Because the server load is most important, I'd say the cheapest way is to deliver the minimum content to your users over the network with very little CPU load. Sending straight text will cause the lightest CPU load for similarly sized programs, so in this case, I'd go with a solution similar to Joey Adams's solution, though I'd remove 5 chars. Also, I've updated with Peter Taylor's suggestion of using the pre tag (48 chars - 40 over network):
echo "<pre>1\n2\n3\n4\n5\n6\n7\n8\n9\n10</pre>";
This is better in this case because the requirement is short. However, let's say we wanted to optimize 100 numbers and line breaks for the server. In that case, if you calculate it in PHP and send the full result over the internet, that would be 9 + 9*3 + 90*4 + 3 = 399
characters plus additional server overhead for the calculations if you did not hard-code it. Thus, instead of performing the logic within PHP and then sending the full result to the client, you could send a smaller script to the client that will build the content for you while at the same time reducing the load on your server. Here's an example bit of JavaScript/HTML you could build and send with PHP (136 chars - 128 over network):
echo "<pre id=\"c\"><\pre><script type=\"text/javascript\">for(i=0;i++<100;){document.getElementById('c').innerHTML+=i+'\n';}</script>";
Here's a fiddle to see it in action.