Congratulations.
I will mention in advance that I'm not the most experienced keeper, and when my peppered cories laid eggs last year and I let nature take its course. They ate most of the eggs but some fry survived and it was lovely to watch them grow up.
Very recently, when cleaning the quarantine tank containing new panda cories, otos and amano shrimp, I noticed panda cory fry, which was amazing and I hadn't seen any eggs.
If your tank has a lot of plants & decor there will be places for the fry to hide, then some will survive. If you would like to have a higher success rate then I'd suggest removing the eggs rather than the fry. You may be lucky enough to have eggs laid on decor/plants rather than glass, which would be much easier to remove, or even place in a fry net in the same tank
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Aquarium-Newborn-Fishes-Hatchery-Breeder/dp/B00PZSYF0I/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1496208332&sr=8-3&keywords=aquarium+fry+hatcheryOr you can set up a completely seperate tank.
If the eggs are on the glass you can very gently roll them up the glass to remove them, and make sure that you take some of the tank water into the hatching tank so the water parameters don't change. Make sure that the hatching tank has something like a sponge/air filter with mature media, or put some tights over a normal filter intake so the fry don't get caught in it. Make sure they have plenty of places to hide just to feel secure, perhaps a bunch of elodea densa or other plant that is quite "fluffy" with lots of tiny leaves.
When the fry hatch they will look like tiny fish poops with a sense of direction (i.e. adorably tiny) and you can get specific fry foods, but I've previously just used fish flakes crushed into a powder.
I will admit that I have never made the effort to set up a hatching/grow out tank, so haven't had large numbers of fry to deal with, but I will say that watching them grow up is a fantastic experience, and I wish you all the best with your cories.
By the way, we will also be expecting regular updates and lots of pictures.