Depending on the specific version of PHP you're using, you might not even be able to execute multiple statements per query / execute.
The short answer is that no, it is not better to return two separate tables in one query. Both tables would have to have the same amount of columns. There won't be a way of telling result #1 from result #2 in PHP. And if you ever want to change either of the tables, you'll have to ensure that the tables still remain compatible.
You might be able to write a benchmark which runs a couple of thousand queries, first as two separate ones, and then one as UNION ALL (as suggested above). I doubt you're going to find much of a performance difference between the two. If the SQL server is running on the same physical server, the query itself is near instantaneous and you may incur a performance hit for doing the UNION ALL. If it is over the wire, to another server on the network, or over the internet (for whatever reason) that will offset the benefit of the combined query.
If these are semantically separate pieces information, it just isn't a very good idea in the long run to tie the two queries together. This smacks of "premature optimization", and that is the root of all evil as Donald Knuth says.