You probably want the L/C ratio at resonance to be at least 10 times larger than it is, and probably higher still. 100nF + 10uH is a pretty nasty combination to use for 150 KHz. The transistor cannot couple to the very low impedances you have created, making it impossible for it to amplify the RF signal, thus no oscillation.
To give an example: For the oscillator in an AM receiver, the inductor is typically 100uH for a frequency around 1 MHz (off the top of my head, not exact numbers). At 1 MHz and L = 100 uH, the reactance will be roughly 630 ohm. You need a capacitor of about 250 pF (not nF) to make this resonate at 1 MHz.
For 150 KHz you want an inductor of about 670 uH plus a capacitor of about 1.7 nF. So your current values are a bit far off, to be similar to the oscillator in an AM receiver.