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The chicken broth is a great idea - try sodium free if you can. We did this for our cat when we first had him and he refused to drink water the first few days which was worrying us. The chicken broth did the trick :) I am sure he is drinking enough if he is still alive but it is important to keep hydrated, especially when eating kibble :)
My guess is: he's drinking enough. When thirsty, he'll drink.
We add some kibble to the raw meat food, and add quite a bit of water to hydrate the kibble and "force" them to consume the water. Hiking, I'll often throw some kibble in the snow.
So put the water in his food. The British Royal Navy used to put the lime juice in the sailors' grog to make sure they drank it.
You say: "He only drinks a dish of water (or less) a day."
What then leads you to the conclusion he's not drinking enough? Most dog water bowls are sized to be filled once a day or so (with the idea that people aren't always around to refill a bowl).
Per http://www.dogster.com/dog-food/how-much-water-should-a-dog-drink, a dog should drink between a half-ounce and one ounce of water per pound of body weight per day. For a 25 pound dog, as little as 12.5 ounces (a glass and a half) of water is therefore sufficient.
Honestly our dogs never drink more than a bowl of water a day, unless they were getting tons of training treats or playing fetch with a plush toy (I think it dries out the tongue). I do add some water to their kibble to slow them down a bit when they eat.
As far as playing in a water bowl as a puppy, that's a very common thing. Lots of puppies do that. We got Jack one of those hamster-bottle type water dispensers when he was a puppy because he'd paw out all the water and lay in it if it was hot. We left the bowl too, but the bottle as a back-up.
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