Terry:
I have checked the breakers none are flipped and there are is no gfci
You are going to have to give us a bit more information to go by. What else have you tried since posting this?
Please try this to be sure. Again, when breakers trip they may not even look as though they have tripped. Besides making sure you use pressure to flip it to the off position and then back on try the "wiggle test". Breakers have little wiggle room when you gently move the handle back and forth compared to a breaker that has tripped. A breaker that has tripped will have much more wiggle room when you gently move the handle back and forth.
Also you say there are no GFCIs. I'm am starting to believe that a GFCI may be responsible for this issue. Reasoning is because this circuit has affected the bathroom and kitchen where GFCI protection is required. Did you actually try looking for all GFCI receptacles and checking to see if any have tripped even if the GFCI is not in the kitchen or bathroom. A GFCI can protect a receptacle in a totally different room than where the GFCI is. I would highly suggest that you look for every GFCI receptacle in your house, even if there is one in the basement of outside around you house, in your garage burried behind boxes or cabinets. I have found GFCIs on calls that the home owner did not even know they had or a GFCI right next to the breaker panel would kill receptacles outside the house, in the bathroom and kitchen. Don't just assume a GFCI is not the culprit. On every GFCI you find press the reset button firmly. If you hear a click then that GFCI had tripped. If the GFCI has a little light on it do not go by that light to see if it has tripped. Still try the reset button. Light on GFCIs can mean different things depending on the manufacturer. So don't use the lights as a guide as to whether the gFCI is tripped or not.
If not the GFCI do you have a meter.. Are you comfortable in taking the face cover off of the breaker panel if further troubleshooting is needed after you check for GFCIs.