If I were you then I would try some of these circuits.
For the inductor values, if you don't get the frequency right then try this website:
RADIO CALCULATIONS
For the Low power fm transmiter:
When assembling the fm transmitter circuit, make sure the rotor of C3 is connected to the +9V supply. This ensures that there will be minimal frequency disturbance when the screwdriver touches the adjustment shaft. You can use a small piece of non copper-clad circuit board to make a screwdriver – this will not alter the frequency.
Q1 is a conventional Colpitts oscillator design. The audio signal applied to the base of Q1 causes the frequency to change, as the transistor’s collector current is modulated by the audio. This provides the frequency modulation (FM) that can be received on any standard FM band receiver.
The inductors are 9.5 turns of 1mm diameter enamelled copper wire. They are close wound on a 3mm diameter former, which is removed after the coils are wound.
The output is a low power of 100 mW, but for some of you this fm rf transmitter can delivers the desired power for broadcasting on your street or with a proper antenna you can cover a small neighborhood. If you need a power wireless fm transmitter use the above menu, you can find transmitters starting with low fm power up to high power fm transmitters.
but just a heads up if they catch you using this bandwith then you are in big trouble, and FYI HAM Radio operators are crawling all over this bandwidth, I would try a much higher frequency (500 Mhz) remember that the data tranasfer rate cannot exceed the transmit frequency.