV.
If you remove the PCV, plug the port, and re-introduce a road draft tube, yes, it will run better...because it's richer than stink!
You used to see clapped-out cars with road draft tubes....and a constant stream of smoke pouring out as they drove.
"Blowby".
Used to easy tell when you needed rings.
Have to have a vented fill cap to work properly.
Some cars even have a shield on the back side of the fill cap (and wire mesh, like coarse steel wool inside the cap for a "filter", mostly to keep from sucking in bugs) that the fan or wind pressure from driving at speed would tend to force fresh air into the crankcase and the road draft tube sucked.
My pickup has a straight tube, the passenger has a tube that runs down the front, along the pan rail, then angles down at about a 45 degree angle to give the "draft".
Or, "draught".
Just having the tube is part of it.
There should be fresh air intake at the top.