It's called 'mole' in English, but the SI unit symbol is 'mol', so it's easy to get confused. It's of little importance though.
O.k. So, you know that the mole is an amount of something.
In any definition of the mole you'll see that 1 mole of pure Carbon-12 atoms weights 12 grams (or, equivalently, 1 mole is as many entities as in 12g of C-12).
If we assume that paper is made 100% of cellulose (to make it simple), which in turn is made of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen: C6H10O5. That's 21 atoms per molecule, altogether weighing roughly the same as 14 Carbon-12 atoms.
So, if you were to ask 'how much paper I'd get from a mole of cellulose molecules', that'd be about 14*12=168 grams. If you were to ask how 'much paper from individual atoms, in appropriate proportions to make cellulose' that'd be 21 times less (since it's 21 atoms per molecule): 168/21=8 grams.
For comparison, a typical A4 sheet weighs about 5 grams.
These are rough numbers, since paper is not 100% cellulose, and its molecular weight in not exactly the same as 14 C-12 atoms, but the difference shouldn't be much.
If you care for more precision you can just research more exact composition and follow the same line of thinking.